View Full Version : Florida needs a team
Flsoccerdude
09 Oct 2002, 03:13 PM
Florida should get a team. The state host a large # of soccer fans and I think that we have almost ne thing it needs. We've had teams befor but they got cut for who knows what.
ax319
09 Oct 2002, 03:26 PM
There are plenty of posts already on this topic, we dont need another one.
Preston McMurry
09 Oct 2002, 05:47 PM
Only 65 posts and someone already died and made you moderator?
Flsoccerdude
10 Oct 2002, 09:20 AM
wtf is ur prob. i posted it because it has to do with that subject and because it bothers a holes like u
now dont post if u aint on subject ********* and thanks for backing me up
UnitedNut
10 Oct 2002, 09:56 AM
Originally posted by Flsoccerdude
Florida should get a team. The state host a large # of soccer fans and I think that we have almost ne thing it needs. We've had teams befor but they got cut for who knows what.
More than likely MLS will return to Tampa....*if* local ownership or league investors can be found. Tampa has a huge youth soccer organization that was supportive of both the Rowdies of the NASL and the Mutiny. Will just come down to whether or not a local owner or ownership group can step up.
CeltTexan
10 Oct 2002, 10:05 AM
Florida is a joke!
Houston had one of the original franchises back in '95. Then FIFA ordered that ALL Div I leagues must play on natural grass and not turf. (FIFA has since changed that due to turf inovations i.e. The Fire) Houston was to play at Rice Stadium which is turf.
Thus MLS shipped our franchise to Tampa and with guys like Lassiter in '96, Ralston the Rookie of the year that year, El Pipe running the show and several years of success....NOBODY in the Tampa/Clearwater/Orlando area came to watch. I recall watching Tampa Bay matches and Raymond James Stadium was as full as a Junior High football game. What happend between the Rowdies and the Black Spiders we will never know. Safe to say no one cared...its not like the Mutiny were fighting a long winning legacy in the Bucs!
Y'alls Southern State is the worst for a MLS franchise. Proof in the fact that Florida has lost not one but TWO clubs....hence Florida is a joke!
ax319
10 Oct 2002, 12:08 PM
Well you guys are going to be talking about this topic for a long time since its going to be atleast 10 years before MLS is back in florida, probably even more then that.
TIKY
10 Oct 2002, 12:25 PM
This is probably a ridiculous statement (few posts aren't) but I've always believed that Orlando would be a good place to have a team. Millions of families visit for the Disney/Universal parks but a relaxing night taking in a "professional" *cough, cough* soccer game that is relatively inexpensive for a family seems like a good deal.
Your hardcore fan base would probably be next to nothing but you'd probably draw decent crowds in spring and summer with a SSS.
Fire away, I can take it.
jgoal5
10 Oct 2002, 01:33 PM
To reply to "Florida Should Get a Team"...................................................................................................................................................NO, They Shouldn't!
ax319
10 Oct 2002, 03:06 PM
Originally posted by jgoal5
To reply to "Florida Should Get a Team"...................................................................................................................................................NO, They Shouldn't!
yeah i think you are right, they had a chance with not one but two team, we should give other cities a chance before they get another one. they had a chance and they blew it. if MLS plans on going to 16 teams in 10 or so years a Florida team should be number 16, the last team to join.
Flsoccerdude
10 Oct 2002, 07:02 PM
See that was the problem Florda needs one central team 2 at once was 2 many for a new thing in a area if there had been one team then there would have been atleast 2 times the atendence to games but see with 2 mls screwed its self so if they had only had made one team in the area it would have been all good but no they didnt realize the mistake until it was to late now wtf do u got to say wat now ass whole
ax319
10 Oct 2002, 08:53 PM
you are Wrong, and the reason why is Tampa's attendence sucked even before Miami was added two years later.
NACIONAL
10 Oct 2002, 09:49 PM
Originally posted by Flsoccerdude
Florida should get a team. The state host a large # of soccer fans and I think that we have almost ne thing it needs. We've had teams befor but they got cut for who knows what.
i didn't see that in the attendances....
