Houston’s Adam Moffat Speaks Of Exciting Times For Vancouver Under Martin Rennie

”It’s going to be exciting for Vancouver next year with him leading them.”

That’s Houston Dynamo midfielder Adam Moffat’s take on new Vancouver Whitecaps manager Martin Rennie. And the 25 year old Scotsman should know, as his countryman Rennie is the reason that Moffat is now plying his trade in the States and in his fifth season in Major League Soccer.

”Martin brought me over. I had a contact who knew him and he asked me to come over and play for his team in Cleveland.”

At AFTN, it’s not everyday we run into someone in MLS that we used to watch playing against our other loves, East Fife. That’s where we first watched Moffat, as he played for Elgin City against the Fifers three times in the 2006/07 season of the Scottish Third Division. We even watched him score against us in the October 7th game at Borough Briggs. The audacity!

Did he ever think he’d end up playing in America when he was travelling around some of the toilets of Scottish football like Coatbridge?

”No. It’s funny how it’s all worked out. Going from there is an unusual journey, but I’ve enjoyed every moment of it. I came over here, played in USL for a little bit, then getting into MLS and now I’ve been here for a few years.”

Moffat stood out for the perennial Highland strugglers and was a player some Fife fans even hoped we’d sign to bolster our promotion push that season.

As it turned out, Moffat ended up leaving Scotland altogether for pastures new in Ohio, where he played for the Cleveland City Stars in the 2007 USL Second Division season.

It was a standout year for the young Scot, being named in the League’s Best XI All Star team and getting attention from MLS teams in the process.

It wasn’t long before Moffat made the state switch south to Columbus to join the Crew, where he spent just over three seasons, notching up 44 appearances and 5 goals. The Crew won an Eastern Conference Championship, two Supporters Shields and a MLS Cup in his time there, although a serious knee injury hampered Moffat’s contribution.

Adam was nearly one of our Cascadia Cup rivals this season, as Portland picked him up third in the expansion draft. After making just four sub appearances for the Timbers, they let him go to join Houston in July, receiving two players in return. Moffat is now a regular starter with the Dynamo, playing 6 games and scoring one goal so far and he came close on Saturday to adding to his tally, crashing a first half effort off the bar.

Although now an established MLS player, Moffat remembers his time in Cleveland fondly and in particular the management of Martin Rennie.

”Martin’s a really good coach. His record shows that. I know it’s at a lower level, but he’s done really well each year and each level that he’s been at.

It’s a challenge for him. It’s going to be a little bit different but he knows what he’s talking about and he knows what he’s capable of doing.”

So what can Vancouver fans expect from a Rennie coached Whitecaps side next season?

”We had a good system [in Cleveland]. We were pretty attack minded, but at the same time we were solid at the back. That’s where we were a little bit more there. Really organised. I think that was probably the biggest thing.

Our organisation helped get us results and he’s kept that with his new team in Carolina obviously. He’s got them really organised and it makes a difference. So if he gets the guys here [in Vancouver] organised next year, it’s going to be good for you.”

And is Adam relishing lining up against his old boss next season?

”For sure. I keep in touch with him quite a lot, so it would be good and hopefully score I’ll against him!”

For now though, Adam’s mind is firmly focussed on the 2011 MLS playoffs.

This season, Houston are battling it out for a playoff spot, currently sitting in third place in the Eastern conference and eighth place in the playoff picture.

One of the things which has hampered their aspirations this year has been their away form. Or lack of it, as they remain winless on the road alongside Vancouver and Toronto.

With the pressure and chances they had in Saturday’s match, they must have surely felt that first elusive away victory was on the cards:

”Yeah, it’s disappointing. Not only not to win the game, but also to end up losing it at the end. We played well and had our chances but we never took them. Full credit to Vancouver, they finished well. “

Houston sit three points clear in the playoff race in eighth spot. Clinching that berth is now where the Club are deeply focussing their efforts for their remaining seven regular season games:

”Yeah, definitely. We had a chance to put some points on the board tonight. That’s our aim and obviously we didn’t, but we’ll keep going. We’ve been playing well lately. Getting to the playoffs, that’s our goal, and we know we’re capable of doing it, so we’ll keep working hard at that.”

And good luck to the Dynamo. With Portland Timbers harbouring playoff hopes of their own, Houston could be the team that stops them achieving that in their inaugural MLS season. As bitter and twisted Cascadian rivals, AFTN obviously hope they fail to achieve that goal!

From a personal point of view, it’s good to see a Scottish player like Adam Moffat come over to the US and do well in Major League Soccer. There were many that came over in the 70’s and 80’s for NASL, but far less so for MLS.

Does Moffat have any plans to go back to Scotland or somewhere else in Europe, or would he like to play out his career over here?

”I don’t know. I enjoy it over here. My wife’s from over here and I married her in California. So who knows. But if there’s an opportunity, I definitely would think about it, but I enjoy being over here. I’ve been in a few different states now. It’s fun. It’s a good lifestyle.”

Good luck to him. As a player who has played and impressed Martin Rennie before, who knows what his MLS future may hold in store and where it may take him.

Midfield isn’t the number one priority for the Whitecaps just now, but never say never.

In The Cold Light Of Day: Cannon Gives Houston A Problem

What a difference a week makes.

Or should that be, what a difference playing at home makes.

The Caps wrapped up their fourth win of the season yesterday and although they were maybe fortunate to get the three points in the end, you can’t grudge them the win for the way they kept fighting till the end.

You can read our full match report of the game over on Prost Amerika.

It seemed like another game where they just wouldn’t catch a break. Fruitless goalmouth scrambles and the woodwork looked like being their story of the Whitecaps afternoon.

Houston must have felt that their first away win of the season was coming. Instead, they are left with the ignominy of still searching for their first road victory, along with ourselves and Toronto.

The Dynamo’s failure and the Whitecaps success can largely be placed at the feet of Joe Cannon.

The veteran goalie was in outstanding form on Saturday. World class save, after world class save, probably laid to rest for the last time this season the debate as to who Vancouver number one goalkeeper is. The job is now Joe’s till the end of this year, at least. After that, who knows what Martin Rennie’s regime will bring.

