us soccer, women's soccer

U.S. women’s soccer team v U.S. Soccer. Please let somebody win

I’ll need to start with disclaimers, for some people in the women’s soccer community have sharp knives and blurred vision, and some people think saying, “Hey, that point you made won’t stand up in court” is the work of a misogynistic craptastic devil in a Belly T-shirt.

So let’s start:

DISCLAIMERS

1. The point of this piece is not to say the U.S. women’s national team shouldn’t be paid more, shouldn’t have fewer games on turf and so forth.

2. Covering women’s soccer is a good way to piss off your editors, and I did it anyway. I was once told to back off WoSo by an editor who was pretty much the opposite of The Patriarchy — she’s a lesbian woman of color. (And a terrific person. I just disagreed with her on this, and I was stubborn enough to shove more WoSo content onto our site anyway. She forgave me because I spent the other 40 hours a week doing what I was supposed to be doing.)

3. They might win. Or at least get a decent settlement. I can’t say definitively because I don’t have all the facts. And neither do you.

I firmly believe, as a journalist or lawyer should (small wonder a lot of journalists go into law), that asking tough questions is the only way to be fair. It stops weak arguments from proceeding. It sharpens strong arguments. So let’s start …

TOUGH QUESTIONS FOR U.S. SOCCER

1. Why haven’t you sorted things out when it comes to paying the women’s national team?

2. No, seriously, why haven’t you sorted this out?

3. Really, why haven’t you sorted this out?

4. Also, can they play a few games on grass?

5. I’ve been told in the past that the WNT gets fewer charter flights because they don’t travel as far. For World Cup qualifying, that’s true. But Jeff Kassouf reported yesterday (tweet below) that the WNT had no charter flights in 2017. So how’d they get to Scandinavia?

6. (From a more arcane realm) Why did you force the girls’ Development Academy upon everyone instead of working with the already established (and popular) ECNL?

7. Does the new CBA include escalator clauses that ensure the WNT will get the same per diems and pay-per-ticket for home friendlies that the MNT gets? (We’re talking about a small amount of money here. You’d think USSF would ensure equality here just to avoid taking a PR hit. But the last CBA had a per-diem escalator that was somehow overlooked. So maybe the question should be: Are you actually going to enforce things this time?)

8. Again, why haven’t you sorted this out?

Some questions have already been asked, and we’ll have to see if USSF lives up to its answers. Exhibit A: The Aloha Stadium fiasco, which Sunil Gulati said wouldn’t happen again. The only way to truly answer that is to demonstrate that it doesn’t happen again.

I can also tell you the USSF answer to half of those questions before I even ask. I can hear the voice in my head: “We just signed a collective bargaining agreement!” But that might not be sufficient legally. I’d defer to lawyers on that one, and I doubt they’ll all agree.

Now …

QUESTIONS FOR BOTH SIDES

1. What’s in the new CBA? I guess we’ll find out sometime in the court filings if this drags on.

2. Why hasn’t anyone enforced the equal-pay clause that Julie Foudy dug out of the 2005 CBA and continued onto subsequent deals? Is that in the new CBA?

To wit:

If in any calendar year, the ratio of aggregate compensation of women’s national team players to the aggregate revenue from all women’s national team games (including all games in U.S. Soccer promoted women’s tournaments) is less than the ratio of the aggregate compensation of the men’s national team players compensation to the aggregate revenue from all men’s national team games (including all games in U.S. Soccer promoted men’s tournaments), then U.S. Soccer will make a lump sum payment to the women’s national team player pool to make the ratios equal. VIX. Additional Payment if Compensation Ratios Change

And Foudy found for something else of interest: “Kessler and Megan Rapinoe did not know the clause existed when I asked them about it.”

(We’ll get to Kessler.) First …

QUESTIONS FOR DRIVE-BY MEDIA PUNDITS

These are directed mostly, but not entirely, at people who don’t regularly cover soccer …

1. When will you get it through your head that this is more complicated than you think? The rest of these questions are related to that …

2. (A complication on “equal pay”) — When will you realize there’s no such thing as “salary” for the men’s national team?

An anointed pool of women’s players gets a base salary plus a salary to play in the NWSL. The men either get called in or not. If not, they’re not paid.

The women have negotiated for that salary many times over the years for one simple reason — stability. The NWSL can’t pay a lot. (Today, you could argue that they could all go to the handful of European teams that pay well, but Lyon can only employ so many people. Still, with England among a number of countries making strides, that might be a more viable option.)

And women’s soccer leagues and clubs have not been models of stability over the years. A steady paycheck from the Federation ensures that women can keep playing the game. In men’s soccer, the clubs ensure that. It’s a rare player who’s established on the men’s national team who doesn’t make decent money playing professionally. Any player who isn’t will get paid when his club contract is re-negotiated.

Men get called in … or not. Women get severance pay. Even Hope Solo.

More trivially, women ask for things men don’t, like maternity leave and child care. (Maybe the men should ask for such things.)

None of this means the women don’t deserve better pay. It means you, fancy-pants drive-by pundit, should do your damn research. Maybe try to compile revenue and pay over a 10-year period. I’ve tried, but it’s difficult to tease such details out of the Fed’s statements. They could always count the Copa Centenario windfall, which accounts for a hefty chunk of the USSF surplus, as “men’s national team.” I hope not, but that’s an extreme example how complicated this is.

A typical excerpt: “Their pay should be the same, without a suit. Period.”

The women have not asked for the same contract as the men. They don’t want it.

You cannot just parachute into this discussion, cite a bunch of stuff about role models and Title IX, and make a coherent argument. Get off your asses, like Andrew Das and Jonathan Tannenwald, and look at the numbers. I doubt it will undermine your underlying argument. It will more likely strengthen it.

3. When will you realize “equal play” is also complicated?

Women’s soccer is not the same as men’s soccer. Not better, not worse. Different.

In women’s soccer, the USA was there from the beginning. In men’s soccer, the USA was there in 1930, then jumped into the abyss for 60 years or so, one glorious day in Belo Horizonte notwithstanding. (See a book scheduled for publication in November. It is mostly about men’s soccer, and it’s a little irreverent. Bwah ha ha ha. Caitlin Murray has women’s history covered.)

The rest of the world is catching up to the USA and Germany in women’s soccer. But Brazil, Japan and the Scandinavian countries, though, may have taken a few steps backwards. We have more teams capable of winning a world title, and that’s why everyone’s looking forward to this summer, but that’s a recent development.

In women’s soccer, few teams in the Western Hemisphere can challenge the USA. Only Canada and Brazil have done so consistently. Mexico forced the USA to scramble to qualify for the 2011 World Cup, but that’s an aberration.

There’s no equivalent of the MNT going to Central America for World Cup qualifiers and dodging batteries and urine. The WNT goes on feel-good tours at home. It’s not the same game.

NONE OF THIS MEANS THE WOMEN DON’T DESERVE BETTER. The next thing that should change is FIFA’s bonus money is different, and that needs to change, and maybe U.S. Soccer can and should take a leadership role in changing it. (If not for altruism, then maybe because it will make paying the WNT bonuses a little easier.) The Women’s World Cup prize pool is up to $30 million. For men, it’s $400 million.

Feel free to write about that. The research is easier.

QUESTIONS FOR … SOMEONE?

1. Huh?

From Michael McCann at the browser-crashing SI site.:

For instance, the complaint charges that “if each team played 20 friendlies in a year and each team won all 20 friendlies, female WNT players would earn a maximum of $99,000 or $4,950 per game, while similarly situated male MNT players would earn an average of $263,320 or $13,166 per game against the various levels of competition they would face.”

How often do teams play 20 friendlies?

Beyond that, I have a few questions …

2. Did the USWNTPA statement strike anyone else as tepid?

They didn’t say they supported the suit. They said they supported the goal. If they support the suit itself, they might want to issue a clarification. As it stands, it reads to me like they’d rather be negotiating that suing, though a lawsuit may be what it takes to re-open negotiation after the players just recently agreed to a new deal.

