us soccer, youth soccer

U.S. Club Soccer forum: Caligiuri, Gans punch sacred cows — and who should drop out?

The first U.S. Soccer presidential forum, hosted by GotSoccer, was a bit like a League of Women Voters political gathering, designed to cover a broad range of topics.

The second forum was hosted by and for — and to some extent, about — US Club Soccer. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that. Their votes carry a lot of weight in this election. They certainly have the clout to bring in all these candidates for a discussion, and they provided a valuable public service by putting the audio online. (The photo in that link confirms what we hear around the 51-minute mark — someone opening a can of Coke.) And there’s certainly nothing wrong with a conversation focused on youth soccer, as much as some people want to hear about the national teams, promotion/relegation and so forth.

Five candidates were there. Carlos Cordeiro was not, and we’ll get to him. Paul Lapointe was not, and that’s a bit contentious. There are two sides to this story. Lapointe told his on Twitter. US Club told me by phone. Here’s how it breaks down:

Start with the press release: “Invited were announced candidates that had personally contacted US Club Soccer to initiate a discussion about U.S. Soccer and their respective candidacies.”

Lapointe insists that he did.

The response I received: All Lapointe sent us was a form letter.

I’ve seen what Lapointe sent. It appears to be a form letter addressed to “Dear USA member,” with bio and platform info attached. So how much should he be penalized for not personalizing that introduction?

US Club did issue a late invitation — a few hours before the forum — for Lapointe to join in. He could not do so on such short notice. And frankly, it may not have been worth his while. He’s not going to be getting a nomination letter from US Club, which had nominated someone but then rescinded that nomination under the late addition to the election procedures that allows an organization to rescind its nomination and yes, I’m getting a headache writing this sentence.

(Incidentally, I obtained a list of organizations that have nominated someone earlier this week. I was working toward publishing it today, and then a new list was posted. Multiple organizations did indeed rescind nominations before the deadline. Maybe later this week, I can get that list posted, but it doesn’t say who nominated whom.)

In any case, he has agreed to be on the RSD podcast in the very near future, so if you want to hear him talk about the issues, come back right here next week. As I said earlier today — he might not be the frontrunner, but he deserves to be heard.

In fact, let’s ask …

Beyond the dispute over times and emails is a larger, more pertinent question: What should an organization demand of USSF candidates? I mentioned on Twitter that US Club came across as if they were expecting candidates to “kiss their ring.” Maybe that’s too harsh. A primary purpose of this forum was to determine how US Club will cast its votes. If I’m advising US Club from a PR point of view, I tell them to invite everyone just to avoid coming across as arrogant — a look everyone wants to avoid when the primary issue in this election is whether U.S. Soccer itself is prone to hubris. But I might be more sensitive to such things than most.

So anyway, what happened at the forum?

If you’ve been following this election closely (or if you’ve listened to the RSD podcast interviews with Kyle Martino, Mike Winograd and Steve Gans — more interviews are on the way), you’ve heard most of this before. All of the candidates think U.S. Soccer has been too heavy-handed and too unresponsive to its members. They have their own ways of saying it — Winograd says USSF shouldn’t be dictating things from Chicago, to which Eric Wynalda amiably retorted that it’s actually from an apartment in New York (where incumbent Sunil Gulati lives).

And all the candidates agree coaching education is far too expensive. Martino pointed out the A and B licenses are only offered at a few specific sites, so coaches have to pay for travel as well.

This forum said little specifically about women’s soccer aside from Winograd’s point that using comparative revenues to justify unequal pay for the MNT and WNT is a misreading of U.S. Soccer’s mission, but we need to remember something here — when we’re talking about youth soccer, we are talking about women’s soccer. A lot of the issues — access, diversity, costs, etc. — are the same for boys and girls. Not all of them, of course, and Paul Caligiuri noted the absence of girls from the Development Academy for its first decade.

But is the DA a good thing? This is where Caligiuri stood out, pointing to the U.S. men’s record before and after the formation of the DA. Spoiler alert — it was better before the DA, back when the USA qualified for World Cups and Olympics. Meanwhile, the U.S. women have been doing OK without a DA. He wants to reorganize to bring the DA, ODP and id2 together. ODP is the old-school player ID-and-training system; id2 is US Club’s answer.

So that’s one hot take. Another came from Gans, who lamented the fact that many states (including his — Massachusetts — and mine — Virginia) now have two State Cups. That is, of course, a result of US Club Soccer starting its own. You have to wonder if the US Club members will take kindly to such a statement or whether it’ll be like my interview for a college scholarship, in which I told a room full of stock brokers I thought Selective Service was unconstitutional. (No, I didn’t get the scholarship.)

Meanwhile, Cordeiro’s absence is being played off as no big deal. I’m not sure that’s right. We’ve had two forums, and he has missed both of them. That might be understandable for Gans and Winograd, who have jobs and shouldn’t be expected to pop up at a random site, especially on a weekday. But Cordeiro’s retired. And if he doesn’t have time for these forums, perhaps he doesn’t have time to be president. (He is, like every other candidate, invited to appear on the podcast.)

And there’s one more candidate who should announce, immediately, that he is not running.

He’s Sunil Gulati.

It’s not about Gulati’s record at this point or whether he’s the right man to continue to serve at this pivotal time. He had every right to make the case.

But now it’s simply too late. Delaying his announcement has left many organizations in limbo as they decide what to do with this newfound power to nominate a candidate. (Previous elections took nominations from the floor of the meeting. Everything about this election is new.)

And while he has been absent, the call for change has gained momentum. It’s a polite call for change, with many kind words about what Gulati has done to help turn around U.S. Soccer from a small federation in red ink to a giant organization awash in sponsorships and infrastructure investments. But it’s loud and clear. The time to stop it has long since passed.

So which candidate will lead that change? I don’t know. It’s going to take a lot more discussion to discern the right choice. Then we’ll see if the voters agree.

 

 

 

 

 

podcast, pro soccer, us soccer

RSD20: Mediating the NASL/USSF suit with Neil Morris

Neil Morris covers his local teams — North Carolina FC and the North Carolina Courage — for WRAL. His work includes a terrific podcast, the Inverted Triangle. In his day job, he’s an attorney and mediator.

So why not combine his areas of expertise and try to mediate the NASL/USSF lawsuit? We gave it a whirl, with Neil playing the role of mediator and your host flipping between the roles of NASL and USSF advocates.

The conversation starts around the 8:45 mark. We quickly explain what’s going on in the real world with the lawsuit, and then Neil explains the mediation process.

I present a hypothetical NASL offer, prompted by Neil’s helpful questions and prodding, around the 25-minute mark. (Highlights: Cosmos owner on the USSF Board, drop divisional sanctioning OR give us D2 for a few years.) I give a hypothetical USSF counter at 43:45. We spend the last half-hour assessing our progress — some promising ideas, but some roadblocks that even the most reasonable people may have difficulty eliminating. Uh oh.

us soccer

Whose nomination is it, anyway?