Joe had to be at his best to keep out some of the Houston efforts.

There were only a few defensive lapses, which was pleasing to see. Whether the centre half partnership of Jay DeMerit and Alain Rochat is going to be our way forward, I don’t know. I think we can be pretty certain that that’s what it’s going to be under the rest of Soehn’s tenure. It still leaves us looking a little weak in the back positions, especially on the right.

We managed to keep the Dynamo to long range efforts for the majority of the game and Carlo Costly was not even a feature of the afternoon. All positives.

Our own firepower missed the suspended Camilo.

It was a bit of a frustrating afternoon for Eric Hassli, as he was forced into more of the creative role that saw his form dip earlier in the season.

We still haven’t seen the best of Mustapha Jarju. I don’t think playing as a striker is going to be his future with us. Playing in the middle, or even just in behind the front two, is surely the way that Rennie will play him to see him at his most effective.

It’s already starting to look like a crowded midfield for next season.

We’re going to struggle to fit in everyone we might want, and if Rennie has his eyes on any midfield dynamos of his own, then we could see someone like Chiumiento or Koffie sacrificed in a trade.

The game turned on Saturday with the introduction of subbies Shea Salinas and Long Tan.

There’s not been many times this season where we can say that we’ve improved our game by bringing on subs. Every other team seems to have the advantage over us in this respect, but finally it was our turn.

Both were magnificent.

It was very pleasing to see Shea Salinas finally pop his Vancouver cherry. A goal from the winger has been on the cards for weeks. It’s just been a matter of when was it coming. Saturday was that day, and you could see the joy and relief written all over his face afterwards. He took it well and he showed the composure and guile that has been missing in many of his other efforts on goal, to bury it coolly and clinically into the bottom right hand corner.

It was also a very well worked move.

Having a hand in it was Long Tan.

I’ll be the first to admit I’ve been skeptical that Tan has what it takes to make it in MLS. He has proved me wrong.

Watching him develop in the reserves and PDL matches has been one of the few joys of this season when it comes to our players.

The PDL is all about development and he’s taken his chance to the max. Banging in the goals like he has been, is not going to keep you in the wilderness for long. He has developed his game, and added scoring to his build up touch that he has always shown.

I don’t think Tan is anywhere near ready to be a starter, but he’s definitely an impact sub and, to my eyes, should be well ahead of Salgado in the pecking order.

It’s the same with Salinas.

I think his best role for us is to come off the bench, much like what Nizar Khalfan was offering us earlier in the season before he just seemed to lose it completely.

Shea’s best games for us have been when given a run in the final quarter of the match.

So as we keep saying after every win. Can we go on a build on that?

In all honesty, New York and LA Galaxy away makes you think no, but I do fancy us to give Seattle and Portland a run for their money in the last two Cascadia Cup matches here.

We also have New England and Toronto in our sights for avoiding last place.

It’s scant consolation for a horrible season, but if we can avoid having the worst team record in MLS history, avoid being last in the 2011 season, finish above Toronto and land the Cascadia Cup, then I’ll take that as a success.

Mon the Caps.

What Do I Get ?

Everyone wants something from this world. Football fans usually want more than most.

We want a winning team on the pitch. We want carte blanche to do what we want off it. We don’t want the front office to interfere with our enjoyment of the game, whilst also wanting their ear when we don’t think things are as they should be.

Yes, many of us supporters are a right pain in the ass for the football clubs we follow.

It’s through love and sometimes misguided self interests and beliefs of course, and if the clubs could operate without the fans then I’m sure they would.

Ultimately, what it all boils down to is that the clubs need us, and we need the clubs.

It’s still always nice to get something back from your monetary and emotional investment in your team though.

As Vancouver Whitecaps fans, we seem to be getting the rough end of the stick compared to some of our MLS rivals, especially our Cascadian cousins.

One of the advantages of travelling around to away games is that it opens your eyes to what supporters of other teams are getting back from their clubs and their corporate sponsors.

Some go down the promotional gameday route. Try and get some more bums on the seats by matchday giveaways. Some pre match, some during the match and some post match.

This isn’t exactly something that the Whitecaps need to adopt thankfully, although we shouldn’t take this for granted and take continued high attendance as a given.

Our supporters turn out to watch the football willingly, not brought there by some gimmick or other, or regular cheap tickets via “deals” sites.

When AFTN was down in Chivas in June, they had an amazing deal for the Caps game that night, and also one for the Timbers game three days later – 4 tickets and 2 Chivas USA scarves for only $45. Excellent value.

Probably just as well we’re not doing a lot of gameday promotions, as some of the promotional days so far at Empire have been a little strange.

Who, for example, thought it was a great idea to give out orange Home Depot branded cheer banners? I know that’s the colours of the business, but what the hell has that got to do with the Whitecaps colours and especially that “sea of white” that they have been so keen to promote? It would work a treat for the BC Lions obviously.

When we were at Qwest for the Sounders game, Samsung Mobile and AT&T gave out really neat two-sided pullout ‘rollabanas’, branded totally in Sounders colours – primarily green and white on one side, blue and white on the other. They were also very reusable and small enough to easily carry around and bring from game to game.

I loved them. They’d work a treat for the Caps support.

Then we had the BC Hydro Family Night, where prizes were given out to fans that went through that most family friendly of things on the concourse, the Budweiser beer tent.

I do love my post match freebies though. I’m Scottish, so of course I do! We talked about these before during our Swangard days. Being in the press box till after the final whistle most games this season, I don’ t know how many of these there have been, but I did love the free car flag giveaway after one particular game that I saw. Saturday’s game will see 5,000 magnetic frames handed out.

We do have another pre and post match freebie to look forward to on Saturday, as your Whitecaps ticket for the Houston game will also grant you free access to the PNE Fair, both before and after the game. Excellent stuff, but will it be a celebratory ice cream cone or an eat your sorrows away in bag after bag of mini doughnuts kind of day?

What has been particularly interesting for me to note this season is how little Whitecaps fans are actually getting back from the club’s corporate sponsors.

We’ve been praised for bringing so many sponsors in this season, especially to what many still consider to be a work in progress, albeit a 37 year old one.

