The NASL/NPSL have announced the creation of their new DIII league and are working on debuting in 2018.
http://midfieldpress.com/2017/06/06...onal-soccer-league-expects-to-launch-in-2018/
My opinion of the NASL has been in a downward spiral the last 18 months, but this actually makes me sit up and notice. Their decentralized vision of pro/rel system was never going to work from the top down. Too much initial capital required for such a risky venture against a major competitor in MLS.
But if this D3 league can get off the ground quickly, they seem to have a pretty good plan. It has low overhead ($1.5-$3 million yearly budget) and reasonable attendance/revenue targets.
Their vision for the pyramid then looks approximately like this:
D2 - NASL (20 teams, single table)
D3 - NISL (24 teams, two insular conferences with two divisions each)
D4 - NPSL (probably a pro-version of this regional amateur league)
If, and this may be a big if, the NISL gets off the ground quickly, I would think that's a much more attractive option to D3-level investors than the USL version. One of the draws of D2 USL is a comfortable onramp to becoming an MLS expansion team. These D3 investors don't have visions of paying the $150 million MLS expansion fee anytime soon.
Now letting my imagination run, if the NISL can beat out USL D3, the NASL pyramid will gain a stranglehold on the the grassroots movement. USL D2 will be undercut a bit and starts to look even more like a reserve league by comparison, which snowballs the NISL signups. The cream of the NISL crop finally gives the NASL a pool of quality orgs to promote/expand with.
Good move, NASL. Let's see if they make it happen.
http://midfieldpress.com/2017/06/06...onal-soccer-league-expects-to-launch-in-2018/
My opinion of the NASL has been in a downward spiral the last 18 months, but this actually makes me sit up and notice. Their decentralized vision of pro/rel system was never going to work from the top down. Too much initial capital required for such a risky venture against a major competitor in MLS.
But if this D3 league can get off the ground quickly, they seem to have a pretty good plan. It has low overhead ($1.5-$3 million yearly budget) and reasonable attendance/revenue targets.
Their vision for the pyramid then looks approximately like this:
D2 - NASL (20 teams, single table)
D3 - NISL (24 teams, two insular conferences with two divisions each)
D4 - NPSL (probably a pro-version of this regional amateur league)
If, and this may be a big if, the NISL gets off the ground quickly, I would think that's a much more attractive option to D3-level investors than the USL version. One of the draws of D2 USL is a comfortable onramp to becoming an MLS expansion team. These D3 investors don't have visions of paying the $150 million MLS expansion fee anytime soon.
Now letting my imagination run, if the NISL can beat out USL D3, the NASL pyramid will gain a stranglehold on the the grassroots movement. USL D2 will be undercut a bit and starts to look even more like a reserve league by comparison, which snowballs the NISL signups. The cream of the NISL crop finally gives the NASL a pool of quality orgs to promote/expand with.
Good move, NASL. Let's see if they make it happen.