El sistema de la liga profesional de EE. UU. para 2022 EXPLICADO | Salarios, Asistencia, Niveles, etc.



¡Echa un vistazo a las botas Halts! Instagram: Sitio web: ¿Quieres entrenar como yo? Echa un vistazo a mis programas de formación individual: ¡Sigue mi viaje! Sígueme en Instagram: Sígueme en TikTok: Sígueme en Twitter: Sigue a Become Elite en Instagram: Sigue a mi PODCAST: Acerca de mí Nombre: Matt Sheldon Edad: 29 Altura: 6′ 0″ Peso: 170 libras Nacionalidad: EE. UU. Trabajo: Profesional Jugador de fútbol Equipo actual: Charleston Battery Liga actual: USL Championship (USA 2nd Tier) Último equipo: FC Tulsa Equipos anteriores: Tulsa Roughnecks, Waterside Karori FC, Saint Louis FC, Orange County Blues, SG Kinzenbach Posición: RB/LB/RM College : Universidad de California Davis (D1)

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48 opiniones en “El sistema de la liga profesional de EE. UU. para 2022 EXPLICADO | Salarios, Asistencia, Niveles, etc.”

  1. As somebody who comes from England, when I see the set up of football in the US you seem to have it back to front. One of the reasons that football has been going so long in England are the grassroots teams. These are the leagues and teams where the fans actually play, this is where their love for the game comes from and where their dreams start. I may be wrong but I just don't see this in the US where it all seems to an outsider that the whole thing is driven by the college system and money. The US must be missing out on thousands of kids who will never go to college so once they leave High School they are lost.

  2. New subscriber, this video is great! I want to understand however, why is the minor leagues so…. I don’t want to say disorganized so let’s go with kitty wampus, it sounds less harsh. This updated system seems a lot more structured than that of years past but still, you named nearly the same amount of leagues off pyramid as on it.

    Why isn’t this structured like MiLB? Maybe a bad analogy, but imo I would think that having let’s say FC Cincinnati have Louisville City FC as a tier 2 affiliate, then maybe an affiliate in Dayton for tier three, and indoor teams etc could be affiliated at the third level. If it’s about funding, obviously these teams are making due to some extent as presently operating so leave that out of it and use it like a farm league? I won’t pretend to know what I’m talking about when it comes to US Soccer but I’m genuinely interested in knowing why this system isn’t in place.

    Furthermore, why are some teams called Portland Timbers II…. That’s unoriginal and boring and what’s worse I notice that quite a few of these reserve teams play in the same bloody stadium and town as their MLS counterpart. Why not take the sport to a city that DOESNT have the MLS, grow the fan base, grow the amount of exposure? You don’t see MLB affiliates named NY Yankees II…. So what’s that all about?

  3. New subscriber here… Great video. Simple and easy to understand. Wonder if you have a similar video on the other non-professional leagues like UPSL all the way down to youth programs. Thank you.

  4. Thanks! now it's more clear to me. I was born and played in Italy for a long time. I've been in the US for more than 12 years now, and my son plays club soccer… so I was trying to get my mind around this convoluted and overcomplicated system we have in the US… Hopefully, it will look more 'civilized' and rational soon.

  5. Pro/rel would destroy MLS and set soccer in this country back 20 or 30 years. If implemented the league would instantly divide into the haves vs the have nots. Half of the teams would sell everything of value and then sell the club because they know they won't have the resources to compete with the richest owners and relegation would mean financial ruin (bankruptcy). The high revenue clubs would instantly double or triple their spending insure they can never be relegated like the top spending clubs in Europe who never get relegated. To the point where say some USL side, with their $1.5 million payroll get promoted and face LA Galaxy or Atlanta United that in an open system could easily have payroll of $50 million+++. Is this more competitive? People fall in love with the romance of pro/rel but the reality is some 20 year old can't sleep because tomorrow he is going to play against a team with 50 times the talent and if they lose the entire support staff gets laid off. Is that the kind of competition we need in this country? I heard someone use a similar example as something we need here. The sport is growing faster than anyone ever imagined. Maybe our system works.

  6. In the US, players are promoted and relegated so that the teams in each league can have the financial stability required in a system that values competitive balance. MLS chose that system in part because the open system used in the past was seen as the reason the NASL collapse. It also has proven to be a very stable system that promotes league growth.

  7. Building An Amateur Soccer Nation by Bill Marth, great read on the Soccer Pyramid!

    Tell ‘em Ric from The Parsippany Football Club sent you 🙏🙏

    Let’s keep this ball rolling!! ⚽️⚽️⚽️

  8. If USL can get pro-reg between their leagues I could see them either pressuring MLS into joining the pro/reg system as the pemier American league or surpassing MLS one day if MLS refuses to adapt

  9. The fact that you don't have promotion and relegation is more or less the only reason i don't care at all about football/soccer in the US, I wanna care about it but without that aspect there really isn't that level of excitement that you get in europe.

    Its kinda weird actually, the team that I support (FC Copenhagen) here in Denmark isn't really in the talks about promotion and relegation, they are already in the topflight of danish football and it doesn't seem likely that they will be relegated any time soon but regardless having it there and seeing who goes into the league who goes out is a load of fun and even when your team gets relegated its still fun to follow them and fight their way back to the higher leagues.

    I swear that if the US introduced promotion and relegation I would be an instant fan an properly follow the leagues there

  10. For those saying that the teams in lower divisions do not have much to play for because there is no pro/rel, I do not agree with that. The US is different than other countries because we have sports here that are more popular than soccer is here. Also we have a lot of big markets. There is a reason why the MLS wanted a team in Miami. Miami is a big market. Orange County SC won the USL Championship last year, and they have been able to sell their players for good profits. The motivation for teams in lower divisions is to make profits, and one of the ways that they do that is by developing and selling players for profits. Recently, Orange County SC has transfered Kobi Henry to Ligue 1 club Stade de Reims. Before that, Orange County SC trsnsfered Aaron Cervantes to Scottish giant Rangers FC in 2020, and Ronaldo Damus was transferred to Swedish club GIF Sundsvall this past January.

  11. @Become Elite, I want to try out for usl but live in a rural area and don’t know how to get involved, any tips? I’m a few hours from Charleston I wouldn’t mind trying out for your team to be honest

  12. It seems that everyone forgets that soccer in America is as old as any other sport. The NASL was the top league in the 70's & 80's…but they got so greedy they almost killed the sport. There has been a grassroots foundation to the sport for over a hundred years. The thing is the sport never had the grip on the American sports fan like other sports. And until recently still well behind in the sports fandom. Those attendants numbers you show is still below the average for even hockey which plays in smaller indoor arenas. Until soccer can grab the normal American sports fan. It will still produce an national team that is marginal at best.

  13. There will never be pro rel in the upper levels of football/soccer in the U.S. when it costs an initial $350 mill to just join the league and MLS itself being single entity…. We may see it in lower leagues possibly at some point.

  14. Hey Matt! My Q &A is… How much money do you pay for taxes as a USL championship player. This is really important to know for players who are trying to budget their expenses when they join a pro club.

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