mind games, mma, soccer

Are sports monopolies necessary?

The news that a district court judge has allowed a lawsuit to proceed against MLS and U.S. Soccer is worrisome for the league and federation. The details of the ruling (see the PDF) are downright disturbing.

At issue: Is U.S. Soccer a legitimate overseer of professional soccer in the USA? Beyond that: Can any organizing body claim dominion over a sport?

In the legal world, monopoly power is a serious problem. In the sports world, we take it for granted. Men’s tennis = ATP. Women’s tennis = WTA. U.S. college sports = NCAA (NAIA exists but is far smaller). Baseball = antitrust-exempted Major League Baseball.

Sports that don’t have a monopoly in place, such as indoor soccer, are usually seen as weakened. Everyone thinks he has a better business plan than the other guy, and the result is often a mish-mash of leagues that test fans’ patience.

Monopolies and near-monopolies may limit competition on the business front. But on the competitive front, they establish objective criteria for determining who’s the best.

Think of boxing, with its alphabet soup of “world champions.” The world chess championship hasn’t really recovered from a split in the mid-90s in which Garry Kasparov walked away from governing body FIDE, though FIDE has its own issues that linger to this day. (Literally — this week, Anatoly Karpov’s bid for FIDE presidency has been squashed by incumbent Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, who seems more inclined to speak with aliens than listen to Karpov’s supporters.)

In mixed martial arts, fans endlessly debate whether to accept the UFC’s argument that it’s the “major league,” and everyone else is minor league. The UFC is getting closer — with Fedor Emelianenko’s loss in June, the UFC and lighter-weight affiliate WEC claimed the top spot in every weight class of the USA TODAY/SB Nation consensus rankings.

The court ruling — which, to be clear, is hardly the final word on the matter — would open the door for competition unless Congress has explicitly said otherwise. The judge rejected U.S. Soccer’s argument that the Ted Stevens Act, which establishes governing bodies for amateur and Olympic-preparatory sports, gives it dominion over the professional game as well. And in other sports, that’s true — USA Basketball and USA Hockey deal with national teams, not the NBA and NHL.

But the fearful question soccer fans must ask is this: Has the court limited U.S. Soccer’s ability to act for the greater good of the game? Specifically, can it protect the interests of a professional league (MLS) trying to take root where no other league has before?

If you remember ChampionsWorld, you may remember it as anything but benign as far as MLS was concerned. The message was driven home on the broadcasts by VP Giorgio Chinaglia, described by Grant Wahl as “the insufferable former New York Cosmos great” with a revisionist mindset toward NASL history and outright malice toward MLS.

Of course, the league survived, and ChampionsWorld didn’t. U.S. cities have shown they’ll support a few preseason exhibition tours by traveling Euro teams, but everyone has a limit.

From a practical point of view, the ruling might not open a can of worms but may merely provide the can opener. Just as other governing bodies provide the pathway to the Olympics, the pinnacle in most of those sports, U.S. Soccer provides the pathway to the World Cup. In the only part of the ruling that is clearly unsound, the judge seriously underestimates FIFA’s interest in meddling and its power to do so.

The ruling could pose a competitive challenge for SUM, the marketing affiliate for MLS that has figured out how to make money off promoting outsiders’ games in the USA. But some games already are outside SUM’s domain. The promoters in these cases are paying sanctioning fees to U.S. Soccer but not to SUM.

And so the optimists’ view of this case would be this: The suit is simply a deterrent to keep U.S. Soccer from setting its sanctioning fee too high. (And also repaying a few ChampionsWorld creditors.)

If MLS and U.S. Soccer were to lose this case, they might take heart from some U.S. precedent. The NFL once lost an antitrust suit. Even though the NFL paid a few million to the USFL in legal fees in addition to the famous $3 cash award, the NFL seems to have survived.

The NFL also has maintained its dominance as other upstart leagues have arisen. The XFL promised something different, and it turned out to be a little too different. The UFL, still in existence, is operating on a smaller scale.

