Friday, December 12, 2008

College Cup notes: Hometown boys

College Cup notes: Hometown boys


FRISCO, Texas -- A total of eight players in this year's event are from the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. So, it wasn't a big surprise that during Thursday's press conferences, the players' thoughts on being back home was a popular topic of conversation.

Wake Forest sophomore midfielder Corben Bone hails from Plano, a Dallas suburb. "It's really exciting. I haven't been back to Texas. I don't get to come back too often being so far away. So it's good to come back and have the College Cup here. My family can come watch and I'm really excited to go after another championship here in my hometown. I can't wait."

"It feels great," said Maryland defender Omar Gonzalez, a Dallas native. "I spent several months here (with FC Dallas), practicing with the guys and playing with the Super Group of Dallas Cup. So, just being back here brings back a whole lot of memories. I'd like to repeat that (success) and win the College Cup championship. That would be great."

North Carolina junior defender Ben Clack is from Duncanville and he too is glad to be back. "The last time I played here was my senior year (of high school) 3-1/2 years ago. So it is good to be back home and see my family. It's a little different here this time. We are here for business this time, not to relax. I am excited and glad it is being hosted in North Texas this year."

Supporting their alma maters: Each of the four storied programs have produced their share of players in Major League Soccer. At least among current or former FC Dallas players, a number of them are expected to be in attendance.

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Cheering on Maryland will be current FCD defender Michael Dello-Russo and former Hoops forward Abe Thompson, who is now with Kansas City. Jamie Watson (North Carolina) will be cheering on the Tar Heels. Other FCD players in attendance will be defender Drew Moor and forward Kenny Cooper, the 2008 MLS Comeback Player of the Year and member of the league's Best XI.

Much love for the ACC: One of the biggest stories with this year's College Cup is that it features three teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference, considered one of the best leagues for college men's soccer in the nation. It was also a frequent topic of conversation on Thursday.

"I think it shows we're a good, strong conference top-to-bottom," Bolowich said. "There were some questions about ACC soccer and I think three teams is quite a statement."

Maryland head coach Sasho Cirovski agreed. "Every single game we play is pretty tough," he said. "I know every ACC game we have is an all-out battle to get the win. It's been a very good year for us and going up, hopefully against another ACC team in the championship game would be a very good thing. It just shows how good the conference is."

But Masur, who coaches the lone non-ACC team in the event, St. John's, wanted to discuss his own league, the Big East Conference.

"We are proud of Big East soccer," he said. We think it is fantastic. We have 16 great teams, teams that are nationally renowned every year. We have our share of guys who do well."

College Cup semis kick off in Texas

College Cup semis kick off in Texas


FRISCO, Texas -- On Friday afternoon, the 2008 NCAA Men's College Cup will kick off as ACC rivals Wake Forest and North Carolina square off in the early game at 5:30 p.m. ET. Then, in the nightcap, Maryland and St. John's meet in the second national semifinal.

Wake Forest (21-1-1) vs. North Carolina (14-7-1), 5:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2

On Nov. 1, the two teams met in ACC play in Chapel Hill, N.C. North Carolina had a 2-1 lead for much of the game until Wake exploded for three goals in six minutes to prevail 4-2. Both coaches are ready to face such familiar opposition.

"One of the best things about going into NCAA play is getting to play different teams with different looks," Wake Forest head coach Jay Vidovich said. "The other side of it is that when we had the conference call for the tape exchange of each other's games, (UNC head coach) Elmar (Bolowich) and I were like do we even need to? We know each other so well."

Bolowich hopes that Wake, which has scored 13 goals in their first three NCAA tournament games this year, is a little low on ammunition.

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"I hope they've run out of scoring," he said. "I think (Friday) will be an open game with a lot of flow and opportunities both ways."

Wake is seeking to repeat as NCAA champions in this, their third consecutive trip to the College Cup. The last school to accomplish that feat was Indiana, who won the national crown in both 2003 and 2004. The repeat is clearly on the minds of the Demon Deacons.

"I think the first time (at the College Cup), two years ago, it was all new for us," WFU midfielder Sam Cronin said. "We were just soaking it all in and we had an early exit from the tournament. So, our goal last year was to stay in the tournament and play on Sunday. And here our goal is the same thing and we're excited about the opportunity."

The Tar Heels are more than well aware of what it will take to defeat Wake, which UNC has not defeated in the last five meetings.

"We'll have to put in a great effort for 90 minutes," North Carolina midfielder Michael Callahan said. "If we do that, I think we can put ourselves in a good position. They're a great counterattacking team, so we have to stay in position."

St. John's (19-2-3) vs. Maryland (21-3-0), 8 p.m. ET, ESPN2

Maryland is arguably the hottest team coming into this year's College Cup as the Terrapins have won 14 consecutive games. Their last defeat came Oct. 3 at Clemson, when they fell 5-3 in an ACC conference match. Since then, Maryland has outscored their opposition 27-6. In their three NCAA tournament games, the Terps have allowed just one goal.

However, St. John's has also been playing some good soccer of late. Winners of three in a row, the Red Storm have won 11 of their last 13. As a team, they have allowed an average of just 0.50 goals per game. The Red Storm have struggled in the NCAA tournament against the Terps, having been eliminated by them in 2004, 2005 and 2006.

For St. John's head coach Dr. Dave Masur, this year's Maryland squad bears close resemblance to those teams.

"They are similar because they attack the ball well in the box," he said. "Up front, they have terrific goal scorers. Their two center forwards, (Casey) Townsend and (Jason) Herrick are pretty physical, pretty direct for 90 minutes, so they are a handful for any back four. They have great flank play with the wide guys getting a lot of goals. (Jeremy) Hall is getting in and getting goals."

Maryland head coach Sasho Cirovski has nothing but the utmost respect for the man guiding the Red Storm from the sidelines and for his group on the field.

"Dave Masur is a great coach and his team is extremely well-organized," he said. "They have very good balance all over the field. They play until the final whistle. They're a team that doesn't make a lot of mistakes."

Terps senior defender A.J. Delagarza was a freshman on the last UM team that advanced to the College Cup in 2005 and won the NCAA title.

"We have leadership this year," he said. "My freshman year, we had five or six seniors who brought leadership on and off the field. I think this year, our seniors and juniors have stepped into that role."

Even though the Red Storm have had to come from behind to win twice in the NCAA tournament, senior defender Rory Quinn is confident that his team can show the same tenacity against Maryland.

"We never say die," he said. "We really take pride in working the whole time. It is something we have really worked on in the past, in my four years here to make sure we play regardless of the score, regardless of the situation until the ref makes sure the play is dead."

