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Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

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A Sports Enigma!

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Page 1: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

Why do Americans Prefer Football over

Soccer?

by Phantomimic

All rights reserved © RAGG

Page 2: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

Here we are again in the middle of another Soccer World Cup. In the media

we see images of the whole world all revved up with enthusiasm for the so-

called "King of Sports" or "The Most Popular Sport in the Planet". But here

in the United States a majority of Americans are once again left wondering

what the hoopla is all about and perplexed at the passion soccer evokes.

Soccer indeed can stir up very strong emotions. Wars have been started or

temporarily suspended as a result of soccer matches. People have died or

been injured as a result of clashes between soccer fans, and some people

have been known to commit suicide when their team did not win the World

Cup. Players have been marginalized for the rest of their lives, retired, or

even killed for failing to win a game or for committing a crucial mistake that

led to the loss of a game. Referees have had to go into hiding for making a

call considered unfair.

The lives of entire groups of people around the globe revolve around the

performance of their favorite teams, and the productivity of entire regions in

certain countries goes up or down depending on whether the local soccer

team wins. Certain teams and specific players have become legends. Their

names and their feats are enshrined in museums and celebrated in word and

song. Certain infamous games or goals or other events during the game

where a team was "cheated" of a win, linger in the collective consciousness

of countries decades after the fact. Some are even still discussed and

analyzed nowadays with computer technology applied to ancient archival

footage.

Page 3: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

When the national teams play in a World Cup all the activity in certain

countries comes to a halt. The streets become deserted. No one works,

including the police, which is not a problem because all the criminals are

also watching the game. If the team wins there is a huge celebration with

people stopping traffic and dancing in the streets. If the team loses the whole

country goes into a long period of mourning as though a national catastrophe

had occurred.

So many people ask themselves: What is it with Americans? Why haven't

they caught the soccer bug like everyone else? Why do they prefer this sport

the rest of the world calls "American Football" over soccer? This question is

even more relevant if you consider that soccer is the most popular (even

more than football) youth participation sport in the United States up to the

age of 13.

I have investigated a little and have found that several explanations have

been proposed ranging from the plausible to the whimsical. Let's take a look.

1) Not enough scoring

Americans say that watching soccer is like having fun watching the grass

grow. They claim that there is not enough scoring for the amount of time

that one spends watching the actual game.

Insofar as the average number of touchdowns in football and goals in soccer

per game is concerned, there is not that much of a difference between both

sports. For example the average number of total touchdowns per NFL game

Page 4: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

for 2009 was about 2.5, and the average number of goals per game scored in

the last World Cup in 2006 in Germany was 2.3. But of course football is

not a game of touchdowns, football is a game of points. Each touchdown is 6

points but you also have the option of kicking a field goal for 3 points (of

course after a touchdown a team can go for the extra point kick or the 2

point conversion, but this is only after a touchdown). So in this aspect

football does have an additional scoring mechanism that makes it difficult

for a game to end up scoreless. The average 2009 NFL score per game was

22.7 points. To this consideration you also have to add game times. In

professional soccer you have 2 halves of 45 minutes for a total of 90 minutes

of game time whereas professional football has 4 quarters of 15 minutes

each for a total of 60 minutes of game time.

So if scoring is important for Americans, when you factor in the extra

scoring and the lower actual game time, football does come out ahead.

2) Not enough timeouts

Americans like their timeouts and have no patience for a constant action

game like soccer.

In football the clock does stop after certain plays and if the game is

broadcast on television TV timeouts are taken. All this can extend the actual

length of a football game (from start to finish) to more than 3 hours. By

comparison in soccer there is only a 15 minute rest period between halves

making the actual start to finish length of a soccer game 105 minutes.

Page 5: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

So if Americans like timeouts then football is more suited for them.

3) Lack of physicality, the game is not violent or "manly" enough.

Americans tend to like physical sports and they argue soccer is not physical

enough. At high school or college level a common derogatory comment

about soccer is that "it is a sport for girls". The fact that the U.S. woman's

soccer team has won the Woman's World cup 2 times with 3 third places and

that the men's team has only achieved a third place finish back in 1930 of

course does not help.

Football is arguably a more physical sport than soccer. Despite all the

protective gear, many football players suffer serious injuries regularly. A

total of 28 players died from direct injuries from 2000 to 2005 and many

players experience injuries that still pain them many years after they have

retired and that require multiple surgeries. The average NFL player's career

lasts about 3.8 years whereas soccer players can play well into their thirties

with careers lasting 10 years or more. There is also the fact that many soccer

players feign an injury to hoax the referee into calling a penalty or have the

other player expelled. This is considered by many Americans to be dishonest

sissy-like behavior not becoming of a man.

So if indeed physical manly confrontation is what Americans want then this

is a reason to prefer Football.

Page 6: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

4) Football is "Institutionalized"

It is argued that, as opposed to soccer, the nature of football with its timeouts

fits just right into American corporate and consumer culture. It is also argued

that the popularity of football at the college level has turned it into huge

money-making enterprise. The above create an insurmountable barrier for

soccer to become popular in the United States.

These seem also valid reasons for the difficulty that soccer has encountered

in becoming more mainstream in the United States.

5) There are too many sports in the U.S.

Another argument is that the sport's market in the United States is saturated.

Football reigns supreme, but basketball, baseball, ice hockey, golf, etc. mop

up the rest of soccer's potential fans. So soccer does not compete only

against football for fans but against all those other sports.

This is another plausible reason too why soccer has had trouble gaining

traction in the United States.

6) You can't use your hands.

It has been argued that there is something about being able to use your hands

that runs deep within the "can do" American psyche or its "pioneer spirit".

That is why sports invented in the U.S. such as football, baseball and

Page 7: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

basketball all involve using your hands. Because of this a sport like soccer is

anathema to Americans.

I don't know if this is true but there may be something to it.

7) Americans are not good at soccer and don't like it because they can't

dance.

There is the perception by many that, despite some exceptions, the average

American guy cannot dance very well and feels uncomfortable about even

trying it. Thus, because soccer requires the major footwork and leg to hip

coordination that comes naturally from dancing, American guys are not good

at it and can't relate to it.

I am not sure that in general being a better dancer makes you a better soccer

player or a more enthusiastic soccer fan. With regards to the "better player"

part of this claim, you would have to argue that how good of a dancer the

average guy is, somehow relates to the number of World Cups their country

has won. The way it stands now it is (World Cups per country):

Brazil 5

Italy 4

Germany 3

Argentina & Uruguay 2

England 1

France 1

Spain 1

Page 8: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

So there you have it, are the Brazilian and Italian guys better dancers than

the English, the French, and the Spanish (with the German, Argentinean and

Uruguayans in between)?

8) No cheerleaders.

It has been argued that Americans (here I guess this means guys) prefer

football to soccer because of the cheerleaders (soccer in the U.S. doesn't

have cheerleaders). After all, what good is a sport without a little porn?

No comment.

These are some of the reasons that have been put forward to explain why

Americans have not caught the soccer bug. Please feel free to leave a

comment and let me know what you think about them and suggest any other

explanations that you may have.

Page 9: Why do Americans Prefer Football over Soccer?

Soccer picture by Neier.

Japan's world cup qualifier against Bahrain, Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

Football picture by John Martinez Pavliga.

http://flickr.com/photos/virtualsugar/2914380264/, Attribution 2.0 Generic

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