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March 29, 2008

Dodgers Do Something Right & RSL Opener

It's 201 feet to left field tonight at the Dodgers-Red Sox game. They're playing in the LA Colisseum, to commemorate the Dodgers '58 season in the track-and-field facility. More than 115,000 fans purchased tickets. Very coool. Can't wait to see highlights.

Mlb_g_redsox_300_2

Oh my, what to say about RSL's opener? I'll let others speak to what blowing a win in the 92nd minute (and having Chivas USA and DC United in the next two weeks) might do to a fragile team...

Rather, I'll just say that I think Wingert deserves a suspension... Blanco sure is entertaining (even if maddening) to watch... how badly did Calen Carr beat Ian Joy(!)... Deuchar's resemblance to Jaqua is uncanny... Where was Chris Rolfe all day and why does Chad Barrett start? ... also, I enjoyed today's Dema-nstration, here's hoping they find a way to get Kovalenko in the starting XI next week and...

Finally, you can dislike the Rapids, but watching them dismantle the Galaxy was pure entertainment!

March 27, 2008

Chicagoans Stick Together

Kenn.com offers a link today to Peter Wilt's blog, which has the story of a deceased Fire fan's manifesto.

This should be required reading for the Loyalists, Rogue Cavaliers Brigade and every other MLS supporters' group. Why do we lose some of our bright lights so young?

I'm ready for MLS Opening Saturday. As a fan. As a lover of the "most beautiful game."

Do I miss being on the inside? Sure. But at least I still get emails every now and then that say things like "I just sold Willis Forko to a club in Norway for $xxx,xxx.00." True story. Count the x's.

Images

Go enjoy RSL, year #4. I will!


March 25, 2008

Humble Agent Makes Big Splash

Note: Every so often, I work on something that never materializes into something publishable. I thought this profile would appeal to RSL/US Soccer fans.

An agent little known to Major League Soccer fans made created two of the biggest ripples in the placid pond that is the MLS offseason.

In January, Rob Feigenson secured an invitation for Denmark-based speedy forward Jeremiah White to U.S. National Team camp. The former Wake Forest University star didn’t disappoint Bob Bradley, competing well enough in training to earn his first cap in the U.S. victory over Sweden on January 19. Then, in a transaction that surprised veteran watchers of the MLS-Europe transfer market, Feigenson helped broker the move of U.S. U-20 midfielder Bryan Arguez from D.C. United to Hertha Berlin. Within weeks of his arrival in the Bundesliga, Arguez, the 19-year-old didn’t play a minute as an MLS rookie last season found himself on the field for a Bundesliga encounter against Eintracht Frankfort in front of 40,000 spectators.

Feigenson has built an emerging practice on placing the right player in the “best environment to succeed,” not necessarily the place with the most money. He’s humble about his practice and his players (and he’s an agent?!), perhaps because he considers them friends and extended family.

In fact, when we spoke recently we started by catching up on the player he and I know best – Guatemalan defender Gustavo Cabrera, who played four games with Real Salt Lake in 2005. We talked about Cabrera’s consummate professionalism, plus his devotion as a husband and dad. Feigenson recounted that one of the ways Cabrera cleared his head and shook his disappointment after being released was to “hitch a ride” with some countrymen, by car, from Utah, through Arizona and the entire length of Mexico back to Guatemala.

Copadeoro_gustavo_cabrera

In other words, we started by talking about the person, not the soccer. But Feigenson, who has represented Cabrera for years and regards him like a brother, was clearly disappointed that F.C. Dallas chose not to sign the 28-year-old Cabrera despite a good showing as a trialist last month. Feigenson is pragmatic (another term not so often applied to agents) though and still optimistic about Cabrera’s career.

“He has a great contract at home (with Comunicaciones),” Feigenson said. “He shares the captaincy of his national team with Carlos Ruiz. He’s playing his best soccer again as well.”

The fact that Cabrera is about the highest profile client of Feigenson’s to play in MLS demonstrates a unique philosophy of his National Sports Group. He doesn’t necessarily “need” MLS, and he doesn’t think that the league is automatically the best path for many young players.

Feigenson is in the agent business for passion, not profits. A fair collegiate player once upon a time, he is now obsessed with finding players with good character in need of the best “fit.”