As with many aspects of the U.S. Soccer presidential election, the nomination process is clearly spelled out, except where it’s not.

The Election Procedures say this:

ussf-noms

(Note that this does NOT include the deadline to rescind a nomination, which is Nov. 27. That’s today. Or yesterday, depending on when you read this.)

We’re looking at 1.2 here to see who can nominate a candidate. The “Athlete members of the Board of Directors” category is simple: It’s Chris Ahrens, Carlos Bocanegra and Angela Hucles.

Who’s an Organization Member? Let’s hit the bylaws …

org-member

So Life Members and Individual Sustaining Members aren’t named as potential nominators. Also scratch (C) Indoor Professional League — the Major Arena Soccer League isn’t affiliated.

Let’s check the rest against the definitions in the bylaws and then see if we can figure out who qualifies under which category. All in alphabetical order.

This is where I’m going to ask for some crowd-sourcing help. A lot of the sites are unclear. The USSF site mentions “Affiliates” without a precise breakdown. 

(A) Associate: “an organization formed to advance a particular aspect of soccer, but not responsible for recruiting, training, fielding and funding of soccer players.”

  • United Soccer Coaches? (Formerly NSCAA)
  • U.S. Soccer Foundation?

(B) Disabled Service Organization: “an organization formed with the primary goal of advancing and improving soccer for disabled individuals.” I’m completely guessing that the following affiliates are in this category:

  • American Amputee Soccer Association
  • U.S. Power Soccer
  • U.S. Deaf Soccer

(D) National Affiliate: “an amateur sports organization that conducts soccer programs in which players compete in at least 26 states of the United States.”

  • SAY Soccer (100,000 youth players) is on the Youth Council.

(E) National Association: Basically, a BIG National Affiliate (1,000 players in each of at least 26 states, 200,000 players total) and member of the Youth or Adult Council.

  • U.S. Adult Soccer
  • U.S. Youth Soccer (3 million players)
  • U.S. Club Soccer (verified National Association)
  • AYSO (500,000 players)

(F) Other Affiliate. Amateur, competes in at least four states but not 26 (because that would be “National”) and not a member of the Youth or Adult Council.

  • U.S. Armed Forces Sports Council?
  • U.S. Futsal? (There was some back-and-forth in the Board minutes over the course of a couple of years about this.)
  • U.S. Specialty Sports Association?

(G) Professional League. That one’s easy. Four.

  • MLS
  • NASL
  • NWSL
  • USL

(H) State Association: “the administrative body within a territory determined by the National Council to carry out the Federation’s programs for amateur youth or amateur adult players, or both.” There are at least 95 of these. I’m hedging because I didn’t find sites for a lot of the adult associations.

Here’s a quick spreadsheet attempt:
WisconsinState – Youthhttp://www.wiyouthsoccer.com/

ORG/STATE ORG TYPE SITE
U.S. Soccer Foundation Associate? http://www.ussoccerfoundation.org/
United Soccer Coaches Associate? https://unitedsoccercoaches.org/
American Amputee SA Disabled Service http://www.ampsoccer.org/
U.S. Deaf Soccer Disabled Service http://www.usdeafsoccer.com/
U.S. Power Soccer Disabled Service http://www.powersoccerusa.net/
SAY National Affiliate http://www.saysoccer.org/
AYSO National Association http://www.ayso.org/
US Club Soccer National Association http://www.usclubsoccer.org/
US Youth Soccer National Association http://www.usyouthsoccer.org/
USASA National Association http://www.usasa.com/
U.S. Futsal Other Affiliate? http://www.futsal.com/index.php/home
U.S. Specialty Sports Other Affiliate? http://usssasoccer.com/
US Armed Forces SC Other Affiliate? http://armedforcessports.com/
MLS Pro https://www.mlssoccer.com/
NASL Pro http://www.nasl.com/
NWSL Pro http://www.nwslsoccer.com/
USL Pro http://www.uslsoccer.com/
Alaska State – Adult http://www.aasa-alaska.com/
Arizona State – Adult Site?
California – North State – Adult http://www.csan.net/
Colorado State – Adult http://www.wearecoloradosoccer.com/
Connecticut State – Adult http://www.cssasoccer.com/
Delaware State – Adult Site?
Florida State – Adult http://www.floridastatesoccer.com/
Hawaii State – Adult http://www.hawaiisoccerassociation.com/
Idaho State – Adult http://www.idahostatesoccer.com/
Illinois State – Adult http://www.illinoissoccer.org/
Kansas State – Adult http://www.kansassoccer.com/
Kentucky State – Adult Site?
Maine State – Adult Not sure this one exists – joint association?
Maryland State – Adult http://marylandsoccer.com/
Massachusetts State – Adult http://www.mass-soccer.org/
Michigan State – Adult http://www.misoccer.net/
Minnesota State – Adult http://www.mnsoccer.org/
Mississippi State – Adult http://www.mississippisoccer.org/
Missouri State – Adult Site?
Montana State – Adult Site?
Nebraska State – Adult http://www.nebraskastatesoccer.org/
Nevada State – Adult Site?
New Jersey State – Adult http://www.soccernjsa.com/
New Mexico State – Adult http://www.nmssa.com/
New York – East State – Adult http://www.enyssa.com/
New York – West State – Adult http://www.wnysasoccer.org/
North Carolina State – Adult http://www.ncasasoccer.org/
Ohio – North State – Adult Site?
Ohio – South State – Adult http://www.soasa.com/
Oregon State – Adult http://www.oregonadultsoccer.com/
Pennsylvania – East State – Adult http://www.eastpasa.wix.com/eastpasa
Rhode Island State – Adult http://www.risa.org/
South Carolina State – Adult http://www.scamateursoccer.org/
South Dakota State – Adult http://www.sdadultsoccer.com/
Tennessee State – Adult http://www.tnsoccer.org/
Texas – South State – Adult http://www.tssas.com/
Utah State – Adult http://www.utahsoccer.org/
Vermont State – Adult http://www.vermontamateursoccer.com/vssa
Virginia (DC) State – Adult http://www.mdcvsasoccer.org/
Washington State – Adult http://www.wssa.org/
Wisconsin State – Adult http://www.wisoccerleagues.com/
Wyoming State – Adult Site?
Alabama (combined) State – Joint http://www.alsoccer.org/
Arkansas (combined) State – Joint http://www.arkansassoccer.org/?q=leagues/adult
Cal – South (combined) State – Joint http://www.calsouth.com/
Georgia (combined) State – Joint http://www.georgiasoccer.org/
Indiana (combined) State – Joint http://www.soccerindiana.org/
Iowa (combined) State – Joint http://www.iowasoccer.org/
Louisiana (combined) State – Joint http://www.playlouisianasoccer.org/
New Hamp (combined) State – Joint http://www.soccernh.org/
North Dakota (combined) State – Joint http://www.northdakotasoccer.org/
Oklahoma (combined) State – Joint http://www.oksoccer.com/
Penn – West (combined) State – Joint http://www.pawest-soccer.org/
Texas – North (combined) State – Joint http://www.ntxsoccer.org/
West Virginia (combined) State – Joint http://www.wvsoccer.net/
Alaska State – Youth http://www.alaskayouthsoccer.org/home.php
Arizona State – Youth http://www.azyouthsoccer.org/default.aspx
California – North State – Youth http://www.calnorth.org/
Colorado State – Youth http://www.coloradosoccer.org/
Connecticut State – Youth http://www.cjsa.org/
Delaware State – Youth http://www.dysa.org/
Florida State – Youth http://www.fysa.com/
Hawaii State – Youth http://www.hawaiisoccer.com/
Idaho State – Youth http://www.idahoyouthsoccer.org/default.aspx
Illinois State – Youth http://illinoisyouthsoccer.org/
Kansas State – Youth http://www.kansasyouthsoccer.org/
Kentucky State – Youth http://www.kysoccer.net/
Maine State – Youth http://www.soccermaine.com/
Maryland State – Youth http://www.msysa.org/
Massachusetts State – Youth http://www.mayouthsoccer.org/
Michigan State – Youth http://www.michiganyouthsoccer.org/
Minnesota State – Youth http://www.mnyouthsoccer.org/
Mississippi State – Youth http://www.mississippisoccer.org/
Missouri State – Youth http://www.moyouthsoccer.org/
Montana State – Youth http://www.montanayouthsoccer.com/
Nebraska State – Youth http://www.nebraskastatesoccer.org/
Nevada State – Youth http://www.nevadayouthsoccer.org/
New Jersey State – Youth http://www.njyouthsoccer.com/
New Mexico State – Youth http://www.nmysa.net/
New York – East State – Youth http://www.enysoccer.com/
New York – West State – Youth http://www.nyswysa.org/
North Carolina State – Youth http://www.ncsoccer.org/
Ohio – North State – Youth http://www.ohionorthsoccer.org/
Ohio – South State – Youth http://www.osysa.com/
Oregon State – Youth http://www.oregonyouthsoccer.org/index.html
Pennsylvania – East State – Youth http://www.epysa.org/
Rhode Island State – Youth http://www.soccer-ri.com/
South Carolina State – Youth http://www.scysa.org/
South Dakota State – Youth http://www.southdakotasoccer.com/
Tennessee State – Youth http://www.tnsoccer.org/
Texas – South State – Youth http://www.stxsoccer.org/
Utah State – Youth http://www.utahyouthsoccer.net/default.aspx
Vermont State – Youth http://www.vermontsoccer.org/
Virginia (DC) State – Youth http://www.vysa.com/
Washington State – Youth http://www.washingtonyouthsoccer.org/
Wyoming State – Youth http://www.wyomingsoccer.com/

