Originally posted by gng007:I'm going to ask a question. It is a question that might shock some of you.But try to remain calm, and if you want, go ahead and answer.
Here it comes:
I don't understand soccer (yes, I'm going to call it soccer) leagues. I really want to understand it better because I'm growing more fond of the sport. MLS (the American professional soccer league, which many of you I'm sure feel like is quite comical) soccer is catching on here in the States. I have a team in my city (Real Salt Lake). Real SL won the MLS cup in 2009 and is now playing in the finals of the CONCACAF tournament. If we win our game tomorrow night against Monterrey Mexico then we get to go to the Fifa Club World Cup in Japan and line up against some premier teams. That would be a dream for us here in Salt Lake City.
ANYWAY, my question is this: I don't understand soccer leagues and how I am supposed to follow soccer globally. Sure, I can follow MLS pretty easy enough. ESPN covers that here in the States. But I have no idea, for example, what league Real Madrid plays in. Or even (gasp) Manchester United. I hear of these teams, but I have no idea how they work, what leagues they are in, etc. Is there a league in europe that these premier clubs all play in? What about the south american teams? Do they ever play each other? I'm confused. Help. I want to be a fan!
Right. Big mission to explain BUT I've got time on my hands, so I'll give it a shot!
For the record, I don't find the MLS comical - far from it. We've been able to watch some matches this year on ESPN America and the quality is far from bad, and you fans are a credit to your league. I've seen far worse quality football-wise in the lower pro leagues here in England.
In Europe, pretty much every country has its own major football/soccer league. Real Madrid play in Spain's top league, La Liga. Germany has the Bundesliga, Italy has Serie A, Holland has the Eredivisie. They're all the top leagues in their football structure. I'll try and explain the general nature of European football structure with England as an example, 'cause it's my 'local' league.
In England, we have a huge football league structure, composed of a lot of divisions. However, I'll just stick to the top four for now, they're the highest up the pyramid.
The top division is the Premier League/Premiership, and is 20 teams strong. Winning it is simple - team that finishes top at the end of the season is champion; we don't have a playoff cup like in American sports leagues such as the MLS, NHL etc. Each team plays each other twice, home and away (so 38 games a season) and the top team is national champion. It's the same format with most other leagues around the world; the MLS is a notable exception because I guess the founders want a system which is familiar to the average American sports-fan used to the structure of your other major sports leagues. Below the Premiership, we have the Championship, League 1 and League 2.
In order for teams to move between the leagues, we have a system of promotion and relegation/demotion.
At the end of every season, the bottom 3 teams in the Premiership get relegated/demoted (for essentially being the worst three teams) to the Championship. The Championship consists of 24 teams. At the end of each season, after 46 games (i.e. play 23 other teams home and away once) the top two teams are automatically promoted up to the Premiership.
The third place is filled by the team that wins the end of season playoff, which is competed by the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th placed teams in the division. However, the notion of a playoff system here differs from the American notion of sports playoffs, e.g. the Stanley Cup's 'best of 7' system.
In our playoff system, the four teams are split up into two ties, Team A vs Team B, and Team C vs Team D, and in each tie two matches are played, so both teams play home and away against each other. For example, Team A plays Team B, and wins the first match 2-0 but loses the second match 1-0; they win by virtue of an aggregate victory of 2 goals to 1 overall. Team A goes on to play the winners of the tie between Teams C and D - for the purposes of example, let's say Team D won it. Team A plays Team D in the playoff final, a one-off match, wins 1-0 and thus becomes playoff champions and wins the 3rd promotion place to the Premiership.
This system of promotion and relegation goes on between the divisions, so, as I say, at the top we have the Premiership - 3 teams go down to the Championship, 3 teams come up from the Championship. From the Championship, 3 teams are relegated to League 1, and 3 teams come up accordingly from League 1 to the Championship. From League 1, 4 teams go down to League 2 (why 4, I don't know, just for the purposes of maintaining competition I guess) and 4 teams come up - in the case of League 2, 3 teams are automatically promoted, and the 4th place is decided by a playoff series between the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th teams in the system I explained above. From League 2, 2 teams are relegated, but they go down to what are called the 'non-leagues', which is the secondary level of professional football in England but that's going probably a bit too far into depth bearing in mind this is supposed to be a kind of crash course in European/world football/soccer lol!
Basically, this system of promotion and relegation is similar throughout all the leagues in Europe, but I would suggest that the English league has the greatest amount of structure. The system is generally the same for most of world football, I would suggest, certainly in Europe and South America.
You mentioned the CONCACAF Champions League - the equivalent competitions here in Europe are called the Champions League and the Europa League; in South America, they have the Copa Libertadores, and Asian football has its equivalent Champions League too.
In Europe, the Champions League is far more prestigious and famous than the Europa League, and to some extent the latter is a bit pointless, but that's beside the point. Basically, both competitions are made up by the most successful teams from European leagues. The format is sort of similar to the CONCACAF version. Qualification for the Champions League each season is a fairly complex affair, but we'll just stick with the basics, i.e. the competition proper is composed of 32 different teams from across the continent, e.g. league champions from Italy, England, Spain, Germany etc. and 2nd, 3rd placed teams etc. The actual structure is similar to the World Cup if you remember from last year, but not identical.
The 32 teams are split into 8 groups of 4, and within those groups, each team plays each twice, home and away, so 6 matches altogether. At the end of that phase, the top two teams progress to the knockout stages - the 3rd placed side drops down into the Europa League (but I won't go there for now!) and the 4th placed side is just knocked out of competition completely for the season. In the 1st knockout round aka. the last 16, each team is paired off with another to play a two-legged tie. The winners of those two-legged ties play in the quarter final stages, being paired off together again. The winners of the quarter finals progress to the semi-finals, again paired off for a set of two-legged ties, the winners play each other in the final. The winner of the Champions' League qualifies for the FIFA World Club Tournament you mentioned earlier, although if they pull out for whatever reason, the winner of the Europa League fills their place, but that rarely happens.
Examples of teams from the major European leagues (listed by country / top tier division) -
England / The Premiership - Manchester United, Chelsea, Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur
Spain / La Liga - Real Madrid, Barcelona, Atletico Madrid, Valencia, Sevilla, Villarreal
Germany / Bundesliga - Bayern Munchen, Schalke 04, Borussia Dortmund, Werder Bremen, Hamburger SV
Italy / Serie A - AC Milan, Inter Milan, Juventus, AS Roma, Lazio
Holland / Eredivisie - Ajax, PSV Eindhoven, Feyenoord, FC Twente, AZ Alkmaar
I could go on but shan't for now lol. I've just listed some of the more familiar names from some of the biggest leagues in Europe that you may find yourself coming across. At the moment, we're coming to the end of the football season here in Europe; most of the major leagues have only a few games left of their domestic calendar - in England, Manchester United are on course to win the championship title, as are AC Milan in Italy, Barcelona in Spain and Borussia Dortmund in Germany (although in neither case are they dead certs as yet). In the Champions League, we're at the semi-final stages - tonight, Manchester United just beat FC Schalke 04 2-0 in Germany, and are favourites to progress to the final (sorry Kirsten for reminding you, by the by!), and on Wednesday night, Real Madrid and Barcelona play the first match of their two-legged semi-final tie. As a sidenote, Real Madrid vs Barcelona is known as El Clasico - it's one of the biggest games in world football because they are two traditional powerhouses of Spanish football and have a massive rivalry. Think NFL, Steelers vs Ravens or NBA with Yankees vs Red Sox, and then add some - it's a BIG deal.
Anyway, I'll let you digest all that for now and see how you cope
