Which U.S. Sports Do Other Countries Follow?

Source: Statista

U.S. sports leagues were long seen as something only Americans could be into, but this has been changing. The Statista Global Consumer Survey content special on sports and fitness now reveals what U.S. sports leagues people from other countries follow most often.

While American football and baseball remain more U.S.-centric obsessions, sports fans in the UK, Germany and China were more likely to follow the National Basketball Association league. Especially in China, urban Chinese said they were following the NBA at a higher rate than internet users in the U.S. itself.

Interestingly, fans from soccer nations UK and Germany were the most likely to follow U.S. Major League Soccer despite its mediocre reputation, showing that despite recent changes, old habits die hard. In China, which has also become a big market for soccer, MLS was the second most popular league behind the NBA.

In the U.S., the NFL still reigns supreme, followed by the NBA and MLB. MLS remained unpopular among Americans with just 13 percent saying the followed the league.

Which U.S. Sports Do Other Countries Follow

Football Defenders Face Higher Dementia Risk

Source: Statista

A well-executed header might excite fans, but it could prove detrimental to the corresponding player’s health in the long run. As a study by the University of Glasgow shows, 5 percent of former football players were diagnosed with neurodegenerative diseases like dementia, motor neuron or Parkinson disease. While this number doesn’t sound too high on its own, it becomes more striking when compared to the rest of the population as our chart indicates.

The control group of 23,028 males matching the criteria of sex, year of birth, and area socioeconomic status only showed 1.6 percent having contracted the aforementioned diseases. While goalkeepers were comparatively safe with 3.2 percent, especially when contrasted with their control group counterparts, defenders ran the highest risks of falling ill with dementia or similar diseases at 6 percent. Professor Willie Stewart, who led the research, is now arguing for safety labels being added to footballs and questioning the technique in general: “Is heading absolutely necessary for football to continue? Is exposure to risk of dementia absolutely required for the game of football?”

Chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE, which is contracted through repetitive head trauma and may be linked to development of dementia, has been the source for many discussions over the last couple of years. Up until now, research focused on more obvious sports like American football or boxing. Now that one of the most popular and widespread sports worldwide is starting to become part of this conversation, attitudes toward protecting players could change in the foreseeable future.

Football Defenders face higher Dementia Risk