Images1 Jeremiah White is Exhibit A. The Washington D.C. native earned All-ACC honors three times and was the 2003 ACC player of the year as a senior at Wake Forest. New England drafted the 5’ 8” speedster, but he was intent on making it in Europe, rather than playing for MLS minimum salary.
White careened across the continent, enduring trials and/or short stints in Holland, Serbia, Turkey, Greece and France. On the verge of postponing up his European dream one year ago, White and Feigenson received only “meager” offers from MLS and focused one more time on Europe. White landed at Denmark’s AGF Aarhus. He scored in his debut and was instrumental in helping the club back to the Danish Super League. He has now earned his own moniker, “Mr. USA.”

All along, Feigenson knew he had to match White with a club that was appropriate for the player’s abilities and that would showcase his goal-scoring instinct. With White finally finding success in a European first division, Feigenson then enlisted Danny Califf (who now captains his Danish side Aalborg BK) and Aarhus’ director of soccer to recommend White to Bob Bradley. Time will tell whether he can earn a return invite to National Team camp.

The story of Bryan Arguez is different. The lanky midfielder signed a Generation Adidas contract with MLS and was the 11th overall pick by D.C. United. He seemed destined to follow a Bobby Convey or Michael Bradley-like trajectory through MLS and to Europe. But Arguez never even dressed for a match and did not seem to fit into United’s long-term plans. Hamstrung by a long-term contract, Arguez didn’t have many options.

Images2 But Feigenson, who has built relationships around the world as the result of frequent “blitz” trips to call on two dozen clubs in the span of a week, knew that Hertha Berlin was seeking youth national team players across the globe. In a whirlwind process, he secured a trial, although negotiations almost ceased before they started, when MLS/D.C. United reportedly sought seven-figure compensation. The Arguez transfer proved that young American players, even without professional experience, have tangible value in the transfer market. (Reports suggest Berlin eventually paid $350,000 for the rights to the Miami native.)

“MLS is at a crossroads,” Feigenson said. “If it’s not a development league, and it’s not a destination league, what is it?”

The answer is that MLS is still a bit of both. But with Arguez commanding a substantially higher transfer fee than Bradley, the incentive is on MLS more than ever to sign the top young players before European teams swoop in to claim them.

Regardless, expect Feigenson’s stateside reputation to continue rise as more players seek his honest, straightforward representation.

March 22, 2008

1996 Speech Hits True Today

I had never really heard of Steve Silberman, contributing editor at Wired Magazine, until I found this article. I'm still not so sure who he is, other than a writer, a computer geek (I hope he doesn't mind) and a fanatic Deadhead. I had similarly never heard of The Well, which I tonight learned is a 22-year-old social networking website for smart people, originally called the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link back when a few elite people had a mysterious ability to "dial up" to something obscure called the "internet." I'm confident I had no idea about the web, or what the future might hold, back in 11th grade.

The WELL predates MySpace and FaceBook by about 17 years. The WELL and Michael Jordan were rookies simultaneously. AOL took on the name America On Line four years AFTER the WELL's debut. You get the idea.

Anyways, Steve Silberman gave a presentation about WELL where he talked about good and bad characteristics of a "host" on a social networking site. (A host is what we would call a moderator today, I think.) "The Underdog Carries the Secret" was the topic of his presentation. He explained how the web was brilliant for bringing disparate voices together. The WELL was not and never has been anonymous, so every participant was theoretically accountable for his/her comments, although the "underdog" voice was still often trampled. Silberman loved the little voice.

Often times, the most stigmatized voice in a community carries some truth, that if the community at large was aware of it - and certainly if the host was aware of it - it would make things better, make for a better integration of the collective psyche.

He went on to recount a conversation recently with the woman who introduced his presentation:

I was talking Gail recently about what she felt made for a really thriving conferencing environment, and she said, basically, a wide range of very vivid and powerful archetypes. I thought that was very interesting. I think that that's also a metaphor for a good psyche - a healthy psyche - and also a healthy culture.

I agree. Here's to open and powerful debate. But then he knocked me off my chair with this conclusion.

I'd like to close with something that's completely unrelated. I'm going to be quoting (late San Francisco Chronicle columnist) Herb Caen. This is something that struck me as a great metaphor for the WELL. It's an obituary that ran a couple of weeks ago, of a woman named Blanche Pastorino. I don't know if any of you knew who she was.

