Can someone explain to a dumb American guy the whole concept of promotion/relegation?
Actually there are a few things about the European soccer leagues I totally don't get. Renting players,
tours of foreign countries that I don't know if the games count or not,
ads all over the jerseys,
brawls in the stands, etc.
I don't know when the season begins or ends,
how the leagues are arranged,
or what the ultimate championship the teams are shooting for.
Injury time is another one. In football, basketball, etc. the game ends definitively when the clock hits 0. In soccer, someone arbitrarily adds 3 minutes to the game, which the ref seems to interpret loosely.
As a Reading FC fan, I want to say congratulations to Reading FC for their promotion last night to the Premiership (English Football). It has been well deserved and a long term coming.
Can someone explain to a dumb American guy the whole concept of promotion/relegation?
Speaking solely for England/Wales - the season runs mid-August to early/mid-May; the professional league has four divisions - Premier League (a separate entity) then the Championship, League One and League Two. Below League Two is the 'Conference', a system of non- or semi-professional clubs. There are a fair few competitions, but the main ones are the league championships, the FA Cup (open to 760+ clubs across the whole country) and the League Cup (open to the four divisions above). Some of the top clubs will also play in the Champions League (top four teams from the Premier League) or the Europa League (positions 5-7 in the Premier League, or the winners of the FA or League Cups if they finished below 7th in the PL). Most teams priortise winning their league, getting promoted or avoiding relegation (as applicable) over the cups, which is a real shame.I don't know when the season begins or ends, how the leagues are arranged, or what the ultimate championship the teams are shooting for
Injury time is a total pain in the ass. It's not quite as arbitrary it seems but it can often make no sense whatsoever. Generally though, you get time added on for making a substitution (30 seconds), goal celebrations (up to a minute, sometimes considerably less), treatment for injuries. The longest game I can recall had 11 minutes added on - Arsenal v Liverpool last season - but it's typically 3 or 4 minutes.Injury time is another one. In football, basketball, etc. the game ends definitively when the clock hits 0. In soccer, someone arbitrarily adds 3 minutes to the game, which the ref seems to interpret loosely
As for promotion/relegation it's a competative thing. Strictly speaking there's no such thing as major and minor football clubs. Obviously there are, but hypothetically there's nothing to stop a small team powering up the leagues and getting to the Premier League, and it has happened before (Wimbledon for example).
Promotion and relegation tends to make things interesting for those teams outside the top 4 or 5 who aren't ever going to win the Premier League trophy.
Hmm it sounds like football (soccer) is organized in a way that is closer to college sports in the US. Many teams with multiple leagues and divisions.
Yeah, I kinda wonder how college football would be with relegation.
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