It’s been great that so many companies want to be involved with the Caps. We know how great it is to be a Whitecaps supporter and it’s good to see others realising that too.

All this money that’s coming in can only bode well for the future. Hopefully it will help with our youth development programs and in paying the wages of quality players on a continued basis, meaning winning teams, happier fans, an even bigger fanbase and more exposure for the sponsors.

But what’s in it directly for the fans?

Well, at AFTN we got a giant headache from the Whitecaps travel sponsor Uniglobe, but apart from that, very little would appear to be the answer.

The Caps bank partner is Bank of Montreal, a company who have invested a lot in Canadian football and have been long time sponsors of the Whitecaps. They do a lot investment in youth football.

All very well and good, but apart from the dreadful ‘wave your card in the air’ seat move, fans aren’t exactly seeing a lot of direct benefit from this tie up.

I’m currently looking to change my bank. Would I consider switching to BMO because they sponsor the Caps? No. If I was in Portland, would I consider switching to their bank partner KeyBank? Hell, yeah.

You see, Key Bank offered Timbers fans a fantastic incentive to move to them and have a definite perceived value for their involvement with the club and the fans.

If you switched and opened up a Key Bank account from mid June until July 8th you got an autographed Timbers jersey signed by Darlington Nagbe (spit) or Kenny Cooper. You were also given tickets to an exclusive reception to meet the players at Piggy Park. Great stuff.

KeyBank also produced a fantastic “Inaugural Goal Flip Book” that was given away at the game against New York on June 19th.

Not only all that, but KeyBank also have an excellent club for the little ‘uns. The LTFC – The Little Timbers Fan Club.

There are two options for joining the LTFC. One costs $15 and has a $150 value, the other costs $5 and has a $100 value.

Both give you a free season ticket to the Timbers Reserves games.

As we said on Wednesday, these games can play an important part in attracting the new, young fanatic.

Both also give you newsletters, 10% discount of merchandise and exclusive contests and events. There was a post-game special party at Piggy Park after the Reserves game on Sunday for example.

The $15 package also gives you the nice looking scarf featured above.

As someone who worked in banking for 16 years, I know how hard it is to get kids used to saving and take an interest in it in the first place. The LTFC is the ideal way to get them to take an interest in not squandering their money and build an early banking partnership for the future.

If I was a kid, or a parent with kids, I’d love KeyBank’s involvement and would look very favourably on them for all my banking needs.

I’m sure we all remember which people and companies treated us well when we were kids.

What I find disappointing about these comparisons between the new MLS Clubs banking partners in particular is the missed opportunities. We all need a bank. Make us want to come and choose you ffs.

I know it looks like we’re singling out BMO here, but that’s for a like for like comparison. Looking at other, less essential items than a bank account, things don’t get a whole lot better with the other Caps sponsors.

Take a look at these giveaway theme nights in Portland this season.

We’ve covered before about the lack of “we win, you win” promotions in Vancouver – would have saved the sponsors a fortune this year mind you!

Take a look at how Seattle’s and Portland’s sponsors promotions blow the Whitecaps corporate sponsors out of the water.

Even Chivas gave us the chance to get half a dozen free glazed doughnuts if they’d beaten us when we were down at the Home Depot Center.

To quote my favourite all time band, The Buzzcocks…

“What do I get? No love.
What do I get? No sleep at nights.
What do I get? Nothing that’s nice.
What do I get? Nothing at all.
At all, at all, at all, at all, at all, at all.”

Sponsors get involved with football clubs for a multitude of reasons. Some, if not all, hope to get some return for their money by increasing business from the team’s fanbase.

I’ve regularly given my business to companies involved with the football teams I support.

I haven’t with the Whitecaps sponsors so far though.

In fact, until I see us fans getting a little from them first, as fans of other MLS clubs get on a regular basis, then I’m more inclined to go out of my way not to use them.

Hopefully we can put the absence of decent deals for Whitecaps fans down to first MLS season teething problems. After all, that’s been the blame dog for so many other letdowns.

Next season, let’s hope that the Whitecaps and their sponsors raise the bar, and give us something comparative to what our Cascadian cousins are currently getting.

We’ve given a lot of our time and money this season, cheering on our team home and away. We don’t do it to get something back in return and the payback works both ways. A little recognition and reward goes a long way Caps sponsors.

I, and many others, are waiting to give you our business.

Reserve League Should Not Be Second Thought

Portland just keep setting and raising the bar in their inaugural MLS season.

For 10,007 to turn up for a Reserve game shows the passion and enthusiasm for the sport down in the Rose City.

It’s quite remarkable. There’s a few MLS clubs that would love that attendance for regular first team MLS games.

It’s been a shame that the Whitecaps haven’t promoted the reserve games better this season. It’s as if they don’t actually want the fans to come out and watch them.

They’ve been entertaining and football supporters want to see their team, at whatever level that they can (monkey tennis aside). Hell, there’s even a few of us talking of some epic January and February road trips down to California for the U18 and U16 games next season.

It also gives us the chance to see players coming back from injury, the fringe players that hope to soon hold down a first team place and young starlets that could break into the MLS squad like Ben Fisk and Caleb Clarke.

Most importantly, and this is what we saw in Portland, it gives the opportunity for families, especially those who cannot afford to come out to the more expensive regular season MLS games, a chance to go along and see the team and some of the players that they’ve been watching on TV.

It is from these experiences that young fans get hooked and become the vociferous Whitecaps supporters of tomorrow. That’s why the Canucks have their Superskills and Open Practice events. For many, that will be the only time they can get to see their beloved heroes.

I know I probably wouldn’t have been the football fan that I am today if my granddad hadn’t taken me to watch Glenrothes Juniors, my local Scottish non league team, when I was a young kid. It was a cheap day out and a chance for us to spend quality time together. I cherish those memories and love the game so much thanks to his early encouragement and enthusiasm.

From there, I advanced to watching East Fife home and away, when I was old enough to go on my own after my grandad had passed away. I was hooked. Gripped by the excitement and passion of watching live action.

Nothing beats the thrill of a live match over a televised affair.

Reserve games, and the Residency games, can get a similar young Caps fan truly excited about the team, and the game, and not drift into disillusionment where they go off and watch the Canucks and Lions instead.

