A Supporter’s Lament: Franchise Relocation Shouldn’t Result In Club Oblivion

A guest piece for AFTN by Devon Rowcliffe

With the possibility of DC United becoming the second MLS club to move cities in less than a decade, I would like to share several ideas for preventing Major League Soccer clubs from ever having to relocate in the future.

But first, a personal introduction. I am, admittedly, “that guy”. Constantly unleashing my puritanical moaning across the internet about Houston Dynamo and Orlando City SC – or more specifically, chastising the fact that both clubs were born out of franchise relocation. (And bear with me when I use the F-word – franchise – for I am not using it as a synonym for “club”.)

I detest relocation. It makes my skin crawl. In my mind, it is the most fetid act of betrayal in professional sports.

Most fellow North Americans simply roll their eyes at my disparaging rants about relocation. Compared to me, they seem quite laissez-faire about the concept of a sports club having an itinerant existence. So how did I come to hate relocation so much? And why is my mindset different than the average North American soccer fan?

THE DEATH OF WIMBLEDON FOOTBALL CLUB
(Or, the Oakland/LA/Oakland Raiders)

I started off life as a baseball fan, having spent much of my formative years at Nat Bailey Stadium, Vancouver’s baseball venue. And after investing several years of my childhood cherishing my local baseball club, it returned the favour to me by… moving to California. Without a single word of warning.

My adulation was instantly harpooned. So was my interest in baseball. Perhaps I should have been prepared for this, as baseball franchises being relocated was nothing new; but the cocoon of my youthful ignorance had protected me from that. Until one day, when my childhood fantasy became hemorrhaged in an instant.

Several years later, flipping channels on a rainy Saturday morning, I stumbled across English football. It filled a void. Clubs with more than a century of history based entirely in a single community, where the concept of relocation was entirely alien. Fantastic.

Perhaps it was my fault, but just a couple of years after I developed an interest in the English game, Wimbledon FC betrayed their fans by relocating to Milton Keynes (a grim “new town” in Buckinghamshire). It was completely unheard of: in England, a system of promotion and relegation is usually what helps to grease the wheels of Darwinism. The idea of a club being moved simply because the owner fancied a different town – especially a club that had been in the country’s top level of football and had recently won the FA Cup – was unprecedented.

But what surprised me most about Wimbledon’s relocation (as a clueless North American still learning about the country where football began) was the massive backlash against the Dons’ migration. And not just from traumatized Wimbledon supporters who were directly hurt by the move, but from football supporters from across the entire country. An organized movement called for a boycott of all matches at Milton Keynes. Football fans were strongly encouraged not to follow their club to away matches there, as ticket purchases would help to put money into the hands of the new Milton Keynes “franchise”, thus legitimizing the reprehensible act of club relocation. Most English football fans were repulsed by the notion that an American-style franchising system might come into play, and that other clubs could be relocated in the future.

Milton Keynes Dons became derisively known as “Franchise FC”, an object of significant scorn that is still reviled in English football today.

SUBMISSIVE ACCEPTANCE VERSUS SOLIDARITY/ACTION

When an American professional sports club is relocated, however, fans simply shrug their shoulders and accept defeat, believing that it’s all part of the franchise system. And that’s arguably the biggest reason why U.S. sports club owners think they can get away with it – U.S. fans are so passive about and accepting of the concept of relocation that they don’t put in the required effort to prevent relocation. Nor is there any significant solidarity between fans across the country to stop relocations.

Quite simply, American sports club owners know that they can get away with it. And so relocation regularly occurs.

Professional spectator sport is ultimately about the fans. Without fans, no club, league or sport can succeed. And that gives fans a tremendous amount of power – but only if they have the courage and fortitude to wield that power. Fans (with relatively modest resources) have the ability to influence or even derail the relocation plans of multi-millionaire owners – if they’re willing to become more active, by putting the time and energy into doing so.

FRANCHISES TRUMP CLUBS (Or, Milton Keynes Dynamo)

Flashback to 2005: San Jose Earthquakes owner Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) announce their relocation to Houston. AEG, valuing their MLS franchise (ownership of a spot in the league) more than the actual San Jose Earthquakes club, move to Houston, thus killing the club in the process.

