MLS News
Early Numbers on the Home Guard
MLS News
Wednesday, 02 April 2014 15:56

As the Home Guard prepare to take on Mexico this week, we're going to look at some of the early-season stats for these U.S. men's national soccer team hopefuls.

This is the last U.S. national team game before head coach Jurgen Klinsmann names his preliminary 30-man World Cup roster. After this game, Klinsmann's evaluations of a player's form will come from games in Major League Soccer.

Soccer is a notoriously stat-starved sport. If you look at a "box score" for a soccer match, you see relatively rare events like goals and assists along with more mundane factoids like the match attendance, red and yellow cards, the number of corner kicks taken and substitutions.

Recently, several soccer news outlets have beefed up their stat reporting, but the raw data doesn't tell you much and the various attempts at graphical representation (heat maps, passing charts, etc) don't tell you much about the data that goes into those images.  

MLSsoccer.com is one soccer news outlet that does a good job of coding and reporting raw numbers for basic but important indicators of a player's performance in offensive, defensive and possession phases of the game.  

For the analytical enjoyment of B/R readers, the following statistics will be recorded and reported for the Home Guard.

Offensive:

SC%: The percentage of shots that become goals. View this as a player's shooting percentage. S/90: The number of shots a player takes per 90 minutes played. This is an indicator of how active an attacking player is.

Defensive:

Def/90: The number of defensive plays a player makes per 90 minutes played. Defensive plays include tackles won, shots blocked, crosses blocked, passes intercepted, clearances and recoveries. This is measure of defensive activity, not defensive efficacy. 

Possession and distribution:

Pass%: The percentage of player's passes that are successfully completed. This may not be a true indicator of a player's passing ability as some players attempt more difficult passes than others. Cross%: The percentage of a player's crosses that are "successful." Only a few positions on the field get involved in this activity, so it as much an indicator of how active a player is in the wide areas as it is in how effective that player is. (N/A means a player has not attempted a cross.) Tch/TO: The number of touches a player takes, on average, before turning the ball over. The higher the number, the fewer turnovers the player makes relative to his position on the field (which determines how many times he touches the ball).  

More stats will be added as the counts increase with relatively rare events like goals and assists. 

Players are divided into the three traditional tactical lines—defense, midfield and forward—keeping in mind that modern soccer formations combine some of these in novel ways so that it is somewhat of a judgment call whether or not a player is a defender, midfielder or defender. 

Possession and distribution stats will be reported for all three positions, but offensive stats will not be reported for defenders nor will defensive stats be reported for forwards. Midfielders, of course, will have all three stat areas reported.

 

All raw data from MLSsoccer.com's Chalkboard. 

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MLS Player Power Rankings: Diaz, Higuain Surge Up Chart After Week 4
MLS News
Monday, 31 March 2014 22:38

Only one word could accurately describe the action across Major League Soccer in Week 4, and that word is dramatic. 

Keeping with the theme from the weekend, we saw a dramatic shift in the latest ranking of the 20 best players in the league. 

Just four players who sat in the top 10 after Week 3 remained in the top half of the rankings through the final week of the first month of the 2014 campaign. 

Read on to see who took the throne away from Jermain Defoe on top of the latest MLS player power rankings.

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8 Things We Learned from MLS Week 4
MLS News
Sunday, 30 March 2014 23:50

Believe it or not, we are already one month into the 2014 Major League soccer season.

Before the league turned the calendar over to April, plenty of madness occurred over the nine matches played on the final weekend of March. 

The weekend that saw four second-half stoppage-time winners taught us plenty about the 18 teams who took the pitch. 

We cut those many lessons down to the eight key takeaways from Week 4. 

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Nick Rimando, Red Cards and the Rest of the Winners and Losers from MLS Week 4
MLS News
Sunday, 30 March 2014 21:52

Week 4 of play in Major League Soccer was the most thrilling one to date in 2014 as four matches saw a game-changing goal in stoppage time. 

