Besthelboy
Banned
Where is Manchester United in CL this season? Oh right, they are not even in it as they finished outside top-4 last season in England.
We don't speak about last season.
Where is Manchester United in CL this season? Oh right, they are not even in it as they finished outside top-4 last season in England.
Have you guys even told them there's even deeper divisions in futbol than the second division? :lol
There are other reasons beyond money.
The logistics would be basically impossible, for one. England is the size of Alabama. Looking at the English football league set up, the top five are nationwide. Try having a fifth tier league in the US be nationwide - it's a practical nightmare. Where are you going to get the money to fly teams around? English teams can hop on a bus and be done. Heck, they can drive themselves.
So once you realise that it's practically impossible to have nationwide lower tier leagues, you start to hit the problem of exactly where the teams get relegated once they go down.
On top of this, the very nature of US sports (especially basketball and American football) make it incredibly hard to compete at a top level without the benefits that come with being at the top level. It's much easier (relatively speaking) for a lower tier soccer/football side compete against the top level - you can choose to stack your defence and counterattack, nullifying the skill/fitness advantage of your opponents. So when a lower tier team gets promoted to the top level, they're still able to compete to a certain degree. That's not going to happen in American sports.
Simply stating that money is the reason presents this idea that American sports owners are somehow more money driven than European football clubs, which doesn't really seem to be the case. Any league with private ownership is going to be money focused to a certain degree.
Well, time to put him on ignore then. Klinsmann is the worst.Jurgen Klinsmann has a GAF account?
Interesting
Germany for example (level in Roman numerals) :
I: Bundesliga (18 teams with heavy hitters like Dormund and Bayern)
II: 2. Bundesliga (18 teams)
III: 3. Liga (20 teams)
IV: Regionalliga (with four divisions constituting a total of 88 teams)
V: State leagues (too many teams)
VI: Lower state leagues (EVEN MOAR TEAMS)
Below the state association league system you have another 67 divisions and close to 1000 teams.
VII: Kreisliga
VIII: Kreisklasse A
IX : Kreisklasse B
X : Kreisklasse C
XI : Kreisklasse D
Soccer, we are pretty crazy about it in Europe
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I think hockey in Canada is probably just as wacky with the number of leagues, except all the smaller leagues are divided by age groups and region. It's probably the only North American sport that skips the college system entirely and your prospects for the major leagues start when you're like 10.Germany for example (level in Roman numerals) :
I: Bundesliga (18 teams with heavy hitters like Dormund and Bayern)
II: 2. Bundesliga (18 teams)
III: 3. Liga (20 teams)
IV: Regionalliga (with four divisions constituting a total of 88 teams)
V: State leagues (too many teams)
VI: Lower state leagues (EVEN MOAR TEAMS)
Below the state association league system you have another 67 divisions and close to 1000 teams.
VII: Kreisliga
VIII: Kreisklasse A
IX : Kreisklasse B
X : Kreisklasse C
XI : Kreisklasse D
Soccer, we are pretty crazy about it in Europe
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Maybe it's just me but I wouldn't call the team on the last place in the German Bundesliga a heavy hitter
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In 22 years of being formed for the EPL... Only 8 different teams have appeared in the Champsionship, And 33 out of those 44 teams have been the same 3 teams..
Promotions are boring in soccer. It often just leads to teams that aren't ready to compete at high levels that drop out again after one year. They become a tiny, tiny fish in a big pond with no chance to grow as any investment will be lost once they drop again.
Leicester City, Burnley and Queens Park Rangers got promoted to the Premier League last year. Burnley is highest ranked at 17, one spot above relegation. Hull City, one of the teams that got promoted a year earlier, is hooking up with Leicester and Queens Park Rangers to drop again. And this is in England, the country with about the healthiest second division in existence.
The concept of promotions and relegations should be looked over at the highest levels. For the level of the sport, stopping the system for the highest league with possibly a reduction in the number of teams in the highest league would be better. Even Germany, England, Spain, Italy and France can't support 20 high level teams, let alone countries like The Netherlands.
I don't feel that's the same. If the champions league was the only league then things might be different.Do a continental comparison and use the Champions League and EUROPA cup instead of just national leagues from specific countries across Europe.
I don't feel that's the same. If the champions league was the only league then things might be different.
I don't feel that's the same. If the champions league was the only league then things might be different.
I don't feel that's the same. If the champions league was the only league then things might be different.
