Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5
Countries with strong leagues tend to have top ranked world cup teams. MLS could easily become a top 5 league in the world, and when that happens, Canadian kids will be attracted to soccer even more, so that instead 1 Alphonso Davies, and 1 Jonathon David, Canada could have a whole squad of elite players.
Ten years from now, Canada will be in the top 20 FIFA rankings, and in 20 years, maybe top 10, and a shot at it.
|
Yet, all the leagues that are better than the MLS are all national leagues, not supranational leagues like the MLS and other North American sports leagues.
Look at the EPL, tonnes of smaller cities have teams in the top two flights of English football… while Canada barely even has 8 teams across our “Canadian Premier League” while Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal have teams in the MLS. Doubling down on the MLS, at best, gets Canada a few more clubs in the MLS in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, and maybe Quebec or Winnipeg.
Think bigger… A CANEXIT from the MLS could get us a domestic league that eventually had 40 teams across the top two flights with a system of promotion and relegation… no more of this MLS nonsense. A proper football ⚽️ league should have a system of relegation and promotion.
The whole point is if we ever want to get good at soccer, we need to abandon the American sports mindset and embrace the global mindset when it comes to the world’s game. . .
Staying in the MLS gets Canada nowhere… but turning the CPL system into something great? That could actually give Canada a fighting chance to win a World Cup one day.
The best thing that could ever happen to Canadian soccer would be for the White Caps FC , TFC, and FC Montreal to sell their MLS franchises, but retain their team identities and join the CPL.