This weekend's action also produced a few unexpected results thanks to the late drama that began in Colorado and ended in New York. 

Since the drama altered the results of so many games, there were plenty of winners and losers to choose from after play concluded at Red Bull Arena on Sunday. 

Continue reading for the biggest winners and losers from Week 4 in MLS. 

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MLS Team of the Week: Zusi, Goncalves and Nguyen Star in Week 4
MLS News
Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:51

In a wild and crazy weekend of play in Major League Soccer, stars from past seasons and new acquisitions that have made a name for themselves featured. 

Because the play in the midfield was so strong this week, we opted to set up the Week 4 Team of the Week in a 4-5-1 formation to make room for an extra central midfielder.

Continue reading to see which 11 players were good enough to be named to the latest MLS Team of the Week. 

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MLS Expansion: Why Raleigh Deserves Consideration as MLS Moves Southeast
MLS News
Saturday, 29 March 2014 15:57

The North Carolina Triangle has long been considered a viable candidate for a Major League Soccer franchise. 

Yet as Orlando City, New York City FC and David Beckham's Miami franchise kick off the next generation of the United States premier soccer league, Raleigh's prospects seem to be dimmed by the growing soccer fever encompassing all of the nation's biggest cities.

However, the Triangle's athletic scene, long dominated by collegiate football and basketball, is diversifying almost as quickly as the metropolitan population is booming.

The NHL's Carolina Hurricanes draw relatively well in one of hockey's smallest markets; the International League's Durham Bulls are re-establishing their identity as the model franchise of minor league baseball; the North American Soccer League's (NASL) Carolina RailHawks are coming off an undefeated 2013 home schedule and repeatedly proving their ability to contend with upper-level competition.

If critics find it easy to describe the riskiness of MLS expansion into the Raleigh area, it may be even easier to explain why such riskiness could very well lead to a success of Portland Timbers-esque caliber.

As the league approaches an inevitable explosion of expansion, the Raleigh area's dedication and passion for soccer should not be overshadowed.

 

The Current State of MLS Expansion

Atlanta has jumped suddenly to the top of the expansion leaderboard, with MLS commissioner Don Garber raving about Georgia's biggest market in a Q&A earlier in March.

The Twin Cities area of Minnesota also seemed to be a favorite of Garber, while top NASL draw San Antonio remains in the mix. St. Louis and Indianapolis stand out as locations in the Midwest, another region under-tapped by MLS.

Indeed, the league is on the cusp of blossoming from a 19-team group to a 30-some-club conglomeration capable of competing with the NHL and NBA for market share.

Wrote Jonah Freedman of MLSsoccer.com in his March 15 column:

But there’s another big reason to enjoy 2014: It’s the last year of MLS as you know it. Because this league is changing forever after this season, and all that talk about slow, controlled growth is about to speed up in a hurry.

MLS will be the largest top-flight league on earth. And it’s not even close. No country in the modern era of the game has successfully dealt with that kind of size and scope at the top-flight level.

If the 1990s marked the rebirth of American soccer and the 2000s followed its ascendance as a secondary sport, the 2010s could soon become the decade of its proliferation into the American cultural mainstream.

 

How Soccer Performs in the Triangle

The Carolina RailHawks will begin their eighth season this April.

The RailHawks have had tremendous success on the field, posting the best regular-season record in the NASL (one tier below the MLS) three of the last four seasons and respectable success in the local market.

Their average attendance of 4,708 in 13 NASL home matches in 2013 ranked third in the league, exceeding both Atlanta (4,677) and Minnesota (4,406), among others. The Charlotte Eagles, playing in the lesser USL-Pro, averaged a mere 807 fans per game.

