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Clint Dempsey to Fulham
Jan 10, 2007 | 6:27AM | report this
Mr. Dempsey has had his work permit approved according to his family. Please read our exclusive chat with the latest American abroad....
5 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Clint Dempsey, Fulham
 
Ramblin' man...
Sep 24, 2006 | 9:34PM | report this
An interview I did for EPL Talk has been uploaded, you can also subscribe to Chris' podcasts via iTunes, which yours truly does. Or doth.
2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: EPL, talk
 
City snaps streak!
Aug 26, 2006 | 11:43AM | report this

Manchester City is the team of the day, as their 1-0 win, coming on Joey Barton's pk, snapped a 19-game spell of futility against the Londoners.

The result, arguably against the run of play, consigned the Gunners to their worst start in 14 years: Arsenal have but  a single point to their name. Tomas Rosicky made his debut for the Gunners and intermittently looked capable, but the real problems for Arsenal seem to be an unwillingness to shoot combined with the continuing lack of a striking partner for Thierry Henry. Henry didn't seem himself today, either, muffing a number of chances. Credit fine defense and game-saving play from City keeper Nicky Weaver.

Arsenal weren't the only contenders to take a tumble today: Tottenham was humiliated today by a ten-man Everton side, 2-0 at home. The Merseysiders seems to be down and out when Kevin Kilbane was sent off with an hour to go, but it was the White Hart Lane crowd who left crestfallen as they suffered through a gutsy, dominating performance by the Toffees that surely will raise more questions about the direction of Spurs.

Elsewhere today, Liverpool rallied to get a vital win at West Ham behind Peter Crouch''s strike and Manchester United offed Watford to go top of the table with three wins in three games. Fulham fans will be cheered with their side's first win and Charlton also got on the board with a 2-0 victory over a sluggish Bolton.

Nearer and dearer to our hearts, Dundee United got a win (yes, a win!) with a 3-1 performance at St. Mirren. Across the street, Dundee lost 1-0 to Livingston at Dens.

5 Comments | Add a comment   categories: EPL, SOCCER, Arsenal, Manchester City, Tottenham Hotspur, Everton, Liverpool, Dundee Utd
 
"Well, DUH!"
Aug 22, 2006 | 6:44AM | report this

Letterhack Christopher Wade sez it all:

"I thought you would find this article [in the Boston Globe, registration req. but free] interesting: I love how Dell'Apa points out that the Revolution and Dempsey have no control over the transfer negotiations and it all comes from MLS HQ. This stubbornness by MLS will just cause bitterness and they will end up getting nothing for Dempsey because his play will suffer because he does not care (thus lowering his value) or he will just wait out his contract.
 
"If MLS were a true business they would sell their talent when it peaks and use the proceeds to reinvest in their “product”, thus creating a wider pool of quality players. This wider pool of quality players would improve play and make it easier to sell their good players."

We agree, Christopher. One note: Dell'Apa insinuates that MLS received an offer of "$2m" for Dempsey — the offer was actually a bit higher than that, In other news, Demspey remains in the market, but a move is unlikely until January.


 

7 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Clint Dempsey, MLS, EPL
 
Soccer's opening weekend
Aug 20, 2006 | 2:13PM | report this

After watching today's appallingly bad New England-Chicago game, this article in the California-based Daily Breeze seemed particularly relevant. I'll write more on this as part of the promised series on MLS, but some of this stuff — especially Alexi Lalas' insouciance towards his fellow players — is hard to ####.

England, of course, opened with a #### this weekend — Manchester United looks very good while L'Arsenal struggled against l'anti-jouers pour Aston Villa. Best performance outside of the Red Devils' demolition of sad Fulham? Perhaps Bolton, which looked very solid against a wasteful Tottenham.

7 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Soccer, MLS, EPL
 
Liverpool stays true to form...
Aug 19, 2006 | 6:49AM | report this
...dropping points to weaker teams in their EPL debut. Seems Rafa's boys are right on course.
1 Comment | Add a comment   categories: Liverpool, EPL
 
MLS turns down multi-million offer for Dempsey
Aug 17, 2006 | 8:24AM | report this

Reliable sources told me this morning that MLS has turned down a "multi-million" dollar offer from English Premier League club Charlton Athletic for the New England Revolution midfielder. Dempsey, who has made no secret of his desire to leave MLS, will be out of contract with the league in 2007.

Published reports in England and the USA that West Ham United had approached the player's representatives or the league are incorrect. At least one other team has expressed interest in the player: Turkey's Fenerbahce has spoken to team personnel with the New England Revolution.


13 Comments | Add a comment   categories: MLS, Clint Dempsey, Charlton Athletic, Fenerbahce
 
MLS 1, Chelsea 0
Aug 05, 2006 | 5:21PM | report this
DeRosario scores a fine strike at distance after receieving the ball from O'Brien. DeRosario actually shrugged off Mikel to give himself a little room on the shot, but the placement gave Hilario no chance.
7 Comments | Add a comment   categories: MLS, All-Star, Chelsea, Chelsea
 
30th minute
Aug 05, 2006 | 4:21PM | report this
I wonder if Shaun-Wright Phillps wishes he could play aginst Josh Gros every day? Who would have thought a young man from our capital would make SWP look so good?