Again — if I’ve misclassified any organization, please speak now. If any of these organizations have no nominating power, please let me know. If you know something I don’t, I need to be in touch with you. It’s my job. Sort of.

pro soccer

What you say about pro/rel, you see, is what you say about society

The promotion/relegation debate has long been tainted by personal accusations. If you point out reasonable things that make it impractical, you’re accused of being a “shill” for MLS or U.S. Soccer. The people making such accusations — the PRZ (pro/rel zealots) — have been so divorced from reality that they make reasonable promotion/relegation talk very difficult.

We’ve turned a corner in the last few years. And with a gaggle of mostly reasonable U.S. Soccer presidential candidates expressing some willingness to explore pro/rel, we can honestly say it’s mainstream.

But the debate is still, unfortunately, not entirely grounded in reality. Or sanity. Or humanity.

Pro/rel is not the magic bullet for “pressure.” I’ve addressed this before in the post with Austin Powers and a clip from White Men Can’t Jump. Taking it further: Look at the players who were on the field in Trinidad:

  • Played in pro/rel leagues in Europe: Tim Howard, Michael Bradley, Christian Pulisic, Bobby Wood, Clint Dempsey
  • Played in pro/rel leagues and been involved in actual relegation battles: DeAndre Yedlin, Jozy Altidore, Benny Feilhaber
  • Played in Mexico’s sort-of pro/rel league: Omar Gonzalez, Jorge Villafana, Paul Arriola
  • Only played in MLS: Matt Besler, Darlington Nagbe, Kellyn Acosta

Pro/rel is not the magic bullet for youth development. Far from it. The notion that any club could make the Premier League doesn’t mean Cornwall has a bunch of Category 1 academies. The youth game isn’t even always tied to traditional clubs — or is Independent Football Academy climbing up through the National League system?

And in case you missed it — clubs that get relegated out of the pro ranks have a nasty habit of closing up their academies.

If you’ve found a lot of full-fledged clubs with academies outside the traditional four professional divisions in England, please let me know. After digging around for a while, I could still count the number of Category 3 academies below the Football League on one hand. Check out the spreadsheets.

Pro/rel DOES have some benefits. I covered that, too. But they’re benefits for supporters. (And neutrals. And data scientists.) Putting a larger goal such as “development” on it just falls apart under scrutiny.

You could also argue that pro/rel helps build a larger soccer culture. That’s fine.

Now let’s weigh it against this …

What do our feelings about pro/rel say about our feelings toward athletes and others?

I’ll raise my hand and say I’m hypersensitive about this. Ever since I saw Rollerball for my first Guardian piece, I’ve been a little queasy with the notion that athletes are exalted but ultimately expendable. No, we’re not carrying out de facto assassinations on a roller rink, but the tone of the conversation toward athletes (or coaches or sometimes just anyone who works for a sports organization) veers toward class bias. There is a substantial group that wants “hungry” athletes fed into sports academies (when they’d actually be far better off in a STEM program) so we can select the top 0.1% for professional riches and glory.

So when we talk about pro/rel — are we looking at it with a bit of sadism? Are we giving the old Roman thumbs-up or thumbs-down to a couple of gladiators?

The anger over the “World Cup losers’ NIT” tournament hints at the problem. I mentioned it might be fun. I’ve been told we don’t have fun in soccer. It’s as if people who cite the Bill Shankly quote about soccer being more important than life and death are unfamiliar with dry British wit.

The next post in this series will how promotion can help with youth development. And perhaps we can do limited relegation so clubs don’t toss aside their academies and stop paying players. Happy Thanksgiving.

 

us soccer

Should men’s and women’s national teams start playing “B” games?

Two bits of news, ICYMI:

  • CONCACAF will play along with the global effort to have a “Nations League,” a promotion/relegation competition that basically replaces friendly games.
  • The U.S. men played in Portugal with a bunch of young players, earning a 1-1 draw and stirring up a bit of optimism for the future.