MLS is already in a competitive environment. Fans can sit at home and watch games from around the world in HD (though it still doesn’t compare to the atmosphere of a good live game). Winning this case won’t make it go away. Losing won’t make it that much worse.

U.S. Soccer, like the UFC, has its critics who say it’s too arrogant in defending its share of the market. Ultimately, the threat of competition could keep it honest.

Congress isn’t going to hand U.S. Soccer, the UFC, the NFL or anyone else (other than baseball, which is another rant) carte blanche to do what it wants. It’s up to the managers and promoters to make sure competition on the business front doesn’t devolve into chaos on the competitive front, no matter what happens in court.

soccer

Player ratings: Chicago-Toronto

Chicago 0, Toronto 0
Sept. 8, 2010

Summary: Toronto came out much more aggressive than Chicago, controlling play but not getting a lot of good chances out of it. TFC had a couple of shouts for a penalty on two close ball-to-arm plays, each of them a 50-50 call. Also, Toronto was whistled for 13 fouls before Chicago picked up its first two calls in first-half stoppage time. But Chicago created the only good scoring chance — only shot on goal, in fact — of the first half.

In the second half, Chicago got an even better chance, but Freddie Ljungberg put a shot wide with only the keeper to beat. The game opened up around the 70th minute, with Toronto putting a couple of good shots on frame. But the game petered out to a dull conclusion.

Side note: Toronto’s commentary crew is excellent. They’re well-prepared with facts on players for both teams, and they work them seamlessly into the commentary. They’re generally relevant facts about the players’ form, not weird personality tidbits on players who have no personality. Terrific stuff.

Conditions: Pleasant, mid-60s.

CHICAGO: Mike Banner replaced the suspended Gonzalo Segares. Collins John got a run in place of Brian McBride. Marco Pappa played for Guatemala on Tuesday and was kept out of action.

6 Sean Johnson (GK): Had some confusion with Robinson in the box that resulted in a rushed clearance that hit Brown in the arm. Little else to do in first half. Big save on White in 74th.

6 Steven Kinney (RB): Little trouble on his side.
5 Dasan Robinson (CB): Some unsteadiness but no harm done. Suffered many fouls, which is odd for a central defender.
5 C.J. Brown (CB): Kicked in the head and bled profusely. Lucky not to concede a penalty when ball hit arm in box.
6 Mike Banner (LB): See Steven Kinney.

6 Patrick Nyarko (RM): Terrific through ball for John. Less of a factor in second half.
6 Logan Pause (CM): Positive play getting ball forward.
5 John Thorrington (CM): Subbed out at half.
4 Freddie Ljungberg (AM): Not much of a factor. Scuffed shot wide on 1-on-1 chance against Frei. Subbed out in 76th.
6 Nery Castillo (LM/F): Set up Ljungberg for golden chance and forced Frei to punch a well-taken free kick over the bar.

6 Collins John (F): Dangerous runs. Made way for McBride in 82nd.

Subs:
6 Wilman Conde (DM): Subbed for Thorrington at half.
NR Calen Carr (F): Subbed for Ljungberg.
NR Brian McBride (F): Subbed for John.

TORONTO: Dwayne De Rosario, Julian de Guzman and Nana Attakora returned from international duty, while Jacob Peterson played out of position up front with Mista nursing an injury. Ty Harden was preferred to Nick Garcia.

7 Stefan Frei (GK): Good 15th-minute save on John. Alert on through balls, cut down angle on Ljungberg breakaway.

4 Maksim Usanov (RB): Comical misplay when trying to move forward into attack. Obvious yellow card puts him over the limit — he’ll be suspended for the next game. Preki didn’t wait that long, taking him out in the 79th.
6 Nana Attakora (CB): Steady enough.
6 Adrian Cann (CB): Timely interventions.
6 Ty Harden (LB): Announcers constantly fretted that he was playing out of position, but he didn’t seem out of place.

6 Nick LaBrocca (RM): Active in attack. Good high shot from distance tested Johnson.
5 Julian de Guzman (CM): Steady if not spectacular.
6 Dwayne De Rosario (AM): Frustrating offensive night by his high standard but worked hard defensively.
6 Dan Gargan (LM): Willing to cover a lot of ground to get involved in attack. Long throw-in nearly put in by White.

