Consider This from NPR - Messi Mania: Will Bringing Soccer's 'G.O.A.T.' Change Major League Soccer's Rep?

Episode Date: July 23, 2023

The United States' preeminent professional soccer league, Major League Soccer, has long lagged behind top European leagues.However, international soccer superstar Lionel Messi joining the Inter Miami ...might be the boost the league needs.NPR's Scott Detrow reports on the impact of Messi coming to the MLS and what the league's future could be.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This message comes from Indiana University. Indiana University performs breakthrough research every year, making discoveries that improve human health, combat climate change, and move society forward. More at iu.edu slash forward. Definitely rooting for red. A few nights ago, producer Brianna Scott and I went to Washington, D.C.'s Navy Yard.
Starting point is 00:00:24 It was hot. It was humid. Ice cold water is better than Chelsea. Ice cold water. But there was a lot of excitement. Thousands of sports fans were there in this neighborhood that just a few years ago hosted the World Series. This crowd was focused on soccer and headed into the home of D.C.'s Major League Soccer team, the United, to watch the league's All-Star game. As rabid as many of the fans were about soccer, they acknowledged that here in the U.S., this kind of scene is still kind of a rarity.
Starting point is 00:00:52 America is considered the best when it comes to the majority of sports, basketball, hockey, baseball, football, lacking in soccer, though. Isaac DiIorio is one of the many soccer fans we spoke to as they headed into the All-Star game. A squad made up of the best players in the league was taking on one of the English Premier League's most storied clubs, Arsenal. Many of the people we spoke to were clearly avid soccer fans, like Patrick Fleming and his dad, Chris. I think that the world community of soccer is something so special were clearly avid soccer fans, like Patrick Fleming and his dad, Chris.
Starting point is 00:01:27 I think that the world community of soccer is something so special that nothing compares to it. Yeah, I mean, I always told him, it doesn't matter where you are in the world, you can always find a game. That's soccer. There's no other sport. Just, maybe not fans of the MLS. How often do you go to MLS games?
Starting point is 00:01:45 Not ever. That's Andreas Gazow, and he's not the only person we spoke to who had never gone to an MLS game. MLS is hoping that's about to change. Enter Miami's number 10, America's number 10, the best number 10 in the world, Lionel Andres Messi! Arguably soccer's greatest of all time, the GOAT, if you will, has come to play in America. Argentina native Lionel Messi walked away from Europe and turned out a monstrous contract offer in Saudi Arabia to come play for Inter Miami. Messi has been the defining soccer great of his generation,
Starting point is 00:02:23 and the fans at the All-Star Game were excited. He's like LeBron James. LeBron or like Michael Jordan, Wayne Gretzky. Think of Tom Brady, Michael Jordan, LeBron James of soccer, right? Messi's arrival has many people wondering what it means for soccer in the U.S. He means so much more than just soccer, right? He's transcended the sport. Getting international players in the MLS just helps raise the bar for American soccer. And more specifically, what it means for a league that has long struggled to take that next step
Starting point is 00:02:53 and break into that top tier of U.S. leagues. Is it that bringing Messi in is going to attract more of a foreign audience to the MLS? Or is it going to turn on more Americans to keep watching soccer now that we have a worldwide star? We'll have to wait and see. Consider this as MLS is about to mark its 30th anniversary. It's closer to the other American major leagues, football, baseball, hockey, and basketball, than ever before. But it's clear the league still lags far behind those top European leagues.
Starting point is 00:03:22 Does messy mania mean MLS's moment is finally here? From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow. It's Sunday, July 23rd. This message comes from WISE, the app for doing things in other currencies. Send, spend, or receive money internationally and always get the real-time mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees. Download the Wise app today or visit wise.com. T's and C's apply.
Starting point is 00:03:57 It's Consider This from NPR. And now your number 10, La Familia, please welcome to the pitch for the first time in Jose Negro, number 10, Lionel Messi! The MLS Messi era began Friday night, when he came off the bench for Miami in the second half of the game against Mexico's Cruz Azul. In front of a star-studded crowd, including some other GOATs, LeBron James and Serena Williams, Messi delivered on the hype. He scored a game-winning goal in extra time to give Miami the victory. Here's the call from Apple TV.
Starting point is 00:04:30 Messi! I think it's exciting to have really one of the biggest names in soccer history come to the U.S. Jasmine Garst is one of my colleagues at NPR. She loves soccer and Messi in particular. Jasmine is from Argentina and last year ahead of the World Cup she hosted a bilingual podcast, The Last Cup, all about Messi and what he means to Argentina and really the globe. Every corner of the world there are kids who are wearing Messi soccer jerseys. I've gone on assignment as a reporter to Uganda and Bangladesh and Europe. Everywhere in the world, there is a child wearing a Messi jersey.
Starting point is 00:05:18 Every award or trophy you can think of, Messi has won it. He's scored hundreds and hundreds of goals, running around the soccer field, making his opponents look silly. Goal de Leo Messi sobre la bocina! El tercero del Barcelona! El segundo de Leo Messi! The irony is that for a very long time, he was so respected around the world,
Starting point is 00:05:41 but in his home country, in Argentina, there was tension because he couldn't seem to deliver when he would put on the Argentine national jersey. Then last year, he finally did it. He won the World Cup in what could arguably be viewed as the most exciting dramatic soccer game ever. And to many, that sealed his reputation as the greatest of all time. Seven months later, he's bringing that energy to Miami in Major League Soccer. We want him to feel that he's part of the MLS family. Don Garber has been the MLS commissioner since 1999,