3. Is tying compensation to revenue a good idea?

At first glance, I thought the idea of the MNT players and WNT players both agreeing to do so was intriguing. But I got this response.

This is way out of my area of expertise. I’d be interested to hear other takes.

4. Why did they hire Jeffrey Kessler?

I don’t mean to keep harping on this. In most realms, he’s terrific, and he consistently fights for athletes’ rights. He’s not just Tom Brady’s lawyer. He’s Caster Semenya’s, and he’s not getting rich off that.

But he struggles in soccer. He was partially involved in the U.S. women’s legal standoff of 2016, which has to be viewed in hindsight as a loss. He’s also involved in the NASL’s lawsuit against U.S. Soccer et al, which I’d doubt will succeed unless the prolonged discovery period turns up a concerted effort to sabotage the league out of spite rather than simply failing to give it a second, third, fourth or fifth chance to gets it house in order.

And he represented MLS players against MLS, which didn’t go so well.

I’ve made reference to some of the transcripts before. He keeps coming up, though, so I’m simply going to paste them here. This is all Kessler interrogating Sunil Gulati. Maybe Gulati could be interrogated on many things, but you wouldn’t think the fact that the Premier League is a level above what was then called the First Division (now the Championship) would be one of them. The transcript was once housed in multiple places but now, to my knowledge, is only available at kenn.com. (I obtained some other transcripts from the case, but they’re less interesting.)

Here we go …

17     Q   And you testified in this case when I questioned you to
18     identify players who went to Division I leagues, you
19     identified both the English Premier League and the first
20     division of England, correct?
21     A   I don't have the testimony in front of me, but ...
22     Q   Okay.  Let's look at it.
23                   MR. KESSLER:  Let's look at Page 1652 of the
24     transcript, if we could put it on.
25     Q   And if you could take a look, it says:

                                                                        2191
                                  - GULATI -

 1
 2              "If you could take a look, Mr. Gulati, at Page 274?
 3              "Mr. Kessler:  If we could display that, please.
 4              "And the question on Line 14 was:  'As a general
 5     proposition, are there many Americans in any of the
 6     Division I foreign leagues?'
 7              "Do you see that, sir, that question?
 8              "Yes.
 9              "And then it says.
10              "ANSWER:  There are a number.
11              "I have think you meant to say in Division I
12     foreign leagues.  There are currently two in Holland that I
13     know of.  One in the English Premier League, and one in
14     the First Division.  At least two in Germany, maybe as many
15     as four."
16              And then I said:
17              "So you were identifying here in response to the
18     question about Americans in any of the Division I foreign
19     leagues both the English Premier Division League and
20     the First Division, correct?"
21              You answered:
22              "That's correct."
23                   MR. ROBBINS:  Excuse me, your Honor, I ask
24     that he continue on with the testimony for completeness, in
25     the interest of completeness and fairness.

                                                                        2192
                                  - GULATI -

 1                   THE COURT:  All right.
 2                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay.
 3     Q   "And does that refresh your recollection that you have
 4     always considered these two leagues in England to be
 5     Division I leagues?
 6              "I don't refer to them that way.  I see what I've
 7     said there.
 8              "What I'm talking about and when I talk about the
 9     Premier League, I talk about the first division.
10              "QUESTION:  Those two leagues compete with each
11     other for players in England, correct?
12              "Some cases, yes."
13                   MR. KESSLER:  Would you like me to read any
14     more?
15                   MR. ROBBINS:  I don't care if you read the
16     middle, but go down to the paragraph -- I'm sorry, Line 19.
17                   MR. KESSLER:  Your Honor, I mean, I think I've
18     read for completeness.
19                   THE COURT:  It's the same topic.  Go ahead,
20     Line 19.
21                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay.
22     Q   "In fact, there was some discussion about teams move up
23     and down from the Premier League to the First Division,
24     right?
25              "They never move up to the First Division from the

                                                                        2193
                                  - GULATI -

 1     Premier, but they move from the First Division up to the
 2     Premier League and down from the Premier League, yes.
 3              "Okay.  Okay.
 4              "Now, so if a team is in the Premier League and is
 5     signing players one year, and the next year they're in
 6     the First Division, okay, they have the same players, right?
 7     Their players didn't change, correct?
 8              "A team goes from the Premier Division to the First
 9     Division, is relegated, is the language we use.
10              "Right."
11                   MR. KESSLER:  Keep going?
12                   MR. ROBBINS:  That's okay.
13                   MR. KESSLER:  No, let's see what he said after
14     that.  Keep going.
15     Q   "And they all have the same players?
16              "Well, the same players who are still in the
17     contract.  They don't change the players, right?"
18              Now, Mr. Gulati.  Let's talk about that.
19              In fact, when you're not coached by your counsel --
20                   MR. CARDOZO:  Objection, your Honor.
21     Q   -- you routinely --
22                   THE COURT:  Sustained.
23     Q   Okay.
24                   THE COURT:  Mr. Kessler.
25                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay.

                                                                        2194
                                  - GULATI -

 1                   MR. CARDOZO:  May we approach, your Honor?
 2                   THE COURT:  No, we don't need comments like
 3     that.
 4                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay.  Your Honor, I won't make
 5     a characterization.
 6     Q   Before you came and made this change, did you discuss
 7     that fact with your counsel at the break?
 8     A   Yes.
 9     Q   Okay.
10              So before that discussion, you identified them both
11     as being Division I leagues in Scotland and in South Africa,
12     correct?
13     A   The equivalent of a typo, Mr. Kessler.  I was going
14     through the list very quickly, and at the end of the list,
15     being concerned about time, I went through it very quickly,
16     just as I might on a given day if I had a hundred of them in
17     front of me say that eight times eight was not 64.  I know
18     it's 64.
19     Q   Well, it's interesting, Mr. Gulati, because the typo you
20     made -- did you make any other typos in this chart when you
21     were filling out the ones and the twos and the threes?
22              Were there any other typos?
23     A   I have to look at it right now.
24     Q   Are there any?
25     A   I can't see it from here.

                                                                        2195
                                  - GULATI -

 1     Q   Well, see, all the others you just copied what was
 2     written next to it; isn't that correct?
 3              Like here it says Hungarian Division I, and you
 4     wrote a one next to it.  But on these, there was, like, no
 5     guidance, so you wrote something else, right?
 6     A   That's not correct.
 7     Q   Okay.
 8              When I questioned you at your deposition and I
 9     questioned you in court where you identified the Premier
10     League as Division I, was that a typo?
11     A   When I identified the Premier League as Division I, no.
12     Q   No, when you identified the First Division as
13     Division I, was that a typo?
14     A   And corrected it within 15 seconds thereafter.
15     Q   Okay.
16              So that was a misspeaking?  That's different from a
17     typo?
18                   MR. CARDOZO:  Objection, your Honor.  I think
19     we're starting to argue.
20                   THE COURT:  Sustained.  Sustained.
21     Q   Okay.
22              Mr. Gulati, you helped Professor Klein put together
23     his charts, correct?  We talked about that?
24     A   Some of the time.
25     Q   And, in fact, when Professor Klein first gave his charts

                                                                        2196
                                  - GULATI -

 1     to us, it said, did you know this, that the First Division
 2     was a Division I in England?
 3              Was that a typo, too, that you did?
 4     A   I don't know what charts Mr. Klein gave you.
 5     Q   Okay.  We'll go through that tomorrow.
 6              Now, Mr. Gulati, in those foreign countries where
 7     you have a Premier League and a first division -- let's go
 8     through the history.
 9              You testified with Mr. Cardozo that the First
10     Division changed its name to the Premier League and the
11     Second Division changed its name to the First Division.
12              That's not true, is it?
13     A   That's not what I said.
14     Q   Oh, it's not what you said?
15     A   Most of the teams --
16                   MR. CARDOZO:  Objection, your Honor.  I have a
17     sense here we're characterizing, we have facial expressions,
18     and the witness is being treated improperly.
19              I object.
20                   MR. KESSLER:  We'll go back -- okay.  We've
21     got your testimony.
22                   MR. CARDOZO:  I'd like the judge to rule on my
23     objection.
24                   THE COURT:  Well, you don't need extraneous
25     comments.  Let's just get to the questions, and it will be

