us soccer, women's soccer

Equal-pay play: No friendly gap, narrowed Cup bonuses

Now that the national team pay calculator is done (more or less), we can run some scenarios.

Here’s one:

Assumed results:

  • Women win World Cup with 9 points in group stage, take Olympic bronze with 7 points in group stage.
  • Men reach World Cup quarterfinals (7 points in group) one year and take 3 points in group stage in another. 

Friendlies: Bonuses for women are now the men’s bonuses minus their game bonuses, so the pay per game should be equal.

Women’s World Cup qualifiers: Now paid at the same rate as Tier 2 friendlies.
 
Women’s World Cup qualifying bonus: Now roughly equal to what a mid-tier men’s player would make for World Cup qualifying bonus. (The men’s pool bonus is split, not equally, among a much larger group.)

Women’s World Cup bonuses:

  • $10.39 million possible team pay, up from $2.53 million
  • Bonus for the tour formerly known as the Victory Tour bonus is unchanged at $1.4 million after finishing first
  • $11.79 million total (prize + tour), up from $3.93 million
  • Reminder: FIFA prize money was $4 million for first place in 2019 but will rise, maybe not quite double. USSF will lose maybe $4-6 million.

Men’s World Cup bonuses:

  • $26.471 million possible team pay, down from to $20 million, with most of the cuts in later rounds
  • Reminder: FIFA prize money was $38 million for first place in 2018.

Women’s Olympic bonuses:

  • $3.8 million possible team pay, up from $1.8 million
  • Bonus for the tour formerly known as the Victory Tour bonus is unchanged at $1.2 million after finishing first  
  • Reminder: USOC prize money is $35,000 for each gold medalist

New for men: Likeness rights, which are convoluted in the current men’s CBA, are pooled into a $350,000 sum as in the women’s CBA.

Unchanged: Gold Cup, Copa America, SheBelieves Cup and Tournament of Nations bonuses. 

RESULTS

  • Total team compensation over 6 years: women $52,562,676, men $43,925,132
  • Maximum possible per player over 6 years: women $2,454,331, men $1,858,198

Full results

And more detail …

us soccer, women's soccer

Why do I question women’s soccer narratives?

I’m aggravated when people denigrate soccer because it’s my favorite sport — and because such sentiments are often rooted in a form of xenophobia in which generations have been expected to be culturally assimilated through our devotion to American sports like football, basketball and baseball.

I’m aggravated when people denigrate women’s sports because such sentiments are rooted in sexism. As with soccer, no one’s forcing you to play or watch, why put down anyone who makes a different choice?

I’m aggravated when people denigrate women’s soccer for any combination of the reasons above.

In case you don’t know my history covering women’s soccer, here are a few highlights:

So why did I write a piece for The Guardian talking about the U.S. women’s soccer team’s arrogance and their fans’ misguided hero worship?

Why have I written two pieces for Soccer America questioning the prevailing wisdom on equal pay in women’s soccer — not to question whether the women deserve to be paid more but to give people the information they need to make it happen?

Why have I spent a week creating a spreadsheet exploring how much the men’s and women’s national teams have made and would make, given different variables?

Because I’m more aggravated by misinformation.

It could be a bit of OCD, which I think most traditional journalists have. People with OCD are agitated when other people aren’t following the rules. And yes, I’m agitated with the scapegoating of the U.S. men’s team, as if it’s somehow Christian Pulisic’s fault that FIFA’s World Cup bonuses are out of whack.

But mostly, it’s because I think facts matter, and I think people make bad decisions when they aren’t telling the truth or putting it in perspective. (Yes, the current period of American history is hell for me.)

So a few things are difficult to accept …

Distorted equal pay arguments

It’s one thing to say women’s soccer players should be paid better. You can certainly use my spreadsheet above and highlight inequities.

The distortion is the notion that “the women who win the Cup should be paid more than the men who didn’t qualify.” It’s a distortion because they are paid more.

That’s difficult for some people to accept because the narrative is so powerful. We hear “38 cents to the dollar,” and we don’t understand that such comparisons are only one of the myriad scenarios you could create on my spreadsheet.

If the men and women each won the World Cup (I have a book coming out in November saying one of those will never happen), the men would be paid many times more. You can certainly argue that it’s not fair. Then you can argue about whether U.S. Soccer can fix it while FIFA drags its feet on prize money. You can argue about whether the bulk of prize money, men or women, should be going to the next generation of athletes as well as the current one. (Olympic prize money — in fact, the revenue U.S. Soccer gets from the Olympics — is basically nothing, and yet the U.S. women get bonuses.) You can come up with many different ways to rectify the situation, which is why I built the calculator, but there’s no denying the situation exists.

But when the men don’t qualify, they don’t get paid. In my calculations, I see few, if any, men’s players making six figures in 2018. They might make it in 2019, helped by Gold Cup bonuses that are surprisingly low given the attendance for those games.