In their first season in the expanded WakeMed Soccer Park, which added a new upper level on the eastern sideline to increase capacity to 10,000, the RailHawks set a club attendance record in a 2-0 win over the Los Angeles Galaxy in the U.S. Open Cup. The team defeated Chivas USA in the following round but was eliminated by eventual MLS Cup runner-up Real Salt Lake in the quarterfinals.

The Cary/Chapel Hill region is also heavily invested in collegiate soccer. WakeMed Soccer Park hosted the Final Four of the 2013 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Championships, while the University of North Carolina won the 2011 men's soccer and 2012 women's soccer national championships.

Arguably the most impressive component of the Triangle's soccer following, however, is at the youth level. Almost 9,000 children from ages 4 to 18 participate in the Capital Area Soccer League, which celebrates its 40th year of existence in 2014.

 

What the Critics Say

Said commissioner Garber about N.C. earlier in March, per Richard Farley of NBC Sports:

Even in my early days—back in 2000—we’ve always looked around it, because it is a hotbed of soccer. We’ll monitor it. We’ve said we need to get south of Washington, D.C. Atlanta is a southern team. Florida…is south of D.C. I’m not sure North Carolina is coming anytime soon.

Wrote Freedman in his ranking of the top MLS expansion candidates last May:

No, it’s not a huge place, it’s not big name and it’s spread out over three-plus counties. But “The Triangle” has a wildly passionate fan base, thanks to three ACC schools within a half-hour from each other. 

Soccer does well here, both at the men’s and women’s levels, and the NASL’s Carolina RailHawks...are a decent draw and have made a little noise about aiming higher. Could all those disparate parts be brought together?

If they were, one MLS player from the area tells me he’d “play there for free.” If it were done right and to scale, this could be an East Coast "Portland" in the making. Eventually.

There's no denying that the Triangle is a spread-out place and hardly boasts the mass-population statistics to overcome that dilemma. Raleigh's city limit's population of 423,000 ranks 42nd in the U.S., while its metropolitan population of 1.2 million ranks 47th.

Nonetheless, Raleigh was ranked by Forbes in February as the second fastest-growing city in America today, and much of that growth is now occurring in the long-neglected downtown area.

 

The Carolina Hurricanes Example

The relocation of the NHL's Hartford Whalers to North Carolina in 1997 was far from an overnight success. In time, though, the 'Canes have established a niche in Raleigh.

Initially, few believed the Triangle—a region most in the sports universe then wrongly assumed to be fully annexed by NASCAR and college basketball—could tolerate, much less support, the NHL. Wrote Gerry Callahan of Sports Illustrated after the club's first three weeks in N.C.:

Their season has been reduced to one long, strange 82-game road trip. They are like some down-on-its-luck country band playing in front of small crowds, in a small city, with no home and no hope.

Their nickname, the Hurricanes, is the only thing about them that makes sense, because thus far the NHL's incursion into tobacco country has been a natural disaster.

But 17 years have revealed the versatility of the sports interests of Raleigh.

In a Southern city defined perhaps most clearly by its lack of a Southern feel, a secondary sport with foreign roots has been embraced. Today, the Hurricanes steadily and significantly attract larger crowds than N.C. State basketball in their shared home at PNC Arena.

 

Downsides to Competing Cities

When MLS expands into its gaping hole between Florida and D.C. (and yes, that is a "when," not an "if"), Atlanta and Charlotte seem slated to receive the greatest consideration.

In population alone, the preferential treatment of both over Raleigh seems warranted.

Historical support for professional teams, conversely, paints a more complex image.

The critics of the NHL's movement into the Southeast in the '90s, if incorrect about the fate of the 'Canes, can certainly take credit for predicting the Atlanta Thrashers disaster. The Thrashers scraped along on woeful attendance for two decades, but the ownership group had finally had enough in 2011 and sent the franchise to Winnipeg.

Both the Atlanta Hawks and Charlotte Bobcats of the NBA, moreover, place in the league basement in attendance. Although both have experienced moderately successful 2013-14 campaigns, currently occupying the final two Eastern Conference playoff spots, they rank 28th and 25th, respectively, in average crowd size.