                                                                        2197
                                  - GULATI -

 1     more efficient.
 2                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay.
 3     Q   Mr. Gulati, you don't recall now -- because we're going
 4     to get it up because we have it on Livenote, fortunately --
 5     you don't recall testifying with Mr. Cardozo that you
 6     testified that the First Division changed its name to the
 7     Premier League and that the Second Division changed its name
 8     to Division I?
 9              You don't recall that testimony maybe 25, 30
10     minutes ago?
11     A   No.  It's now different than what you just said 30
12     seconds ago.  What I said was the First Division became the
13     Premier League, that most of those teams became part of the
14     Premier League.
15     Q   Listen to my question, please, Mr. Gulati.
16              Do you recall testifying maybe 25 or 30 minutes
17     ago -- I think the jury recalls -- that the First Division
18     changed its name to the Premier League and the Second
19     Division changed its name to the First Division?
20              Do you recall saying that with Mr. Cardozo?
21     A   I don't know if those are the exact words, but something
22     like that, yes.
23     Q   Okay.
24              And now tell the jury, is it a lie or is it true
25     that they changed their names?

                                                                        2198
                                  - GULATI -

 1     A   They became -- they became -- they changed their name,
 2     but they became the First Division.  Most of the teams, as I
 3     also said 25 minutes ago, became part of the First Division.
 4     Q   Okay.
 5              Did they change their names?  Just focus on that.
 6     A   I believe the answer is yes.
 7     Q   Okay.  You think that's yes.  Let's focus on what
 8     happened.
 9              Before there was a Premier League, there was
10     something called the First Division, right?
11     A   That's correct.
12     Q   Okay.
13              And then there were about 32 teams in the First
14     Division, right?
15     A   I don't know the number that were there, but there
16     was -- there was a number of teams in the Premier League.
17     Q   And at that moment, all of those teams you would
18     call First Division?
19              There was no Premier League, right?  That was the
20     highest division?
21     A   All of the teams that were in that division were part of
22     the First Division, yes.
23     Q   And those teams were some of the best teams in the world
24     at that time, right, before the Premier League?
25     A   Some of them, yes.

                                                                        2199
                                  - GULATI -

 1     Q   Okay.
 2              And then what happened is some of those teams left
 3     the First Division and formed a whole new organization
 4     called the Premier League; isn't that correct?
 5     A   Some of those teams became part of the Premier League,
 6     that's right.
 7     Q   And there was no changing of names.
 8              Some of the teams left the First Division, and they
 9     became a different league, about 16 of the 32, right?
10     A   I don't remember if it was 16, but, yes.
11     Q   Okay.
12              And the 16 teams who a moment before the Premier
13     League were First Division, they didn't change their name?
14              They stayed the First Division, right?
15     A   They -- the bigger and better teams, in most cases,
16     became the Premier team.
17     Q   Okay.
18     A   Not a --
19     Q   You have to --
20                   MR. CARDOZO:  Wait a minute.
21                   MR. KESSLER:  Objection.  It's not responsive
22     your Honor.
23                   THE COURT:  Go ahead.
24     A   Became the Premier Division.  The other teams became
25     what continued or changed their name or however you want to

                                                                        2200
                                  - GULATI -

 1     characterize it, part of First Division in this reformatted
 2     league.
 3     Q   Okay.  I'll try to ask the question very slowly.
 4              The teams who stayed in the First Division, about
 5     half that league, that league didn't change its name.
 6              It stayed the First Division, right?
 7     A   I don't know if it was -- I mean, some of these teams
 8     became part of the Premier League.  Some of them were part
 9     of the First Division.
10     Q   The league never changed its name.  No league ever
11     changed its name in England, right?
12     A   We had a league that started that became the Premier
13     League.
14     Q   Mr. Gulati, you believe that the First Division League
15     changed its name to the Premier League?
16              That's what you believe?
17     A   No, that a lot of the teams, as I said earlier, became
18     part of the Premier League.
19     Q   Okay.
20              And no league ever changed its name, correct?
21     A   No, that's -- we've had a number of leagues in the
22     English league that have changed their league name by having
23     a sponsor affiliated with it and so on.
24              And this -- let me finish.
25              In this characterization, I'm not sure if they

                                                                        2201
                                  - GULATI -

 1     changed when those 12 or 14 or 16 teams were left or not, in
 2     that framework that you've just outlined the question.
 3     Q   Right.
 4              And, in fact, the Second Division in England never
 5     changed its name to the First Division, right?
 6              The league?
 7     A   You characterize it that way, that's correct.
 8     Q   Thank you.
 9              What happened was there was a First Division League
10     of 32 teams.  Sixteen of them became a new league called the
11     Premier League, and the other 16 teams, which were
12     still first division, called themselves still the First
13     Division, right?
14              There's nothing complicated about that?
15     A   Not all 16, but some of them, yes.
16     Q   Okay.
17              And what happens between those two leagues is that
18     the teams move up to the Premier League sometimes and then
19     they move down to the First Division, right?
20     A   There is relegation and promotion, yes.
21     Q   Right.
22              And so all of these teams in the First Division in
23     the Premier League are, if we were going to look at it in a
24     broader sense, major league teams that move from one league
25     to the other, right?

                                                                        2202
                                  - GULATI -

 1     A   There are teams that move between the first and the
 2     second and the second and the third as well.
 3     Q   Right.
 4              Like normal minor leagues.  Let's talk about
 5     baseball.  You know about baseball, minor leagues?
 6                   MR. CARDOZO:  Objection, your Honor.
 7                   THE COURT:  Sustained.  And we're at
 8     1 o'clock.  I think we better break for the day.
 9                   MR. KESSLER:  Okay, your Honor.  That's fine.
10                   THE COURT:  Jurors, we have a slight schedule
11     change.  We've going to start a little bit later tomorrow.
12     We'll start about 10 o'clock, okay?

So here’s what happened next

page 2215

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 5   .zZzV
 6   z
 7   o{UPR today is Friday the thinker TAO*EPBT.  Thirteenth not yet?  
 8   Why.?.  (.  Today is Friday, the 13th., of October.  Spooky 
 9   spooky
10                  MR. CARDOZO:  Goer good morning, your Honor.
11                  MR. KESSLER:  Good morning, your Honor.
12                  THE COURT:  Good morning.
13                  MR. CARDOZO:  Your Honor, I hope you had a 
14    chance to look at the letter I --
15                  THE COURT:  Barely.  That's why I'm -- 
16    my first question is is this something that we have to do 
17    before we resume with the jury?
18                  MR. CARDOZO:  Yes, your Honor.
19             , and I raise this point with great reluctance and 
20    I have thought about it a lot before I did this.  And I've 
21    never done this before in my professional career.
22             I believe that Mr. Kessler must be this morning 
23    before the jury publicly sanctioned because he committed 
24    yesterday a blatant violation of what in Massachusetts is 
25    Rule 3.4E of the Massachusetts rules of professional conduct 

