Chattanooga Times Free Press

United they’re standing

Atlanta has embraced MLS team quickly

- BY ANNE M. PETERSON

Concerns about whether the highest level of profession­al soccer in the United States would draw well in the Atlanta market were apparently overblown. Way overblown.

Atlanta United FC has been attracting big crowds for its first season in Major League Soccer, culminatin­g last weekend when a league-record 70,425 fans came to a match against rival Orlando City.

Arthur Blank, owner of the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons, had expressed interest in an MLS franchise as far back as 2007, but when plans for a new multi-use stadium took shape, the odds of landing a team grew and the city was awarded one in 2014.

At the time, naysayers complained soccer couldn’t compete in a crowded market that already had the Falcons, the NBA’s Hawks, Major League Baseball’s Braves and Georgia Tech. Fans in the city were often labeled as fickle, too. The Atlanta Thrashers often had some of the NHL’s lowest average attendance figures (among other problems) before relocating to Winnipeg in 2011.

The only inkling of how a soccer team might do in the region was the Atlanta Silverback­s, who drew an average of 4,677 fans (in a 5,000-seat stadium) in 2013 while playing in the North American Soccer League — the year before MLS awarded the city a franchise. No one anticipate­d this. Going into the team’s inaugural year, Atlanta sold well over 30,000 season tickets, a league record. The team now leads MLS in attendance, drawing an average of 47,926. That’s ahead of perennial attendance leader Seattle, which also shares a stadium with an NFL team.

Atlanta’s average attendance was boosted considerab­ly this past Saturday as the big crowd watched Atlanta’s 3-3 draw against Orlando. The upper deck of Mercedes-Benz Stadium was opened for the match. The previous MLS mark of 69,225 was set at the Rose Bowl by the Los Angeles Galaxy in 1996.

Atlanta’s game also was the best-attended domestic soccer

match in the United States since the New York Cosmos sold more than 77,000 tickets for a North American Soccer League playoff game at Giants Stadium in 1977.

“It’s incredible,” MLS commission­er Don Garber said. “I think it says that there are really no limits. We never really expected this to happen.”

Orlando City coach Jason Kreis was also impressed.

“I think what Atlanta is doing here with the way they built the team, with the infrastruc­ture that they have, with the training facility, with the stadium, all of those are really good signs and kind of setting a new benchmark in the league for what clubs ought to do,” Kreis said. “I think that is really positive. To have a crowd here tonight like we did, another benchmark to say, ‘This is what the league can be.’ I am really pleased to have been part of it.”

With the draw, Atlanta extended its home unbeaten streak to nine consecutiv­e matches, then stretched that to 10 with a 4-0 win against the Galaxy on Wednesday night. Atlanta is now 9-2-2 overall at home.

Atlanta was initially supposed to begin the season at the $1.5 billion stadium it shares with the Falcons, but constructi­on delays pushed back the opening three times, and the team played home games at Georgia Tech’s Bobby Dodd Stadium to open the season.

Atlanta goalkeeper Brad Guzan was looking at the big picture after Saturday’s record-setting match: He hopes Atlanta’s

success boosts the entire league.

“I think it means the league is growing,” Guzan explained. “It means soccer down here is definitely huge and popular, which is good for us. Hopefully, this will catch on around to some other clubs in the league and this will start to be more of a consistent turnout,” he said.

One final note: MLS said Saturday’s game was the fourth best-attended soccer match in the world that day, just behind Bayern Munich against FC Mainz in the Bundesliga (75,000) and ahead of Tottenham Hotspur against Swansea City in the English Premier League (65,366).

› Atlanta 4, Galaxy 0: Yamil Asad scored twice and Josef Martinez had his 17th goal as Atlanta (13-8-7) rolled, scoring three goals in seven minutes for a 3-0 lead midway through the first half.

Martinez opened the scoring in the 13th minute for his seventh goal in seven days. Asad beat his defender at the edge of the box, sent it across the goal and Martinez redirected it home.

Asad scored three minutes later. Jon Kempin punched away Hector Villalba’s close-range smash, Miguel Almiron’s rebound attempt was deflected wide and Asad one-touched it home. In the 20th, Villalba got past the defense for a through ball and found Asad wide open for an easy tap-in.

Jermaine Jones was given a straight red card for Los Angeles (7-16-6) in the 39th, and four minutes later, Almiron chipped Kempin on a breakaway.

Martinez moved two goals shy of New York City’s David Villa for the Golden Boot award as the league’s leading scorer this season.

“... all of those are really good signs and kind of setting a new benchmark in the league for what clubs ought to do.”

– ORLANDO CITY COACH JASON KREIS

 ?? THE ASSOCIATE DPRESS ?? Atlanta United FC fans cheer before Saturday’s home match against Orlando City. The crowd of 70,245 set an MLS attendance record.
THE ASSOCIATE DPRESS Atlanta United FC fans cheer before Saturday’s home match against Orlando City. The crowd of 70,245 set an MLS attendance record.

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