WorldGame
10 Oct 2002, 10:56 PM
ok, as a lifelong lover of this game and a lifelong resident of Florida here's my two cents:
no matter what you read, where you read it, or what you hear, the only question as to whether a pro soccer club can survive and prosper in Florida is whether or not the ownership group proves with their deeds that they want the club to succeed. the orlando magic ownership has just learned that lesson the hard way. even though they gave away shaq with a big bow on his head to the lakers, they still thought they could sell out the games and rake in the dollars just by showing up. and people got bored and stopped going to games. now the team's ownership has realized they have to operate their organization like every other business: they have to advertise, they have to tell their prospective customers little things like 'hey, we'd love it if you bought our product...which, by the way, we still happen to be selling despite the fact you haven't heard from is in five years."
all the business plans that have driven pro teams in florida in the past 20 years have been garbage. no offense to TIKY (I say this from downtown Orlando, and I love it that someone else thinks O-town would be a good idea, but it isn't) but that concept about there being so many vacationers that a few of them would spill over into a local sporting event is wrong. when I go on vacation I don't go to another city's sports team events unless my team is playing them. also, any team put here in Orlando that had as part of its buiness plan a siginificant chunk of attendance coming from vacationers is not a place I would want to be. my team is my team, and local fans that follow that team should be supporting them no matter what. take as an example the rowdy die-hard fans of most every team in the northeast: do those fans look like people who have been mindlessly wandering around malls, museums, and attractions all day? no, they look like people whose lives are in and about that town and they have a direct interest in seeing their team win because it represents them and their community. if I saw a bunch of waddling sunburned tourists dozing off at an mls Orlando team match, I'd be forced out of reverence for the good of the game to immediately call commissioner garber and break the bad news to him that another Florida mls team was not long for this world.
there's a right way, and there's a wrong way and all we've seen down here (marlins, devil rays, lightning, panthers, mutiny, fusion, xfl(?!)) is the wrong way. no team will ever succeed with shallow business assumptions such as "there's plenty of retirees in tampa who grew up with baseball in the northeast where they all retired from, so naturally they'd make our baseball team a success" or the previously mentioned and ever popular "there's tons of tourists with plenty of money looking for something else to do while on vacation...naturally there would be just enough of them coming to our team's games to keep us from going broke". bad ideas with similar results. when it's done right, it'll work. until then, forget it.
Originally posted by ax319
you are Wrong, and the reason why is Tampa's attendence sucked even before Miami was added two years later.
Attendance wasn't the problem in Tampa. A lack of an owner/investor, and a horrible lease agreement with Raymond James Stadium were what killed the team. And neither of these things had anything to do with fan support. Yes, Tampa Bay didn't led the league in attendance. But every year there were teams with worse attendance. Heck, the Mutiny drew more people last year than San Jose - the league champions?! Put another team in Tampa with a decent owner/investor and a decent place to play, and the team does fine.
Originally posted by Flsoccerdude
See that was the problem Florda needs one central team 2 at once was 2 many for a new thing in a area if there had been one team then there would have been atleast 2 times the atendence to games but see with 2 mls screwed its self so if they had only had made one team in the area it would have been all good but no they didnt realize the mistake until it was to late now wtf do u got to say wat now ass whole
How about: Tampa and Miami are like 5 hours apart, they're not exactly "in the area" of one another. I've lived in FL, I highly doubt Tampa drew too many fans from Ft Lauderdale, or vice versa.
I lived near Miami, one of the big problems there was a complete lack of promotion. I had a kid in a class who wore a Revs t-shirt one day, professed to like the Revs, and yet had never heard of the Fusion, though he was a FL native.
Paul. A
11 Oct 2002, 02:35 PM
I would like MLS back in Florida asap, but I think a few other cities should get a chance first.
JMU Soccer!
11 Oct 2002, 02:44 PM
If Tampa area investors were willing to pony up for a Soccer Specific Stadium as well as commit to owning the team, MLS would be back in town in a heartbeat.
Of course, I don't see that happening anywhere in the near future.
Paul. A
11 Oct 2002, 04:21 PM
I will be really happy if it does happen though. I will be able to handle the wait and the drive(I will be living on the east side of Florida by then) even if it takes 5 years.
feuerfex
15 Oct 2002, 11:35 PM
Originally posted by SPL
Attendance wasn't the problem in Tampa. A lack of an owner/investor, and a horrible lease agreement with Raymond James Stadium were what killed the team. Yes, Tampa Bay didn't led the league in attendance. But every year there were teams with worse attendance. Put another team in Tampa with a decent owner/investor and a decent place to play, and the team does fine. 1) Tampa had the worst overall attendance in the league over their existence. They were always in the bottom two or three. True, other teams were at the bottom (miami, san jose, kansas city, colorado) at one time or another, but they didn't start there or stay there. Tampa never developed an upward trend. I would argue that attendance was a very big problem in Tampa.
2) My understanding of the lease deal at Raymond James was that it was quite reasonable. Of those we know about, more than half are far worse than Tampa's.