Isn’t it bizarre that a mere spot in a league is perceived to be of more value than an actual club? What was AEG’s point of creating an MLS club in San Jose in the first place? Did they care about the community in San Jose at all, or was it merely a convenient place to drop anchor? Was it to give the community of San Jose a club to call their own, or was it to simply “grow the sport” nationally, with the interests of actual San Jose fans being a mere afterthought?

That’s the problem with franchised leagues that permit relocation: a spot in a league is sometimes worth more than not only a club, but the emotional connection between that the club and its community of fans. And ultimately, isn’t it because of that emotional bond why any of us bother to become fans of a club in the first place?

So for two years, San Jose supporters had no club. And it’s entirely feasible that it could have remained that way. San Jose fans are lucky that another rich owner decided to re-establish the club. But what if such a white knight wasn’t to be found?

SAN JOSE, AUSTIN… NEXT UP: DC UNITED, COLUMBUS, NEW ENGLAND?

Relocation in North American soccer hasn’t stopped there. English Premiership side Stoke City board member Phil Rawlins, who has emigrated to the US, moved Austin Aztex to Orlando, Florida at the end of the 2010 season (despite a 25% increase in attendance from the 2009 season). Had he attempted to do this to Burnley FC, he’d spend the rest of his life looking over his shoulder every time he stepped foot in northern England. But, again, here in passive North America, the victims of the relocation made a brief stink, while the rest of the continent shrugged its passive shoulders in contempt.

And with the dust barely settled on that, another MLS relocation scenario looms with DC United. The baseball stadium that they play in is old, a poor fit for soccer, and the lease charge is exorbitant. So the club has asked for planning permission to build their own stadium. After years of negative responses and red tape from local government, the ownership group have threatened to leave Washington DC.

But it’s the future that concerns me most. MLS has stated that it intends to cap the league at 20 clubs (or is that “franchises”?). If true, once the league achieves that number, there would be no way for new clubs to enter, given the absence of promotion and relegation here in North America. So if a city in the MLS-barren southeast of the U.S., for example, wants to join the league in the future, there will be only one way to get in – by relocating a franchise. And that would almost certainly mean the death of yet another North American football club.

How do we solve this problem? In a league based upon franchises, is it possible to ensure that MLS clubs won’t be extinguished again in the future?

Here are five ideas for ensuring that the clubs in Major League Soccer won’t be asphyxiated by their “benevolent” owners in the future:

SOLUTION ONE – FRANCHISE LEAVES, CLUB STAYS

Perhaps the best solution of all: let a franchise relocate if it must, but keep the associated club alive in its home community.

Confused?

What if, when AEG moved their franchise spot from San Jose to Houston and created a new club (Houston Dynamo) based around that franchise, they had been forced to keep San Jose Earthquakes alive as a football club? Admittedly, that club would no longer be in MLS. It might have played in the professional second-division (NASL) or third-division (USL Pro). It could have been relegated down to the short-season USL PDL, a fourth-tier league aimed primarily at giving college students competitive matches during summer. Or perhaps San Jose Earthquakes could have even dropped down into the amateur USASA (D5). And while dropping down four divisions, and going from professional to completely amateur would have been a shock, at least the hardcore fans would still have had a club to support. Surely that would have been much better than instant oblivion between San Jose supporters and their local football club.

In order to ensure that a club would be kept alive after its associated franchise is relocated, MLS franchise owners would need to enter into a contractual obligation to continue operating that club, even if they decide to relocate their MLS franchise elsewhere. Move DC United’s franchise to a different region and start a new club there if you must; but DC United as a football club must continue on for the benefit of the fans – even if that means playing in a (much) lower division.

When an MLS franchise is awarded to an ownership group, they should be required to sign a contract with the United States Soccer Federation (USSF) or the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) so that in the event of a franchise relocation, the ownership group would have to continue running that club in its home community for “X” number of years. Perhaps a certain annual budget (for at least several years) should be agreed to, and that fee should be paid to the USSF/CSA as a bond for running the club for the subsequent several years – and without it, the USSF/CSA would refuse to sanction the relocation of the MLS franchise.

