Sunday, April 20, 2008

Soccer notebook | Mexico team's visit to Seattle is a big hit — Brazil next?

Seattle Times staff reporter

One look at the crowd of 56,416 and it was easy to see that Wednesday night's Mexico-China soccer match was a huge success.

For the fans, virtually all of whom roared their appreciation for Mexico and turned SoDo into a small city of Latinos. For the match sponsors. For organizers. And for Major League Soccer and one of its newest franchises, Seattle Sounders FC.

"It showcases the opportunity that exists for the Sounders when they come into Major League Soccer, depending on the personnel they put on the field," said Dan Courtemanche, senior vice president of marketing and communications for MLS, who attended last night's game. But even a Sounders roster without a Latino player, he figured, might draw well among the Latino demographic because of their appreciation and knowledge of soccer.

"When you put a quality product on the field, the opportunity exists to have a large fan following," Courtemanche said. "We've seen it already with what the Sounders have done with 14,000 season-ticket deposits, and that's a tremendous start. But this takes the brand to the next level when you see this tonight."

MLS, Soccer United Marketing and Sounders FC representatives determined through research that a large enough Latino fan base lived in a three-hour drive radius of Seattle, and the decision was made to bring Mexico to the city.

The fans came from the Yakima Valley, the Portland area, Skagit County and plenty of points in-between.

"There were a lot of individuals who weren't so sure how the Mexican national team would do in Seattle," Courtemanche said, "and I think those doubts are now erased."

Next up, Brazil?

Seattle appears a likely destination for Brazil's national team, and soon, according to sources close to the situation who did not want to be identified.

The opponent would be Canada and the match would take place in the first part of June. Contract negotiations are ongoing.

Brazil is a five-time World Cup champion, most recently winning the title in 2002.

Fiesta inside and outside

The crowd arrived early, some four hours before kickoff, and turned the area around Qwest Field into a mass of humanity.

Fans from all over the Northwest snapped up Mexico T-shirts, jerseys, scarves and caps, some bringing their own flags and airhorns. At the Futbol Fiesta in the stadium's North parking lot, the crowd was thick and lines were long for an autograph from former national team player Ramon Ramirez and other activities an hour after the event opened at 4 p.m.

A strolling troupe of mariachi musicians provided free entertainment. It turned out that the group was from Wenatchee, and is part of a high-school program for mariachi musicians there.

By 6 p.m., more than 55,000 tickets had been sold and the gates opened to a cheer.

"We're so happy," said Jose Garcia of Mount Vernon, clad in Mexico's red, white and green. "It's been many years since I saw the national team in Mexico City. Now they are here."

José Miguel Romero: 206-464-2409 or jromero@seattletimes.com

This is very important for me also because it was beautiful to see all of the other young kids scream Mexico for hours while we got to the stadium and it still didn't end their. What bothered me a bit though was that their was lots of people on my way their that yelled racist comments. So now my question is what would the guy say in the video that we saw in class on Monday that Mexicans are going to take seattle over also?

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Latino Vote

So in the last few days in class we have talked about the Latino vote and how much it will make an impact on the future candidate. The weird thing though is that people were expecting Latinos to vote for Obama but that is not the case most of the time. Part of the problem is because people take personal issues into consideration and each group has different matters at stake. The problem is that the Latino vote is so divided because older Latinos vote for Clinton and younger Latinos vote for Obama.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=18718803

New York Sen. Hillary Clinton won the Latino vote on Super Tuesday by a 2-to-1 margin in key states such as New York, California and New Jersey. That gave her a decisive win with the fastest-growing demographic in the country, possibly setting the stage for the general election when Latinos could make a huge difference in swing states.
Latinos have traditionally voted about two-to-one for Democrats. While George W. Bush made inroads with Latinos in the 2004 election (he won 40 percent of the Latino vote), those gains seem to have eroded as Republicans have increasingly spoken out against illegal immigration.
Clinton focused on winning over Latino voters in recent vigorous campaigning in California and Arizona. She benefited from high-profile endorsements from Latino leaders such as Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers Union.
While Illinois Sen. Barack Obama did not win the Latino vote in California, he managed to attract younger Latino voters. Clinton culled her support — as she did in other states — from older voters.
The wave of Latino support for Clinton began during the Nevada caucuses, when she won the Latino vote two-to-one.
The issues Latino voters have valued this primary season were similar to the concerns of voters nationwide, and included the economy, education and the war. But Latino voters also have expressed concern with immigration legislation, workplace raids and relations with Mexico and Central America.
After Super Tuesday, political scientists say Latino voters will press candidates for more details on immigration reform and related concerns, which certainly could help Arizona Sen. John McCain, the Republican front-runner. He co-authored an immigration overhaul bill that ultimately died in Congress.
But not everyone in the Republican Party may feel so inclined to court Hispanic voters. Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has made immigration one of his central campaign tenets and has spoken out against illegal border crossings.
If candidates do chose to campaign for the Latino votes, they will have to do so seriously.
"Candidates are now forced to talk to the issues that matter to Latinos," says Jaime Regalado, director of the Pat Brown Institute of Public Affairs at California State University. "In past years, they used to just go to East L.A. and eat a taco."