page 2216

 1    with a parallel provision in New York.
 2             Because that rule prohibits a lawyer from alluding 
 3    to any matter that will not be supported by admissible 
 4    evidence and from stating a personal opinion as to the 
 5    credibility of the witness.
 6             If you turn to Page 2 of my letter, your Honor, and 
 7    the indented paragraph, which I'm sure you recall the 
 8    substance of, Mr. Kessler said to Mr. Gulati:  "is it a lie 
 9    or is it true that they changed their names," referring to 
10    the first division, the Premier League issue.
11             And he also said, as referred to on the bottom of 
12    the page.  Of my letter, "there were about 32 teams in 
13    the first division.  There was no changing of names, and so 
14    on.
15             And then he made a factual assertion in the form of 
16    a question:
17             "what happened was there was a First Division 
18    League of 32 teams, 16 of them became a new league called 
19    the Premier League, and the other 16 teams, which were 
20    still first division, call themselves still the first  first 
21    division."
22             Your Honor, Mr. Kessler had absolutely, absolutely 
23    no factual bay sis for making that assertion.  It was an 
24    
25    absolute violation of the Massachusetts rule prohibiting an 

page 2217

 1    allusion to any matter that will not be supported by 
 2    admissible evidence.
 3             Now, I understand that obviously when it comes to 
 4    be our turn, three or four or five weeks from now, I can 
 5    call a witness to establish that.  But the damage has 
 6    already been done to Mr. Gulati's credibility.
 7             We stayed up all night and we received about four 
 8    or 5 o'clock this morning an affidavit from the head of the 
 9    
10    English football association, which is attached as exhibit 
11    C, which PHA*EUBGS which makes the point crystal clear, and I believe under 
12    the circumstances, your Honor, where Mr. Kessler 
13    deliberately sought to call the witness a liar, to make a 
14    factual assertion which he knew to be blatantly false, that 
15    we cannot be prejudiced by waiting six weeks in order to 
16    correct that.
17             What has to be done, I respectfully submit, your
18    Honor, is that Mr. Kessler has to be publicly admonished 
19    before the jury; the correct facts, which Mr. Gulati recited 
20    in response to my questions before Mr. Kessler started bee 
21    raiding him yesterday with false assertions, the correct 
22    facts have to be told to the jury this morning before the 
23    witness resumes the cross-examination; and Mr. Kessler 
24    should be admonished not to do this in the future.
25                  THE COURT:  Mr. Kessler.

page 2218

 1                  MR. KESSLER:  You know, your Honor, I've been 
 2    practicing over 20 years.  I have never before been accused 
 3    of a violation of any cat any efforts in any state or 
 4    federal court.
 5             I am astounded that Mr. Cardozo would make that 
 6    allegations.  I've known him a long time.  He didn't pick up 
 7    the phone last night or say anything to me.  He didn't ask 
 8    me what was my basis for the questions or anything else.
 9             Instead, I walk in this morning, I get served with 
10    this paper as we're coming in, not even the night before.  
11    I'm not even in a position your Honor this morning since I 
12    don't have the person here, Mr. Young, who gathered the 
13    information for me about the Premier League, upon which I 
14    based my questions, which he did from looking at Internet 
15    sites and other sources and made phone calls to people at 
16    the Premier League asking questions, all of which 
17    information he gave me to give me a basis for asking the 
18    question, a reasonable basis.
19             Now, I'm presented, sight unseen, with an affidavit 
20    from a witness who I don't know, who I can't 
21    cross-examination.  I'm being accused, like it's the star 
22    chamber, you know, right now, your Honor should decide I 
23    committed an unethical violation and tell the jury what I'm 
24    not even in a position to present to you the basis of my 
25    questions, I'm not in a position to cross-examination this 

page 2219

 1    witness (when) it's unbelievable.
 2             Now, your Honor, that is trial.  If I made a 
 3    misstatement, okay, and, your Honor, in 20 years, it won't 
 4    be the first fact that I was proven wrong or right about, 
 5    okay, and I'm not representing to your Honor at this 
 6    moment -- he's presented an affidavit.  This is the first 
 7    time I've heard before that witness about this changing the 
 8    name.
 9             If this testimony is truthful, then he -- the 
10    affidavit he presented, then he may be right and I may be 
11    wrong and I'll prove it to the jury, as there are about 
12    thousands of subfacts in this case, many of whom I expect to 
13    prove Mr. Cardozo has been completely wrong.  I'm not 
14    accusing him of unethical violations, despite the fact that 
15    I think he's wrong about many, many things.
16             So, your Honor, I think the idea that you would 
17    consider some type of ethical thing without my being able to 
18    present the basis or cross-examination this witness or 
19    anything else is just beyond the pale.
20             Having said that, your Honor, having said that,
21    your Honor, okay, you know, he's presented this affidavit, 
22    you know, with respect to the changing of the name.  He 
23    says -- and, you know, I have no problem -- in fact, I had 
24    already told my colleagues when doing this that I was going 
25    to indicate to the witness during my examination that I had 

page 2220

 1    been presented with some evidence suggesting that maybe the 
 2    league of the names was chosen and that I wanted to less the 
 3    witness know that, is that correct, and tell him if that's 
 4    wrong, I apologize to him.
 5             But to come up and ask for an ethical violation 
 6    when he had bee sees and I believed it to be true in good 
 7    faith and Mr. Cardozo nose me better than that -- and I 
 8    don't know if it's true or not but I'm willing to give him 
 9    the benefit of the doubt and this afew yant that he wouldn't 
10    give me with the basis that I had.
11                  MR. CARDOZO:  Your Honor to suggest that at 
12    5 o'clock in the morning I should have called Mr. Kessler is 
13    ridiculous.
14                  THE COURT:  Well, I --
15                  THE COURT:  It's a serious allegations or 
16    charge or accusation, so I'm going to give him a chance to 
17    respond to it.  There are two issues.  One is the ethical 
18    issue.  The other is it's simply an evidentiary issue and 
19    putting aside the ethical question, there is still an 
20    evidentiary problem when evidence is suggested that is -- 
21    for which there's no foundation, whether it's intentional al or  or 
22    accidental or good faith, whatever.  There's still a problem 
23    that the jury hears something for which there is no 
24    admissible evidence sto support it.
25                  MR. KESSLER:  And, your Honor, I would propose 

page 2221

 1    to cure that in my questions.
 2                  MR. CARDOZO:  Your Honor, I --
 3                  THE COURT:  Well --
 4                  MR. CARDOZO:  I believe -- I understand if you 
 5    want to reserve decision on --
 6                  THE COURT:  Well, I think he's entitled to if, 
 7    as he says, he had a basis for believing that it was true, 
 8    then I think he ought to be entitled to say that and we'll 
 9    he evaluate that along with whatever you have here and that 
10    goes to the more serious problem.
11             The evidentiary problem is one that perhaps, as 
12    Mr.S can Kessler says, he has a way of curing.  I don't 
13    know.
14             But I don't think anything is going to happen irref 
15    cabbly with the witness this morning that can't be added to, 
16    supplemented, corrected, after an opportunity to hear 
17    further from the witness.
18             (Counsel conferred.)
19                  MR. CARDOZO:  I respectfully suggest, your
20    Honor, the damage has already been done.  I don't want to 
21    wait until Mr. Kessler decides how he wants to elicit this 
22    information.
23             I would respectfully suggest that the first order 
24    of bus this morning (business this morning should be to 
25    allow me to elicit from Mr. Gulati what he standards the 

page 2222

 1    facts to be because to let Mr. Kessler do this when he still 
 2    can't stand up and -- forget the ethical issue.  He still 
 3    cannot represent to you he had any basis.  I can't wait 
 4    three hours or four hours or '2 days.
 5                  THE COURT:  I don't think the timing is that 
 6    critical.  The jury is not -- the jury is hearing a lot of 
 7    stuff over weeks and weeks and weeks.  An hour or two is not 
 8    going to make a difference.
 9                  MR. CARDOZO:  Your Honor, I would respectfully 
10    request that Mr. Gulati either be asked by you, if not not 
11    me, what he understands the facts to be.
12             I think I am severely prejudiced if I simply have 
13    to wait for Mr. Kessler --
14                  THE COURT:  Well, let me make -- no.  I think 
15    it may be appropriate for Mr. Kessler to do it, but maybe we 
16    
17    can suggest a Kessler that Mr. Kessler ought to ask, and 
18    here is a suggestion, which would call for hearsay evidence 
19    as to which Mr. Kessler might not press an objection.
20             That is, to ask the witness whether he has 
21    information from the English leagues as to how it came 
22    about.  He could give that answer.  I don't know.  That's a 
23    possibility.  He could give the substance of --
24                  MR. KESSLER:  Your Honor, again, I don't know 
25    whether it's even true or not but I'm willing to do that 