And even better than merely forcing new MLS franchise purchases to participate would be to impose this upon all current MLS franchise owners.

SOLUTION TWO – SUPPORTERS BECOME MORE VOCAL/ASSERTIVE

Second, we as supporters need to assert the concept that clubs are more important than franchises. It is the clubs that are why we bother to become supporters in the first place. We don’t support our local football club so that we can help a franchise owner make a profit, nor so that the league can hit their annual targets for TV ratings. We support our local football club because it is OUR club – albeit emotionally ours, rather than legally.

If clubs continue to be killed every time a franchise is moved, this process will continue to thwart the growth of professional soccer here in North America – particularly when MLS hits its cap of 20 clubs, and the pressure for relocation becomes higher than ever. If I can be certain that my club will exist in my community in 50 years, I will put a tremendous amount of passion, time and money into supporting it. However, if it could have been relocated to three different cities by then, why should any of us bother to make such emotional investments into clubs?

If short: as supporter, we need to become less passive and less accepting of our clubs being destroyed. We need to demand that our clubs will remain, and that there will be a proverbial shit storm against the franchise relocator, the league, and the USSF/CSA if our clubs are killed when a franchise is relocated.

Our clubs play in a league of franchises, and like it or not, that’s the disappointing reality that we all have to accept for now. But that doesn’t mean that we have to sit on our hands and meagerly watch as our clubs are destroyed when franchises are relocated. We have a voice. If owners who relocate franchises are happy to kill our clubs in the process, then the Independent Supporters Council (ISC) can organize a continent-wide boycott of that franchise’s new team (just as the Football Supporters’ Federation in England successfully organized a boycott of all Milton Keynes Dons matches for several years). But these actions will only work if there is solidarity – if we all care, and if we are all assertive enough to raise our collective voices when it matters.

SOLUTION THREE – MLS ENTRY ONLY TO EXISTING (LOWER-DIVISION) CLUBS

Third, Major League Soccer should stop awarding league franchises to ownership groups that are not currently running a successful football club. Only clubs currently in existence, and operating successfully in a lower division (ideally division two), should be allowed to buy an MLS franchise.

This demand might surprise some people, given the success of Toronto FC and Philadelphia Union, two clubs that were created only after their respective ownership groups were awarded MLS franchises. But if clubs were forced to start their existence in the lower divisions prior to joining MLS, the concept of clubs and their associated league franchises being innately intertwined would be significantly unraveled. As a result, there would be an expectation that these clubs would continue to exist, even if their associated MLS franchise were relocated to a different city. Rather than disappearing into oblivion, fans would expect their club to simply go back down to the lower-division league where it began its existence.

If an ownership group can catapult themselves directly into North America’s top-flight by buying their way into Major League Soccer, it’s no wonder why there is such a dearth of successful second and third division clubs here. And that’s a huge problem for the growth of football on this continent, when the middle of our football pyramid is so pathetically anemic. Requiring clubs to start their lives in a lower division of American soccer would be an immense help in addressing this problem as well.

It’s also less risky for MLS to pluck D2’s best clubs than it is to award a league spot to a group that have never before operated a football club – which is a risk and a big leap of faith. In fact, I’m surprised that the USSF hasn’t already pressured MLS to do this, considering the profound success of the three Cascadia clubs – which were all “promoted” from D2.

Remember during the MLS franchise bid process back in 2009, when there was interest from FC Barcelona (Miami), as well as groups based in New York City and even Ottawa? Imagine what the NASL/USL Pro would look like today if those ownership groups had all established lower-divisions clubs as part of a long-term process for joining MLS. And imagine the New York Cosmos playing D2 football!

