ESPN published its second World Fame 100 list, and one thing is clear: soccer is head and shoulders more popular than any other sport.
A lot of footballers on ESPN's new World Fame 100 list. pic.twitter.com/PNFVNlIkMD
— The18 (@the18com) May 31, 2017
Thirty eight of the 100 athletes are soccer players, nearly triple the amount of basketball players on the list, which was the second most represented sport.
Soccer did have fewer athletes in the top 20 (Ronaldo, Messi, Neymar, and Kaka) than tennis (Federer, Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Serena Williams, and Kei Nishikori).
It still dominated the list from top to bottom, with Ronaldo at the top and newly signed Liverpool midfielder Mohamed Salah rounding out the list at 100.
Of interesting note is the absence of baseball and hockey players. Despite generally being generally confined to North America, Japan, Korea, and Mexico, baseball offers some of the most lucrative contracts in all of sports. The high salaries generally reflect the average income and purchasing power of its fans, leading to better TV deals based on those viewers. The moral of the story is that soccer still has room to grow, especially as its fans' disposable incomes do.