Soccer in a Football World: The Story of America''s Forgotten Game
ISBN: 9781592138869
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Temple University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Soccer -- United States -- History; Soccer -- History;

David Beckham's arrival in Los Angeles represents the latest attempt to jump-start soccer in the United States where, David Wangerin says, it "remains a minority sport." With the rest of the globe so resolutely attached to the game, why is soccer still mostly dismissed by Americans?

Calling himself "a soccer fan born in the wrong country at nearly the wrong time," Wangerin writes with wit and passion about the sport's struggle for acceptance in Soccer in a Football World . A Wisconsin native, he traces the fragile history of the game from its early capitulation to gridiron on college campuses to the United States' impressive performance at the 2002 World Cup. Placing soccer in the context of American sport in general, he chronicles its enduring struggle alongside the country's more familiar pursuits and recounts the shifting attitudes toward the "foreign" game. His story is one that will enrich the perspective of anyone whose heart beats for the sport, and is curious as to where the game has been in America--and where it might be headed.


David Wangerin was born in Chicago and grew up in Wisconsin. Two years after coaching his high school's soccer team to a debut season of unbroken defeats, he moved to England, partly to be nearer to Aston Villa. He has been a contributor to the British soccer magazine When Saturday Comes since 1988, and now lives in Scotland, where he has developed an affection for Raith Rovers.

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