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How pressure, expansion and format will combine to make a better MLS

Overall MLS quality, at team and individual level,  will rise as more matches take on the current level of intensity

Overall MLS quality, at team and individual level, will rise as more matches take on the current level of intensity

I was on Marcelo Balboa’s radio show last night and we were talking about Major League Soccer’s deliciously tight playoff races.

I told him a quick little story about former Finnish international Simo Valakari and something he used to say.

Simo was a good, not great, holding midfielder. But he was a consummate pro.  (The guy could be a criminal on the field, so do feel OK about hissing at your computer screen right now.) Valakari punched the clock honestly every day, faithfully pouring everything he had into the effort. He was Army Ranger-esque in terms of prep and discipline. (Every team has a few of these; the good ones have more than others.)

I remember talking to Valakari before a match in May against Kansas City. Dallas had lost the previous contest and Kansas City was struggling. So in his mind, the contest was nothing short of "massive."

I teased him a bit. "You say that about every game! I mean, it’s only May!"

And he said something to the effect of, "Yes, exactly! So you see what I mean, huh?"

In other words, he thought I was agreeing with him.

I’m wondering right now how many teams around MLS wish they had a little more Simo-type sentiment in them back in April, May and June?

There are just four rounds of play remaining, and playoff fates remain undecided.  That means nerves are frayed. Locker rooms are more serious places. Managerial jobs are on the line. Rightly or wrongly, a playoff appearance is usually the first unit of measure for MLS success.  

I’ve long said that the league’s pace of development in quality would increase as expansion moved forward, when the number of teams missing the playoffs each year reached critical mass. It’s just about there now, as almost half the 15-team field will miss out on the "second season." Next year, exactly half the field will fail to qualify as Philadelphia becomes the 16th side. So, only 8 of 16 will gain post-season berths.

That’s still not an ideal percentage, but it’s a heck of a lot better than before.

Star-divide

Teams really are battling fiercely right now for positioning, as the contests have taken on a more desperate bent. Almost every team (excepting three or four hopelessly out of the race) could use a few more points. Even at the top, teams like Columbus and Houston would prefer to have a little more distance on the field.

So here’s the point: gradually, teams are beginning to realize that coasting through a few matches here and there early in the season is a recipe for a stressful September and October. Points and opportunities lost back in April, May, June, etc., are now viewed with sure regret.

As players (individually) and clubs (collectively) figure this out going forward, every single match throughout the campaign will be contested at a higher level, with a combative desperation poured out in buckets rather than layered out in spoonfuls.

And that’s when players get better, when they are under real pressure 30 times a year, not just 10-12. When they fully comprehend the need for high-level performance night after night, throughout the entirety of the seven-month season. When the pressure of the longer moment squeezes the very best from them. When the lesson is fully absorbed that easing off the gas pedal for a few matches each year might mean the difference between playing in November or staying home.

Managers are learning lessons, too, and will have to recalibrate some approaches. Players in poor form will be provided less latitude going forward. Previously, a promising talent would get chance after chance to round into form. And why not? Managers knew the truth, that you only had to stay close through the spring and early summer, then make a nice run over the season’s final third to access the playoffs.

Now, leaning too long on a chronic underachiever may well cost a playoff spot (and in some cases, could even cost a manager his job).  In Dallas, for instance, Schellas Hyndman tried hard to work through Andre Rocha’s issues, to make him the player he was in 2008. The manager finally (finally!) grew tired of the moody Brazilian’s indifferent displays. Rocha was benched and it was a clear case of addition by subtraction for the team, which saw its form rise noticeably. Hyndman probably waited too long, and his team surely lost points because of it.

So, it goes back to individual performance. Players will simply have to perform at a higher level. And they’ll be asked to do so over a longer period of time – and they’ll be better for it.

The current intensity of MLS matches will create better players, which will heighten overall quality and strengthen the national team pool. Imagine when everyone fully figures out that points in May are every bit as valuable in the standings as points earned in the heavy-pressure days of late September and October, when we see this current level of intensity stretched over seven full months.

0 recs  |  Comment 4 comments

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only one more thing needed

This makes lots of sense, but one other thing would really improve the competitiveness — relegation. If the pressure is only on the top half of the table then the teams at the bottom (like Dallas) have no reason to compete at this same level (though Dallas’ recent form may argue against this). Plus relegation keeps the fans interested too.

I realize that there will never be relegation with MLS, but it is worth mentioning.

by baconboy on Sep 30, 2009 11:12 PM EDT reply actions   0 recs

ah, relegation

i love the concept of promotion-relegation in theory . but as you said, it’ll never happen here, so we may as well wish for something that has a better chance of really happening, such as free bacon for all. i will say this: in MLS, due to the historically forgiving playoff structure, there has always been a relegation of sorts. because when teams miss the playoffs, the manager is frequently fired, fans are POed and things are generally grim. so, you could say teams that make the playoffs are “promoted” into the second season, while the others are relegated to an early vacation. … hmmm … that really is quite a stretch, eh?

by Steve Davis on Oct 1, 2009 10:29 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Relegation keeps fans interested?

Is there any evidence that bottom of the table teams in the EPL, Championship, etc don’t suffer a drop in attendance? I don’t think so, but I would love to see it. I’m guessing that teams in danger of relegation that do survive have poor attendance the next year, just as they would if relegated.

by Sounder At Heart on Oct 1, 2009 11:21 AM EDT up reply actions   0 recs

Relegation pressure is "negative pressure"

Any team that is threatened with relegation to begin with is pretty bad, but the punishment of relegation is so much greater than the reward of avoiding it (as opposed to making the playoffs) that relegation pressure doesn’t help anyone in the locker room. The best you can do is tune it out.

'Gentlemen' he said,
'I don't need your organization,
I've shined your shoes,
moved your mountains and marked your cards,
but Eden is burning.
Either get ready for elimination,
or else your heart must have the courage,
for the changing of the guards.'

by Sgc on Oct 1, 2009 11:52 AM EDT reply actions   1 recs

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