Intelligence
Overview
The 10-minute briefing. Market opportunity, what APL is, the competitive picture, and lessons from other leagues and properties.
What's in the Knowledge Base
4 pages, organized by function. Start here, then go deeper on any topic.
Overview
You are hereThe 10-minute executive briefing. Opportunity, competitive picture, and lessons from precedents — all on one page.
Research
Market Data
29 sourcesFandom growth, international viewership (50.3M), MLS attendance vs. TV collapse, NWSL trajectory, 2026 World Cup window, geographic distribution, youth participation.
Competitive Landscape
9 competitors mappedEvery player in American soccer — MLS, USL, NPSL, TLfC, Kings League. USL L1 as the direct competitor. International leagues as the real competition for attention.
Precedents
12 case studiesWhat worked (PLL, IPL, Kings League, Savannah Bananas, DCFC, Chattanooga) and what failed (NISA, NASL, ICC, LIV Golf, MLL, UFL). Five failure patterns and three success categories.
The Opportunity
The Audience Exists
Nobody Is Capturing It
The Timing Is Now
The US is co-hosting the FIFA World Cup — 78 games on US soil, 6.5M expected attendees, 55% of 18–34 year olds plan to watch. The Club World Cup 2025 drew 81,118 to a single match at MetLife. This is a once-in-a-generation window.[5]
What APL Is
APL is a startup professional soccer league targeting the Northeast United States. The founding club — Mass Rising, based in East Boston — is already operational.
The Competitive Picture
Direct competitor: USL League One is APL's most direct competitor: ~14 clubs, ~2,700 avg attendance (declining 6.2% in 2024), ESPN/CBS distribution, USSF D3 sanctioning. A prospective club owner must answer: "Why APL instead of USL L1?"[6]
The real competition: The real competition for American soccer attention isn't other domestic leagues — it's the international product. The English Premier League alone has 36.2M US viewers. 66% of American soccer fans follow multiple leagues. The question for any new domestic product: can you get added to that rotation?[7]
What We've Learned From Others
Across all the research, successful new sports properties fall into exactly three categories.
Radically different products
Kings League, Savannah Bananas
Don't compete with existing leagues — be a different product category entirely.
Massively capitalized with regulatory backing from Day 1
IPL, PLL
Requires either institutional authority (BCCI for IPL) or overwhelming capital + talent acquisition that guts the competitor (PLL took 60–70% of pro lacrosse talent overnight).
Organic single-club community brands with 10+ years of patience
Detroit City FC, Chattanooga FC
Zero centralized infrastructure at the start. Radical patience. Not a league play — a club play that grows into a league over a decade.
Five Failure Patterns
- Challenger leagues that do what established leagues do, but cheaper, almost always fail (NISA, NASL, AAF, XFL).
- Undercapitalized ownership is the #1 killer at every level (NISA, MLL, USL expansion failures).
- Novelty decays without real stakes (ICC went from 109K to new lows in 5 years; LIV Golf can't crack viewership despite $1.1B+ spending).
- Fixed franchise models in thin markets bleed out (MLL lost 7 franchises across two waves of collapses).
- No media deal = no visibility = death (MLL never secured a meaningful TV deal; NISA was invisible).
The Critical Finding
No successful new league has been built in the middle ground — modest capitalization, traditional format, multiple simultaneous market launches, no celebrity founder, no regulatory backing. That middle ground is where NISA, late-stage MLL, and dozens of failed American soccer ventures went to die.
Sources & References
- [1]SBRnet / Samford University Center for Sports Analytics, America's Soccer Revolution: 5 Viewing Trends Poised to Make World Cup 2026 a True Watershed Moment (May 2025)
- [2]For Soccer, World Cup American Fan Insights (Nov 2025)
- [3]Front Office Sports, MLS Reveals Apple TV Streaming Numbers, Raising Questions (Jul 2025)
- [4]Sportico, MLS Team Values 2025 (Jan 2025)
- [5]FIFA, Club World Cup 2025 Achieves Global Success with 2.7 Billion Audience (Sep 2025)
- [6]League One Updater, 2024 USL League One Attendance Report (Oct 2024)
- [7]For Soccer, 2024-25 United States of Soccer (Nov 2025)