You're not going to like this, but I'd replace Zusi with Keane and Nielsen with Rimando or Gruenebaum.
Speaking of nominations, Eric Hassli nominated for 2012 FIFA Puskás award
I think last year's was better...
I actually agree on the the Zusi call, but Nielsen should be on there. He's a beast. I'd put Rimando above Kennedy but in fairness I didn't watch alot of his games, so maybe he's better than I think.
I can't believe I'm rooting for Seattle...
Ugh...
Lol come on.
The ref had a decent game.
Lol come on.
The ref had a decent game.
Glad Beckham will be gone and glad he will be apart of an expansion franchise. And before anyone suggests his discount is not valid in Ny or La.
if you enjoy soft calls and bad linesmen
is that confirmed?
Glad Beckham will be gone and glad he will be apart of an expansion franchise. And before anyone suggests his discount is not valid in Ny or La.
http://www.mlssoccer.com/matchcenter/2012-11-18-sea-v-la/highlights/206364
- that guy was swinging his arms around like a madman
- the ball hit BOTH his hands
- he actually reacted to it like "ow that just hit my hand"
http://www.mlssoccer.com/matchcenter/2012-11-18-sea-v-la/highlights/206364
- that guy was swinging his arms around like a madman
- the ball hit BOTH his hands
- he actually reacted to it like "ow that just hit my hand"
It sucks that because of it we were deprived of what could have been a great finish to that game, though...
Manchester City’s Abu Dhabi-based owners are understood to be considering extending their influence in football across the Atlantic with a bid for a New York MLS franchise. Telegraph Sport understands that City’s proprietors are among a number of investors considering bidding for the franchise, which will extend the league membership to 20.
Sources with knowledge of the MLS franchise process told Telegraph Sport that City’s owners have examined the potential of a US investment, though they will face competition, both from Middle East rivals and US-based investors.
Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s purchase of Manchester City may have begun as a whim, but its potential as a marketing and diplomatic tool quickly became clear to the emirate’s ruling family.
The success of the project is understood to have led to discussion of building City 'franchises’ in other leagues, with the US among the most lucrative and high-profile developing markets in world football.
Qatar are also interested in extending their global reach in football to the US, with the investor behind Paris St-Germain understood to be taking soundings about the MLS.
Nasser Al Khelaifi, who is managing director of Al Jazeera sports and fronts Qatar’s sports investment arm as well as being president of PSG, has held a series of meetings in the US as the tiny Gulf state considers its next move.
The quickest route into the MLS is via a New York franchise, with MLS commissioner Don Garber clear that he wants a second team in the city alongside New York Red Bulls.
The league is in talks with the New York authorities over building a privately-financed stadium at Flushing, in the borough of Queens, a commitment that makes the franchise more attractive to Abu Dhabi and other potential investors.
The owners of New York Cosmos, the glamour franchise made famous by Pele and Franz Beckenbauer in the 1970s, are keen to take an MLS slot eventually, but will play in the second-tier North American Soccer League from next season.
What is Don Garber thinking to be pushing for another team in New York City, that guy is so incompetent....
I was being sarcastic, it would be great for the league to attract ownership groups of that caliber...isn't the MLS looking for a big payday with the expansion fee in the range of 100 million ? Would explain why they are pushing NY hard.
Consistency is theme for 2013. Season will start in March 2. New plans for First Kick. Will seek to avoid games during WC Qualifiers and Gold Cup. 2013 will see the same play-off format but with more rest days between them.
I assume everyone has seen the Donovan story...
http://www.latimes.com/sports/soccer/la-sp-landon-donovan-galaxy-20121126,0,7777058.story
If he's trying to leave MLS and head to Europe, good luck to him he has more than earned it. I don't buy the retirement talk though, if he's not at the World Cup (for non-injury reasons), I'll eat my hat.
And a summary of Garber's state of the league speech:
http://www.prostamerika.com/2012/11/26/commissioner-garber-makes-state-of-league-speech/74903
When it comes to new development projects, the Bloomberg administration is closed for business.
That’s because the mayor’s people — with an eye toward his legacy — have carefully crafted a special list of high-profile priority projects to fast-track before Bloomberg’s third term ends in 14 months, putting all else on hold, several sources told The Post.
Those projects include the Midtown East rezoning; the Staten Island Ferris wheel; a Major League Soccer stadium in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park; US Tennis Association expansion of the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center; Cornell’s Applied Sciences campus on Roosevelt Island; and developing the vacant Kingsbridge Armory in The Bronx.
One high-ranking city official said all other land-use proposals are getting completely ignored because the administration will not take on anything outside of its priorities. Meanwhile, the lucky projects it selected are getting pushed through a tedious, bureaucratic approval process at lightning speed.
Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber says the league is at "the finish line" in negotiations with New York City to acquire land to build a stadium in Queens that would become home for the league's 20th team.
Garber says MLS hopes to have the team start play in 2016 at a 10-acre site in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park and spark a rivalry with the New York Red Bulls, who play at a 25,189-capacity stadium that opened in 2010 at Harrison, N.J.
"We believe that this second team in New York will help create an opportunity to break through the clutter in this market of almost a dozen professional sports teams," Garber said during a telephone conference call Monday.
...
Garber said the Red Bulls do not have the right to block a second team in the market. New Red Bulls sporting director Jerome de Bontin told Fox this month that an additional team probably was premature.
"I'm not at all concerned about Jerome's point of view. I think it's just part of being new," he said. "We've had the full support of Red Bulls ownership."
Garber said possibilities for expansion beyond New York include Atlanta, Orlando, Miami and Minneapolis.
isn't the MLS looking for a big payday with the expansion fee in the range of 100 million ? Would explain why they are pushing NY hard.
That's an insane number. No team will ever have enough money to pay that while the MLS has such a small media footprint. Especially since they have to spend $100m on getting a stadium built.