"Another day, another heart-rending death: On Saturday, the gentle, delightful Blanche Pastorino died at 87 in a local convalescent hospital. For two decades, her Blanche's (now Carmen's) at 4th and Channel was jammed at lunch with such regulars as Herb Gold, Cap Weinberger, Fletcher Benton and Ruth Asawa, even though her entire menu consisted of crab salad and wine or Anchor Steam. A sign on the wall explained it all: 'If Food Is Your Main Consideration, This Is Not Your Place.'"

Thank you very much.

In an instant, the billions and billions of meaningless bits of information floating around a wired world served a purpose. A real purpose. While a few friends and family may have a tattered 13-year-old copy of my great Aunt's obituary pressed tightly between a novel on a dusty shelf; her life, the restaurant she lived for, her friends and her simplicity remain alive thanks to late 20th century technology and one stranger's archived comments.

Steve Silberman, thank you.

Herb Caen's Column here.
San Francisco Chronicle Obituary: Jan. 30, 1996
Six Years Later, from the San Francisco Examiner

March 19, 2008

Bull Durham Sequel?

Bull Durham ranks with Cinema Paradiso as my favorite movies of all time. They're both about old wise man mentoring young dude... ok, I guess the similarities end there. Imagine my surprise when I read this ESPN article suggesting the 21st century sequel to Bull Durham.

Is it baseball Opening Day yet? Are they really opening in Japan? Anyways, enjoy:
Whatever happened to Nuke Laloosh?

Pg2_g_bulld_300

Secondly, thanks for Kali for posting this link on Marking the Referee. Sports Illustrated opening their archives? Very, very cool. Read about it here. If you're not a NY Times on-line subscriber, let me know and I'll post here.

March 16, 2008

This is Olympic soccer?

Ok, there are about eight more compelling topics this week like the monks' uprising in Tibet and Michael Pollan's (The Omnivore's Dilemma) here on Thursday and the 15.5 miles I ran today on my step-by-step quest to raise money and awareness for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, but I just want to say...

Is this the best the USA can do for a U-23 Olympics team? Tonight's game against Honduras was so bad that the star-spangled streaker absolutely captivated Christian Miles for a full 60 seconds, leaving poor Brian Dunseth absolutely speechless. I didn't see all 270 minutes of this round of qualifying, but of what I saw, here are some of my reactions:

* Freddy Adu: Like he would do in practice every day I saw him last year, Adu will make at least one move, pass, feint that reminds all onlookers of his incredible talents. He hasn't figured out how to be a presence fo 90 minutes, but he's worth the money to watch (although only about 3,000 people agree on Tuesday and Thursday).
* Jozy Altidore: Sometimes I worry that the only way the USA can score is a quick forward getting behind the last defender, or off a header. We need a forward who can take defenders 1v1 - and I don't think Jozy is that guy. I like him, but he's not enough when you play the Englands, Italys and Argentinas of the world.
* Stuart Holden: I've always liked this kid. But I think he showed tonight he belongs on the flank, not inside. Probably has a Steve Ralston-like career ahead of him (good in many ways, but not a breakthrough international player).
* I liked Michael Orozco, Maurice Edu and Dax McCarty in the middle of the park... Every instinct tells me Dax is too small to be impactful in MLS, but he plays smart and quick. I thought he was a lot like Jamie Watson when I first saw him, but he's surpassed Jamie by leaps and bounds. You know who Dax reminds me of a little? Peter Nowak - although he's not in that class yet obviously.
* I want to see more of Sal Zizzo. Liked him at UCLA. I like him at this level.
* Is there a player more frustrating to watch than Chad Barrett?
* Poor Charlie Davies. But I doubt his "confidence is absolutely shattered" as Mr. Miles said.

Gaven_e

* Eddie Gaven kicks off his 6th MLS season in two weeks - and he's still only 21?!??!
* What's wrong with Sacha Kljestan?

March 15, 2008

MLS Single Table - part 2 of 2

In the second part of my analysis of the financial underpinnings of MLS teams, I look at the top seven teams in MLS. Teams were ranked on a 10-point scale (10=high) in five categories: Ticket Sales, Stadium Situation, Corporate Sponsorship, Designated Player/Coach and Intangibles.