page 2223

 1    because I don't like being accused of these things, and I've 
 2    been presented with this for the first time this morning, 
 3    
 4    and I can tell your Honor I would never go into court and 
 5    ask any question that I didn't believe I had a basis for.
 6             Sometimes I'm wrong.  I assume Mr. Cardozo has 
 7    sometimes been wrong.
 8                  MR. ROBBINS:  If I can just make a suggestion 
 9    your Honor.  I think an appropriate way to do it in light of 
10    yurch's indication is that the first question Mr. Kessler 
11    asks of Mr. Gulati is at the close of the day we were 
12    discussing the English Premier League, the change of names.
13                  THE COURT:  Right.
14                  MR. ROBBINS:  Is there something you'd like to 
15    explain to the jury.  I think that would be the fair way to 
16    do it.
17                  THE COURT:  Right.  Ask him whether he's made 
18    inquiry about that overnight.  That would technically be 
19    hearsay but in the absence of an objection it could be 
20    admitted.
21                  MR. KESSLER:  Your Honor, I don't have any 
22    problem with doing that.
23                  THE COURT:  All right.

Kessler did follow through and allow Gulati to confirm that, yes, the Premier League is the top tier and the First Division is second.

 7    REDIRECT EXAMINATION
 8   
 9   BY MR. KESSLER
10                  THE CLERK:  I'd like to remine the witness 
11    that he is still under oath.  Please be seat the.
12                  MR. KESSLER:  May I proceed, your Honor?
13                  THE COURT:  Please.
14    Q   Good morning, Mr. Gulati?
15    A   Good morning.
16    Q   Mr. Gulati, there was a point yesterday that we 
17    discussed in your examination which I'd like to give you a 
18    chance to clear up because I want to make sure that I didn't 
19    say something that I misspoke about something, and that has 
20    to do with the naming of the Premier League.
21             Is there something you learned about that that 
22    you'd like to tell the jury or explain?
23    A   I learned that what I had said to Mr. Cardozo yesterday 
24    was correct, that virtually all of your comments about how 
25    the Premier League was formed and the number of teams and 

page 2227

 1    the renaming were all, in fact, absolutely incorrect.
 2    Q   Okay.
 3             The Premier League did rechange its name?  That's 
 4    what you learned?
 5    A   And that the first division had been previously the 
 6    second division and so on.
 7             So everything I said to Mr. Cardozo was correct.
 8    Q   Okay?
 9    A   And all of the questions and issues that you raised at 
10    the end of the day were, in fact, wrong.
11    Q   Okay.  Mr. Gulati if, that's true, I want to apologize 
12    to you because we got a little sidetracked on the Premier 
13    League and I want the jury to get every fact exactly 
14    correct, okay?
15             Let's talk about the Premier League.
16             It is true that the Premier League and the first 
17    division have teams that change each year.  Some teams going 
18    G. to the Premier League, some go to the first division,
19    correct?
20    A   That's correct.
21    Q   Okay.
22             And it is true that those two leagues, in effect, 
23    as you've testified before, compete with each other for 
24    players, correct?
25    A   Some players, yes.

And then compared the Premier League and First Division to the NFL and AFL of the 1960s. Then apologized to Gulati.

 
 9    Q   Okay.
10             And the first division is comparable, we just said, 
11    in quality, at least torques league to Major League Soccer, 
12    right?
13    A   That's correct.
14    Q   So if we're defining some major league level, then both 
15    Major League Soccer and the first division of England would 
16    have to be in that major league level, right?
17    A   If you're defining major league in that way, that would 
18    be correct.
19    Q   Right.
20             And the Premier League might be even a better 
21    quality than that, right?
22    A   The Premier League is the top division in England, yes.
23    Q   So, for example, when the A*FL and NFL both existed if 
24    football originally, the NFL might have been better than the 
25    A*FL, but they were both competing major leagues, right?

page 2230

 1                  MR. CARDOZO:  Objection.
 2    A   I don't know that they were both --
 3                  THE COURT:  Wait a minute.  Wait a minute.
 4                  MR. KESSLER:  Sorry --
 5                  THE COURT:  
 6                  MR. KESSLER:  I'm sorry, did you sustain the 
 7    objection?
 8                  THE COURT:  I'm thinking about it.
 9                  MR. KESSLER:  I'm sorry.
10                  THE COURT:  Go ahead, you may answer.
11                  MR. KESSLER:  Thank you, your Honor.
12    A   I don't know at what time we're talking about.  
13    Certainly from the little I know, when the A*FL started, 
14    they weren't considered a major league in that sense of the 
15    word, and I don't know that in football they use major 
16    league like that.
17    Q   Okay.
18    Q   Now, let's turn to another subject., and, again, 
19    Mr. Gulati, on the naming issue I want to apologize to you, 
20    okay?
21    A   I accept your apology.
22    Q   Thank you.

I would just love for someone in soccer to explain to me why he keeps getting hired for soccer cases.

And again — the U.S. women probably have a better case than the MLS players did. MLS players endured some shoddy treatment in the early days, but that didn’t give them a good legal case, and they really should’ve settled once Judge George O’Toole kicked the guts out of it in April 2000. (Scroll to “On April 19, 2000” here.) The U.S. women might be able to win no matter who’s representing them. But it might help if they had someone sit down and explain the realities of soccer to Kessler so he doesn’t make any costly mistakes.

Repeating the disclaimers:

1. Jeff Kessler does a lot of good.

2. U.S. Soccer has done a lot of good (compared with, say, Brazil and, until a few years ago, England) but also some things that make us face-palm.

3. While we don’t know what’s in the new CBA, no rational person would object to the WNT getting a big bump in salaries AND bonuses given the USSF surplus. The fact that the world is catching up is actually a good reason to spend more, not less.

And finally: The lawsuit may be a good idea.

In the meantime, question everything and demand more. (Maybe except from those of us who are doing this for free.)

pro soccer, women's soccer

The top 100 women’s soccer players, by the numbers

The Guardian has released its annual list of the top 100 women’s soccer players in the world, drawing votes from an outstanding panel.

It’s a diverse group of voters. The only U.S.-based journalists on the panel are Jennifer Gordon and Jen Cooper, both terrific choices. (You might also include Jordan Angeli, a former player now doing broadcast commentary, in the journalist category as well — a great choice as well, no matter how you classify her.) I don’t see any U.S. managers/coaches on the list — the three from the NWSL are all from Europe, though they’ve certainly been here long enough to know the talent pool. Three former U.S. players, including Angeli, are on the panel. They’ve found voters based in Asia, Africa, Australia, South America, Central America and New Zealand in addition to the usual hotbeds of the USA and Europe.

Fortunately for me, the timing is excellent. I’m writing the women’s soccer portion of my book now, and this data fits perfectly. 

I’ve uploaded my spreadsheet to Github if you’d like to dig in for yourself. Here are some highlights … 

BY COUNTRY

The USA is still No. 1 in terms of numbers of players on the list. FIFA rankings in parentheses.

  • 16 USA (1)
  • 11 England (4)
  • 11 Germany (2)
  • 9 France (3)
  • 6 Netherlands (7)
  • 5 each for Australia (6) and Sweden (9)
  • 4 each for Brazil (10), Japan (8), Norway (13) and Spain (12)

Fifth-ranked Canada had two players on the list. No. 11 North Korea had none.