5 Jacob Peterson (F): Couldn’t get into flow in unfamiliar role. Subbed out in 57th minute.
5 O’Brian White (F): Crashed into defenders for fouls. Subbed out in 84th.

Subs:
6 Maicon Santos (F): Had been a fitness question mark coming into game but made a positive contribution to the attack.
NR Nick Garcia (RB): Replaced Usanov.
NR Joseph Nane (M): Replaced White.

soccer

Player ratings: D.C. United-Columbus

D.C. United 0, Columbus 1
Sept. 4, 2010

Summary: Undermanned United started brightly, gave up a goal when young keeper Bill Hamid muffed a clearance and promptly ran out of ideas. Final shots on goal: Columbus 2, United 0.

Conditions: For a change, quite pleasant. And still, only 12,075 showed up.

D.C. United: Decimated by injuries and national team call-ups, United dressed only 16 players. Dejan Jakovic (Canada) and Marc Burch (injury) both played Wednesday but were unavailable here, Jordan Graye started ahead of Devon McTavish, and interim coach Ben Olsen moved Clyde Simms from midfield to the back line. Former Crew man Jed Zayner filled one of the defensive spots despite being listed as “out” on the injury report. That left Julius James as the sole returnee at the back from Wednesday night’s game. The midfield was more stable, with Kurt Morsink taking Simms’ spot. The EPL should look at this game before deciding to stick with this new “25-man” rule.

4 Bill Hamid (GK): Terrific save on Gaven, but the one blunder was costly.

5 Jordan Graye (RB): Solid job on Gaven, who was much more threatening Wednesday night. Lapse in 85th gave Crew good opportunity.
6 Clyde Simms (CB): Held his ground very well in unfamiliar role.
5 Julius James (CB): A couple of dodgy moments in possession but solid defensively.
6 Jed Zayner (LB): Not bad at all.

5 Andy Najar (RM): A few more of the dazzling moments United fans have come to expect, but Francis stopped him cold a few times as well.
5 Kurt Morsink (CM): Seems to have cut down on the needless fouls. Subbed out in 87th with trainers taking a look.
6 Stephen King (CM): Solid work at both ends.
6 Santino Quaranta (LM): Several good runs but often frustrated in the end.

4 Danny Allsopp (F): Couldn’t quite get in the flow; subbed out for Moreno in 61st.
5 Pablo Hernandez (F): A menace once again but unable to test Hesmer.

Subs
6 Jaime Moreno (F): Worked hard, ran more than we’ve seen in recent months.
NR Devon McTavish (CB): Replaced Morsink, though he switched positions with Simms.

Columbus: William Hesmer returned to the net. Frankie Hejduk was ruled out due to injury, Adam Moffat didn’t make the 18, and toughman Danny O’Rourke was shuffled to the back line. Those moves opened space in the midfield for Dilly Duka and Kevin Burns, both effective as subs Wednesday night.

6 William Hesmer (GK): Not really pressed into action. Alert on the occasional through ball.

5 Danny O’Rourke (RB): Struggled at times to handle Quaranta. Didn’t instigate any incidents.
6 Andy Iro (CB): Effective at disrupting final ball in United possessions.
6 Chad Marshall (CB): See Andy Iro.
5 Gino Padula (LB): Injured early; subbed out in 30th.

5 Dilly Duka (RM): Good moments here and there. Subbed out for Garey in 77th.
5 Brian Carroll (CM): Not much productivity in the center, but nothing conceded.
5 Kevin Burns (CM): See Brian Carroll.
6 Eddie Gaven (LM): Not as effective as he was Wednesday, though he forced a good save from Hamid (the only save of the game at either end) on a surging run early in the second half.

7 Guillermo Barros Schelotto (F): Picked his spots very well, creating opportunities with deft touches and pouncing on Hamid error for the opening goal.
6 Steven Lenhart (F): Lost his man on a corner kick for best chance of the night; otherwise not involved that much until blazing shot over bar in 79th.

