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Author: admintakes
Gallery: Surging Ball State squad downs Northern Illinois – Soc Takes
MUNCIE, Ind. — A surging Ball State team scored four unanswered goals after falling behind 1-0 early to secure a 4-1 win against Northern Illinois on Thursday. Following a slow start to the season, the Cardinals are now unbeaten over their last five matches, racking up three wins and two draws.

Follow Robbie on Twitter: @RobbieMeh.
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Gallery: Sowinski hat trick propels FC Tulsa past Indy Eleven
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Understanding The Pyramid 2024 – State of Women's Soccer – Soc Takes

Well, hello there, SocTakes crowd. Remember me? It’s been a while. Even longer than before. Sorry about that, the pandemic, and life, and the universe, and everything, it all happened.
You know the drill by now, it’s January February March April, which means the start of #HipsterManifesto season, and a perfect time for another installment of Understanding The Pyramid, the inconsistently-published series wherein yours truly runs the gamut of what’s what in the North American soccer system.
This time around, it’s a bit of a twist, as we’ll be looking at the state of the women’s game going into the 2024 campaign, including all the various leagues both existing and under construction, along with some thoughts on where I’d like to see the trajectory turn.
Without further obligatory introductory waffling, buckle up, we’re jumping in.
This past season saw one professional league operate (the NWSL) along with the same trio of semi-professional/amateur leagues (WPSL, UWS, USL-W) that operated in 2023.
- Division 1 – Fully Professional
- First season: 2013
- Teams for 2024: 14
The National Women’s Soccer League was born out of the disarray following the collapse of Women’s Professional Soccer in April 2012. With the USL’s original W-League on shaky ground, the WPSL stepped up for the 2012 season to run the WPSL Elite league to ensure a professional season could be played that year. While that league took the field, US Soccer held a series of meetings incorporating every major factor in the women’s soccer scene to create a new top-level league from scratch to, it was hoped, learn from the mistakes of the previous attempts.
Needless to say, it worked, and the NWSL has remained a bedrock of women’s professional soccer not just in the USA but in the global landscape for over a decade now. While the league has definitely not been without controversy (see: everything that came to light in 2021), and of course the ever-present question of pay equity, one thing it has done is survive longer than any of its predecessors. Entering its 12th season for 2024, the league is continuing to grow, with expansion to San Jose with Bay FC and Utah Royals returning for this season, and a planned return to Boston coming in 2026. Off the field, attendance numbers are at an all-time-high, with the 2023 season average cracking 10,000 for the first time ever, roughly double that of the men’s 2nd division USL Championship.
While the aftermath of the litany of scandals and abuse and overall horrific behavior revealed throughout 2021 still loom large, the league has worked hard to improve off and on the field, and there have been meaningful changes for player welfare to go along with the rising profile and growth. All of this means is that, while the 2021 scandals could have killed the league (and damn nearly did), the league did what it could to clean house, fix its problems, and get back to celebrating the women’s professional game. In my opinion, it succeeded.
- “Division 4” – Amateur
- First Season: 1998
- Teams for 2024: 141
Full disclosure, I worked for the WPSL as a paid contributor for the 2018 season. With that said, I absolutely fell in love with this league during that summer, learned so much about how it works and how it’s focused and arranged, and deeply respect the organization top-to-bottom. While the WPSL isn’t professional (at least with this specific form), don’t let that detract from the consistent stellar quality you’ll find among its ranks on and off the field. The WPSL has long been a proving ground for collegiate and post-collegiate players either looking to extend their seasons, players keeping the dream alive during the weekends, and up-and-comers looking to impress and prepare to turn pro. That skill level, combined with some of the best coaching around, makes for a highly competitive, highly engaging league with sides that could go toe-to-toe with professional clubs.
It’s commonplace now for most NWSL draft picks to have played some WPSL ball, if not that in one of the other “Division 4” leagues, but the WPSL stands out as the oldest and longest-lasting, with the widest footprint. Fun fact, the men’s NPSL was originally the MPSL, the Men’s Premier Soccer League, a splinter off of the WPSL!
