Baseball faces crowded sports market in Britain, Europe
LONDON — Making the long walk from the Stratford train station through a mall and to Olympic Stadium, fans headed to the first Major League Baseball games in Europe passed retailers filled with gear from Premier League clubs. Next on the route was a tented pop-up outlet brimming with merchandise from the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox. And right by the ticket windows near the gates was the claret-and-blue stadium store of West Ham.
Baseball is trying to muscle in on a crowded marketplace dominated by soccer but also filled with cricket, rugby — and this month Wimbledon, whose purple-and-green shirts, bags and caps become a constant current of colour through the streets and the Underground.
“It’s probably quite hard for them to catch attention,” said House of Commons Speaker John Bercow, familiar with competition for recognition both in Parliament and at sports venues, “but I think it’s becoming less hard because more and more people have got access to a television that enables them to watch an American football match and possibly a baseball match. So I think that those audiences are going to grow.”
Author of a book ranking the top men’s tennis players and an Arsenal season ticket holder, Bercow has watched the NFL establish itself in London and now baseball trying to break though. The Yankees and Red Sox were dispatched across the pond as an attention-getter, a purpose pitch designed as a wakeup by a sport that grew up in the United States and has gained traction in Latin America and Asia but has been largely disregarded in Europe and Africa.