Posted on

Achieving #ProRel Part 1

Blog Achieving ProRel
Responsive image
by Dean Mitchell
@SportsHCtweets
@sportshistorycollectibles
I

t seems so simple. MLS detractors post derogatory statements about everything that they hate about the league with the hashtag #ProRel. I guess they think this alone constitutes a plan and it’s the simple solution that will bring success and riches to all. I suspect many are young and never witnessed the soccer dumpster fire before MLS. They demonize MLS Single Entity and SUM and paint them as an evil cabal that’s hoarding all the riches. To me, those were brilliant plans to create a viable league that wouldn’t go bankrupt like each and every pro soccer league before it. They solved a problem and created a sustainable pro league. 

After 27 years maybe it’s time to take off the training wheels and grow into a world class league—but in an American way. There are many Promotion/Relegation proponents, but there aren’t many problem solvers with actual plans on how to achieve it. 280 character snarky tweets are easy but the devil is in the details. 

ACHIEVING PROREL: PART 1

I’d like to see us get there, but I never want the sport to return to the dark ages of teams folding left and right. What works in England (and developed over 130 years) doesn’t automatically work in the US and Canada. Pragmatically, how could we get there? Lets consider just a few of the myriad obstacles Promotion/Relegation would need to hurdle:

sidebar image
    1. MLS is in 2 countries, not just the USA. Logistically challenging to say the least (see item #7 below for more). This would involve federations in 2 countries to come to an agreement.

    2. How many Div 2 teams have the financial ability to ramp up to D-1 level? The TV Revenue reward isn’t there yet so the bank account needs to be substantial. Pro soccer cannot afford to have under-funded teams folding mid season. How many Div 2 teams have 18,000+ seat stadiums (or a game-plan to ramp up quickly?). Ideally, for ProRel to be feasible, USL Championship would need 12-18 teams “Ascension-ready”.  This could actually force the issue.

    3. TV revenue needs to grow and become more significant. Ideally, that revenue would be distributed like the EPL or NFL in which all teams receive an equal portion (No separate deals for Super Teams that plagues many of the world’s leagues). 

    4. MLS Equity: Face it, MLS owners invested huge sums stabilizing the pro game and building Soccer Specific Stadiums (SSS). How do you compensate these pioneers? Especially Philip Anschutz and Hunt Sports who propped up the league with millions of dollars until it was able to stand on its own. Here’s my humble opinion on how that split might happen.

      1. After establishing that #ProRel will be added to MLS, a date should be established when the league will split, giving teams 4-5 years to plan and adjust (this date could be pushed back if goals are not being met).

      2. Upon that date, MLS cashes out to all its owners/investors and single entity ceases to exist. Figuring this out will be very difficult and litigious. Single entity was neccesary to establish the league and not follow the un-controlled spending path of its failed predecessor, the North American Soccer League (NASL). Maintaining a salary cap would be essential to survival of the North American pro game.

      3. The top 24-32 MLS teams would start Y1 of “MLS Premier”. Personally, I prefer the lower number and a more balanced schedule.

      4. The remaining bottom of MLS teams would relegate to “MLS Championship”. Of course, parachute payments, similar to EPL teams would be paid to relegated MLS teams to help compensate with this transition. These parachute payments would be a permanent part of the plan for relegated teams, otherwise they run the risk of folding like many Mexican teams have.

      5. The American Sports league concept of Indemnity (protection against new teams encroaching on a market) would need to go away—For example, if we wind up having 3 “MLS Premier” teams playing in a metro area like Dallas, so be it.

    5. 12-18 USL Championship teams who meet the D-1 criteria would round out the MLS Championship (D2). To buy in to the equity MLS has established, they would be required to pay a large entrance fee like the ABA teams did when they were absorbed into the NBA (and likewise, when WHA teams joined the NHL). This would basically be a merger forced by a challenger league. The NBA, NHL and NFL all thrived after similar peace treaty absorptions. None of the major sports leagues in North America have taken on such an ambitious merger though.

    6. Q: When would we be ready for this?  A: When there are between 48 and 64 teams that are “first-division-worthy” between USL and MLS.  Every team in England’s second division meets this criteria. In Mexico, their second division “Liga Expansion” only has one of its sixteen teams rated as worthy of Ascension—Leones Negros of Guadalajara. Mexico stopped Promotion/Relegation largely because of this issue.

