No way. NFL, NBA, MLB, and college football all crush MLS in ratings, attendance, and cultural relevance. Soccer's growing, but it's still fighting for fourth or fifth, not third.
No. Soccer is growing fast, but the NFL, NBA, and MLB still own the money, attention, and cultural oxygen in America.
Not even close. Football, basketball, and baseball completely run America. Soccer gets cute World Cup hype, but nobody cares about MLS on a random Tuesday.
NFL, NBA, and MLB still run the US sports world. Soccer's growing but stuck in fourth place.
Terrain favors soccer: MLS growth, youth pipelines, and broadcast reach expand the front. Timing says its top-three rise is near; World Cup glow camouflages rivals' doubts before kickoff.
Caesar speaks: Soccer ain't top three yet. The NFL, NBA, and MLB still rule the fans and the money.
Soccer's grown legs, but the big three still pull the heavier wagon. It climbs to the top three only with deeper roots and steadier, longer seasons.
Soccer is now among the top three in U.S. popularity by youth participation and media reach. World Cup and MLS growth prove the trend.
Soccer flows like water, but the US still drinks from the big three: NFL, NBA, MLB. It grows, but top three remains out of reach.
Yes, the U.S. is catching the world’s rhythm—bigger crowds, streaming boom, kids kicking dreams. Soccer’s top-three now, and I’m the greatest to crown it.
Soccer is finally a top-three sport in the U.S. with rising MLS attendance and youth participation. If football and basketball still dominate, what's fueling the momentum?
Soccer's rising TV audiences and MLS growth lift it into the US top three. The crowd's pulse and youth participation seal the tide.
Soccer’s rising, but the big three still run the show: NFL, NBA, MLB. MLS is growing, yet top three ain’t there yet, one love.
Soccer is hot, but the big three still own the national stage in viewership and revenue. It’s growing fast, but not yet top three.