The WPSL has previously operated a professional league, the one-off WPSL Elite for the 2012 season following the collapse of Women’s Professional Soccer after their 2011 season. This league served as a precursor and incubator for the NWSL, with 3 of the 8 teams joining the NWSL for its inaugural campaign and many others branching off to start UWS. They have plans underway to operate another professional league, tentatively named WPSL Pro, but more on that below the fold.
- “Division 4” – Amateur
- First Season: 2016
- Teams for 2024: 41 (UWS 1), 12 (UWS 2)
UWS has a bit of an unusual origin story. Most of its foundational clubs came from other leagues, with some quitting the WPSL over organisational concerns following a highly dysfunctional 2015 season. Others came from the suddenly-defunct original USL W-League. More still planned to participate in a proposed-but-never realised revival of the WPSL Elite. Ultimately, there were eleven teams that had aspirations for higher standards in amateur women’s soccer comprising the inaugural roster.
From their original footprint in the northeast, the league steadily grew to cover a national footprint and, thanks to the participation of Calgary Foothills WFC, also operate in Canada. The league, like many others at this level of “semi-pro” soccer, has its ups and downs, including a substantial contraction of their original westward expansion and the as-expected revolving door of clubs, but have found a foothold and a niche as an alternative to the WPSL.
They also have done something unique among all active women’s leagues: adding a second division with eventual plans for promotion and relegation. While the two leagues haven’t been formally intertwined in that way just yet, and the UWS 2 currently serves as mostly a reserve/development league, the aspirations are real and the league is definitely one to keep an eye on.
- “Division 4” – Amateur
- First Season: 2022
- Teams for 2024: 81
This is not the same USL W-League as mentioned above, rather, this is a brand-new league that emerged much in the same was as UWS (a running theme in all of American soccer, as you probably knew already). Initially, the league was formed to offer an organised way for men’s USL sides to field a women’s team under the same umbrella, but has since grown and expanded, adding some more USL-aligned teams from WPSL and UWS along the way.
With the push that USL has made to grow the men’s game across its three leagues, the women’s game has been able to benefit since the re-founding of the W League, and now it seems that the majority of incoming men’s teams in the USL system have plans out of the gate for a women’s program. And all this despite a very sparse distribution: despite the national footprint, there are few teams west of the Mississippi excluding some small clusters in the pacific northwest, bay area, central Colorado, and south Texas.
That said, the W League can safely lay claim to being the fastest growing of the four leagues, and like the others in its “semi-pro” level, has professional aspirations that too will be further explained below the fold.
Much like on the men’s side, there’s been an explosion of new professional opportunities across the continent alongside the creation of multiple new professional leagues.
- Division 1 – Fully Professional
- First season: 2024-2025
- Teams for 2024-2025: 8
- Committed future teams: 9
USL wasn’t content running the second-highest men’s professional league alongside one of the two national amateur leagues after reorganising in the mid-2010s. No, they had bigger, bolder ideas. They added another men’s professional league, re-started their women’s campaign, built out academy and youth leagues, and now are issuing a direct challenge to the NWSL with the creation of the USL Super League.
This league has already requested and received division 1 sanctioning from US Soccer, putting it atop the women’s pyramid jointly with the established NWSL, but with the added benefit of an existing professional infrastructure on the men’s side for USL teams to leverage. Already, 4 of the 8 announced teams (Brooklyn, Carolina, Lexington, Spokane) have direct ties to men’s professional teams in the USL Championship or League One. This now makes it far easier and more straightforward for groups to add a professional women’s team to their operations, and ultimately will massively increase the playing opportunities for young women.
The league is also taking the unusual step of running a fall-summer calendar alignment, anticipating an August 2024 kickoff and running through, presumably, some point in May or June. While the league is on track for their August start, we still don’t have further details on the schedule – yet.
