Gallery: Dayton Dynamo FC and FC Buffalo draw in 3-3 shootout | Soc Takes

DAYTON, Ohio — Dayton Dynamo FC and FC Buffalo settled for a 3-3 draw after a wild, five-goal second half last Sunday at Roger Glass Stadium. Here’s a video of Dayton fans reveling in the thriller and some photos from the NPSL contest:

Shout out to the @GemCitySquadron who have been loud . This is what lower division soccer is about! #Pride @NPSLSoccer @daytondynamo pic.twitter.com/A9YSgmkc0O

— Soc Takes (@SocTakes) June 25, 2017

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Evidence of another bidder in Jacksonville | Soc Takes

Photo credit: Jacksonville Armada FC

During his press conference today, Robert Palmer, owner of Jacksonville Armada FC, suggested that a USL ownership group had been interested in playing in Jacksonville — one that was also attempting to secure Hodges Stadium as its stadium of choice.

Interesting tidbit from Palmer around the time of his purchase of team: “USL was actively trying to put another team in Jacksonville to play at Hodges. Learned this 24 hours before closing on the purchase of the team”

— Chris Kivlehan (@kivlehan) January 8, 2018

In researching this claim, Soc Takes has been provided with a letter dated July 11, 2017 addressed to Marshall Happer, COO of Jax Armada, and NASL interim commissioner Rishi Sehgal that corroborates part of this claim. The letter (below) clearly suggests that another “competing interest” wished to use Hodges Stadium to host “professional soccer matches for the 2018 season.”

While it does not categorically state the USL as the league of interest, “professional soccer” suggests it would be a team interested in MLS or the USL, with the latter being far more likely. Additionally, sources have confirmed that the USL was interested in placing a team in Jacksonville.

Soc Takes is not aware of the identity of the alternate Jacksonville USL group.

During a time when owners and leagues regularly make incendiary allegations, it is good to have documentation to back one of these.

To see a good summary of today’s press conference, see the following:

Jacksonville Armada announcement about to start – will live tweet it #nasl

— Bob Williams (@WilliamsBob75) January 8, 2018

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Compelling Group C storylines | Soc Takes

Photo credit: Rene C. Nielsen

Group C play wrapped up Tuesday with France and Denmark advancing to the Round of 16. What were some of the most compelling Group C storylines during the Group Phase?

A Goal Makes a Difference

On the afternoon of June 22, 1982, Guillermo La Rosa scored the only goal for Peru in a match that ended 5-1 against a Poland team that featured Zbigniew Boniek.

Peru was eliminated in the first round of the 1982 Spain World Cup in the hands of Poland. But the sensation of La Rosa’s goal was forgotten for more than three decades.

World Cup after World Cup, Peru didn’t remember how to spell the word “goal” with their lips; they forgot how much oxygen their lungs needed to scream it again. Thirty-six years later, they suddenly recovered that memory.

Andre Carrillo and captain Paolo Guerrero gave Peru the dignity they deserved. Peru wanted and played the three matches always in search of the three points via the offensive and risky football fructified in the last game of “La Albirroja.”

The Real Tasks

France and Denmark advanced to the second round of the 2018 World Cup. After a 0-0 draw, both teams qualified to the Round of 16 undefeated.

France progressed in first place with seven points out of nine possible (two victories, one draw), and Denmark in second with five points (one win, two draws).

Now, math will not be necessary; the second round means proficiency. One mistake and you are out; ineffectiveness is a high price to pay.

Denmark demonstrates to have an excellent defensive mechanism, but benevolence in the attack. They’ve scored just two goals, which is the lowest offensive average of the qualified teams.

They will face Croatia, the black horse of Group D, which advanced with three victories behind a lot of offensive participation. Denmark’s game reclines in Eriksen’s potential, but a midfield with Modric and Rakitic could isolate him from the game, leaving the Danish without ball possession.