One of the perks of having a press pass for this season, has been being able to get in to see the Whitecaps first two reserve games, which were played behind closed doors at Empire.

The reason given was that there could not be a quick enough turnaround of the facilities at Empire.

To be fair, the stands at Empire were covered with litter and being cleaned up as the games went on.

How did the Timbers manage to get Piggy Park looking immaculate in less than 15 hours turnaround time then?

Was it that Empire couldn’t be cleaned up in time, or that no-one wanted to pay any extra costs to make this happen, thinking the numbers that would turn up wouldn’t make it worthwhile?

It better not be the latter considering how much money has been fleeced out of the fans this season and how much has been brought in from a seemingly never ending supply of corporate sponsors.

Now I’m realistic enough to know that we’re not going to be getting 10,000 fans turning up in Vancouver to watch the reserves. I don’t think we have quite that level of passion for football here yet. We may even be lucky to get a tenth of that. Only crowds of around 5,000 turned out for D2 level football after all.

Tickets for the Timbers reserve game on Sunday were $10. There was also a Groupon deal on the go, and that brought in many.

When the Caps did open up one reserve game, against Seattle on August 9th, commendably it was free. They didn’t really seem to want that many heading along though, and after some initial confusion in Seattle that it was another closed door game, they came out and said that attendance was limited to 100.

They probably didn’t even reach that figure in the end. Some Sounders fans had taken the day off to head up but the confusion put an end to them travelling up all together.

The Caps final two home reserve games of the season are being played at Swangard (v San Jose on Sept 6th and v Portland on October 3rd – both with 11am kick-offs) and we don’t know yet what the attendance rules will be. Hopefully both games will be open to the public and some fans will turn up.

Mid morning, midweek games aren’t exactly going to get people flocking there of course.

And this is where MLS can come in and make things more viable.

It’s great that they brought back the Reserve League this year. As we’ve said before, we need every chance possible for us to develop younger and fringe players.

To see the likes of Ben Fisk and Caleb Clarke coming up from Residency, coming on as subs in the last two reserve games, and turning in impressive displays, gives a lot of hope for the Whitecaps future, in a season which hasn’t offered much.

But Major League Soccer needs to do more.

They need to make sure that games are played on weekends, on the back of the first team games, and insist that they are open to the public. No more ridiculous and costly midweek trips to California for the Caps.

Where games are between two geographically close teams that will have away support travelling, they need to be done as double headers, as they did in Portland at the weekend.

There’s only ten games they have to fit in over the course of the season. Shouldn’t take a super computer like Isaac Asimov’s The Machines. Although, more games would be desirable.

MLS needs to attract younger fans to their “product”. The new breed and future supporters of the League. Reserve games are an ideal way of encouraging this.

Let’s hope commonsense prevails. Although this is MLS we’re talking about…

[*** You can see pictures from some of this season’s reserve games on AFTN’s Flickr account ***]

In The Cold Light Of Day: Portland Turn Up Heat

The only thing that wasn’t hot in Portland on Saturday evening was the Whitecaps performance.

It’s got to the stage now where there’s not really any point in analysing what went wrong with the Caps any more.

Well, it probably got to that stage many weeks ago if we’re being honest. We all know where it’s going wrong, both on and off the pitch. I’m sure even Tom Soehn does. He must have a mirror in his house after all.

It’s all just depressing and with only nine games remaining, further critiquing of our weaknesses and what we need to fill those gaps are as fruitless as an orange tree in the Arctic.

I just can’t wait for this MLS season to (officially) end and then for the new U18 and U16 ones to start. At least when they lose, you know they’ve learned a lot from the game and will move on from that and develop.

All we’ll say on the game is that how we came away with just a one goal defeat is baffling. Another four goal drubbing looked on the cards, with the defence looking like their footballing brains had melted in the heat, but yet, if we’d pulled a goal back a little earlier, we could have salvaged the most unlikely point we would have earned since Kansas City in game three.

Dominating possession at times counts for nothing if you don’t actually do anything with the ball in front of the net. As John Spencer said post game, they were comfortable knowing we had the ball in front of them, as we posed no danger with it.

So with that said, let’s look at everything else from the Portland weekend.

What an amazing turnout from Caps fans. We brought 50 or so for previous Portland playoff games in D2 in recent years, and that was always a blast, but with those numbers on Saturday and the roof to help the noise, what a loud and fantastic atmosphere we generated. A far cry from the midweek game last season when there were three of us!

Most of us were on the same songbook but there were some logistical problems that need to be looked at.

The Timbers FO didn’t want General Admission and that’s fair enough. Their home, their rules.

That is why it is imperative that tickets for Whitecaps get allocated in a proper way, especially if they are to be trusted to a company like Uselessglobe (who, as one fan counted, had an embarrassingly small number travelling down on their bus).

People need to be sat together with their friends. Older couples and people that want to just sit and quietly watch the game, should not have to endure being sat next to a drummer.

Sort out stuff like that and it’s a win-win for everyone. It was pretty much all good on the day, bar a few minor grumps, but it would be so much easier if this was all taken care of beforehand.

Also what was the deal with sitting a bunch of Timbers fans at the front of the upper 222 section? Mostly family types and a number of kids from what seemed like a school or a camp. Who sold them those seats? Were these unsold tickets sent back by Uniglobe? And whether they were unsold tickets or separately allocated tickets, why were they taking up premier real estate in the Vancouver section?

I sincerely hope these weren’t unsold tickets from Uniglobe and that tickets were allocated from the back down.

The travelling blue and white hordes all seemed to have a great time down there, with many tales of how accommodating the Timbers Army were, something that those of us that have made previous trips already know, love and admire. Everyone seemed well behaved, with praise coming from security on the Southsiders forum. It was nice to have security with a full understanding of what a football crowd is all about and how to deal with them. BC Place should send their security down there and Seattle to take in a game. Too late for the PNE numpties.

Rival fans mingled before, during and after both Saturday first team game and Sunday’s reserve game, without incidents. Many Southsiders went to a Punk concert post-game and pogoed the night away with TWO rival supporters groups – Portland’s Timbers Army and Victoria Highlander’s Lake Side Buoys, the latter of whom had made their way down as friends of the TA.

