Since Saturday, over 90,000 people have watched soccer at
CenturyLink Field in Seattle. First there was the Cascadia Cup between
the Seattle Sounders and the Vancouver Whitecaps. Tuesday night was a
World Cup qualifier between the U.S. and Panama. Wrote Sports Illustrated
soccer reporter Grant Wahl: “I have never seen a qualifying crowd so
forceful and vocal in its support of the American players. It was
impossible not to get chills during some of the second-half chants and
when the American Outlaws unveiled a giant U.S. Soccer 100th Anniversary tifo
before the game. There’s a reason U.S. Soccer chose to stage this game
here.” Seattle soccer fans bring that faux-dangerous, sing-songy energy
to a stadium that’s typical of European matches but seemed elusive for
American cities. A chorus of soccer observers believe Seattle — and the
Pacific Northwest in general — is the new epicenter of American soccer.
How, exactly, did Seattle become such a welcoming environment for the
sport?
Seattle has always supported their soccer more than the norm, dating back to the NASL Sounders
days, when attendance at matches roughly doubled the league average.
Youth participation in the area is strong, but youth participation is
strong across the country. Lots of immigrants have historically played
soccer here, but lots of immigrants play soccer everywhere.
One more plausible explanation is the three-way rivalry in this
region between Portland, Seattle and Vancouver. There’s no other common
sport for Portland, Vancouver and Seattle — which have a combined
population of about eight million — to compete in. Compare that to the
Acela cities of the Northeast, which play in every major sport, at every
time of year. Other regions don’t need MLS to crown a champion. In the
Pacific Northwest, soccer is the only means of determining supremacy.
(There are no ways to determine supremacy besides sports.)
Another theory is a bit more abstract. Maybe Seattle, Portland and
Vancouver are so dedicated to their counter-culture archetypes that they
will like a sport merely because the rest of the country doesn’t. Maybe
it makes perfect sense that soccer would be imported into this city as
well, the single sport the rest of the country so readily and often
vocally rejects. It fits in with the ethos of the region as neatly as
indie coffee shops and scratch cocktail bars.
But these are still fans acting like fans. They don’t all have master’s degrees in poetry, or if they do, they’re not showing it. They passed out “Song Cards” for both matches, featuring lyrics such as “you’ve got health care / we’ve got tanks” (for the match against Vancouver, of course) and “We came to drink / We came to sing / Burn, destroy, wreck and kill.” Chants about violence and nationalism? Soccer really has come a long way in America.
But these are still fans acting like fans. They don’t all have master’s degrees in poetry, or if they do, they’re not showing it. They passed out “Song Cards” for both matches, featuring lyrics such as “you’ve got health care / we’ve got tanks” (for the match against Vancouver, of course) and “We came to drink / We came to sing / Burn, destroy, wreck and kill.” Chants about violence and nationalism? Soccer really has come a long way in America.
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