    7. Back to the Canadian Teams:

      1. Should they leave MLS and create a similar ProRel in Canada with the Canadian Premier League? That would be a very small league, Canada’s  “Premier League” boasts eight teams. Adding 3 teams makes eleven, now split that in half and you see where I’m going with this. Figuring this out will be very difficult and litigious.

      2. If so, how will they be compensated for losing Equity MLS Membership? Toronto FC certainly deserves to be recognized as the first great expansion team in MLS that launched the current Golden Era. There could be a US benefit: This could create 3 spaces for additional US markets in “MLS Premier” but it would be very costly to the deserving Canadian teams in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto.

    8. How many teams are Promoted/Relegated? Should it be 3 like in England or as little as 1 like in Mexico (until recently)? Or maybe how the Bundelisga does it, the top two teams in the lower division ascend and the 3rd place team plays the 16th place Bundesliga team in a play-in to determine who gets the third spot. I’d prefer three. Painfully, the MLS Cup will need to be eliminated which means the traditional playoff format would disappear and the Supporters Shield would determine the Champion. Hey you asked for ProRel didn’t you? I don’t think playoff races and relegation races should compete, do you?

    9. Consider this, before blowing everything up in a #ProRel vacuum, are there lessons to be learned from similar domestic leagues (development-wise) who have already solved this problem that we can emulate (A-League or J-League for example?)

    10. Finally, if ProRel actually happens will the eurosnobs leave their barstools and couches to actually support MLS? I have my doubts. But, there is a much larger percentage of the American soccer culture that might really like it. 

I am pretty happy with MLS as it is now after seeing every team I previously ever cared about fold and disappear. I love the stability it has brought to the game. But, I also believe that there are plenty of forward thinking soccer fans in North America that would like to see an American version of the soccer pyramid. 

NEXT: ACHIEVING PROREL: PART 2

In Part 2 I will offer up examples of an alternative history had ProRel been in place the past decade and the consequences it would have created to the growth of the sport.

Posted on

MLS Raises Soccer Out Of The Graveyard.

Responsive image
by Dean Mitchell
@SportsHCtweets
@sportshistorycollectibles
M

ajor League Soccer is now 25 years old. It’s far and away the best effort at establishing the game in North America.

Significantly, MLS has brought the game out of a perennial survival mode—something no other league before it could say.

All of our major Sports Leagues had growing pains. MLS is light years ahead of where the NBA, NFL, NHL etc. were at 25 years of age. There are over 15 Soccer specific stadiums across the USA and Canada and another 6 under construction. MLS Franchises are going for $300 million as the expansion era is coming to a close.

North American soccer was long described as an alphabet soup of failed leagues. Rightly so, every single attempt at pro soccer had failed. The jury was out if the sport would ever survive (let alone thrive).

Young soccer fans in the US and Canada don’t realize how good they have it, having grown up with an intact league as long as they can remember. Love it or hate it, MLS has always been there for you. My generation got hooked on the game only to have the rug pulled out from under us. I was 25 when the NASL went belly up in 1985 and it sucked. 7 years later, the MISL folded too (Indoor, but another soccer epic collapse).

The Soccer Graveyard kept growing as every attempt to create a top-flight league failed. The USA, APSL, WSA, WSL, A-League all filled in as best they could, mainly run by soccer people with their hearts in the right place—but no deep pockets. Soccer “nerds” like me were scoffed at for following a “bush-league sport that will never make it”. Don’t even ask about getting a game on TV or to get a bartender to switch to a game from a “real sport”.

During the “Dark Ages Era” (’85-’95) there were definitely some success stories along the way but in the end—they all failed at establishing a fifth major league sport. Efforts to revitalize NASL brands would ultimately give teams like the Timbers, Rowdies, Sounders, Whitecaps and Earthquakes legacies lasting over 40 years—the dream never really died in these NASL strongholds.

By the 1996 Launch of MLS the consensus was: “If the upstart league failed, the sport would never succeed here”. Certainly another big-time attempt would be decades away. After a splashy inaugural year, MLS settled into a slow downward spiral and even briefly folded in 2001—only to be revived the next day. By this point, Philip Anschutz owned and operated 7 of the 10 franchises—sustaining the league for half a decade. Had Anschutz gotten hit by a bus or lost interest, we certainly wouldn’t be celebrating MLS’s 25th Anniversary.