There are other reasons beyond money.
The logistics would be basically impossible, for one. England is the size of Alabama. Looking at the English football league set up, the top five are nationwide. Try having a fifth tier league in the US be nationwide - it's a practical nightmare. Where are you going to get the money to fly teams around? English teams can hop on a bus and be done. Heck, they can drive themselves.
Maybe it's just me but I wouldn't call the team on the last place in the German Bundesliga a heavy hitter
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They're rare exceptions and that is already in the country with the highest investments, and even they usually don't do more than sit in the middle. The regular promoted teams have very little chance against the teams most people watch.The success of Swansea, Southampton, and to an extent West Ham completely contradict those ideas.
The vast majority of football clubs in England are local things which make very little money. Do you think Barrow Town F.C. does it primarily because football is a smart monetary investment?
I'm not saying it has the be like the champions league format or that I even know how the leagues could be fixed. The talent being far too concentrated is the problem though.I can't really imagine football if there was only Champions League and that's it. 32 teams in one competition and few hundred professional footballers and nothing else. Everyone in England support four teams, travel across Europe half the time to support your team and most people would never get into a stadium to want a game. There many weekends of emptiness that will have to be filled by something else. Rugby and cricket will have to pick up the slack.
Where is Manchester United in CL this season? Oh right, they are not even in it as they finished outside top-4 last season in England.
Germany for example (level in Roman numerals) :
I: Bundesliga (18 teams with heavy hitters like Dormund and Bayern)
II: 2. Bundesliga (18 teams)
III: 3. Liga (20 teams)
IV: Regionalliga (with four divisions constituting a total of 88 teams)
V: State leagues (too many teams)
VI: Lower state leagues (EVEN MOAR TEAMS)
Below the state association league system you have another 67 divisions and close to 1000 teams.
VII: Kreisliga
VIII: Kreisklasse A
IX : Kreisklasse B
X : Kreisklasse C
XI : Kreisklasse D
Soccer, we are pretty crazy about it in Europe
![]()
If you count NCAA and NAIA as the minor leagues of the NFL (32 teams), then you have:
NCAA Div. I-A (aka FBS) (128 schools)
NCAA Div. I-AA (aka FCS) (124 schools)
NCAA Div. II (170 schools)NCAA Div. I-AAA (aka No Football) (0 schools w/ football teams)
NCAA Div. III (245 schools)
NAIA (88 schools)
For a rough total of 755 collegiate teams. (These numbers will vary depending on the sport, mind you.)
Add on top of them all the high schools in the country as minor league below that, and you're looking at somewhere around 14,000 more teams (this can be fuzzy as small rural schools will play alternative formats like 8-man or 6-man).
This isn't even counting the mess of constantly forming and folding semi-pro and independent minor leagues and teams in North America. Though there are a few more stable minor leagues, that play slightly different formats, like the Canadian Football League (9 teams) and the Arena Football League (12 teams), the size of them and the lack of them should show just how much American professional sports rely on the high school and collegiate systems to farm talent. Hell, the NFL even eventually folded it's own European D-League.
The European system is a pretty capitalistic system with some shared revenue, but ultimately it's nearly aristocratic in the sense that the top teams stay on top forever with some exceptions. Sure, there are some Cinderella stories, but the majority of the teams below the top can barely make a (longterm) winning team when they don't get the big funds which are the international games. If football/soccer wasn't a sport which relied a good amount of luck, the difference between top clubs and the rest would be even more apparent.
But isn't that the same for United States, even more so? There can be no cinderella stories as lower league teams are not even allowed to compete against the big boys - even in any cup competitions? You look at Europe as a continent and the amount of top teams is significant in various sports. Champions League is the equivalent of NFL in American football where teams from different states/countries compete against one another. The difference is that in Europe the teams have to be champions or place high enough locally to gain access to the "superstar league". They have to maintain that edge every season or the door is shut to continental cups, and also risk relegation locally if they completely capitulate or fall into financial turmoil. Dortmund is 18th right now in Germany.
I don't think either way is automatically better, it's just a different approach.