In other words — the women’s base salary of $100,000, before any bonuses or game fees are paid, is more than what men will make.

So griping that the women should be paid more than men in years such as this is a bit like saying summer in Virginia should be hot. It is.

A “double standard” on behavior

It’s not the first time this has happened in women’s soccer. A women’s soccer player (say, Hope Solo) is criticized for her behavior. We immediately hear men wouldn’t be criticized for such things. That’s simply not true.

These conversations are, of course, far too polarized. On one side, you have people who’ll defend nearly anything the women do.

I’m very suspicious of any such devotion to anyone. Megan Rapinoe. Kanye West. Donald Trump. The Instagram influencers who got people to go to the Fyre Festival.

The good part of all this is that it’s at least an effective counterweight to the other side — the sexist dirtbags who don’t want the women to be paid well. They don’t even want us journalists to be writing about them at all. I actually had a female editor once tell me to quit writing so much about women’s soccer.

Make no mistake — I’d rather see a bunch of people making a statement for women’s rights and gay rights than a team of dumbasses pledging fealty to Brazil’s president or the worst elements of ICE and the Border Patrol. And women have to put up with a lot of things men don’t, from glass ceilings to horrific abuse on Twitter.

But facts and proper context won’t undo any progress fighting against these forces. It’ll just put the movement on a firmer foundation.

So what I’m doing isn’t a “build up and tear down” thing. It’s a “build up” that recognizes complexity and nuance while trying to avoid dead ends.

Because we’ve been through this before. Everyone remembers 1999. Maybe 1996. Less likely, 2004. Few remember the doldrums of the mid-2000s, when we had no professional league and little interest in women’s soccer.

The people who pop up for the majors (World Cup, Olympics) will yell about equal pay without addressing the specifics. They’ll decry the “double standards” of those who raise even the slightest questions about celebrations — an interesting accusation to lob at Hope Solo, and one that fed the fire that made Kaylyn Kyle respond to death threats — before moving on the next story. Maybe Tom Brady will injure Eric Trump while playfully tossing a dinner roll at a White House dinner. Maybe Grayson Allen will pick up a technical foul. Maybe Bryce Harper will take a fastball in the ribs.

You won’t see these people at NWSL games, writing about whether the Portland Thorns/Timbers relationship is a new model for dual-gender professional sports organizations. You won’t see them analyzing the games to see that Julie Ertz had a much bigger impact on the USA’s wins than Megan Rapinoe. (Golden Ball voters really dropped the ball on that one.)

Maybe at some point, we’ll actually cover women’s soccer for what it is. It’s a sport. It has some athletes who’ve made a fortune and some who have second jobs, and in the NWSL, you may see the latter outperforming the former.

Alex Morgan and Marta are on the same team. They’re in eighth place. Out of nine. They missed the playoffs last year, too.

Women’s soccer is interesting. It’s not just a platform for skewed cries of sexism.

Check it out.

us soccer, youth soccer

Freddy Adu’s next chapter will be worth reading

Remember when U.S. men’s soccer was so full of hope?

You don’t? Watch this …

That ad is so much better than the ads we see for the U.S. women’s team today. The field-level ad isn’t bad, but so much of it is over-the-top hero worship. If we keep putting the women on pedestals and exalt them as flawless, we can’t be too surprised when critics pounce on any crack in that facade. (And then we prolong the discussion by claiming that the criticism is sexist, even though it’s not the least bit inconsistent with what we see in men’s sports, and it’s painfully ironic that the knowledgeable women who question the narrative are bullied worse than people who speak up about women’s soccer pay. You’ve read this, right?)

(Also, the band that provided the soundtrack for that ad is an indie duo called Joy Zipper, and the NYT writeup of their wedding is cute.)

But this isn’t a rant about advertising. The focus here is the young man who pops up at the 44-second mark to do some stepovers, flip the ball up and smash a volley into the net.

He’s Freddy Adu, one of the most talented young players this country has ever seen.

No, really …

No, really …

No, really.

One of the disappointments in the soccer media of the last 10 years has been that no one ever quite captured the story of how Adu plummeted from such heights to where he stands today, unable to stick with a second-division U.S. team.

Until now. See the ESPN story by Bruce Schoenfeld, who not only landed a rare interview with Adu himself but chatted with people who’ve known him at the beginning and the (almost certain) end of his playing career.

For the latter point, the definitive comment comes from the ever-candid Eric Wynalda, who took over the USL’s Las Vegas Lights team and declined to invite Adu for another season with the team.

The reason that Freddy’s not here now, there are six or seven guys getting their first chance or their second chance. He’s on his fourth or fifth. It’s their turn, not his.

Wynalda and Isidro Sanchez, son of the legendary manager Chelis and temporary coach at Las Vegas last year, also put into words what others have not. Adu’s skill was as good as anyone’s. His work ethic was not. By this point in his career, he simply won’t be able to do the work he didn’t do when he was younger.