The concert was a benefit for long time TA member Abe, to help fund some medical costs he incurred. The true spirit of Cascadian fans right there.

It was a long journey down to Portland for many. The Southsiders bus got caught up in border traffic for over three hours on Saturday morning. Going back was even more horrendous for some, with two hour border waits to get back into Canada at Peace Arch and Pacific Highway. I thankfully chose to go via Abbotsford, but even with that half hour wait, a couple of horrible heavy traffic delays between Olympia and Seattle and a blown headlight to be fixed meant a nine hour return journey, an 11.15pm arrival home and getting up this morning at 4.30am for work!

So why do we do it? Why do we spend so much time, money and effort to go and watch two games and two defeats?

Because we love our team and we will support them through thick and thin. Or thin and thinner, as it is this year.

That’s not to say that we’re going to follow them like blind mice or like sheep. We’ll criticise, and rightly so. Some criticism will come in veiled ways, like the singing of “Teitur Tots” or “Martin Rennie’s Blue and White Army”. The increasing amount of Scottish saltires that will be coming out to the next few games will remind us that Tommy’s days, as manager at least, are numbered.

Rennie may or may not turn out to be the great white hope that we’re wanting, but at least it’s a change and right now, the more changes behind the scenes and on the pitch the better.

Having the double header with the reserve game on Sunday was particularly fantastic and helped make the trip even better.

Even though we saw two defeats, there were two very different team performances. The reserves had fight and gusto and were clearly devastated at their late collapse. Sitting in my hotel room on Sunday morning, watching highlights from the feisty Sunderland-Newcastle game the day before, it struck me that some of the players should watch these games to know how they should contest a derby.

Despite being down about the actual game, what needs to be instilled into our players right now is that they can still win the Cascadia Cup. Two victories at home and it’s ours.

If that can’t lift them, then they may as well start packing their bags now.

[*** You can see AFTN’s pictures from both Saturday’s MLS game and Sunday’s Reserve League game on our FLICKR account ***]

Whitecaps Players Raise Homeless World Cup Awareness

We’ve been critical before of the Whitecaps lack of community presence, especially when compared to their expansion peers and Cascadian rivals, Portland Timbers.

It’s still far from great, with corporate functions and appearances seemingly taking precedence to being out and about at grass roots and community projects, being seen to encourage making a difference.

The last couple of weeks though, it’s been good to see some of the players getting out there and working closely with the Canadian homeless football team, as they prepare to head out to France for the 2011 Homeless World Cup.
Last week, a number of players turned out to train with the homeless players at Oppenheimer Park in the Downtown Eastside.

Last night, Whitecaps Captain Jay DeMerit and four of his fellow players – Jeb Brovsky, Bilal Duckett, Jonathan Leathers and Shea Salinas – headed out to the send off at PHS Community Services Society’s Life Skills Centre on East Cordova Street.

Five men and eight women from BC will be heading out to Paris for the World Cup and the Caps players wanted to be there to send them off with the team’s well wishes and encouragement.

Apt really that Major League Soccer’s down and outs are attending a homeless event. Maybe the Canadian homeless team can come back from France with some silverware and show their more affluent peers how it’s done.

The 2011 Homeless World Cup will be the 9th annual tournament since the inaugural one in Graz, Austria in 2003, with 48 nations taking part this time around in the Men’s event and 16 in the Womens.

This year’s numbers have shown how much the tournament has grown since the 18 countries taking part in year one.

It is also a good way at showcasing what a global problem homelessness is and it does make you wonder how much better other countries are at dealing with the problem than the poor attempts we make here in Canada.

To be eligible, players must:

– Be male or female and at least 16 years old at the time of the tournament
– Have been homeless at some point after the previous year’s World Cup OR
– Make their main living income as a streetpaper vendor OR
– Be asylum seekers (who have neither positive asylum status nor working permit)

Games are 4-a-side, with three outfield players, a goalkeeper and four rolling subs, and they are played as two seven minute halves.

For the World Cup games, there has to be a winner in each match, with a penalty shoot-out deciding any games that have ended square at the end of the 14 minutes of play. Winners of shoot-outs get three points and the losing team, one.

The eight British Columbians will do Canada proud, no matter what happens on the pitch. Just getting there is a huge achievement for these guys and girls.

We at AFTN wish them all the very best and we will be having updates on the blog and on our Twitter account.

You can also follow everything that’s happening at the Champs de Mars in Paris, and find out more about the history of the tournament and the causes behind it, at the Official Homeless World Cup website.

It was great to see the encouragement shown by the Whitecaps for the team.

As we covered in the earlier article, Portland have left Vancouver behind when it comes to community interaction (along with a lot of other things). Hopefully these appearances will be the start of a lot more community appearances from the Whitecaps, especially in the close season.

They don’t want us to just think that all they care about is big business and making money after all.

In The Cold Light Of Day: Disaster With A Capital DC

I wasn’t going to write anything about Saturday’s capital DISASTER.

There’s that old adage that if you can’t say anything good then don’t say anything at all. And let’s be honest here, what good can you say about the DC debacle?

Even the obvious fun we could have with Stephen King’s brace and horror doesn’t do it justice, although the aptness was incredible. Even the most glass half full fan would struggle for positives from that.

Let’s have a go….

Well, for me, the biggest positive is that we only lost by four. It could easily have been a lot more.

If we’d opened the scoring with that scramble from Camilo’s free kick, would things have been any different? No-one can say for certain, but seeing as how we’ve struggled to keep a lead all season, I think we can make a pretty good educated guess.

The only other positive road I can even begin to go down is that Camilo’s free kicks have surely got to be the best and most consistent in MLS. It’s quite inexplicable really as to why he’s not our penalty taker as well, especially considering how badly we’ve fared in that area of late.

Most teams have at least one nightmare games in a season. Saturday in Washington was ours.

Although we’ve only won three games all year, we’ve at least been competitive (maybe Real Salt Lake in June aside). Even the 4-0 defeat by LA saw us competitive until about the last fifteen minutes. We were never really at the races in Washington, or if we were, the players and management certainly had the blinkers on.

It was strange to see us edging the possession at the end of the first half, for it certainly didn’t feel that way watching it.