7. New England (26 points). The Revs are cursed and blessed with ownership by the NFL’s Patriots. The soccer team’s finances have always been sufficiently attended to by the image-conscious Kraft family, but never with enough focus to elevate them into the league’s elite. Plus, their poor on-field play in early years compromised great crowds (the Revs led MLS in average attendance in 1997). Recently, the Revs’ four losses in MLS Cup finals have created a hard-to-manage level of expectation amongst their fans. As Yogi Berra might say, “they can’t win until they win.” The NFL overlay has provided some big-name sponsors for the soccer team, but not enough for a jersey sponsor. All in all, it’s hard to believe that the Revs have maximized their corporate potential. The biggest crime is subjecting fans to 60,000 empty seats at Gillette Stadium each game – the Revs have some great fans who deserve a soccer stadium. The one time Gillette was full for an MLS game (’01 MLS Cup) was one of the best environments in MLS history.

Rsl_stadium_2008

6. Real Salt Lake (30 points). It’s hard for me to be impartial on this one because I’m proud of the economic foothold RSL created in the state of Utah. That the ’08 edition ranks fourth in season ticket sales according to the Sports Business Journal last month, is impressive considering the small market – and the team’s disappointing three-year record. The September opening of the new stadium in Sandy (about 10 miles south of downtown Salt Lake) will put an end to three years of spending extraneous energy on Capitol Hill and the region’s painfully slow political process. Although the Xango jersey sponsorship isn’t the biggest in the league, I hold that it was critical for a team and sponsor to step forward with the “first” deal – to provide a baseline by which the others would follow. Plus, without a Fortune 500 company in the state, RSL realistically didn’t have too many options (as I’m sure they’re finding on the stadium naming rights pitch) – and was right to formulate the Xango partnership when they did. Bonus points also for the Real Madrid relationship. Finally, I’m certain Mr. Checketts will open the wallet for the appropriate designated player as soon as the stadium revenues start flowing.

5. Houston (32). Although only starting their third season, Houston looks like the club that can’t do wrong. They win. They draw strong crowds to an adequate-sized facility. The Dynamo appear to be on the verge of a downtown stadium. Amigo Energy stepped up to sponsor the team’s jerseys. Not a bad turnaround for a club that misfired badly by introducing itself as Houston 1836 and offending much of their Latin American fan base. Oliver Luck deserves credit. Somewhat quiet within MLS circles, he’s concentrated his energy on forging a new stadium, while Chris Cannetti and Dom Kinnear have done well to manage the business and soccer sides respectively. The Dynamo has climbed to fifth in the league in season tickets (and are likely to surpass RSL) – and the passion and size of their post-season crowds demonstrates the depth fans’ loyalty. All that’s left for Houston to do is introduce a Texas-sized DP to match their new part-owner, boxing legend Oscar de la Hoya.

4. Chicago (33). The Fire’s 2008 season ticket numbers are an embarrassment, but the team proved it (with a huge assist from Cuautemoc Blanco) could draw crowds down the stretch last year on the basis of group sales and walk up. To crack the MLS Top 3, the Fire should solidify its season ticket base and continue to build its deep tentacles in the Chicago soccer community. After all, the team has history and tradition going for it – and the assembly of Fire legends Hamlett, Armas, Shore and Jeffries on the bench has been favorably received by the fans. I’m sure John Guppy leveraged a massive spend out of Best Buy for the shirt sponsorship – partially making up for the club’s below-average stadium naming rights deal (although the team possesses the sweetest lease in MLS at Toyota Park). Finally, as much as I initially scoffed at the team’s massive investment in Blanco, Salt Lake fans, among others, can attest to the Mexican icon’s game-changing skills on the field and at the box office.

3. D.C. United (35). United earns a top-three position for incredible consistency - a perennial attendance leader, an impressive case of trophies, a well-established brand, strong management and an engaging and evolving roster of players including some MLS’ best-ever imports in Moreno, Etcheverry, Gomez and Luciano Emilio, among others. DC’s two major drawbacks are a lack of corporate support (where’s the jersey sponsor and/or a decade-long marketing partner?) and no clear-cut plan to build a stadium. It’s easy to forget that this club is on its third ownership group – but perhaps the current group will finally get the stadium done. No executive in MLS is as closely tied to the identity, ebb and flow of his team as Kevin Payne. And even those who have found themselves on the wrong side of one of his bombastic rants have been pulling for him to recover from his recent heart surgery.