Denmark seems comfortable defending their goal; they’ve shown an unbreakable order and an efficient effort by holding the result. However, Sisto, and Poulsen will be the most important variations to bring instability to Croatia’s first line. Jorgensen could be the oxygen, and not just by holding the ball. The Danish center forward must appear as the referent for air balls and crosses. Against Croatia, Jorgensen needs to become the killer that Denmark wants.

The First Final

The conditions of Group D led to an unexpected encounter for the second round. France will face Argentina in their first knockout match.

It was scripted that France progressed as the dominant team from Group C, but it was a surprise that Argentina advanced in the last 10 minutes to the second round, struggling against Iceland and Nigeria.

Les Bleus have their most important task of the 2018 World Cup against a sleeping giant. Without translating the roster depth into game chemistry, Didier Deschamps hasn’t found the best facet of the French team yet. But as we review the 2016 Euro, France made progress to reach an enjoyable level of football during the knockout stages.

The key to the game against Argentina will remain in the midfield. Argentina doesn’t have a connection between the skeleton of the team and Messi; there’s a profound lack of systemic ideas with the Argentinian central midfielders and the offense.

Even if Deschamps makes rotations in the starting lineup — with players or formations — France has the best defensive midfielder in the game, N’Golo Kante. Kante can cover ground, recover and play at a very high intensity without being outpaced from the game.

This match will bring joy to World Cup fans.

The Kangaroo King

The 2018 World Cup was Australia’s fourth appearance in the most important stage of soccer. The Aussies scored two goals, both penalty kicks, to reach a total sum of 13 goals across their four appearances.

Tim Cahill converted five of those 13, and Tuesday’s match was his last chance to match a record by becoming the fifth player to score in four consecutive World Cups.

Pele, Klose, Uwe Seeler and Cristiano Ronaldo accomplished the feat.

Cahill, 38, played 37 minutes during the 2018 tournament, all against Peru. Even if Australia didn’t qualify to the next round, the Aussies showed resistance against better rivals.

However, the Australian fans are saying farewell to their most prominent icon of the 21st century.

Follow Luis on Twitter: @LFulloa.

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Gallery: Xavier def. Butler 2-2 (4-1) | Soc Takes

INDIANAPOLIS — With the BIG EAST regular season title already in tow, Butler fell to a more motivated Xavier squad 2-2 (4-1) in penalties Wednesday at the Sellick Bowl in the semifinals of the conference tournament. But not before Butler made things interesting by notching a pair of late goals to erase a 2-nil deficit and send the match into overtime.

Here’s a gallery from the four-goal thriller that required a shootout:

Follow Robbie on Twitter: @RobbMeh.

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Gallery: Familiar faces return to Indy as Eleven draw Penn FC | Soc Takes

INDIANAPOLIS — Penn FC‘s Marco Franco and Paulo Jr. returned to the Circle City on Saturday night to take on their former club, Indy Eleven, at Lucas Oil Stadium on Pride Night. Both familiar faces were with Indy in 2017.

The end result, a 1-1 draw, meant a sharing of the points between two clubs currently separated by just three points in the USL Eastern Conference table.





Photo credit: Robbie Mehling/Soc Takes




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Union Jack Cup returns to Broad Ripple July 29 | Soc Takes

INDIANAPOLIS — A celebration of the Indiana soccer scene is back.

The Union Jack Cup, a futsal tournament where local Indianapolis supporters’ groups of European clubs square off, will return to Broad Ripple on July 29. The tournament starts at 11 a.m. on the second floor of the Keystone Parking Garage at the intersection of College Avenue and Westfield Boulevard. The event is free and open to the public.

“When you have the likes of Jay Wetzel and the Union Jack staff working their asses off to support the local soccer community, the least we can do as patrons and supporters is throw them a futsal tournament,” said Napghanistan Casuals goalkeeper Brandon Evans. “We want to let everybody in Indianapolis and beyond know about not only the best ‘soccer bar,’ but the best bar in Indy.”

