Sunday, March 16, 2014

Toronto, Dempsey, and thanks to Dom Kinnear...

THE TORONTO EXPERIMENT

"Attacking is the reward for playing defense." - Ryan Nelsen, Toronto FC manager.

The new look Toronto FC (the 7th incarnation?) are underway, and they got off to a cracking start, getting all three points on the road in Seattle. But what did we learn from the first 90 minutes of action?

1) Michael Bradley is going to have his hands full:

From the first kick, Bradley was a man on a mission. Trying to be everywhere he could, putting out every fire in defense, starting or taking part in every attack. "He just has to be Michael Bradley." Ryan Nelsen said, of what would make his new midfield general successful, and at the start, he wasn't trying to be Michael Bradley, he was trying to be three of Michael Bradley.

Once he settled into the game, Bradley looked much more like the player TFC believed they purchased. Playing box to box, covering the back four, chasing down balls, and breaking upfield on the counter. The issues looking to the future though could be in the need for Bradley to be quite literally everywhere, as he was in the early stages of the match. A goal, then a two goal cushion allowed him to relax, and Toronto to revert even more to natural form, basing everything on absorbing pressure. While Jonathan Osorio has been a bright spot coming out of the preseason as a partner for Bradley, one can't help but think to what the midfield would have looked like had they been able to keep hold of last years star performer, Matias Laba. Laba would have covered the center backs, Bradley, and helped spur attacks, while Bradley was more free to push forward into attack at will, and track back when possession was lost. With Osorio, a less accomplished and less natural defender, Bradley is needed to be in more positions while foreseeing the future as to where he needs to be.

A major issue Toronto will face this summer will come when Bradley isn't around during the World Cup, with goalkeeper Julio Cesar also away, the fragile Toronto back four could really face some issues. In the meantime, Bradley and Osorio need to keep working on their relationship and timing, as well as gelling with Caldwell and Henry, becoming a real unit not just in defense, but when they are in possession, where the break downs happened last season, leading to disaster when the other team broke on the counter. If Nelsen truly believes that attacking is the reward for defending, Bradley's role needs to be perfectly defined for him and his teammates, and Michael Bradley needs to only be, Michael Bradley.


2) Who needs preseason or practice?:

As far as debuts go, Jermain Defoe had about as good of one as could have been expected for someone who didn't have a preseason with his new teammates. Two goals in less than a half hour, and a full 90, for a guy who hasn't played since February 8th against Everton for Tottenham, and only started practicing in the last few days.

With one match under their belt, Toronto still hasn't had their "big three" even on a practice field together. Gilberto arrived out of shape and overweight, getting injured before the season began. Defoe arrived injured, and only just began practicing. Only Bradley has had a full preseason and practice schedule with his new teammates.

One would say the worst time for a remade team to go on the road to face the Sounders would be in their opening match, especially after the Sounders got three points against the reigning champions just a week earlier. To do it without one of the big three, with so many new and important pieces not having ever played together, is impressive. One would assume the team is only going to get better.


3) 3 points masks deficiencies:

While Toronto got off to the best start they could have hoped for as far as results are concerned, the game did bring up some deficiencies in the team they have been assembling over the past few months.

They are still shaky in defense. With Nelsen's philosophy of defense first, Toronto spent the majority of the match without possession, and the final 20 minutes saw them barely get out of their own half. Once the Dempsey goal cut the lead down to one, the bus was for all intents and purposes, parked.

Despite having played together last season, Caldwell and Henry do not look to be the most in sync partnership. The same issues of last season are there, and it will be interesting to see if Henry is replaced during the course of the season.

While Defoe and Bradley showed great hustle, questions still abound about the rest of the team. De Rosario looked a shadow of his former self. Bloom is by no means a world beater, and could be a liability at right back. Alvaro Rey and Jackson have the tools to be successful out wide, provided they learn to gel with the fullbacks, be it Morrow and Bloom, or another pairing. What the team does to improve while in possession, something they have struggled with during the whole Nelsen era, could decide his future as manager. It will be interesting to see if De Rosario shifts out wide in some games once Gilberto is fit, or if he will slot back into the midfield, leaving Bradley to cover for his slowing pace and lack of defensive presence. Nelsen has some decisions to make, and it is doubtful Toronto will support Nelsen fully through the summer transfer window if results are not up to par.