Subs
7 Shaun Francis (LB): Not the MLS Insider blogger. More effective than Padula in dealing with Najar, often getting the better of the United phenom 1-on-1.
NR Jason Garey (RM): Subbed for Duka in 77th.
NR Andres Mendoza: Time-wasting sub in stoppage time. Getting called offside when you’re supposed to be killing the clock probably won’t please Robert Warzycha.

soccer

MLS player ratings: Aug. 18-22

After nine games last week, it’s another full slate this time.

Volunteer via Twitter, Facebook or the comments, then leave your comments below:

All times ET

Wednesday
Chicago-New England, 8:30

Saturday
Toronto-New York, 1
San Jose-Los Angeles, 4 (TeleFutura)
Columbus-Colorado, 7:30
Dallas-Chivas USA, 8:30 (FSC) – I’ll take one of the 8:30s
Houston-Chicago, 8:30
Kansas City-New England, 8:30

Sunday
D.C. United-Philadelphia, 2 – me

soccer

MLS player ratings: Aug. 11-15

Thanks to all for your contributions to Week 1 of the MLS player ratings project. As Lois Griffin once said about dinner, it was so much fun, we might as well do it again.

Let me know via comments, Twitter or Facebook if you’d like to handle one of the games below, then leave your ratings in the comments. Then tell all your friends to come over and check out your brilliant analysis. (Actually, I was quite impressed with all the contributions.)

All times ET

Wednesday
Philadelphia-Salt Lake, 7:30
New York-Toronto, 7:30

Saturday
Philadelphia-Colorado, 4 (TeleFutura)
New York-Los Angeles, 6 (FSC)
New England-Houston, 8
D.C. United-Dallas, 8
Salt Lake-Columbus, 9
San Jose-Kansas City, 10
Chivas USA-Seattle, 11

soccer

There is no “try” — Adu or not Adu

Anyone made that pun yet? I think we’re all racing now to make the last possible pun on Freddy Adu’s name.

The young American’s status is up in the air again after a trial with Switzerland’s FC Sion didn’t pan out. (Aside to headline writers: “Not signing” and “failed to impress” or not the same thing.)

Now we have a report that Adu is “close to signing” with the Los Angeles Galaxy. My background doesn’t give me much faith in anonymous reports — which works out well, because no one ever tells me anything — but World Soccer Reader has shown itself to be more sincere and reliable in its reporting than most. And it’s interesting that the mainstreamers who could easily throw cold water on such reports have not done so.

“Close to signing,” of course, is a nebulous term, and many things can derail a deal that seems close to happening. This isn’t the NBA, where teams are basically bidding against each other for free agents, and players are weighing only a couple of factors. This is international soccer and MLS, where the multiple parties must agree on transfer terms, contract terms, compensation for the team holding allocation rights, salary cap impact, etc., etc.

So while we wait to see if this deal comes to fruition, we can ask: Should Freddy Adu come back to MLS?

I say no. Here’s why:

Adu is the classic example of how the old media “build up, tear down” celebrity cycle has been accelerated and magnified in the Internet Age. Some people thought he was never that good. Some people legitimately bought the “new Pele” line, though no one in a position of authority was actually calling him that. Some people thought he was several years older than he said.

Let’s destroy all three of those arguments, in reverse order:

Continue reading

soccer

MLS in the Silverdome — raise the roof, y’all!

Josh Hakala has the story of an innovative idea to remove all the disadvantages of the Silverdome as an MLS venue in one swoop. It’s simple but brilliant: Put a roof at the top of the lower (edit: not upper, which makes no sense) deck, creating an enclosed space below — two of them, actually — for concerts, basketball, hockey, maybe even indoor soccer. Then remove the roof on top of the upper deck, and voila — it’s a 30K-ish soccer stadium.

Roof, gone. Capacity decreased to something reasonable. Without knowing the particulars, I’d have to think the width of the field wouldn’t be an issue, either, unless the Silverdome’s current upper deck juts out really far.

