When Freddy Adu debuts professionaly for DC United this Saturday, he
will become the youngest professional athlete in American Sports since
some guy in baseball a long time ago. Already, the lower bowl at RFK is
practically sold
out
and United's management has decided on keeping the upper bowl closed to
increase demand. It's a move which should pay off in the long run even
if it may inconvenience fans used to purchasing tickets the day of the
game.
"It's the right thing to do," team president Kevin Payne said.
"We've already begun to see a lot of [ticket-buying] activity for
the second [home] game, and that was exactly the point: to get
people to understand that they need to buy their tickets in
advance."\
With the upper deck closed, capacity will be 24,603 at the 52,000-seat
stadium for the nationally televised game against the defending
champion San Jose Earthquakes.
Tom Knots, a Washington Times columnist, points out that there has not
been the same outcry of indignation over Freddy Adu's step into the
pro ranks.
It is so terribly sad to be a 14-year-old millionaire, with no father
and a mother who once worked two jobs to feed and clothe the family.\
Or it would be so terribly sad if Adu were an 18-year-old
multimillionaire in the NBA.
Soccer fans are probably more used to this phenomenon than your average
American sprts fans. Clubs around the world routinely sign up promising
teenagers to professional contracts in the hopes they work their way up
the reserve teams and result in a good first team player.