A season of firsts for Real Salt Lake

A season of firsts for Real Salt Lake


SANDY, Utah -- If anything, the 2008 season could truly be defined as a season of firsts for Real Salt Lake.

In the span of a few months, RSL went from the MLS basement to a playoff team for the first time. The Utah side also posted its first winning record and inhabited first place in the Western Conference at different junctures for the first time in club history.

2008 also marked the move from Rice-Eccles Stadium to Rio Tinto Stadium -- a soccer-specific facility that will also serve as host venue to the 2009 MLS All-Star Game.

For the club, nothing signaled 2008 would be a different year than previous ones quite like taking over the top spot in the Western Conference. Real only stayed on top for a few weeks after beating Eastern Conference champion Columbus by a 2-0 margin in mid-July. Still, the impact it made, in terms of building confidence, could not be measured.

It was also during that stretch that RSL posted a record above .500 for the first time in club history.

Real coach Jason Kreis felt like RSL earned what it got through being much more competitive on the field.

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Check out the best of 2008

"I still look back at the whole season and say that we were the better team in almost every game we played," Kreis said. "There was very few games where I could say, well, we didn't deserve better than we got there."

Perhaps one of the biggest keys to RSL accomplishing what it did in 2008 was the club's ability to plug in key pieces during the league's international transfer window in the summer.

In that time, RSL added depth and versatility by bringing in forward Clint Mathis, midfielder Will Johnson and utility man Robbie Russell. All three players played key roles in the team's playoff run.

Johnson instantly earned a starting role. Mathis and Russell gradually moved into the first XI as well. Kreis thought all three players possessed a nice degree of versatility and meshed well with the existing core of the team. Such additions to the RSL roster worked out better than anyone could have anticipated.

Kreis credited general manager Garth Lagerway's knack for finding the best players available.

"He does deserve a lot of credit," Kreis said. "He's worked extremely hard and been out scouting and brought in some quality players."

Many of the players themselves hoped for good things when they joined RSL at midseason. What they experienced as the season wound down exceeded even their fondest expectations.

"When I first signed, you never could have told me that this would happen the way it did," Johnson said. "Things have more or less been perfect since the minute I got here."

RSL reached a major landmark in October when it opened up Rio Tinto Stadium -- a state-of-the-art soccer-specific venue seating 20,008 people. Getting to that point was a journey fraught with political infighting as RSL worked to secure a portion of Salt Lake County tax revenues to help finance the cost of building the stadium.

Once the stadium was finished and RSL moved in, the dramatic difference between Rio Tinto and the club's former venue at Rice-Eccles became immediately apparent.

RSL players embraced a natural grass surface that was easier on their bodies than the hard artificial surface at Rice-Eccles. The stadium was also seen as a friendlier venue for the team's fans -- with better views of the field throughout the stadium than what was possible before.

Working to match its brand of soccer with the quality of its new digs became a goal for RSL in 2008 and beyond.

"This stadium is too nice to not have a good product in there," midfielder Kyle Beckerman said.

Perhaps the most memorable moment for RSL in the 2008 season is its first-ever trip to the postseason. Real needed a dramatic finish to get to that point, qualifying in the season finale at Colorado when Yura Movsisyan came up with the equalizer in the 90th minute for the playoff-clinching draw.

While that moment stands out most in the minds of fans and outside observers, for RSL players another moment proved just as big in fueling their run to the playoffs. The moment in question was Real's second road victory of the season at San Jose.

That 3-2 triumph in late September set off an eight-game unbeaten streak that did not come to an end until a 1-0 loss to New York in the Western Conference Championship.

"It was a game we wanted to win," goalkeeper Nick Rimando said. "We were OK with a tie, but we fought to the end and we got a victory. From then on, we got some results on the road and we picked up some confidence."

Once RSL reached the MLS Cup Playoffs, the team was not content to simply sit back and call it a season. The Utah side upset expansion partner Chivas USA and earned a surprise berth into the Western Conference Championship.

Beckerman said that the team's unexpected success was an appropriate reward to a cadre of loyal fans that have continued to support RSL even in bleaker moments.

"We wanted to give them something to cheer about," Beckerman said. "We wanted the soccer that we play to be attractive -- attacking, creating chances. This is the type of soccer we wanted to play. But, also, that's what we wanted the fans to see. We wanted them to be excited about their team and how we play."

The bitter 1-0 loss at home to the Red Bulls in the West final has left RSL wanting more going into the 2009 season. And while its possible they might rise to even further heights, it will be hard to eclipse what happened this season -- simply because how quickly the team rose after enduring mediocrity for so long.

"We're not the doormat of the league anymore," Beckerman said. "We're players in this league. That definitely takes it up a notch there. Our fans are going to expect that the type of soccer we're playing is good enough to (make us) first or second all year."

Warzycha likely to replace Schmid

Warzycha likely to replace Schmid


COLUMBUS -- If he moves into the job vacated this week by head coach Sigi Schmid, one of the first tasks for current Columbus Crew assistant coach Robert Warzycha would be to determine if his former position would be filled.

Warzycha is the favorite to replace Schmid, who decided to seek employment elsewhere -- possibly with the expansion Seattle Sounders FC -- after leading the Crew to their first MLS championship last month.

Schmid is out of contract and the issue of a charge of tampering reportedly brought against Seattle would have to be resolved before he can complete a deal with the Sounders.

"The team is still working on the Sigi situation then will go forward with the hiring of a coach," Warzycha said. "I am one of the candidates but absolutely nothing has been resolved yet.

"I think that (being the head coach) would be best for me. I made it clear a long time ago I needed to spend some time in Columbus coaching. At some point I've said I want to be a head coach. That is a normal progression if you are an assistant. That is the perfect situation for me."

Technical director Brian Bliss feels the Crew can survive without filling the No. 2 position that Warzycha currently holds because of changes in the way MLS will operate in 2009.

Instead of 18 first-team players and 10 on the developmental roster, the new rules will allow clubs to have between 18-20 full-time players -- depending on their salary cap situations -- and up to four developmental players. The net result is a reduction in the roster to 24 from 28 and the elimination of the reserve division.

"I personally wouldn't add an assistant coach under those circumstances but that will be something for the new coach to decide," Bliss said.

Bliss, an assistant at Kansas City for six years before becoming the Wizards' interim head coach midway through the 2006 season, said he would like to be a head coach again but now is not the time, noting he has been in his current position less than a year.

However, he said if his responsibilities as technical director were greatly reduced -- which at this point no one in the organization has considered -- he would be open to being an assistant if, for example, Warzycha wanted to make him his replacement.

"Robert's ready to lead this team. He's put in his time and done all the right things," he said.