Sounds somewhat expensive, of course, so we’ll have to see if the capital is actually there. But at least they’re not trying to find a site from scratch like New England or D.C. United.

Could this sort of outside-the-box thinking help United?

Forget the political problems for a moment and consider this possibility: The Redskins return to the site now occupied by dilapidated RFK Stadium. No NFL team would move into a smallish, dated, crumbling facility, whatever its charms. So RFK would need to come down — preferably demolished rather than simply collapsing on its own — and a new stadium is needed.

Suppose that stadium had the following:

– A field that slides out, as in the Arizona Cardinals’ stadium and Veltins-Arena in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. You could actually roll a grass field on top of an artificial field if desired. You could have separate fields for soccer and football.

– A retractable roof between decks. Making a soccer stadium out of the upper deck, as in the Silverdome plan, might be tricky — I can’t imagine retractable roofing is designed to bear that much weight. But you could close the roof all the way for “indoor” events, or you could close it partway to make a nice soccer stadium out of the lower deck.

All we need to make it happen is a couple hundred million dollars and the agreement of several political bodies. At least the former would be less of a problem with the Redskins’ involvement.

soccer

Panic at RFK: Olsen replaces Onalfo with D.C. United

Ben Olsen, thrown into the fire

Ben Olsen burst onto the MLS scene soon after the league launched, bringing a potent mix of skill and effort to a powerful D.C. United team. As injuries robbed him of some of his speed and likely ruined his chances of remaining in Europe, where he had impressed on loan with Nottingham Forest, he stuck with United and was a midfield general whenever healthy. He made it to the World Cup in 2006 with his experience and willingness to do anything for his team.

Along the way, he became one of the most popular athletes in Washington. Not on D.C. United — in D.C. He was always quotable and charitable. The fact that Nick Rimando and Jacqui Little asked him to officiate at their wedding should tell you what his teammates thought of him, and the fans who came up with elaborate displays for him felt the same way. (Fine, Red Bulls fans, go ahead and wretch, but I’m just telling you the reality here. Besides, if you’ve made peace with Richie Williams, surely you can forgive another United midfield irritant.)

Whether Olsen, only a few months removed from his playing days, is ready to take over as head coach of a dysfunctional D.C. United team is anyone’s guess. He will have one advantage over Curt Onalfo — everyone will be rooting for him.

But at D.C. United, the problems surely go a bit deeper than the head coach. Let’s look at a couple of years of incoming players (skipping minor developmental player moves), since 2007, when United won the Supporters Shield:

Continue reading

soccer

Announcing the MLS ratings project

Envious of other countries that have Sunday (even Saturday evening) papers filled with player ratings to let you know how everyone performed at a glance, even subjectively? Nostalgic for the days that USA TODAY had ratings for MLS? Tired of poring through 15 different game reports on 15 different sites and blogs that don’t tell you whether your fantasy left back performed semi-capably?

In this day of DIY media, why can’t we do this ourselves?

Here’s the plan: Each week, we need one or two people to volunteer to rate a game. I’m reserving the right to turn people down if I don’t think they’re going to be objective about it, and anyone who comes in and rates every home team player a 10 won’t be considered for ratings down the road. We’re not looking for Fanzone here — we want actual information from people who watched the game in detail.

We also want a little bit more than a number. It could be something like “Donovan: 7 – missed one early chance but sprang Buddle for equalizer with deft touch.” Or “Dure: 2 – repeatedly beaten for pace, most attempted clearances intercepted, at fault on all six goals. Gets a 2 rather than a 1 just for sheer effort and avoidance of yellow card.”

The ratings also should help us track tactical changes each team is making. Lead off the report with any changes in the side since the last game and give us at least a solid guess at the formation. That usually means taking what you see on the broadcast and then giving it a reality check once the game is underway. (Also, this is easier if you’re in the stadium and can see the whole field, so anyone who’s at a game gets priority if we have several volunteers.)

I’ll try one tonight for Metapan-Seattle, though I may be at the mercy of the broadcast feed for CONCACAF games. Hopefully, I’ll at least give us a template to go by.