- Division 2 – Fully Professional
- Planned first season: 2024
- Teams for 2024: 1
Ah, NISA, everyone’s favourite torch-bearer of the NASL’s dysfunction combined with classic USL chaos. They’ve got a women’s league in the works, the WISL! It’s been on the books and has a team announced (Los Angeles Force), they’ve applied for division two sanctioning, and allegedly have 5 other teams ready for their inaugural season.
Aside from that, radio silence since September 2023, which is far from ideal, given that the hypothetical kickoff point for them would have been some time during the many delays of this article. Inauspicious, to say the least, and very NISA.
Do they actually have 5 other clubs lined up? Gut says probably. Are they ready to roll right now? Absolutely not. Could they be ready to roll for a fall start, or even better a Spring 2025 proper launch? Probably, or at least probably maybe. Who knows? It’s the NISA orbit, where the timelines are made up and the deadlines don’t matter. I’ll have more to say when more exists.
- Division 3 – Fully Professional
- Planned first season: 2025
- Teams for 2025: 10
Over a decade ago, following the abrupt collapse of the lone professional league Women’s Professional Soccer in 2011, the WPSL operated a hastily-assembled professional league known as WPSL Elite. This gave the organisation their first bite at the professional ranks, and it seems they never lost the taste for it.
Now, with a far stronger organisation from top to bottom, the WPSL is planning to give it another more permanent go, with the modest aspirations of division 3 professional status. For their planned 2025 launch, they already have 7 teams signed on with letters of intent, an application filed with US Soccer, and multiple teams already lining up to play for 2026 and beyond. Given their large footprint and the strong foundations of many of their clubs, this slow and methodical approach to expanding up the pyramid seems well-placed for success.
So, that’s 4 existing leagues, plus 3 more vying for a spot in the pyramid. What’s the future going to look like? Set your tin foil caps to hypothetical, it’s Speculation Time!
At the top, NWSL is ingrained and doing well and growing, and the media attention it needs is there where it needs to be. I’d put my chips on it continuing to grow and improve year-after-year, as it already has been. For the trio of amateur leagues in play, WPSL and USLW feel the most ready for long-term success, purely based on the strength of their central offices. Not to say I’d bet against UWS, just that, in comparison, the others seem a bit more stable and faster-growing. But there’s definitely room for more than one league at that level, as we’ve seen on the men’s side of the pyramid with NPSL, USL2, and UPSL.
Now onto the debutantes.
I have extremely high hopes for the USL Super League, and not just because the DFW Metroplex is finally getting a professional women’s team (something that long-time readers will know I’ve been wanting for years), but also because the way USL has become a juggernaut of soccer across the country over the last decade is utterly spectacular. They’ve built a formula for successful expansion that puts every league before them to shame, and applying that to the women’s game is logical and exciting.
WPSL Pro, they’re doing things slowly and carefully, which in this business is not just safe but often the soundest strategy. Using existing teams that are ready to move up rather than trying to form a new league entirely out of thin air is a time-tested strategy that, see above, has been used to massively grow the professional ranks on the men’s side already. It’s exciting that we have enough long-lasting, sustainable women’s clubs that we can now have amateur teams ready to turn pro.
As for the WISL, who knows? They might turn out to be a great little league, or they might never take the field, and at this point, I have literally no idea what to expect. But even still, credit to them for trying, and as much as I rag on NISA, I’m glad they exist and are doing what they’re doing as best as they can to provide a viable alternative to the current systems. It’s important, even if it’s unstable.
So with all that said, I think it’s even more high-time we got a women’s Open Cup. This is not a new soapbox for me to stand on and yell, but if it was debatable and borderline enough in 2018, it’s even more of a pressing point in 2024. We have the teams, the leagues, the time, and the media attention. So please, PLEASE, give us a Women’s Open Cup. Please. I need it.
Anyway, that’s enough words to shake the rust off the ol’ SocTakes feed and kick off a new season of #HipsterManifestos. Welcome back, y’all, and happy spring.