On paper, Jermain Defoe, Gilberto, Dwayne De Rosario, Michael Bradley, Steven Caldwell, and Julio Cesar are about as good as any first six names on the team sheet as any MLS team might have. What comes from the next ten names in the squad will tell the tale of Toronto's season.



THE TWO FACES OF DEMPSEY

Against Toronto FC, we got to see both sides of US captain Clint Dempsey.

Having scored only 1 goal in his last 27 matches with any club or his country, Depmsey finally found the back of the net again on a wonderful counter attack where Steven Caldwell was caught in no mans land, having to leave either Obafemi Martins or Clint Dempsey uncovered. The ball took a slight hop off of Dempsey's first touch, which he volleyed with power to a favorable angle against Julio Cesar's position. A beautifully taken goal, and vintage Dempsey.

The bad however was even more prevalent. While Dempsey using the entire stoppage in play for the injury to Brad Davis to get in the face of the ref constantly berating him for the way he was officiating the first dozen minutes or so is expected of a complainer and captain like Dempsey, the rest of his behavior was rather repulsive.

First, Dempsey had an off the ball conflict with Toronto right back Mark Bloom, while play was being called back for a free kick being taken too quickly. Dempsey walked past Steven Caldwell, who was a shield to the referee that was waiting for the ball to return for the free kick, (and lets be honest, if he pulled this stunt on Caldwell, he would have left the field on a stretcher.) when Dempsey walked past Bloom, and used the back of his hand to aggressively swat Bloom in the baby maker. It was a cheap, dirty, gross, and disrespectful move by Dempsey, and I hope the MLS disciplinary committee takes a look at the incident, and at the very least fines him heavily.

But Dempsey was by no means done with the child like behavior. When Dempsey was fouled a few minutes later, in what could only be described as Dempsey taking contact and dramatically flopping to the ground, Jonathan Osorio attempted to offer Dempsey his hand to help him up. Dempsey's response, which the cameras caught for every viewer to see plain as day? "Fuck you bitch." Pure class.

In the second half, Dempsey was at it again. While battling Alvaro Rey for the ball, once the ball was away, Dempsey kicked out at Rey, kicking him in the right calf, tripping him. He then stepped over Rey and started making "he dived" motions to the referee.

Between nutting Bloom and kicking Rey, along with his otherwise poor professionalism, Dempsey shouldn't have been on the pitch past the 60 minute mark, and never should have had the opportunity for only his second goal in 28 matches.

The fact is, Clint Dempsey often acts like a spoiled child in a grown redneck mans body. While fans enjoy his passion and commitment, the moody, classless, reaper of vengeance against perceived injustice makes him thoroughly unlikable to me. His fall from his once mighty perch has felt like a slice of karma biting him in the ass. While I need him to be at his best come Brasil, if he fell of the face of the Earth following the World Cup, I can't say I would miss his antics.

For years people have had the debate, Donovan or Dempsey, with many saying that Donovan wasn't in Dempsey's class. To that I would reply, you are correct, they are not in the same class... Landycakes actually has some. And an even more stark contrast was seen in the very match in which his behavior showed his true colors. Michael Bradley was also on the pitch. Acting like a professional. Acting like a captain. All without the arm band. Dempsey could learn something from the future USMNT captain... how a professional behaves. A few minutes after Dempsey's goal, Obafemi Martins gave Bradley a nudge into the advertising boards next to the pitch. Bradley's response? A "good hard fought battle" tap of respect to Martins arm before returning to the pitch to play on.

I know that for many Americans, saying anything negative about Clint Dempsey is akin to publicly killing Julia Roberts and then raping her corpse, but truth is truth, and Clint Dempsey can be a real miserable C-U-Next-Tuesday.



THANK GOD FOR DOMINIC KINNEAR

Over the past few years, thanks in large part to Barcelona and the Spanish National Team, tiki taka has become the way the game, short-short-short is the way every team wants to play. Keep the ball on the ground, and try to walk it into the net, or find the perfect diagonal pass to crack open a defense.

The 1970's/1980's stereotypical (think of the slaughtering Big Sam takes for his tactics) british long ball hung around longer in the US than it has in other leagues, and I for one don't mind that. The short-short-long game has been pushed out of the game, even at youth level.