Take the second part first because it applies to a long debate in women’s soccer. The U.S. women have long been accused of having a stale player pool, giving few opportunities for players to gain experience. (This topic was one of my first pieces for The Guardian.)

Things have changed a little bit. The new collective bargaining agreement isn’t public, but it’s apparent that some of the restrictions previous coaches faced in calling in new players have been eased.

Still, it’s hard to imagine a U.S. women’s team like the men’s team we saw in Portugal. Here’s a rough attempt to come up with such a roster. You’ll see the men’s players first, with their ages, clubs and number of caps (thank you, Soccer America), and then I’ll try to come up with their female analogues. Some of them are inexact (I really had to mix up specific midfield roles).

GK: Ethan Horvath (22, Club Brugge/BEL, 2). Jane Campbell (22, Houston, 2)

GK: Bill Hamid (26, FC Midtjylland/DEN, 3). Yes, two goalkeepers in one game. Hamid has just moved from D.C. United, where he came up through the academy.  Adrianna Franch (27, Portland, 0)

RB: DeAndre Yedlin (24, Newcastle United/ENG, 49). This is a tough one. Yedlin is well beyond the “prospect” stage, having already played in a World Cup. He’s not on the way out, like (don’t shoot the messenger) Ali Krieger. Let’s say Kelley O’Hara (29, Sky Blue, 104)

CB: Matt Miazga (22, Vitesse/NED, 4). Emily Sonnett (23, Portland, 12)

CB: John Brooks (24, Wolfsburg/GER, 33). Like Yedlin, he has already played in a World Cup, so this is a tough one. Since we went with an experienced right back, let’s take a less experienced center back who’s closer to Brooks’ age: Abby Dahlkemper (24, N.C. Courage, 13)

CB: Cameron Carter-Vickers (19, Sheffield United/ENG, 1). Tierna Davidson (19, Stanford, 0)

LB: Eric Lichaj (29, Nottingham Forest/ENG, 14). Jaelene Hinkle (24, N.C. Courage, 8)

LB: Jorge Villafana (28, Santos Laguna/MEX, 15). Lauren Barnes (28, Seattle, 0)

RM: Tyler Adams (18, New York Red Bulls, 1). Jaelin Howell (17, Real Colorado, 0)

DM: Danny Williams (28, Huddersfield Town/ENG, 23). Allie Long (30, Portland, 33)

LM: Kellyn Acosta (22, FC Dallas, 17). Lindsey Horan (23, Portland, 43)

LM: Lynden Gooch (21, Sunderland/ENG, 2). Christina Gibbons (22, Kansas … um … Utah?, 0)

AM: Weston McKennie (19, Schalke/GER, 1). Brianna Pinto (17, CASL Elite, 0)

AM: Alejandro Bedoya (30, Philadelphia, 66). Kristie Mewis (26, Houston, 15)

F: Juan Agudelo (24, New England, 27). Crystal Dunn (25, Chelsea/ENG, 57)

F: C.J. Sapong (28, Philadelphia, 3). Jessica McDonald (29, N.C. Courage, 1)

F: Dom Dwyer (27, Orlando, 4). Kealia Ohai (25, Houston, 3)

So that’s a WNT without Naeher, Sauerbrunn, Ertz, Lloyd, Morgan, Rapinoe, Heath, Leroux or Press. (Also, oddly, without Mallory Pugh or Andi Sullivan — I simply didn’t find the proper place for them, though I would fully expect to see them in a “youth movement” lineup.)

Would we like to see that? The U.S. women don’t play many friendlies like that. In fact, none.

But pretty soon, the U.S. men also might not have that chance. The Nations League may wipe out available slots for friendlies. Every game may count for something, so experiment at your own risk.

Incidentally, someone asked about a Nations League for women. Can you imagine the U.S. women going to play on a bumpy, overgrown field in Trinidad or the artificial turf in Saprissa? Those are the stadiums they roll out for men’s World Cup qualifiers — can you imagine where they might put a women’s Nations League game?

So how will the national teams develop players?

Perhaps it’s time to bring back an old idea — the national “B” team. The USA-Portugal game might be a great example, and if you can’t do it in a friendly ….

pro soccer, youth soccer

I have many questions …

… and not enough time to ask them of all the people who need to answer them.

I’ll try to pester people before Thanksgiving. But if anyone wants to go ahead and ask, go ahead.

MLS/COLUMBUS CREW 

  1. If Precourt takes his team or his ownership position or whatever you call it to Austin, then does Columbus immediately jump into the expansion fray as San Jose did when the Earthquakes moved? Columbus already has a stadium, so if they can raise the expansion fee, do they get a “new” Crew?
  2. Is MLS planning to do anything to appease angry fans across the country who are saying they’re less likely to support their local teams because a city can have a solid fan base and a stadium and still move? What assurances will you give them that you’re not just going to let their owners pack up and move somewhere?
  3. Did the Columbus powers-that-be really cut off future conversations, as PSV claimed? If not, why have we not heard a loud denunciation of that claim?
  4. Why should any municipality pledge money, even just for infrastructure, to build a stadium for an MLS club when that’s clearly not enough to guarantee the club’s future?

NWSL OWNERS 

  1. Why don’t you have a commissioner, eight months after Jeff Plush stepped down?

REFEREES

  1. When are you going to start calling more fouls, from the pro level down to Under-9, so that U.S. players will develop skills instead of just beating the crap out of each other?

MEDIA

  1. When are we going to quit exalting players who beat the crap out of each other?

U.S. SOCCER

  1. Are you working on a solution to the training compensation / solidarity payment issue that you think you would survive a court challenge from the MLS Players Union or whomever else, or are you waiting for the Court of Arbitration for Sport to weigh in?
  2. Why did the women’s national team have to play on bad turf in New Orleans?

FIFA 

  1. What in the world does “continuously” mean here? Shouldn’t citizenship be part of the criteria? And what’s up with efforts to update this?

fifa-nationality

U.S. SOCCER VOTERS 

  1. Why are you ducking my emails?

I’m sure there’s more, but let’s start with that.

pro soccer

Collated Twitter talk: Nov. 15

I’m not going to spend time on Twitter today because I’m going to try to … now, everyone, sit down and don’t be alarmed … report on soccer matters. I’m going to try to talk with people to see what’s on their minds and what’s happening. That sort of thing.

Speaking of which, listen to my dadgum podcast with Kyle Martino.

Again, please don’t be alarmed or offended.

Quick notes on conversations of this morning:

No, but I think FIFA would look dimly on USSF being tied up for years in court, and I would think (if Messrs. Bank, Holroyd and Turner disagree, I defer to them) MLS owners would bring quite a lawsuit if their way of doing business is changed by USSF fiat.

https://twitter.com/randomblackrain/status/930837320999358464

No one running for president is going to burn it all down. I’d be shocked if anyone tried to shut down the Development Academy, for example. Make big changes, sure. But burn it down? Not happening.