The midfield was posted missing on too many occasions.

It was so bad that until I rewound the action on my TV, I couldn’t for the life of me work out if Mustapha Jarju had come on for Shea Salinas or Peter Vagenas. Both were posted missing.

It was certainly Salinas’ worst game for us.

I’ve been becoming a fan of Vagenas in recent weeks. I know a lot of you aren’t, but I do feel he’s calmed down our midfield a little and been a huge boost for Gershon Koffie. He was completely ineffectual against DC.

The inability of the midfield to boss the game, led to wave after wave of attack on the defence and they were simply not up to it.

Both the midfield and defence are at fault for the goals. The midfield for letting them through and the defence for frankly being atrocious.

Jay Nolly had a mare. I felt so sorry for his wife, having to be surrounded by fans in Doolins, as a guest of the Southsiders. She was really going through the wringer.

With the way Soehn has acted this season, this will most probably spell the end of Nolly as the starting keeper and he may have played his last first team game for us. Every keeper has those games. We were even joking on Twitter the day before about goalkeeping howlers in general. That second goal doesn’t need analysing, Nolly himself knows it was a shocker, but he certainly could have done better for the first and fourth goals as well.

The defence left him wide open though.

We’ve seen some pretty bad defensive displays this season but that one tops the lot. We can’t handle anyone running at us. Toronto’s Plata has shown us that and on Saturday DeRo, and others, just waltzed past us with ease. Our marking was equally horrible. Leathers and Harvey just can’t track back quickly enough for long balls over the top, and the latter is far removed from being anywhere near being a capable replacement centre half.

Having only one defender on the bench in Bilal Duckett (and I use that term very loosely) was ridiculous. Putting on the least defence minded midfielder we have, in Davide Chiumiento, for Jay DeMerit and going three at the back was terrifying. It was clear we were going to get ripped a new asshole. And we were.

Where’s Mouloud Akloul when you need him? There’s still not been any satisfactory reason given for his release. Why wasn’t Janicki on the bench? Or Knight?

How can our current line up be expected to field four flair players (Hassli, Camilo, Chiumiento and Jarju) when we can’t defend to save ourselves?

Some of the tactical decisions, player positioning, team selection and substitutions have been baffling in recent weeks. Clueless and devoid of rational thinking.

That brings us nicely to Tommy Soehn.

For the love of everything holy, please just fuck off from our team right now.

Go back to DC or anywhere else that will have you. Your welcome has long gone in Vancouver.

We gave him the benefit of the doubt after Teitur’s sacking. We gave him until after we bowed out, or should that be meekly surrendered, from the Voyageurs Cup, when others were calling for his head long before.

But please, just go now.

Don’t wait for Martin Rennie to arrive and move back upstairs to your other job.

You’ve messed that up to. The quality of the players you’ve found for us has been terrible. You had over a year to prepare us, and Teitur, for the League you should know so well. You have failed us and you’ve managed to drag some players, like Omar Salgado, backwards.

You’ve lost the faith of many fans to be able to do the role of Director of Soccer Operations.

Harmony in the camp is not good. If you speak to players, their friends and families, and general front office staff, you’ll struggle to find many happy bunnies right now. This is not all down to Soehn either. He’s the fall guy, but it goes much deeper and higher.

We need a clean break so that Rennie can have fresh eyes and judge ALL the players accordingly.

I am certainly not deluding myself by thinking that Rennie can turn around the Caps with the current squad. It wouldn’t be the first time that he has gone into a Club and had a complete clear out. That’s what we need. A mass exodus.

Yes, it’s going to mean that some fan favourites will unfortunately be on their way out of Vancouver, but that’s what’s needed, for the good of the team.

When the season ends and we get to protect our few guys for the expansion draft, it will be surprising if any of the others are picked up. What needs to happen then is that before ANY player is released, Rennie needs a month working with ALL of the guys in a hard camp, so that he can make his own mind up as to who would be a fit for his team, without any prejudicial input from Soehn.

Rennie has his own style of play and tactics and is big on team players. He needs to assess them all to see if any will fit in with his plans.

There will be no Teitur’s guys. No Tommy’s guys. Just players, playing for their footballing future and the advancement of Vancouver Whitecaps Football Club.

A lot of these players can start playing for their futures now, but not all will get a chance.

Aside from the Cascadia Cup games, I would just field experimental line-ups for the rest of the season (admittedly some of the existing line ups have had a touch of Dr Frankenstein about them). Let all the players have a go and see what happens. We’ve nothing to play for and nothing to lose.

It’s interesting that the MLS game in which we have mostly dominated possession was against Toronto in June, when it was our fringe players out there. Sure we couldn’t score, but we at least knocked it about well and lost to a penalty. Plus the reserves recently beat Seattle 2-1, and quite comfortably at that.

Throw guys like Salgado, Tan, Morfaw, Knight, Janicki, Nanchoff, Davies and even Sylvestre into the mix. They’ll sink or swim, but at least the fans will think that we’re at least getting something out of the games by developing players. Why have them in the squad if we can’t get a look at them?

Playing our regulars and not getting results for the remainder of the season is pointless. Then again, that’s been our season so why expect different.

I want to see a team of fired up players against Portland. And you know what? I have a sneaking suspicion, based on nothing but my ample gut, that we will actually get something out of that game.

We better. Another capitulation will not be tolerated – especially in a Cascadia Cup match.

Join The AFTN Fantasy Premier League

The 2011/12 Premiership season gets underway tomorrow.

I have to say that I’m finding it hard to get an interest this season.

My English team from when I was about 6 years old, West Ham, played terrible last time and got deservedly relegated. My other bright lights from last season, Blackpool, have also gone. What am I meant to do now??!

Since my other English loves, AFC Wimbledon, are still a few years away from the cash cow, it’s hard to focus on anything but League Two and the Championship.

None of the Premiership’s promoted teams really do it for me, although I will find myself cheering on Swansea City. Celtic brethren and all that.

All that said, it hasn’t stopped us running our annual AFTN Premiership Fantasy Football League!

It helps keep my interest and watching, and for those of you whose teams are playing in the Premiership and for those of you who just love it, it’s an added bonus and a lot of fun.