What seems to be missed by most fans and managers, is that Barcelona/Spain play the Dutch way, but the old Dutch system had the short-short-long aspect to their game as well, with De Boar opening up the field with a long ball to Bergkamp when the defense tried pressing the ball. Hell, even Barca employs it on a rare occasion where Xavi can ping a 55 yard ball on a dime as Dani Alves or Jordi Alba are bombing down the wing on the overlap into space.

David Beckham was a master of switching play quickly from one wing to the other, or 30-40-50 yards down field, unlocking defenses for a variety of players over the years for Manchester United, Real Madrid, and LA Galaxy. The way he could take his team from defense to attack in a matter of seconds may have been his greatest attribute.

While most teams in MLS have made the switch the rest of the world has been making over the past 6 years or so, Dominic Kinnear in Houston has been sticking with traditional short-short-long system. You play a short pass, then another short pass, attempting to bring defenders in to create space, allowing for a longer pass, which when accurate, can unlock a defense.

Teams which still play the fundamental style need to be well drilled. The long pass which can unlock a defense, can also leave you open to a counter attack if it is mishit, or just if possession is lost. Kids these days are not taught how to perfectly place a ball like Michel Platini from 40 yards, or David Beckham, or Emmanuel Petit.

While the youngest of children should be drilled in the style of playing defense by holding possession, and the skill of the short-short-short game, teenagers should be taught the art of the long ball. Not as an always tactic, but as an alternative. A way to unlock a defense. A way to change play from one side of the pitch to the other. Its a dying art that very few players are still capable of, especially in MLS.

So for sticking to a fundamental style, not jumping on the latest trend, and for being successful year in and year out all the same, I have to say, thank god for Dominic Kinnear.




Thanks for reading the latest edition, and remember, MLS Matters.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

MLS Season Preview 2014

Welcome to my sixth annual MLS season preview. Its amazing how the league has grown and changed over the years, and this season could be the best yet for MLS.

For those not familiar with my season previews, I take a look at the major comings and goings with each MLS team, where they finished last season, and where I see them finishing this season. As you may know if you follow MLS, it may be the most difficult league in the world to predict. In just one season a club can go from worst to first, or first to worst. Mid season transfer can shake up the standings, and the World Cup this season adds another dimension to the predicting, but I will give you the most reasoned preview of which I am capable, and I hope you enjoy it.


Chicago Fire... 2013 Finish: 6th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 finish: 6th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: D/M: Lovel Palmer, D: Jhon Kennedy Hurtado, D: Patrick Ianni, M: Benji Joya, D: Greg Cochrane, M: Matt Watson

OUT: M: Arvelo Rios, M: Joel Lindpere, F: Maicon Santos, D: Wells Thompson, D: Jalil Anibaba, D: Austin Berry, F: Frederico Puppo, M: Yazid Atouba

New manager Frank Yallop has already made some interesting changes in his short time with Chicago, making the team more solid defensively, but the story of Chicago's 2013 season was the out of his skin form of forward Mike Magee. When predicting a finish for 2014, I took into account the fact that Chicago should be more solid defensively, allowing fewer goals, but also acknowledging that the chances of Magee having a career year yet again are up in the air. If Magee finds his scoring boots again this season, expect Chicago to be fighting for playoff positioning, reaching as high as third in the East, but should the team fail to gel under Yallop in his first season controlling not only the first team but player personnel decisions, or Magee returning to the form of his first few MLS seasons, Chicago could fall as low as 7th or 8th in the conference.



Chivas USA... 2013 Finish: 9th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 8th in the Western Conference.

IN: M: Mauro Rosales, D: Andrew Jean-Baptiste, F: Adolfo Bautista, F: Eric Zavaleta (loan from Seattle), M: Agustin Pelletieri

OUT: F: Tristan Bowen, D: Jorge Villafana, M: Gabriel Farfan, F: Bryan De La Fuente, D: Steve Purdy

The story of Chivas' 2013 campaign was one of a poor team, racism, and abysmal attendance. The story of 2014 looks to be much brighter, if not just as muddled. MLS itself stepped in to purchase Chivas USA last month, keeping the name, manager, and stadium, with an eye to securing a new LA based ownership group which will provide a rebranding, as well as a new stadium in LA itself, preferably at some point this season.