The Knights, Charlotte's Triple-A baseball club, ranked dead last in the 15-team International League in 2013 attendance as well. Their 3,803 average was less than half of the Durham Bulls' average and only slightly higher than the Single-A Carolina Mudcats, based on the edge of Wake County.

 

Dilemmas to Raleigh Expansion

Two major issues stand in the way of Raleigh's bid for an expansion team: lack of a highly prominent potential ownership group and lack of a suitably located and sized venue.

The latter concern can be resolved with time and money. Wrote Luke DeCock of The News & Observer last year:

An MLS franchise would need a stadium with at least 18,000 seats, not to mention more luxury suites, more press and multipurpose facilities, more parking and better access from Interstate 40. WakeMed Soccer Park has provisions for a 25,000-seat stadium in its master plan, but a stadium in downtown Raleigh might make more sense.

It has been speculated that city planners have been casually contemplating a stadium location just south of downtown. WakeMed Soccer Park is fine as a temporary facility; after all, it boasts roughly the same capacity as the San Jose Earthquakes' current home.

Of greater worry and less resolution is the lack of ownership. Raleigh is a city known for its generally high living conditions but is not flush on billionaires with money to temporarily waste on establishing a MLS franchise (in addition to the $30 million expansion fee, as DeCock also noted).

 

The Triangle's Soccer Passion

Every weekday evening, thousands of cars congest Capital Boulevard, heading home from downtown Raleigh to upper-class northern suburbs in Wakefield, Wake Forest and Rolesville.

At the spotlight at Durant Road, north of I-540 and a good portion of the way home, they run into another logjam of congestion headed the perpendicular direction.

Is it another popular commute route? No, it's the daily soccer-practice rush hour, where traffic regularly backs up 20 to 30 minutes outside of WRAL Soccer Park each afternoon.

Indeed, the Triangle's wide-scale soccer movement is most evident among its youngest participants, a generation growing up with soccer listed first on physical-exam forms, with soccer instead of baseball the quintessential summer-night spectator sport, with soccer matches in Barcelona, Manchester, Munich and elsewhere in Europe on national TV in America.

It's the generation that will inevitably carry soccer into the U.S. professional-sports spotlight in the coming decades. It's the generation that will do the same locally in the Triangle.

They deserve a MLS team to carry, too.

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MLS Week 4: Complete Schedule and 5 Things to Watch for This Weekend
MLS News
Friday, 28 March 2014 08:54

The state of D.C. United will be the story to watch in MLS Week 4, but what additional storylines will complete your weekend preview?

In the coming slides, a majority of the nine matches scheduled for this week will be covered in great detail. Each match selected will be dissected from a unique angle to intensify your viewing pleasure.

So, what exactly warrants your attention in Week 4?

Read on to find out.

 

Note: Unless otherwise mentioned, credit all statistics to Squawka. All data collected is licensed from Opta Sports.

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Breaking Down the MLS Contingent in USMNT Squad for Mexico Friendly
MLS News
Friday, 28 March 2014 03:42

On Wednesday, United States men's national team head coach Jurgen Klinsmann named a 22-man roster for next week's friendly against Mexico with 19 of those players coming from Major League Soccer.

Here's a breakdown of the players he selected and those he didn't.

 

The Givens

As one would fully expect, Klinsmann named the bulk of North American regulars to the squad, many of whom are expected to compete for starting spots on the team the Americans will take to Brazil this summer. This group includes Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Matt Besler, Omar Gonzalez and Graham Zusi (DaMarcus Beasley also made the team but plays club in Mexico, not in MLS).

Also included on the roster for the Mexico friendly are a number of MLS players who are likely to make the World Cup roster, albeit as role players, including Nick Rimando, Kyle Beckerman, Clarence Goodson and Eddie Johnson.

