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Moderators: kdawg32086, magik9113
Batu7 wrote:Btw, how tough/competitive is football in Canada? I have a dream to join my girlfriend in Toronto and try my chance at professional football.
Batu7 wrote:Btw, how tough/competitive is football in Canada? I have a dream to join my girlfriend in Toronto and try my chance at professional football.
Batu7 wrote:I missed my chances at playing at the U18 divisions, but I'm fairly good. I train every week, and occasionally play against lower league players in 7 a side games. I'm still fairly young, so I have the potential to achieve something if given the right training. How small is that sum?
magik9113 wrote:Have a few relatives from Italy who seriously considered attempting a run at the MLS or other paying leagues. It is a common belief in Europe that it's simple to accomplish going pro here in the states, but that's not the case.
However with some of the people I played against in high school/my older brothers have played with (Benny Feilhaber, Marcus Tracey, Kyle Martino[retired due to career ending injury]) currently playing pro, it isn't too far-fetched of an idea. In the U.S. they look for strength, speed, and height (over six feet tall) as basically the first cut before you even touch a soccer ball...it's a hell of a lot more difficult to even be considered if you're short, scrawny looking, or "average" speed. You also have to be incredibly fit (running probably five miles a day in the off-season)
Anyways, I have never actually seen a NASL game...how does the skill compare to the MLS?
magik9113 wrote:same with me...way tooo short lol
Foye wrote:That's basically the worst possible approach.
Soccer should be 1st and foremost judged by technique and talent.
SlavaMedvedenko wrote:So basically guys like Xavi would not cut it in the MLS?
This thread should be re-named as "Can someone on RealGM make it in North America as a soccer
player", lol.
magik9113 wrote:same with me...way tooo short lol
KevinMcreynolds wrote:hopefully JK laid some pipe on the strip as well, gotta get those reps in
Ottawa will join the NASL and begin play once their new stadium is finished, it was officially announced on Monday. Construction on the the 24,000-seat stadium is expected to start later this year, which likely means the team will begin play in the 2013 season. The team will be operated by John Pugh, who currently owns the PDL's Ottawa Fury.
"We welcome Ottawa to the NASL," NASL Commissioner David Downs said in a statement released by the league. "As we continue to expand and collectively grow professional soccer in the United States, Canada and the Caribbean, Ottawa is a natural market with a vibrant business community, large soccer fan base and an exceptional ownership group."
How the NASL will look in 2013 is still an open question. The Montreal Impact will be replaced by the San Antonio Scorpions in 2012, meaning the league will be in compliance with the USSF's requirement that 75 percent of league's teams must be based in the United States in order to be sanctioned as Division 2. The addition of Ottawa, though, would throw that balance out of whack as three of nine teams (Ottawa, FC Edmonton and the Puerto Rico Islanders) would be based outside the country.
In order to meet the 75 percent requirement, two U.S.-based teams would have to join the league or one of those three teams would have to relocate. One possibly saving grace could be USL-Pro teams like Orlando City or the Rochester Rhinos joining the NASL's ranks. Both ownerships had considered NASL and would seem a more natural fit for Division 2. Their choice to join the USL-Pro seemed to be rooted in their belief that the NASL would be unable to get USSF sanctioning.
The Montreal Impact announced Tuesday that Marc Dos Santos has resigned as head coach. Montreal Impact President Joey Saputo gave the coaching duties to sporting director Nick De Santis on an interim basis, starting today. “I’ve accepted Marc’s resignation, because the team is having a difficult and unacceptable sequence," said club president Joey Saputo. “This is too important of a year to let it go like this. From the start of the season, I said it was important to finish our journey in second division on a positive note in order to start MLS on a high. Our goal today hasn't changed, we want to make the playoffs and get as far as possible.”
"The technical staff in place will be led by Nick De Santis," added Joey Saputo. "Following Marc's departure and after analysing our current situation as a club, this is our best short-term option. Additionally, being with the team everyday, Nick will get the chance to evaluate the group. I am confident that our coaches will straighten up the situation. I want to thank Marc for his services over the last five years with the club. I wish him the best of luck in his future endeavours."
Marc Dos Santos became the eighth head coach in Impact history on May 14, 2009, after replacing John Limniatis. In his first season coaching the Impact, Dos Santos was a league finalist for Coach of the Year and led the Impact to its third championship in team history. Dos Santos quits with a regular season record of 26-25-16 and a Nutrilite Canadian Championship record of 0-6-3. In 2011, the Impact had only won two games in 12 regular season games (2-7-3).