I also wanted to look not just at the overall depth but in terms of where the top players ranked. To analyze that, I used the same scoring system that cross-country meets use — a sum of the top five. The lower the score, the better.

  • 75 USA
  • 98 France
  • 114 England
  • 116 Netherlands
  • 151 Germany
  • 265 Norway*
  • 311 Brazil*
  • 334 Australia
  • 375 Sweden
  • 390 each for Japan* and Spain*

The asterisks are for countries that had four players on the list. I added a hypothetical fifth player ranked 125th — seems likely that those countries would have another player somewhere around that rank if it continued for another 50 or 100.

So by either measure, the USA leads the way despite all the progress made in the rest of the world. The biggest surprise is that England and the Netherlands have raced past Germany. 

BY LEAGUE

One caveat here: Players on loan from the NWSL are counted in both of their leagues. That means several players, such as No. 2 Sam Kerr, contribute to the rankings for the NWSL and Australia. No. 28 Jess Fishlock counts for both the NWSL and France. (I filtered out the second reference to each player when I calculated the county rankings.)

I’m a little surprised that the NWSL held onto No. 1.

  • 30 NWSL
  • 21 France
  • 18 Germany
  • 16 England
  • 6 Australia
  • 5 Spain
  • 4 Sweden
  • 3 China
  • 2 Norway
  • 1 each for Japan and the NCAA

The cross-country rankings don’t really tell us much. Five players can form the backbone of a very strong team, but they don’t reflect the strength of a league. Still, I was on a roll, so …

  • 26 France
  • 45 NWSL
  • 92 England
  • 93 Germany
  • 266 Spain
  • 331 Australia
  • 417 Sweden (again using the hypothetical fifth player ranked 125th)

As expected, France’s success rides mostly on the ridiculous strength of one club …

BY CLUB

  • 14 Lyon
  • 10 Wolfsburg
  • 8 North Carolina (Courage, not NCAA)
  • 6 Seattle
  • 5 each for Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City and PSG
  • 4 each for Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Chicago, Orlando and Portland

You’re not expecting the cross-country rankings to be close, are you? Asterisks once again mark the four-player teams with a hypothetical 125th-ranked player added.

  • 26 Lyon (3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th)
  • 93 Wolfsburg
  • 145 Arsenal
  • 201 Chelsea
  • 209 Seattle
  • 235 North Carolina
  • 243 Portland*
  • 276 Manchester City
  • 328 Chicago*
  • 342 Barcelona*
  • 343 Orlando*
  • 347 PSG
  • 383 Bayern Munich*

As you’d expect, the salary-capped, parity-driven NWSL spread its talent across far more clubs than the other leagues did.

NWSL: 30 players — 8 at North Carolina; 6 at Seattle; 4 each at Portland, Orlando and Chicago; 2 at Utah; 1 each at Washington (Pugh but not Lavelle) and Houston 

France: 21 players — 14 at Lyon, 5 at PSG, 2 at Montpellier

Germany: 18 players — 10 at Wolfsburg, 4 at Bayern Munich, 2 at Essen, 1 each at Turbine Potsdam and Frankfurt

England: 16 players — 5 each at Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City, plus 1 at Birmingham

Australia: 6 players at 5 clubs

Spain: 5 players — 4 at Barcelona, 1 at Atletico Madrid

Sweden: 4 players — 3 at Rosengard, 1 at Linkoping

China: 3 players at 3 clubs

Norway: 2 players at 2 clubs

ODDS AND ENDS 

  • The players in China’s league are from Brazil, Nigeria and Malawi.
  • The five nominees for U.S. Soccer Female Player of the Year rank 7th (Morgan), 10th (Rapinoe), 12th (Horan), 25th (Heath) and 32nd (Ertz). The nominees did not include No. 21 (Dunn).
  • The U.S. players who played the most international games in 2018 without being ranked in the top 100 are Lloyd (19), Sonnett (14) and Lavelle (13). 
  • Adrianna Franch is ranked (65th) despite making no appearances for the USA in 2018.

Again, the full spreadsheet is at Github.

women's soccer

NWSL’s leadership void compounds hurricane damage

On Monday, Campbell University and Coastal Carolina University agreed to move their football game from Saturday to Wednesday and play it at Campbell instead of Coastal Carolina, a brief sojourn for Chanticleers fans. (Coastal Carolina won rather easily.)

On Tuesday, the University of Virginia moved its home football game against Ohio to Nashville.

On Tuesday, the University of North Carolina postponed its home football game against Central Florida and rearranged other games in other sports.

And so forth and so on.

And all the while, Graham slept on, dreaming of a world where he could do just what … oops, lapsed into an old XTC song there. (As if there are any new XTC songs — sad proof of the ill effects of pointless conflict.)

Let’s try that again …

And all the while, the NWSL … closely monitored the situation as Hurricane Florence crept toward the Atlantic coast.

That was Monday. Nothing Tuesday. On Wednesday, the NWSL Twitter feed RTd this from North Carolina:

Closely Monitoring 2: Electric Boogaloo.

And yet, no statement, unless you count the “Oh no, this looks bad!” statement:

https://twitter.com/TheNCCourage/status/1039977997812609025

So while Virginia football fans were setting GPS coordinates for Nashville, Courage fans were wondering when flights out of town would become scarce. (The answer? Thursday afternoon.)

So many Southerners really are friendly people. But perhaps not the most industrious. No wonder John F. Kennedy once dissed Washington as a city of “Northern charm and Southern efficiency.”

And so the Great NWSL Semifinal Kerfuffle dragged into Thursday afternoon, leading to exchanges such as this between Chicago Red Stars coach Rory Dames and North Carolina Courage president/GM Curt Johnson …

It was not a great day for a lot of WoSo Twitter, a land where normally sturdy hotels 120 miles inland will topple in the face of 33-mph winds and passengers are better suited to judge the safety of flying in storms than a U.S. commercial airline industry that hasn’t had a major crash since the Colgan Air crash of 2009 that shed new light on pilot training and cockpit procedures. (It was windy in many parts of the country that day — I flew from Columbus to Dulles on a small commercial plane that also had JP Dellacamera and John Harkes aboard, and the landing was rather frightening — but that was not cited as a factor.)

But the biggest problem here isn’t social media, which is often prone to overwrought, inaccurate takes.

The problem is that the NWSL remains rudderless, now in its 19th month without a commissioner since the surprise resignation of Jeff Plush.

And so instead of figuring out a solid neutral site that would still let the Courage maintain some of its home-field advantage, we get this …

No home-field advantage for the Courage. And now it’s on ESPNews, which many of us don’t get.

With a little bit of planning, this game could’ve been in Atlanta. Or Nashville. Or Richmond. Or someplace the Courage and its fans might have been to reach.

Sure, it’s better than waiting until the last possible minute to see if North Carolina can host a playoff game on Sunday or maybe Monday. But they had other options.

women's soccer

Washington Spirit report: Meet the new boss …

Taylor Smith won the ball at the back and surged down the right channel into open space. Mallory Pugh went out wide. A couple of passes threatened to unlock the Utah defense.

I don’t remember exactly what happened next, but it probably involved Becky Sauerbrunn breaking up the attack.

I bring it up because that may have been the only time Wednesday night that the Washington Spirit looked like they had a chance of scoring a goal. Even a glimmer of hope.

Sure, Rose Lavelle had a couple of dazzling moments, pulling off skill moves usually seen only in coaching clinics in which the coaches are trying way too hard to show they can teach some off-the-wall 360 move. (Calling it the “Maradona” is surely ironic these days given that Jupiter would rotate with more speed than Maradona would.) And Lavelle had a good run going until Rachel Corsie committed a foul that would’ve been a 15-yard penalty in the NFL.

