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The 3% will be the yanks who see nothing wrong with it as their sports use the same models.I think it’s disappointing that it’s only 97%.
The 3% will be the yanks who see nothing wrong with it as their sports use the same models.I think it’s disappointing that it’s only 97%.
Bet a lot of players are on the phones with their lawyers about this. Expect a lot of legal challenges from them about terminating their contracts if they can't play for their national teams due to this.
Without promotion and relegation, English league football would lose much of its enduring attraction. So too, for European footy.I’m City before anything but any victory would feel hollow if we could never be relegated from the Super League. I could lose interest in the sport which I would never have thought.
Probably the consortium under whatever chosen name they want to be known asWho do we think will make the announcement? The clubs involved?
So your last 3 sentences indicate your issue is changing something that already exists, not the lack of promotion/relegation per se. Ok, now I understand - and that’s a perfectly valid viewpoint, you don’t want to change something which in your view is already working ok.The point I was making was that the danger of failure drives the ambition of a sporting club. Keep that and fans remain engaged, the team remains driven; remove it and you end up with a facsimile of competitive sport.
The 6 nations is successfully accepted by fans because there wasn't a previous alternative. There was nothing to compare and contrast. The same as in the US with the way they do things.