Sgt. Largent":2hbf35h4 said:Garber held a press conference today, not much of note except this stood out to me;
Garber: "In the next 6 months, we have to develop a plan with our ownership for when we go further than 24 teams. Because we will."
It's always puzzled me that Garber and the owners are so hell bent on expansion. Is it because they want to money grub as many franchise fees before this hits critical mass?
IMO it makes more sense to have LESS clubs in a league where all the clubs draw 25k+, have great fanbases and are financially stable enough to each afford at least two high priced DP's..........than a 20-30 club league with bottom dwelling financially struggling franchises pulling the cap down.
Smurf":33v17l0w said:3 points vs portland....doesn't get much better than that!
knownone":3ropna4n said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
CurryStopstheRuns":38dfi8ka said:knownone":38dfi8ka said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
Odd that you say that because I do not recall Yedlin being able to do that either. That, and if he did make a run his crosses were horrendous.
Sgt. Largent":x7fv5cnw said:CurryStopstheRuns":x7fv5cnw said:knownone":x7fv5cnw said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
Odd that you say that because I do not recall Yedlin being able to do that either. That, and if he did make a run his crosses were horrendous.
Yedlin could get wide, but he rarely could put in a decent cross. But the point is taken, having a blindingly fast outside back (and winger) puts tremendous stress on a defense and changes the way they gameplan.
We don't have that right now, which is why you see a lot of narrow playing and team's clogging the middle of the pitch.............daring us to get wide.
Smurf":27b8t26v said:Sgt. Largent":27b8t26v said:Garber held a press conference today, not much of note except this stood out to me;
Garber: "In the next 6 months, we have to develop a plan with our ownership for when we go further than 24 teams. Because we will."
It's always puzzled me that Garber and the owners are so hell bent on expansion. Is it because they want to money grub as many franchise fees before this hits critical mass?
IMO it makes more sense to have LESS clubs in a league where all the clubs draw 25k+, have great fanbases and are financially stable enough to each afford at least two high priced DP's..........than a 20-30 club league with bottom dwelling financially struggling franchises pulling the cap down.
While that is a good plan, it leaves out large portions of the US. Leaving many fans without clubs. Granted, thats going to happen...but in the US that number is really large. Most soccer fans in the US have a favorite team they follow...and for many of them...its not in MLS. Its overseas or down in Mexico (especially southern states). Cities that have franchises often get local support from existing soccer fans, and then transition into cultivating a new fan base.
The idea of expanding to more and more cities is to increase the number of MLS supporting soccer fans in the US, while simultaneously increasing revenue and quality of the game in our country. While I do worry that fast expansion can hurt us, I am not as fearful as I was a few years ago. The leagues reputation is growing, and not just locally or nationally, but internationally. MLS is quickly becoming one of the most internationally accessible leagues in the world. The league has signed a whole slew of broadcast deals in the last few months including one with Sky Sports (UK), Eurosport (Europe minus UK), Brazil, and others.
As the league grows more popular (and it will), we will also see the structure of the league begin to shift. It wouldn't shock me at all if in 30 years we have MLS and MLS2 with a promotion-relegation system. But for now, we have to focus on increasing accessibility to the league, and developing talent for the league to show case. Sure big stars will help with the draw, but we also need to to surround those stars with quality. The transformation of the academy system is absolutely huge for this country. And the partnership between MLS and USL will help foster that system.
Sgt. Largent":2dzqj4zx said:I get what Smurf is saying, and it makes sense in a broad way of growing a league by creating as many new soccer fans in as many markets as possible.
But IMO that's kind of a pollyanna way of trying to grow soccer in the US. As the meager MLS TV ratings can attest to, Joe Blow sports fan isn't exactly being won over the the beautiful game, so not sure putting an MLS club in his city is going to change that.
Putting franchises in cities like Orlando does make sense because that's a soccer hotbed, but just saying "NOW WE WANNA GO TO MIAMI, MINNEAPOLIS, VEGAS, SACRAMENTO!!! ON AND ON!!" is going to be detrimental to the league as whole over the long haul because in the end the #1 way to grow a sport is $$$$$, and the way you get money in professional sports is not expansion, it's not gate receipts, it's not merchandising...............it's TV revenue. And the only way to get the TV revenue up to the level it needs to be to sustain a 15-20 club league is to get that cap space up to a level where the MLS can start competing with other leagues for major players AND continuing to develop our own players.
I just don't see this happening with 10 clubs every year in a 25 club league keeping the cap # so low. I'm just fine with soccer crazy cities like Orlando, and previously Vancouver, Portland, Seattle, etc getting clubs..........but if one or two clubs join, then Garber needs to do more like what the league did with Chivas, add by subtracting a franchise that's dragging the league down.
Uncle Si":3dvfdhs1 said:Smurf":3dvfdhs1 said:Sgt. Largent":3dvfdhs1 said:Garber held a press conference today, not much of note except this stood out to me;
Garber: "In the next 6 months, we have to develop a plan with our ownership for when we go further than 24 teams. Because we will."
It's always puzzled me that Garber and the owners are so hell bent on expansion. Is it because they want to money grub as many franchise fees before this hits critical mass?
IMO it makes more sense to have LESS clubs in a league where all the clubs draw 25k+, have great fanbases and are financially stable enough to each afford at least two high priced DP's..........than a 20-30 club league with bottom dwelling financially struggling franchises pulling the cap down.
