The major professional sports leagues are those professional sports leagues with the largest fan bases and television audiences (and therefore, the largest revenues and player salaries).
These four leagues are often referred to as the Big Four, although there is a significant enough disparity in the popularity and revenues of the NHL compared to the other three leagues that the NFL, MLB and the NBA could be separately categorized as the Big Three. Compared to the other three leagues, the NHL has struggled to find support in the Southern United States, which has led some sports fans in this region to dispute the NHL's status as a major league. (Oddly, however, the former Confederate States have the same number of NHL clubs as does Canada: both places have six teams each. Moreover, there are an additional three Sunbelt-based clubs in California and a fourth team in Arizona.) However, since the NHL is the only other team sports league in the North America to generate multi-billion dollar revenues, the league is closer financially with the three more popular leagues than any other North American team sports league. Furthermore, in spite of a season-long lockout in 2004 the NHL returned in 2005 with even stronger revenues than before the lockout. The term hockey country is often used to describe those parts of the U.S. where hockey's fanbase is strongest. Ironically, most of the recent expansion teams were located in Southern cities, and three teams relocated from hockey country to the Sunbelt during the 1990s: the Minnesota North Stars moved to Dallas, the Winnipeg Jets moved to Phoenix, and the Hartford Whalers moved to North Carolina's Research Triangle region. (The Quebec Nordiques also moved, but they moved to another corner of hockey country by becoming the Colorado Avalanche.)
Since the four leagues listed above are those listed as the major leagues, the sports they play (baseball, basketball, American football and ice hockey) are often referred to as the four major professional sports or even just the major sports by North Americans. As of 2005, thirteen American metropolitan areas have at least one team in each of the four leagues; these cities are said to have the Grand Slam.
The four major leagues combine for revenues that are hundreds of times greater than all other U.S. professional team sports leagues combined. The best players can become cultural icons to tens of millions of Americans plus millions of Canadians because the leagues enjoy a dominant place in American popular culture combined with a significant place in Canadian popular culture.
In terms of overall league revenue, the NFL, MLB and the NBA rank as the three most lucrative sports leagues in the world (in that order). Based on June 2006 exchange rates the NHL ranks as the world's fifth most lucrative league, slightly behind the FA Premier League in English soccer. It is worth noting, however, that the Premier League has only 20 clubs - depending on exchange rates and what is defined as revenue the Premier League's average per-team revenues are very close to, and could be ranked ahead of the NBA's.
Soccer is very popular in North America, although none of the past attempts to establish a premiere professional league have been extremely successful. The current premiere league, Major League Soccer, has not yet (in spite of its name) achieved major league status in the eyes of North American fans. Some of the top American and Canadian professionals opt to play in Europe rather than for MLS, such as seasoned USA striker Brian McBride. The U.S. men's team has performed respectably in recent international competitions, and has been in the last five World Cup finals. (In 1994, the Americans got an automatic finals bid as the host, but they have qualified for every other Cup finals series since 1990.)
The major sports leagues in the United States and Canada are unique compared to most leagues outside North America in that there is no promotion and relegation system. The same teams compete in the leagues each year. The worst teams are not relegated each year to a second tier league, to be replaced by the best teams from the second tier league. One could even argue the worst teams are rewarded for their futility, as the worst teams receive a higher position in the following year's draft for new players, which in football and basketball, usually consists of players who have played the sport in college. A notable result of the "closed shop" aspect of the major leagues is that the franchises have average book values that are considerably more than those of the clubs of the FA Premier League (which as noted above has comparable average team revenues to the major North American leagues but also a relegation system).
The last of the "big four" to fold outright were the original Baltimore Bullets in 1955, while the last team to cease operations were the Cleveland Barons (formerly the California Golden Seals), which were merged into the Minnesota North Stars organization in 1978, two years after moving to Ohio from California. However, this merger was officially dissolved in 1991,Stein, Gil: Power Plays: An Inside Look at the Big Business of the National Hockey League (1997, Birch Lane Press, ISBN 1559724226) and the franchise was resurrected as the San Jose Sharks. The last NHL team to fold outright were the New York Americans in 1942, while the last NFL team to fold were the Dallas Texans in 1952 and no MLB team has folded since 1899, when four National League teams ceased to exist.
