• @tal
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      924 days ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v_England_(1950_FIFA_World_Cup)

      On 29 June 1950, the United States defeated England 1–0 in a World Cup group match at Estádio Independência in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

      The odds were 3–1 the English would win the Cup, and 500–1 for the U.S.

      Newspaper headlines in most World Cup nations trumpeted the shocking upset, except ironically in the United States and England. There was only one U.S. journalist at the World Cup: Dent McSkimming of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch; he could not persuade the newspaper to pay for the trip, and had taken time off work to cover the event.[6]: 4  McSkimming’s report of the match was one of the few to appear in a major U.S. newspaper;[6]: 141  [17] some other journals carried agency reports of the match.[18]

      1950: “We have a soccer team?”

      • Jake Farm
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        223 days ago

        So soccer wasn’t much of a thing in 50s America? I would never have guessed that given how ubiquitous it is now.

        • @tal
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          23 days ago

          Soccer’s more popular now than it was then, but even today it’s far-less popular in the US than in a number of other countries, and considerably less popular than the “big” sports.

          kagis

          https://news.gallup.com/poll/610046/football-retains-dominant-position-favorite-sport.aspx

          41% of American adults have football (this is American football, not soccer) as their favorite sport.

          10% baseball.

          9% basketball

          5% soccer

          4% ice hockey

          3% auto racing

          2% ice/figure skating

          And the stuff below that is 1% or less.

          • Jake Farm
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            523 days ago

            After finding out rugby, I could not for the life of me understand why people prefer gridiron football. It is so slow and only occasionally interrupted with action.

            How many americans have played in a soccer team as a child though? I wonder how that would shift the statistics.