 

The Fringe Players

With limited World Cup roster spots still up for grabs, Klinsmann did call in a number of MLS players expected to be in position battles. At right-back, he called in Brad Evans, Michael Parkhurst and DeAndre Yedlin (Liga MX defender Michael Orozco was also called in and can play any position along the backline).

Evans, Parkhurst and Yedlin all saw minutes in February's friendly against South Korea and Evans, in particular, is widely considered to be in a battle to start at right-back. But his struggles in a number of recent appearances for the USMNT and the fact that Klinsmann called in three other players capable of playing his position says a lot.

Brad Davis was also called in again and this will be his last chance before the World Cup camp convenes to prove to Klinsmann that he belongs on the roster headed to Brazil.

Davis did well against Panama in the final game of World Cup qualifying, providing two nice assists, but he is fighting for a spot in a relatively deep midfield for a place on the left—likely against Brek Shea and newcomer Julian Green (Green is also part of the squad for the game against Mexico).

Maurice Edu received a call-up but hasn't seen the field for the Nats since last March against Mexico in a performance that was widely criticized. He would also likely have to knock Kyle Beckerman off the roster in order to go to Brazil himself.

Finally, at forward, Chris Wondolowski will get another chance to impress after scoring twice against South Korea in February. Wondo will have to battle Jozy Altidore, Aron Johannsson, Johnson and potentially even a few others for a World Cup roster spot and will need another very strong performance to stay in the mix.

 

The Others

With Tim Howard and Brad Guzan in Europe and unavailable for selection, Klinsmann called up normal fourth and fifth choices at goalkeeper, Bill Hamid and Sean Johnson. However, both are long shots to make the World Cup roster.

Luis Gil also received a call-up this time around after playing a cameo role against South Korea in February. Gil is unlikely to make the 2014 roster, but he has U.S. fans excited for what he might be able to do heading into the 2018 cycle.

 

Who Missed Out?

There weren't too many surprises in terms of players left out this time around, but some fans were hoping that Benny Feilhaber or Mike Magee would have been included. Feilhaber has been a fringe player with the USMNT since the Bob Bradley era and even though he played 30 minutes off the bench against South Korea in February, he apparently didn't do enough in Klinsmann's eyes to deserve another call-up.

Magee, unfortunately, got food poisoning before the match in February and was unable to play. Now, he has apparently missed his window.

Although they're not MLS players, the U.S.'s Tijuana contingent was not included due to Xolos advancement in the CONCACAF Champions League. That means Greg Garza, Herculez Gomez, Edgar Castillo and Joe Corona were all unavailable for selection. All four are considered fringe players for World Cup roster spots and missing this camp certainly won't help their chances.

 

Follow me on Twitter @JohnDHalloran

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MLS Star Nigel Reo-Coker Injured After Tripping over Bike Rack on Walk
MLS News
Wednesday, 26 March 2014 04:54

Nigel Reo-Coker of the Vancouver Whitecaps is an injury doubt for his side's next MLS game after what the league described on its website as an "off-field walking accident."

Reo-Coker, who had stints in the Premier League with Aston Villa and West Ham United, was apparently walking in Vancouver when disaster struck:

This, after the former Aston Villa and West Ham United star suffered a nasty gash to his face while walking the streets of Vancouver on Sunday.

The club has stated the Englishman was looking elsewhere while walking when he tripped over a bike rack, cutting his face and hitting his head in the process.

Accidents happen. Just not often like this.

[h/t Dirty Tackle]

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The MLS Home Guard Returns and Prepares for the World Cup
MLS News
Tuesday, 25 March 2014 18:16

If any sports writer had written a year ago, "Clint Dempsey and Michael Bradley will lead their Major League Soccer teams into the 2014 season," it would not have been long before that poor fool was looking for work after suffering the indignity of a public mocking—for good reason.

