Except people with close friends or relatives on a particular soccer team and people at a University that make money off a University soccer team and members of a soccer team
Let's say there are 1 million people in a city & 100 people buy ten dollar tickets to see a soccer game at a University each week that might add up to 50 thousand dollars per year before expenses
Students might get free tickets but non students might pay more than ten dollars
Then taxpayers can pay for soccer scholarships but more important!y a University can pretend to make money off it without taxing people
Less than 1 in 10 thousand show up to the University game
By the about 20 percent at most figure I mean during any specific year vs if their children ever were voluntarily on a team in their entire life outside of gym class
In summary I think more revenue is lost by the tax payers in the local community than any revenue the local community makes for people paying to watch soccer
But I support people's right to play soccer without tax funding in a place far away from me
@LordMordred @TSN_Sports
I think if we are talking parents of children in small soccer games it might be less than or equal to about 20 percent of the population of all white parents and then they do not care about games their children are not in