It's
not the Super Bowl, but World Cup will have its share of parties
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[July 03, 2015]
By Steve Ginsburg
(Reuters) - The women's World Cup final
between the United States and Japan on Sunday may not rival the Super
Bowl, but soccer fans, wild with excitement, will be at viewing parties
in bars, museums and homes across America.
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In Chicago, U.S. Soccer will host a Lincoln Park extravaganza on the
shores of Lake Michigan, where soccer-mad revelers will watch the
title match on a 19-by-33 foot, high-definition screen.
Last summer's viewing party for the men's World Cup drew 28,000
people to Chicago's Soldier Field.
Sunday's game, in Vancouver, Canada, will be a grudge match of sorts
as the Americans lost the 2011 World Cup final to Japan on penalty
kicks after a 2-2 draw.
The World Cup has already become a bonanza for merchandisers and
television broadcasters as the United States seeks its first
championship since 1999, when the Americans defeated China.
Randy Vogt, the manager at Robson Sports in downtown Vancouver, said
demand for USA gear has been hot. He sold out of jerseys ahead of
the USA-Nigeria game and on Thursday received another batch on
special order.
"By Sunday they'll be gone," he said. "Having the U.S. in the final
is great for our business."
Fox Sports said 8.4 million viewers on average tuned in for the team
USA’s semi-final win against Germany this week, and at one point in
the game about 12 million people were watching.
The six USA matches on the Fox networks have averaged 5.3 million
viewers, more than twice the viewership on ESPN of the 2011
tournament through the semi-finals that year.
Overall viewership this year for all games on the Fox networks has
averaged 1.3 million viewers per match, an increase of 45 percent
over 2011, the network said.
Major League Soccer still lags in popularity to other pro sports,
such as football, baseball and hockey, but it is making inroads,
especially when the national teams perform well.
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"We have definitely seen an uptick in ticket sales and attendance at
Seattle Reign FC home matches since the beginning of the women’s
World Cup," said team spokesman Brandon Kolp, adding he has seen
increased interest in the team's "pro experience" camp for girls.
Fans in soccer-loving Portland, Oregon, have a long list of places
to catch the World Cup final, from neighborhood bars to big screen
theaters. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry is hosting a
"Match at the Museum," a free screening of the game on its
four-story screen in its Empirical Theater.
Seventeen-year-old Seattle area goalkeeper Britt Blomso has been
watching the World Cup on television for several weeks and plans to
watch Sunday’s final with family and friends at her home in the
Seattle suburb of Shoreline.
"The U.S. has always been a kind of a powerhouse, at least for
women," said Blomso, who plans to play at Colorado’s Fort Lewis
College after she graduates from high school.
"The fact that we’ve been so competitive is really encouraging, to
see these players play my dream."
(Additional reporting by Julie Gordon in Vancouver, Eric M. Johnson
in Seattle, Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, and Shelby Sebens in
Portland, Oregon; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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