One problem is that, despite a couple of ludicrous scouting reports to the contrary, he was never fast. He could create space with a deft touch and beat a defender that way. He was never going to run past a typical professional defender.

What were the makers of Football Manager looking at?

Adu also suffered from bad advice and a string of bad luck with his club teams. At D.C. United, Peter Nowak was widely considered to be the perfect coach for a prodigy, but his mismanagement peaked in the 2006 playoffs. With United trailing New England 1-0, Adu was the best attacking force United had on the field. Nowak pulled him in the 65th minute in favor of Matias Donnet, who contributed absolutely nothing. A little while later, Christian Gomez cramped up — an accomplishment on a cool fall day — leaving only Ben Olsen to inspire the attack through sheer force of will. (Yes, this is all in my book. The first one.)

On Adu went to Real Salt Lake, which was always going to be a brief stop on his way to Europe. He wound up at storied Portuguese club Benfica, which turned out to be a mess.

Then it was Monaco’s turn to mess up, spurred by Franco-American club president Jerome de Bontin’s proclamation that Adu could represent U.S. soccer in France the way Greg LeMond represented U.S. cycling. That’s a lot of pressure to put on a player the coaches didn’t even seem to want. A whirlwind tour of Europe akin to something Chevy Chase did in the movies followed.

At this point, Adu got a lifeline. He came back to MLS to play for Philadelphia. And he wasn’t bad. Had he embraced the shot to be an above-average MLS starter at this point, he could have spent the rest of his 20s as a productive professional player.

Instead, he embarked on another round of globe-trotting and another return to the USA. The player who was a strong MLS player in his teens was a mediocre USL player in his 20s.

So why is this a story of optimism? Let’s go back to the ESPN story.

Adu believes that several of the players at Next Level have significant potential. He knows now, though, that potential only sets the starting line. “Growing up, I was always the best player,” he said. “Guys who were way below me at the time, you’d say right now had better careers than I did.”

If he’d had a Freddy Adu working with him, an elite-level player there to explain what it meant to succeed, he would have developed a different attitude. “So when I see a kid who’s really talented, clearly above the rest, and he’s just coasting, trying to get away with his talent, I say, ‘No, no, no. That can’t happen! You can’t let that happen! They will surpass you.’ Because I was that kid.”

He’s the perfect coach. He’s charismatic. He has good attacking vision.

And kids can learn so much from people who’ve failed. Many of the best coaches in the world are people who never panned out as players. They faced adversity, and they pass those lessons along to those players.

We’ll never see Freddy Adu representing the U.S. again. Not on the field.

But off the field? We’ll see.

It’s too late to take advantage of the potential he had as a player. Maybe he’ll take advantage of the potential he has now.

us soccer, women's soccer

A quick guide to the U.S. women’s soccer pay dispute

This World Cup is going to be quite competitive, today’s 13-0 rout notwithstanding. The bad news is that the USA’s chances of winning are less than 50-50, but the good news is that the reason is the growth of the game worldwide. No one who cares about women’s soccer would want the game in England, France, the Netherlands and elsewhere to make no progress.

And it raises a question that pops up on occasion: Why aren’t the U.S. women aren’t paid as much as the U.S. men?

You may be surprised here. Unless U.S. Soccer is outright lying on its 990 form for the fiscal year ending March 2018, the women are being paid more than the men.

Look at pages 7-9, the breakdown of what USSF pays its highest-paid employees. You’ll see that USSF spends ridiculous sums of money on its current and past men’s national team coaches, which we can refer to as The Klinsmann Boondoggle. Even aside from that, it’s hard to understand why the men’s Under-20 coach is paid more than women’s coach Jill Ellis.

The only players, from any team, on this list are …

  • Christen Press, $257,920
  • Becky Sauerbrunn, $256,720
  • Kell(e)y O’Hara, $256,695
  • Samantha Mewis, $247,497

It occurred to me that USSF could have listed the men as independent contractors. But the 990 lists any independent contractor making more than $100,000, and no U.S. men appear there. Also, for the fiscal year ending March 2010, Jozy Altidore and Brad Guzan are listed in the same “highest-compensated employees” that lists Press and company on the most recent 990. (Altidore and Guzan made a little more than $150K, if you’re curious.)

How is this possible? A couple of things:

  1. The men’s team rotates players often. In 2018, even though the men only played 11 games (shame about that World Cup), they used more than 50 different players. No one played 10 games. In 2017, when the men played 19 games, a few players reached double digits, led by Jorge Villafaña, of all people, with 15. (This is worth remembering when we see the “a man playing 20 games” argument — unless I’ve missed someone in the media guide, no man has played 20 national-team games in a year since Landon Donovan in 2002, the year the USA reached the World Cup quarterfinals.) The women might use 30 players in a year, with 8-12 of them getting only a couple of short appearances.
  2. The women (20-25 or so, at least) are on salary. The men are not.
  3. The men haven’t exactly collected that big World Cup bonus. In FY ending March 2018, they actually won a major tournament (the Gold Cup), and their bonuses still didn’t propel anyone into the Sauerbrunn/O’Hara $250K range.