Yet, here we are, the start of the 2014 season, and not only are Dempsey and Bradley leading their MLS teams onto the field, but they already faced off in a rugged game that saw Dempsey receive a two-game suspension for taking a swipe at an opponent's most sensitive region in a fit of pique.  

There is no debate that it was an earth-splitting coup for Major League Soccer. But, there will be no end to the debate about whether or not Dempsey's and Bradley's moves to MLS are "good for Bradley/Dempsey" or "good for the US Men's National Team." 

With 12 weeks to go before the FIFA World Cup Final, USMNT head coach Jurgen Klinsmann finds himself with half of his player pool competing in MLS, including 40 percent of his team's "spine."

In the first World Cup (1998) after MLS came into existence, 16 of the 22 players on the USMNT roster played for MLS clubs. In the next two World Cups, 11 of the 23 players were from the Home Guard. In the last World Cup, only four of the 23 roster spots came from MLS.

There is a good chance that the Home Guard will account for more than half of the 2014 World Cup roster. The downward trend in MLS players contributing to the emergence of U.S. international soccer is clearly coming to an end.

This is due, in no small part, to the rising level of play in Major League Soccer. Yes, we all know that the CONCACAF Champions League remains a blemish when assessing the quality of MLS play, but too many factors not related to talent play into that black mark on MLS' record.  

Major League Soccer continues to attract international talent. Young players from Africa and Latin America now comprise a heavy proportion of MLS rosters. Older, or shall we say "experienced," players from Europe continue to make MLS their last hurrah. This combination of young, technical talent and experienced, tactical acumen not only raises the level of play in MLS, but it also improves the technical and tactical abilities of American MLS players.

Another, more obvious reason why so many Nats are playing in MLS is that the league is finally loosening the purse strings and paying real money to attract star players. The league's weak overall salary cap still limits the depth of MLS rosters, but the level of the top MLS talent has never been higher.

Many will not see much advantage in these two factors in terms of how they affect the Nats' chances in Brazil. There is, however, one advantage that MLS players will have over their European counterparts in the heat and humidity of the Amazon lowlands—MLS players will be in mid-season form while European players will have a full, brutal season's worth of minutes and maimings on their tired bodies.

Another advantage, that may seem trivial but will actually magnify the effects on worn-out players, is the travel distances in Brazil. Much has already been made of the distances that the USMNT has to travel in group play this summer. But consider this, the Americans make a pair of 1700-mile trips in the first round, while Bradley and Toronto FC traveled 2066 miles just to play Dempsey and his Seattle Sounders. 

Long trips are second nature to MLS players. When was the last time Christiano Ronaldo traveled 2000 miles for a league game? The answer in La Liga, where the furthest possible travel distance for Real Madrid is the 313-mile odyssey to Barcelona, is never. The longest trips Ronaldo's Real Madrid made in the 2013-2014 season were in the UEFA Champions League: a 1700-mile trek to Istanbul, Turkey to play Galatasaray; 1289 to Copenhagen, Denmark; and 923 miles to Gelsenkirchen to play Schalke.

Meanwhile the Seattle Sounders, with USMNT players Clint Dempsey and Brad Evans, will make three longer trips—Montreal, 2284 miles; Dallas, 1679 miles; and Boston, 2487 miles—in just seven weeks before the start of the World Cup.

Finally, consider the June weather conditions in Brazil. The Nats face Portugal at 6 p.m. local time in Manaus with an average temperature of 83 degrees and 80 percent humidity. This is very similar to the June weather in Kansas City, home to potential USMNT starters Graham Zusi and Matt Besler, with 85 degree average temperatures and 60 percent humidity (h/t www.weatherspark.com).

The bottom line is that the Home Guard has a travel advantage over the European players in the World Cup and they will be in mid-season form as opposed to end-of-season wrecks. If anything, the size of the Home Guard may prove to be just the edge the U.S. needs to advance from their group and make some noise in Brazil this summer.

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