The four leagues all expanded within the last decade and currently have either 30 or, in the case of the NFL, 32 teams. The newest major league team is the Charlotte Bobcats, who joined the NBA in 2004. The newest NFL team is the Houston Texans, who became the NFL's 32nd team in 2002 after the NFL was unable to find a viable ownership group and stadium plan in Los Angeles. The newest NHL teams are the Columbus Blue Jackets and Minnesota Wild, who began play in 2000, while the newest MLB teams are the Arizona Diamondbacks and Tampa Bay Devil Rays, who joined the NL and AL respectively in 1998.
Recent expansion franchises have commanded huge entry fees, which are generally held to represent the price the new team must pay to gain its share of the existing teams' often guaranteed revenue streams. The Houston Texans paid an unprecedented dollar|$" target="_blank" >*700 million to join the NFL. By comparison, the Charlotte Bobcats paid $300 million to join the NBA. The Diamondbacks and Devil Rays paid $130 million each to join MLB while the Blue Jackets and Wild paid $80 million each to join the NHL.
Many sports analysts and owners believe that 30 is the optimal number of teams for a major league, thus future expansion is by no means certain. The NFL is still anxious to return to Los Angeles (see below) but many believe that NFL officials would privately prefer to re-locate an existing team in order to avoid altering its current eight four-team division alignment. Even if expansion franchises could continue to command huge fees, as more teams join the leagues the owners' share of the fees is constantly reduced. Even if large markets remain without a team, a point could still be reached where one-time expansion revenues are offset by chronic stresses such as a drain on the talent pool (which could have a noticeable impact on the quality of play and thus start turning off fans) and saturation of the national television market (if the leagues are unable to negotiate higher fees from the television networks, then additional teams will simply cause the existing television revenue to be split into smaller shares).
The Utah Jazz are located in the smallest television market of any U.S. team (the Green Bay Packers' television market includes the much larger city of Milwaukee 120 miles / 200 km to its south). They relocated during a turbulent period in NBA history and have enjoyed strong support from a very large geographical area devoid of other major sport teams. Utah is also the least populous state with a team.
Professional sport leagues as we know them today evolved during the decades between the Civil War and World War II, when the railroad was the main means of intercity transportation. As a result, virtually all major league teams were concentrated in the northeastern quarter of the United States, within roughly the radius of a day-long train ride. No MLB teams existed south or west of St. Louis, the NFL was confined to the Great Lakes and the Northeast, and the NBA (which didn't exist before 1946) spanned from the Quad Cities to Boston.
The NHL remained confined to six cities in the Northeast, Great Lakes and eastern Canada, although several West Coast-based teams did compete for the Stanley Cup in the era before the Cup competition was limited to NHL teams. During the 1910s and into the 1920s, the pro teams in Western Canada and the USA Pacific Northwest were on a par with those in Quebec and Ontario. From 1914 to 1927, the Stanley Cup was an eastern vs. western championship. (Before 1914, the Stanley Cup was a challenge cup, and some western teams did mount challenges, including one from the remote Yukon Territory. In a bizarre incident in January 1905, the Dawson City Nuggets made the arduous month-long journey to Ottawa to challenge the reigning Ottawa Silver Seven. The Nuggets lost the first game of the best-of-three series by a score of 9-2, and the second game by a score of 23-2.)
College, minor-league and amateur teams existed from coast to coast in all four sports.
As travel and settlement patterns changed, so did the geography of professional sports. With the arguable exception of the western hockey teams which competed for the Stanley Cup in the early 20th century, there were no major league teams in the far west until after World War II. The first west coast major-league franchise was the NFL's Los Angeles Rams, who moved from Cleveland in 1946. The same year, the All America Football Conference began play, with teams in Los Angeles and San Francisco (not to mention the Miami Seahawks, who became the only southern-based major league franchise, although Louisville, Kentucky had previously had shortlived baseball and football teams.) Baseball would not extend west until 1958 in the controversial move of both New York-based National League franchises. The NBA would follow in 1960 with the move of the Minneapolis Lakers to Los Angeles, while the NHL would not have a west coast presence until it doubled in size in 1967.
Since then, as newer, fast-growing Sunbelt areas such as Phoenix and Dallas became prominent, the major sports leagues expanded or franchises relocated (usually quite controversially) to service these communities. Most major areas are well-represented, with all but seven continental U.S. metropolitan agglomerations over one million people hosting at least one major sports franchise. As of 2006, the largest metropolitan area without a major professional sports franchise is California's Inland Empire. However, since this area is adjacent to the San Diego and Los Angeles metro areas and serves as a local market for those teams, no major league franchise is likely to move there without purporting to represent the L.A. and/or San Diego markets as well. The most populous independent metropolitan area outside of a major franchise's local market is the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, nearly 200 miles from the nearest major sports teams in Washington, D.C.. It previously hosted a successful franchise in the American Basketball Association. Virginia is also the most populous state without a team within its borders.
