I watched some of the USFL just out of curiosity. Useless Shitty Failure League.
What made the USFL of the 80s work?
1. Regional drafting so that teams had players with which local fans would be familiar.
2. Competitive salaries and a willingness to draw top-level talent.
3. NFL style approach to marketing
4. NFL quality players (due to money being available)
5. NFL quality performances. Good teams, good players, good product.
The only reason that version failed was the decision *pushed by true American hero Donald Trump* to switch to the fall and compete with the NFL in a misguided effort to follow the old AFL path and be absorbed into the League. It was a strong product, gaining traction, with an array of quality players on the rosters. Ratings were good, people were invested. I went to many Stallions games and the stands always had 20-30,000 fans.
Why am I confident this version of the USFL will fail quickly?
1. Teams with rosters full of players no one has ever heard of. There's zero local draw/attraction. None.
2. Terrible on-field product. The games are barely high school-level quality. It's shitty football played by shitty football players who'd never set foot on an NFL field (and most apparently didn't even play in college). There's not a single player on any roster that I've ever heard of. Not a one. They aren't signing Heisman winners.
3. No marketing. The games are being played in Birmingham and I have seen almost nothing marketing-wise. I flipped by one of the awful games the other day and saw stands that looked completely -- as in 100% empty -- at the start of the third quarter. I bet there weren't 50 people there. That's not sustainable.
4. Disinterested TV. Yes, it's being carried on two networks but is anybody -- Bueller? Bueller? -- watching the games? The announcing teams are second-rate. No, that's an insult to second-rate teams. They're bargain basement. It's a terrible production.
I hate to say it, but it's not going to work. A lot of people are going to lose money here. It doesn't have a single ingredient to give it a chance to succeed.