Drinks, snacks and prizes will be available at Union Jack Pub immediately following the conclusion of the tournament. The official after-party (21+) starts at 10 p.m. at Sam’s Silver Circle featuring live DJs and more prize giveaways.

Some of the groups participating in the five-on-five futsal tournament include: Slaughterhouse-19, Napghanistan Casuals, Manchester United Indianapolis, American Outlaws: Indianapolis, Queens Park Rangers Loyal Supporters of Indianapolis, Gelbe Wand BVB Indianapolis and OLSC Indianapolis. There will also be an Unaffiliated FC team for interested participants not aligned with a particular supporters’ group.

In addition to the tournament itself and other related festivities, the event offers plenty of opportunities to engage the community as well. Local charitable organizations will be on hand.

“As part of Slaughterhouse-19 and Union Jack’s commitment to help improve the city, multiple local non-profits will also have tents at the event,” states the Facebook event details.

The “blue kit”-wearing American Outlaws: Indianapolis squad took home the title in 2016 behind the expert guidance of venerable player/coach Frank Hall. The AO: Indy side will return this year in hopes of defending its futsal crown.

For more information on the third-annual Union Jack Cup or to inquire about participating, visit the event’s Facebook page.

You can follow Kevin on Twitter @KJboxing.

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Lansing Ignite FC joins USL D3 | Soc Takes %lansingignitefc

Lansing Ignite logo explainer. Credit: Lansing Ignite

It is now official. Lansing will be a founding member of USL League One — the artist formerly known as USL D3. The possibility was first reported by Soc Takes via Twitter.

Is @USL_D3 coming to Lansing, Michigan?There are reasons to argue yes&no.

Yes: An ad (sent to @SocTakes by a source a few days ago) was posted suggesting Lansing is hiring front office personnel for a pro ⚽️ team.

Yes: @LansingUnited has previously discussed desire to go pro. pic.twitter.com/4PyLRhe8X7

— Nipun Chopra, PhD (@NipunChopra7) August 16, 2018

Lansing Ignite FC will be the ninth member of USL League One for the 2019 season and 11th including 2020-participants Penn FC and the Rochester Rhinos. We spoke with Ignite general manager Jeremy Sampson ahead of today’s announcement:

Jeremy Sampson: It was the natural step and the reason that we made the move to the PDL last season.  It gave us an opportunity to learn about the league and vice versa as we continued to investigate bringing professional soccer to Lansing.

  1. Can you briefly explain how this new team came to be?

JS: I met with 4 people in Lansing each month to work on telling our story and building our pitch to investors.  Those people came from the Chamber of Commerce, a local economic group and the sports arm of the convention and visitor’s bureau.  We quickly determined that Tom Dickson would be a perfect partner.  I connected with his President Nick Grueser and found out that they were looking at the USL as well, so we decided to work together to bring professional soccer to Lansing.

  1. What can you tell us about Lansing-League One’s ownership? Why are they interested in investing in Lansing soccer?

JS: Tom Dickson has been one of the preeminent entrepreneurs in the business of sports for the last two decades, launching his first professional sports team in 1996 – the Class-A Lansing Lugnuts – and spearheading the development and construction of the team’s home stadium, Cooley Law School Stadium, which will serve as Ignite FC’s home venue.  A former Entrepreneur of the Year in Michigan, Dickson has additionally been responsible for the development of more than $150 million worth of new minor league ballparks in Dayton and Eastlake, Ohio, Joliet, Illinois, and Gary, Indiana, and serves as the Chair of Minor League Baseball Enterprises and is on the Board of Directors for Minor League Baseball. Since 2005, Dickson has also served as the Chief Executive Officer of Professional Sports Catering, the fastest growing concessionaire in baseball, operating at over 30 ballparks around the country.