Re: pro/rel in general. I’m going to have an upcoming post suggesting pro/rel zealotry is driven by an inherent belief that athletes are subhuman. Maybe I’m still too affected by Rollerball. 

That said —  I still like my idea, complicated though it may be, to have a separate League and Cup season with modified pro/rel that minimizes risk and maximizes reward. And it occurred to me today — if people prefer to have two separate D1 leagues instead of a two-tier D1A and D1B, the structure I’m proposing still works.

Or maybe I’m just biased because I financially benefit from nothing but chaos.

I’ll check in with you fine folks later today.

podcast

RSD19: U.S. Soccer presidential candidate Kyle Martino

A vote for Kyle Martino is actually a vote for a network of people that he believes can solve the problems in U.S. Soccer. He’s going to bring them together in early December to flesh out a “progress plan” that he outlines on his site.

He’s already hard at work building this consensus, and this interview has a few glitches because he was on the run as we chatted. He had to run at one point to do a live interview, and the phone connection dropped as he hopped from train to train.

The former MLS player and current (though on leave) NBC analyst grasps the complexities of the U.S. Soccer presidency for which he’s running. Like a couple of other candidates, he’s out talking with youth and adult constituencies to find out what they need. He has mixed feelings about the incumbent, Sunil Gulati, whom Martino firmly believes has run his course as president but still has a lot to offer U.S. Soccer. He’s shocked to hear how other candidates talk about Gulati, pointing out that the next president will have to work “symbiotically” with him as a FIFA Council member and World Cup bid organizer. (That’s all between the 14- and 18-minute marks.)

We talk specifically about women’s soccer — in addition to our conversations about youth soccer, which is certainly not limited to boys — at the 13:30 mark and the 28:00 mark and possibly a few other places. I did not get around to asking about the NWSL — honestly, I haven’t thought of a question along those lines that I wouldn’t rather be asking NWSL owners.

pro soccer, youth soccer

Fact/reality-checking the GotSoccer U.S. Soccer presidential forum

No, I’m not going to fact-check every sentence. I’m relatively sure Paul Caligiuri and Eric Wynalda played in Germany.

I’m also not going to try to transcribe the whole thing, though I did find myself summing up pretty much everything. You can find all that at the bottom of this post. The summary of the summary — basically, the most extraordinary things I noticed — is at the top.

And a quick reminder: While transparency could be improved in many aspects of U.S. Soccer, there is a considerable amount of information on its governance page, including bylaws, the policy manual, and (part) of the election procedures.

So here are the surprising/dubious things, then the whole thing.

Disclaimer up front: While this is a fact/reality check steeped in appropriate journalistic skepticism, these people all seem like the sort of person we’d love to see involved with U.S. Soccer. Only one can be president, but I hope the others find a role.

SURPRISING/DUBIOUS THINGS

Paul Caligiuri tossed out the astounding estimate that more than 500,000 kids in Southern California are not part of U.S. Soccer because of pay-to-play. We know he’s not just talking about travel soccer because he suggests a possible solution of “Friday night soccer” pickup games. Seems staggering to suggest 500,000 kids are being missed by every program, particularly the hundreds of clubs with recreational programs that are cheap and usually offer financial aid.

The ever-popular promotion/relegation discussion drew some reasonable takes and some off-the-wall takes. Caligiuri somehow segued into youth futsal. Paul Lapointe suggested piloting pro/rel in top amateur leagues including his own, the UPSL, but most elite amateur leagues have had pro/rel for generations. (And my indoor league. I didn’t get those two championship T-shirts by winning the Upper Division.)

I have a belated follow-up for Mike Winograd about his plan to have a USSF training center in each state. How does this complement the requirement for each state association to have a director of coaching with an A license?

Several candidates imply U.S. Soccer isn’t doing things it most definitely is — overseeing futsal, hiring independent auditors and governance reviewers, etc.

THE WHOLE THING

Joe Cummings, himself a rather good candidate if he had so chosen, moderates the forum and kicks things off at the 11:15 mark of this video:

I’ll continue to give timestamps throughout, and I’ll give the order in which each candidate answers so you can go through and find specific comments. The format is formal, and candidates answer each question in a different, pre-assigned order. Each candidate gets two minutes for the intro and their answers to specific questions, then four minutes for a closing.

Take a moment to applaud GotSoccer and Cummings here — this is done very well.

My comments are in italic.

INTRO (13:30)

Cummings first explains the absentees: Carlos Cordeiro is at a CONCACAF meeting, Sunil Gulati (not yet announced his bid for re-election) is away on U.S. Soccer business (?!!!), and Kyle Martino had vacation plans before he announced his bid. (We’ll hear from Martino soon enough.)

Frankly, it seems clear that Gulati has no interest in appearing alongside other candidates. That might be why he has delayed announcing his intent to run for a final term under USSF’s new term-limit bylaws. He is appearing at functions as the USSF president, not as a candidate.

Or maybe he’s not running.

The order: Lapointe, Caligiuri, Gans, Wynalda, Winograd.

Noteworthy:

  • Caligiuri went rogue. The intros weren’t supposed to be about the issues, but that’s he discusses. He actually gives more of a personal intro in some of his answers. But he does state here that he was a USSF board member, which I’d forgotten because it wasn’t recent. He served from 2005 to 2007, during which time the board was reduced from 40 to 15. (That may seem sinister to some, but other sports federations have been doing the same thing under guidance/direction from the U.S. Olympic Committee.) 
  • Three candidates — Lapointe, Gans and Winograd — played professional indoor soccer at some point, a bit ironic given that the indoor game isn’t affiliated with USSF right now.

 

QUESTION 1: Actually two questions — why do you want to be president, and what’s your position on whether the president should be paid? (23:30)

Noteworthy:

  • Winograd, not for the first or last time, says he is not a “burn it all down” guy.
  • Caligiuri makes the first of many references to his DNA.
  • Gans twice says he has “graciously declined” to run for president in the past.
  • Most candidates don’t give direct answers on paying the president. Winograd says he wouldn’t want to be paid but thinks the next president (not him) should be paid to broaden the pool of qualified candidates. Wynalda sees an advantage to paying the president to make that person more accountable. Gans sees an issue with nonprofit law but doesn’t have time to explain it in full.

Fact/reality check:

Lapointe doesn’t care whether president is paid but thinks it should become a full-time position. This is an interesting point that deserves a bit more attention. One criticism of Sunil Gulati has been that he’s too involved with every phase of the game, and that he should let staff and other board members handle their jobs. Lapointe is going the other direction.

QUESTION 2: What are your thoughts on pay-to-play? (33:30)

Noteworthy:

  • There’s some discussion here of applying the USSF surplus, but Gans notes that an upcoming question covers that in more detail.

