Why Women's Soccer Might Make Soccer Work in America 

If you are remotely sports-minded, the timing of this post is probably a bit too on the nose. The US Women's National Soccer Team just played what may have been one of the most exciting, frustrating, and ultimately American games of soccer ever played. However, these thoughts have been percolating around in my brain for a bit, and the game yesterday just crystallized that my premise is right.

For the average American, the Women's World Cup is a more interesting soccer tournament than the men's, and might be the event necessary to get your average American sports fan to watch soccer.

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Image from the NY Times (I think)

With almost any other sport, Americans will not accept the women's version. Volleyball and gymnastics might be the exception, but those are not major sports and Americans will only care about them every four years.

But Women's soccer, particularly this team in this event, might help soccer catch on for the rank and file fans who generally spend their year moving from their local baseball team to football Sundays to the NBA and NHL playoffs. They might now spend a morning watching a Premier League game, or tune into a Men's national friendly.

The best teams in the world, playing an exciting (if sloppy) brand of soccer, in the biggest tournament in the world, and the American team has a shot at winning. This is why Women's soccer might turn Americans on to watching soccer on TV. Yesterday's 2-2 Penalty Kick victory over Brazil might have been the tipping point. It had everything Americans love, and rather than rehash that, I'll point you to American McCarver's recap of the game.

This tournament, particularly if the US team can beat France and move into the finals, might be enough to get fans to check out another soccer game. If ESPN is smart, they'll start showing recaps of Premier League games, pitching the upcoming EPL season, and pointing hungry soccer fans towards something besides MLS. Americans simply are never going to get behind MLS. We don't watch second rate leagues (at least not in large numbers). Hardcore soccer fans will watch MLS the way hardcore football fans watch the CFL or Arena league: they just like the sport and will do anything to watch it.

Casual fans, hooked by this Women's World Cup (and, in particular, this team), should be spoon fed EPL games, in hopes of growing a larger, American soccer audience. This time, it might actually work.