We’ve gone with the official game this year, so as to harvest our readers from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond.

Everyone is welcome to take part, no matter what team you support. In fact, the more the merrier. So tell everyone you know, that AFTN is the place to go.

You can sign up any time, although we will close our private league off to new entrants by the end of August. To get off to the best possible start, make sure your team is entered before the first game kicks off tomorrow.

You have £115 million to spend and a squad of 15 to assemble, so get cracking!

You can sign up at http://fantasy.premierleague.com.

Once you’ve picked your team, you need to enter the AFTN Private League. The code for that is 1010555-240491.

We’ll hopefully come up with a prize for the winner at the end of the season, and will post regular updates on the AFTN Forum.

Good luck!

Martin Rennie Named Vancouver Whitecaps Manager

The managerial hotseat at Vancouver Whitecaps doesn’t really get much chance to get warm these days.

It’s become more of a game of musical chairs in the dugout, but today, Vancouver Whitecaps announced their new manager, and this time I think we’ve got a keeper.

Martin Rennie was officially unveiled as the new Whitecaps boss at a press conference this morning.

The internet was abuzz last night with the breaking news that the current Carolina Railhawks manager was to become the Caps third manager of the season.

As far as we’re concered here at AFTN, it’s a fantastic move.

Rennie is very highly thought of in managerial circles and many consider him to be the best young manager currently working in North America.

High praise indeed for the 36 year old Scot.

Others are comparing him to the likes of Brian Clough and Alex Ferguson.

Rennie will not officially take the Vancouver reigns until after the end of the season, choosing instead to stay with NASL leaders Carolina until their season and Championship push is over.

I can’t begin to tell you how much I admire Martin for doing that.

By choosing to stay at Carolina and see through what he started there, shows that he is a man of principle and loyalty. These are two traits sadly severely lacking in modern day football.

Rennie was linked with the Montreal Impact job, but the word on the street is that one of the stalling points in these talks was the fact that he wanted to stay with Carolina until their playoff push was done and dusted.

Montreal’s loss is most certainly Vancouver’s gain. Of course, the fact that Martin has allegedly turned down the Frenchies has already endeared him to Caps fans no end.

Many Whitecaps fans will not be familiar with the name of Martin Rennie. Believe me, you soon will be.

Although a very young manager, he has achieved so much already in his fledgling career.

So who is the new man in charge of guiding the Whitecaps to future glories?

Martin Rennie was born in Thurso and grew up on the outskirts of the town in a village called Bettyhill, in the very north of Scotland, but moved to the central belt at the age of ten, living in Larbert. His father was a Reverend and this has given Martin his strong faith.

A lifelong fan of Falkirk FC, Martin Rennie has had a love of the game from an early age and was a former ballboy at Brockville, watching his beloved Bairns week in, week out.

As a player, he went over to the States at the age of 19 and played for Charlotte Eagles when they were in the A League. He tore his anterior cruciate ligament on his first day here and struggled to recover.

Upon returning to Scotland, he turned out at Junior level (that’s adult football, not kids! Scottish non league, around tier 6, and pretty good – better than some League sides). His Clubs included Rosyth in Fife and Bo’ness United and Dunipace FC, but his playing career was unfortunately cut short in his late 20’s by another cruciate ligament injury to his right knee.

Many players would have walked away from the game. Some would have been bitter. Not Martin.

He threw his heart into the coaching side of the game and he had already achieved his UEFA ‘A’ licence by the age of 26. He now holds 12 SFA and UEFA badges and is one of only a handful coaches in the world to hold both the UEFA ‘A’ licence and ‘Youth’ licence. Impressive for any coach, never mind a 36 year old one.

Having played in Scotland and the States, Rennie decided to commence his coaching career in the US and took over the Salem PDL side Cascade Surge in 2005.

In his first season as a coach, the Surge lived up to their name, winning the Northwest Division title by eight points, before going on to lose the Western Conference Final to Orange County Blue Star.

Martin left Cascadia and went back to the UK to get more coaching qualifications before returning to the US to become manager of Cleveland City Stars in the USL Second Division in 2007.

In his first season in charge in Ohio, the City Stars finished runners up in the Division in their inaugural season and Martin was awarded the USL D2 ‘Coach of the Year’.

The team went one better the next season, and won the 2008 USL Division Two Championship.

This success landed him a job in USL Division One for 2009 with Carolina Railhawks and the his transformation of the team has been impressive, to say the least.

In his first season at Carolina he had a clear out of players and took the team from not making the playoffs the previous season to regular season runners up.

The Railhawks made the jump to NASL with the Whitecaps in 2010 and won the NASL regular season title, before going on to lose the USSF-D2 Championship game to Puerto Rico.

Carolina have run away with the league again this season and they currently lead the NASL by 12 points, with nine games remaining. Another Championship could be heading Martin’s way before he leaves for pastures new in Vancouver.

So what will a Martin Rennie Whitecaps side look like?

Going on his past records and former glories, it could be pretty exciting. He’s been nominated as Coach of the Year for the last four consecutive years (winning once). We’re getting a good ‘un.

His Cascade Surge side were the highest scorers in all of the PDL in 2005, but to show that it wasn’t just attack minded teams he put out, his Cleveland side of 2007 conceded only 13 goals all season – a USL record that still exists.

In 2010 his Carolina side conceded just 14 goals for the season in NASL and they’ve only let in 16 so far this season. I don’t think I need to tell you how big a hole this is that we need to plug in Vancouver.

One of the things that excites me about Martin coming to the Caps is his history of rebuilding teams and developing young talent.

We have a lot of promising young players in the Residency program and PDL side, who were unlikely to get a look in under the likes of a Tommy Soehn style manager.

From what we have seen from Rennie’s managerial career to date, he has never shirked the responsibility of building for the future. Sometimes this proves to be to his detriment, as at both Cleveland and Carolina, he has seen his best talent transferred to bigger and better things. Always the curse of the smaller teams.

At both Clubs he has been forced to rebuild from team decimation, but on both occasions he has bounced back stronger. He certainly has some rebuilding work to do in Vancouver.