Another large metropolitan area without any major league franchises is Las Vegas, which is expected to surpass the Hampton Roads area in metropolitan population before the 2010 Census to become the largest metropolis without a franchise. Despite the area's explosive growth, all four leagues are wary of placing a team there due to the city's legal gambling industry, which includes sports betting. In the U.S. especially, as contrasted with Europe, for a professional sports organization to have any association, real or perceived, with gambling has been taboo ever since the 1919 World Series scandal and all four leagues forbid its personnel to have any type of contact or association with anything related to gambling of any kind.
When the WHA and NHL merged, the NHL inherited teams in Canadian metro areas that were under one million in population at the time, these being Edmonton, Winnipeg and Quebec City. The NHL later added teams in Calgary (via relocation from Atlanta) and Ottawa (via expansion). The distinctive place hockey holds in Canadian culture allowed these franchises to compete with teams in larger cities for some time. However, the teams in Winnipeg and Quebec City were eventually moved to the U.S. The three remaining "small market" Canadian teams have survived largely because their markets are growing rapidly — all three metro areas in question are now over one million in population and are thus comparable in size to some of the smaller American metro areas with teams in other leagues such as Salt Lake City, Jacksonville and Memphis.
Although Calgary and Edmonton remain the two smallest television markets of any of the major leagues as of 2006, any "small market" disadvantage in the two Albertan cities has been largely off-set in recent years by the fact that the oil-driven Albertan economy is one of the fastest growing in the world, and not uncoincidentally Alberta also has an unusually large proportion of high-income earners. Alberta's GDP per capita is the highest of any Canadian province or U.S. state even after exchange rates are taken into account. Since Alberta's total GDP (over C$200 billion as of 2005 and expected to exceed US$200 billion in 2006) is well over twice Utah's (less than $90 billion as of 2006), it is not difficult to explain how Alberta can support two major league teams if Utah can support one.
The first Major League Baseball team in Canada was the Montreal Expos, who began play in 1969 and were one of the most unprofitable franchises in the sport. They became the Washington Nationals in 2005. The Toronto Blue Jays, who began play in 1977, have done much better.
The Toronto Huskies were a charter member of what is now known as the NBA, but they only lasted from 1946 to 1947. The NBA returned to Toronto in 1995 when the Raptors joined the league. The same year, the Vancouver Grizzlies began play: they moved to Memphis in 2001.
The NHL has operated on both sides of the Canadian-American border since 1924, and there were strong American-based clubs even before the NHL was founded in 1917. The first US-based club to compete for the Stanley Cup was the Portland Rosebuds of the Pacific Coast Hockey League, who lost the 1916 series to the Montreal Canadiens (then of the National Hockey Association.) The next year, the PCHA's Seattle Metropolitans took the Cup away from the Canadiens.
The NFL has never attempted to enter the Canadian market, leaving Canada to the Canadian Football League (which plays under significantly different rules than those used in the United States.) The CFL was formed in the 1950s from the merger of two competing leagues, one based in the west and the other in the east. The CFL briefly expanded south of the border in the mid-1990s: the experiment was unsuccessful, although the Baltimore Stallions (aka "CFL Colts") did win a Grey Cup before becoming the Montreal Alouettes.
All four leagues grant some sort of territorial exclusivity to their owners, precluding the addition of another team in the same area unless the current team's owners consent, which is generally obtained in exchange for compensation and/or residual rights regarding the new franchise. For example, to obtain the consent of Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos to place an MLB team in Washington (which is about 35 miles from Oriole Park at Camden Yards), a deal was struck under the terms of which television and radio broadcast rights to Nationals games are handled by the Orioles franchise, who formed a new network (the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network) to produce and distribute the games for both franchises on local affiliates and cable/satellite systems.
Some leagues, such as the NFL have even stronger ownership restrictions. The NFL currently forbids large ownership groups or publicly-traded corporations from purchasing NFL teams. This policy allows the league office to deal with individual owners instead of boards of directors, although the Packers' ownership group was grandfathered into the current policy. The NFL also forbids its majority owners from owning any sports teams (except for soccer teams) in other NFL cities, and prohibits owners from investing in casinos or being otherwise involved in gambling operations. (NFL owners may freely own soccer teams without league restrictions because Lamar Hunt won a court challenge stemming from his investment in the old North American Soccer League. Hunt currently owns 3 teams in Major League Soccer, one based in Kansas City - where he owns the Chiefs - and also teams in Dallas and Columbus.)
