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Around SBN: Seahawks Trade for TE Kellen Winslow

The next MLS coach will be ...

This was a list from my most recent Monday piece in SI.com. The weekly Power Rankings I do on that particular weekly staple get a little buried … at the bottom of the second page and all. I mean, you can only digest so much of information before you need to go refuel with a delicious taco or something.

Essentially, I said that D.C. United and Toronto have kicked their coaches to the curb and will soon hire their next future, ex-coach. You know what they say … these guys are hired to be fired. Especially at these particular clubs.

And there could be further openings. K.C. could get restless if Peter Vermes can’t steer the ship into playoff port. There’s always something weird going on with the comings and goings of coaches in Chicago. Sure enough, Carlos de los Cobos may hotfoot it back down to El Salvador. Anyway, you get the picture.

So, in my best estimation, here are the Top Five candidates:

(Again, this is picked up from my SI.com piece ... )

1. Richie Williams (New York Red Bulls assistant): The irony about Williams is that each time he’s passed over for an MLS post, he gets to spend time sponging up more knowledge from yet another manager. He’s been an assistant under well-respected Bruce Arena and this year he’s mentoring under the wily Hans Backe. Williams, a two-time interim assistant for New York, will get his shot sooner or later.

Star-divide

2. Robin Fraser (Real Salt Lake assistant): Few MLS assistants are as well respected as the man at Jason Kreis’ right hand. Plus, if Real Salt Lake claims a second consecutive title (or even gets close), plucking an assistant from Rio Tinto is a safe play politically for management elsewhere.

3. Colin Clarke (Puerto Rico Islanders head coach): Clarke’s teams were usually good at FC Dallas, but they floundered in the playoffs. Then again, there hasn’t been any playoff success since he left Pizza Hut Park, either. Since, Clarke has been an absolute sensation in Puerto Rico. Previously he might have needed to be pried out of that sweet gig. But infighting and instability in U.S. Soccer’s second tier may have him thinking otherwise today.

4. Paul Mariner (Plymouth Argyle head coach): The longtime Revs assistant, once thought to be the next guy to get his own post, made big news less than a year ago when he left to take over at the struggling English second-tier side. But the club was relegated anyway (Mariner’s first task was to stave off relegation), so he now resides in a lesser role behind manager Peter Reid. An MLS appointment might not look too bad right now.

5. Caleb Porter (head coach at the University of Akron): Porter was hot property after nearly fashioning a perfect season in 2009 for an unheralded college mid-major. He interviewed for the D.C. United position last December but chose to remain with the Zips, which lost in last year’s NCAA championship match. Porter had a brief MLS playing career. Also ripe for being plucked from the college ranks is Maryland’s Sasho Cirovski, who has helped stock so many MLS rosters with talent he helped develop.

 

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I'm not a KC fan and so don't follow all the ups and downs

that closely, but I’d think that KC would have to be kinda dumb to fire Vermes. He’s taken a pretty sad team from last year and fashioned a squad that has come together (probably too late the make the playoffs, though) in a big way. Coaches can’t make something from nothing, but a good coach will eventually get things going in the right direction and get some good results out of his roster. I think you can say Vermes has done that.

Whoever gets the job at TFC and DC better make sure the FO and the fanbase knows that it’ll take a couple of seasons to turn those clubs around (probably less at Toronto).

by Nevtelen on Sep 26, 2010 12:35 PM EDT reply actions  

I don't know if it's old news

but Klinsmann was on the BBC today talking about how he’d agreed terms with the US National team to be the coach but it fell apart when they couldn’t agree on “technical details”.

Anyway, sorry, back to the thread. Williams looks good, Marnier far less so (here’s a pointless fact: I used to live on the same street as him).

by rudi on Sep 26, 2010 8:37 PM EDT reply actions  

Colin Clarke

It’s unbelievable to me that he isn’t back in coaching. Sure his FCD teams struggled in the playoffs to an extent, but both losses were on penalties. Clarke built the most talented FCD team of the decade in 2006, but there was just too many egos for it to work together.

He seems like a great fit for Toronto as long as the ownership is patient with him.

by Daniel Robertson on Sep 27, 2010 11:38 AM EDT reply actions  

Paul Dalglish?

How about Paul Dalglish, just dumped unceremoniously by USSF-D2’s Tampa Bay Rowdies?

by aztexan on Sep 27, 2010 12:58 PM EDT reply actions  

Brian McBride to Chicago

after De Los Cobos gets fired for missing the playoffs after they reloaded with so much talent mid-season.

Win or lose, we will always be here for you.

by johnjahafanclub on Sep 27, 2010 5:55 PM EDT reply actions  

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