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Talking Beckerman, Donovan, DPs and the potential new MLS playoff structure

RSL fans feel the spirit of Sounders FC ... and vice versa.

RSL fans feel the spirit of Sounders FC ... and vice versa.

A few thoughts to finish out the MLS Cup coverage from Seattle: 

I’ve long been a Kyle Beckerman advocate. Will he ever be a top-flight international for the United States? Probably not. The one thing his game lacks at that level is pace. That, combined with the fact that he plays a spot where the Americans are fairly deep right now means he’s probably only going to be a fringe fellow in the U.S. shirt. (By my reckoning, Michael Bradley, Benny Feilhaber, Ricardo Clark and Maurice Edu are already ahead of Beckerman in the U.S. pecking order at holding midfielder, with passport citizen Jermaine Jones potentially cramming his way into that phone booth, too.)

But none of that shouldn’t diminish what Beckerman represents, that quintessential MLS bread winner – the kind of guy MLS championships are built around, as we see. Beckerman may be a league standard bearer in only one area, inexhaustible work rate. Otherwise, we would classify him as an above average MLS box-to-box midfielder, and I think that means more to the collective effort than people think. The guy tackles hard, he's a quality passer, he's fairly good in possession, he's a good shooter from long distance and he's a spirited leader.

Star-divide

Beckerman went from player to player Sunday evening just before extra time, slapping hands and offering and encouraging word. He was about to play perhaps the most important 30 minutes of his career, and he looked up for the job, with energy to spare and enough concern for everyone around him to ensure they had the tummy for the fight, too. That's outstanding leadership -- and that's a guy I'd want as a cornerstone if I were about to build an MLS side.

As more teams gain traction in the forming a real bond with supporters, winning MLS titles will be more important to more people. Only then will guys like Beckerman get their due. At the moment, guys who can deliver MLS titles -- but who may not quite be able to consistently elbow their way into the national team picture -- simply aren't appreciated the way they should be.  

Landon Donovan, like David Beckham, had a muted nights in Seattle. Unheralded RSL right back Robbie Russell did a great job of matching Donovan’s pace while still managing to occasionally get forward himself. Plus, RSL’s hard-working midfield did a great job shutting off the supply of passes into Donovan on the left and Beckham on the right.

Should Donovan, one of the league’s highest salaried stars, have been able to stretch the game by himself? Maybe. The guy didn’t have his best match, for sure. But I’d say that had more to do with a pair of central midfielders who are average at very best, and  their inability to deal with a RSL's superior midfield.  They just couldn't command possession well enough to get balls to Donovan or Beckham in useful spots. Ten minutes into Sunday’s match, I turned to fellow writer Ives Galercep sitting next to me and said, "Can you believe a team that has Jovan Kirovski and Chris Birchall playing central midfield is playing in an MLS Cup final?"

Donovan blew the PK, there’s no getting around it. But I continue to be perplexed with the volume of general, ongoing Donovan bashing – and believe me there are plenty taking delight today in his momentary failure. Donovan takes big PKs all the time. He was 21 for 23 in MLS before Sunday. He’s 2 for 2 in the playoffs and he takes them in important World Cup qualifiers. So to suggest that he can’t perform under pressure is just silly, an argument presented without paying attention to those darned facts that sometimes run counter to a good old fashioned, embittered opinion. Players who take spot shots are going to miss occasionally.

Granted, though, it was a terrible time to have a bad moment from the 12-yard spot.

 

One of the dominant topics, apparently, in league owner meetings was this new proposal on determining championship sites. You can read a bit more about it in previous posts, but it’s basically that the highest ranked team among the pair of finalists will host MLS Cup.

I love this idea, and I think it’s going to happen. There’s just seems to be a lot of momentum in that direction. (Personally, I think they should seriously consider a two-week break before the final, which would help untangle the logistical challenges of arranging hotels and such on the fly before a final, would assist supporters' travel efforts and would provide more time to "sell" the game locally.)

The game Sunday in at Qwest field really was fantastic theater. The place was bumpin' and thumpin' the way it should be for a final. Now, imagine what it would have been like if Seattle had been playing? Those fans are seriously in love with their team, and they were wonderfully engaged in the final. The event truly resonated in the Emerald City, which is stark contrast to past finals, to be frank. The owners noticed, and so did MLS commissioner Don Garber. I think images of the teeming scene and the big game feel in the days leading up to Sunday's final will put them past the finish line on this new "higher seed host" proposal. 

