North American Soccer League (NASL) was a professional American (with a few teams in Canada) soccer league that operated from 1968 to 1984.
The biggest club in the league and the organization's bellwether was the New York Cosmos, who (while aging Brazillian superstar Pelé played for them) drew upwards of 40,000 fans per game at their height. However, the overall average attendance of the league never reached 15,000, which is less than Major League Soccer (MLS) currently draws.
The NASL faced challenges in regard to selling the sport of soccer to Americans, which was then completely foreign to the majority of them. The league "Americanized" the rules in the attempt to make the game more exciting, and comprehensible, to the average American sports fan. These changes included a clock that counted time down to zero as was typical of other timed American sports, rather than upwards to 45 minutes as was traditional, a 35 yard line for offsides rather than the traditional half way line, and a shootout to decide matches that ended in a draw. The foreign image of soccer wasn't helped, however, by a league that brought in many older, high profile foreign players, and frequently left Americans on the bench. This effort was often doubly futile, as while many of the foreign players were perhaps "big names" in their home countries, almost none of them qualifed as such in North America, and they quickly absorbed most of the available payroll, such as it was, which could have otherwise been used to pay North American players better.
Overexpansion was a huge factor in the death of the league. Once the league started growing, new franchises were awarded quickly, and it doubled in size in a few years, peaking at 24 teams. Many have suggested that cash-starved existing owners longed for their share of the expansion fee charged new owners, even though Forbes Magazine reported this amount as being only *]100,000. This resulted in the available talent being spread too thinly, among other problems. Additionally, many of these new owners were not "soccer people", and once the perceived popularity started to decline, they got out as quickly as they got in. They also spent millions on aging stars to try to match the success of the Cosmos, and lost significant amounts of money in doing so.
While the NASL ultimately failed, it introduced soccer to the North American sports scene on a large scale for the first time and was a major contributing factor in soccer becoming the number one participatory sport among American youth. It has also provided lessons for its successor Major League Soccer, which has tried to build soccer-specific stadiums for each of its teams, rather than following the NASL's example of renting large NFL venues which it had little hope of ever filling. MLS has enforced a limit on foreign players, forcing teams to develop American talent rather than following the NASL's example of relying on highly-paid imports who were often well past their prime (although some have criticized the league for going too far, arguing that the league needs more marketable names. Initially, MLS also tried to "Americanize" its rules with shootouts and the clock counting down, but since 2000 the league has adopted FIFA Laws.
United States soccer competitions (defunct) | Canadian football (soccer) competitions (defunct) | Indoor football (soccer) | 1967 establishments | 1984 disestablishments | Professional sports leagues
North American Soccer League | 북미 축구 리그 | North American Soccer League | 北米サッカーリーグ
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