Conrad had a nice blooper into Ching that Cudicini ably snuffed away.
Add a comment   categories: MLS, All-Star, Chelsea
 
20th minute, All-Star Game
Aug 05, 2006 | 4:14PM | report this
Little on-field excitement at present. Chellseas has been gracious enough to allow the MLS guys time and space to actually string together some passes — canny watcher swill have noticed that four defenders were kind enough to allow Albright to get control of a pass in the box before relieving him of it.

Jimmy Conrad's ill-considered tackle on Didier Drogba gave Frank Lampard a nice free kick attempt, and Troy Perkins did well to save it to his left. Still, it's a stroll in thje park so far. Perhaps they should all be wearing white sweaters and eating cucumber sandwiches?
Add a comment   categories: MLS, Chelsea, All-Star
 
10th minute, All-Star Game
Aug 05, 2006 | 3:58PM | report this
A full house here today at the All-Star Game, though the crowd seems to be pretty heavily pro-Chelsea, as one would expect. It’s a pretty steamy day in suburban Chicago as well; a lot of folks are cooling off on the patios.

Weird trivia: No guys jumping out of planes onto the field or having a fly-over today here, however — the Firehouse is in Midway airport’s flight path zone and the FAA wouldn’t grant clearance. However, Southwest jets fly over about every five minutes, anyway.

Josh Gros missed a chance to finish a nice play on a cross from Albright in the 7th minute — linesman Nate Clement ruled the ball had gone out of bounds, however.

So far a pretty easy game – no real tackles and Chelsea is coasting at about ½ speed.
2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: MLS, All-Star, Chelsea
 
Chelsea-MLS All-Star game coverage begins
Aug 05, 2006 | 3:01PM | report this
Howdy, folks. We're here in Bridgeview, getting ready for the kickoff. The preview is up at here, the guys are on the field, and we'll be back in ten with some pre-game notes.
2 Comments | Add a comment   categories: MLS, All-Star Game, Chelsea
 
Chelsea, MLS and the NASL
Aug 04, 2006 | 9:00AM | report this
CHICAGO (August 3) – This week at the Fire’s new Bridgeview stadium complex, the 11th MLS All-Star game will pit an MLS select side against a pre-season Chelsea team gearing up to defend its second-straight English Premiership title.

Chelsea is an interesting choice of opponent for MLS. Arguably, this team is what MLS, as a league, aspires to be in the future. It’s also worth noting that both organizations have taken diametrically opposite paths to get where they are today.

The one thing the two outfits have in common, of course, are deep-pocketed investors with deliberately obscured, murky backgrounds and a propensity for losing money. Chelsea announced a loss of $252 million — the largest ever in soccer history — back in January. Owner Roman Abramovich has spent some $600 million in transfers since 2003 (accounting for 40% of all transfer monies spent in the Premiership in 2005, according to auditors Deloitte).

Coincidentally, $600m is about what MLS has lost in eleven seasons of play, with only two clubs, Los Angeles’s Galaxy and New England, coming close in that time to profitability. (New England’s profitability is now questionable considering the dramatic fall-off in attendance the club has experienced.)

That’s where the similarities end: Where Abramovich introduced a new paradigm into European football with his New York Yankee’s style of management, MLS’ attempt to change the rules with single-entity ownership remains a work in progress. MLS is light years behind the Big Five (MLB, NBA, NFL, NHL and Nascar) in both quality of play and interest; indeed, MLS has still to justify the “major” in its sobriquet at about every level, term becoming both a blessing and a curse.

Where Abramovich has been profligate, MLS has been parsimonious. And while Abramovich benefited from a slow-moving cadre of competitors, MLS has had to face off against well-financed, knowledgeable opponents across the American sports spectrum.

But while Abramovich has been blamed (by some) for “ruining” the English game, there’s no question that he has, in three years, demonstrated what the American “big-league” sports mentality can do to the European game. Some will sniff at that notion, claiming that Abramovich can buy any player he wants, which is the same argument used against the New York Yankees. The truth, however, is that success comes from blending complementary talents. There’s a lot to be said for knowing which players to buy and who can most effectively manage your assets — give Abramovich credit for hiring two experienced pros in Peter Kenyon and Jose Mourinho to do just that.

MLS, apparently, doesn’t have an open wallet. That’s why its odd that that the league has not leveraged all its assets by any stretch. In fact, eleven years in, it’s worth noting that MLS turned its back on one of the biggest resources available to it and is paying a hefty price for it.

When MLS kicked off, it marketed itself as the “anti-NASL.” Where the NASL recklessly over-expanded, MLS was going to take it slow. Where the NASL loaded up on over the hill players, MLS was going to instead be “an American league to develop American players.” MLS had a business plan that was going to rope in the huge number of rec players, contain costs, and make everyone a tidy profit. One day, MLS execs said, America will be home to the best league in the world.

