Abstract

The growth of professional soccer in the United States is evident through the rapid expansion of franchises and increased game attendance within Major League Soccer (MLS) and the United Soccer League (USL). Coinciding with this growth is the emergence of European-style supporters’ groups filling sections of MLS and USL stadiums. In this study, the authors utilized an egocentric network analysis to explore relationships among supporters’ group members for two professional soccer clubs based in the United States. Egocentric network research focuses on the immediate social environment of individuals and is often viewed as an alternative approach to sociocentric (i.e., whole network) analyses. This study employed hierarchical linear modeling as an example of multilevel modeling with egocentric data, using ego- and alter-level variables to explain the strength of co-attendance ties. The results indicate the perceived commitment of fellow fans to the team, shared membership in a supporters’ group, age, and interactions with other fans in team settings related to higher levels of co-attendance. The outcomes of this study are both theoretical, as they advance an understanding of sport consumer behavior within soccer supporters’ groups, and methodological, as they illustrate the unique value of employing egocentric network analysis in sport fan research.

Highlights

  • The rapid ascendance of professional soccer in the United States within the last quarter of a century has changed the American sports landscape

  • The United Soccer League (USL), the second-tier professional soccer division in the United States, has almost doubled its average game attendance during the 2010s, with the 2019 season bringing in nearly 4500 fans per game [1]

  • Our study extends the work of Katz et al [34], who used social network analysis and hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) to examine similar network variables

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Summary

Introduction

The rapid ascendance of professional soccer in the United States within the last quarter of a century has changed the American sports landscape. Soccer supporters’ group members differ from traditional sport fans through their expressions of organized fandom These groups occupy a specific section of the stadium together and exhibit flags, banners, and other visual displays; organize cheers and chants; and play musical instruments to enhance the in-stadium atmosphere and provide a more active and engaged form of support for their team [4,5,6,7]. To orchestrate this type of collective behavior requires coordination

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