It really feels like you're hand waving to dismiss arguments. NFL is not like champions league. There's plenty of people who follow the national league and care about that, champions league isn't the only thing that matters. You already admitted those leagues have one or two good teams which already proves the point of what people hate. I like parity and salary caps, not whoever can piss away the most money/ is the biggest city to win. You seem to only want to your champions league comparison due to physical size of America which isn't right. There's plenty of upsets and Cinderella stories in the current american leagues. There's no benefit what so ever to make most teams in a 30+ team league to always suck. There's literally no benefit to your system.But isn't that the same for United States, even more so? There can be no cinderella stories as lower league teams are not even allowed to compete against the big boys - even in any cup competitions? You look at Europe as a continent and the amount of top teams is significant in various sports. Champions League is the equivalent of NFL in American football where teams from different states/countries compete against one another. The difference is that in Europe the teams have to be champions or place high enough locally to gain access to the "superstar league". They have to maintain that edge every season or the door is shut to continental cups, and also risk relegation locally if they completely capitulate or fall into financial turmoil. Dortmund is 18th right now in Germany.
I don't think either way is automatically better, it's just a different approach.
why doesn't the Premier League have playoffs? season just kinda.... ends.
Ends with the best team over 38 games on top of the table, they are the campions.
That format is about the one thing the EPL gets right
Considering NFL has 32 teams it would be cool if they organised a knockout cup tournament in addition to the main season competition.
In the unlikely event that the top 2 (or top 3, 4 etc.) have the identical points, goals scored and goals conceded, then only in that ever so rare scenario would a play off occur.
And anyway we have the thrill of play-offs from other competitions like the FA Cup, League Cup and European competitions. Best of both worlds.
They're rare exceptions and that is already in the country with the highest investments, and even they usually don't do more than sit in the middle. The regular promoted teams have very little chance against the teams most people watch.
Sure, in the States, a league of 32 teams is closed. Sorry Seattle, no NBA games for ya. However, within the league everybody has a fair shot to the playoffs, and the mechanism for a tad more equality are well proven (salary cap, rookie draft).
In Europe, money is everything. The reason why the Champions League isn't as one-sided as the national leagues is because the top teams are so overpowered in their national league that they have reached diminishing revenue level on international level. Following the development though, I won't be surprised if the CL gets more and more one-sided within the next two decades. That's how it works with capitalism when there aren't any strong regulations.
This a great point although the cups have kind of lost their appeal
Because it punishes the fans for shit they have no control over.
America embraces Sports socialism--salary caps, revenue sharing, luxury taxes, public funding of stadiums.
Seems like all of them to me, going by attendances and the atmosphere at recent finals.
Pro/reg forces more player movement than needed. I'm sure some of Dimitar Berbatov, Neil Etheridge, Matthew Briggs, John Heitinga, John Arne Riise, Damien Duff, Steve Sidwell, Giorgos Karagounis, Mali Mahamadou Diarra, Derek Boateng, Charles Banya, Dino Islamović, Ronny Minkwitz, Max Oberschmidt, Josh Pritchard, and Alex Brister might have stayed at Fulham had they not been relegated. With that kind of turnover (and the reverse for promoted teams,) it's barely even the same team.
The FA Cup final actually sells out the second biggest stadium in Europe every year.
2014 attendance: 89,300
2013: 86,300 (for a game between two historically smaller clubs)
2012: 89,100
2011: 88,600
2010: 88,300
2009: 89,400
and so on
Why do you think they exist in England? For the good of the people? Do you think Glazer ran Manchester United for charity?
I'm doing a version of this in NCAA Football 14
ACC/American
SEC/Sun Belt
Big Ten/MAC
PAC12/MWC
Big 12/C-USA
Lowest of the power conference and champ of the non-power conference switch.
It would make the non-power championship games and end of the season games between power conference also-rans more exciting, but it would never happen.
That's a good point. It's unlikely for teams like United to be relegated, but not qualifying for the CL is kind of the equivalent of that for a big club. Chelsea of course only qualified for the CL in 2012 by winning it, and the first few seasons of City's big money they weren't qualifying and even after qualifying they've found it very difficult to compete.
But isn't that the same for United States, even more so? There can be no cinderella stories as lower league teams are not even allowed to compete against the big boys - even in any cup competitions? You look at Europe as a continent and the amount of top teams is significant in various sports. Champions League is the equivalent of NFL in American football where teams from different states/countries compete against one another. The difference is that in Europe the teams have to be champions or place high enough locally to gain access to the "superstar league". They have to maintain that edge every season or the door is shut to continental cups, and also risk relegation locally if they completely capitulate or fall into financial turmoil. Dortmund is 18th right now in Germany.
I don't think either way is automatically better, it's just a different approach.