Hi, it’s Vanessa. As a former soccer player (ed. note: ok we can call it soccer just this once) I am pumped to be in the US for once. We’ve got the FIFA Club World Cup this year, the CONCACAF Gold Cup, leading to the 2026 FIFA World Cup. There has never been a more important time for the sport to take off stateside than these next few years and Major League Soccer knows it can’t mess up now. “Once those events leave the country, MLS will still be here,” MLS deputy commissioner Gary Stevenson told Bloomberg in an interview earlier this week. “We will be the option for them. And so this is a really important 24 month period for us.” The last time the US hosted the World Cup was in 1994 before the MLS even played its first game, so the attention from the tournament will be unprecedented for the league. However, maintaining the fans will still prove to be a challenge due to the league’s broadcast deal with Apple TV. St. Louis City fans hold up scarves as their team takes the field during a MLS regular season game against DC United. Photographer: Icon Sportswire/Icon Sportswire They are in year three of a $2.5 billion 10-year deal with the streaming service that has limited their viewership growth. Last year’s MLS Cup broadcast on FOX only drew 468,000 viewers, down 47% from the year before. The game was also being simulcasted on Apple TV, which could be the reason for the low broadcast numbers, but the streaming numbers were not released. This is a problem. How can we tell if the deal with Apple is a success or not for MLS if we don’t know who’s watching? There needs to be more accountability. The league understands the distribution limitations and took measures to increase the accessibility. Comcast Xfinity and DirectTV customers will now have Apple TV ingrained in their systems and be able to subscribe directly from there. The Apple TV app will also now be available for Android devices, which the deputy commissioner pointed out is good for their market in Latin America because over 80% of the region doesn’t use iPhones. “If you put all of that together, the distribution of season pass will be significantly more than it was,” said Stevenson. “And we're excited about that.” This season also brings the league up to an even 30 clubs with the addition of the latest expansion franchise San Diego FC. The MLS has added a new team nearly every year since 2015 but 30 is typically the number that signifies a league is full. “We're not actively seeking expansion,” Stevenson said. “It's not something that we put on our list of priorities. But if there is an attractive market with an attractive ownership group that is interested in our league, we of course, will have those conversations.” Bloomberg also spoke to the CEO of the newest team San Diego FC on the Bloomberg Business of Sports podcast about leading the introduction of his second expansion franchise. Tom Penn also led LAFC into their inaugural season. Listen to the full interview here. Hi, it’s David. The 49ers have chosen an interesting time to try to make an investment in Glasgow Rangers, the Scottish footballing giant. Only days ago, Rangers’ footballing fortunes sank to what for many was an unthinkable low. It lost a home cup tie to a team in a lower division for the first time in its 153 year history (Queens Park FC). The 49ers, who also own Leeds United, want at least 51% of investors to agree to a 25p-a-share proposal before proceeding with a bid, according to a person familiar with the situation. Glasgow Rangers during the cup match on Feb. 9. Photographer: Ian MacNicol/Getty Images The deal values the club at around £120 million — incredibly about the same amount as Bill Foley, the billionaire owner of the National Hockey League’s Las Vegas Golden Knights — paid for the successful, but less storied Bournemouth. Rangers is a big club. It is almost guaranteed to qualify for the Champions League or Europa League each year through virtue of it being one of two perennially top teams in Scotland, alongside its fierce crosstown rival Celtic. It’s hard to know if £120 million is good value or not. Still, the 49ers will have plenty of money if they sell their stake in their NFL team, Bloomberg reported earlier this week. The 49ers, who declined to comment, have given investors until March 1 to agree a deal. Rangers told the Press Association: “It is not our policy to comment on speculation. If there were any such discussions, these would remain confidential.” The press officer didn't return calls. |