Wilmer Cabrera has been brought in as manager, as well as an aging Rosales and Bautista. While Chivas should still struggle this season to get results, they should be one of the more interesting teams in MLS, and slightly improved. Few doubt that Cabrera has what it takes to manage in MLS, and the new ownership saga seems to be ripe for exploration as the season progresses.



Colorado Rapids... 2013 Finish: 5th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 9th in the Western Conference.

IN: D/M: Marc Burch, M: Marvin Chavez, M: Marlon Hairston

OUT: F: Atiba Harris, M: Tony Cascio (loan to Houston), M: Hendry Thomas, D: Kory Kindle (retired after one season)

After a somewhat surprising finish with a young core in 2013, Colorado look to push on in 2014. The major issues seem to be, can the youth continue to mature, and will they find a manager? In a very short span of time this off season Colorado lost an assistant coach and then their up and coming manager, leaving them in limbo as the season begins.

With so much disarray, I have to predict a poor finish for the Rapids. Add to the mix an owner more concerned with his NFL and EPL teams, and the uncertain continued growth of the Dillons, Serna and Powers, the entire bottom half of the West seems plausible for the Rapids, but my gut says they could see themselves fall behind even lowly Chivas USA.



Columbus Crew... 2013 Finish: 8th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 9th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: GK: Brad Stuver, M: Hector Jimenez, D: Michael Parkhurst, M: Daniel Paladini

OUT: M: Eddie Gavin, D: Drew Beckie, D: Chad Marshall, GK: Andy Gruenbaum, M: Konrad Warzycha

With a new ownership group in place for its first full season (replacing the Hunt family), and a club badge rebranding in the future, it would be easy to see things looking up for the Crew. Throw in former MLS player Gregg Burhalter as manager, sort of a disciple from the Bruce Arena coaching tree, and savvy additions, and a case could be made for Columbus finishing as high as 5th, but the questions are large enough for me to predict them sitting near the bottom of the conference.

One interesting thing to look for throughout the season will be Berhalter's tactical decisions. MLS, mainly known as a 4-4-2 league over the years, seems to be making a switch to 4-3-3. Berhalter, not to be out tweaked, has dabbled using 3 men at the back this preseason. Parkhurst is the perfect MLS player for a 3 back system, but in many games the formation could easily lead to Columbus getting over run with the wrong players to not only partner Parkhurst, but to big lung it up and down the wings all match long. When and where Berhalter tries this wrinkle will tell us a lot about Berhalter as a manager, and the changes they may need to make in the summer transfer window.



DC United... 2013 Finish: 10th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 8th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: M: Davy Arnaud, D: Sean Franklin, D: Bobby Boswell, F: Conor Doyle, F: Eddie Johnson, F: Fabian Espindola, D: Jeff Parke, M: Alex Caskey

OUT: F: Carlos Ruiz, F: Lionard Pajoy, M: Dwayne De Rosario, D: James Riley, M: John Thorrington, D: Dejan Jakovic, F: Casey Townsend, M: Collin Martin

The argument could be made that no one had a better offseason than DC. Adding a USMNT forward as a designated player in Eddie Johnson, an aging but dangerous proven scorer in Espindola, a solid vet in Arnaud, as well as 3 veteran rocks in defense with Franklin, Boswell, and Parke, I was almost tempted to believe that last seasons rock bottom finish and season of abject misery was a blip, and the playoff team of 2012 is the norm under manager Ben Olsen. While I believe they will be greatly improved, I'm not sold on the team being solidified in time to get the early results they will need to put things in motion for a playoff run. Johnson, even if he wants to show Seattle what they are missing just because of money, he will be away this summer because of the World Cup, which could cause the team to falter should the US be away for longer than just the group stage.



FC Dallas... 2013 Finish: 8th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 5th in the Western Conference.

IN: M: Adam Moffat, M: Hendry Thomas, F: Andres Escobar, F: David Texeira

OUT: M: David Ferreira, M: Jackson, F: Kenny Cooper, M: Bobby Warshaw, F: Eric Hassli

Oscar Pareja left Colorado this winter to go back "home", and this could be the start of something special in Dallas. The additions of Moffat and Thomas in the midfield could be exactly what Dallas needed to take an underperforming side last season and really put it all together. Thomas in particular could be one of the moves of the offseason, protecting the defense and distributing through the middle, making it all work in ways it hasn't since Daniel Hernandez was shown the door. Look for Dallas to get off to a hot start, and the teams pace to wear the opposition out during the long hot summer. You'll enjoy watching FC Dallas.



