Whether this rivals MLS in totality remains to be seen. The USL started the USL Super League, a Division 1 women’s outfit at the same level as the NWSL. Thus far, attendances have been lower, while major players have stuck to the league with the longer legacy - although salaries are roughly equal between the two leagues.
Can the USL compete at the same level as an established league such as MLS, which just began its 30th season? The USL and MLS operate differently - USL owners run teams as separate businesses, whereas MLS utilizes a single-entity system for ownership where owners are partners in league business. The USL does not have a salary cap, nor does it have restrictions on academy territories, unlike MLS, which gives MLS franchises control over youth players in their markets.
MLS, for their part, has insisted that it is welcoming the rival first division
“Any opportunity to build the sport professionally is positive," Commissioner Don Garber said at a news conference last week. "I've said this many, many times: fans determine what teams they care about. Sponsors and broadcasters determine what properties matter to them, and to their viewers, and to their customers.
"So, all of us are going to do what we can to build the best possible product. I look forward to seeing how it plays out over the next number of years."
Others in the U.S. soccer sphere argue that any chance to grow the game is a worthy opportunity.
"I think it's a product of this country and this continent be being very, very excited and proactive about the World Cup coming here, and all of the eyeballs that are going to be on this continent, this country, this summer, with the Club World Cup. But more importantly, with the largest World Cup that's ever going to happen," Apple TV analyst and former MLS MVP Taylor Twellman told GOAL. "I saw the same announcement that everybody else saw. I'm as interested as everybody else is. There seem to be a lot of questions still remaining."
The original target start date for the league was 2027. McDonough admitted that 2028 is more likely. And meanwhile, clubs remain in a state of confusion, to a large degree, as to how, exactly, this might work. The opportunities are limitless. The logistics, however, are mightily unclear.
"They can be really successful clubs, but I think it's just something that we thought could be a good thing," McDonough said. "It's our next evolution,"