2. Toronto FC (45). And all of a sudden there’s a quantum leap to the top two teams in the MLS Financial Single Table. TFC absolutely redefined the notion of the “splash” that an expansion team could and now SHOULD make. I thought Chicago in ’98 was a pretty cool place to be. Salt Lake in ’05 was a dream come true for me and many Beehive State soccer fans. But TFC set the standard the Peter Wilt and I once planned for – selling every seat, every game in a new soccer-specific stadium. What the Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainment group, led by the humble and humorous Paul Beirne, did earns TFC the first perfect “10” in any category – and they earn three: ticket sales, stadium situation and corporate support. They earn a “9” for intangibles – this organization has a day-glo bright future, especially if they start winning. They’ll start winning, right Leafs’ fans? My old friend Mike Thompson would probably remind me that the Leafs haven’t won a Stanley Cup in nearly 40+ years – let’s hope Team For Canada doesn’t make the faithful wait that long.

1. Los Angeles Galaxy (47). From my days at AEG, I feel like I know this club and market pretty well. Consider this: In MLS’ 12 seasons, the Galaxy has been the league leader in attendance in eight of them. Sure, they early years benefited from July 4th at the Rose Bowl, and they’ve had their share of doubleheaders, but for FIVE years now, they’ve called a relatively small venue, Home Depot Center, their home. They score 10 for ticket sales. And the venue? A second perfect 10. Although I think the “cathedral” synonym that Tim Leiweke throws at it is hyperbole, HDC dazzled soccer fans who secretly feared that every new stadium would look like Columbus. HDC feels like it’s been around for a decade already… is the classy jewel on a pastoral sports campus… and was PRIVATELY funded in a magnanimous effort by the incomparable Philip Anschutz. (Plus, the $70 million or so that Home Depot paid to name it –TEN times more than the Fire got from Toyota – set a great bar for the league to live up to.) Corporate support? Another 10 thanks to HDC, Herbalife and a certain #23 who sent Galaxy revenues into another stratosphere last year. You can question whether the extensive Asia travel this spring is the best way to prepare for an MLS season – but the dollars undoubtedly speak loudly. I didn’t give LA a “10” for use of Designated Player, not just because they have three (which MLS execs publicly bemoan but privately chuckle over.) Beckham’s value has already been demonstrated (although him winning a meaningful game in Galaxy colors would be nice)… Then you add Ruiz and Donovan to the same team? That’s dynamic. Ok, five years ago would you have predicted that Alexi Lalas would be a GM and Ruud Gullit an MLS Coach? Star-studded City of Angels – you have a veritable constellation down in Carson. As for intangibles, I say the Galaxy’s got ‘em. So what’s the real challenge in LA? They have to win. Mr. Leiweke won’t tolerate a slow start this year, so I think you could see Steinbrenner-esque turmoil this year. But the Galaxy can throw money after money and keep trying until they get it right.


Finally, a quick note on the two expansion teams…

Seattle ranks in my top 7 already. They will put up Toronto-like ticket sales numbers, have a classy organization headed by a stand-up business leader in Adrian Hanauer, plus an attention-getting funny-guy owner in Drew Carey who actually happens to know a few things about soccer. I’m bummed they seem content with Qwest for the short term, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re in a new soccer-specific stadium before DC.

Philadelphia has to show me more… Many people clamor it’s a soccer town, but why do I think the entrenched Phillies/Eagles/Flyers/76ers fans will make it difficult for the Liberty Bell FC (I’m just makin’ it up – don’t go reporting it) to get a fair shake in the media, or of the entertainment dollars? I am not as impressed with their ownership and management – I think they’re a middle of the pack club in many ways. I hope they prove me wrong.

Thanks for weathering the longest two blog entries in ‘Hat Rack history... hope you have your MLS Direct Kick package ordered and your tickets punched to Opening Day in two weeks.

