Economists ate good at explaining why things happened, they are just as bad as the rest of us at predicting what will happen.This article with an interview with an economist who studies soccer from the Hudson River Blue blog was very interesting. It discusses the CBA but for me the most interesting part was the discussion of how he believes MLS will never compete on the world level for talent absent relegation. In short he thinks the other US major sports leagues get by without relegation because they have no serious competition for talent world wide. Because soccer is different, he thinks the incentive system of relegation will be needed eventually to let MLS push into the top tiers of world soccer.
I'm not sure that's right but it made me think about things in a different way and that's always useful.
EXCLUSIVE: Stefan Szymanski of Soccernomics talks dollars, data, & why MLS isn't "major"
HA, i only last 45 seconds before I got nauseous.If they go on strike, it's not the end of the world. These guys can go on tour.
http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/ae3520fc56/we-re-better-than-the-best-by-the-mls-all-stars
This article with an interview with an economist who studies soccer from the Hudson River Blue blog was very interesting. It discusses the CBA but for me the most interesting part was the discussion of how he believes MLS will never compete on the world level for talent absent relegation. In short he thinks the other US major sports leagues get by without relegation because they have no serious competition for talent world wide. Because soccer is different, he thinks the incentive system of relegation will be needed eventually to let MLS push into the top tiers of world soccer.
I'm not sure that's right but it made me think about things in a different way and that's always useful.
EXCLUSIVE: Stefan Szymanski of Soccernomics talks dollars, data, & why MLS isn't "major"
Yeah For the most part he is wrong about how sports are wrong about how sports are wrong in this country and seems to be least about the way to make a profit and more about "do it the way I know that works you fucking Americans".This article with an interview with an economist who studies soccer from the Hudson River Blue blog was very interesting. It discusses the CBA but for me the most interesting part was the discussion of how he believes MLS will never compete on the world level for talent absent relegation. In short he thinks the other US major sports leagues get by without relegation because they have no serious competition for talent world wide. Because soccer is different, he thinks the incentive system of relegation will be needed eventually to let MLS push into the top tiers of world soccer.
I'm not sure that's right but it made me think about things in a different way and that's always useful.
EXCLUSIVE: Stefan Szymanski of Soccernomics talks dollars, data, & why MLS isn't "major"
The guy has points but for the most is wrong in how to operate a league in North AmericaHow in the world does pro/rel have anything to do with economics? Sure it causes competitive nature and that might cause some increase in viewers but I doubt even that. What a stupid stupid argument.
The heart of the matter is can the owners or the players survive a strike. The owners. But maybe free agency isn't as important as having to rewind marketing plan 5 years. Next week is crunch time.
What parts do you disagree with?The guy has points but for the most is wrong in how to operate a league in North America
Oh yeah, I agree about that article, I thought you were disagreeing with the Twellman piece.My biggest problem is him saying pro/rel would work in the U.S. , that is asinine. Going on a rant about who single-entity is so bad yet the riches leagues in the world have some form of single none have promotion/relegation. Does MLS need to open up? You can look back and see I have said they need to spend more but in the way the other leagues do. To be able to compete with the European (association) football we don't need to be more like the European leagues, we need to be more like the other American sports leagues. Drive parity trough revenue tie the cap AND a floor to that and that way it won't matter if you have free-agency you are controlling the cost while allowing the spending that the league need to expand and grow.
Oh nah Twellman is on point.Oh yeah, I agree about that article, I thought you were disagreeing with the Twellman piece.
Thats not true. 80% of the owners are other sports owners, are billionaires. Very few owners will lose their shirt if MLS completely tanked. So with that in mind, the players are the ones that would have to play in NASL, abroad or just go get a real job. So I think that thinking is wrong.Oh nah Twellman is on point.
Edit: well there is this
THE MLS owners that will lose there shirts are the RSL union and Crew owners who are millionairesThats not true. 80% of the owners are other sports owners, are billionaires. Very few owners will lose their shirt if MLS completely tanked. So with that in mind, the players are the ones that would have to play in NASL, abroad or just go get a real job. So I think that thinking is wrong.
The only hope we have is that the owners like what their doing and are willing to bend so they can keep their toy-hobby business going.
RSL owner is a billionaire real estate mogul, so no.THE MLS owners that will lose there shirts are the RSL union and Crew owners who are millionaires
Losing a few 100 mill is going to hurt these, not that I'm crying for them, but it would hurt.RSL owner is a billionaire real estate mogul, so no.
Union is owned by a billionaire venture capitalist, so no
Crew? Chicago? probably.