All of this makes things complicated.

But it doesn’t necessarily make things right.

To my knowledge, no one has quantified what “equal pay” would look like. I tried …

It’s a long thread. The highlights are a women’s salary that equals what a man would make if he played 20 games, evening out “base pay” a bit, and comparable competitions get comparable bonuses. Oh, and I’d slash the men’s bonuses if they ever make a big World Cup run, instead investing that money in youth soccer. Please don’t tell them I said that. And I wonder if I’m just replicating the scenario in the Rush song The Trees, in which the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, axe and saw.

Even then, you’re faced with a question. When you say “equal pay,” does that mean the women get the same amount of money, divided 30 ways, that the men get divided 50 ways? Or does it mean Alex Morgan should be paid the same as Christian Pulisic?

So that’s the present. But it’s also worth knowing the past, and for that, you should really read Caitlin Murray’s book, which is excerpted in The Guardian.

And that all points to the weird duality of U.S. Soccer and the U.S. women:

  1. The USSF has done quite a lot to push women’s soccer forward.
  2. The USSF has, at times, treated the women’s players with negligence or even malice.

All of which makes it very difficult to assess the fairness of any CBAs, especially those we haven’t seen.

us soccer, women's soccer

U.S. Soccer: The game is not the same

Let’s skip the intro and get right into it …

You may want to refer to the original, because this is a paragraph-by-paragraph response. Miki Turner has done some of the screenshots already, so expect to see his Tweets throughout …

(NOTE: When I say POINT here, I don’t mean my point. This is what USSF is arguing. As you’ll see, I find at least one of those points baffling.)

POINT 1: The games are different. Paragraph 1:

U.S. Soccer denies the remaining allegations in this paragraph and states that under applicable international rules, the players on the USMNT are forbidden from playing on the USWNT, that the USWNT and USMNT play at different times, in different locations, against different opponents, and are comprised of athletes who have different obligations, are compensated in fundamentally different ways, and enjoy different benefits; thus, USWNT players have no male “counterparts” who play for the USMNT.

The “forbidden from playing on USWNT” might be legally necessary, but it’s not a great way to start this if you’re trying to win over the public (which may or may not matter).

But the important part here is valid: Women’s soccer and men’s soccer are different. They work just as hard, yes. The games they play are different.

Then after the boilerplate stuff (yes, Alex Morgan exists and lives in town X and has played for the national team; Megan Rapinoe exists and lives …, etc.), USSF expounds upon that point.

Paragraph 39 of the WNT complaint talks about “the same job duties” and “similar working conditions.” It’s one of the weakest arguments the WNT raises, and USSF denies it in full.

And see Paragraphs 44-50, which surprisingly don’t go into much detail.

POINT 2: Hey, we didn’t say that …

USSF claims it has never “admitted that it pays its female player employees less than its male player employees and has gone so far as to claim that “’market realities are such that the women do not deserve to be paid equally to the men.’” The precise language is “U.S. Soccer denies the remaining allegations in this paragraph.” It’s Paragraph 2. Get used to seeing that phrase more and more.

Similarly …

POINT 3: No, the WNT’s revenues aren’t higher than the MNT’s. Except occasionally.

And this …

(The key part there is the smaller of Miki’s screenshots — I hate the way Twitter embeds restate the tweet to which it responds.)

POINT 4: The pay structures are apples and oranges.

“U.S. Soccer further states that no pay comparison can be made between the USWNT players, who earn guaranteed salaries and benefits, and the USMNT players, who are paid strictly on a match appearance fee basis.”

That’s Paragraph 51, and it’s restated in different words in the next two paragraphs.

Paragraph 54 of the WNT complaint is simply ridiculous. The claim that USSF denied the WNT’s request for equal pay is only true if the WNT asked for a contract without its salaries and benefits. (See Paragraph 62 below.) The claim that the WNT isn’t paid for games against teams outside the top 10 is absolutely wrong because, again, the women are on salary. They get paid even if they’re not called up for a game.

The next WNT argument is that a “similarly situated” MNT player would make much more than a WNT player (Paragraph 58). USSF reiterates that it’s simply not comparable.

What about charter flights? Paragraph 72 says “there are many factors” that determine charters. What I’ve been told, and what makes sense to me, is that the WNT hasn’t had charters because they simply don’t travel as a team. They flew to Scandinavia as individuals. The MNT has had situations in which it flies from qualifier to qualifier or Gold Cup game to Gold Cup game. This year, with the World Cup, expect WNT charters. (If they don’t do that, yikes.)

POINT 5: That’s simply not true

I’m guessing we will see the men’s CBA entered into evidence at some point here.