March 10, 2008

MLS Single Table - A financial comparison

Images_2The release of MLS teams’ season ticket totals by Sports Business Journal last week begs for some hard analysis, with a dose of informed speculation, that I’ll call my MLS Financial Single Table.

I graded all 14 MLS teams on five financial criteria on a 10-point scale (10 = high, 1=low).

Ticket Sales: Season tickets are an important component, but the FST also looks at historical trends.
Stadium Situation: Got your own? Score no less than 6. Can’t fill it? Score no better than 6. Playing in the NFL or NCAA’s house – score no more than 5.
Major Corporate Support: Teams with jersey sponsors and lucrative stadium revenue streams earn kudos here.
Designated Player or Coach: Two places where an exuberant owner can really set his team apart – for better OR worse.
Financial Intangibles: Championships sell merchandise and build long-term fan bases. So does long-term grassroots work, including academy formation, having a 501-c-3 foundation, a meaningful broadcast partners and consistent brand building in the marketplace. Being irrelevant in any MLS market is not good here.

So without further ado, we start with the one club that would face sure-fire relegation if financial performance alone were the yardstick:

14) Kansas City (13 points out of a possible 50): They say KC is 100% Chiefs’ country, but with the spendthrift, hopeless Royals as your only other Major League competition, the Wiz/Wizards should have made more inroads in 12 years. They rank dead last in MLS historical per game attendance (not including Miami – financial mismanagement in an entirely otherworldly orbit). They have no jersey sponsor, no shovel in the dirt for a stadium and they’re facing two years of oblivion in a minor league baseball park. On the bright side, new ownership hasn’t been afraid to make big changes: Curt Onalfo might be one of the smartest, most genuine people in the sport; they hired away an MLS stadium veteran from HOK to coordinate their stadium development and the signing of DP Claudio Lopez might make them a contender. Still, the franchise remembered as the home of the ‘Zard Card, Price Chopper promotions and Jetsons’ sound effects exists only because Lamar Hunt had a wallet even bigger than his heart.

13) Chivas USA (21 points): The knock on the best soccer team in California is that no one ventures to the Home Depot Center to watch them. Are they really relevant? Kudos for blockbuster sponsorships (including Comex on the jersey), a great coach and product on the field. But they tied their own hands by trading their DP slot, are the clear secondary tenant in their stadium and the fan issue. Why do so few people show up to watch them? Let’s just say they charged $10 for every ticket in the house… Would more than 7,000 fans per game show up?

12) San Jose (22 points): I have bad vibes about this one. It’s tough to appear “major league” when you play in a small college’s small soccer stadium – even with enhancements. (I’ve been there.) The Bay Area is a notoriously difficult market and about 11 GM’s failed in the ‘Quakes first incarnation. The A’s are known in the baseball world as some of cheapest operators, and there’s no indication they’ll loosen the purse strings for soccer. Yes, they get a grace period – and they have a graceful coach – but they look atrocious on the field on paper and empty seats in a 10,000-seat stadium will get ugly quickly. Not that anyone reads newspapers here anymore, but I never understood why the SF Chronicle offered such measly coverage of the Quakes. They rank ahead of Chivas USA because they appear to have a stadium plan and committed local ownership.

11) Red Bull New York (24 points). The ‘Bulls are held to a higher standard because they compete in the toughest entertainment market on the planet. Glitz, glamour and big ambitions sell in New York – but it wanes if it’s not backed up with mega-success. Red Bull, the drink, unfortunately inherited the atrocious legacy of the MetroStars – dismal crowds, miserable stadium atmosphere, horrendous player signings, wasted money on big-name coaches – get the picture? The only reason this team ranks this high is that Red Bull has poured so much money into the Harrison stadium plan, two designated players (one of whom, Juan Pablo Angel actually performed the way MLS hoped DP’s might) and a (second chance) high profile coach. Remember the buzz and the 30,000-odd curiosity seekers when Red Bull played its first game? Hey drink guys! This isn’t airplane stunts and bad 2 a.m. drinks. Gimmicks don’t work. You gotta just win.

