Battery Officially Moves Back To USL2

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Soccer, USA
The Charleston Battery officially announced Monday they are returning to the United Soccer Leagues Second Division for the 2010 season after playing in their First Division for the past 12 seasons.

The Battery, who finished the 2009 USL1 campaign with a 14-5-11 record and 53 points, tying them for third place in the league’s regular season standings (15-7-8), advanced to the first round of the league’s playoffs, where they lost by a 4-2 aggregate score to the eventual champion Montreal Impact, who have now joined the new North American Soccer League.

The team was founded in 1993 and joined what was then called USL D-2 in 1995, winning the league title the next season.

The Battery will continue to hold its annual preseason Carolina Challenge Cup tournament, which featured the team facing competition from Major League Soccer clubs, though the Battery has never won the crown at their own tournament, and will take part in the 2010 Lamar Hunt US Open Cup tournament.

WPS Freedom Renames W-League Team, Names GM And Jersey Sponsor

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Soccer, USA
The Washington Freedom of Women’s Professional Soccer announced Monday it is renaming its affiliate franchise in the United Soccer Leagues’ W-League the Freedom Futures and has named former US Women’s National Team and Freedom player Joanna Lohman as the newly-branded franchise’s first general manager.

The Futures also announced American Fitness Tri, an annual Labor Day triathlon held in the DC area, will become the team’s official jersey sponsor in the 2010 W-League season.

Rampage’s Fabinho Named MISL POW For Week 3

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Soccer, USA
Rockford Rampage defender Fabinho was named Monday the Major Indoor Soccer League Player of the Week for Week 3 of its inaugural season.

Fabinho scored a crucial three-point goal and played as a sixth attacker in the Rampage’s 9-8 come-from-behind win against the Milwaukee Wave Friday at the Rockford MetroCentre.

The 2-0 Rampage, who lead the rechristened league formerly known as the National Indoor Soccer League, will face the winless Philadelphia Kixx (0-2) this Friday at the MetroCentre.

Now Ireland Is Being Silly — According to Sepp

Posted by: admin  :  Category: World Cup
Any semi-serious follower of the game of soccer feels badly for Ireland’s national team.

The Irish lost a World Cup finals berth to France on the strength of an extra-time goal scored by William Gallas moments after teammate Thierry Henry twice handled the ball.

Everyone on the planet saw it. Everyone except the referee, that is.

Ireland made several appeals for a replay, for redress, all turned down.

And now Fifa boss Sepp Blatter suggests the Irish are making an even stranger request.

The Irish would like to be the 33rd team at South Africa 2010.

At least, that is what Blatter said today, in South Africa, ahead of the Final Draw scheduled for Friday.

In this story, Blatter said the Irish asked today to join the World Cup as an extra team. How a tournament with 33 might work, Blatter didn’t address.

Given the black eye that Fifa got, deservedly, for the way the Ireland match in France ended, and the now-instinctive cynicism I bring to all Fifa pronouncements … we would be remiss if we failed to note that we have no source out of Ireland’s federation confirming they made any such request.

It would not strike me as out of the realm of the possible if Blatter took some throwaway line and pushed it forward as a formal request, just to make Ireland look silly.

At this point in the proceedings, Fifa is as likely to take vows of poverty as add a 33rd team.

And if Ireland actually made that request, in the light of day … well, yes. Then the Irish are being silly.

Enormous Void on the World Cup Map

Posted by: admin  :  Category: World Cup
Noticed this the other day. While studying the list of 32 qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

An enormous swath of territory, extending from eastern Europe across nearly the breadth of Asia has … zero … teams in the World Cup.

From the eastern borders of Slovakia and Serbia and Greece … to the border of North Korea, the continent of Asia is shut out of South Africa 2010.

And Fifa can’t be happy about that, if we assume that it believes every region on the planet would like to have at least one or two countries from their neighborhood in the finals. To root for … to root against … just someone to bring the event a bit closer to home.

Didn’t work out this time. Not for the 90 percent of the contiguous bulk of this population-dense area.

How did this happen?

–In part, it is bad luck.

Russia, Ukraine and Bahrain were on the edge of qualification. Each was in a home-and-home playoff for one of the 32 berths, playoffs in which each was the favorite. Each stumbled in the second half of the playoff.

–In part it reflects bad planning on the part of FIFA.

Soccer’s organizing body allowed Australia to shift from the Oceania qualifying group into the Asia qualifying group. The Australians took a look at Asian soccer and decided — quite accurately — that their chances of getting to South Africa via one of the four guaranteed Asia berths were much better than winning Oceania (which essentially means beating New Zealand) and getting the region’s half-berth — and surviving a home-and-home roulette with Asia’s No. 5 finisher.

That doesn’t mean Fifa should have allowed the Aussies to move. Anyone paying attention (and apparently it doesn’t include Fifa) knew that Australia represented a strong threat to qualify out of Asia, and that Oceania without Australia is a one-country “region” named New Zealand.

Australia rolled right through Asian qualifying, not losing in eight matches (6-0-2) of final group play, and poof! there went one of Asia’s four berths — to a country usually considered a continent of its own and not part of Asia.

–Some of it is the sheer weakness and/or incompetence of soccer federations in the massively populated Asian mainland.

China plays lots of soccer, has hundreds of millions of fans … but its federation is corrupt and incompetent. India also has a horrible federation and doesn’t play much soccer. Pakistan is a soccer nonentity and doesn’t seem to mind. Ditto, Bangladesh. Indonesia is hardly better. None of those five countries reached even the final 10 in “Asian” qualifying.

Iran usually is competent, but it fell two points short of qualifying outright, one point short of the fifth-place playoffs. Saudi Arabia lost to Bahrain in the fifth-place home-and-home, and then Bahrain lost to New Zealand. There goes the Arabian Peninsula.

And that leaves Asia represented by Japan, the two Koreas … and Australia. Three countries on the edge of the continent, and one on another continent entirely. And it leaves seven time zones, from central Europe to Korea, with no World Cup teams.

So, from Turkey and the Middle East, from Poland, Romania … through all the “stans”, across Mother Russia and its breakaway children, through China and Mongolia, across Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, and down into Indochina and Indonesia and over to the Philippines … a chunk of territory that probably holds something like two-thirds of the world population … it’s World Cup armageddon.

For soccer fans there, the 2010 World Cup will be about watching teams from the rest of the world. (Unless they feel kinship with the Koreas or Japan.)

Meanwhile, Europe has 13 teams, Africa has six, South America has five, North American has three and even little Oceania has one.

We can be fairly certain Fifa would prefer that an Iran and a Russia and China and maybe an Arabian Peninsula team were in the World Cup. None of them are.

It leaves a yawning void on the World Cup map. Maybe it won’t happen again anytime soon. Fifa has to be hoping so.