How the Economy is Affecting the Casual Fan

This is an excellent SI article that while not specifically about MLS (in fact the article doesn’t even mention soccer) has resonance for Galaxy fans.

This season especially has seen many of these, um, symptoms appear in Carson.

Beatlemania like screams every time David Beckham touches the ball. Flash bulbs exploding around Home Depot Center like so many LSD flashbacks. And generally uneducated fans who don’t appear to appreciate they are watching a godawful team.

Former Manchester United midfielder Roy Keane once complained about the lack of atmosphere at Old Trafford caused by a surfeit of the prawn sandwich eating crowd – read ignorant corporate types – sitting on their hands rather than supporting their team.

I don’t mind rich guys subsidizing the masses (thanks Uncle Phil). I just don’t want them taking over to the extent a sporting event becomes like a night at the opera. (It’s depressing when fans tell me the nitwits behind them complain about them standing up – after a Galaxy goal has been scored!).

Of course, the Galaxy has been so abysmal this season there’s been precious little to shout about, although the likes of the Riot Squad are doing their utmost (thanks guys).

But in the main it’s a stadium full of people so thrilled to watch a global superduper star like Becks they can’t see beyond to the quality of football on display. Which has, generally speaking, been crap.

Nevertheless, the Galaxy have increased their ticket prices each year despite missing the playoffs three years in a row (there’s a prediction in there).

Season ticket holders reportedly dropped 15 percent this season. And are likely to fall again in the coming one. I’m getting more and more anecdotal reports via e-mail, on this blog and in person of fans who say to me: “I can’t bring myself to watch this lot anymore. It’s a waste of money.”

That’s telling me the knowledgeable fans who understand the game know what product they are seeing: a bland corporate one unlikely to get the most ardent soccer fans to return. They’ll sit home and watch Stoke City play Hull City (no disrespect to Hull, unexpectedly lighting up the EPL this season so far) rather than support MLS.

The game is being undermined by the suits.That’s not what the sport is about. The casual fan – such as families – who understand the democracy of soccer are endangered.

And if that’s the case, so is the authenticity of the game itself.

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