10) Columbus (24 points). Congrats on the jersey deal – but Glidden splashed on the front hardly compensates for the misfortune of not being able to sell the name of the first soccer-specific stadium in 1999. Crew Stadium proved to skeptical owners that this league could survive, and thrive, in team-owned venues. This will be one of Lamar Hunt’s many legacies. But after 1999, the Crew never again led MLS in attendance and had the ignominy of not being able to fill its venue for marquee MLS games. A town that didn’t even have the NHL when the Crew were announced has blown it – supporting the club only to the most mediocre of levels, despite personalities like Brian McBride, Frankie Hejduk, Dante Washington, Jeff Cunningham and Sigi Schmid. The Crew will still be here 20 years from now – in the middle of the pack, without a title and with hardly a sellout. Unless… unless they become the first MLS team to build a SECOND soccer-specific stadium and Columbus finally catches Crew fever.

9) FC Dallas (25 points). Remember how difficult the process of building in Dallas, McKinley, Frisco was? Maybe there was a reason. I have really rooted for this enterprise to be successful, and I know the demographics suggest that Frisco will be surrounded by homes eventually, but it feels like driving to the West Texas desert every time you go to Pizza Hut Park. Is the honeymoon over? Season ticket sales are DOWN from a year ago. Perhaps it’s because the stadium is uninspiring – with the exception of the stunning Verizon Wireless Club. Unfortunately, MLS needs 20,000 fans paying $20/game more than it needs 500 VIP’s paying $100 each. FC Dallas’ bold moves internationally with Brazil’s CA Paranaense and Mexico’s Monterey Tigres could pay off in the long run – far more than the ill-fated DP signing of Denilson. Big sponsorships are nice at the stadium – but where’s the jersey sponsor?

8) Colorado (25 points). Ambitious owner Stan Kroenke set out to remake this franchise as part of his sports, television and real estate empire in Colorado, but empty seats at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park last year were an ominous sign. The Rapids have never drawn consistently other than July 4th, and a decade of mediocre soccer has caught up with them. On the bright side, I have a feeling that DSG Park’s soccer complex will eclipse Pizza Hut Park as the destination for youth soccer in the summer, giving stimulus to the Rapids in a city whose teams have had broad regional appeal for decades. A meaningful relationship with Arsenal could also jumpstart this club.

Later this week, I’ll present the top of table – seven clubs that have made the right moves financially and appear to be growing into the MLS franchises envisioned when Mssrs. Rothenberg, Hunt, Anschutz and Kraft first dreamed up the details in 1995. I’ll also give my early take on the future expansion teams – Seattle & Philadelphia.

March 06, 2008

Old Fashioned Hero

Lance Armstrong, a true contemporary American hero in my opinion, stopped by Utah on Wednesday to help Jon Huntsman Sr. announce that the Huntsman Cancer Institute was doubling in size.

20080306__ut_huntsmanplug_0306_a11_

Huntsman responded to a personal battle with cancer years ago by plunging an estimated $500 million of his own money to build the HCI, which now stands tall above Salt Lake City on the University of Utah campus. Its quickly emerging as one of the leading research and care facilities in the United States and is something Utahans can and should be proud of. Now that it has been "blessed" by Armstrong, a cancer survivor who has used his bully pulpit with Nike to lead a nationwide movement to bring attention to the need to cure cancer, I expect it to rise to even greater prominence. Kudos to Lance and former Utah governor.

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Speaking of raising money to fight cancer, Mrs. 'Hat Rack and I have raised about $2,000 to date as we march towards a May date with the Ogden Marathon. We'll be at the symbolic halfway mark in training when we toe the starting line at this weekend's Canyonlands Half Marathon in Moab. Support a great cause by making a donation here. We thank you!

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It's only Arena Football but...
The Blaze cut their kicker after he missed a field goal in the first game of the season. The move splashed ice-cold water on the career of a player who had been a mainstay of the franchise and relocated his family to SLC. Oh wait... it's Arena Football. Who cares?

March 05, 2008

New Soccer Stadium, No Controversy

One of my good friends close to BYU Soccer passed along this blurb...

The university will break ground on the new South Soccer Stadium on Monday, March 10 at Noon. President Samuelson, faculty, coaches, players and alumni are expected to attend - and the public is invited.

BYU has an innovative soccer program where the men compete in the USL's PDL rather than NCAA soccer. Chris Watkins has been an invaluable friend to Real Salt Lake. I personally have been extremely impressed with their program, which has a clear mission - and a great track record of success - on and off the field. Soccerlandscape1