He lost a lot of his Cleveland players at the end of the 2007 season, but rebuilt and landed a Championship the following year with a brand new squad.

With Carolina, a change of ownership and uncertainty about the Club’s future saw further rebuilding there and again this didn’t prevent the success from coming.

Another exciting element that Rennie will bring to the Caps is his belief in using psychological concepts to get the best out of players. It’s something he’s studied back in the UK.

He believes in caring for his players, as this interview with Indyweek.com in 2009 shows. This type of man management will be good to see in Vancouver. It was something I think Teitur was good at, but Tommy not so much.

That said he has a clear tactical concept that players must abide to and playing as a team is a key part of that.

There are a couple of interesting points that we will need to see how they develop.

The first is around his assistants. Rennie has worked very closely with his fellow Scots Brian Irvine and Paul Ritchie for a few years. If he can bring them with him to Vancouver then this will be a huge asset for us (as well as obviously pleasing me with having an increased Scottish contingent at the Club – especially with Ritchie being a Fife lad like myself).

The other issue I see is who will decide which players are being kept and which are being released.

Martin Rennie should be the one to have a look at the guys and make those decisions. He is not going to be coloured by Soehn’s draftees and make the proper decisions based on what kind of players he is looking for and what style of play he will be playing.

He needs to have full control of who stays, who goes and who joins the Caps. No outside interference.

Although he may not be a household name to many out there, the buzz is there amongst those who do know Martin Rennie and his achievements. He has won 87 of the 159 games he has coached in his career – a winning record of 55%.

Carolina will be gutted to lose him, but hopefully he will leave them with the NASL Championship. We in Vancouver have got a talented young manager and all of a sudden, the future is starting to look a lot more promising.

Welcome to Vancouver Martin.

Sealbh math dhuit!

In The Cold Light Of Day: Caps To The Four In Basement Battle

What a difference a week makes. Well, eight days if you want to be picky!

Concede four goals, for our heaviest defeat of the season last weekend, yesterday, bang in four and it could have been more.

And the fans certainly lapped it up.

All hail King Eric.

When you’re looking at what maybe made the difference, you really don’t have to look much further than the opposition.

Chicago were a very poor side.

You can tell they come from the Windy City, for they certainly blow.

If ever the chant of “can we play you every week” fits a team, it was this Chicago Fire side.

We may be bottom of the heap, but we’ve competed well in pretty much every game this season. The only game that instantly springs to my mind where we haven’t, was Real Salt Lake away in June.

We haven’t gotten the breaks. We haven’t taken care of business ourselves and held on to our leads. That’s football.

Next season, we might just find ourselves one of the luckiest sides going. Who knows? We can’t really get much worse luck than we have in 2011, and we’re going to have an exciting new manager trying to get the best out of us.

This was another basement battle. Not sure how many such games the Caps can have in one season, but they certainly seem to be coming along at a fair rate of knots.

We mentioned on Friday that the Caps had their work cut out to stop them being the worst team in MLS history.

As it turns out, we may not have that much work to do.

As long as we finish with one more win than Chicago, then we don’t have to worry about that. It’s looking pretty likely, although Chicago certainly did show some glimpses of what they can be capable of, and Vancouver had a few worries of their own at the back.

Let’s get the few negatives out of the way first.

Our defence is woeful at times. No matter what combination we have back there, things just seem to happen that allow the oppostion to get back into games. Silly schoolboy errors.

Obviously the constant changing of personnel doesn’t help, but even our experienced guys are getting caught out.

Alain Rochat was turned inside out for that first Chicago goal. It was actually embarrassing to see Dominic Oduro leave him so flat footed. He’s such a good defender, but was made to look so average. Hey, it happens to the best of them I guess.

I have to say that the jury is still out for me with Jordan Harvey.

The Philly fans were disappointed to see him go. I found it strange that the Union did. Now I’m kinda wondering if there was a reason that they were so keen to accept the offer they just couldn’t refuse.

He hasn’t impressed me so far and has been responsible for a couple of goals conceded now.

The penalty he gave away last week against LA was ridiculous and he clearly isn’t able to cover as a central defender, as his clumsy footedness for the second Chicago goal showed.

He may be a great defender. We just haven’t seen that in a Caps shirt yet.

It was great to see Jay Nolly back between the sticks. Not just because he’s a friend of AFTN, but we feel he is the better keeper and the long term goalie of the team.

He could have done better with the second Fire goal, and he knew it. That was written all over his face. He had some fantastic stops though and hopefully this will see him back as the starter for the remainder of the season.

In a way though, it’s a strange one.

Joe Cannon has been very outspoken about the team and the performances. He is now no longer on Twitter and no longer the starter. That conspiracy theory side of me wonders if the writing was on the wall for him as soon as he gave the Southsiders $1000 for drinks after the Galaxy defeat.

At the other end of the pitch, things were simply sublime.

Eric Hassli had a fantastic game. It’s frustrating in a way because he doesn’t show it all the time and does blow a little hot and cold.

He was hot as hell on Sunday.

He’ll be kicking himself at the penalty miss that deprived him off his hat-trick, but that strike for the opening goal was simply perfect.

When he went to shoot instead of taking it in further, I was saying to myself “don’t shoot from there”. What do I know?!

To have that composure and that confidence in the opening seconds, to find the perfect postage stamp corner, is the mark of a class player.

His footwork and contribution to the third goal was his highlight of the game for me.

I love how he spins around and used his build to prevent getting knocked off the ball. Doesn’t work all the time, but it makes it so difficult to defend and to dispossess him.

That third goal is possibly my favourite Whitecaps goal of the season.

It was almost perfect football. 13 passes, 41 seconds, spraying the ball all around the pitch. That’s how football should be played.

Camilo’s little spin to outfox the two Fire defenders was also class.

Hassli may have been getting all of the post-game plaudits, but I think a case could be argued that Camilo earned the actual ‘man of the match’ award.

It was nice to leave Empire on a high for the first time, in a long time.

We may not have much to play for but I want to see us build some momentum to take into the off season.

We don’t do well after a win. We need to change that.

Let’s go on a run and keep it going well after Portland.

Everything in the garden isn’t quite rosy yet, but it’s starting to look like we’ve done the watering.

Mon the Caps.