Warzycha, the Crew's interim coach for the last three months of the 2005 season after Greg Andrulis was released, has been second-in-command since Schmid was named head coach in October of that year.

The remainder of the staff this past season included goalkeeper coach Vadim Kirillov and Mike Lapper, who like Warzycha is a former Crew player.

Schmid said he does not anticipate taking any of the staff with him if he gets the job in Seattle because most are under contract with the Crew.

"If I decided to do that I'd have to let the Crew know we're considering it," he said. "It's been a great support staff. I wish soccer in this country were at the point where if the head coach moves you take the support staff with you. That's the way it's done in Europe. Unfortunately, with the way finances are with lot of people, they would find it difficult going cross country. It's not feasible."

Crew president/general manager Mark McCullers said Warzycha was a viable candidate in 2005 before Schmid was hired but that the timing then was not right.

Every Crew head coach prior to Schmid had been a promoted assistant since the firing of the original coach Timo Liekoski with 10 games left in the 1996 season. Tom Fitzgerald took over and lasted until early in 2001 season when Andrulis replaced him.

"This is how we envisioned things playing out to a certain extent three years ago when we brought Sigi on," McCullers said. "We needed somebody then with a different perspective, an outside perspective with experience and who could do some fairly drastic things to get us headed in the right direction.

"You look back on it, those were the objectives and as an organization we achieved those things in large part due to Sigi. Moving forward, we're looking to build on the foundation that has been laid. Continuity is an important thing. You look at Robert and what he brings to the table. He knows this team. He's helped make this team successful. He was extremely influential in making this team successful.

"We're in a different situation now. We've accomplished a lot of those things so it would make more sense to make a move that supported continuity than more that it supported change."

Warzycha said he is not taking for granted that the job is his. He has not consulted with Houston coach Dominic Kinnear on how he handled moving from being a Dynamo (at the time the San Jose Earthquakes) assistant to replacing a popular and successful coach. Kinnear took over for Frank Yallop in 2004 after San Jose won two titles in three years and guided Houston to the 2006 and '07 championships.

"No, the first thing before I make a call I have to get the job. I don't want to get ahead of myself and look stupid. First things first," Warzycha said. "If I do get the job I'm going to call Dominic and a few other people and ask for advice but not right now."

If Warzycha becomes head coach he will also use what he learned from watching Schmid firsthand for three seasons.

"He runs the team very well," Warzycha said. "The players have to buy into what you're doing. They have to trust you and believe in you. It's not only better for the team but for the players. They backed him and trusted him.

"If you approach it the right way then you're going to have success. That's what he did. He identified early that the way were we were going was the right way to win a championship and he was right."

The new Crew coach should have an experienced core to work with. The re-signing of league and MLS Cup MVP Guillermo Barros Schelotto was massive. Defender Danny O'Rourke got a new deal but central midfielder Brad Evans was lost to Seattle in the expansion draft.

MLS Defender of the Year Chad Marshall is on a trial with Mainz of the German second division but Bliss is hopeful the out-of-contract player will re-sign.

If he does, Bliss thinks the Crew will have "14 or 15" of its top returnees then try to fill the roster from there to reach the maximum 20 on the senior squad. The team could go with 18 or 19 and pay a few players more but Bliss feels with team's entry in the 2009 CONCACAF Champions League a deeper roster, albeit thinner in the wallet for those in the final roster spots, is the way to go.

Warzycha's knowledge of the roster will be an asset when he likely assumes control. So, too, will be his understanding of how things work within the organization.

Schmid expressed frustration upon his departure that the team was unable to complete plans for a new training center. Ideas have been thrown around for two years but the goal of having a bigger complex by the 2010 season grow dimmer each week and with the sour economy municipalities are unlikely to share in the cost anytime soon.

Also, Crew Stadium celebrates its 10-year anniversary in May but it remains without naming rights attached and most of the parking around the venue, including the team's lot, is unpaved despite the organization's efforts to get the state of Ohio to do something.

McCullers said he is trying to be patient, just as he hopes the fans are with the coaching switch after Schmid led the team to its most successful season.

"I think our fans understand what we've been doing the past three or four years to try and put the best product on the field that we can and trying to be a professional soccer club in every sense of the word," McCullers said. "I think they see it and I think they support it and I think everyone has a positive eye toward the future."

Schmid leaves Crew after Cup win

Schmid leaves Crew after Cup win


COLUMBUS -- The most successful chapter in Columbus Crew history officially closed Wednesday with the announcement that head coach Sigi Schmid would seek employment elsewhere after leading the club to its first MLS championship last month.

General manager Mark McCullers confirmed that assistant coach and former Crew player Robert Warzycha is the frontrunner to be the named the organization's fifth full-time head coach. However, no decision is expected before next week.

"This week would be a fairly aggressive timetable," McCullers said. "Obviously, getting the head coaching position secure is a priority. It's an immediate priority. Because there has been speculation about Sigi not returning I've have people contacting me -- agents and other coaches.

"I want to make sure I do our due diligence working with our ownership and Brian (Bliss, technical director) in the process but my objective is to make the decision as quick as possible."

When asked if Warzycha is the leading candidate, McCullers replied, "At this point in time that's fair to say. Certainly Robert is somebody I respect and seriously considered for the job the last time it was open."

McCullers said no other candidates have been interviewed.

"I need to focus on the candidate pool a little bit. I haven't had a chance to do that. That's part of the due diligence to see if there are any other candidates that warrant consideration," he said.

McCullers made it clear several times that "continuity" was the most important feature of the new head coach, and thus there seems to be little desire to go outside the organization this time.

Warzycha became interim coach on July 12, 2005, after Greg Andrulis was relieved of his duties, and took a team that was 4-10-2 to a 7-6-3 record the remainder of the season.

He joined the Crew in June 1996, two months into the inaugural season, and been a fixture since. He was a player/assistant coach in 2002 before retiring as a player. He stayed on after Schmid was hired in October 2005.

"Robert has all the qualities and all the abilities and he knows the players to be able to continue what we built here in Columbus," Schmid said. "He's been here since day one as a player. He's been an assistant for a long period. He expressed to me he was willing to stay as my assistant for as many years as I was willing to stay here. I really appreciated that.

"He's ready. He's been a tremendous help here for me and I hope I've been a help to him as he's learned and improved. More so than anything, he's got the experience to do the job."

While Warzycha could be on the fast track to take over the Crew, Schmid hopes for a similarly rapid response from expansion Seattle Sounders FC.

"Obviously, everybody knows I had a visit to Seattle last week. Things are on hold there. Hopefully, we'll be able to move that forward in the next few days," Schmid said. "I had come to the decision that I wasn't going to return here and I thought it was fair to let (the Crew) know so they can move forward."