Starting point is 00:06:26 when no one really viewed it as an actual major league like the NFL or Major League Baseball. The league launched after the 1994 World Cup with great fanfare. World Cup was very successful in the United States. And then we went through a period in the early 2000s where we were thinking of shutting the league down, going through, you know, contracting teams. The teams were mostly playing to small crowds in cavernous NFL stadiums. And no one watching the games was confusing the New York, New Jersey Metro Stars and other MLS squads for Real Madrid or other iconic European clubs. And then we get a call that maybe David Beckham would like to come to Los Angeles. Ladies and gentlemen, it is my distinct pleasure and honor to introduce to Los Angeles and the world the newest member of the LA Galaxy, Mr. David Beckham. In 2007, Beckham was in a similar spot as Messi is now, the former captain of England's national team and a globally famous sports superstar.
Starting point is 00:07:18 And at that time, it was just spectacular. And the crowds were enormous. And David could have gave us the cultural moments that MLS didn't have that the NBA and the NFL does have. And the crowds were enormous. And David sort of gave us the cultural moments that MLS didn't have that the NBA and the NFL does have. And then just became another player. Injuries and the trials and tribulations and ultimately winning championships. And if not for David, there's no Messi. And frankly, I would say if not for David coming here in 2007, I'm not sure the league would be on the trajectory that we have been on. The league has kept growing in the decade and a half since. Most teams play in brand new soccer-specific stadiums. Fans are filling the seats. I asked Garber about what comes next.
Starting point is 00:07:56 I've heard you talk a lot about comparing MLS to the big European soccer leagues, and I've heard you talk a lot about comparing it to the big domestic leagues and other sports in the U.S. in the long term, which is more important to you as you think about the next steps for the league to make? It really is being part of the global conversation of international football. At the end of the day, we're competing against big established soccer football leagues that have enormous reach and fan bases that have 100 years of history that have got generational support. And that's the history, that have got generational support. And that's the marketplace. That's the audience, particularly with a global media partner that we're very focused on. How do you close that gap? Because you can have as much momentum as you
Starting point is 00:08:35 want, but we're talking about a moment in time where it feels like trillions of dollars are being spent in some of these big European clubs. Just the money is more than ever before. The global rights are more than ever before. It just seems to be on another stratosphere. We're still in the earliest days of MLS, right? You think about the lifespan of a company, you know, they look at it in generations, a 20-year period. We're still babies on that path. So we look at really what the future opportunity is. And if you think about things like our development programs, our homegrown player systems, our transfers that continue to grow
Starting point is 00:09:10 in terms of our sales of international players, all of them are beginning to be part of the global conversation. And eventually being part of that family ultimately is going to lead to the kinds of opportunities like the Lionel Messi opportunity. Last thing, I have heard you and so many other people at MLS talk about all the things you're excited about with Messi. What's the thing you're most worried about? Is there anything
Starting point is 00:09:32 you think this has to go right? Yeah. I mean, listen, he has to get totally inculcated into the culture of being in America. And people thought we set up the stunt where he went to a public supermarket. We actually didn't. He wanted to go to the supermarket. People down in Miami are big soccer fans, and they say, hey, that's Messi. Eventually, he asked his wife for the keys to the car, and he went in the car and probably listened to the radio. He probably wasn't doing that in Barcelona. He probably wasn't doing that in Barcelona. I think there's a lot of time that he's going to have to work with all the people around him with the club just to get comfortable.
Starting point is 00:10:07 So that was Don Garber, the commissioner of Major League Soccer. And when you think about his goal of making MLS at the same level as the European Soccer League, the Premier League, it's clear standing outside the All-Star Game in D.C. how far he has to go. There are fans streaming into the stadium to go to this match between the MLS All-Stars and Arsenal. And it feels like 90 percent of the people walking into the stadium are wearing red Arsenal jerseys. They're here to see the British soccer team. I don't think it'll ever be what it is in Europe, but I don't think that means that it'll stay what it is. Still, many MLS fans really think the American League could blow up one day way down the line. Do you feel like MLS could ever be at that EPL level, ever be at that championship? A thousand percent. It's not a if, it's just a when.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Yeah, I would never say never, right? In this case, it's just the U.S. is so far behind. Messi will help with that, and he'll be paid well for his efforts, earning between $50 and $60 million a year, plus a unique agreement where he gets a cut of the revenue Apple makes from new subscriptions to its broadcasts of MLS games. It is more of the Hollywood-type model. Kenneth Shropshire is a professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business. He's an expert on the business of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business. He's an expert on the business of sports, and he says there is no question Messi will boost the league in the short term. The whole question becomes, is this going to be sustained? And are you going to be able to hold on to fans that you might bring in,
Starting point is 00:11:41 and sponsors and endorsers and others? And will there really be this next generation of athletes that have the option to play anywhere else in the world? And they say, no, I'm going to come to the MLS because I see the value that can be brought. And then there'll be who will be the next one to get the Apple type deal. What happens on the field will be what matters most. We are moments away from the 2023 MLS All-Star Game. At the All-Star Game, MLS's top players lost to Arsenal, who was playing without its top roster, by a lopsided score of 5-0. Martino's. Havertz!
Starting point is 00:12:21 A fifth for Arsenal. This matches the record for goals scored by an international club opponent against the MLS All-Stars. At the same time, they lost in front of a sellout crowd of 20,000 fans. And on the side of where things are headed, outside the stadium after the game, vendors were hawking bootleg pink Miami jerseys,
Starting point is 00:12:45 with Messi and his number 10 on the back. This episode was produced by Brianna Scott. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detrow.

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