The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Arthur Blank cautiously bets on fans in Gwinnett
Atlanta United proved a shockingly large number of metro Atlantans are willing — anxious even — to pay good money to go wild at pro soccer games.
But a top official for United and Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank is toning down expectations as they press their luck with the world’s biggest sport. The organization is poised to test the market with a lower division pro soccer team in Gwinnett County.
The new United Soccer League team will play next year at Coolray Field, where peers with the minor-league Gwinnett Braves have seen their own fan base sink from small to tiny.
We’re about to find out if yet another soccer team can outdraw average local game attendance for what we’re supposed to believe is America’s favorite pastime.
Just how much soccer can one community squeeze the pudding out of ? And how many pro teams can be stuffed into Gwinnett? (The Atlanta Gladiators minor-league hockey team and lacrosse’s Georgia Swarm are also there.)
“We’ve got modest expectations on attendance,” Steve Cannon, the CEO of Blank’s AMB Group, told me when I asked about the new USL team.
They have a plan, though, to improve their odds. Season-ticket packages for Atlanta United games at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium also will include tickets to USL games in Gwinnett, Cannon told me. (Though a team spokeswoman said it’s not yet clear how many USL games will be included in the Atlanta United package.)
“We think it will be a delight” for fans, Cannon said.
That doesn’t sound like a
great way to bring in ticket revenue, if that’s a primary goal. But maybe it’ll be a jump-start for a team that competes with lots of other entertainment options in Gwinnett and the rest of metro Atlanta.
So far, the team doesn’t have a long-term commitment in Gwinnett. The deal at the county’s Coolray Field is for one year, with fees being paid for using the facility as well as for the cost of converting the baseball field into a soccer pitch for each USL game.
Cannon told me there is no particular intention to move, though. “Ultimately, we want to build a fan base, so moving around is not good.”
I suppose the Gwinnett Braves might want to make sure they can live with the hassle of cohabitating with soccer.
The tentative tenor sits in stark contrast with the remarkable success of Atlanta United, which in the fall finished its inaugural season.
The team made it into the playoffs of the nation’s top-rung Major League Soccer. And Atlanta United’s average attendance of more than 48,000 set a record for the MLS and outdrew every team in Major League Baseball, the National Basketball Association and the National Hockey League.
USL teams across the nation tend to generate far smaller crowds, averaging a few thousand per game.
But let’s face the cold truth: Neither the Gwinnett Braves nor Atlanta United’s planned USL team exists primarily to attract fans to their games. Their central function is to supply their big brothers with a talent pipeline or to take in players from the higher level teams that need more work.
Of course, who doesn’t want to woo fans across a wider geography?
“It will allow us to push our reach north,” Cannon told me.
Hopefully, soccer can manage the trek.