How and why the Crew let go the 2008 MLS Coach of the Year -- the man who led them to the Supporters' Shield title with the best regular season record in the league (17-7-6) -- will be open to debate.

Schmid hinted that if a different offer had been made by Hunt Sports Group during the summer he might have signed then and not let his contract expire after winning the MLS Cup.

"It's like I tell the players all the time when we play: You can't worry about what happened," he said. "Obviously if you go back into August or July and instead of this or that happened we'd be at a different point right here. It didn't happen so we're at this point. We have to accept it."

McCullers said the organization tried to re-sign Schmid.

"I wouldn't classify it as anything going wrong or breaking down for that matter," he said. "Sigi had a decision to make and we respect that decision, and for whatever reasons he made it. He was very clear from the very first conversation we had that it was his intent to explore options that were available to him for professional reasons, for personal reasons and that's what he did.

"We appreciate the fact he was upfront about his intentions all along. We made him a very competitive offer that would have made him one of the highest paid coaches in the league."

Schmid said he decided two days ago that he would not remain with the Crew but said he is taking a gamble by not having an agreement yet with Seattle, or any other organization.

"I was going to try and come to a decision on Monday. As it was related to me, I thought at that point in time the decision would be, 'OK, this or that. OK, I'm going to choose this,'" he said. "What it ended up coming down to was instead of this or that it was, 'Well, you either have this and maybe you'll have that. It's a little uncertain.' I decided I was going to deal with the uncertainty. So I came to that decision on Monday."

There were several reasons given by Schmid for his desire to move on. Among them, his family, including wife Valerie, still live in southern California.

"If things work out as I hope they do and being on the West Coast or that possibility, it's easier on my family. That had a factor in it," he said. "Certainly finances had a factor in it. The negotiations length had a factor in it, definitely.

"Also, looking at everything else and what I mean by everything else is we haven't got an agreement yet here in Columbus on a training site. In this economic climate is that going to happen now? It was definitely hard -- a hard decision. It's not easy."

There could be a hitch to Schmid being on the sideline next season because there reportedly is a non-compete clause that prohibits him from coaching any MLS team in 2009.

"I can't speak to the details of his contract," McCullers said when asked if that was the case. "The short answer to your question is, no, I don't think our intent is to block him from working. In any employment agreement where an employee has access to confidential and proprietary information there's language that protects the organization. I think that's normal."

When asked if he would be coaching in MLS next season, Schmid replied, "I would hope so but I can't really comment on that."

Still, McCullers expressed appreciation for what Schmid has done for the organization. Schmid was 34-33-5 in three seasons and missed the playoffs the first two years as he jettisoned all but three players from the previous regime.

"I have a lot of respect for Sigi and I'm sad to see him go. We've been through some tough times together. We've been through some great times together. Any time you work with somebody that closely and it's time to depart, it's difficult," McCullers said. "As far as I'm concerned we're on good terms. He did what we needed him to do here and brought some hardware to the organization along the way. I'll always look back on my working relationship with him very fondly."

Schmid said the Crew and the Hunt family will always be special because they gave him a chance after being dismissed by the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004. It was an emotional time for Schmid when the Crew won the MLS Cup with a 3-1 win against New York on Nov. 23 in Schmid's former home, The Home Depot Center in Carson, Calif.

"As I've said all along, I thank the Hunt Sports Group and I thank the Crew organization for having the patience with me to allow it to happen," he said. "I do feel that (the Crew) is in much better shape than when I came here. The team is going to play in the CONCACAF Champions Cup. We'd never been MLS champion. To win the Supporters' Shield the way we did this year; the young nucleus of players we had this year -- I believe there's a solid foundation.

"Now it's time to turn to another challenge and that's good, too, because challenges keep you motivated and keep you going."

Schmid looks forward to returning to Crew Stadium someday and visiting the Nordecke supporters section that he played such an integral part in developing this season.

"I expect when I come back to Columbus with whatever team I'm with that the fans will respect what I was able to do here but I know they're going to be out to win the game and support the Crew once the game begins," he said. "Fans are supposed to support the home team so I'd be disappointed if the fans here in Columbus didn't support the Columbus team to its full extent.

"The fans -- that's one of the hardest things for me to leave and one of the hardest things in my decision-making process. There was a bond. The scarf I wore was very special to me because it represented for me the bond to the fans and the bond to Lamar (Hunt). That's something that will always be very special to me."

Dynamo to face Atlante in Champions League

Dynamo to face Atlante in Champions League


HOUSTON -- Thanks to the Houston Dynamo's 1-0 win against Luis Angel Firpo on Nov. 26, the team earned a date in the quarterfinals of the inaugural edition of the CONCACAF Champions League.

Wednesday, the Orange found out their first opponent for the knockout stage. The team was placed against Mexican side Atlante FC in the quarterfinal draw held at the CONCACAF headquarters in New York City.

The Dynamo will play Atlante in the first leg of the two-game, total-goals series on either February 24, 25 or 26, 2009. A week later, the teams will play the second leg in Cancun, and the winner of the set will advance to the semifinals of the confederation's club championship, where they will play the survivor of the quarterfinal between Santos Laguna of Mexico and the USL First Division's Montreal Impact.

Atlante finished atop Group C in the CONCACAF Champions League group stage, with 11 points from six matches, tied with Montreal yet winning the head-to-head tiebreaker. The Dynamo finished second in Group B, advancing ahead of Firpo with that final day victory, finishing with nine points from their six games, three behind Mexico's Pumas UNAM.

The other quarterfinals feature an all-Mexican matchup as Pumas UNAM will take on Cruz Azul, and the second of the USL First Division sides in the final eight, the Puerto Rico Islanders, will take on CD Marathon of Honduras.

Should the Dynamo, the only MLS team in the quarterfinal round, win the tournament, they will advance to the 2009 FIFA Club World Cup, to be held next December in the United Arab Emirates.

The teams will be playing for the second time in less than a year, as Atlante will be looking to avenge a 4-0 loss at Robertson Stadium last July 12 in the opening match for both teams in SuperLiga 2008.

Dwayne De Rosario opened the scoring just 20 minutes into that match and Stuart Holden added goals in the 21st and 28th minutes to put the match out of reach. Brian Mullan capped the scoring in the 54th minute, sending the home crowd into a frenzy.

