Camisetas POLONIA
Andrew Marchand and John Ourand are joined by Men in Blazers’ co-host Roger Bennett. The three go over the finer points of Comcast/NBC’s $2.76B deal with the Premier League and what it means for U.S. soccer. Bennett provides his usual comedic touch, while also talking about the emotions of going to see his parents this Thanksgiving for the first time in two years. The guys also discuss other news:  NBC Sports’ Thursday Night booth with Drew Brees taking the analyst role on the Thanksgiving broadcast,  Al Michaels’ potentially headed to Amazon, and a new dark horse in the NFL Sunday Ticket sweepstakes. They end the show with their «Calls of the Week,» with Ourand staying close to home with a D.C. choice, and Marchand having Carolina on his mind.

#AndrewMarchand #JohnOurand #RogerBennett

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3 comentarios en «Episode 8: Is it time for soccer in America? ft. Roger Bennett | Marchand & Orand | New York Post»
  1. North American soccer should have built up at the state level, Have state regional leagues, the top teams from which qualify for a Champion's league type format for the whole of America.

    America is too vast for just one league. Football is ultimately a grass roots game that builds up at a local level.

    Plus US soccer needed to be the sport of the poor. it shouldn't have tried to emulate the franchises you see in the big American sports. It should have set up clubs in the poorest areas, and offered subsidized tickets for the poor. Ultimately soccer is the poor man's game. or at least that's how it started out in Europe and Latin America.

  2. Ya in the USA, soccer is Pay to Play so only kids with rich parents get chance for success in the sport.. Mohammad Salah trained on dirt fields growing up and now look at him. In the US, you have to pay thousands every year to let your kid play on a team which means actual talent never makes it through unless their parents make some crazy sacrifices. Disgusting the barrier to play on of the most cheapest sports to play in the world.

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