I live in the UK, so I don’t care much if soccer interest increases slightly in the States, since that’s sort of like caring about poverty in Palo Alto, while living in a hut in rural Africa.
At any rate, I am fairly sure that most countries which care about football will be very upset if the US of all countries wins it.
It’d also be a loss to the US, I think. I understand that the US team is, and has always been, not considered that great? If so, then a win by the US team implies that it’s an extreme event for the US team; this will attract new fans due to the publicity and novelty of the US team winning; but then, because it was an extreme event, the US team will regress to its mean and consistently lose for the indefinite future, making all its old and new fans unhappy and more than wiping out any gains from having briefly made its old fans happy until the new fans finally attrit.
A win for the US would probably increase the interest in soccer in the US, which I think would be a net loss by your standards.
I live in the UK, so I don’t care much if soccer interest increases slightly in the States, since that’s sort of like caring about poverty in Palo Alto, while living in a hut in rural Africa.
At any rate, I am fairly sure that most countries which care about football will be very upset if the US of all countries wins it.
It’d also be a loss to the US, I think. I understand that the US team is, and has always been, not considered that great? If so, then a win by the US team implies that it’s an extreme event for the US team; this will attract new fans due to the publicity and novelty of the US team winning; but then, because it was an extreme event, the US team will regress to its mean and consistently lose for the indefinite future, making all its old and new fans unhappy and more than wiping out any gains from having briefly made its old fans happy until the new fans finally attrit.
Sometimes people are loyal to teams that keep losing.
Yes, that’s the problem.