Soccer — or football (or foosball or  futbol), as it is called by the rest of the world outside theUnited States is surely the most popular sport in the world. Every four years, the world championship of  soccer, the World Cup is watched by literally  billions all over the world, beating out the United States professional football's  Superbowl by far. It is estimated that 1.7 billion television viewers  watched the World Cup final between France and  Brazil in July of 1998. And it is also a genuine world championship, involving  teams from 32 countries in the final rounds, unlike the much more parochial and misnamed  World Series in American baseball (that does’t even involve Japan or Cuba, two  baseball hotbeds). But although soccer has become an important sport in the American sports scene, it will never  make inroads into the hearts and markets of American  sports the way that football, basketball,  hockey, baseball, and even tennis and golf have done. There are many reasons for  this.
    Recently the New England Revolution  beat the Tampa Bay Mutiny in a game played during a horrid rainstorm. Nearly 5000 fans  showed up, which shows that soccer is, indeed, popular in the United States.  However, the story of the game was buried near the back of the newspaper's sports section, and there  was certainly no television coverage. In fact, the biggest reason for soccer's failure  as a mass appeal sport in the United States is that it doesn't  conform easily to the demands of television.
    Basketball succeeds enormously in  America because it regularly scheduled what it calls "television time-outs" as  well as the time-outs that the teams themselves call to re-group, not  to mention half-times and, on the professional level, quarter breaks. Those  time-outs in the action are ideally made for television commercials. And  television coverage is the lifeblood of American sports. College  basketball lives for a game scheduled on CBS or ESPN (highly  recruited high school players are more likely to go to a team that regularly gets national  television exposure), and we could even say that television coverage has  dictated the pace and feel of American football.  Anyone who has attended a live football game knows how  commercial time-outs slow the game and sometimes, at its most exciting moments  disrupt the flow of events. There is no serious  objection, however, because without television, football knows that it simply  wouldn't remain in the homes and hearts of Americans. Also,  without those advertising dollars, the teams couldn't afford the sky-high salaries of their high-priced  superstars.
 
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder