Not surprised. Ive been living in Paris for a couple years now and even though I have so many friends that are huge football fans there isnt a big “going to the stadium” fan base. I’ve talked to friends and other people that have been living in Paris all their life and are fans of PSG and have never been to a game in their life. Even though there are specificities to this like the fact that its super expensive to go watch a game at the Parc des Princes I believe it also has to do with the fact that the culture of going to your team’s game just isnt as big here.
Only one team in Paris means the stadium is full anyway (45 000+). The low attendance come from club with smaller stadium (Reims, Brest), less club history (Clermont) and no supp culture (Monaco).
Clermont has the 3rd highest attendance in %. Reims and Brest despite having small stadium can’t get them full.
And that’s the main problem of Ligue 1, aside from Paris, absolutely no other clubs are restricted by the size of their stadium, since they can’t get fill the one they already got.
While almost every single german clubs have an average above 95%, in France we have only one. Paris.
Monaco drags a bit the average for France
Elversberg bigger than PSG
Always has been
Bigger than our “Landeshauptstadt” defo
Know your place, trash :D
goes without saying really
Both are the same really. Both have a guy pumping money in their club.
I’m always suprised at the quality of lower league German stadiums
Because those teams used to play in the BuLi
Most teams in the second league of other countries also played in their first division once?!
I guess so but when you compare 2nd tiers from Spain and Germany their quality is so much better. Germany’s 3rd tier also has great stadiums too, the only one that I can think of being great in our 3rd tier is Riazor and that’s also because they used to be a great team.
What the fuck are Deportivo doing all the way down there? The hell happened?
I watched a documentary on La Liga called “Six Dreams” and it was insane seeing clubs like Eibar, Girona, competing against Real Madrid in Barcelona.
The disparity in facilities was vast. And these were clubs in La Liga at the time.
Germans know how to build stuff
sssh, we don’t talk about BER, Stuttgart 21 or the Munich Zweite Stammstrecke here.
I mean the Championship also has big teams, Leicester and probably the biggest one is Leeds are there. Sheffield Wednesday is also a traditional club.
Also Sunderland’s Stadium is nice
Malaga’s La Rosaleda too this season I suppose, but that’s an exception
Many stadium were renovated for 2006.
German engineering
Spain’s 2nd division has some insane stadiums as well, i bet most of the teams in spanish 2nd division are bigger than most stadiums in Portugal 1st division outside of the big 3, and i would bet 100€ the average attendance is bigger than in Portugal outside the big 3
“Portugal outside of Big 3” is really pretty small business lol. The 2nd tier of the Polish leauge also has more attendance than that, and Poland is among the European countries with fewest people going to football games per capita.
The “Big 3” is more than 60% of attendance of whole Primeira Liga.
Poland is among the European countries with fewest people going to football games per capita.
Is that lack of interest in football, or just the domestic league? Most of the Polish I’ve worked with would play in our 6-a-side games. One lad with a Legia Warsaw screensaver who was a bit of a nutter.
Hard to say for me really. Football is definitely popular. People just don’t go in as big amounts as in football countries, relatively to the country’s whole population. The only country I found with a lower number among the ones I checked was Ireland, but Ireland definitely has other sports they prefer, in Poland football is definitely the most popular sport overall.
What I can say is that in Germany football is considered way more inclusive entertainment, more people think it’s just a nice way to spend time with your family, “normal” people go to games. In Poland going to games is more associated with being a hooli, an ultra, and most middle-class people really despise the idea. I can say my family would definitely never go to a football game, and tbh even avoid going out on the time of the game to not meet the fans on the street to avoid unpleasantries. Also basically all my friends (middle class) despise football and football fans and think it’s an entertainment for simpletons and would never go to a game. The general popular opinion in this class is that footballers are overpaid lazy do-nothings who are all very bad at their job, and the fans are lowlife who will beat someone up.
I can also say that my hometown club has a stadium of 40 000, which is just too big in general. It was built for Euro 2012, in hopes that the culture will catch up to the facilities. The average last season was 10 thousand people, when they were battling relegation. This season, inexplicably, they keep winning games and lead the league, and the stadium is suddenly full.
In Poland going to games is more associated with being a hooli, an ultra, and most middle-class people really despise the idea. I can say my family would definitely never go to a football game, and tbh even avoid going out on the time of the game to not meet the fans on the street to avoid unpleasantries. Also basically all my friends (middle class) despise football and football fans and think it’s an entertainment for simpletons and would never go to a game. The general popular opinion in this class is that footballers are overpaid lazy do-nothings who are all very bad at their job, and the fans are lowlife who will beat someone up.
Interesting - this is exactly how it was in England before the Premier League. Attendances were half of what they are today in the 80s. No families, just predominantly working class men. It wasn’t uncommon for someone to just piss where they were standing in the stadium, so you’d never taken your wife or kids to a game.
I had a look at Polish historical attendances, and if you go back to the 1970s the average league attendance is actually higher than the leagues in France, Netherlands and Scotland at that time. About +40% higher than it is now.
For Ireland, football is still extremely popular over there, probably their 2nd sport after Gaelic football. More so than Rugby despite their success in that. It’s just difficult to encourage people to go out in the cold to watch local football when you can sit in a warm pub and watch a Premier League game on TV easily enough.
Oviedo’s stadium Carlos tartiere is insane.
Germany is a wealthy country
The 2006 WC was also very instrumental in that.
It’s great when after a major sporting even the stadiums can be used.
Hertha, Schalke, HSV, Nürnberg, Kaiserslautern and Hannover - six of twelve '06 World Cup stadiums are used by clubs currently in the 2. Bundesliga. Add Düsseldorf and that’s seven stadiums with 49.000+ seats, while the Championship, Serie B and Segunda Division have just one 40.000+ seater each (two in Ligue 2).
two in Ligue 2
Has to be Sainté and Bordeaux right ? Still weird that they’re in Ligue 2. Kinda like Hamburg/Schalke situation
2006 is also a big part why some of those stadiums are now not in the Bundesliga anymore. A lot of Clubs taking on huge debt to pay for upgrades that couldn’t really afford it.
well, not really…
schalke opend theirs in 2001, parkstadion was fkin outdated, this was planned before gemany even got the world cup. Hertha obviously rent the stadium, Glubb does so as well. Hannover rent their stadium for less then a million a year, it was actually somewhat of a scandal, when it became public. HSV paid only about 15m for renovations prior to the world cup.
Lautern just fucked that one up all by themselves…
Tell that our conservative politicians, please
German sports culture always seemed so family oriented to me. Its like even small neighbourhood clubs are the gathering center, let it be sports or even bingo nights for elders. Everyone has an attachment to the clubs.
Germany being incredibly decentralised is also a net positive for sports culture, you simply have so many urban centers than can sustain big sports organisations compared to France or Spain.
Well its the club culture. To keep ur hometown club Alive u have to participate and work a bit for it. Its strenghening the community and binding ppl to the club
Extremely jealous of this.
What makes me sad about England is when I first started working, our factory had a sports and social club that had existed for 100+ years.
This used to be the norm, and many bigger clubs still around today (West Ham: Thames Ironworks) came from these roots. Even once they’d professionalize the Saturday 3pm kick-off time was aligned to the time factories closed so the workers could then go and watch.
Anyway long-story short, the factory got bought by a Chinese firm and they instantly shut-down all of the social and sports clubs. Despite the wages always being relatively low, people used to love working there for the social element which completely disappeared.
It’s admiral how Germans have held on to their institutions compared to how we will just sell off anything to the highest bidder. I think it’s a class issue where the working class here either just don’t own enough to have a say, or worse don’t feel they have a right to have a say in community clubs that have been there for over 100 years.
France has a big Rugby playing culture which Germany doesn’t have.
Honest question for the French fans here. Excuse my English ignorance, but is Rugby bigger than Football in France?
Its because there are so many sleeping giants in the bundesliga 2
Well I’m not surpried, fan culture is insane in Germany and with massive, classic Bundesliga clubs like Hamburg, Nurnberg, Hannover, Dusseldorf etc, the numbers are guaranteed to be high.
Germany should thank us for Fritz and Ottmar, Eckel, Liebrich,Kohlmeyer our first World Cup won by Kaiserslautern :)
That’s certainly not an attitude any of those idols would be fond of buddy. We should be grateful they’re part of our history, others shouldn’t be grateful to us.
Ihr tut mir ja schon leid. Der Typ ist ja nichtmal die Ausnahme…
Auf Reddit mag es wohl anders sein. In de Palz is des absolut die Meinung die jeder vertrete werd :) Absoluter Fakt wenn man jeden Pälzer fragt.
They also have a very big population, and less teams at the top level.
Hannover and Düsseldorf??? mentioned but not us is crazy
Etc, Kaiserslautern just didn’t come to mind at the moment, I know you are a massive club
Always been a fan of 1. FUCK since that UEFA Cup tie back in 92/93. Shame what’s happened to your club (and ours) since those days.
Yeah. Good old fiscal fuckery. Writing a big check that couldn’t be cashed to renovate their stadium for the 2006 World Cup (Fritz Walter Stadion). Ever since that move they have not been the same.
And all that although not one of your reps misses a chance to pronounce how devastating your relegation was „for the region“.
Not mentioning Schalke which in fact is amongst the top ten clubs with the most members in the world is the real craziness
iirc Schalke were 16th in revenue the last time they played champions leauge
Seriously, they have more members than even BvB. They’re the second largest club in Germany by that metric.
There’s too many big clubs in 2.Bundesliga to remeber at one moment, okay?
Like I said no worries. We’re absolutely shit rn
Og Klose club?
what about rugby?
In Germany? That would be as expected.
And yet the powers that be, seems to think that Qatar Sports Investments and privately owned Super clubs is the best model for the future of the game.
Germany also has a significantly larger population than countries like England and Spain.
England could actually overtake the Bundesliga next season given the stadium expansions going on ATM and small teams like Burnley, Luton and Bournemouth being close to the bottom of the table.
Too busy farming
Wonder where the Championship ranks. Some big clubs in there currently.
Such small numbers compared to the NFL