Goalkeeper Pat Onstad did not face a single shot on goal in that game, as the Orange defense led the way. The only Atlante player to come close was Ernesto Pereyra Gabriel, who broke free for a scoring chance in the eighth minute.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Finalists share impressive pedigree

Finalists share impressive pedigree


Last year's NCAA Men's College Cup featured three clubs who had never played on men's college soccer's biggest stage. However, this year is a different story as the four participants -- Maryland, North Carolina, St. John's and Wake Forest, are no stranger to the event. Of course, three of those sides come from the Atlantic Coast Conference, with St. John's being the lone non-ACC school in attendance as the Red Storm play in the Big East. Wake Forest is the lone holdover from 2007 and the Demon Deacons return looking to repeat as NCAA champions.

Wake and UNC open the event on Friday with first kick set for 4:30 p.m. CT. St. John's and Maryland meet in the nightcap, which is scheduled for a 7 p.m. CT kickoff. Here's a closer look at the four national semifinalists:

MARYLAND

Maryland (21-3-0) comes into the College Cup riding a 14-match winning streak. The second-seeded Terrapins clinched a spot in the big event by defeating Creighton 1-0, thanks to a goal by Rodney Wallace off a free kick. Wallace also had his side's first tally of the 2008 season, in a 2-1 win against UCLA at The Home Depot Center back on Aug. 29.

The Terps' top scorer throughout 2008 was junior midfielder Jeremy Hall (14 goals, 6 assists) but freshman striker Casey Townsend (11 goals, 4 assists) is another player to watch. Junior midfielder/forward Doug Rodkey led Maryland in assists with nine, while freshman midfielder Matt Kassel chipped in with seven. As a team, Maryland allowed an average of 0.75 goals per game. In goal, Zac Macmath has been a huge asset with a 17-1-0 record, 10 shutouts and a goals-against-average of 0.49 in 19 games.

This will be Maryland's 11th trip to the national semifinals in program history and fifth College Cup appearance in the last seven years. Their last trip was in 2005 when the Terps came away with the NCAA championship.

"It feels great to be back," said Maryland head coach Sasho Cirovski, who has led his team to six College Cups. "I couldn't be more proud of our team right now."

Maryland has beaten St. John's, their Friday opponent, in three consecutive matches, eliminating the Red Storm from the NCAA Tournament in 2004, 2005 and 2006.

The College Cup will be a homecoming for two Maryland players who are from the Dallas area. Freshman midfielder Kaoru Forbess, who played in 11 games as a reserve, is from Garland while defender/midfielder Omar Gonzalez (five goals, one assist) is a Dallas native who has trained with FC Dallas in the past.

NORTH CAROLINA

The Tar Heels' last trip to the Men's College Cup was in 2001, when they won the NCAA title. This is their third appearance in the in program history and UNC (14-7-1) heads into the event riding a three-match winning streak. Carolina advanced to Frisco by beating a pesky Northwestern squad 1-0 in the national quarterfinals. Freshman midfielder Kirk Urso had the lone goal of the game for the Heels, who were a No. 13 seed when he scored in the 61st minute.

"It's like a dream right now," Urso said after the win. "We've worked so hard. Our team, we knew we had the potential the whole year. For this to be happening at this time, it's just amazing. It's just a dream."

Offensively, the Heels were led by senior striker Brian Shriver (13 goals, five assists), junior forward Eddie Ababio (seven goals, four assists) and freshman midfielder/forward Billy Schuler (four goals, five assists). UNC allowed 1.27 goals per game and should be set between the posts with senior starter Jacob Wescoe (10-5-1, 3 shutouts, 1.27 goals-against-average) although backup Brooks Hagerty (4-2-0, 2 shutouts, 1.22 goals-against-average in seven games) is also a solid option for UNC.

Carolina, a No. 13 seed, will be facing a familiar foe in Wake Forest. On Nov. 1, the Tar Heels, who at the time were ranked No. 7 in the nation, lost 4-2 to the top-ranked Demon Deacons, but the final score was a bit deceiving. UNC had a 2-1 lead before Wake exploded for three goals in a six-minute span in the second half to break the game open.

Wake has beaten UNC three consecutive times and the Tar Heels haven't defeated the Demon Deacons since a 1-0 win during the 2005 regular season. Carolina has a pair of players with ties to the Dallas area. Sophomore defender David Rodriguez, who has played in 11 games in 2008, is from Big D along with sophomore midfielder Cameron Brown (three goals, five assists), who calls nearby Garland home.

ST. JOHN'S

This will be the Red Storm's fourth trip to the College Cup but first since 2003. With a 19-2-3 record, this year's team has the most wins since the 1996 team won a school-record 22 matches and the NCAA title. St. John's, a No. 3 seed, which punched their ticket with a 2-1 overtime win against Indiana, has won four in a row.

Maryland, their College Cup opponent, has eliminated the Red Storm from the NCAA Tournament three years running. The sides last met on Nov. 15, 2006 with the Terrapins prevailing 2-0.

"(They are) a fantastic team, a great program with unbelievably talented players," said St. John's head coach Dr. Dave Masur. "Collectively, they play very hard and together."

The St. John's offense is led by Big East Midfielder of the Year Nelson Becerra (eight goals, seven assists), who converted the game-winning penalty kick over Indiana. It was the junior's fifth game-winner of the year and he is a perfect 3-for-3 on penalty kicks. Sophomore midfielder Tafadzwa Chiduku (seven goals, one assist) is another threat along with Sverre Wegge Gundhus (four goals, five assists) and Walter Hines (one goal, five assists). In the back, the Red Storm is led by Joel Gustafsson, the Big East Defender of the Year. He is the anchor of a unit that allowed just 0.50 goals per game this year, making St. John's the toughest team in the nation to score on. In goal, redshirt senior Neal Kitson has been a rock, keeping 15 clean sheets in 23 games while amassing a 19-2-2 record and a goals-against-average of just 0.47.

Two players for the Red Storm are from the Dallas area. Redshirt junior defender Ben Clack, who started 24 games this year, hails from Duncanville while sophomore midfielder Ale Ivo, who came off the bench in the win against the Hoosiers, is from Fort Worth. "It's really an awesome feeling to know I can go back and see my host family and friends," Ivo said. "Everyone is going to be there. I went to high school there. I played club there. It's like my second home."

WAKE FOREST

The Demon Deacons (21-1-1) delivered the most decisive win to reach their third consecutive College Cup with a 5-0 blanking of South Florida, where five different players found the back of the net for the defending NCAA champions, who have now won three straight. Wake's only loss of the season came on Nov. 14 when Virginia beat them 3-2 in the semifinals of the ACC Tournament, a setback that came in double overtime.

"I'm very excited for my team," Wake Forest head coach Jay Vidovich said after the win against South Florida. "We had a tremendous start to the match. I'm tremendously happy with how we played and defended right from the beginning. Our guys did a fantastic job the entire game."