  1. What is your role within the organization? Will you have an ownership stake?

JS: Tom has hired me to be the Vice President/General Manager and my role is to oversee the day-to-day operations of the club.  Tom Dickson can speak to the makeup of the ownership group.

  1. Fans of Lansing United have been vocal on social media about their unhappiness with how things have unfolded. Is it your goal to get them back, and if yes, how do you plan on doing that?

JS: For me that situation has been the most disappointing part of this transition.  “The Ransom” have been great supporters of Lansing United.  I have been very transparent with them going back to the end of our 2017 season where I met with them and explained that I was moving to the PDL and I was making that move to get to the USL in the future.  They have always asked me for more games and the ability to have beer and other amenities that I couldn’t offer.  I have delivered all of those.  I met with them as a group a few weeks ago and it was clear that some in the group didn’t agree with this move for various reasons.  I told the group that this was not some form of a hostile takeover, this is what I wanted.  We would love for them to all be a part of what we are doing with Lansing Ignite and we welcome them to join what we are doing but at the end of the day, you are asking about 4-5 guys who are being most vocal on social media.

JS: Looking at the requirements set forth by the US Soccer Federation Lansing’s DMA size falls perfectly into what D3 is looking for.  I am also excited to be a founding member of a brand-new league.  I have had the opportunity to meet with someone from every organization.  There are so many good people involved with each organization.  I am looking forward to being one piece of what we are all building together.

  1. How will Lansing’s team be unique from the other League One teams?

JS: We will play our home games in Cooley Law School Stadium, playing in a baseball stadium will make us unique for sure.  We have some other plans but can’t release those details at this point.  I believe our ticket prices will be very reasonable, our game day experience will be fun, and we are working with a new supporter’s group for Lansing Ignite.

  1. What are the next steps for the team? Have you started your search for a head coach?

JS: The next steps are to continue hiring for our front office and to hire a head coach.  We’ve conducted a National search and feel very good about the candidates that we have interviewed.  My goal is to have a coach in the next couple of weeks, so we can continue to evaluate talent and begin to build our roster.

Follow Nipun on Twitter: @NipunChopra7.

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Wild affair contrasts 1st meeting between LouCity, Eleven | Soc Takes

Photo credit: Robbie Mehling/Soc Takes

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — When Louisville City FC and the Indy Eleven met in Indianapolis earlier this season, it was quite the snooze-fest. Neither club truly found its rhythm before an Ayoze penalty conversion finally gave Indy a 1-0 win in the May 5 battle of attrition.

The two teams more than made up for it during a wild affair Sunday evening at Louisville Slugger Field. Three goals and a missed penalty occurred — and that was just in the first 20 minutes. When the smoke cleared, points were shared in the Derby City with the scoreboard reading 2-2.

“We want to win every game, but we don’t want to to lose,” said Louisville City FC player-coach George Davis IV. “So, it’s nice to show some resilience and come back and get the draw. But at the end of the day, we’re going to go back to the drawing board and see what we could’ve done better and how we could’ve come out of that game with three points.”

LouCity earned a penalty just six minutes into the match, but Indy goalkeeper Owain Fon Williams denied Brian Ownby’s ensuing attempt. Later, Greg Ranjitsingh returned the favor with a penalty save of his own for the hosts, parrying away Eugene Starikov’s spot kick.

In the 16th minute, forward Jack McInerney opened the scoring for the visitors with a header off a Kevin Venegas service that a defender couldn’t quite clear. But just a minute later, Louisville City equalized through Ilija Ilic on a pass from Magnus Rasmussen.

  • Related: Gallery: Indy Eleven, Louisville City FC draw in LIPAFC showdown

Shortly thereafter, McInerney made it a brace in the 21st minute, assisted by captain Matt Watson. Originally, the goal was ruled an own goal by defender Sean Totsch but was later awarded to Jack Mac.

