NorthDakota
Grandson of Loomis
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Sit down.
It's a top ten in the world league now dude... which considering where it was 15 years ago is astonishing...
Makes sense. I’ve seen the women from that state. I’d need a lot of beer also.
I'm glad to see Ibra come to the MLS.
I'll be even happier when the MLS is no longer seen as a final large pay day for players who can't hack it in Europe anymore.
The ultimate for me would be an MLS team winning CONCACAF.
I'm glad to see Ibra come to the MLS.
I'll be even happier when the MLS is no longer seen as a final large pay day for players who can't hack it in Europe anymore.
The ultimate for me would be an MLS team winning CONCACAF.
Top 10? MLS is probably closer to 20th.
La Liga
EPL
Bundesliga
Serie A
Ligue 1
Primeira Liga
Eredivisie
Russian Premier League
Super Lig
Swiss Super League
Superliga
Brasilerao
Liga MX
I'd put all of these leagues comfortably ahead while all of the Big 5 second-tier leagues ahead, as well.
Replace Swiss Super League with MLS and Superliga (guessing Denmark?) with Argentina and there is your top 10. 20th maybe 10 years ago. Hard to say Liga Mx is top 10 and MLS is maybe top 20 when our best MLS teams just owned the best Liga Mx teams.
English Championship is top 10 top quality too. Might be ahead of Argentina.
Kind of hard to take you serious when you say it isn't close... it's arguable, MAYBE, but they are usually ranked in the top ten these days when you see these lists and such... it's not some crazy statement, and it's growing/climbing faster than any league anywhere... this should be a good thing, not some idea that is met with scorn by American soccer fans.
Of course MLS is growing that is plainly obvious. I'm agnostic about the league so I don't really care either way. I'm just pointing out calling it a Top 10 league in the world really isn't based in any concrete evidence. But you're right, there are a few clickbait articles that say MLS is in the Top 10.
1) The bulk of the top scorers and all-stars are past their prime, or over 30 years old. This is arguably a larger problem for MLS today than it was 5-7 years ago.
2) Zlatan easing his way into retirement with a 95% pay cut is evidence MLS is not a top-tier league.
3) A lack of promising young talent isn't befit of a top 10 league. This is made even worse with point #1 above. The top young MLS players right now are worth ~$3 million or so on the open market. Compared to say a bottom of the Top 10 league like the Eredivisie the contrast in talented youth is enormous.
4) The league is growing within North America (attendance, especially) but arguably is expanding too quickly with more clubs and diluting its product.
5) Many of the financials surrounding MLS are terrible and will prevent it from taking the next step as a league--see Cyle Larin walking away to Besiktas for mere peanuts. Until this changes there is ceiling for the league, which I'd argue, they are fast approaching on a global competition comparison.
6) Using FiveThirtyEight's global club rankings the top MLS team, Toronto FC, comes in at #213 sandwiched between Argentinos Juniors (currently 11th in the Argentinian league) and Brentford (currently 11th in the Championship). There are only 4 MLS teams in the top 300 world rankings. For leagues in the conversation on the Top 10 fringe there are 5 Mexican, 6 Dutch, 15 Argentinian, 4 English Championship, 7 Turkish, and 10 La Liga 2 clubs all ranked ahead of Toronto.
I think most Americans who follow soccer closely know the MLS isn't a top 10 league and that it'll take more than 20 years to approach that level. It could take another 30 years and that's not a knock on the MLS as much as it is respect to the other leagues that are operating in better systems, with more history and more talent.
1. Wrong. The average age of the golden boot winner going back to 2012 is 28, which I suspect is about the average for any league. This year that trend will continue barring injury with Josef Martinez.
2. To me that shows the league’s progress. 5 years ago they’d give him a 20 million dollar contract.
3. This is also wrong. These are outdated narratives. In the last year alone MLS has sold young players to Barcelona and Manchester City and as you state begrudgingly to Besikitas just to name a couple. RBNY just turned down a transfer offer from Dortmund for Tyler Adams and Atlanta turned down a 25 million offer from Arsenal for Almiron. NYC turned down an offer from Sevilla for Villa.
4. I won’t argue this one. I don’t think new clubs are the problem though, I think it is old ones such as the Rapids and Revs.
5. Disagree with your first point that the financials are terrible but the overall single entity league structure holding it back I do agree with.
6. 538’s formula can’t be used for a new league like MLS and honestly it’s pretty awful for soccer as a whole.
I can see MLS being just outside the top 10 but it’s hard to accruately gauge because MLS now is a completely different stratosphere than even 4 years ago. For instance, I think MLS has surpassed Liga MX this year. I think they’ve surpassed Argentina because MLS is pillaging their league for any promising young talent. In fact Argentina’s league is in deep deep financial trouble but that’s a whole other topic in and of itself. Will those trends continue? It sure seems MLS will continue to rise.
the narrative that MLS is still the retirement home for aging Euro stars where PR > soccer.
So LAFC ain’t no joke. They are very entertaining to watch.
I hope you stuck it out ACamp...
Holy shit Zlatan.