Top-seeded Wake heads into their national semifinal match with ACC rival North Carolina having allowed just 0.70 goals per game all year. The Demon Deacons are led by junior midfielder Cody Arnoux (17 goals, eight assists) and senior striker Marcus Tracy (13 goals, 10 assists), who is considered a top prospect for next month's MLS SuperDraft.

Other key contributors to the potent WFU attack, which has averaged 3.5 goals per game this year, include sophomore midfielder Corben Bone (seven goals, 17 assists), a Dallas native, junior forward/midfielder Zack Schilanski (11 goals, five assists), senior midfielder Sam Cronin (10 goals, four assists) and senior midfielder Jamie Franks (three goals, 11 assists). In goal, Wake has junior Akira Fitzgerald (20-1-1, 13 shutouts, 0.61 goals-against-average).

WFU and UNC have already faced each other once in 2008. On Nov. 1, the Demon Deacons went into Chapel Hill and found themselves trailing 2-1 before exploding for three goals within a six-minute span to hand the Tar Heels a 4-2 loss. The last team to repeat as NCAA champions was Indiana, who accomplished the back-to-back feat in 2003 and 2004.

Dynamo defined by perseverance

Dynamo defined by perseverance


HOUSTON -- He was only kidding, but veteran defender Craig Waibel said the one thing the 2008 Houston Dynamo will be remembered for is that they were the first Houston team not to win a championship.

Despite the deadpan answer, he was correct.

In their first two seasons after moving to Houston from San Jose, the Dynamo notched second-place regular season finishes in the Western Conference, breezed through the playoffs and won the MLS Cup at Pizza Hut Park (2006) and at RFK Stadium (2007).

But this year, even though the team closed out the year with a 1-0 win against El Salvador's Luis Angel Firpo to advance to the semifinal round of the inaugural CONCACAF Champions League, the Dynamo fizzled out during the postseason.

A 3-0 loss to eventual MLS runner-up New York on Nov. 9 was the final, crushing blow for a team that expected to, yet again, be the final MLS club standing at The Home Depot Center in late November.

"We played 48 games this year, which I think is 15 more games than anyone else in MLS," said head coach Dominic Kinnear. "That is almost a good five months' worth of soccer right there, and it's been good for us.

"We have seen the emergence of some young players and we have seen the consistent play of the players that have been here for a long time."

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SIGHTS & SOUNDS

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Check out the best of 2008

Brian Ching once again led the team with 13 goals and five assists. Dwayne De Rosario added seven more goals and four assists, and Nate Jaqua was signed mid-year to provide depth up front.

In his 14 games, including 11 starts, Jaqua chipped in with four big goals, four assists and more scoring chances per game than perhaps anyone else in the league.

Pat Onstad, whose statistics while playing in MLS are better than anyone else to have played goalkeeper, again led the league in goals against average (1.03).

Those kinds of numbers got the Dynamo to the top of the league standings, despite their participation in the preseason Pan-Pacific Championship in Hawaii, the CONCACAF Champions' Cup, one match in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, SuperLiga, MLS regular season play and, most recently, the CONCACAF Champions League.

Defender Eddie Robinson looked past the playoffs defeat to New York when asked about what the 2008 Orange would be remembered for. Instead, he looked at the entire body of work and at a schedule that would have most professional soccer players quivering at the thought of playing nearly 50 matches in eight months.

"To play as many games as we did all summer long and to still come away with as many points as we did, especially in league play, it's just incredible," said Robinson. "Coming down the stretch, I don't know how many games we went there without losing one. We were good, and I just think our attitude, for the last two and half months that felt like four, is something everyone should be proud of."

From July 29, their first match after the All-Star break, until a 3-0 loss to Pumas UNAM in the CONCACAF Champions League, the Dynamo played 16 games and lost just one time. They went an incredible 9-1-6 that included a stretch where two home matches had to be postponed because of Hurricane Ike's destruction in and around the Houston area in mid-September.

"What was the highlight of our season," Robinson asked. "Our perseverance."

There were many high points for the Dynamo in 2008, but, to be fair, the team had several blemishes that only makes their season story more interesting.

First there was the disappointment of Argentinean signing Franco Caraccio. He might have scored the team's first goal of the year in a 3-3 tie vs. FC Dallas on April 6 and added another goal and assist in 10 games (8 starts). But he struggled to gain the fitness he needed to compete for a full 90 minutes and he was eventually released.

On July 1, the team traveled to Charleston for their first match in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. After tying the game late, the Dynamo eventually lost in penalty kicks to their USL First Division rivals.

Then after their most exciting win of the season, a 2-0 win against Pachuca, a team that has quickly become their biggest international rival, the Dynamo traveled to New England and lost on penalty kicks in the SuperLiga final.

"Overall, it is a disappointing season when we don't reach the goals that we set forth as a team," said Onstad. "This team's aim is to win trophies, and unfortunately we did not do that this year."

Ching echoed that sentiment.

"Obviously this team has higher expectations than most, so it is a disappointment when we get close in SuperLiga and lose," he said. "It's even more disappointing when we positioned ourselves well for the playoffs and lose. It is just frustrating."

Waibel has some decisions to make. Despite being one of the go-to veterans for his three seasons in an Orange uniform, he and his wife had a deal that after his 10th professional season, he'd confer with her about returning for more.

Waibel had three assists this year in 14 games after scoring a career-high five goals in 2006. He played nine of his 10 pro years in MLS, and six of those were spent with the Dynamo and the San Jose unit that moved from California in 2005.

Waibel might make a good coach one day, but he's not saying exactly what his plans are just yet. Like many of his long-time teammates, he thinks the team can take more good than bad from this season because of the number of games they played and how much high-profile time many of the reserves got to see on the field.

"You have to look at the number of games we played this year, and to only lose nine of them, that is not bad," Waibel said. "Because of all the games, and all the experience we got off the bench this year, all of that really made us the deepest team in this league. That only happens because of all the games we played. The experience gained by Stuart Holden, Geoff Cameron and Corey Ashe, all the time they got on the field made them legitimate contenders for starting positions.

"The greatest thing to take away from this season, on top of the results, is that we are still one of the best teams in this league and we have a bench that is as deep as any."

After their loss to the New York Red Bulls in the Western Conference Semifinal Series, Ching mentioned that he thought there would be some big changes with the team, but failed to elaborate when pushed. Kinnear sidestepped the question and said the team next year would be fine.

Waibel acknowledged the possibility of a shakeup, but didn't dwell on the potential breakup in chemistry the team has relied upon since Day 1.

