Actually, the comparison to national teams is quite relevant. Why do you cheer for USA in the World Cup? They're not gonna win it anyway?
My team is shit right now and it was also shit 25 years ago. But hey, we won La Liga in 1999/2000 and it was a beautiful moment, a prize for all the suffering and hard work of the previous years. A fan of a top tier team is never going to experience something like that because they are used to succeed. A victory for them is the norm, a victory for us is something unique and very special.
Cuz unlike the Bolton Wanderers, the Cleveland Browns *could* actually win the title at some point. You don't have to relegate your dreams to the shitbasket permanently.Why do you Americans like socialism in sport so much anyway?
Why do you Americans like socialism in sport so much anyway?
Cuz unlike the Bolton Wanderers, the Cleveland Browns *could* actually win the title at some point. You don't have to relegate your dreams to the shitbasket permanently.
Cuz unlike the Bolton Wanderers, the Cleveland Browns *could* actually win the title at some point. You don't have to relegate your dreams to the shitbasket permanently.
Doesn't necessarily level the playing field. In nba it has certainly made things worse. Mlb which doesn't have a cap and only a few teams that pay luxury tax has a ton of parity despite this.Because it levels the playing field, adds parity, and makes the sports infinitely more exciting and dramatic to watch year to year.
EVERY sport. In the 80's and 90's certain teams started just throwing money at the best players in the goal of buying titles, and the respective leagues (in time) said "Nope", and instituted a salary cap. It was in the interest of preserving the integrity of the sport and giving every team a fair shot at being competitive.
Nobody is questioning why anyone is a fan of a middle-of-the-pack Euro football team, the question is more how do you stay motivated when the odds are so heavily against you winning any sort of title?
A lot of EuroGAF has chimed in with their personal reasons which is fine, it's just very hard to understand from a US point of view where playoffs and championships are the benchmark for success for our professional teams.
If we make it out of the group stage this year I will count it as a victory.
Cuz unlike the Bolton Wanderers, the Cleveland Browns *could* actually win the title at some point. You don't have to relegate your dreams to the shitbasket permanently.
Enforced parity would ruin the league system here and make the premier league incredibly dull.
I'm all for some more gentle corrections though.
PastorOfMuppets said:What I don't understand is why do teams that are on the B-tier continue to have fans. I know Everton for instance will never be bad enough to be relegated but they will also never be good enough to fight for the top spot unless some crazy Russian billionaire buys them and decides to go nuts.
The draft is a bad system, needed only because of the existence of College sports. In Europe, every team has an academy, and stars routinely come out of the most obscure teams. The problem lies with teams not having enough money to keep their stars - something which happens in US sports all the time, where players rarely retire at the team they're drafted in.
A salary cap (probably never coming), better revenue sharing (probably eventually coming), and more lucrative european places (I've long been a proponent of rolling the EL into the CL and have one mega european cup where the best 6-7 teams of each big league gets in) would go a long way to making european football more competitive, but please keep the draft out of any of these discussions.
If I didn't know what match this was from I would've thought something awful had happened to both teams here.
There, that should clear things!
You have to have a draft if you have a salary cap/revenue sharing because otherwise there's nothing stopping the richest teams from spending tons of money on identifying the best prospects, signing them (paying bonuses), and spending the most money on player development.
That's what's happened in pro baseball in the US (there's a draft for players from the US but signing international players was wide-open until a few years ago). Kids sign big contracts at 16 and then go to a baseball academy the team has setup in the Dominican Republic.
Doesn't necessarily level the playing field. In nba it has certainly made things worse. Mlb which doesn't have a cap and only a few teams that pay luxury tax has a ton of parity despite this.
You Americans like winners. Us Europeans like our hometowns. Consequently, we're going to be cheering for the teams of our city regardless of their performance. Not to mention that it's far more epic to see an underdog winning against a giant (see also: AUPA ATLETIC!).
Also, here teams are far more bounded to their land that in the US since you cannot buy and sell teams to different cities: Real Madrid is not going to become Real Bilbao just because some rich guy buys it.