Houston Dynamo... 2013 Finish: 4th in the Eastern Conference. 2014 Predicted Finish: 4th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: D: A.J. Cochran, D: David Horst, M: Tony Cascio

OUT: F: Brian Ching, D: Bobby Boswell, F: Callen Carr

Other than the loss of solid veteran Bobby Boswell, it was a quite offseason in Houston. While I could make a case for Houston falling to 7th or 8th in the league, the Dominic Kinnear factor as well as Houston's legacy as a team that grinds it out all season long has me keeping them in the playoffs this season. Typical boring Houston.



LA Galaxy... 2013 Finish: 3rd in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 2nd in the Western Conference.

IN: M: Baggio Husidic, F: Samuel, F: Rob Friend, D: James Riley

OUT: M: Colin Clark, D: Sean Franklin, M: Michael Stephens, GK: Carlo Cudicini, M: Pablo Mastroeni, F: Jose Villarreal, D: Bryan Gaul, D: Greg Cochrane

Bruce Arena is the king of the tweak, making minor changes year after year while keeping his team among the best in the league. This seasons tweak, adding a large target man (2 actually) for Robbie Keane to play off of, while sliding Landon Donovan back into the midfield. The main loss, Sean Franklin, was replaced by James Riley, making it a wash.

The question will be how LA handles the World Cup with Landon Donovan and Omar Gonzalez being gone, and only that keeps me from placing them as Western Conference winners. If either Samuel or Friend hits the ground running, LA could be in for a dominating season, and Robbie Keane could be headed toward an MVP season.



Montreal Impact... 2013 Finish: 5th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 10th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: D/M: Eric Miller, D: Heath Pearce

OUT: D: Allesandro Nesta, M: Paolo DelPiccolo, M: Maximilliano Rodriguez, M: Davy Arnaud, D: Zack Valentin

Frank Kloppas has joined Montreal this season as manager, after a mediocre spell in charge of the Chicago Fire. With no major additions to coincide with veteran departures of a mixed nature, nothing about Montreal has me excited for the upcoming season. I don't know who they are, nor do I trust Kloppas to do anything with them. Though they finished just in the playoff race last season, in a wide open battle from 3rd to 10th in the East, my gut says Montreal sink to the bottom.



New England Revolution... 2013 Finish: 3rd in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 5th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: M: Paolo DelPiccolo, M/F: Steve Neumann, F: Patrick Mullins, F: Teal Bunbury, M: Diego Kobayashi

OUT: F: Chad Barrett, D: Tyler Polak, GK: Matt Reis, F: Juan Agudelo, M: Juan Toja

Last season New England took a young squad with a young manager, had fun playing, and took it all the way to the 3rd seed in the East. This season I expect much of the same. A major loss will be Juan Agudelo heading to Europe, but the addition of Teal Bunbury could be just what the doctor, or in this case Jay Heaps, ordered. Bunbury has yet to prove himself, but will finally be given the chance to be the main man for a club, and the positive atmosphere could be just the thing he needs. Throw in 2 of the top 10 players in this years draft and New England is looking good.

The worry of course is a second season syndrome setting in with Heaps and the youngsters of the Revolution. Have other clubs figured them out? To me, the deciding factor in New England making the playoffs could be that they wont be losing anyone to the World Cup.



New York Red Bulls... 2013 Finish: 1st in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 2nd in the Eastern Conference.

IN: M: Bobby Convey, D: Richard Eckersley

OUT: GK: Kevin Hartman, D: Brandon Barklage, D: Heath Pearce, F: Fabian Espindola, D: Markus Holgersson

New York had a relatively quite offseason with no real major losses and no major additions. Eckersley could prove that he is better than a few seasons in the hell that was TFC have shown, and Convey is always serviceable. For the first time since Bob Bradley's Metro Star days, New York decided team chemistry is more important than adding a "name".