But the stats for this one were just ugly for the Spirit, unless you count saves, in which long-serving understudy DiDi Haracic tallied 10 and was a bit unlucky not to have an unlikely 11-save shutout. She at least made Laura Harvey and company sweat on a cool, almost chilly night at the Maryland SoccerPlex.

spirit-shots
Does the “expected goal” (xG) stat ever go into negative numbers?

With that, I have to confess that the headline is misleading. I did not meet the new boss, Tom Torres. I’m working on a story for The Guardian, and my priority was talking with some Utah folks — including Laura Harvey, who told me she used to deliver The Guardian. Small world.

But the Won’t Get Fooled Again reference is apt. This Spirit team isn’t suddenly going to learn to avoid defensive lapses. Nor is the midfield going to provide any meaningful possession.

So I’m still at a loss to explain why the Spirit felt the need to fire Jim Gabarra now rather than offer him a sideline swansong and then perhaps another job in the organization. And I didn’t get any more answers on what was frankly a weird night at the SoccerPlex. Jen Gordon wasn’t there, apparently for the first time since the Spirit’s debut. Neither was Boyd. Good dog.

I’m pondering the quote from Spirit president and interim GM Chris Hummer from yesterday’s post, in which he talked about starting the process for 2019 now. Does that mean interim coach Tom Torres is a candidate?

Torres’ resume isn’t bad. But my sense is that the restless fan base will want a bigger name or more top-level experience. Also, the Spirit may still have trouble shaking the perception that they think they can get by with the coaching talent in the D.C. area. They caught lightning in a bottle with the then-green Mark Parsons, who had been a youth and high school coach in rural Virginia, but the Spirit otherwise have a track record of overvaluing coaches (and sometimes players — the DMV is not California) from this area. It’s understandable in the academy — nothing wrong with hiring a former player like Lori Lindsey or a mid-Atlantic stalwart like Santino Quaranta — but another perspective would surely help. And this team needs it.

Next stop: Audi Field.

podcast, us soccer, women's soccer

New podcast, new T-shirt

The feedback I’ve received on the T-shirts is that everyone loves the “three minivans” badge.

minivans-shirtSo the new T-shirt emphasizes that badge. The RSD banner is moved, and the “TRAVEL SUCKER” logo becomes a small badge.

Take a look and get your shirt now.

Also new …

I’m going to do fewer hourlong podcast interviews. Instead, I’m going to do two different sorts of podcasts:

The big ones: Multipart, multivoice series on a particular topic, akin to the great “American Fiasco” series.

The small ones: Short podcasts covering a couple of topics.

This week, it’s the latter. Give it a listen.

The three topics this week are:

  1. We have a new U.S. Youth Soccer chairman. What does that mean for U.S. Soccer?
  2. On women’s soccer broadcasts, could we show a variety of aspirational archetypes, not just soccer players?
  3. What’s new at Ranting Soccer Dad.

 

podcast, women's soccer, youth soccer

RSD36: Player pathways, college and elite leagues, with Lesle Gallimore

Lesle Gallimore has been head women’s soccer coach at the University of Washington since 1994, and she’s the current president of United Soccer Coaches.

In this conversation, we talk about how college coaches adapt their recruiting to the new “elite league turf war” environment. And we talk about how players adapt and whether they *can* adapt.

For example: Could Gallimore’s most famous player, Hope Solo, work her way through the system today and be discovered?

Coincidentally, Solo made a lot of news this week, and I discuss that before the interview (which was recorded before all that news happened). The Gallimore interview starts around the 10-minute mark.

podcast, us soccer, women's soccer, youth soccer

RSD27: Julie Foudy finds reasons to be optimistic about youth soccer

If you came here from my Soccer America piece, skip ahead to the 25-minute mark. Or maybe go back to the beginning of this conversation around the 18-minute mark to hear Foudy talk about pay-to-play and the chase for results. Or back to 13:20 to hear the entire youth soccer discussion.

Today’s guest has an impossible task: Make me feel better about youth soccer, and soccer in general, and youth sports in general … maybe just life in general. But she’s faced tougher tasks. She’s Julie Foudy, Hall of Fame soccer player and ESPN journalist.

After I make an announcement and then rant about curling commentary, the interview starts around the 13:20 mark with a discussion of what’s good about youth soccer, whether soccer can have the same supportive atmosphere of extreme sports (20:30), the lack of women in coaching (26:20), her experiences as a soccer parent (31:20) and then U.S. Soccer politics, including the role of the Athletes’ Council (40:10). She also talks a bit about the U.S. women’s team heading into the SheBelieves Cup (51:10).

us soccer, women's soccer

Scenes from an Orlando hotel (or, why Heather O’Reilly is hard core)

After my interview with SiriusXM FC today (thanks, Dunny and Janusz), I headed over to the hotel where all the action is at the U.S. Soccer Annual General Meeting to grab a good meal and see who was hanging around.

I found more than I expected:

Hard-core HAO: I’ve been wrong about a few things in this election. One of them — I assumed that because Arsenal’s women play Sunday, Heather O’Reilly would not be at this meeting. As I walked through the lobby, someone from a table (not the table with Kathy Carter mentioned below) that also included Shannon Boxx and Lori Lindsey waved to me.

My brain: “That’s Heather O’Reilly. But it couldn’t be. She has a game on Sunday.”

Yes, she does. And she’s playing in it. On Saturday, she’ll go straight from the meeting to the airport and fly across the Atlantic for Sunday’s game.

That’s how important this meeting and election is to her. And to a lot of people.

I guess I shouldn’t complain about my flight. (Which was actually pretty good.)

“Hey, Eric! You’re on TV!”: I snagged the table in the hotel sports bar in front of the only TV tuned to beINSport, which was doing its election coverage. I looked up at the screen and saw … Eric Wynalda.

I looked back across the room and saw … Eric Wynalda.

He seemed a little puzzled when I insisted to him that he was on TV at the very moment. Safe to say the interview wasn’t live.

Carter holds court: I stumbled into a room where Kathy Carter had apparently just finished speaking. Quite a few dignitaries (voters) were on hand, including John Motta and Kevin Payne. Don’t read anything into that — I still don’t know who’s voting for whom. Motta is clearly one of the big winners in this election — he gets along with everyone, which is very impressive. When I saw him in Philly, he was at a Wynalda event.

I did get to speak with her and was a little surprised to find she has been reading my work. I hope that doesn’t mean she’s reading Twitter. (Motta is a big winner; a big loser in this election is clearly Soccer Twitter, a web of conspiracies and miscellaneous b.s. Seriously. You’ve heard that the non-Carter and Cordeiro candidates are talking about some sort of solidarity statement, and I can confirm that such conversation is taking place. I wouldn’t be surprised if all eight candidates agreed on a statement blasting selected anonymous jerks on Twitter who keep poisoning the conversation.)

Coincidentally, I had listened to the Total Soccer Show podcast on the plane, which I heartily recommend. (The podcast, not the plane, though American Airlines has more leg room on a flight to Orlando than British Airways has on a flight to London.) They pointed out that she has a lot of good ideas in her platform that haven’t gotten a lot of attention. Maybe we’re too focused on asking, “So, SUM is really evil, right?”

Her campaign has had a few missteps. I can’t argue that she’s the best choice, and I can’t argue against people who say they want more of a change in the Federation. But this whole “evil Wasserman/SUM cabal” talk is, to put it mildly, overblown. If she wins, please put down the torches and pitchforks. Work with her. You might be surprised.

I saw Carter a bit later at a table in the sports bar with a few members of the Athletes’ Council. And Sunil Gulati.

Martino’s army: I wandered down the hall after visiting the Carter room and found the room where Kyle Martino has been talking for … I don’t know how long.

I found a misconception worth correcting here. A lot of us have been viewing Martino as a sort of compromise candidate who may win out as everyone’s “anyone but (Candidate X)” second or third choice. What I found in that room: Many people who passionately support Martino. He’s not their second or third choice. He’s No. 1. They love him, and they’re ready to fight for every vote.

