Soccer is the world's favorite pastime, a passion for billions
around the globe. In the United States, however, the sport is a
distant also-ran behind football, baseball, basketball, and hockey.
Why is America an exception? And why, despite America's leading
role in popular culture, does most of the world ignore American
sports in return? "Offside" is the first book to explain these
peculiarities, taking us on a thoughtful and engaging tour of
America's sports culture and connecting it with other fundamental
American exceptionalisms. In so doing, it offers a comparative
analysis of sports cultures in the industrial societies of North
America and Europe.
The authors argue that when sports culture developed in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, nativism and nationalism
were shaping a distinctly American self-image that clashed with the
non-American sport of soccer. Baseball and football crowded out the
game. Then poor leadership, among other factors, prevented soccer
from competing with basketball and hockey as they grew. By the
1920s, the United States was contentedly isolated from what was
fast becoming an international obsession.
The book compares soccer's American history to that of the
major sports that did catch on. It covers recent developments,
including the hoopla surrounding the 1994 soccer World Cup in
America, the creation of yet another professional soccer league,
and American women's global preeminence in the sport. It concludes
by considering the impact of soccer's growing popularity as a
recreation, and what the future of sports culture in the country
might say about U.S. exceptionalism in general.
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