Then who rejected what?

Paragraph 62, WNT complaint:

During collective bargaining for a new contract, USSF rejected requests for compensation for the WNT players that would have been at least equal to that afforded to the male MNT players.

Paragraph 64, USSF response:

U.S. Soccer denies the remaining allegations in this paragraph and states the USWNTPA consistently rejected all proposals for a “pay-for-play” structure similar to the one in that the USMNT players accepted during the 2017 CBA negotiations.

I’m a little surprised no reporter who has the time to really dig into this (read: not me at the moment) has found out whether the WNT has ever asked to go without salaries and get the MNT pay structure.

POINT 6: Head-scratchers

USSF denies that it has complete control over whether the WNT plays on turf? (Paragraph 68)

SUMMARY

us soccer, women's soccer

The college bribery case and accused soccer coaches

Thanks a lot, Twitter, for sending me down another rabbit hole. I could be working on any number of things, including my transitions from guitar to keyboard and vice versa on the Better Than Ezra classic Good. (If you want to know where we’re performing, let me know.)

If you don’t know of the women’s soccer angle on the big college bribery scandal, perhaps in mourning that a star of the great show SportsNight is caught up in all this, check out the story linked here:

I responded the only way I can think of — a bad joke about Mallory Pugh leaving UCLA early. (Hey, Isackson played as many regular-season UCLA games as Pugh did, right?)

That would be Amanda Cromwell, who played with the WNT and in the WUSA before going on a strong coaching career — a long stint at Central Florida, then was hired in 2013 — on my birthday in the spring — at UCLA.

Andrea raises a good question. Off to research I go. After a dead end at PACER, I found that Heavy.com had already embedded the Massachusetts indictment against Felicity Huffman, Lori Loughlin and many other people, including Bruce and Davina Isackson, parents of former UCLA women’s soccer roster person Lauren Isackson.

This is not the complaint against UCLA men’s coach Jorge Salcedo and other coaches, but we’ll get to that.

The Isackson affidavit

Go to page 172 of Heavy.com’s document (you can also just go to Scribd). That’s page 107 of an affidavit by FBI Special Agent Laura Smith.

According to this …

The Isacksons first tried USC via former USC women’s soccer assistant Laura Janke (more on her later). Former USC women’s soccer coach Ali Khosroshahin (more on him) forwarded Isackson’s info to Salcedo in May 2016. In June, she got into UCLA. Not sure what happened at USC, which was apparently Lauren Isackson’s first choice.

Here’s where the affidavit gets quite serious: “On or about July 7, 2016, CW-1 directed a payment of $100,000 from one of the CWF charitable accounts to a sports marketing company controlled by Salcedo.” Then another to Koshroshahin for $25,000.

(“CW-1” is Cooperating Witness-1, who has agreed to plead guilty to many charges with the hope of obtaining leniency. The affidavit stresses that his information has been corroborated many other ways, including wiretaps and emails.)

Cromwell is not mentioned in any of this.

The Salcedo indictment

PACER records show a case was opened and terminated against Salcedo in California on March 12. Lawyers can better explain what happened, but in any case, everything is taking place in Massachusetts. I mention the California indictment only because the FBI agent who signed a warrant here is named Diamond Outlaw. Seriously. His or her handwriting is worse than mine.

Anyway … on March **5**, a sealed indictment was filed in Massachusetts against Salcedo, Khosroshahin, Janke and 10 others. The case is District Court 1:19-cr-10081-IT-11.

I love legal documents’ need to state the obvious: “ACT, Inc. … administers the ACT exam, a standardized test that is widely used, etc.” All of the schools involved are listed as “highly selective” except San Diego, which is “selective.”

Khosroshahin is identified as USC’s head women’s soccer coach until November 2013. At the outset, it doesn’t say how he has been employed since. Janke is identified as a former USC assistant coach through January 2014. Again, what was she doing after that?

Janke is accused of creating a “falsified athletic profile” on behalf of “Yale Applicant 1” in November 2017.

Quote 1:

55. In a subsequent email, Singer instructed JANKE to add to the profile that Yale Applicant 1 had been on the “JR National Development Team in China,” noting, “we are saying she got hurt this past spring, so was not recruited till now as she got her release late summer.”

Now over to USC. The date is not immediately specified.

62. In exchange for these payments, JANKE and KHOSROSHAHIN designated four children of Singer’s clients as recruits for the USC women’s soccer team, despite the fact that none of those children played competitive soccer.

It wasn’t just soccer. Janke is accused of helping a prospective USC rower with no rowing experience in September 2016.

The UCLA section repeats a trail we saw earlier, also in 2016 — Khosroshanin takes falsified profile, hands it over to Salcedo, and a soccer player who hasn’t played elite soccer gets into UCLA.

There’s a brief mention of another accusation from October 2018 involving a men’s soccer recruit who hadn’t played competitive soccer.