As we know today, this was pure hubris.

One of the biggest reasons for this is simply the lack of experienced, knowledgeable soccer people in the league. There are a number of folks out there who know something about the game and are eager to help out. Yet because of MLS’ encoded animosity toward the NASL — encapsulated in commissioner Don Garber’s historically questionable assertion (to us in fact, here) that the NASL “didn't provide long-term benefits to the sport” — MLS has never reached out to the folks who were there first.

This is a rotten waste of capital. Just off the top of our heads, guys like Jay Emmett, Clive Toye, Noel Lemmon, Dave Socha (a World Cup ref 24 years ago) and Gordon Bradley, are experienced administrators who at the very least could be tapped to help reform what is a badly damaged development track and probably could help advise a new generation of scouts. Some other former NASL’ers also have something increasingly common among older Americans — money. Why aren’t these folks, who had some success in the 1970s, being tapped today to help fund some of the projects soccer needs to succeed in the USA?

We suspect a reason MLS doesn’t reach out is that many of the former NASL’ers would have a disturbing tendency to actually put the game first, and the marketing second. Say what you want about the NASL, but they did put a good product on the field. They may or may not have been the over-the-hill gang, but the NASL did have a bunch of guys who actually knew how to play the game. Take a look back at the rosters from the 1974 World Cup. A fair number of those guys went on to play in the NASL before too long. Now take a look at the 2006 World Cup roster. How many of them will ever kick a ball in MLS?

Moreover, they cared about it, deeply. And while we hate to agree with Giorgio Chignalia, he had a valid point when he noted last month that Americans like stars. Would spending a few million more a team on players — and a few million less bringing teams over for exhibition matches — really be such a bad idea?

Has MLS made strides? Yes — it has managed to get a handful of arenas built for its teams, has survived expansion, contraction and now looks set to expand again. Monday, Fox announced a deal to pay the league rights fees for some telecasts, and Univision looks set to follow suit. These are steps in the right direction for a business, to be sure.

But the business at its center remains hollow. MLS still doesn’t have a good enough product on the field to tear people away from competing entertainment.

We don’t like it, but the truth is that MLS has no true stars, little respect outside the country and a fan base that has remained dismayingly static. As a result, MLS has failed to rope in the large number of folks who enjoy the game or just plain like sports. The 2006 World Cup defied expectations in the USA by showing that Americans will watch soccer even if Team USA isn’t playing. What these fans do demand, however, is top quality, and MLS can’t yet consistently deliver that. Every other pro league in America has the world’s best players. MLS has none of them.

We know the guys try like hell every game, but the fact that so many players in the league can’t trap a ball exquisitely, can’t keep the ball in between the touchlines for extravagantly developed plays, can’t see the entire field or anticipate the next pass, and can’t shoot on net is glaringly obvious to a novice. And truthfully, those of us who have pleaded for patience over the years are at the end of our tethers — eleven years should be long enough for even the most slavish fan to realize that the league is failing at its core mission, which must be, as we have been told, to develop quality American soccer players, coaches and refs.

And this brings us to where we came in. MLS wants to use Saturday’s All-Star game as a measuring stick. The league clearly feels that if its “boys” can hang against Chelsea, well, then they’re not doing too badly. The problem is, the whole equation is false. How does putting the best players of a mediocre league against a top team in pre-season training, in a meaningless friendly, reveal anything about where the league truly is?

We think, truthfully, that the game, without even having kicked off, has already shown how far MLS has yet to come. We also think MLS should pay more attention to the lessons Chelsea and the NASL offer — or better yet, start making use of the resources.

And by the way, even if you disagree with our take on the league and the value of the NASL, one fact is really tough to argue away: The fans aren’t coming on Saturday to see MLS’ “Best XI.” They’re coming to see the stars.

That says about all you need to know about MLS right now, and it’s a shame, because it doesn’t have to be this way.

18 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Chelsea, MLS, NASL
 
Wednesday's column delayed
Aug 02, 2006 | 6:39AM | report this
UPDATED: Heh heh heh. Yeah, well, those of you who were looking to watch the KC-CHI game know what happened in Chicago last night. For those of you that don't, we got walloped by a huge storm (blowing up the transformer on the next block, making for downed power-line fun this morning) and the Open Cup game was delayed.

We're still going to try and post something today before we get into All-Star coverage, but we went from dying in the heat to cleaning up the mess. Sigh...
12 Comments | Add a comment   categories: SOCCER, MLS, Chelsea
 
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JamieTrecker
I am the senior soccer writer here at Fox Sports as well a regular contributor to many, many newspapers and magazines. If you like what I write, then please buy my book "Love And Blood" from Harcourt, now available. Sign up for Jamie Trecker's Rather Unobtrusive Mailing List by sending us an email at jamie.trecker
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