Dinsy Ejotuz
Footballguy
And in fact the league (which owns all player contracts for all 18 teams and determines total salaries) has apparently had enough of parity and gotten tired of waiting for its big market teams, New York and LA, to win enough hardware to help promote the sport in the country's biggest cities. So the salaries for New York and LA are roughly three times bigger than any other team in the league this year.Would they be lining up to buy Fulham kits in Singapore if the Cottagers pulled down a single Premier League title? No chance. Would Seville would be an international marketing force like Barca or Real if they found a way to win it all in La Liga? No one wrote a Broadway musical about the Kansas City Royals last time I checked, but the Damn Yankees have one. Was the casual fan was more interested in the NFL when Baltimore and Tampa were winning lone titles than when the 49ers, Cowboys and Patriots had their heydays in the 80s/90s/00s? Jordan's Bulls, Bird's Celtics, Magic's Lakers, Detroit's Bad Boys? Or the '77 Trailblazers? (Holy #### - don't look now, but the NBA has zero parity!)Yeah. That's what I thought. Dynasties sell.Plenty of other factors in play of course, but the MLS is a capped league with rules designed to encourage parity. It pales in comparision to La Liga, the Premiership, the Bundesleagua, or really any number of other soccer leagues throughout the world.
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. I disagree that it follows that the parity system is not important for the NFL.There are two reasons that parity is more important for the NFL than it is for the other leagues.