Speaking of the board of governors meetings, the big boys in the meeting rooms over the weekend were also expected to continue knocking around the idea of re-shuffling the deck on Designated Player rules. During their previous get-together at the All-Star break they talked about potentially adding one more DP slot per team, among other suggested DP modifications.

This may now be factored into the fluid calculus on the hot-button issue: DPs aren't delivering titles. Not much, anyway, although the sample remains small. Major League Soccer has now decided three titles in the day of the Designated Player. Houston won in 2007, Columbus last year and now Real Salt Lake. Only one of those had a DP; Guillermo Barros Schelotto fell under the designation last year.

 

RSL was the better side against Los Angeles on Sunday and last week against Chicago. Those two teams also happen to have the league’s most illustrious pair of DP Dandies, David Beckham and Cuauhtemoc Blanco. Around RSL, the team is the star. It's a no DP zone, at least for now.

Despite the conventional wisdom, most of these guys really don’t move the attendance needle, Beckham and Donovan being the clear exceptions. Yes, someone like Thierry Henry would add fans in the seats, as would a few others. But most DPs that will land on MLS shores will increase the gate take only marginally, and only then by enhancing the overall quality and therefore continuing to add value to the greater product. Does anybody really think Jose Angel Landin will add more than few hundred folks per game at Houston? Or does anyone really think Luciano Emilio was singularly responsible for selling a bulk of seats this at D.C. United in 2009? Not if they know what they are talking about, they don’t.

So … if these guys don’t necessarily win championships and they don’t significantly amp up attendance, owners may be more reluctant to dole out big bucks to yet another DP. (Plenty of owners are already against this notion. It's an agenda that has long been driven by the Galaxy's big-spending ownership outfit AEG.  Garber says assuredly that nothing will be decided until the new Collective Bargaining Agreement is hammered out. And who knows when that might be?)

Finally, here is what Garber said at halftime of Sunday's match about Montreal apparently taking the lead as the 19th franchise. (Garber hopes to have No. 19  on board by 2012.): "We are making progress. … Montreal is still the leading candidate. But we have got some work to do, most importantly, that stadium needs to be renovated and expanded. It's probably not suitable for an MLS team today. We are going to work with the Saputo family and the provincial government and try to make some progress in funding a renovation."

That would be three Canadian teams, by the way. Toronto is already on board – and spectacularly so – and Vancouver will join in 2011.

0 recs  |  Comment 13 comments

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MLS Cup Host Sites

Having the highest seeded team host the cup final is not a bad idea. It would certainly inject more passion into the final. The biggest problem is logistical, especially for clubs that play in someone else’s house. What if the Revs are the highest seeded team and the MLS Cup title game is on the same night that the Patriots are scheduled for a home game? Then what? I don’t see the NFL budging. Man, I hope I don’t lose sleep over this tonight. Yo, Steve, I love your blog. Keep it up!

by JohnnyPirate on Nov 23, 2009 11:37 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

I was thinking the same thing for Seattle...

…and it struck me even if Qwest was taken by the Hawks, there’s still viable alternatives in Husky and Safeco (which has hosted USMNT matches in the past). I’m sure there must be alternatives in the Boston area…

by PeterJH on Nov 24, 2009 2:34 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Or

the three teams that would have an issue could just make sure that the Patriots/Seahawks/Cougars aren’t scheduled to play that weekend. They schedule around events all the time and asking for the weekend wouldn’t be a big deal. It’s not like they’re asking for two or three weeks in a row.

Formerly ryebreadraz

by Ryan Rosenblatt on Nov 24, 2009 3:19 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

DP

Steve, while Landin’s effect at the gate has been minimal, he has been a boost to the Houston restaurant community.

“Can you believe a team that has Jovan Kirovski and Chris Birchall playing central midfield is playing in an MLS Cup final?”

Great line.

Do you have any thoughts on who you think Philly could pick in the expansion draft?

by Phil McCrack'n on Nov 24, 2009 1:30 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Great stuff

“Steve, while Landin’s effect at the gate has been minimal, he has been a boost to the Houston restaurant community.”