Fact/reality check, in order:

Caligiuri worries that pay-to-play excludes many players. He says “perhaps millions,” then says by his estimate, more than 500,000 kids in Southern California are not part of U.S. Soccer because of pay-to-play.  That’s an extraordinary claim. It doesn’t seem verifiable, and I wonder what he means by that. Are there really 500,000 kids who aren’t playing for USSF clubs at all, not even on the generally affordable rec level? He further confuses it by suggesting one answer could be “Friday night soccer” — basically, supervised pickup games. Does Southern California really have 500,000 kids who have no access to anything like this?

Wynalda is paying about $3,300 a year for his 8-year-old. He concludes that it’s too much. For his older daughter, farther up the ladder, he has to pay more. By the time it’s done, people pay more on soccer than they could possibly get back in a college scholarship. That’s certainly true. 

Winograd laments the fact that someone finishing up a college career has to spend $1,000 or so to get coaching licenses. Not sure which licenses he means here — the early licenses generally cost less (unless you have to travel), the late licenses generally cost more. Take “$1,000” as a very rough estimate of preliminary costs.

Lapointe says no one’s going to be able to tell independent clubs that they can no longer charge their players. We’ll rate that “true.” He then says he’s the only candidate talking about inner cities and futsal. We’ll rate that “false.” Winograd had just mentioned programs like that. He wants to stop the poaching of players for free, where another club sells a family the Kool-Aid to convince a kid to switch. He wants payments for that.

Gans jokes that all the answers have been made. He agrees with everyone. He says clubs need to be reined in a bit with “Good Housekeeping standards.” We’ve seen some attempts to create club standards, but they’re neither widely known nor universal, so his point is valid.

QUESTION 3: What’s your view on promotion/relegation? (44:30)

Noteworthy:

  • Lapointe works in the UPSL. Caligiuri coaches in it.

Fact/reality check in order:

Lapointe is the big pro/rel champion here. But it’s hard to conclude that he understands the issue. He starts out saying this has been a big issue for months now, which may surprise the people who’ve been talking about it for years. He says it has not been in our culture, which isn’t really true — amateur leagues have done it as long as I know. He works in the UPSL and touts their pro/rel stance as a fresh start — again, I don’t know that it is. He wants to test pro/rel in UPSL, NPSL, PDL and state organizations — again, a lot of leagues already have it. The USASA lists 13 “elite amateur leagues” — including the UPSL — some of them a century old. At least half of them have pro/rel.

Caligiuri talks about his experience in Germany with teams that went up and down. He mentions the excitement it brings fans and the pressure it brings players. I’ve argued many times before, based in part on conversations with Scandinavian soccer veterans like Brian Dunseth and Bobby Warshaw — pressure depends on the soccer culture, not simply pro/rel.

Caligiuri continues with a strange suggestion about futsal for ages 6-12, suggesting that’s a place we could test pro/rel. Traditional youth leagues already have pro/rel, but they don’t do it at younger ages because they want the focus to be on development, and they worry that coaches under relegation pressure will start playing direct at U8. Ontario youth soccer quit keeping scores and standings — a decision I actually argued against on a Canadian radio show a few years ago. Then he talks about doing pro/rel in USASA leagues — which, again, already exists.

Winograd says he’s going to assume we’re talking about the pro ranks. He says it would be exciting, but as a practical matter, “we’re not there yet.” Franchise fees, contracts, etc. He wants to start building it at the lower leagues, and then he touts his alternative plan to have “guest clubs” in the top division in the near-term. I prefer my system, but he’s reality-based on this point, and he goes on to talk about USSF’s power and limitations. USSF shouldn’t be ramming things down people’s throats, he says in conclusion.

Wynalda believes we are ready, and he points to parachute payments and so forth as a way to make sure clubs are better off financially in the long run. Sort of, but when you see English clubs curtailing their academies, you have to wonder if the long-term picture really is better. If I trusted economists, I’d love to see an economic study on that.

Gans says everyone’s watching the last day of the Premier League not to see who wins the league but to see who goes up or down. Is that a feature or a bug? Then he says the passionate promotion/relegation people have made a really good point, which is that players develop more of a cutting edge in pro/rel systems — again, the Warshaw/Dunseth experience and some common sense would say otherwise. Then he offers his own reality check — he remembers the late 80s and early 90s when everything had fallen apart, and given that, he doesn’t think USSF can simply impose it.

QUESTION 4: What do you think of the nomination process, and please explain the election process. (54:45)

Fact/reality check in order:

Gans gets to go first. That might be coincidence, but it’s appropriate. He was the first candidate to declare, so he’s been laying a lot of the groundwork here. If someone other than Gulati or Cordeiro is elected, that candidate owes Gans a debt. He is concerned that he was not given a list of delegates, which he believes should be freely given by a nonprofit. I don’t know enough about applicable law to know whether that’s true, though I can verify that I also asked for that list and was denied. The election procedures call for candidates to receive this list 120 days before the election, then again (because the delegates may change) 60 and 30 days out. He also points out rules have been changing a bit midstream, which is absolutely true.

Winograd sees a lack of clarity and sophistication, and he says his law firm frequently works with companies on their election process. He says he read the bylaws with help from someone at his law firm, a sign that they’re not really clear. He worries about seeing “blocs” form, especially where votes are heavily weighted as on the Athletes Council. (Indeed, I’ve spoken with someone on the Athletes Council who says they do indeed tend to vote as a bloc so their voice isn’t diluted. That said, I have no idea how you change that. USSF can’t change the rules that give athletes 20% of the vote, and I don’t see how you stop them from voting as a bloc.)

Caligiuri says the election rules are against the Roberts Rules of Order. He doesn’t say how. He cites his board experience and says he understands how the councils (Athletes, Pro, Youth, Adult) work. He cites it as a positive that USSF answers to the U.S. Olympic Committee and the Stevens Act, specifically because it mandates athlete representation.

Wynalda says the rules were built as an attempt to represent everybody but that they ended up being built by one man — Sunil Gulati. He’s critical of the process but doesn’t offer much detail.

Lapointe notes he was told two days ago that an association can rescind a nomination — that was indeed recent news. He isn’t happy that he has only three months between his declaration of intent in September and the deadline to present his three (minimum) nominations in December. That’s an odd complaint. Nothing prevented him from declaring his intent as early as Gans did.

All five candidates correctly described the election process itself in varying detail. 

QUESTION 5: What are you going to do with that $100-$150 million surplus? (1:04:45)

Fact/reality check:

Wynalda asks where the money is coming from and gives an astonishingly precise figure — 49% of $94 million is coming from television. Looking at the Form 990 for the year ending March 31, 2015 (not 2016) — there’s a figure of $94.8 million for program service revenue. “Sponsorship and royalties” is $39.7 million of that. In 2016, both numbers increase. I’m not sure where he gets that figure. Then a lot comes from the national teams, and 2018 is going to be an odd year with no major event. He segues into the “registration war” and referees, and I’m not sure I follow. When he visits the podcast, I’ll follow up with him. (You are planning to be on the podcast, right Eric?)