"If the next best thing comes along, someone is going to move out," Waibel said. "We'll wait and see if the next best thing comes along. That is all you can do. But I don't think anyone on this roster is banging down the door trying to get out of here.

"I think everyone that has been here and left is banging on the door trying to get back in."

As for goals in 2009 for whatever players might don the Orange and White next year, that's easy.

"The season is over," Kinnear said. "But our goal for next year is set already, and that is to win MLS Cup 2009."

College Cup memories for Hoops trio

College Cup memories for Hoops trio


FRISCO, Texas -- When Pizza Hut Park plays host to the 2008 NCAA Men's College Cup this weekend, the event will conjure up images of their own experiences on college soccer's biggest stage for three current members of FC Dallas -- midfielder Eric Avila, defender Michael Dello-Russo and defender Drew Moor.

Avila, who is currently with the Generation adidas team on their trip to England, just completed a rookie campaign where he played in 14 games and had two assists. The southern California native played in the 2006 College Cup with California-Santa Barbara, scoring the national championship-winning goal as the Gauchos beat UCLA 2-1 in the NCAA title game.

It's an experience he still remembers well. "I think it was an experience I will never forget," Avila said. "My whole time in my college career, I just wanted to make the Final Four. That's basically what my goal was. The experience of being in there and having all the coaches around you was great."

Dello-Russo played in eight games for FCD this year. But before he was a fourth-round pick of the Hoops in the 2006 SuperDraft, he played at Maryland. He played in the College Cup in each of his four seasons, and was named to the 2005 All-College Cup team as a senior on the last Terrapins team to win a national championship.

"It was awesome," he said. "It was probably the best soccer experience of my life. We were lucky enough to go to three before that but that one was definitely awesome because it was my senior year and everything was on the line. We loved each other and played for each other. It was great to be there."

And the 25-year-old knows how fortunate he was to have been to the event every year.

"Extremely lucky, it's all based on Maryland," Dello-Russo said. "The coaching staff has done an amazing job there. That is probably the most elite program in the country right now. Just to be part of it and of the growing of that program is unbelievable and unforgettable.",p> Just after the conclusion of the 2008 season, Moor was rewarded with a multiple-year contract extension that will keep him in hoops for years to come after a season where he started 27 games, scored two goals and assisted on another. But before he was the sixth overall pick in the 2005 draft, he spent time at Indiana and played for the Hoosiers' championship teams in both 2003 and 2004.

"Obviously it was a great experience," he said. "I was fortunate to go to two College Cups actually and being able to win two national championships was great. The one thing that was really cool about the first one was that it was Coach (Jerry) Yeagley's last year there, which was obviously special. Then the next year was Coach (Mike) Freitag's first year there. It was just a good year to be at Indiana and such a great team. A lot of those players are in MLS now. I bet half that roster is in MLS now, so it was a special time."

Being a Dallas native, even though IU didn't advance to the final four, falling to St. John's in the quarterfinals, he still plans to be in attendance.

"I'm definitely looking forward to it," Moor said. "It's definitely a cool thing that Pizza Hut Park is able to host it. It will be fun to go out and watch the games."

Also worth noting is that FCD defender Aaron Pitchkolan has also experience playing for an NCAA title. When he was a freshman at Tampa in 2001, Pitchkolan was part of a team that won the NCAA Division II national championship. Pitchkolan just completed a solid year where he played in 21 games, 15 of those starts and scored for the first time since 2006.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Red Bulls bring Petke back into fold

Red Bulls bring Petke back into fold


The New York Red Bulls replaced one beloved longtime central defender with another on Wednesday, signing Mike Petke hours after losing Jeff Parke in the Seattle Sounders FC expansion draft.

Petke, 32, was picked up by the Red Bulls after he was waived by the Colorado Rapids. Petke played in 143 games for the MetroStars from 1998-2002, earning MLS All-Star honors in 2000 and 2002. Red Bulls coach Juan Carlos Osorio was an assistant coach under Octavio Zambrano in 2000 and 2001.

The Bohemia, N.Y. native, who was originally picked eighth overall by New York in the 1998 College Draft, was dealt to D.C. United in a blockbuster deal that brought U.S. international Eddie Pope, Jaime Moreno and Richie Williams to New York.

Petke spent three seasons with D.C. United and was a starter on the 2004 MLS Cup championship squad. He moved to Colorado midway through the 2005 season and spent parts of four seasons there.

Petke started 10 of 11 games this year after early-season foot surgery, scoring two goals, including one against the Red Bulls in a 5-4 Rapids win on Sept. 27 at Giants Stadium.

Parke was one of 10 players selected by the Sounders on Wednesday. He was one of 19 players left unprotected by the Red Bulls.

"It's obviously a sad day for the New York Red Bulls in losing Jeff Parke," Red Bulls sporting director Jeff Parke said. "At the end of the day we just weren't able to protect every player we would have liked to protect. Unfortunately Jeff was selected, but we thank Jeff for his contributions to the club and his long history here in New York. We will obviously miss him both personally and professionally."

Along with Dave van den Bergh, Parke was arguably the most consistent Red Bulls player this year. He anchored the backline, starting 23 of 24 games, playing 2,025 minutes. The 26-year-old spent five years with the Red Bulls, starting 126 of the 132 games he's played in and was second behind Petke on the team's all-time list of games played.

The last pick of the 2004 MLS SuperDraft, Parke's Red Bulls career ended with the first-ever performance-enhanced drug suspension in league history. Along with goalkeeper Jon Conway, Parke still has four games remaining on 10-game suspensions handed down by the league.

"It just came down to a numbers game," Agoos said. "We were only able to protect 11 players, I think three of which had to be international players, and we just didn't have the room to protect every player we wanted to."

Continuing with the defensive restructuring, the Red Bulls waived Venezuelan international Gabriel Cichero, who struggled mightily down the stretch of the regular season, as well as midfielder Gordon Kljestan and forward Sainey Touray.

Pitchkolan reflects on past, future

Pitchkolan reflects on past, future


FRISCO, Texas -- Although Aaron Pitchkolan was left unprotected by FC Dallas in the expansion draft to stock Seattle Sounders FC, the fact that he went unselected was greeted with pleasure by head coach Schellas Hyndman.

Since the end of the season, Hyndman has expressed a desire to keep Pitchkolan in Frisco. Pitchkolan played in 21 games for FCD, 15 of those starts. He played some left back early in the year but really showed his value when Davino missed seven games with a toe injury in late summer. Pitchkolan filled in admirably, helping to solidify the FCD backline and even scored his first goal since 2006.

"It's always good to score and to get your name on the scoreboard," Pitchkolan said about his tally. "It helps give you confidence. It was good."

