Blogs May 18, 2009 at 11:40 am

Comments

1
Don't float your theories. Nobody cares, and it isn't that amazing that a small number of seats (a fraction of capacity at that field) have sold out.
2
The New York Times had a decent article on it several weeks ago, and I somewhat liked their theory- the idea is that it's based in Seattle's perception of itself as not quite the same as other American cities. I don't want to say more alternative because that sounds utterly ridiculous, but different. And an extremely visible way to set yourself apart from the rest of the country is to throw support behind a soccer team. That's not how stereotypical America does it, and that's why we want it.
3
Because it's not football season.
4
People like scarves.
5
1) all other sports teams in seattle suck, the sounders just happen to suck the least at the moment 2) the giant xbox logos
6
There are people that like soccer.
There are people that will pay for tickets.
They intersect.
7
dads like watching their kids do ANYTHING. fact. i don't know jack about soccer, but i know about parents.
8
I am going to go with because its fun.
9
Because Seattle is full of pretentious ass hats that think being liberal and progressive means liking soccer.

@2: Of course Seattle would like to think of itself as some European paradise. Except you have to ignore the fact that its a sprawled out mess with barely any public transportation sliding way behind New England as the most progressive area of the country. Just within the NW Portland has Seattle beat for being outside of the normal American feel.

It could also have to do with Seattle having only two other teams left and them both being subpar.
10
Yeah, we know, all you media types don't get why Seattle loves the Sounders and why we don't want to listen to your pathetic attempts to make us broke by going to NFL games instead of real football like the Sounders play.

Tough.
11
Can we please stop calling it 'soccer' now?
12
Maybe not in MLS, because there are so few superstars, but internationally football has more than its share of prima donnas.

As with basketball, those are the players fans turn out to see -- the ones who can do the amazing things only they can, and that you sit through 90 minutes for.
13
@5 and 9

I've got to step in and point out the fact that your "all other Seattle teams suck" mantra ignores recent history.

Since 1999, the Seattle Seahawks have had 5 division titles, 6 playoff appearances, 4 playoff victories and 1 NFC Championship. That's hardly subpar; in fact, it's better than most other teams in the NFL over the last decade.

*sigh* the problem is that everyone here is a fair-weather fan, and thus loses all hope, enthusiasm and memory of past success as soon as a team loses a few games. I really hope that doesn't happen to the Sounders once they (inevitably) have a lousy season sometime down the road.
14
They got off to a pretty amazing start. The tickets are very reasonably priced, especially in comparison to Seahawks or Mariners games, so they they sold a lot of season tickets.

It will be interesting to see how the rest of the season goes now that their performance has significantly leveled off.

At this point I am leaning toward not renewing my season tickets for next year just because I am tired of having to stand up for the whole game when virtually nothing is going on most of the time. That, and the jerkoff PA guy.
15
@11, the word "soccer" dates to the 1880s, about 20 years after the sport was invented. "Football" refers to several different sports including American football, Australian football, and both kinds of rugby (and that's hardly an exhaustive list). In each country "football" is used to refer to the most common form of football played in that country.

If you want "football" to become the common term here for association football, you'll have to wait until it's more popular than that other kind of football. Good luck, you'll be waiting a loooong time.
16
@12: yeah, Christiano Ronaldo isn't exactly known for his humility. I could rattle off a whole list of ridiculous international soccer divas, both who are amazing and who think they are. And @9, I was talking about the perception about Seattle that residents have, so your bitching is pointless. (And Portland can blow me.)

Also, going to games is a lot of fun. I'm going to my first away game this weekend.
17
I like to drink! I like to sing! And I like to make other men feel uncomfortable about what they consider real football.

If ya don't like it, go watch your VHS tapes of Steve Largent scoring touchdowns to Bon Jovi in the Kingdome while eating a KingDog and a brewski.

Piss off, ya fucking cunts!
18
@10 Will, if talking shit about the Seahawks is the only way you can justify the popularity of the Sounders, then you're obviously not very confident in the long term viability of MLS in Seattle.

@11 No. This is America, we call it "soccer" here, because we already have a homegrown sport that we call "football".
19
Also, of course Seattleites are fair-weather fans. We have a moderate climate and natural beauty of all kinds within easy reach of the city (and inside it). It's tempting to go cycling or hiking or skiing or sailing or any other number of active sporting activities rather than sit at home and watch a mediocre team on TV.
20
At my pub a bunch of the regulars have become rabid soccer fans. They come out with their fancy scarves and whatnot. There is definitely a type that has embraced the sport, that's for sure. But this Obama theory is just liberal intellectual masturbation.l
21
And, also, it's just fun. The games are fun live, they're fun at a pub, etc. At this moment it feels inclusive and exuberant and enjoyable. It's new and interesting. It's for everyone- young drunks, families, respectable adults, etc. I do worry a little bit if Seattle's notoriously fickle fans can keep it up, but I do know that there's a well-organized backbone of support that should prevent us from becoming Dallas, and a smart management team who know how to make things work. People are always going to bitch, but why let them spoil the fun?
22
I like soccer in general, I played as a kid, the tickets are reasonably priced, the schedule is easy on my schedule, the quality of play is reasonably high, the players are beautiful, the stand-all-game-and-sing type atmosphere reminds me of going to my college football games. Why the hell wouldn't I get season tickets (and have plans to renew next year)?
23
So when you putting up the seasons tickets for sale @14?