Lapointe says it’s not the Federation’s money — it’s your money (meaning the GotSoccer crowd). “We’re going to give it back to the states and regions,” he says, through coaching education and infrastructure. Then comes a baffling statement: “We don’t have a defined player identification system and a recruiting system thereof.” He wants to allocate those funds to send people out to find players. The USA does have a player identification system — actually, several: the Development Academy, ODP, id2, etc. Does he mean they’re not coordinated?

Gans mentions fields — inner cities, futsal courts, etc. — and pay-to-play. Then opportunities for women — he represented the Boston Breakers at one point.

Winograd says two places: Pay-to-play, not just kids but coaches. Then clearly defining a path to the national team, specifically, training centers in each state — a building with two fields. I should’ve followed up with him on the podcast about this — how does this differ from existing infrastructure? The interesting part is coordination — he wants to have blackout dates for leagues and tournaments, then bring kids into training on those.

Caligiuri wants to keep registration fees with the program that paid them — if you pay $1 to register a youth player, that goes for youth soccer. Same for adult soccer. Then a big proclamation to get all coaches involved: Every high school coach, he says, will be an Olympic Developmental scout. “How many high school players do not participate in your states?” he asks. That surely varies widely by state. In any suburban area, it’s tough to make a high school team if you’re not already on a top travel team. But are we missing some players in rural areas? Frankly, it raises the question of why college coaches aren’t scouting these areas.

QUESTION 6: What would be your plan for the organizational structure of U.S. Soccer? (1:15:15)

Fact/reality check in order:

Gans wonders if the organization is so big that positions need to be split — maybe a general manager of soccer, separate from the CEO. He promises a top-to-bottom review, and as he’s said often, he wants the main office in Chicago to deal more respectfully with the states and other organizations. He’s heard too many stories of disrespect. I’d like to hear some specifics at some point, but does anyone doubt him?

Wynalda cites his dear friend Hank Steinbrecher, the USSF General Secretary through the 1990s, talking about many people arguing for the same thing but opposing each other. He wants to have paid positions to delegate responsibilities (somewhat the opposite of Lapointe).

Caligiuri wants to create a culture. First, fund the Athletes Council and help them understand concerns of other councils. He says this is the only council that isn’t funded. What does this mean? I’m looking into it. And he wants to raise the standards. Second, hire a technical director. Third, look to Silicone Valley. It’s Silicon. (Sorry, pet peeve.) 

Winograd sees serious fracturing — overlapping, competing and unclear structures. He says he couldn’t figure out, as a parent, what team is for what. (On a related note: Watch for the Ranting Soccer Dad Guide to Youth Soccer in 2018.) But there’s no one-size-fits-all solution — same solution in one state may not work in another. We already have reps in each state, he says, which again raises the question of how they would function alongside a USSF center in each state.

Lapointe says he’ll peel back the layers. He’ll want an outside firm to take a look, and he’ll want an outside audit. Both of which have been done, repeatedly, as is evident from board minutes. In fact, an outside review (along with the USOC) is why the board dropped from 40 people to 15. Then, he says, we have to remove conflict of interest, which will peel back the layers. He hints that Dan Flynn’s salary as CEO could be split among a couple of people, but we need to peel back those layers. I don’t mean to harp on this, but I have to say again — it sounds like a lot of the information he’s seeking is readily accessible. In some cases, though, it’s not, and there are some layers to peel back.

Quick check of highest-paid USSF employees for year ending March 31, 2016 (according to the Form 990): 

  • Jurgen Klinsmann, MNT coach: $3,050,813
  • Dan Flynn, CEO: $694,745 
  • Jay Berhalter, CCO: $531,601
  • Andreas Herzog, assistant MNT coach: $398,993
  • Jill Ellis, WNT coach: $306,407
  • Tom King, managing director admin: $300,101
  • Brian Remedi, CAO: $287,329
  • 4 WNT players (Holiday, Klingenberg, Krieger, Heath): $225,450
  • Lisa Levine, legal counsel: $208,095
  • Eric Gleason, CFO: $188,086

QUESTION 7: What would be your process for selecting a men’s national team coach? (1:25:40)

Wynalda says we’re operating under the assumption that the president is the sole selector, which isn’t always true. He says we asked Jurgen Klinsmann to do 3-4 jobs, but the national team coach should do just one — not technical director, not youth development. He thinks we did that with Klinsmann so we could justify his salary. Maybe, but was it also a false belief that Klinsmann would be able to singlehandedly bring Das Reboot to the USA? In any case, he says we need to wait until after the World Cup, then jokes that he skated out of the question.

Gans wants a committee of former players and those involved with the youth game. The latter seems like an awkward reach to the people in the room. Then he talks about the Philadelphia Atoms of the NASL and how their star players took different approaches — some committed, some not. Back to the committee — they would come up with the questions and vetting process, then selection.

Lapointe notes some of the best players in the world aren’t the best coaches or business people. He suggests a director of coaches — “I don’t think there is one in the federation.” The next president, he says, won’t hand-pick the next coach. He wants a coach who leads players into the game rather than just teaching the game. At this level, is a national team coach teaching anything? In the last two World Cup qualifiers, he says, it doesn’t look like the players had leadership and wanted to be there. I’m not going to nit-pick on the second-to-last qualifier, the 4-0 rout over Panama that made us think everything would be OK. The last two qualifiers seared in our memory are the home loss to Costa Rica and … well … the last one.

Caligiuri wonders if it was the national team coach for futsal, beach soccer or the men’s national team, saying we need a coach for all three. Futsal isn’t Keith Tozer any more? He was the coach as of June. And Eddie Soto has been serving as permanent beach soccer coach, though he had to hand the reins to Francis Farberoff for a tournament that conflicted with Soto’s college duties. But, of course, given the World Cup qualifying debacle, he realizes we’re talking about the latter. And that’s about going out and listening to other people’s opinion. Hiring a sporting director or technical director would assist with that, he says. But as president, he would take 100% accountability for that decision. He also points toward looking at coaches at the World Cup, so the next person would likely be interim.

Winograd says this goes to one of the central failings in U.S. Soccer today — decision-making. Whether it’s this or going to birth-year age groups, these are all about the decision-making. We don’t know who made the Klinsmann decisions or how those decisions were made, but we know we need future decisions to be transparent. You have to have a committee with former players, former coaches, business people.

SPECIFIC QUESTIONS FOR EACH CANDIDATE

GotSoccer attendees came up with these.