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Soc Takes Pod Ep. 63: American amateur soccer rundown – Soc Takes
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Front Porch Discourse: How did FC Cincinnati get it so wrong? – Soc Takes
In the latest episode of Front Porch Discourse, co-hosts John Lenard and Ian Foster discuss the pitfalls of FC Cincinnati‘s expansion season, comparing them to the decade’s other lower-leagues-to-MLS transitions. But first, they take on how the media seemed to completely underestimate Jill Ellis and the USWNT in 2019.
Follow Front Porch Discourse on Twitter: @FPDiscourse.
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Gallery: Indy Eleven narrowly edge Loudoun United on Ayoze penalty
INDIANAPOLIS — An Ayoze penalty conversion in the 68th minute was all that separated the Indy Eleven and Loudoun United on Sunday as the hosts held on for the 1-0 win at Carroll Stadium.

Follow Robbie on Twitter: @RobbieMeh.
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One USL club's player contract contains 'at any time' termination clause – Soc Takes

Photo credit: Robbie Mehling/Soc Takes
Over the course of the last several years, the U.S. Soccer Federation created an impetus among the leadership of the USL to bring every club into compliance with every FIFA guideline regarding player contracts. As of the end of the 2017 season, USL clubs were more consistently and completely adhering to FIFA guidelines than clubs in the NASL or MLS. The USL made a strong commitment to meet FIFA standards for all player contracts in the league’s effort to be recognized as a sanctioned Division II league by the USSF.
With this background, it comes as a surprise that one USL expansion club has a contract addendum that not only doesn’t meet FIFA guidelines, but seems to undermine the long-term spirit of the way the USL has handled player contracts.
The player contract for the USL expansion side obtained by Soc Takes includes the following language applicable to players with semi-guaranteed deals as an amendment to the standard USL player contract:
“Semi-Guaranteed Player Status: Except as specifically set forth in Section I.B. below, and for the complete avoidance of doubt as it relates to all sections of the Player Agreement (including, but not limited to, Section 1, 16, 18 & Addendum B), Player further agrees and acknowledges that (name redacted) may terminate Player Agreement at any time during the term of the Player Agreement in the Club’s sole discretion. In the event of an early termination of the Player Agreement, Club agrees to pay Player the pro-rata amount of salary due to him as of the date of the termination and shall be under no further obligation to provide any additional compensation (including, but not limited to housing, insurance, etc.) except as specifically required by law (e.g., COBRA insurance coverage, etc.).”
Our understanding is that this clause is not being introduced league wide and not being used as addendum to other player contracts with expansion teams in the league. However, it is possible if the club has success in implementing this clause, other USL teams looking to cut costs and depress wages might follow. It also could serve as an example of the type of cost-cutting player contract addendum we might see in other U.S. professional leagues.
- Related: What USL documents tell us about Tommy Heinemann saga
Through the years, the USL has made an effort to ensure professional players are in professional environments. Not long ago, many players — if not most — outside Major League Soccer were often found holding down second, third and even fourth jobs just to make ends meet.
These days, many players can survive during the season on their USL salaries alone. But now, perhaps given the diminishing revenues across the lower divisions, austerity might begin to reign again in terms of player salaries.
UPDATE
In response to this report, a USL official responded with the following comment:
“The USL has invested heavily in player standards over the years, and its Compliance Department closely monitors these issues across the league to ensure we meet USSF and FIFA regulations. This addendum issue was an isolated occasion with a new expansion club that mistakenly included non-compliant language to their player contracts. As soon as they learned of this issue, the Compliance Department moved quickly to work with the club and ensure these contracts were nullified, and new compliant contracts were executed with the players prior to the new season. The department also reached out to every club in the league, reemphasizing that all contracts are guaranteed by FIFA regulations, and such addendums are not acceptable.
We are committed to upholding player standards across the USL, and we take very seriously our compliance with U.S. Soccer Federation and FIFA player contract regulations. Our team works hard to ensure all the league’s clubs maintain the highest standards, and we continue to build upon that.”
Follow Kartik on Twitter: @kkfla737.
