Re: Garrett Gilbert
Posted: Sat Feb 02, 2019 2:16 pm
JasonB wrote:So I'll call this.
In 5 years, MLS will be way beyond the NHL as the fourth major league in the US.
MLS could be more popular if they would add more teams.
JasonB wrote:So I'll call this.
In 5 years, MLS will be way beyond the NHL as the fourth major league in the US.
JasonB wrote:Cincy this year, Austin and Nashville next year, and then Miami the year after that.
The last team added, Atlanta 2 years ago, won the championship last season while averaging over 50K per game in attendance.
Peruna94&07 wrote:We are probably the only d1 college to have a soccer homecoming.
We should embrace the MLS as ours
Well with Luchi in charge, hopefully some more SMU folk will test their knowledge of the upper reaches of the Tollway.
Starting with the Bayern Munich under 23s team playing on Saturday at 2PM. Pity the cold will be back by then but hopefully we will get some folks out for it. Preseason MLS does not get a lot of attention but seeing one of our own suit up for the Germans after they bought him should be appreciated.
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JasonB wrote:Mustangsabu wrote:It’s time to just embrace Major League Soccer.
Deep down y’all know it’s true.
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So I'll call this.
In 5 years, MLS will be way beyond the NHL as the fourth major league in the US.
A huge stink has been raised over the past year about the US failing to qualify for the world cup, and rightfully so.
That said, we are about to enter a golden age of US soccer that we have never seen before. Fans of soccer in the US are going to quickly adopt the US as their team and grow attached to US stars, and the sport is going to mainstream quickly, at an even faster pace than it has over the last 10 years. The players just starting their careers right now at 18-20 years old in Eurpoe at top clubs are outstanding (Weah, Pulisic, McKinney, Adams, Sargent, etc). And the next round of players at the U-20 and U-17 levels are even better and deeper. The profile of the US player is going to rise significantly, and we have already seen that in recent transfer fees.
On top of that, the instant success Tyler Adams has had at Leipzig after his transfer from RBNY brings major credibility to MLS as a league. Almeron will do the same at Newcastle. The revenue MLS brings in with these transfers over the next 5 years is going to enable clubs to even further invest in their youth acadamies, will significantly increase the popularity of the league, and over the next 10 years, MLS will transition from a selling league to a buying league, becoming one of the top leagues in the world.
There has been a bunch of talk about soccer catching on in the US since the 70s. The evolution of MLS has been slow, but consistent. Soccer in the US is just about to hit the hockey stick growth that was anticipated to happen eventually for the past 40 years.
78pony wrote:JasonB wrote:Mustangsabu wrote:It’s time to just embrace Major League Soccer.
Deep down y’all know it’s true.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
So I'll call this.
In 5 years, MLS will be way beyond the NHL as the fourth major league in the US.
A huge stink has been raised over the past year about the US failing to qualify for the world cup, and rightfully so.
That said, we are about to enter a golden age of US soccer that we have never seen before. Fans of soccer in the US are going to quickly adopt the US as their team and grow attached to US stars, and the sport is going to mainstream quickly, at an even faster pace than it has over the last 10 years. The players just starting their careers right now at 18-20 years old in Eurpoe at top clubs are outstanding (Weah, Pulisic, McKinney, Adams, Sargent, etc). And the next round of players at the U-20 and U-17 levels are even better and deeper. The profile of the US player is going to rise significantly, and we have already seen that in recent transfer fees.
On top of that, the instant success Tyler Adams has had at Leipzig after his transfer from RBNY brings major credibility to MLS as a league. Almeron will do the same at Newcastle. The revenue MLS brings in with these transfers over the next 5 years is going to enable clubs to even further invest in their youth acadamies, will significantly increase the popularity of the league, and over the next 10 years, MLS will transition from a selling league to a buying league, becoming one of the top leagues in the world.
There has been a bunch of talk about soccer catching on in the US since the 70s. The evolution of MLS has been slow, but consistent. Soccer in the US is just about to hit the hockey stick growth that was anticipated to happen eventually for the past 40 years.
Goodness someone get JasonB some smelling salts and call 911. The lad has lost his everloving mind. The American public will settle in for a Simpson's marathon before giving a couple of hours, plus whatever time the crooked ref who won't show his watch, says to put on at the end (yet he won't tell until he roots his little whistle and says enough.
ponyboy wrote:It would be nice to experience cold for once up there in Toyota Stadium.
JasonB wrote:Mustangsabu wrote:It’s time to just embrace Major League Soccer.
Deep down y’all know it’s true.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
So I'll call this.
In 5 years, MLS will be way beyond the NHL as the fourth major league in the US.
A huge stink has been raised over the past year about the US failing to qualify for the world cup, and rightfully so.
That said, we are about to enter a golden age of US soccer that we have never seen before. Fans of soccer in the US are going to quickly adopt the US as their team and grow attached to US stars, and the sport is going to mainstream quickly, at an even faster pace than it has over the last 10 years. The players just starting their careers right now at 18-20 years old in Eurpoe at top clubs are outstanding (Weah, Pulisic, McKinney, Adams, Sargent, etc). And the next round of players at the U-20 and U-17 levels are even better and deeper. The profile of the US player is going to rise significantly, and we have already seen that in recent transfer fees.
On top of that, the instant success Tyler Adams has had at Leipzig after his transfer from RBNY brings major credibility to MLS as a league. Almeron will do the same at Newcastle. The revenue MLS brings in with these transfers over the next 5 years is going to enable clubs to even further invest in their youth acadamies, will significantly increase the popularity of the league, and over the next 10 years, MLS will transition from a selling league to a buying league, becoming one of the top leagues in the world.
There has been a bunch of talk about soccer catching on in the US since the 70s. The evolution of MLS has been slow, but consistent. Soccer in the US is just about to hit the hockey stick growth that was anticipated to happen eventually for the past 40 years.
leopold wrote:I’d argue the bigger threat is MMA.
It has all the violence and physicality of football with less of a risk. It’s grown faster with women, can be practiced in some manner all your life, and has a more practical application than football, considering it’s use as self-defense. Heck, Trey Quinn was leading the country in receptions and said he dreamed of being an MMA fighter.