For Gans: Based on failing to make Olympics and World Cup, what grade would you give the Development Academy and would you continue it? Gans has two kids who’ve been in the DA and sees a lot of positives, but he doesn’t care for the edicts that come down from Chicago, such as the high school prohibition. (“Chicago” has replaced “Washington” as the scapegoat of this political realm, which might not really fit given the dispersed group of people that makes these rules.) He’s seen kids who didn’t even want to play college soccer after playing in the DA because they’ve had the joy sucked out of them and turned into robots. Grade: B-minus.

For Wynalda: What are your expectations for the men’s and women’s national teams? He doesn’t consider finishing 16th in a World Cup to be success, and he doesn’t think we’ve gotten better on the men’s side. We don’t have specialists, he says. He references Gans’ comment on robots and says we need to embrace personality. His expectation is to be a serious contender by 2026, and he thinks we can solve it in eight months rather than eight years. On the women’s side, he says they’ve represented us better than anyone, and staying on top is difficult.

For Winograd: What role should U.S. Soccer play in CONCACAF? What the hell is this question? Winograd gamely gives it a go and says we should take a leading role in getting the respect for CONCACAF that it deserves.

For Lapointe: With so much focus on obtaining college scholarships, how do you intend to influence the college game “in the alignment process”? I don’t understand the last part. Lapointe says the USSF president needs to pick up the phone and call the NCAA because we don’t have a relationship. Not sure what’s he basing that assumption on. Not sure how to prove it one way or the other.

For Caligiuri: What skillsets do you bring that qualify you to lead a national governing body? DNA. Playing experiences. Coaching. Athletes Council and board membership — felt rushed to vote at times and didn’t have complete information. One thing he did on Athletes Council and board — when we have three board members, if it’s a male chair, then it would be a female co-chair. We didn’t have things like that — I learned the Councils can make rules like that on their own.

CLOSING REMARKS

Gans: A recent report gave every candidate a one-word summary, and his was “businessman.” He cringed. He’s a soccer person who became a lawyer.

This is a complex job. It involves someone who has a deep background, leadership, organizational skills, deep business skills, consensus-building, conflict resolution, negotiation. I’m the one candidate that combines all that.

There’s a platform he’ll be disseminating soon. But one of the first things he’ll do (he’s said this on my podcast) is to form a task force to solve the divisiveness in youth soccer. There are two State Cups in Massachusetts. Why? Because sanctioning organizations are fighting. That doesn’t help.

There’s an attrition rate at age 13 that’s higher than other sports. I didn’t find figures to confirm or dispute that statement. On a related note: I’m a little disappointed no one has mentioned Project Play in this forum.

“I have no ties to FIFA. I’m glad to say that.”

Finally, WNT conditions will be evened out right away. Paralympic, futsal and beach will be treated with respect.

Winograd: We have made great strides over the last 20 years, but in a lot of areas, we’ve lagged behind, and there’s an increasing fracture at all levels.

Three key initiatives: First, decision-making must be inclusive, merit-based and transparent.

Second, equality in women’s soccer. He calls this “something we haven’t talked about,” which is mostly true in this forum. He repeats here what he’s said on the podcast — travel and field conditions will be equivalent. If the women want to keep their salary structure, fine, but we’ll still make things equivalent.

Third, reducing cost barriers. Again, not a one size-fits-all solution. Can have competing organizations but there needs to be integration.

Uniquely situated to do this — perseverance, stamina, ability to bring people together and sit and synthesize interests to find a path forward. He’s been doing this throughout his career. You need the business side and the soccer side — I’ve played, I’ve coached.

Caligiuri: Conflict over the years has been promoted in an interesting way. U.S. Club Soccer and U.S. Youth Soccer (not to disregard AYSO and SAY) — those two have Olympic development programs: id2 and ODP. We could reform the Development Academy. Keep those registrations in those national youth organizations rather than channeling them into U.S. Soccer. Waive those fees of $1 per kid. Instead of promoting conflict, we create unity with two organizations that are doing meaningful things and have great volunteers.

We talked about pay-to-play. The Academy has increased it for many. It has narrowed the path for youth soccer players. His plan is broader. Keep your registrations, or everything is going to be run through.

Repeating from opening: “If you don’t want change, then I’m not the right person.”

When he was on board, he asked about girls for Development Academy.

Lapointe: The next president has to have integrity, transparency, honesty and business ethics. I have all five of those. (Yes, I rewound and double-checked. He listed four things, then said he has all five.)

“American soccer is not broken. It needs a reboot. It needs new software.”

“I would rather be knighted or hung on the success of a 3-year-old that puts the ball under their foot for the first time and the parents that go along with that child and the system that they’re going to belong to to make sure it’s proper and to make sure it’s not confusing for them and to make sure they’re on the right path to support the very culture and the very things we’re talking about today.”

He then promises inclusion and equal pay for women. He says he’s also looking at the inclusion of an Open Cup for women. This hasn’t gone over all that well with women’s soccer fans — also there has indeed been an Open Cup in the not-too-distant past, but it suffers from a distinct lack of entries.

He also wants to peel back the layers and remove conflict of interest.

Futsal is near and dear to his heart, and he claims to be the only person to have reached out to AMF and the futsal national team. “We have a national futsal team, and we don’t even sanction the sport in this country.” Multiple problems here — by AMF, does he mean the World Minifootball Federation, the successor to FIFRA (Federacion Internacional de Futbol Rapido)? That’s more small-sided soccer and indoor soccer — now renamed “arena soccer” and under the same general umbrella as the Major Arena Soccer League. It’s not futsal, which is under the governance of U.S. Futsal (USFF) — a USSF affiliate.

OK, let’s try this fact-check again. There IS indeed an AMF — Asociacion Mundial de Futsal — which used to be FIFUSA (the last three letters are NOT United States of America) — that holds its own futsal championships, including the upcoming Women’s World Cup. The rest of the initial check is still correct — there is a WMF (formerly FIFRA) that organizes small-sided and indoor (boards) soccer, and the Major Arena Soccer League (Baltimore Blast, Milwaukee Wave, San Diego Sockers, etc.) is an affiliate. It’s still not quite accurate to say the USSF doesn’t sanction futsal because it includes U.S. Futsal (USFF).

Back to Lapointe’s closing …

I hope I’d be considered to be part of the federation even if I don’t get elected.

Wynalda: A couple of things we don’t have — a clear vision. We’ve been left to our own devices to an extent. We can’t even tell ourselves who we are. It’s not broken. It’s a very unique part of our history that we need to fix it and fix it now. The president’s job is to build a culture that makes sense for all its members, to have an understanding of “who are we? What are we trying to accomplish?”

We’ve been teased. We always say we’re the sport of the future. We can’t rely on an outside sources for Holland or Belgium — YOU know how to do soccer. The federation’s relationship with organizations is the only thing that’s broken. And when we’re fighting with ourselves, how are we supposed to beat the rest of the world.

“They ruled us by fear and then expected us to do great things.”

Commends all these gentlemen (other candidates) on their bravery.

The advantage I have is I understand this game. My job is to help you understand this game.