SOLUTION FOUR – EVENTUAL PROMOTION/RELEGATION
(OR AT LEAST A USSF 50-YEAR PLAN)

Fourth (although admittedly less realistic) would be to have promotion and relegation here in North America. Rather than buying their way into MLS by purchasing a franchise and having league suits decide which clubs can compete in MLS, clubs could automatically enter the league by winning the second division. Struggling clubs would find themselves relegated, and stronger clubs would take their place. Promotion and relegation could allow the concept of franchises to potentially be scrapped, thus eliminating a major cause of relocation.

However, given the single-entity structure and high franchise purchase cost ($40 million for Montreal joining in 2012) in MLS, the only likely way that promotion and relegation would be introduced into MLS is if the league starts its own second division (MLS2). The setup would probably look similar to Japan, where there is promotion and relegation between the J1 and J2 in Japan’s J.League, but no formal up-and-down with the lower divisions (D3 and below). NASL and USL Pro (the second and third division league, respectively) are simply too fragile to enter into a formal arrangement with MLS at this point, and thus MLS would likely have to set up promotion and relegation on its own.

Huge obstacles remain. The USSF’s lack of interest in creating a healthy D2/D3, and their almost complete attention solely to MLS, means that lower divisions above USL PDL (D4) are in a shambles. I mention this because even if promotion and relegation were only to exist within MLS, the league would still need far more thriving D2/D3 clubs (who would probably start life in NASL or USL Pro) to absorb. We would also need many more clubs on the western half of the continent – at present, Los Angeles Blues are all alone on the west coast in D3, and San Antonio (a new club starting in 2012) will be the only D2 U.S. club in the western half of the country.

The question is: does either MLS or the USSF have any desire for promotion and relegation? We don’t know, because unlike the Japanese FA, which has a publicly-available 50-year vision for that how country intends to grow its club football, there is no such document from the U.S. soccer authority (or if there is, it certainly hasn’t been made public). While promotion and relegation is impossible in the immediate future, could/should it happen in the next 10/25/50/100 years? Does MLS want it? Does the USSF want it? Do the fans want it? For the health of club football and its growth here in North America, this discussion needs to happen.

SOLUTION FIVE – FORMAL SUPPORTER INVOLVEMENT/OWNERSHIP

Fifth, I would like supporters to realize a formal voice in how their clubs are operated. This could come in the form of independent supporters’ trusts, in which fan representatives could sit on the club’s board of directors and have a formal voice in club operations. Victoria Highlanders in the USL PDL recently became the first club in North America to offer their supporters 30% ownership through shares (via season tickets). And although MLS has an odd structure (where club owners only actually own 49% of their MLS franchise, as the league is the majority owner of all of its franchises), there’s no reason why supporters couldn’t have a formal voice within that 49%, and possibly even have an ISC representative on the league’s board of directors.

When supporters are an active and participating part of a football club, that club is more likely to be seen as valuable on its own, rather than just as a disposable cover draping a league franchise. It would also help a club in its efforts to remain alive in its home community. For example, have DC United supporters played an active and organized role in expressing their displeasure about the difficulties of procuring planning approval from the District? Have they lobbied politicians, demanded their support, and threatened to vote as a block for whichever candidates support their objectives? If not, would DC United supporters have been more likely to have played such an active role if they had a formal ownership stake in the club?

DIFFICULT DECISIONS AHEAD FOR THE USSF

Achieving these five proposed solutions (particularly forcing MLS franchise owners to contractually agree to keep a club alive after franchise relocation, and clearly communicating a long-term vision for the growth of American club football) won’t be easy. Interestingly, although these proposed solutions relate to MLS and its member clubs, the decisions would almost all be for the USSF to decide and to act upon.

Your move, Sunil Gulati.

Devon Rowcliffe is based in Vancouver, and is a major proponent of supporter-owned football clubs. He has been a member of the Vancouver Southsiders for nine years, and recently became a season ticket holder at Victoria Highlanders FC – the first partly-supporter-owned football club in North America.

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.

In The Cold Light Of Day: Whitecaps Out Of Their Depth In Houston

With all the exciement and eventful games in the Whitecaps MLS season to date, fans were brought back down to earth with a bump this afternoon with a pretty lacklustre Caps performance in the Texas heat.