Regarding territorial rights, the main concern for many team owners has become television revenue although the possibility of reduced ticket sales remains a concern for some teams. Because the National Football League shares all of its television revenue equally, and most of its teams sell out their stadiums with little difficulty, some NFL owners are seen as being less reluctant to share their territories. For example, the return of the NFL to Baltimore in 1996 attracted no serious opposition from the Washington Redskins organization.
Comparing the sizes of television contracts, the NFL is by far the largest (reportedly $2.2 billion US for the 2001 season), with the NBA and MLB second and third ($500 million and $479 million respectively). The NHL is in a distant fourth place ($120 million), a disparity those who wish to exclude the NHL from the major leagues often point to. However, the NHL began airing games on NBC starting in January 2006 and the NHL Network is now available to a large percentage of U.S. cable and satellite subscribers. In addition, many regular season NHL games are broadcast on regional sports networks (such as FSN), which can vary on contract worth by region or team.
There are thriving professional ice hockey, baseball, and basketball leagues around the world but none are in a position to challenge their North American counterparts for dominance on or off the playing surface. Major League Baseball is increasingly luring away the stars from the Japanese leagues, the National Basketball Association frequently recruits talent from professional leagues in Europe and Latin America and the European hockey leagues have become a major source of star talent for National Hockey League clubs.
The perceived lack of competition from the rest of the world has contributed to the long-standing but controversial practice of the American media dubbing the champions of MLB, the NBA and the NFL the world champions. The early Stanley Cup champions from both the NHL and the early leagues the NHL eventually displaced were also called world champions in the early decades of professional hockey by Americans and Canadians alike. However, that practice fell out of favor in the latter half of the 20th century.
If the popularity of baseball and basketball keeps growing in various countries outside of the United States, some think that the NBA and MLB may begin to place franchises in foreign markets (other than Canada, where the NBA and MLB each already have a franchise in Toronto). The popularity of baseball in Southeast Asia and Central America is growing, along with the talent of prospective players from the regions. Meanwhile, the popularity of basketball has grown to be the second highest in the world (following soccer).
However, one major detractor against foreign expansion by MLB or the NBA is that the sports in question enjoy much of their popularity in relatively poor countries that would probably be unable to financially support a sports franchise using the American model. The only clear exception to this would be the popularity of baseball in Japan, but well-established baseball leagues already exist in that country.
Due to the popularity of hockey in some of the most prosperous parts of Europe, many believe that the major league with the best chance of success outside North America would be the NHL. This has led to the possibility of European NHL franchises being discussed in the past, although NHL officials have repeatedly said they have no current plans to create a European division.
Recently talks about NBA franchises being located in Europe have intensified. For logistical reasons it would be necessary to have between two and four teams in Europe, so that visiting teams can have a "European Swing." Possible cities for such expansion include London, Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, and Rome. However, as of 2006, NBA expansion to Europe is looking less likely, mainly because of increasing cooperation between the NBA and ULEB, the body that organizes the Euroleague for top European clubs. In 2005, the two bodies agreed to organize a summer competition featuring four NBA teams and four Euroleague clubs, with the first competition to take place in 2006. *
The NFL has the least international exposure of the Big Four. The NFL has attempted to promote its game worldwide by promoting NFL Europe (although that has largely failed outside Germany) and holding a regular season game in Mexico City. The NFL has a working agreement with the Canadian Football League (CFL), which is second in popularity only to the NHL in that country. Despite this, the prospect of foreign NFL franchises in the relative near-future is unlikely due to gridiron football's lack of popularity outside of Canada and the US.
Several factors since 1990 have eroded the regional boundaries between these football codes, although the support systems and minor (including junior and schools) competitions in each state and city still reflect the biases of the last 100+ years. The recent factors of change include -
UEFA, the sport's governing body for Europe, maintains lists of coefficients to compare the performances of national teams, leagues and individual clubs. The league coefficients are used for determining how many teams from each domestic league may compete in the Champions League and UEFA Cup. Perhaps not uncoincidentally, the top five leagues using these rankings are those of Spain, Italy and England (4 CL entries each) followed by France and Germany (3 CL entries each). Portugal is sixth and also gets three CL entries, while the Netherlands is seventh and currently entitled to two CL entries. There is currently a significant gap between the coefficients of the Dutch league and the top league of Greece, which is currently ranked eighth.
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