For now, send in your ratings as comments — I’ll set up a post to collect them. We might change that system down the road.

So, can I have volunteers for the following (times ET; updated with volunteers):

Thursday
8 p.m. – Philadelphia-Columbus (ESPN2) – John “The Soccerist” Greely

Saturday
4 p.m. – Toronto-Chivas USA (Telefutura)
7:30 p.m. – New England-D.C. United
8:30 p.m. – Kansas City-Salt Lake – Alexander Abnos
9 p.m. – Colorado-San Jose

Sunday
7 p.m. – Dallas-Philadelphia (FSC) – Michael Roadarmel
9 p.m. – Chicago-New York (ESPN2) – me
11 p.m. – Seattle-Houston- Alexander Abnos

mma, olympic sports, soccer, tennis

Friday Myriad: Not out of our league

To be perfectly honest, we’re in a lull. No Tour, no huge world championships (no disrespect to the folks with rifles and pistols), etc. Plenty of league games, though. Through the weekend, eight Mexican league games are on various networks. On Saturday, seven MLS games are on Direct Kick / MLSSoccer.com. See Soccer America listings below.

And it’s X Games weekend — see TV schedule and ESPN3 schedule.

FRIDAY

2 p.m.: X Games. ESPN

3 p.m.: Tennis, ATP Los Angeles quarterfinals. ESPN2

7 p.m.: X Games. ESPN

11 p.m.: Tennis, WTA Stanford quarterfinals. ESPN2

SATURDAY

9:30 a.m.: Soccer, Emirates Cup, Celtic-Lyon. GolTV

11:30 a.m.: Soccer, Emirates Cup, Arsenal-AC Milan. GolTV

2 p.m.: X Games. ESPN

3 p.m.: Tennis, WTA Stanford semifinals. ESPN2

5 p.m.: Tennis, ATP Los Angeles semifinal. ESPN2

7 p.m.: X Games. ESPN

9 p.m.: Boxing, Juan Manuel Marquez-Juan Diaz II, pay-per-view

10 p.m.: Soccer, W-League championship. One of the two major U.S./Canada amateur women’s leagues finishes its season absurdly early so that many players can get back to college. Fox Soccer Channel

10:30 p.m.: Tennis, ATP Los Angeles semifinal. ESPN2

SUNDAY

6 a.m.: Soccer, U-20 Women’s World Cup final, Germany-Nigeria. ESPNU / ESPN3.com

9 a.m.: Soccer, U-20 Women’s World Cup third-place game, South Korea-Colombia. ESPNU / ESPN3.com

9:30 a.m.: Soccer, Emirates Cup, AC Milan-Lyon. GolTV

11:30 a.m.: Soccer, Emirates Cup, Arsenal-Celtic. GolTV

1 p.m.: X Games. ESPN2

3 p.m.: Tennis, WTA Stanford final. ESPN2

5 p.m.: Tennis, ATP Los Angeles final. ESPN2

5 p.m.: Soccer, WPS, Atlanta-Gold Pride. Fox Soccer Channel

7 p.m.: X Games. ESPN2

7:30 p.m.: Soccer, MLS, Los Angeles-Chicago. Fox Soccer Channel

9 p.m.: MMA, UFC on Versus: Jon Jones-Vladimir Matyushenko, Mark Munoz-Yushin Okami, Tyson Griffin-Takanori Gomi. See my main event preview at USA TODAY. Versus

MORE MYRIAD

  • Full soccer listings at Soccer America: MLS, international friendlies, Mexico.
  • Selected weekend listings at USA TODAY
  • ESPN3: U-20 Women’s World Cup, Australian Rules football, CFL, cricket, fishing, lacrosse, extra X Games.
  • Tennis Channel: Delayed coverage of ATP Los Angeles, ATP Gstaad, WTA Stanford.
  • Universal Sports: FIVB beach volleyball, European and African track and field.
  • More Olympic sports: FIVB beach volleyball, water polo World Cup, shooting World Championships (live TV).

Upcoming: USA Swimming championships, starting Tuesday.