Welcome to In Transition — An American Soccer Network!
The flags are out. The tickets are being purchased (well some are, at least). With the 2026 FIFA World Cup set to kick off on American soil this summer, the nation's soccer enthusiasm has reached a fever pitch, and with it, expectations that are drifting dangerously beyond what
32 years ago, the United States hosted a World Cup. At the time, soccer was a sport for kids and immigrants, a game played in the suburbs on Saturday mornings but rarely discussed at the bar. Then the tournament arrived, and something shifted. Crowds showed up in numbers that stunned
Inter Miami's aggressive pursuit of 'super-club' status is undoubtedly driving significant growth for Major League Soccer, but not without generating friction and valid concerns about competitive balance. The club's strategy, anchored by global megastars like Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, and fueled by the
It’s a subtle shift that many fans have started to notice — the voices calling soccer matches no longer sound quite as connected to the action. That’s because, increasingly, they aren’t. Across major networks like FOX, CBS, and even international broadcasters such as Sky Sports and DAZN, more