Salcedo and Janke are not mentioned again.

Cromwell is not mentioned at all.

pro soccer, us soccer, women's soccer

Welcome, drive-by pundits. Can we introduce you to the NWSL?

I’ll toss this into the “maybe tying pay to revenue isn’t such a good idea” argument, and please don’t take one part out of context …

Over the past week, per the daily Soccer America newsletter, eight MLS games and one CONCACAF game had better attendance than the WNT’s game in Tampa.

What does this mean? Let’s ponder.

Marketing: You may argue that the WNT game wasn’t properly marketed. Possibly. I don’t know how to quantify it. I just know people said that about MLS for years.

If I knew where to advertise, my books would sell more and my blog would’ve made money. So I’m the last guy to ask about that, and I’m interested in hearing ideas.

Maybe MLS teams have the advantage of being in town all year every year. But at the same time, fans can see them play whenever, and how often is the WNT in Tampa? Shouldn’t fans be taking advantage of that rare opportunity?

No, MLS isn’t the MNT. Maybe the MNT isn’t properly marketed outside of Mexico games, either. You can support the WNT’s legal case and still say the MNT games should be treated better – or ticket prices should be lower. If it becomes either/or, everyone suffers.

But in any case, drive-by media pundits who only know World Cups and Olympics miss the boat with WoSo attendance triumphalism. They have no idea that tens of thousands show up to see Zlatan. Rooney. Martinez. Tim Howard’s farewell tour. Jordan Morris. Efrain Martinez. (Google him.) Would you rather see the since-departed Almiron or the MNT? Thought so.

Maybe it would help if everyone, including the drive-byers, paid more attention to the NWSL. Then they’d have the advantage of a consistent community presence that MLS teams enjoy.

Not that the NWSL has done particularly well in marketing, either. Maybe a new broadcast deal will help. Assuming they get one.

The international challenge: Women’s soccer won’t thrive on the SheBelieves Cup alone. Nor can it rely on a big boost every quadrennium with a win or thrilling run to the final in the World Cup or Olympics. Not with European teams turning up the heat. England has crashed the party. France, propelled by two big-spending clubs, has been there for a while. Germany and Sweden never really left. Then all those teams were bested in Euro 2017 by the Netherlands and Denmark. Then those teams fell far short in the Algarve Cup, in which Norway beat Poland in the final.

Yikes. Then factor in Canada, Brazil and Japan. Don’t count out Australia.

And this isn’t a bad thing. We all want the game to grow internationally. Look at the struggles softball has endured because it’s basically a three-country sport (USA, Japan, Australia). No one’s kicking women’s soccer out of the Olympics as they did with softball. The competition’s too good.

The revenue argument: So suppose the WNT and MNT both tie their salaries (WNT) and bonuses (WNT and MNT) to revenue. Looks great for the WNT — now. Suppose the WNT doesn’t make the final in either the World Cup or Olympics over the next two years. That’ll make a dent in revenue, and that’s actually when we’ll want U.S. Soccer to spend more on women’s soccer.

If U.S. Soccer was really as dastardly as people say (and, at times, it has been), they’d say, “Oh, tie it to revenue? Sure!” Then they’d cackle as the revenue drops when 2016 proves not to be a fluke.

As I said in the last post, I don’t have answers here. I just know that yelling “equal pay for equal play” and other slogans won’t solve the problem. It’ll take some serious attention to detail.

So I’ll write these wonky posts. And maybe the handful of you who read them will be able to ask questions and advocate for things to be better — not just with a short-term victory for Jeff Kessler but (also?) a long-term victory for the sport.

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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 2   
 3   z
 4   z]
 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.)

non-soccer rant, podcast, pro soccer, us soccer

RSD 2-7-19: Dan Loney and I don’t talk about promotion/relegation

Dan Loney and I have three things in common. First, we’re parents. Second, we have a goofy sense of humor. Third, we’re on the Enemies List of people who push promotion/relegation as The Big Issue That Will Save U.S. Soccer and Make Us A Consistent Global Power.

The funny thing is that Dan, unlike most of us who point out inconvenient facts that make a pro/rel system difficult (but not impossible) in this country, actually hates pro/rel itself. I actually get caught up in the romance of relegation escapes and promotion chases. (I miss you, Coventry City.)

So we spoke for an hour and talked about the Athletes’ Council (in which he and I disagreed on whether Carlos Bocanegra should be on it), the Muppets, Dr. Katz: Professional Therapist, and conspiracy theories — including the accusation that we are the same person.

We did not discussion promotion and relegation in any detail whatsoever.

Enjoy …

us soccer

Coaching education through the years

This post goes with a short presentation I’m doing at the NSCAA — I mean, United Soccer Coaches (snappy short title to come, but I’m going to say UniSoc here) — convention for the Society for American Soccer History, an organization that has caught fire in the past three years or so.

