Sunday, June 21, 2026

American Soccer Nation (Mark C. Franek)

In American Soccer Nation: The Remarkable 150-Year History of Yanks on a Roll, from Mob Football to the Modern Game, author Mark C. Franek explores the history of soccer across the United States. Soccer has taken a long, arduous road to gain cultural acceptance in America, often battling outside detractors, as well as from within the sport’s American leadership itself. Franek highlights the rise, fall, rise, fall, and rise again of American soccer culture since people first started playing soccer in the 19th Century in campuses and industrial towns.

Franek’s book is a journey through several iterations of “soccer boom” - the first American Soccer League in the 1920’s, the American’s success in the 1930 World Cup, followed by a nadir in soccer during the Great Depression and World War II, before booming again in the 1970s thanks to infusion of money and international talent. Modern soccer has seen the rise of Major League Soccer (MLS), fueled by a better approach to acquiring international stars, although success at the national team level has been inconsistent at best and marred by bureaucratic and philosophical battles over just how the national team should operate. 

Franek closes the book by offering some suggestions on improving American soccer, including investing more in youth academies built around the twin pillars of soccer and education. He acknowledges that he’s employed by one of these academies that boosts the Philadelphia Union’s pipeline of youth talent; however, he correctly identifies that the way to grow soccer is not just from the top down but also from the youth pipelines on up. 

From a soccer fan’s perspective, the biggest challenge to get American soccer boosted in the mainstream remains improved access and coverage on national television (the author glosses past this point in the book). While MLS’s Apple deal has been a benefit financially, TV ratings for the few broadcast games that do occur and coverage and interest among casual fans have dropped. Getting a major sports broadcaster invested in covering MLS fairly is still the longest kick ahead for soccer domestically. However, American soccer is definitely closer to the “big 4” of American sport than at any point in modern history, and it’s likely it will be within the “big 5” sooner than many think.

MY RATING: 4