Tim Cahill will miss time for the World Cup, and Theirry Henry, in his final contracted season with the club, isn't getting any younger. Already Henry is being pulled from New York's opening match due to the issue of a turf field, which Henry refuses to play on unless it is Portland. While I believe the Red bulls will be in the Supporters Shield race until the season ends, these issues will see them finishing 2nd to me. Then again, who knows what name could enter the fray post World Cup.



Philadelphia Union... 2013 Finish: 7th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 3rd in the Eastern Conference.

IN: GK: Andre Blake, M: Maurice Edu, D: Austin Berry, M: Vincent Nogueira

OUT: M/F: Kleberson, D: Chris Albright, M: Michael Farfan, D: Jeff Parke

Philly made two superb acquisitions in Edu and Berry, with Blake, the best keeper in the MLS Super Draft, still needing MLS seasoning before stepping in to take McMath's spot as Philly's #1. Farfan and Parke will be losses, but as the team matures one more season together, Philly looks destined to put it all together and make a run. Every year I pick a team to surprise everyone with their strong finishing position, and this year I feel it is the Union. Look for Philadelphia to be more defensively sound this season, and Jack McInerney to have a season similar to his start of last year. Watch the flanks for Philly this season.



Portland Timbers... 2013 Finish: 1st in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 1st in the Western Conference.

IN: D: Jorge Villafana, M: Steve Zakuani, F: Gaston Fernandez, D: Norberto Paparatto

OUT: D: David Horst, D: Dylan Tucker-Gagnes, F: Ryan Johnson, D: Andrew Jean-Baptiste, M: Sal Zizzo, F: Sebastian Rincon, F: Jose Valencia, D: Mikael Silvestre

This could be the year of Darlington Nagbe. If Steve Zakuani gets fit and back in form, Portland becomes even faster and more dangerous. Should Fernandez hit the ground running with the help of hi countryman Diego Valeri, they may be unstoppable. As long as Will Johnson stays fit, Portland has the inside track to the Supporters Shield. The most fun team to watch as well as the hipster choice thanks to Caleb Porter and the Timbers Army, Porterball 2.0 could be even better than version 1.



Real Salt Lake... 2013 Finish: 2nd in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 3rd in the Western Conference.

IN:

OUT: GK: Josh Saunders, D/M: Lovel Palmer

RSL has been one of the most consistent teams the past several years, and the fact that they made no major changes should see that trend continue. The one major worry is that they are now under a new manager in Jeff Cassar. Much of the credit RSL has received in recent years has been laid at the feet of Jason Kreis. If RSL should falter this season, the legend of Kreis will only grow prior to his debut with NYCFC in 2015.



San Jose Earthquakes... 2013 Finish: 6th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 7th in the Western Conference.

IN: F: Atiba Harris, F: Billy Schuler, D: Brandon Barklage

OUT: M: Ramiro Corrales, M: Mehdi Ballouchy, D: Justin Morrow, M: Marvin Chavez, D: Steven Beitashour

On paper, the Quakes have a team more than good enough to reach the playoffs in 2014. But games are not played on paper. The Quakes lost most of their depth this offseason, meaning any extended injury or rash of injuries/suspensions could lead to a tumble down the table. I feel this season San Jose will once again fall just short of making the playoffs.



Seattle Sounders FC... 2013 Finish: 4th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 4th in the Western Conference.

IN: GK: Stefan Frei, F: Tristan Bowen, D: Chad Marshall, F: Kenny Cooper, F: Corey Hertzog, F: Chad Barrett, D: Jalil Anibaba, M: Marco Pappa

OUT: GK: Michael Gspurning, D: Marc Burch, M: Blair Gavin, F: Steve Zakuani, M: Mauro Rosales, M: Adam moffat, F: Eddie Johnson, D: Jhon Kennedy Hurtado, D: Patrick Ianni, F: Eric Zaveleta, M: Alex Caskey

Sigi Schmidt is in the final season of his contract with the Sounders. Eddie Johnson as well as a host of veteran players were shown the door. In return they gained a quality defender in Marshall, a mid who completely lost form during a year away from MLS in Pappa, and a handful of forwards who are either past prime or haven't gotten there yet, and maybe never will.

