Courtside
By Anthony L. Cuaycong

There are policy changes, and there are identity shifts. Major League Soccer’s (MLS) decision to abandon its long-standing February-to-December season and instead run from July through May beginning 2027 is clearly the latter. The scheduling change effectively aligns it with the global football ecosystem, both in continuity and in structure.
On paper, the rationale cannot be more straightforward. By moving the calendar, MLS gets to be in lock-step with international transfer windows, reduce conflicts with FIFA break periods, and theoretically increase its attractiveness as both a developmental and commercial stopover for talent. The development coincides with other structural reforms it has thumbed up, including a departure from the traditional two-conference split in favor of a single-table format more recognizable to followers of European and South American leagues.
Amid the strategic thrusts, however, a question arises: Just how far can MLS move toward football orthodoxy without eroding what makes it unique? Sports organizations in the United States typically operate on their terms; the National Basketball Association, National Football League, and Major League Baseball have, for the most part, grown on the strength of cultural authorship. By contrast, their much younger sibling has always walked a tightrope; it relies on geographic singularity but likewise pushes for international legitimacy.
To be sure, MLS will be hobbled by practical concerns, among them local weather conditions, proximate events, and seasonal pulls. Still, the scheduling shift could well normalize transcontinental player movement, establish more coherent club development arcs, and raise competitive stakes. Which is to say there is merit in trying. Identity is not preserved through stasis, and continued incrementalism masks a slow death.
Make no mistake. The coming years will test whether the move accelerates growth for MLS or serves to complicate the delicate ecosystem it has spent three decades nurturing. In this light, the planned change signals neither triumph nor capitulation. Rather, it is an acknowledgment that success does not come without pain points, and that the line between evolution and reinvention stays out of sight until well after the moment has passed.
Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.