Not long ago, many smaller football leagues in Canada barely reached audiences outside their own cities. Unless supporters were attending matches or actively searching for coverage, it could be difficult to follow clubs consistently from abroad.
That is no longer really the case. Livestreams, supporter-run pages and short-form clips now push Canadian football into the same online spaces as lower divisions from England, Germany and elsewhere. A fan scrolling through football clips on a Saturday afternoon can easily end up watching a CPL goal or crowd reaction without looking for it directly.
The growth is beginning to show away from social media as well. The Canadian Premier League reported record growth during the 2024 season, with more than 445,000 supporters attending league matches across the campaign.
Supporters can now follow clubs far beyond their own region
One of the biggest changes is access. Smaller leagues no longer depend entirely on traditional television coverage to build visibility. Matches travel much further online than they once did, especially once goals, crowd clips and reactions begin circulating during games.
A few years ago, many neutral supporters overseas would probably have struggled to name a single CPL side. Now clubs regularly appear in football discussion pages, livestream recommendations and supporter-led feeds alongside lower divisions from Europe and South America.
Clubs like Forge FC and Halifax Wanderers have quietly built recognisable online followings despite operating well outside football’s traditional spotlight. Canadian players are becoming more visible in the English game as well, with striker Cyle Larin recently making an impact at Southampton after arriving on loan from Mallorca.
The timing of the Canadian football calendar helps too. Matches take place during quieter periods for some European leagues, so supporters already watching football year-round often look elsewhere once domestic seasons slow down. There is also growing interest in football that feels less polished than the top end of the sport. Smaller grounds, younger squads and tighter rivalries can create atmospheres that stand out online because they feel different from the coverage surrounding elite clubs.
Smaller clubs are becoming easier to discover
Even five years ago, supporters usually discovered new leagues very differently. Fixture lists and television schedules were still doing most of the work. Now clips, podcasts, reaction channels and football creators often introduce supporters to clubs they were not actively looking for.
Smaller leagues benefit from that kind of exposure because a single clip can travel much further than a full match broadcast. A dramatic late goal or loud away section can spread quickly online, even if most people watching have never seen the league before.
A 2025 study from WSC Sports found that 62% of sports fans discovered a new team, player or competition through short-form video content. Younger audiences are consuming football differently as well. According to a 2025 YouTube and SmithGeiger sports study, 56% of Gen Z fans engage with sports creator content every week.
That matters for smaller Canadian leagues because creator-led football content often pushes clubs with strong atmospheres or loud support rather than simply the biggest names. League1 Ontario and CPL matches now appear regularly across football feeds that previously focused almost entirely on Europe’s major leagues. That would have been much harder to imagine a decade ago.
Supporters now follow matches in different ways
Most supporters no longer watch football in just one way. It is fairly common now to watch a match while checking stats feeds, reaction accounts or injury updates at the same time.
That is especially true for smaller competitions where traditional coverage can still be limited compared to Europe’s major leagues. Fans following those leagues often rely more heavily on digital tools and second-screen habits to stay connected during games.
It is also common to keep fixture trackers or bookmaker odds open during matches, especially when supporters are trying to follow several leagues at once across a weekend. Resources featuring a list of free bets and sign-up offers from top sportsbooks are often referenced because they compile football odds, promotions and scheduling information from multiple operators in one place. Oddspedia, which compares betting markets across leagues worldwide, has become part of how some fans keep track of competitions outside the biggest European divisions.
The shift towards multi-platform viewing is becoming increasingly visible across football. Hub Entertainment Research found in 2025 that sports viewers are regularly using multiple apps and digital services while following live events. In a recent interview with the Financial Times, EA Sports president Cam Weber discussed how younger sports audiences increasingly prefer shorter clips, interactive features and flexible viewing habits alongside traditional broadcasts.
Not every supporter wants the same football experience
Part of the appeal around smaller Canadian leagues is that they offer something different from football at the very top level. Supporters can still feel closely connected to clubs, players and local rivalries in ways that are sometimes harder to find elsewhere.
Digital coverage has helped those leagues reach people who were already looking for that kind of football experience. A supporter might first discover a Canadian club through a social clip or livestream recommendation, then continue following because the atmosphere and identity feel distinct from the football they usually watch every week.
Streaming has played a major role in that visibility. Nielsen’s 2025 Global Sports Report highlighted how digital platforms are helping emerging competitions build wider international audiences.
Smaller Canadian leagues are still operating on a very different scale from Europe’s elite divisions, but online coverage has at least made it easier for clubs to stay visible outside their own regions.



