segunda-feira, 18 de junho de 2018

Former teammates not happy with Landon Donovan’s paid support for Mexico

Going in on “all in for El Tri”


As the 2018 World Cup gets underway, it seems like there are an ever expanding number of ways that American fans can experience the tournament. They can look on in embarrassment or anger at the fact that the USMNT didn’t qualify for the tournament while paging through Bruce Arena’s new book. Another option is picking a different team to root for. Americans whose families immigrated recently often choose to support the teams of their parents or grandparents to have a familial connection to the tournament and the sport. Others may not know that they have relatives from Glogau in the Kingdom of Prussia and should thus support Poland and pledge their fealty to King William I. Luckily, Fox advertiser 23 and Me would be happy to sell them a DNA test to dig up that information and guide the very important team selection process.
While it might seem reasonable for fans to engage with the tournament by picking a team to support, it’s unexpected that former USMNT players are doing the same - and yet, more unexpected is that the adopted team they’re picking is Mexico. So, what’s going on with that? Things more or less kicked off with former USMNT players expressing their support for El Tri when Alexi Lalas donned a Mexico kit for Fox, “The Home of El Tri.”
This just seems... strange. In the past Lalas has decried diversity and even declared that “There’s only one national team” on air during a Copa America broadcast about Mexican-Americans wearing El Tri kits on their way to a match between Chile and Mexico. It doesn’t seem like this is coming from a place of any desire to genuinely support Mexico. Rather, it looks like Fox has decided that the way to cover the World Cup with the USA at home is to appeal to a massive audience of Mexican-Americans and Mexicans that it just recently realized was an audience it should entertain and that Lalas has in the past criticized.
Overall, the Fox coverage of the tournament has been lacking. Aside from the network using remote broadcasts to call games from studios in the US, somehow they’re being outdone by ESPN who has a bigger team in Russia to cover the biggest event in the world. The bottom-line driven Fox coverage is clearly based on appealing to a mass audience by focusing on Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, and building the coverage around stars rather than the entire event itself. In addition to the smaller team covering the World Cup, what has been offered hasn’t been well researched and is filled with cliches or odd comments like - “A gaze into the brain that is constantly working” - whatever that means. Similarly, rather than giving billing to every story or letting the narrative of the tournament unfurl and have it lead the story that Fox tells, the network is following marketing revenue by appealing to the Mexican audience.
Joining Lalas in his support of Mexico, or at least in support of advertisers, is another former USMNT legend, Landon Donovan. Soak this one in:

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