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Jill Ellis leaving USWNT
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postthey are wrong. your numbers refer to an NWSL player. Not an allocated WNT player
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostBusinessmen know you’ve got to spend money to make money. They build a brand over time losing money upfront to make more later. NWSL owners are more opportunists than businessmen because they don’t invest and then require USSF subsidies to protect them from losses. Look at your average MLS club where attendance is about 3-4x higher than NWSL but they are spending 10-15x the gate for promotion, multi-million salaries, and facilities. They are building their brand and their sport just like NHL and NBA owners did 50-70 years ago when pro hockey and basketball were young, unfollowed sports. They didn’t go looking for handouts and immediate profits like most NWSL owners.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDifferent times, different risks, less popular sport and a female one at that.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSoccer is the MOST popular sport in the world.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSoccer is the MOST popular sport in the world.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...or-girls-2010/
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAgreed that USSF is propping up NWSL, but it also works to USSF’s and team owner’s advantage a lot more than it does the players and absolutely hurts women’s soccer. Non-allocated (meaning non-USWNT) minimum pay in NWSL is $15k/yr and the majority of players are making close to that. Allocated players make a minimum NWSL salary of $46k although stars like Morgan make more through bonuses and private endorsements. Still a very top player like Morgan is probably earning $500k in an average year, which is chicken feed in the pro sports world for top talent. For very little salary/bonus money, USSF gets control of their careers whether they are in a club or national team jersey. Team owners get cheap talent and don’t need to pay for their top talent (USWNT members) so they don’t invest heavily in their teams. And whenever you or I hear about how little women’s soccer players are paid, another young talent coming up in HS or college hears that too and decides not to go pro and the sport suffers. Nothing move forward because USSF repeatedly fails to meaningfully invest in the women’s side of the sport. The message is always the men must move first and then they’ll invest in the women, but the simple fact is that the women have been stronger for decades and they’ve squandered the money on the men’s side.
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Does this sound familiar? The WNBA was founded over 20 years ago, gets a ton of support from the NBA, yet it can't make money or get much traction going with a much more popular sport than soccer.
WNBA players are poorly paid https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidbe.../#1f5af0fa33eb
"In the past few weeks, a collection of WNBA stars have spoken out about pay in the WNBA. An incomplete list would include Liz Cambage, Kelsey Plum, Skyler Diggins-Smith, A'ja Wilson, Seimone Augustus, Kia Nurse, and ******** Griner. According to High Post Hoops, none of these players are paid more than $115,500 by the WNBA. Meanwhile, according to ESPN, the eight lowest paid players in the NBA in 2018-19 will be paid $838,464. And none of these players have even played in the NBA yet." Despite this disparity, the WNBA players are not being asked to be paid the same amount as an NBA player. What WNBA players keep emphasizing is that they want the WNBA to change the way the WNBA revenues are shared with its players."
The WNBA has lost an average of $10M a year since it started and average game attendance is declining https://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...2019/38809289/
The WNBA has less viewers than bowling https://thefederalist.com/2018/07/11...eyre-overpaid/
"Of course the real issue has nothing to do with sexism and everything to do with the fact that the WNBA simply isn’t very popular with Americans. For example, last month the WNBA averaged 250,000 viewers per game with a high of 378,000. Relative to the history of the league, this was an extraordinary success, up 39 percent from last year. By comparison, last year’s Professional Bowling League averaged 650,000 viewers for ESPN."
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDoes this sound familiar? The WNBA was founded over 20 years ago, gets a ton of support from the NBA, yet it can't make money or get much traction going with a much more popular sport than soccer.
WNBA players are poorly paid https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidbe.../#1f5af0fa33eb
"In the past few weeks, a collection of WNBA stars have spoken out about pay in the WNBA. An incomplete list would include Liz Cambage, Kelsey Plum, Skyler Diggins-Smith, A'ja Wilson, Seimone Augustus, Kia Nurse, and ******** Griner. According to High Post Hoops, none of these players are paid more than $115,500 by the WNBA. Meanwhile, according to ESPN, the eight lowest paid players in the NBA in 2018-19 will be paid $838,464. And none of these players have even played in the NBA yet." Despite this disparity, the WNBA players are not being asked to be paid the same amount as an NBA player. What WNBA players keep emphasizing is that they want the WNBA to change the way the WNBA revenues are shared with its players."
The WNBA has lost an average of $10M a year since it started and average game attendance is declining https://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...2019/38809289/
The WNBA has less viewers than bowling https://thefederalist.com/2018/07/11...eyre-overpaid/
"Of course the real issue has nothing to do with sexism and everything to do with the fact that the WNBA simply isn’t very popular with Americans. For example, last month the WNBA averaged 250,000 viewers per game with a high of 378,000. Relative to the history of the league, this was an extraordinary success, up 39 percent from last year. By comparison, last year’s Professional Bowling League averaged 650,000 viewers for ESPN."
Right up there with watching paint dry.😉
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDoes this sound familiar? The WNBA was founded over 20 years ago, gets a ton of support from the NBA, yet it can't make money or get much traction going with a much more popular sport than soccer.
WNBA players are poorly paid https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidbe.../#1f5af0fa33eb
"In the past few weeks, a collection of WNBA stars have spoken out about pay in the WNBA. An incomplete list would include Liz Cambage, Kelsey Plum, Skyler Diggins-Smith, A'ja Wilson, Seimone Augustus, Kia Nurse, and ******** Griner. According to High Post Hoops, none of these players are paid more than $115,500 by the WNBA. Meanwhile, according to ESPN, the eight lowest paid players in the NBA in 2018-19 will be paid $838,464. And none of these players have even played in the NBA yet." Despite this disparity, the WNBA players are not being asked to be paid the same amount as an NBA player. What WNBA players keep emphasizing is that they want the WNBA to change the way the WNBA revenues are shared with its players."
The WNBA has lost an average of $10M a year since it started and average game attendance is declining https://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...2019/38809289/
The WNBA has less viewers than bowling https://thefederalist.com/2018/07/11...eyre-overpaid/
"Of course the real issue has nothing to do with sexism and everything to do with the fact that the WNBA simply isn’t very popular with Americans. For example, last month the WNBA averaged 250,000 viewers per game with a high of 378,000. Relative to the history of the league, this was an extraordinary success, up 39 percent from last year. By comparison, last year’s Professional Bowling League averaged 650,000 viewers for ESPN."
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[QUOTE=Unregistered;2538785]Until the sports are completely funded for and controlled by the government (which will hopefully never happen), you either have a successful business or not. If your business is a big time success then everyone makes more money. If it isn't then you make less money. I really wonder if the average american is so sympathetic to people who play games and make more than 100,000 per year doing it.......and if any of the athletes are not ecstatic with what they are doing and making then they have the option to find real jobs anywhere they can find one.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostUntil the sports are completely funded for and controlled by the government (which will hopefully never happen), you either have a successful business or not. If your business is a big time success then everyone makes more money. If it isn't then you make less money. I really wonder if the average american is so sympathetic to people who play games and make more than 100,000 per year doing it.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostBut they will shell out $100 or more per ticket to watch athletes who make $20M a year. Or they'll make a point of catching their home teams games on TV. Why? It - the big US sports - entertains them. In the US soccer to many isn't entertaining, or at least not entertaining enough to spend much of their limited time and funds.
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