But like the rest of his teammates, he looks back on a season where he had three different head coaches and FCD missed the playoffs for the first time since 2004.

"Obviously (it was) a strange year and definitely not what you expect coming into the season," he said. "But you've got to roll with it and I think we made a decent push at the end. It obviously wasn't enough but we had a lot of turnover. It's difficult."

However, Pitchkolan did feel like the team got on the same page once Hyndman arrived in mid-June and started implementing his version of the 4-4-2.

"Having a set system and having players in that system will help you," he said. "But that wasn't what it was like this year and you got to adjust as best you can. Having stability definitely helps, knowing who is going to play where, what formation and who your coach is. That definitely helps."

No matter whether it was Steve Morrow, who started the year as FCD's coach, Marco Ferruzzi, who replaced Morrow on an interim basis after his dismissal, or Hyndman, his current coach, Pitchkolan's approach has never wavered in the least.

"I just go in and try to do my best no matter who is the coach," he said. "I just try to help the team improve and to improve individually."

Even with all that happened, Pitchkolan admits he and his fellow Hoops never thought that missing the playoffs was a possibility. That definitely made watching other teams continue their seasons on TV a little strange.

"Yeah, I kept tabs but it's definitely from a different viewpoint than in years past," he admitted. "If a game was on, I'd watch it. But it was kind of weird. I'm always watching MLS games throughout the year but (missing the) playoffs, it was a weird situation to be in."

Should Pitchkolan remain with FCD, along with fellow defender Drew Moor, who signed a multiple-year extension just after the end of the regular season, he would be one of the longest-tenured players with the club, in the fold since 2005.

"Yes, that's definitely weird," he said. "There's been a lot of turnover. I see Oscar Pareja out here (coaching the FC Dallas Juniors) and remember my rookie year, me, him and Drew (Moor) were playing together. It's definitely weird to be one of the elder statesmen of the team. Hopefully next year we can get a good core together and will know our roles better. Hopefully it will work out."

One thing he didn't want to get into was his possible future in north Texas.

"I really don't have too much to say about that," Pitchkolan said. "I've just got to wait and see what options come up. I'm not really sure and will play it by ear."

No matter where he ends up, his focus in the offseason will remain where it's always been.

"I'm just going to stay in shape, play when I can and lift weights to keep up my strength," Pitchkolan said. "I don't want to get too out of shape or do anything too crazy in the offseason like ride a moped (and get hurt doing that)."

Cunningham hungry for success

Cunningham hungry for success


FRISCO, Texas -- When FC Dallas traded for Jeff Cunningham late in the year, there was some question whether the swap with Toronto FC would work out. But in 11 games with his new club, the veteran striker had five goals and two assists, and by the end of the year he and Kenny Cooper had evolved into a formidable strike tandem.

While the possibility of Cooper going to Europe after the first of the year is still a point of continual speculation, adding to the situation is that Cunningham is now out of contract. FCD head coach Schellas Hyndman has said that he would like to bring the veteran back. But in what promises to be an offseason filled with change for the Hoops, truly anything can happen.

Cunningham does want to return to the club. But when asked to rate his performance during his time at FCD, he minced few words.

"Well, my thing is the team brought me in to try and help make a difference in the last few games, to help them make the playoffs and that didn't happen," he said. "So, as a result, I feel like I failed and we failed. We didn't meet our goals and that's it. I'm really disappointed and frustrated. That's it."

The 32-year-old forward has no illusions about what he has to do to return to the top level he showed in 2006 when he won the Budweiser Golden Boot while with Real Salt Lake. But he is far from saying his career is on the downward slope.

"I've got to get better," Cunningham said. "I've got to improve. The last few years, I haven't been in a stable environment. Every year there have been rumors of change and uncertainty about where I was going to be. I think as of right now, I think I'm going to be part of FC Dallas unless things change after this interview. I know now that I'm going to be part of this team, so I just want to improve and in all areas.

"I feel like I can have another season like '06. I feel good and feel more motivated now because I have some young players that are pushing me," Cunningham added. "I see Kenny almost winning the Golden Boot and know I can be one of the top players in the league, goal scorers. I just want to come out and prove that I can have my best year next year."

The seasoned scorer has changed teams three times since coming to MLS and knows that there are no guarantees in this league or any other.

"My experience in the league is that there are no certainties," he said. "You never know. I don't know what the future holds but as of right now, I'm hoping to be part of the team next year but that's it."

Cunningham's offseason program could include relocating his wife and infant daughter from Toronto to north Texas so he could take advantage of warmer weather to prepare for the coming season.

"This offseason is extremely important for me to have a steady workout program. I think with the weather here, it would be better for me to be here," he said. "I'm sure they're going to join me wherever, here. Hopefully we can agree on a contract and make that move to be more settled, get a house and have some stability for a while, at least while I'm here."

He calls the facilities at Pizza Hut Park some of the best he has seen since he has been playing the world's game. "That's one of the best facilities I've seen in a while," Cunningham said. "I've seen the IMG Workout Center in Bradenton (Florida) that a lot of other athletes are using. It's great with the weather. You have 10 fields to come out and train at and the resources are all here. It's really up to you to make that commitment to improve. The club has provided every resource for us to improve as players."

For Cunningham, the digs in Frisco are a big step up from the offseason situation with one of his former employers.

"It's not like one of my former teams where I had to pay $2,000 to get a club membership," he said. "That's kind of ridiculous. Here you have access to good trainers and good fields, the weather is good to train and you have young players that are eager to improve. We don't have time to build into the season. We have to come in at 100 percent. That's going to put a lot of importance on our offseason training."

Before FCD wrapped up their training until 2008, Cunningham could be seen working after practice with some of the younger players.

"I don't really think it's a mentor role," he said of his extra work. "I look at all the young players and every single one of them is eager to improve and be in the first team. I don't like it but it's a matter of survival. You see a guy like Kenny that nearly won the Golden Boot and is probably one of the hardest workers on the team. You don't have a choice but to match that."

In his eyes, it's all part of soccer being a yearlong job.

"There is no offseason any more," Cunningham said. "You're forced to keep up. You've got guys that are in the national team who are going to be at a good level and joining the team in the preseason. They're going to bring in players, college players that are going to be finishing up their season. So, it's important to stay after, work with the young boys and keep up with them.

"It's a matter of survival nowadays," he continued. "It's not like a former club where you had 20 old guys that didn't want to do any workouts. Here you have 20 young guys that are pushing you to improve. I feel like I have a lot to prove next year and I'm looking forward to it. I know I can play. I see all the players they have brought into the league and the players all year and know that I can still contribute. I'm going to let this frustration (of not making the playoffs) go and look forward to next year."