And several state reps in the room said they’re looking for change. No one mentioned promotion and relegation. They said they were glad that the Trinidad debacle has helped shed light on the many issues within U.S. Soccer.

 

pro soccer, us soccer, women's soccer, youth soccer

U.S. Soccer presidential election: Last call for questions

In one week, U.S. Soccer members — from big-shot board members to little-known delegates from far-flung state associations — will descend upon a hotel just outside Disney World and Sea World. They’ll have two days of preliminary meetings and a welcome event at Hollywood Studios. (I have not yet inquired about Fastpasses for Toy Story Mania.)

questions-flipThen on Saturday, it’s the Big Vote. Eight candidates enter. One takes over the presidency from Sunil Gulati.

And we still have so many questions left unanswered. So many ideas that haven’t been fully vetted. So many vague statements.

So let’s come up with a list of questions — some for all candidates, some for specific candidates. Then I’ll see if I can get them answered.

You can leave them as comments here. You can email me. You can hit me up on Twitter.

Here are a few to get us started:

ALL CANDIDATES

Paralympics

  1. What will you do to work with the 7-a-side program (for athletes with cerebral palsy or brain injury) while it’s not part of the Paralympic Games program?
  2. Can anything be done to start a 5-a-side program for visually impaired athletes, a sport that is in the Paralympic Games? Have you already had conversations with athletes about doing this?

Futsal

  1. Most conversations about futsal in this campaign have focused on using it as a youth development tool. But we have a men’s national team and a couple of budding pro leagues. What’s the next step for building out the game at the elite level?

NWSL 

  1. Name three things that can be done to improve the women’s league.

Women’s national team

  1. Will you try to negotiate both the MNT and WNT collective bargaining agreements at the same time?
  2. Hypothetical: You’re negotiating with the WNT. They ask for 24 players to be put on full-time salary with restrictions on the number of “floaters” who can come into camp. The coaching staff has warned that they need flexibility to call in players who are impressing in the NWSL and Europe. What’s your next move?

Youth soccer

  1. Hypothetical: Let’s say the state associations, backed by a national movement of parents and coaches, ask USSF to standardize leagues throughout the country, folding the Development Academy and other elite leagues into a clearly defined pyramid with promotion/relegation and more local play (less travel). U.S. Club Soccer, predictably, gets very upset. What’s your next move?
  2. Will you tell Development Academy clubs to let their players play high school soccer? Do you see any sort of compromise (say, letting kids play their junior and senior years)?

Open Cup 

  1. Hypothetical: You’re trying to sell the Open Cup as a separate TV property. The best bid you have is from an online streaming service that just launched a year ago. They’re offering four times as much as any traditional broadcaster. What’s your next move?
  2. NEW! Should the Open Cup run a fall-to-spring schedule that isn’t tied to the summer leagues (NPSL, PDL). If so, would you favor a separate Summer Open Cup for those leagues?

Promotion/relegation 

  1. Would you be open to a modified promotion/relegation system in which clubs can’t be relegated below a specific floor (for “major” clubs, D2; for other fully professional clubs, D3)?
  2. Hypothetical: You get a conglomeration of leagues to agree to set up a pyramid. MLS says it will not participate. The top league in your pyramid applies for D1. The task force recommends approval. MLS lawyers up. What’s your next move?

ERIC WYNALDA

  1. Some lawyers and others with experience in the nonprofit world and with NGBs are skeptical of your idea to turn USSF into a lending bank. How would you respond?
  2. Will you please, please stop saying “international calendar” in reference to the fall-to-spring calendar that isn’t used in half the world? (Sorry, pet peeve of mine.)

HOPE SOLO

  1. Where did you hear the incorrect statement that U.S. Soccer coaching licenses are not age appropriate? (The purpose of this question is to find out where she’s getting misinformation like this and whether she has taken steps to find better sources of info.)
  2. If you win the presidency, you will be in the position of defending the federation against a grievance you filed. What’s your next move?

KYLE MARTINO 

  1. In your Progress Plan, why would any club created after 2024 be “non-league”? What happens if we have major demographic and climate shifts?
  2. Why move all of U.S. Soccer to New York and not just have a satellite office?

CARLOS CORDEIRO

  1. You’ve demonstrated a reluctance to do interviews. How will you adapt to the role of president, when you be required to do many press conferences?

KATHY CARTER

  1. Is it a conflict of interest to have the head of SUM, Don Garber, serving on the Board as long as it’s been in its current (15-member) configuration AND serving as the chairperson of the Nominating and Governance Committee? If not, why not?
  2. What happened to SUM’s site? It’s now redirected to a page on the quasi-independent MLSSoccer.com.
  3. Would MLS expansion fees be cheaper if new owners did not get a share of SUM? Is there any way to untangle that relationship?
  4. Would MLS be in good shape, financially (either profitable or running a loss only because it’s investing in future growth), if it were separated from SUM?
  5. Plenty of people who understand how SUM helped save professional soccer in 2002 question whether it’s still necessary in its current form (co-mingled with MLS) today. How would you respond?

Anything else?

 

pro soccer, women's soccer

Time for U.S. pro leagues to treat their cornerstones a bit better

With its callous attitude toward Columbus, MLS has already staked out a “thanks for getting us off the ground, now go away” attitude that Don Garber must fix before he either leaves office or renews his contract.

Are we seeing the same thing in pro women’s soccer? It’s complicated. We might not know a complete answer until we know the lineup of teams for 2019.

But it’s not looking good.

We might be able to absolve the NWSL of blame for the fact that 2018 will be the first season of pro women’s soccer in the USA without a team called the Boston Breakers. They weren’t the strongest club in WPS — see general manager Andy Crossley’s dissections of his handiwork for more details on that and yet another reason to add Curt Schilling to your list of the worst human beings in sports. And they never really found a good home ground in the NWSL — Dilboy Stadium was about as “track-and-field-specific” a venue as anyone could find, and Harvard’s Jordan Field was OK but tiny.

So when word spread that the owners were trying to sell, no one could really blame them. We may never know what happened with the new owners who, as of a few days ago, seemed set to buy the club and continue into the new season. Was the league completely blindsided? Or should they have done more to wrap up the deal or reject it in time to let others have a chance? Would the league have a more potent voice if it made up its mind as to whether Amanda Duffy is the interim or permanent commissioner, executive director, CEO or whatever they want to call their leader?

As we know now, others did indeed leap into the fray to try to save the team. I spoke with representatives of three different camps, some of whom are opposed to each other on other issues. They were confident that they had investors with enough money to keep the Breakers running. They were less confident that they had time for everyone to get through due diligence. After missteps of the past — Jeff Cooper’s mysterious money men bailing on St. Louis, Dan Borislow taking the Washington Freedom to Florida and butting heads with authority for a year until the league finally collapsed — “due diligence” is not something that can be skipped.

Whatever happened has happened. The question now: Is there any chance of reviving the Breakers in 2019?

What I’m hearing isn’t positive. Nor is the fact that the NWSL has not responded to my inquiries over the weekend about the Breakers situation, first to get comment on the last-ditch effort to save the team and then to get comment on what happens next.

The answer affects more than just Boston. Like the Crew in Columbus, the Breakers name means something to soccer fans. It’s an original.

And for all the bluster of MLS-affiliated women’s teams being better situated that everyone else, look who had the most extensive youth and reserves operations — the Boston Breakers, along with fellow independent Washington Spirit. (At least the Breakers Academy will continue. FC Kansas City also still has Academy games scheduled, resuming Feb. 10.)

Something dies every time a team folds or moves. MLS has lucked out so far that things have turned out well in the long run, but that streak could end very quickly if the Crew move. And if the NWSL can’t act on the obvious interest to restore the Breakers next year, the league’s credibility will suffer.