Facing up against Franchise FC in Houston, Vancouver were put to the sword as a dangerous Dynamo side took apart the midfield and defence time and time again.

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

We’d been impressed by the depth of the Whitecaps squad so far this term, as injuries and suspensions continued to the plague the team. Today showed that the depth level probably does penetrate too much into the 20’s.

Let’s look at the positives first.

Um, well we kept them down to three! I don’t know how, but we did.

Aside from that, few players came away with a lot of plaudits.

Camilo looked dangerous but really needs to keep his diving under control. He was very lucky not to get booked trying to win a penalty in the first half. The thought of Camilo playing alongside Hassli and Salgado is truly exciting. His finish was exceptional for the Caps only goal.

Why Teitur took him off for Salgado is a bit of a mystery. Camilo was our only real attacking threat whilst Harris was pretty much done and not mobile. I would have liked to have seen Salgado on 10 to 20 minutes earlier. It may not have made much of a difference but it would have been good to see what he could introduce to the game.

Jay Nolly made some saves and couldn’t be faulted for the first two goals. He perhaps rushed out a little bit early for the third but to be fair, Bruin had easily left Rochat and Boxall behind and would have probably put the ball in the net no matter what.

Rochat clearly tired before the final whistle. Understandable after working in the middle and then having to cover Blake Wagner for a lot of the match in the left back position too.

The midfield was non existent for most of the game. Houston managed to do what others have struggled with so far and that’s to shut down Davide Chiumiento for most of the game. His flair made the Caps goal but there was little else of attacking note for the match.

Russell Teibert made a little difference when he came on at the half, but the midfield just couldn’t get into the game and were shut down. Nizar Khalfan was a shadow of the man we saw when he came on as sub last weekend. Maybe we should look at having him as an impact sub.

Jeb Brovsky didn’t do too bad on his debut and it was great to see Mouloud Akloul back playing in a Caps jersey.

A few of us were wondering pre-game whether Jay DeMerit was fully recovered from his groin strain. I guess we now know the answer to that and there’s going to be some more changes at the back next week.

So not a lot to take from this but let’s do our AFTN 3-2-1 anyway:

3 points – Camilo
2 points – Jay Nolly
1 point – Russell Teibert

The heat and two games in five days could be used as excuses for the lacklustre performance, but we don’t hold too much sway with that. The biggest positive we can take out of this is that it was a patchwork Caps side, with many fringe players.

So although we can’t get complacent, let’s not get too down about today either.

Yes, we were made to look like an expansion team out there, but it’s how we bounce back from it that matters.

And bounce back we must. Five points from a possible 15 isn’t the end of the world, but we need to start getting the ticks in the win column in our home games, hopefully starting against Chivas next Saturday, if we harbour serious hopes of a playoff berth.

Hey, early days I know. Hopefully we’re getting our injury problems out of the way early!

Once we get some of our main guys back in, I think we’ll see the Caps we know and love. It’s keeping them healthy and in the starting eleven that appears to be our biggest problem.

Mon the Caps.

The Part Of Major League The MLS Don’t Seem To Get

The second leg of the MLS first round playoff match up between Seattle Sounders and Houston Dynamo took place yesterday at the Texas side’s Robertson Stadium.

The first leg was a cracker, despite finishing goalless (see Blog of October 30th) and rekindled some interest in the MLS from us this season.

With things tentatively poised, it was a slightly more cagey second game, but nonetheless still entertaining in another goalless 90 minute encounter. Brian Ching ended up scoring the only goal of the two legs, five minutes into extra time, to send Houston through and end Seattle’s inaugural season.

As we explained in previous Blog posts, MLS action hasn’t been on the TVs much at AFTN Towers in recent years, but the first leg, and especially the wonderful atmosphere the Sounders fans created for the whole ninety minutes, made us wonder if we should perhaps be more open minded about just how good the MLS was and how professional Major League Soccer really was. Maybe it is a proper football league after all. Then we saw the pitch.