Almost fell out of my chair.

by GeoJock on Nov 24, 2009 2:33 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Line of the week

thanks for the props on my line re Jovan and Birchall, but I agree with GeoJock : McCrack’n wins the damn prize w/ the Landin zinger!

by Steve Davis on Nov 24, 2009 2:42 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Beckerman...

… Show me a Rapids fan that says he or she was happy with the Beckerman/Ballouchy trade, and I’ll either show you a moron or a liar.

by wrettubj on Nov 24, 2009 3:35 PM EST reply actions   0 recs

Agreed

Mehdi Ballouchy was a crucial part in our epic collapse this season. That dude sucks. Wanna take him off our hands today Philly?

"It's like an owl without a graduation cap; Heartbreaking!!" -Tracy Jordan

by 303buff on Nov 25, 2009 2:32 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

Penalty Kicks

to determine the championship was pathetic.

Honestly, you would think we as Americans could come up and fix the one stupid thing in soccer instead of doing some stupid rule changes. If we are going to insist on a playoff, then make it work, don’t be so stupid.

I get the fact that during a two or three week tournament, you might have to decide some matches by penalties.

But to determine a championship over a league that goes on 8-9 months is just idiotic. Anyone who tuned in and watched for 120 minutes to just see a tie felt cheated. I must of watched another game because RSL was definitely not the better team and were lucky to score. That being said, the Galaxy played a mediocre game at best after having one hell of a goal in the 1st and didn’t deserve the win either. That game was still to be decided and in my opinion never will.

I agree that the host city needs to actually care about the event. Watching Seattle fans route for their eliminated team in the stands during the final was pathetic and has to go. While this league has made some great strides, this league still has a long way to go and needs to fix things that aren’t going right. Designated players not having an impact is almost laughable when you compare the skill around the world and what actually makes it to MLS. There isn’t enough money for most teams to bring in a designated player good enough (save LA) to make much of a difference, but eventually, that too will have to change if the league want to succeed. As soon as they can afford to, they should, but the quality needs to improve.

by Cool Dudes on Nov 25, 2009 2:16 AM EST reply actions   0 recs

What Seattle fans rooted for the Sounders?

Seriously?

There was a single call and repeat to start the match when the Rave Green marched out, and there was another after LA Galaxy fans chanted “F*** the Sounders”

That was it.

3 Trophies were won this year, two by teams with a DP
Of the 8 teams that made the playoffs 5 were with a DP
I’m willing to bet that the teams with DPs made more money on average than teams without.

I am not a Supporter
I am not a Fan
I am a Sounder
Sounder At Heart

by Sounder At Heart on Nov 26, 2009 11:10 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

The point was it was stupid

and the Seattle fans that showed up really didn’t care about the game, which is exactly why its shouldn’t have been in SEATTLE!

Yes, having good players will help you win, but having only one good player won’t help.

The quality of the entire side needs to go up and DP is just one way of doing that.

by Cool Dudes on Nov 27, 2009 9:40 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

That game had more fan interaction than most matches this season

You mean the 42,000 Seattle fans (~4,000 from not Seattle) that showed up didn’t care? Just over half of whom had season tickets?

Seriously, its funny because the Commissioner is saying that this was the best Cup Final in league history and it shows that it must be at a home site in the future rather than neutral, but you and he are using an example that is the exact opposite.

Seattle made the celebration about the LEAGUE. IF LA were to have hosted Salt Lake it wouldn’t have been about the league, it would have been about LA. I don’t know if that’s how a sport continues to advance. It certainly wouldn’t have gotten major coverage in newspapers around the country if hosted by a local club (not after the first year).

There has been no better neutral hosting of the MLS Cup Final, and so the response is that neutral doesn’t work? Make that work using Logic 101.

I am not a Supporter
I am not a Fan
I am a Sounder
Sounder At Heart

by Sounder At Heart on Nov 28, 2009 2:41 AM EST up reply actions   0 recs

You Are Right of Coarse

Watching 40K bored Sounders fans chanting for their eliminated team was much more compelling than the spectacle that 60,000 Galaxy supporters screaming their head’s off in the Rose Bowl for their team could ever have been. Brilliant!

by Cool Dudes on Nov 30, 2009 3:22 PM EST up reply actions   0 recs

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