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LaGrandeOrange

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Posts posted by LaGrandeOrange

  1. 2 hours ago, Jer15 said:

    Yeah. I've assumed for 2 seasons now Valour will drop out but the Bombers keep them going, thank goodness.

     

    York just got new ownership.....I don't profess to know much other than the owners also have ties to the Mexican league (which I know very little about). I think their family owned or owns a team.....I should  It's great news the league got the team away from the Baldassarra family who seemed to pass it around between the family and their company. I can only assume that was for tax reasons....but I really don't know so I probably shouldn't speculate.

     

    Either way, I hope that means good things for York...again, call me overly optimistic if you feel that's the case 😆.

     

    I can't stand to think of the CPL disappearing. It's clearly been helping the pipeline. 

     

    All of this just seems too typical for Soccer Canada, finally getting things turned around. I remain optimistic but I admit a bit fearful. I really don't want to think of the program regressing. I recall going to games just hoping they'd win and make it to the hex. I don't want to go back to those days. 

     

     

    Yeah- I feel the same, the amount of CPL talent moving to MLS/abroad is fairly impressive for such a short time and with such little infrastructure beforehand. I am a very rare person who follows the league without a club to support (the Alex Bunbury group has talked about coming into town for years, any day now...) and I find it to be a fairly admirable quality all things considered. I hope I'll be able to continue to watch, but I also probably won't put in extra effort since I don't have a club to support.

     

    It'd be very bad for something to happen to the league before 2026, I can't imagine FIFA would be too thrilled for a World Cup host to not have a domestic league.

    • Like 1
  2. 13 minutes ago, Jer15 said:

    I have no knowledge of this to be a fact but I have a feeling the CPL has something up their sleeve.

    Why would they willingly take the games off TV without a plan to have that replaced? There was still time left on the deal with Mediapro.

    Maybe I'm being overly optimistic but I don't think this is the end at all. The league knew at start up it'd be years before making money. They knew it would be even longer after the "bubble season" due to covid. I doubt this would spell the end all of a sudden. 

     

    I'd really like to think that! As zubazpirate points out- there's some fairly strong entities within the league, I have no doubt Forge and the Cavs could land on their feet regardless of what happens, but even without this uncertainty there's at least two (York and Valour) clubs who are on shaky ground.

  3. On 1/28/2024 at 11:42 AM, The_Admiral said:

    Relative to the other leagues, Latter-day Saints are underrepresented in the NHL. Derek Ryan is the only active one, and the only other one I remember before that was Brent Peterson, the old Barry Trotz assistant. I think Mormons have early-morning religion classes that preempt the 4 a.m. ice time of legend, but more than that, hockey's youth culture of binge-drinking and sucking your friends' dicks to show that you're not gay doesn't jibe with Mormons' upright cultural mores. 

     

    I know the demographics of Utah are shifting, so maybe there could be a situation where the Jazz are the team for Mormons and the, let's say Coyotes are the team for gentiles, but then you're splitting up a market that's already small and marginal to begin with.

     

    I am unfamiliar with most about LDS, but is there a reason why the mormon population would not want to watch the team just because they didn't grow up with playing the game? Isn't Nevada one of the other handfuls of places with a significant population? The Grizzlies ECHL team seems to be at around the average attendance of the AHL, I've always been under the impression that saturation level/team success/marketing is what draws attendance for basically every team in the non-NFL leagues and we've seen with the Golden Knights/Kraken that the NHL is very happy to give expansion teams a good chance at early success (unlike the 90's/00's expansions).

  4. I'm not sure who will produce the broadcasts, but it seems like a PWHL model (YouTube + occasional national) is probably the best course of action, but the PWHL has the benefit of national names and the CPL's marquee names are...the clubs in Hamilton and Calgary, ostensibly? It's so frustrating because it just takes so much work to build the domestic game in any country where it's not a huge part of the culture (I follow the A-Leagues to some degree too and Australia/NZ is having some issues) and people are impatient (naturally) AND have the benefit of still following CFM/TFC/Whitecaps in MLS, a league that (while a pyramid scheme) has somewhat successfully grown.

  5. 1 hour ago, Sidney said:

    I'm looking for some informations and I can't find any real answer about that.

     

    Why are the called the Angels and are red? are they like devils? 

     

    I had an other version but didn't want to post to not be in a wrong direction.

     

    Hi, I think it's as simple as, "Los Angeles" translates to "the Angels" and they are red largely because the Dodgers are blue. I believe the original Angels in the PCL were red and blue (and the Angels wore mostly blue in the 00's) .

    • Like 1
  6. Oh wow, I did not realise this thread was here, this is my world!!! The quick play games fit my current lifestyle a little better, although once my kids are a little older I can see myself getting into a longer play hockey or soccer game. To further speed it up, I often develop excel sheets that can do much of it.

     

    Not a huge football fan, but Fast Drive Football (which Discrim mentioned earlier) is so fun and has great customisation- the fictional league creation/maintenance is so smooth and feels realistic, especially when you get into some of the user created charts, you have a nice little self-contained fictional universe.

