Major League Soccer is the top-flight professional soccer league in the United States and Canada, and was founded in 1996 after the USA hosted the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Major League Soccer is certainly the most prominent, popular, and profitable soccer league currently and of all time in the U.S.A., and its goal is to become one of the top soccer leagues in the world. The MLS was founded in 1996 and is currently celebrating its 25th anniversary.
History of Major League Soccer
The first successfully organized national soccer league in the U.S. came about much later in comparison to that of other countries around the world. The league was founded in 1993 and held its first season in 1996 after the United States Soccer Federation, the official governing body of soccer in the U.S. and more commonly known as U.S. Soccer, pledged to create a Division 1 professional soccer league as part of its bid to host the 1994 World Cup.
MLS started with 10 teams in 1996 and a television rights deal with ESPN. The league struggled in its first few years due to a lack of attendance, financial problems, and unsuccessful efforts to “Americanize” the sport. It wasn’t until 2002, when the U.S. Men’s National Team made it to the quarterfinals in the World Cup, that MLS started to shed its inchoate skin and find success.
Adoption of International rules and standards
In mid-2000s, MLS adopted the rules and standards of the International Football Association Board (IFAB), a global body that formed in the British Isles and created the codified set of rules known as the Laws of the Game that FIFA recognizes and enforces. Major League Soccer also started constructing new soccer-specific home stadiums for its teams rather than continue to use NFL stadiums. Some MLS players ended up joining European teams, and the league was also able to successfully expand and include more teams.
Increase in Popularity
In 2007, when Toronto FC joined the league, English superstar David Beckham joined LA Galaxy, and Stan Kroenke bought the Colorado Rapids, all of which increased the popularity and revenue of MLS, the league finally started to look successful. Since then, the league has continued to succeed, profit, and expand and will only continue to do so in the near future.