Lots of people would snap em up.

I'll just get in my jalopy with my bear skin coat and pork pie hat ... since we never change what we call games, right old chap? Have you heard about the new stick ball league - good show, that!
24
I suppose it has to be said:
http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/2008/03/…

25
The Pacific Northwest takes pride in "being a little bit different."

Own it.
26
How about the massive year long media blitz, early community buy in opportunities and the fact that another team left town? I'd say it's more a fact of a really effective marketing campaign and the vacuum created when the Sonics got sent off packing. No soccer team prior has done so much advertising or ran such an effective media campaign.
27
When I lived in the Bay Area, I used to watch the Quakes all the time. When I lived in Chicago, I would go and watch the Fire play (at Soldier Field no less). Now that Seattle has an MLS team, I'm thrilled to have that part of my life back again. Not only is soccer the only spectator sport that I have ever enjoyed watching, but there's a lot more motivation to actively participate when a civic pride component is involved. It's nice to support a local team, get to know the players, and be a part of the fans in your own town.
28
Seattle supported the original Sounders in a big way, and the Seattle area has more people per capita playing rec soccer than almost anywhere in the country. Those people like to watch higher level soccer. No grand theories needed.
29
Oh, and the Sounders play in a downtown stadium, unlike most MLS teams, which have theirs out in the exurbs.
30
@28 most of the people I see watching have never kicked a soccer ball in their lives.
31
@16: "And portland can blow me". I second that.

All the sounders success is due to Kasey Kellers Blog: http://www.kaseyslastline.com/
32
@25 got it. It’s a Cascadia thing.

In the late 70’s and early 80’s when the NASL version of the Sounders regularly drew over 25,000, and on occasion drew over 50,000. The rivalry with Portland and Vancouver was huge.

Back then, Republicans got elected all the time in Seattle, so it’s not about liberals. Seattle is a soccer hotbed, face it. Just like Portland and Vancouver. You’ll see when they get teams in 2011.
33
Eli- it's because this generation of parents are chicken to let their kids play football. Kids get hurt, even killed, playing football. But every parent wants their kid to play sports, so soccer is the it-game right now. It gets played four seasons a year. Ever been to Whitman middle school on a Saturday in the fall? There are THOUSANDS of people there, parents & kids, dozens of soccer games all day long crammed onto the new fields. Do a little research on numbers of kids enrolled in youth soccer today versus 20 years ago, I bet you'll see a pretty telling trend.
34
A majority of Sounders fans remind me of a lot of the Mariners fans I see: clueless about the sport, yelling and cheering like trained seals when the video screen or PA guy tells them to and spending a lot of time on their way to and from the concession stands.

We'll see how attendance goes when the novelty wears off, the team isn't winning so often and going to games is no longer the cool thing to do. Or when it's cold and rainy come the fall.
35
That theory is bullshit. Seattle has a huge soccer playing population that has always come out of the woodwork for real footballers (i.e., not A-League). This is our first chance in 25 years to see the highest quality players and matches the US has to offer. Fair-weather fans, like Stranger writers who like to watch cute boys run around on a field, will lose interest by September. The stadium will still sell out without you.
36
@35: some of us enjoy the sport AND like to watch cute boys run around on a field.
37
I don't understand it. Roller Derby as represented by the Rat City Rollergirls round here has just as much teamwork as soccer, is experiencing rapid growth worldwide, and is far more cool rock and roll gonzo than soccer, but doesn't have nearly as many latte sipping fairweathers cheering it on.
38
SOUNDERS FC FOR THE WIN!

SOUNDERS!
SOUNDERS!
SOUNDERS!

oops, sorry, got caught up again, never mind.
39
#35 - the stadium has yet to sell out.
40
@39: You're still on about this? Kill yourself, please.
41
Roller Derby is great if you want to be surrounded by a bunch of people congratulating themselves and each other on how cool, hip and counter-culture they are. The term 'poseur' was coined specifically for such venues. What a joke!

The premise that you can somehow draw some broad conclusion about the city of Seattle which will in turn explain the ability to sell X number of tickets to soccer games is a bit daft from the start. I'm sure all of the offered theories explain away some portion of the ticket sales/fervor. Maybe Seattle is just a place that has a nice confluence of all those things in greater numbers that some other cities, but at some point the hype just feeds on itself and becomes something other. Whether it maintains its current momentum remains to be seen, but there's really no need to explain it or apologize for it. Moving 32,000 tickets to a weekend sporting event in a metro area with a population of over 3 million doesn't really seem that mystical to me.

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