Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman
How so? Only 3-4 teams have a realistic chance of winning. In the NFL, every team has a chance, small or large market. "Sub/mini-competitions" are for suckers.
In the old days, many teams could win the top division. Some of those proud franchises are now buried in the second and third division. Ex. Nottingham Forest
I find it bizarre that the non-elite franchises think it is ok to be satisfied with developing players and battling to avoid relegation. There should be a class revolt. The worker franchises must be electrified to over-throw the industrial bourgeois elite.
|
The sports system in Europe is just so much different, some teams only have stadiums that can seat a few thousand people
some stadiums can seat 70,000
and with the transfer of players being so much different, there are very few trades or free agents of top level players, all the players are bought and sold
and in a relegation system it would be impossible to put in a salary cap that allows every team to compete.
This year Blackpool came up, their revenue is 1/10th of most Premier League clubs, they are not going to ever compete with teams in London, Liverpool, or Manchester. But their promotion from the Championship this year was just as important to their fans as a title is to NHL/NBA/MLB/NFL teams in North America. Their one year in the Premier League was just the cherry on top.
It's hard for people in North America who aren't used to it to understand it, just because the playoff system is so ingrained to crown a champion, and parity among teams is believed to be more important.
A successful season for Luton Town is completely different than one from a team like Blackburn, or Manchester United etc. But all 3 can have fantastic seasons.
A team like Manchester City finished 3rd this season and their fans are ecstatic, it's their best season possibly ever, and easily in the last 40-50 years.
and Chelsea finished 2nd and it was a horrible year, they sacked their manager who just won them two trophies 1 year ago.
Every team has it's real own goals, only 5 or 6 really have a shot at the title
But it works in Europe, it works perfectly in my opinion.
The smallest teams most of the time have the most loyal fanbases.
that's the romanticized reasoning.
Economically, the Champions league will never allow it. Getting in to the CL group stages is worth around 35m pounds in tv money. Each round you progress is another 5-10m I believe.
It's worth it too much at the top to change the system, and if the teams at the bottom every revolted and changed the system than the top teams in England/Spain/Germany/Italy would just create their own superleague, and it would dwarf everything else worldwide.