However, I would love if there would be some kind of levelling mechanism in order to spread the wealth among the different teams inside a leage (or even the Champions Leage). That's a good American idea worth of being copied, me thinks.
A lot of people misinterpreted my question as "How come people don't just cheer for the best teams in a given sport?"
That's not what I meant to ask. The relegation mechanic in European soccer leagues allow for drama for the bottom feeder teams. You can see a team work its way from the D-League up to the A league over a period of several years like many other people have pointed out.
But only a few teams are subject to relegation every year. In the EPL, the bottom three get relegated and three from the Football League get promoted.
Meanwhile, at the very top of the league, you have an elite group of four or five teams that compete with each other to win the EPL crown.
The problem with that is that the EPL is a 20 team league. Slots 1-3 and 17-20 are the only ones that are worth watching over the long term. What about teams that are perennially in the 6-14 slots? They are never going to be bad enough to be relegated and never going to be good enough to win the championships. They have essentially stagnated in the middle and are competing for nothing.
North American sports has several different mechanisms that allow for teams to improve in the future and there is an expectation that a team that sucks now can be middle of the road later and maybe get over the hump. It may not necessarily happen but there's a realistic chance of it happening. And also the reverse. There's nothing currently in North American sports that resembles the 20 year run of dominance the Big Four have had in EPL or the ridiculous dominance of Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga (23 championships over 51 years).
The problem with that is that the EPL is a 20 team league. Slots 1-3 and 17-20 are the only ones that are worth watching over the long term. What about teams that are perennially in the 6-14 slots? They are never going to be bad enough to be relegated and never going to be good enough to win the championships. They have essentially stagnated in the middle and are competing for nothing.
If the difference is because of greed, it is the other way around. NA sports, clubs and Leagues are built and structured to generade profit. The parity is just a measure to reach that goal. In europe though, many of the teams main goals is to achieve succes, climb the ladder and win. Greed is a way to reach that goal, an order i very much approve of.What? A bad team has never been crowned champion. Yes, a Cinderella run happens from time to time, but the best team always ends up winning.
And the NHL probably has the most parity out of any league in the world at the moment. More parity is better for the sport in general. Europeans will likely never see it in their leagues due to greed.
I have no trouble understanding people supporting non-winning teams.
My issue in soccer is that mid level teams aren't exciting to watch. Soccer is such a difficult sport that unless its being played at a high level, it often just looks sloppy and amateurish most of the time.
FYI to all the Europeans here....
Americans support losing Teams here too, im getting an impression in this thread that people think Americans don't support home teams, there are many teams with great emotional support behind them but are not constantly on top or winning; (Knicks, Packers, Pacers, Devils, Celtics, Raiders, Mets, Cubs...etc)
two of the worst matches I have ever seen were this seasons games between Man U vs Chelsea and Arsenal vs Chelsea. Absolute dross.
Poor compared to the very rich clubs, but still top 25. Simply looking at income, there's no real reason why Ajax can't duplicate Atletico's success:
The problem with that is that the EPL is a 20 team league. Slots 1-3 and 17-20 are the only ones that are worth watching over the long term. What about teams that are perennially in the 6-14 slots? They are never going to be bad enough to be relegated and never going to be good enough to win the championships. They have essentially stagnated in the middle and are competing for nothing.
I have no trouble understanding people supporting non-winning teams.
My issue in soccer is that mid level teams aren't exciting to watch. Soccer is such a difficult sport that unless its being played at a high level, it often just looks sloppy and amateurish most of the time.
Why do you Americans like socialism in sport so much anyway?
i think the more pertinent question would be, how do you feel that your mid-table club has no fucking shot of ever winning the league? Every year it is the same fucking teams contending for the title.
I needed a team to play as in Football Manager years ago and didn't want to go the route where I could just buy every player with a big team.You support Blackburn Rovers...? I guess we can never truly be friends then.
Why in god's name did you choose to support them? Even if you're not from the UK?
i think the more pertinent question would be, how do you feel that your mid-table club has no fucking shot of ever winning the league? Every year it is the same fucking teams contending for the title.