The hosts again leveled in the 59th on a ripped volley from outside the box by Davis IV, with Ilic providing the assist. Both teams mustered several other opportunities in the second half, including Starikov’s chance to win it from the spot, but the final whistle sounded at 2-2. For the 8,437 supporters in attendance, it felt like 4-4.

“The way the game went we felt like we should’ve won the game,” Eleven head coach Martin Rennie confessed. “Obviously, the way that we ended the second half — we were on top and had two or three great chances, including the penalty. So, we feel like we probably did enough to win the game, but it is a hard place to come and they are a good team so we can be happy with our performance and build on it.”

LouCity announced the hiring of a new head coach earlier this week in former Philadelphia Union manager John Hackworth. But Hackworth has some coaching commitments to wrap up with the U17 U.S. men’s national team before taking the reins, so Louisville City will continue using its player-coach triumvirate of Davis IV, Luke Spencer and Paolo DelPiccolo in the meantime.

Four goals, two missed penalties, physical play, a golazo, impressive goalkeeping and sharp midfield play — yep, this one pretty much had it all — solidified Sunday’s high-flying match as the complete antithesis of the May meeting between the clubs.

Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KJboxing.

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Peter Wilt steps away from NISA | Soc Takes

Image credit: NISA

The National Independent Soccer Association (NISA) announced Thursday morning that co-founder and top official Peter Wilt has resigned from his position with the league. NISA, its teams and Club 9 Sports, its consultant, will now take up the joint task of finding Wilt’s replacement.

Wilt, who helped get notable clubs like the Chicago Fire, Chicago Red Stars and Indy Eleven off the ground, had hoped to launch NISA at the Division III level and eventually branch out into two leagues with promotion and relegation between them. According to Thursday’s press release, those ideals still remain the league’s stated goals in Wilt’s absence.

“I wish the NISA teams and new leadership well,” Wilt said in the release announcing the formation of a committee to seek new leadership. “I am proud of the strong vision we developed and now others will need to carry it forward. I am hopeful that my stepping away will allow the disparate open system groups to unify around a shared vision.”

Wilt’s next endeavor will be heading up Madison Pro Soccer, where he’ll serve as Big Top Events’ managing director, per the release. His new project will be bringing a USL/USL D3 club to Madison, Wis.

And here’s the bigger news –

Peter Wilt will help bring in Madison’s TBA @USL team:

RIP soccer Twitter.https://t.co/3bEUPPoP9g

— Nipun Chopra (@NipunChopra7) May 17, 2018

“We have compiled a list of candidates with Peter’s help and will quickly narrow it to a short list before identifying the new leadership of the League,” Club 9 Sports managing partner John Prutch said in the release.

Whether NISA can survive the loss of its most prominent ambassador remains to be seen, but it’s obviously cause for concern, especially given the abrupt timing of Wilt’s departure. Today’s announcement might spell the beginning of the end for NISA.

Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KJboxing.

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Opinion: Officials should be less part of VAR decisions | Soc Takes

Photo credit: Oleg Bkhambri (Creative Commons license)

Video review has made its way to the 2018 World Cup and brought with it the same sort of controversy we’ve seen in league play. The system is still only used for four key events: goals, penalty kicks, red cards and mistaken identity.

We often hear the defining criteria of “clear and obvious error” used to describe the instances where VAR is even allowed to be applied. From there, the referee is allowed three possible options:

1. Change the call based on video evidence 2. Review the video on the sideline

3. Keep the original call

We’ve had debates over whether VAR impacts games, and on how it might affect the pace of play.

Instead, let’s look at that third option for the referee and think about whether the referee is part of the game itself. By game, I mean both the sport of soccer as a whole as well as the individual match.

When VAR was first discussed, there was a debate between giving power to the video booth and leaving power with the center official. We’ve ended up with a compromise that, to me at least, is the worst of both worlds. The key issues are the requirement of a “clear and obvious error” and the option for the referee to keep the original call.