It wasn’t quite as good an atmosphere generated by the Dynamo fans but they certainly put on a great effort and still impressed, complimenting the action on the pitch well.

But all that pales into insignificance because of their shocking pitch – fake, bare, covered in sand and the worst crime of all, still with college throwball markings including big red endzone wording.

Now in an ideal world there would be no groundsharing with other sports. That is what the MLS ideally want – soccer specific stadiums. It’s what Houston are also ultimately aiming for. For now though they share the University of Houston campus facilities with the Cougars throwballers.

The end result is a disgraceful pitch to play a vital playoff game on, in front of a live continentwide television audience (although if we’re being honest the NFL games on at the same time were commanding many more viewers, but those that were left were the real football fans).

It’s not just us that think it was shocking, Seattle’s Freddie Ljungberg commented in his Blog:

“Arrived in Houston and have just been training at the stadium and noticed that they have the American football lines on the pitch. I think it is an absolute disgrace that the League allows this! They had it once before in New England and I didn’t have a clue where I was because you use the line and midfield line to know where you are on the pitch. When lines are everywhere you don’t know when to shoot or do anything – it is a massive problem!”

Well put Freddie.

The Cougars didn’t even have a home match yesterday and it was in that state, but were allowed to practice on the pitch according to the commentators. WTF?

You expect to see these kind of bush league facilities in something like the college football circuit or the USL Division 2 and PDL Leagues. Hell, you can even just about tolerate it with some of the newer USL1 sides in the less popular markets, but not for what is meant to be North America’s premier league.

If the MLS wants to be a professional league and thought of as such by fans outwith the North American continent (although I doubt this is really a pressing concern for the insular League and some of their more insular fans), they need to make sure that showcase games like this aren’t played in such conditions.

They take enough franchise money from the teams they admit (and Houston joined the League in 2006 so it’s not as if they haven’t had time to sort things out) and they hold Big Brother style control in a number of other less significant issues, so why not insist that the lines and markings are removed completely? Other clubs do it and the technology is there to do it.

I know it’s a fear amongst some Vancouver Whitecaps fans that this is something which we will face come 2011, when we’re sharing BC Place with the CFL’s BC Lions.

The difference I see it though is that with true football people behind the Whitecaps they wouldn’t let such embarrassing shambles happen. Would they?

With A Little Bit Shock Shock Horror

Since it’s inception I’ve found it hard to really get excited by the MLS. The fact that it isn’t just a single table, the playoffs, the no relegation and what I’ve always perceived as inferior football on display being the main factors.

I saw my first live MLS match in the flesh in 1997 when I took in a LA Galaxy game at the Pasadena Rose Bowl, but since then there’s been very little action caught on TV apart from a brief spell watching Tim Lovejoy’s show on Channel 5.

With Vancouver Whitecaps entering the fray in 2011, I thought that this season would get me a little bit more excited. Seattle Sounders games did that initially but being stuck with mostly the boredom that was Toronto FC games to watch on TV, it hasn’t quite happened the way I thought.

Last night though I took in the first leg of the playoff match between Seattle and Houston Dynamo and what a cracker it was too.

Plenty of passion, thrills, spills and chances galore. No goals, but certainly one of the better no score draws you’re ever likely to sit down and watch.

The atmosphere at Seattle’s Qwest Field was also exceptional. The chanting and singing continued for the whole 90 minutes and from what you could see on TV, the whole of the stadium seemed to be standing for the entire game.

Seattle have been a great success story for both the League and the game in general in North America. The crowds they’ve been achieving (opened up to 36,000 last night) and the atmosphere they’ve been creating, have done more to excite me about Vancouver joining the league than most of the football I’ve seen on display.

Their rivalry with Portland will be the best and fiercest in the entire MLS and when you add Vancouver into that Pacific Northwest melting pot, the games are going to phenomenal.

With an exciting second leg in prospect and what promises to be an explosive tie between arch rivals LA Galaxy and Chivas USA to come on Sunday, the MLS has finally started to get me interested.

If only all their games could be like last nights one, then I’d be making sure I’d be watching more often.