While that is a good plan, it leaves out large portions of the US. Leaving many fans without clubs. Granted, thats going to happen...but in the US that number is really large. Most soccer fans in the US have a favorite team they follow...and for many of them...its not in MLS. Its overseas or down in Mexico (especially southern states). Cities that have franchises often get local support from existing soccer fans, and then transition into cultivating a new fan base.
The idea of expanding to more and more cities is to increase the number of MLS supporting soccer fans in the US, while simultaneously increasing revenue and quality of the game in our country. While I do worry that fast expansion can hurt us, I am not as fearful as I was a few years ago. The leagues reputation is growing, and not just locally or nationally, but internationally. MLS is quickly becoming one of the most internationally accessible leagues in the world. The league has signed a whole slew of broadcast deals in the last few months including one with Sky Sports (UK), Eurosport (Europe minus UK), Brazil, and others.
As the league grows more popular (and it will), we will also see the structure of the league begin to shift. It wouldn't shock me at all if in 30 years we have MLS and MLS2 with a promotion-relegation system. But for now, we have to focus on increasing accessibility to the league, and developing talent for the league to show case. Sure big stars will help with the draw, but we also need to to surround those stars with quality. The transformation of the academy system is absolutely huge for this country. And the partnership between MLS and USL will help foster that system.
Smurf, large portions of the US are left out of many sports. Not every city, major or minor, needs to have a professional team in any sport. This is a concern I have for the MLS and their desire to keep expanding. Iowa? Nebraska? Oklahoma? Phoenix? San Antonio? All have large soccer populations. But are any ready for an MLS team?
I'm interested to hear what the "transformation of the academy system" (one that started 5 years ago) is doing that is so dynamic and important to professional soccer, as I work in it. If its developing quality, I will once again say that quality development in the MLS is seen as an investment, to be sold off to bigger clubs. Its going to be that way for a generation still.
The MLS needs to be careful. The NHL should be both their test model and standard.
I'm really not sure what to make of this. Yedlin basically played as a wing back for us last year. His job was to make over lapping runs and take people on, and he did it at least 10 times per game. The quality of his service isn't an issue, the width pulls defenders out the middle which gives more space for Dempsey and Martins to operate. That's the issue we have right now, they crowd the middle and force Dempsey and Martins to make passes through tight windows. Teams are not afraid of isolating Neagle 1v1 because 80% of the time he's going to lose possession. Mears doesn't have the pace to consistently get outside and Remick doesn't have the technical ability to justify trying to beat people as a LB.CurryStopstheRuns":1o69542e said:knownone":1o69542e said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
Odd that you say that because I do not recall Yedlin being able to do that either. That, and if he did make a run his crosses were horrendous.
knownone":3q9seilc said:I'm really not sure what to make of this. Yedlin basically played as a wing back for us last year. His job was to make over lapping runs and take people on, and he did it at least 10 times per game. The quality of his service isn't an issue, the width pulls defenders out the middle which gives more space for Dempsey and Martins to operate. That's the issue we have right now, they crowd the middle and force Dempsey and Martins to make passes through tight windows. Teams are not afraid of isolating Neagle 1v1 because 80% of the time he's going to lose possession. Mears doesn't have the pace to consistently get outside and Remick doesn't have the technical ability to justify trying to beat people as a LB.CurryStopstheRuns":3q9seilc said:knownone":3q9seilc said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
Odd that you say that because I do not recall Yedlin being able to do that either. That, and if he did make a run his crosses were horrendous.
We either need a true winger or CM whose capable of unlocking a defense.
What does that even mean? You thinking Yedlin isn't a threat does not change how the game works. The simple act of him making runs and the threat of his speed stretches the defense. That is the point I was making, I'm not saying Yedlin is some super 1v1 perfect cross machine.CurryStopstheRuns":2wm2wh7y said:knownone":2wm2wh7y said:I'm really not sure what to make of this. Yedlin basically played as a wing back for us last year. His job was to make over lapping runs and take people on, and he did it at least 10 times per game. The quality of his service isn't an issue, the width pulls defenders out the middle which gives more space for Dempsey and Martins to operate. That's the issue we have right now, they crowd the middle and force Dempsey and Martins to make passes through tight windows. Teams are not afraid of isolating Neagle 1v1 because 80% of the time he's going to lose possession. Mears doesn't have the pace to consistently get outside and Remick doesn't have the technical ability to justify trying to beat people as a LB.CurryStopstheRuns":2wm2wh7y said:knownone":2wm2wh7y said:It's becoming more and more apparent how important Yedlin was last year. We literally have no one who can go wide and beat people 1v1.
Odd that you say that because I do not recall Yedlin being able to do that either. That, and if he did make a run his crosses were horrendous.
We either need a true winger or CM whose capable of unlocking a defense.
That may have been true at first, but when he was unable to win 1v1 match ups, or effectively serve crosses, his threat became nothing more than false perception.
Smurf":365qzp5m said:If MLS can couple more TV Markets, with international stars, and the ability to cultivate young stars the league will continue to grow at an outstanding rate.
Evidently reasonable dialog is being daft, or maybe you just don't know what you are talking about.CurryStopstheRuns":3s02yr4o said:I am of the belief that you are being intentionally daft so we are done here.