The primary benefit of video replay is that it allows difficult, too-close-to-call decisions to be made easily and relatively quickly. In baseball and rugby, events that happen far too quickly for humans to accurately make decisions can be made in under a minute with the advantage of slow-motion playback. Yes, it does require a stoppage in play, but those happen anytime there’s a contested situation already. And instead of watching a player and/or coach squabble with an official, we can turn to tangible proof, figure out the correct decision and apply it. Problem solved.

Requiring VAR to be used in only those “clear and obvious error” situations means that center officials still control the game. But should this be the case? I honestly don’t know. This keeps a human element in the form of the four on-field officials which interfere with the outcome of a game. Decisions on yellow cards or free kicks are made with some amount of subjectivity. We, as spectators, have come to accept this as perfectly normal. But is it really normal?

Onto the focal point of this rant: the VAR procedure.

When a situation worthy of video review occurs — one of those “clear and obvious errors” — either the referee requests a review or the video booth decides it’s worth investigating anyway. This is all fine to me. If they don’t find anything on the replay, that’s it, they don’t need to signal the referee, and play continues. Still perfectly reasonable. But if there is an error, we get to those three possible decisions listed earlier up. Now, at this point, we know there must have been a “clear and obvious error” by the crew on the field in order to trigger this process, meaning that one of the on-field crew members has either gotten something wrong or missed something. Why, then, is there an option for the referee to overrule the decision from the video booth? They have access to all the footage and camera angles, so they have the best possible chance of making the correct decision, and they’re only investigating because there was an incorrect call already made.

Giving the referee that option essentially nullifies the entire purpose of video assistance. In fact, I don’t think they have the procedures right at all. To me, I would prefer that either the video booth gets to override the call on the field and the ensuing decision is automatically revealed in the stadium like tennis’ Hawk-Eye system, or the video booth makes the final call and passes it along to the ref, who merely relays it. One of those two should be the official policy. It shouldn’t be the referee’s decision. Currently, VAR technically only determines when a review is needed, and it’s wholly in the head referee’s hands from there.

The idea behind VAR was a fairer #WorldCup and fewer errors. 95% of the match-changing decisions taken by the referees in the Group Stage were correct.

↗️ Thanks to the support from VAR the accuracy has increased to 99,3%. @fifamedia summary: https://t.co/L846ZzKtAe pic.twitter.com/YoHxJpLuoB

— The IFAB (@TheIFAB) July 4, 2018

But again, this is my opinion and I honestly don’t know if it’s the right one. I keep thinking about this issue, and I need more data.

Finally, a small gripe comparatively, but one I think might actually be the most irritating. The video assistant referee is only allowed to use slow-motion playback for contact offenses — handballs, tackles and the like. Why can’t they use slow-motion playback for everything?

I’ll get to the point.

To me, the purpose of a team sport is to see how two teams of players do against each other. It should be down to their actions on the field and the decisions of their coach. The referee’s opinion shouldn’t be part of the sport itself. It’s not interfering with the game to me, it’s preserving it. It’s ensuring that the rule book is correctly and fairly enforced every single time.

I imagine that just about everyone reading this has some negative opinion of a particular referee. We all know a ref who made some ridiculous call or completely missed a penalty kick or something. This is the exact problem I’d like to see VAR address. Instead, it’s basically rendered useless by the FIFA/IFAB implementation.

Imagine the following scenario:

Team A is hosting Team B in a stadium with goal-line technology. Team A takes a shot on goal that slips through the ‘keeper’s hands, and a Team B defender attempts to clear the ball off the line. According to the goal-line technology, the ball fully crossed the goal line and the referee gets the signal to award a goal. But instead, the center referee decides that, despite what his technology tells him, the ball really was cleared off the line and it’s not a goal.

This is how VAR looks to me. I just don’t know if I’m right.

Follow John on Twitter: @JohnMLTX.

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