     

    Stone Mountain Press has three fun games (well, there's more but I've only played three) of note- Gridzone which is ostensibly a 7-on-7 football game, he's starting towards putting together NFL seasons but it is also designed for fictional league play, also with methods of going through the offseason. The game has no special teams, scoring is based on how far up the field a team progresses, based on skills of individual players and charts.

     

    Dice United is a beautiful soccer quick-play simulation, you get the experience of watching highlights on Match of the Day or the MLS Wrap-Up show, and there's lots of seasons (and a guide explaining how to rate any season you can find on FBRef). Stone Cold Hockey uses a very similar engine but uses it for hockey, and it's also a wonderful game with a lot of seasons that plays through pretty fast but still gives you the feel of watching highlights. Both games have a book for fictional team creation/season progress.

     

    Shoot-Out Hockey is a really good quick play game without much chart referencing, which is a nice feature- you can play with dice or fast action cards. It doesn't "backfill" the stats like many replay games, when you take a shot you know it's (X) player taking it, which is fun for a quick play game.

     

    The Beautiful Game is a very famous soccer simulation in this world where you can play any season ever with some quick math, this is a very fun game that sometimes feels a little more random than Dice United, but to me its' best feature is, similar to Shoot-Out is it doesn't feel like you're "backfilling" results, which is to say that when you flip a card for an attack you get some flavour text to set up and then roll dice to resolve, whereas in the Dice United/Stone Cold engine it's more like "Team A is on the attack, will they score or not?"

     

    Rugby World and World of Rugby League take the two rugby codes and put them into the Beautiful Game engine. I'm a big League guy, and WoRL scratches that itch.

     

    Finally I'll shout out Precision Sports Games who also have a fun Rugby League game, along with Aussie Rules and Rugby Union games. These are all the ones I play, although Dice United and Fast Drive Football are the big two for me right now.

     

    I'd add that I started out in MLB Showdown as well, and as a result (and of course my baseball team being killed off in 2004) I feel like I've had trouble ever getting into any other baseball game. Showdown Bot is a cool site though that makes cards from any player in Baseball Reference! NFL and NBA Showdown were really wonky games- NFL's barcode reader was broken year one, which killed any momentum the game could have built, and while they fixed it by year two, the damage was done.

     

    Wizards of the Coast also made a soccer game Football Champions which I tried SO HARD to get into, and I have so many cards (if I was willing to ship them to Italy, I could apparently make some good money), but just never quite worked for me as a game. I literally busted it out last week for my once every year or so attempt to like this game and it just doesn't work for me. Feels too stunted.

    • Like 1
  7. The somewhat cynical reasoning is that MLS is a bit of a pyramid scheme because it mostly makes money through expansion fees and the best justification they can get for charging those fees involves having a ton of matches, since it's mostly a gate-based league (and most MLS teams do draw very well). It operates in that way like every other North American sport, except unlike those leagues it has to contend with a higher body that can interrupt its' schedule (FIFA International breaks), and MLS has no real control over it, but the breaks are known far enough in advance that they could just...work around them.

     

     

  8. I'm certainly feeling a little MLS fatigue- I think the earlier finish forced by the World Cup last year was favourable. It's a delicate balance of factors (and obviously it's weighted very heavily towards making the owners happy) but the long playoffs in other sports are aided by there being action daily or almost daily- with the big gaps and erratic scheduling it's a little tricky, especially since as time has moved on I've felt less connected to teams other than my own.

    • Like 2
  9. I've been a casual Als fan all my life and there have only been a few players to really break through and become stars (Calvillo, Boulay, Cahoon) but clearly Dequoy is the next one. The CFL's Tokébakicitte icon.

  10. I assume you've completed these and are just posting them now, but would you be interested in keeping it going with the French Elite 1 or some of the top national teams? Most of the national teams have lacking aesthetics compared to their relatives in other top sports.

  11. Hell yeah, was a great match- I have to admit I'm a total bandwagoner when it comes to the Als (as opposed to the Habs or Impact [refuse to use the new name]) but I'll probably head out to Percival Molson once or twice next year. This was a fun playoff run!

    • Like 1
  12. Pretty excited, it's been a minute since the Als have won. I can't claim to have followed the season too closely but the playoffs have been exciting and this Als defence is excellent- I don't know the Bombers well enough to know how bad they're going to beat us.

  13. 4 hours ago, monkeypower said:

    Not that I've watched or followed the PLL at all, Roughnecks and the NLL for me, but I can't see the vision in (seemingly) randomly assigning home cities, when most of the cities aren't cities, to teams after teams have been established for a couple years and then still doing the touring method.

     

    Like how much of a home fanbase can be cultivated when the home team will only play two home games every handful of weeks, if that? How many existing fans are actually going to switch allegiances because their team isn't their home team now? I also know from the NLL that a large portion of players don't actually live in the city the team is based out of and I assume that's even more the case in the PLL, so it's not going to be as easy to have players show up to city or community events to build support/rapport/advertise if they aren't going to be playing in the city.

     

    This was exactly my question...who is this serving? And if the goal is to go to home markets...is that an admission the touring method is failing? Even though it's sort of the central premise?

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