Canadian soccer — the year ahead
By Ben Knight
Â
Eight things we long-suffering followers of the beautiful game in the Great White North need to see in 2010:
1 – Major corporate sponsorship for the Canadian men’s soccer team. CSA general secretary Peter Montopoli knows you can’t finance World Cup runs on a fraction of the registration fees ponied up by amateur soccer players. He and the whole world outside of Metcalf Street agree on this. With the economy brightening and a World Cup year dawning, it’s time to bag the elephant. I want to see Montopoli, head coach Stephen Hart and a delighted corporate president, grinning in front of a giant mock-up cheque, by St. Patrick’s Day at the latest.
2 – Quick resolution to the USL-1/NASL-2 dispute. The USSF has given both sides a week to find a compromise. The blogosphere is ripping this as indecisive inaction. I think it’s a thoughtful, measured move – which should have happened two months ago, but it’s too late to cuss about that now. Scotch-tape-and-string together a one-year compromise, and make the split permanent next fall.
3 – MLS expansion to Montreal. A done deal, according to my pal and colleague Ben Rycroft, and I have no tangible reason to doubt him. But an official announcement would be lovely.
4 – At least ten international matches for the Canadian men. The CSA is whispering/shouting/mumbling about playing every designated day on the FIFA international calendar. We all know that won’t happen, so let’s just hit most of them. And get a major draw – Italy, Portugal, England – on the gleaming new grass at BMO Field. And make sure the private boxes are filled with corporate CEOs with money to spend on something happening and cool.
5 – A second Designated Player in MLS. The current single DP remains a huge cap hit, and the three teams that have won championships in the DP era (Houston ’07, Columbus ’08, Seagull City ’09) didn’t have one. A second DP – with either a split cap hit or (ideally!) no cap hit at all – could quickly ease the choking over-parity in Our Little League, without causing too much unaffordable inflation in the overall player pool. And it could be vital in keeping Dwayne DeRosario happy at Toronto FC, now that Julian DeGuzman is making bigger trips to the bank.
6 – The Vancouver Whitecaps continuing to do everything right. I’m starting to feel that even if the ‘Caps don’t have a league to play in, they’ll still keep building just fine for next year’s MLS debut. Play some friendlies with the Portland Timbers. Invite Seattle and Toronto in for matches. Invent some cornball yet compelling reason to play the Montreal Impact every month or so. Host some minor international sides! Montreal took on Haiti (0-0 draw) and Syria (2-1 win!) at Stade Saputo last July. Vancouver can do that – and more. Â
7 – A Voyageurs Cup tournament, even if there’s no league for Montreal and Vancouver. Okay, maybe it’s unofficial. Maybe the winner (other than Toronto) doesn’t get to play in the CONCACAF Champions League. It’s still important to play the games, because this competition matters. Especially after the strange way last year’s tourney ended, with the Whitecaps sitting rain-drenched in the seats while the Impact B-team lost 6-1 to TFC.Â
8 – Toronto FC in the playoffs. Yeah, they missed by one point, and the team they beat in the second-last game squeaked in ahead of them, and won the whole bun-feed. We all know it wasn’t that simple. It took naïve coaching, bad discipline, fifteen late goals-against and a midfield-heavy roster void in strikers, wingers and centre backs to not get that point. That and a 0-5 loss in the rain in Joisey, which proved the need for a new captain more than any of the many other things you could actually point to. May new coach Preki be the ass-kicking bastard this town so urgently needs.
That’s my wish list. What’s on yours?
Onward!



December 31st, 2009 at 9:07 am
[...] + Ben Knight: Canadian Soccer – The Year Ahead. [...]
December 31st, 2009 at 12:49 pm
Although nothing wrong with some home matches v. England and Italy for a big crowd at BMO, we need more friendlies against central american and south american opponents. We have to go through CONCACAF to get to the WC. Honduras,Costa Rica, etc. play a different style and employ different tactics than do Cyprus, England, etc. We need to play teams that employ CONCACAF tactics, with CONCACAF refs, so that playing in CONCACAF isn’t a “soccer culture shock” so to speak, or write.
Happy new year!
December 31st, 2009 at 2:06 pm
^^ Dam Skippy , want to see some Mexican sides up here this year again and definitely the VC cup tournament , I look forward to that , as much as the regular TFC season run .. always great to have a road trip to Saputo !!
December 31st, 2009 at 2:14 pm
[...] Full Story Categories: Canadian Game, Contributors No Comments » [...]
December 31st, 2009 at 4:26 pm
The VC should be expanded so the Whitecaps,Impact and TFC have to go and play some teams in different provinces etc…Provincial Champs from their Men’s League etc…and it all should be Televised.
December 31st, 2009 at 4:35 pm
What about if CSA “sanctioned” the League,Whitecaps and Impact want to be in and solve lack of Canadian Pro. Leagues’ problem,right here.The League would be Canadian based and US Team would join.
January 1st, 2010 at 2:33 pm
You just don’t get it and never will. Toronto FC doesn’t need a captain or an ass-kicking coach. They need talent.
January 2nd, 2010 at 12:54 am
What would ass-kicking Coach do for TFC?Wasn’t Carver one?
January 3rd, 2010 at 1:17 am
I completely agree with Juve177…we need to play Latin American countries as much as we can instead of playing Belarus, Moldova, and Cyprus year in and year out for crying out loud.
Either we learn to play Concacaf style or pay FIFA a nice cheque to put Canada in the Oceania group…screw you New Zealand.
Australia made a nice move into Asia and is now top of the group…good for them for leaving the Banana Islands around them behind.
January 3rd, 2010 at 8:17 pm
Debacle…If Canada as the largest North American/Americas country “applied” to play the likes of Cook Islands and Samoa ,it would hurt Canadian soccer in the long run…{and FIFA won’t even look at this nonsense anymore}…Russia or Turkey would sooner have a case to play in Asia,instead of UEFA.
Those Oceania “teams” would lose to Canadian Amature Champions or a CSL’s Teams etc…
January 4th, 2010 at 3:49 pm
Yup…agree with you MM…Oceania group is a joke…New Zealand going to the World Cup is a joke…can’t see them scoring one goal.
Maybe it just drives me nuts working with New Zealanders in the office who think their soccer team is a powerhouse by going to the World Cup.
January 5th, 2010 at 3:23 pm
Agree completely with playing more concacaf and south american teams. That’s the only way we’ll get the experience and know how to get to the world cup.
And Justin, Ben doesn’t need to be defended, but whats with the attitude!. State your point of view and be respectful.
January 6th, 2010 at 9:24 am
How about a deal between MLS and its players for a new CBA, and soon. That, in itself, has grave implications for the league and soccer in North America if there is any work shutdown for any length of time. Especialy during the World Cup.