The Standard Journal

League embarks on 25th season by looking back and forward

- By Anne M. Peterson

As Major League Soccer embarks on its 25th season with two new expansion teams, it seems worth noting how far the league has come in that quarter-century.

And what better way to look at that evolution than to ask its first employee.

MLS president and deputy commission­er Mark Abbott has been around since long before legends like Landon Donovan, Carlos Valderrama and David Beckham graced the league.

Abbott has seen the expansion of MLS from 10 teams in 1996 to 26 teams this season. Four more are on the way.

He joined MLS three years before its first season and wrote the league’s business plan. He rode out the dark days of contractio­n in 2002 before the re-emergence of the league under current commission­er Don Garber.

He’s seen soccer go from the “next big thing’’ to a legitimate major league sport.

“If you think about the modern era of profession­al soccer, beginning with the World Cup in the United States in 1994, if you think about how people were 6 or 7 or 8 years old at the time, and maybe that was the first time they were watching a sport or sporting event. Now they’re in their late 20s or early 30s. So you have an entire generation of people who grew up with soccer as a mainstream sport in this country, which was different than the way I grew up. And so I think it has been a process of the market developing, and the league making investment­s to help develop that market.” Abbott said. “Clearly in the last few years, when you see what’s happening in some of these markets where you get 70,000 people in Atlanta, or what happened with our MLS Cup in Seattle, or what’s happening with our El Trafico game in Los Angeles, you realize this league means a lot to a lot of people.”

Atlanta midfielder Jeff Larentowic­z, a 15-season MLS veteran, echoed Abbott’s thoughts.

“The children that are now in their 30s, the biggest sport to them growing up was soccer. And that’s kind of where we’re at,” Larentowic­z said. “So the iron is hot, it’s time to strike. I think the league is doing that, expanding and trying to really push that. That generation is here.”

The stats back him up. A Nielsen survey showed interest in MLS grew 27% between 2012 and 2018. And a Gallup poll from two years ago showed soccer was tied with basketball in popularity behind American football among fans ages 18-34.

The 25th season will be the first for teams in Nashville and

Miami. Charlotte, Austin, Sacramento and St. Louis will get clubs in the next two seasons, bringing MLS to 30 teams.

For now, the plan is to sit tight at 30, Abbott said. As the 1994 World Cup on home soil led to the start of the league, the 2026 World Cup, a joint effort between the United States, Mexico and Canada, is on the horizon.

“We began with the league launching as an outgrowth of the World Cup here in 1994, and it will be our 30th season (in 2026) and I think an opportunit­y really to show the country and the world that soccer, and Major League Soccer, is a major-league sport and one of the top leagues in the world.”

But before getting too far ahead, here’s what to look for when the 25th season of Major League Soccer begins this weekend:

The LA Galaxy, no stranger to big-time signings, brought in Javier Hernandez — better known as Chicharito — to replace another big name, Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c. The speedy Mexican internatio­nal has spent the last decade in Europe. He’ll be tasked with replacing the offensive firepower of Ibrahimovi­c, who had a franchiser­ecord 30 goals last season before he bolted for Milan.

The 31-year-old Chicharito is the top goal-scorer in the history of the Mexican national team, which has a fervent following among Los Angeles’ expansive Latino population. His signing has already resulted in a boost in ticket sales, and points to an epic El Trafico rivalry with LAFC and fellow Mexican internatio­nal Carlos Vela.

MLS and its players agreed to a new five-year contract this month, avoiding the possibilit­y of a work stoppage to start the season.

It includes greater investment in player spending, and flexibilit­y for the league’s teams in spending those funds. It also expands free agency and allows teams to take more charter flights, which the players had prioritize­d.

The deal gives players a share of the media rights deals in 2023 and 2024.

After some seven years of planning, David Beckham’s MLS team is at last a reality. Inter Miami, with its sleek Miami Vice-reminiscen­t pink logo complete with herons, appears to be off to a solid start.

Sporting director Paul McDonough was key to Atlanta United’s successful launch, coach Diego Alonso is a CONCACAF Champions League winner and Rodolfo Pizarro is a flashy attacking midfielder who built a reputation in Liga MX.

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