We’d be served up with, well, more Alphabet soup.

Posted on

#SportsHistoryBlog Salutes: GoodSeatsStillAvailable.com

SportsHistoryBlog Salutes
Responsive image
by Dean Mitchell
@SportsHCtweets
@sportshistorycollectibles
W

hen we first created SportsHistoryCollectibles.com our mission was: To showcase our memorabilia from all the leagues that thrived, failed and shaped the North American sports landscape of today. Along the way we found a few like-minded sites, sites that are distinctly different yet kindred-spirits in our mission to keep these stories alive.

One of my favorites is GoodSeatsStillAvailable.com. Host Tim Hanlon covers every angle, from how the majors became “Majors” to Pro Bowling, pro volleyball, soccer and more. His attention to the marketing and business side of pro sports is incredibly interesting.

Tim’s passion for this “lost” sports history dates back to his unmitigated childhood love affair with the (original) New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League. Seeing the world’s best players in this intriguing new sport really made an impression. Tim had spread his allegiances to the upstart Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) New Jersey Rockets), the United States Football League (USFL) New Jersey Generals and the fledgling Major Indoor Lacrosse League (MILL) 1988 Champion New Jersey Saints. Each time, teams folded and slipped into oblivion.

Tim resurrects these memories on his many podcasts. He has over 165 episodes, each with an interesting guest. Some of my favorites include:

EPISODE 163:
Once Again, The XFL Is Done (Or Is It?) – With ESPN’s Kevin Seifert

EPISODE 159:
Chronicling Pro Sports’ “Major” Leagues – With Tom Brucato

EPISODE 158:
“Stealing” Dodger Stadium – With Eric Nusbaum

EPISODE 138:
The International Volleyball Association – With Jay Hanseth

EPISODE 141:
The National Bowling League – With Dr. Jake Schmidt

EPISODE #31:
Indoor Soccer’s Wichita Wings With Mike Romalis And Tim O’Bryhim

EPISODE #92:
“Retro” Pro Lacrosse History – With Steve Holroyd & Dave Coleman

EPISODE 132:
ABA Basketball Memories – With Hall Of Famer Dan Issel

EPISODE #02:
Sports Executive Andy Crossley & The WPS Boston Breakers

As you can see, Tim’s been very busy. Like us, he’s come a long way since launching in 2017.

Check out one of his podcast about a team you really cared about that’s gone—or learn about one you never knew existed.

GOODSEATSSTILLAVAILABLE.COM
WAS CREATED BY HOST TIM HANLON AS A TRIBUTE TO DEFUNCT TEAMS AND LEAGUES
Posted on

Welcome Sports Fans!

Welcome Sports Fans
Responsive image
by Dean Mitchell
@SportsHCtweets
@sportshistorycollectibles
T

his inaugural post of #SportsHistoryBlog is an exciting new project for me personally, I’ve never taken an Editorial approach but I love to talk about this stuff with like-minded people. I want to share what I love about Sports and what certain things mean from my personal perspective.

My father and I were concerned about our vast collection of Sports memorabilia stashed away in our garages and attics. “What if either of us were to pass away and our significant others tossed it all in a recycling bin? ” We’d talked for years about selling these treasures and ensuring every item found a good home.

In 2017, we created SportsHistoryCollectibles.com. Featuring Programs, Media Guides, Magazines, Ticket Stubs etc. from  Football, Baseball, Basketball, Hockey and a huge selection of Soccer inventory is arguably the best of it’s kind, there isn’t anything like it out there.

We library these items and strive to be a resource for North American media coverage of leagues and eras you can’t find anywhere else. Browse the articles—even if you aren’t looking to buy. Long after it is sold fans and historians can reference our documented history. You’ll notice how we photograph each item—way more than just an eBay cover shot—you can actually read the stories and re-live the events.

I look forward to sharing with fans and historians and getting your feedback. Please be sure to Subscribe and share these posts with like-minded sportsaholics.

WE CREATED THIS SITE TO SHARE OUR LOVE FOR SPORTS AND TO FIND GOOD HOMES FOR ALL OF OUR COLLECTIBLES