1941: National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) is formed. Coaching education would be a major focus, and the organization would go on to offer its own coaching courses and diplomas, especially ramping up in the mid-1980s. Its conventions aren’t just an attempt to set a world record for the number of tracksuits in one convention center — coaches would flock to them for lectures and demonstrations from pro coaches from the USA and elsewhere. The organization is now known as United Soccer Coaches.

1964: The American Youth Soccer Organization (as with the NSCAA or NASCAR, no one ever uses the full name — it’s “AYSO” to everyone) is formed, offering a different approach than existing youth leagues — it’s open to all, every player plays, and teams are shuffled in the name of parity. Though it remains mostly recreational, with no pretense of being “elite,” it develops some outstanding players (Alex Morgan, Landon Donovan, Carlos Bocanegra, Eric Wynalda among them). It would also develop its own coaching education resources down the road, many of them proprietary. So if you live in an area with no AYSO operations (say, most of my home state of Virginia), you can’t see them.

1970-74: U.S. Soccer Federation coaching begins in earnest with the first course in 1970, which trains several future national team coaches (one of them also a future New York Cosmos coach). The man credited with setting up the curriculum is Dettmar Cramer, who arrived from Germany via Japan and served a brief stint as USMNT coach in 1974.

Sources: Cramer obituary in Soccer America, interview with Ian Barker (United Soccer Coaches director of coaching education)

1980s: Bob Gansler, later the USMNT coach and then director of coaching at U.S. Soccer, helps develop NSCAA coaching education (Source: interview with Ian Barker, United Soccer Coaches director of coaching education).

Source: interview with Ian Barker

1995: U.S. Youth Soccer introduces the National Youth License, a weeklong course that focuses on U12 (and under) and emphasizes psychology and teaching. In 2015, it is renamed the National Youth Coaching Course.

2011: Claudio Reyna unveils the new U.S. Soccer curriculum at the NSCAA convention. Some coaches and journalists are puzzled by the admonition against “overdribbling,” and they’re skeptical that the USA can ever settle on one approach. The curriculum is indeed quite specific — teams are supposed to play a 4-3-3 (slightly revised to 4-2-3-1 or 4-1-2-3 as needed, and possibly 4-4-2 at some older age groups), and coaches are told which skills to emphasize at which ages. Within a few years, it quietly fades into disuse.

Sources: U.S. Soccer curriculum, My report for ESPN

“U.S. Soccer, it’s always been kind of ‘What’s the new flavor of the day?’ So if the Dutch were successful, the U.S. would kind of mimic how the Dutch do their systems of play. And then the Germans start winning, you know, I think the U.S. was always looking over in Europe, even South America, for ideas and different ways. And they would bring over a lot of foreign coaches as well to kind of help with some lectures and things like that to give us some ideas about how they do it overseas coaching-wise.”

Mark Pulisic (yes, Christian’s father — also an experienced coach). Source: 2018 interview with PennLive

2011: Dave Chesler hired as U.S. Soccer Director of Coaching Development.

2013: The NSCAA and Ohio University launch a master’s degree program in soccer coaching.

Source: Ohio University program information

2013: USSF D license (geared toward coaches at U13 and U14) now includes concepts such as periodization, useful for high-level coaches but not really applicable to grassroots coaches. It also requires coaches to take the two weekends of work — “Instructional Phase” and “Performance Review” — with a minimum of 10 weeks in between.

Sources: 2013 USSF release via SoccerWire, 2014 U.S. Soccer Q&A with then-Director of Coaching Development Dave Chesler

2014, February: Ryan Mooney hired as U.S. Soccer Director of Sport Development.

2015, February: U.S. Soccer slams the door on the alternate coaching pathway that allowed coaches to skip lower-level USSF courses if they had the rough equivalents from NSCAA. (Someone with an NSCAA National Diploma for a year could move into USSF C license course; someone with Advanced or Premier Diploma for a year could move into B license course.) Most controversially, the policy takes effect immediately.

Sources: Multiple, including 2018 Soccer America Q&A with Ian Barker. Can compare USSF policies from 2012-13 and 2017-18, copied and stored at Box.com

It’s philosophical, because their curriculum approach isn’t aligned with ours. That’s like you’re being taught French, and you’re saying, hey, it’s a Romance language, so it should be equivalent to my Italian course.

Then-USSF Director Chief Soccer Officer Ryan Mooney, speaking with Soccer America in 2018

There is a progression of complexity for tactics that is important. Having coaches come into the pathway at different points is not very functional, so our vision is for a coach to enter our pathway and be in it throughout their entire coaching career.

Then-USSF Director of Coaching Development Dave Chesler, speaking with ussoccer.com in 2015

2015, February: Several soccer organizations not normally on the same page — U.S. Youth Soccer, US Club Soccer, AYSO, Say Soccer, U.S. Futsal, U.S. Specialty Sports Association and MLS (?!) — form a Youth Council Technical Working Group that demands more openness from U.S. Soccer in discussing issues such as the birth-year age-group mandate and coaching licenses.