It would be easy to call Seattle the losers of the MLS offseason, because no one seems to be able to tell me what is going on in Seattle, what the plan is if it does exist. But with Cooper said to be looking better than he has since his brief Red Bulls spell, Marshall ready to marshall the back line, and Pappa being a possible key cog in the mid, should everything go exactly right for Seattle, they will be figting for the top of the West. And yet, should Clint Dempsey fail to reach form, or Obafemi Martins fail to ever achieve any, it is also plausible that by the time the World Cup arrives, Sigi could be unemployed.



Sporting Kansas City... 2013 Finish: 2nd in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 1st in the Eastern Conference.

IN: M: Sal Zizzo, GK: Andy Gruenbaum

OUT: GK: Jimmy Nielsen, F: Teal Bunbury

When you walk away from the 2013 season as MLS Cup champions, you don't need to make many changes to your team, and KC didn't. Can they survive with a new keeper in front of the leagues most consistent defense? Can they repeat as champions? Will CONCACAF Champions League slow them down? Will the hunt for an MLS Cup/US Open Cup double be too much for a team that will be worn thin should the US make it past the group stage at the World Cup?

The questions in regards to KC are many, but as their positioning last year and eventual Cup win tell us, the questions could very well come with positive answers. Like with most teams, as long as the key players stay fit, KC could be fighting on all fronts, sticking in the Supporters Shield race until the bitter end.



Toronto FC... 2013 Finish: 9th in the Eastern Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 7th in the Eastern Conference.

IN: M: Jackson, F: Gilberto, D: Justin Morrow, M: Dwayne De Rosario, F: Jermain Defoe, M: Michael Bradley, D: Bradley Orr, GK: Julio Cesar

OUT: F: Robert Earnshaw, F: Justin Braun, F: Danny Koevermans, GK: Stefan Frei, M: Bobby Convey, D: Richard Eckersley, M: Mattias Laba, M: Reggie Lambe

Where to begin with Toronto FC and the overhaul that has begun? Their best player last season, Mattias Laba, is now gone, but Michael Bradley now anchors the midfield. They added proven EPL goal scorer Defoe to the front line, as well as Gilberto, who came into training camp over weight and out of shape. Elder statesman De Rosario came back to Toronto against all odds, with Brasilian #1 Julio Cesar joining from the English Championship.

All signs would point to Toronto FC climbing the table, solidifying a playoff spot, and even challenging for the Supporters Shield. And yet the game doesn't always work that way. There are still many holes in the Toronto squad to be filled in during the coming seasons, and in its current state, the team seem to be very reliant on Michael Bradley. It would be easy to say as Bradley goes, so goes TFC, but realistically even a brilliant season from Bradley and the TFC new boys should see them fall a few points short of the playoff places in a heavily muddled Eastern Conference.



Vancouver Whitecaps FC... 2013 Finish: 7th in the Western Conference. Predicted 2014 Finish: 6th in the Western Conference.

IN: D: Christian Dean, M: Mehdi Ballouchy, D: Steven Beitashour, M: Matias Laba, M/F: Sebastian Fernandez, M/F: Nicolas Mezquida

OUT: D: Lee Young-Pyo, GK: Joe Cannon, M: Daigo Kobayashi, F: Corey Hertzog

Welshman Carl Robinson takes over Vancouver as they continue to take steps forward. The addition of the fantastic Laba should help secure the back while also helping Vancouver gain and keep possession. Ballouchy and Beitashour should also help in that regard. I expect the Whitecaps to be marginally improved and in position most of the season in a dog fight for the final playoff places. Much will ride on Robinson's vision and tactical decision making.


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As with every season, the summer transfer window can shake things up in positive and negative ways for every team, so while some of my predictions will make me seem a visionary, others will make me seem rather thick. Who knows, maybe both are true? I will close with a few other predictions for the upcoming season...

Supporters Shield Winner: Sporting Kansas City

Potential League MVP: Robbie Keane (LA Galaxy), Will Johnson (Portland Timbers), Tim Cahill (NY Red Bulls)

Player To Watch: Matias Laba (Vancouver), Michael Bradley (Toronto), Darlington Nagbe (Portland), Hendry Thomas (Dallas), Eddie Johnson (DC)

Rookie Of The Year: Difficult choice this season as so few rookies look likely to get steady starting minutes.



Well, that was it, season preview #6. I hope you learned something, were aggravated by something, or inspired to watch a club you hadn't really paid attention to before, or watch an old face in a new place.

Until next time, remember, MLS Matters.