Quote:
Originally Posted by Welkin
but whether should we as a country spend Billions and Billions of taxpayer money to host a sporting event for a sport that the large majority of Canadians have little interest. We all agree that there are pockets of fan support for soccer throughout Canada. However, I don't believe that my fellow Canadians should spend billions of dollars just so that I can pursue my interest in seeing in person world class soccer. We have much higher needs for our tax dollars than building white elephant stadiums.
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I think your premise is wrong. I thought the debate has always been whether we could host a WC rather than whether we should fund it.
And I don't know where you get the idea of white elephant stadiums. What new construction there would be would be needed. The only possible white elephant would be if they built something new for Toronto without having thought of its future legacy and ability to draw events or a main tenant. And that we have debated.
To say that a large majority of Canadians have little interest is wrong as well. That has always been born out by the large ratings the WC gets, contrary to what the TFC people like us to think about online content.
I look at it as an event and Canadians love big events, does that correlate to a mainstream interest in soccer maybe not (proving your point) but it does point to a massive interest in the temporal event.
In 2002 our love affair with the CWNT began at the U19WC in Edmonton that evolved into a huge story and event. Does that mean that watching teenage girls playing soccer would become big? (No rude comment please

) No it just was an event that steamrolled.
More people watch the Grey Cup than the regular season should we judge the CFL only on huge Grey Cup ratings, obviously not.
But you can't say the WC wouldn't be a success and that Canadians would have little interest. Whether to spend the money or not is a different story.