2015, February: USSF releases new F license (for coaches of U8 and lower) online, effectively taking away the excuse of parent coaches to not take the F license. It features examples of coaching from people such as Shannon MacMillan.

Sources: My SoccerWire story, group statement

2015, June: Nico Romeijn hired as U.S. Soccer Director of Coaching Education. Chesler remains as U.S. Soccer Director of Coaching Development. Mooney remains as U.S. Soccer Director of Sport Development.

2015, December: First graduates of new USSF Pro License course get their licenses.

2016, January: Chesler leaves Director of Coaching Development post.

2016, September: The NSCAA, anticipating a similar move by U.S. Soccer, overhauls its grassroots coaching curriculum, replacing its Level 1 through Level 6 diplomas with a brief online intro and then several age-appropriate pods.

Sources: United Soccer Coaches (formerly NSCAA) coaching courses (click “Development” to see the grassroots modules)

Sources: U.S. Soccer release, Soccer America

2018, January: U.S. Soccer unveils its own new grassroots modules, allowing coaches to start with a basic intro and then take age-appropriate modules either online or in-person. The modules are rolled out over eight months. The old F license and E license are gone, but you can still progress to the D license three ways …

First: If you have the E license, you only need to watch the Intro to Grassroots Module online.

Second: If you have the F license, watch the Intro module and take two in-person modules, including the 11v11 module.

Third: If you have neither of those (in other words, you’re starting fresh), watch the Intro and take three modules — one online of your choice, one in-person of your choice, and the in-person 11v11.

Also, the new training format is “Play/Practice/Play” — coaches are asked to have players immediately jump into small-sided games as soon as they arrive, with coaches speaking over the flow to subtly introduce the topic of the day, then have the “practice” phase, then scrimmage. And at least in the classes I took, we were encouraged to grab practice plans from U.S. Soccer or elsewhere rather than devising them ourselves. The new practice plans are indeed simpler to use.

Sources: Maryland Youth Soccer Association (thanks for posting, guys), Soccer America

From my 2017 NSCAA presentation on parent coaches’ needs

This is an improvement over the “Warmup with a drill that takes a little bit of time to explain / Small-Sided Game that takes a little bit more time to explain / Expanded Small-Sided Game that’s ridiculously complicated and will never be explained over the course of this practice / Scrimmage” approach, in which we were all supposed to develop practice plans like we’re Fabiano Caruana prepping to face Magnus Carlsen for the world chess championship in November.

Source: My review at Ranting Soccer Dad. By the way, Caruana nearly won.

2018, April: New U.S. Soccer org chart shows Nico Romeijn as Chief Sport Development Officer and Ryan Mooney as Chief Soccer Officer. Coaching education is listed as a responsibility of each person. Concurrently, USSF announces a Technical Development Committee overseen by Carlos Bocanegra and Angela Hucles, the Athletes’ Council representatives to the USSF Board.

2018, August: Romeijn and Mooney discuss availability of upper-level licenses and insistence that Development Academy coaches must have a least a B license in interview with Soccer America’s Mike Woitalla. The USSF officers’ comments draw heavy criticism from ESPN’s Herculez Gomez, focusing on the accessibility of these program to Hispanic coaches.

Source: Soccer America Q&A, Ranting Soccer Dad account of Gomez criticism and other issues

2018, October: A U.S. Soccer-led task force on youth soccer, promised by Carlos Cordeiro in his successful campaign to become federation president, convenes for the first time.

2018, December: Asher Mendelsohn hired as new U.S. Soccer Chief Soccer Officer, replacing Ryan Mooney, who has gone into a private venture. No word as yet as to whether Mendelsohn and Romeijn’s responsibilities for coaching education have been adjusted or clarified.

Source: Soccer America report

TODAY …

United Soccer Coaches continues to offer its own grassroots modules in addition to a more advanced sequence — National, Advanced National, Premier — as well as separate courses on goalkeeping, futsal, high school coaching, club administration (in conjunction with US Club Soccer), LGBT inclusion, safety and tactics. It also collaborates with the University of Delaware for a Master Coach Diploma / Certificate and with Ohio University on the master’s degree mentioned above.

US Club Soccer and AYSO are doing their own thing.

MY COACHING COURSES 

  • 2010: F license through Virginia Youth Soccer Association
  • 2013: Second Positive Coaching Alliance workshop
  • 2013: E license, USSF
  • 2014: NSCAA Special Topics Diploma: Coaching U6, U8, U10 Players
  • 2014: Incomplete D license, USSF (instructional weekend only)
  • 2015: F license, USSF online version
  • 2017: United Soccer Coaches Diploma: Get aHEAD Safely in Soccer
  • 2018: USSF Introduction to Grassroots Coaching
  • 2018: USSF 11v11 online module
  • 2018: USSF 11v11 in-person module