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It's official: FC Cincinnati to join MLS in 2019 – Soc Takes

Photo credit: Robbie Mehling/Soc Takes
Welcome to the big show, FC Cincinnati.
The club with by far the most staggering attendance figures in all of lower-division American soccer is off to MLS. League commissioner Don Garber & Co. announced The Queen City as the latest MLS expansion market Tuesday at Rhinegeist Brewery. FC Cincinnati will officially become MLS’ 24th team, set to debut in 2019.
“Let me begin by letting you in on a little secret — alright, maybe not so little,” FC Cincinnati president and GM Jeff Berding said at the announcement. “This day was always the vision for (owner and CEO) Carl Linder and me from the day that we began on Aug. 12, 2015. This was always the plan. We had a vision of where we were going, we had a plan on how we were going to get there, we had a commitment to hold people accountable and we were always guided by the same core values.”
The city’s bid was chosen second, after Nashville, from a selection process that originally started with 12 cities vying for a spot among four. The remaining two cities will be selected at a later date. Sacramento and Detroit, both of whom were named finalists alongside Nashville and Cincy for the first two openings, will now have to reshuffle back into the deck and re-prove their worth over the other eight cities still holding out a glimmer of hope for a spot in MLS: St. Louis, Indianapolis, Raleigh, Charlotte, Phoenix, San Diego, San Antonio and Tampa Bay/St. Petersburg.
Some of those cities’ bids have effectively been killed already due to a lack of local public support, but technically all are still in play. MLS has made it clear that its unlikely to select bids that don’t have a concrete stadium plan and financing ironed out.
This year, Los Angeles FC became the league’s 23rd team. FC Cincinnati will become the 24th next year, while Nashville plans on debuting in 2020 as the 25th. David Beckham and his investment group continue to sort out their ongoing saga down in Miami, but eventually will join as No. 26. Two other markets will be chosen out of the remaining eight to reach MLS’ ultimate stated goal of 28 teams.
FC Cincinnati, currently in the USL, will continue playing at Nippert Stadium in MLS while its shiny new stadium is being constructed.
“After many thrills of victories and agonies of defeat — the great stadium and players that’ll be part of your history — you’re going to remember this day as a truly historic event for The Queen City, for FC Cincinnati, for Major League Soccer and for soccer in North America, so congratulations,” Garber said. “You should be incredibly proud of your meteoric rise as one of our continent’s most incredible soccer cities. And it’s a testament to so many of you that are here today — an event that I will promise you, I’ll never forget.”
Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KJboxing.
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Jimmy Nielsen resigns as coach of OKC Energy – Soc Takes

Photo credit: Matt Boulton/Flickr
Multiple sources inform Soc Takes that Energy FC head coach Jimmy Nielsen has left the Oklahoma City club, taking his staff – Mark Howard, Chris Spendlove and James Ritchie – with him.
The Energy enjoyed a strong second half of the USL season, propagating them to the semifinal of the Western conference.
One source informed Soc Takes that Nielsen quit because “their (Energy FC) player budget was reduced and their raises weren’t big enough.” Soc Takes has not been able to independently verify this claim.
Multiple sources inform Soc Takes that Nielsen does not currently have an UEFA A license; an USSF requirement. Therefore, in keeping Nielsen, Energy showed loyalty to the ex-goalkeeper as the team had to apply for an USSF waiver. With the departure of the Danish manager, Energy FC are expected to be USSF compliant on all counts except field dimensions.
The future for Nielsen and his crew remains uncertain. While the group were interested in the recently vacated St. Louis FC job, Soc Takes understands that Nielsen is not the front-runner for that position.
Update (11/16/17, 735PM): Nielsen spoke to Soc Takes contributor James Poling about parting ways with the team –
Nielsen: “I respect the ownership tremendously. We couldn’t come to a new agreement, but I don’t envision that changing the relationship that we have moving forward.”
— James Poling (@James_Poling) November 17, 2017
Follow Nipun on Twitter: @NipunChopra7.
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