Knave
12 Aug 2003, 03:40 AM
I’m not really sure how to address this topic so I guess I’ll just pose a question and then wax on aimlessly. I suppose that’s not so uncommon on BigSoccer.com …
To what extent did the internet help to make soccer in the USA what it is today?
I tend to think that the answer to this question is that the internet helped soccer in the USA tremendously. I might even dare to say (and had I a few drinks I might even believe) that if not for the internet soccer in the USA wouldn’t be half of what it is today. The leagues would be struggling even more than they are now. The fans would be far more casual and much less knowledgeable. Without the internet I doubt there’d be much of a core of hardcore soccer devotees to sustain the sport through these lean years.
I say this for two reasons.
First, the only way I can find information about soccer is on the internet. Without it I don’t think I’d ever have become so hooked on the MLS when it started up. I certainly wouldn’t have started to attend PDL matches. Hell, I wouldn’t even know what the PDL is or that there’s a team nearby. I don’t think I’d know about the US Open Cup and I’m quite certain that I wouldn’t know when any of the national teams play. And I’ve said all of that without noting how reliant I am on the internet for day to day soccer news.
Second, if the internet is great for anything it is connecting people with obscure interests. Folks, I’m sorry to say it but soccer in the USA remains an obscure interest. (Actually, no, I take that back. I kind of like that soccer is still a bit obscure in the USA.) The best example of this today is BigSoccer.com. The ability to talk with other people about soccer in the US is actually a pretty rare thing. But here it’s not. Before I got involved here (back in the Soccerboards days) I wasn’t nearly as serious about soccer as I am today. It was talking about the game here as much as continuing to go to games and watching games on TV that elevated my interest to the (perhaps unhealthy) level that I maintain today. But before BigSoccer (in its various incarnations) came around there was NAS, alt.sports.soccer and various email lists. I remember the day when the women’s boards opened on BigSoccer in order to give a home to the massive group of refugees from – what was that place called? – WWContheWWB (Women’s World Cup on the World Wide Web). That was a real community there and I bet some of what was formed there helped to get WUSA going – even if it might not be enough to sustain that league. In short, you can’t usually talk about soccer around the water cooler or on talk radio but we had the internet to step in and fill the void. That was and remains important.
So, yeah, I’m rambling at this point. But I just don’t believe that my experience is unique. For me the internet was pivotal in my becoming a supporter of soccer in the USA. If not for the internet I just don’t think it would have happened.
To what extent did the internet help to make soccer in the USA what it is today?
I tend to think that the answer to this question is that the internet helped soccer in the USA tremendously. I might even dare to say (and had I a few drinks I might even believe) that if not for the internet soccer in the USA wouldn’t be half of what it is today. The leagues would be struggling even more than they are now. The fans would be far more casual and much less knowledgeable. Without the internet I doubt there’d be much of a core of hardcore soccer devotees to sustain the sport through these lean years.
I say this for two reasons.
First, the only way I can find information about soccer is on the internet. Without it I don’t think I’d ever have become so hooked on the MLS when it started up. I certainly wouldn’t have started to attend PDL matches. Hell, I wouldn’t even know what the PDL is or that there’s a team nearby. I don’t think I’d know about the US Open Cup and I’m quite certain that I wouldn’t know when any of the national teams play. And I’ve said all of that without noting how reliant I am on the internet for day to day soccer news.
Second, if the internet is great for anything it is connecting people with obscure interests. Folks, I’m sorry to say it but soccer in the USA remains an obscure interest. (Actually, no, I take that back. I kind of like that soccer is still a bit obscure in the USA.) The best example of this today is BigSoccer.com. The ability to talk with other people about soccer in the US is actually a pretty rare thing. But here it’s not. Before I got involved here (back in the Soccerboards days) I wasn’t nearly as serious about soccer as I am today. It was talking about the game here as much as continuing to go to games and watching games on TV that elevated my interest to the (perhaps unhealthy) level that I maintain today. But before BigSoccer (in its various incarnations) came around there was NAS, alt.sports.soccer and various email lists. I remember the day when the women’s boards opened on BigSoccer in order to give a home to the massive group of refugees from – what was that place called? – WWContheWWB (Women’s World Cup on the World Wide Web). That was a real community there and I bet some of what was formed there helped to get WUSA going – even if it might not be enough to sustain that league. In short, you can’t usually talk about soccer around the water cooler or on talk radio but we had the internet to step in and fill the void. That was and remains important.
So, yeah, I’m rambling at this point. But I just don’t believe that my experience is unique. For me the internet was pivotal in my becoming a supporter of soccer in the USA. If not for the internet I just don’t think it would have happened.