INDIANAPOLIS — The Indy Eleven did a lot of things right for 43 minutes Saturday afternoon. They were comfortable on defense. They were lethal in attack. The team had a pretty good day picking up its third win of the season for a temporary share of first place in…
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indy Eleven have had a busy January. First, the team confirmed a switch to the United Soccer league first reported by Soc Takes’ own Nipun Chopra. A week later, the team announced the head coach that will lead them in the club’s first-ever USL campaign. The…
INDIANAPOLIS — Indy Eleven have exercised their right to terminate forward Eamon Zayed’s contract ahead of the 2018 season. A provision of the contract allowed for termination triggered by a switch to the United Soccer League. The 34-year-old international will leave the club holding the record for most goals…
Former Indy Eleven boss Tim Hankinson has made a return to Montego Bay United. MBU play in the Red Stripe Premier League. Hankinson was at Montego Bay when he first signed with Indy Eleven in December of 2015. He left the eventual league winners in good form as MBU…
INDIANAPOLIS — There were signs that this decision was coming and other indications that a decision had already been made. Either way, the Indy Eleven will attempt to carry on without the services of Tim Hankinson. His contract was set to expire at the end of this month and…
The NASL playoffs are looming and the top seed is locked up. Miami FC will host the club’s first-ever postseason match on Nov. 5 at Ricardo Silva Stadium. That is done. Their opponent for that match is less clear, however. There are currently two teams battling it out for…
INDIANAPOLIS — Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico on Sept. 20. The devastation has been widely reported and the story in recent days has centered around political spin. While the people of Puerto Rico have been dealing with the effects of a catastrophic storm, Puerto Rico FC are…
INDIANAPOLIS — Saturday night in Indianapolis and the scoreboard still showed 5:05 left to play. It was sudden death for St. John’s in overtime. Butler men’s soccer won their third straight to open the Big East season. The final score was 1-0. Butler pushed the tempo from first kick…
INDIANAPOLIS — Every season has it’s unique challenges and 2017 will be no different for the Indy Eleven. What is different is the injury carousel with players hopping on and off with great regularity. While some players have remained relatively healthy throughout, others just can’t stay injury free, or…
Miami FC are running away with the rankings at this point. Can anyone stop them? Miami are the outright leaders and sit 7 points clear of the Deltas and the Cosmos after 12 games. They have 27 points! They have the best offense (21 goals for), the best…
CINCINNATI — FC Cincinnati supporters packed Nippert Stadium in droves for the club’s 1-nil U.S. Open Cup win over big brother Columbus Crew SC in the “Hell Is Real Derby.” After a frenetic few minutes of stoppage time, the home side held on to advance to face the Chicago…
The bad news first Tanner Thompson left last week’s game with a concussion. It’s a symptom of the plague of injuries that have befallen the Indy Eleven during the course of the season. While his injury is being taken seriously, it’s not a permanent setback. Thompson is expected to…
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Las Vegas Lights FC schedules 3 exhibitions vs. MLS sides – Soc Takes

Image credit: Las Vegas Lights FC
Las Vegas Lights FC has yet to play a match, but is already causing a stir with some marquee preseason exhibitions lined up for spring 2018. Well, more like the end of winter 2018, but this is the desert we’re talking about, after all.
The Sin City-based USL club will host three MLS sides on consecutive Saturdays in February, the team announced Monday. The Montreal Impact will visit on Feb. 10, followed by the Vancouver Whitecaps on Feb. 17 and D.C. United on Feb. 24.
BREAKING: We’re coming out of the gates BIG in 2018!!
Lights FC is proud to announce Soccer Spring Training, with 3 @MLS clubs coming to face us in Downtown Las Vegas in February.
• 2.10.17 – vs @impactmontreal
• 2.17.17 – vs @WhitecapsFC
• 2.24.17 – vs @dcunited pic.twitter.com/Ffm3a6FgQl— Las Vegas Lights FC (@lvlightsfc) November 27, 2017
LV Lights FC also recently announced its first-ever head coach in Jose Luis Sanchez Sola. The veteran Mexican manager, nicknamed “Chelis,” previously coached several Liga MX teams as well as former MLS club Chivas USA. Most recently he was with Venados F.C. Yucatan in Mexico’s second division.
Season tickets for the LV Lights’ inaugural campaign start as low as $200 and include a free jersey thanks to an extended Cyber Monday sale.
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Cashman Field Archives – Soc Takes
If you take a look at Cashman Field, the ballpark where Las Vegas Lights FC is set to play in the 2018 USL season, you may notice that it’s rather square. If you have never done such a thing, here’s a visual aid, consisting of a satellite image of…
Project 50/50: Part I – Soc Takes

Photo credit: Visit Anchorage
Right now, the American soccer landscape is in the best shape it has ever been. We have a thriving top-flight league in MLS, two growing Division 2 leagues and two newly announced Division 3 professional leagues in the USL D3 and NISA.
With new leagues come new markets, and today I’ll begin looking at some of the best markets for expansion in our two new D3 leagues. This series will cover all 50 states, shortlisting three cities in each one and making a case for the best new soccer city in every single state. Each post will cover five states, for a total of 20 of these posts. Yes, I’m including Alaska and Hawaii. Every market I describe will have a D3-compliant venue with a minimum seating capacity of 1,000, as per the 2014 USSF Professional League Standards.
Welcome to Project 50/50.
ALABAMA
The first state alphabetically, Alabama is historically dominated by college football. Home to the Alabama Crimson Tide and Auburn Tigers, there’s been a notable lack of soccer until the recent semi-pro teams and announcement of the USL expanding to Birmingham. However, let’s take a look at the next best market for pro soccer.
Mobile
-Metro population: 615,234 -AFC Mobile in GCPL
-Averaging 1,564 in Double-A baseball
Mobile is the largest metro area in south Alabama, and has played host to a number of minor league sports over the years. The demographics are trending younger, with a rising household income, and there are several nearby universities. Mobile has a team in the new Gulf Coast Premier League, and the team has been built by crowdfunding and local support. This is a promising, if so far untested, market.
Other markets considered were Tuscaloosa, Montgomery, and Huntsville, but as Mobile is the only city outside Birmingham with any membership in the soccer pyramid, it seems like a pretty solid choice. AFC Mobile is also demolishing attendance records in the GCPL, so no problems there either.
As for the branding and stadium, they’re already D2 compliant with their venue, and their branding is absolutely gorgeous. Honestly, they’re a few investors away from fully professional.
ALASKA
Alaska currently is without professional sports for the first time since the 1980s, and that’s a goddamn shame. Alaska is all too often ignored and passed over by leagues, and this annoys me. The big question here is what league would an Alaska team join? The new D3 leagues are likely going to be too regional, making travel difficult. And D2 might be too costly at first. So, I propose an interesting idea: put an Alaska team in the Canadian Premier League. It’s much closer travel, taking only three hours to fly from Anchorage to Vancouver.
Anchorage
-Metro population: 401,635
-Averaged 3,623 in ECHL final season
Anchorage is really the only logical choice for a soccer team in Alaska. While Juneau and Fairbanks have the demographics, they’re way too small for USSF regulations. But Anchorage, they’re just about perfect for an expansion team. Population is growing and trending younger, and there’s no competition to speak of anymore. There’s no college football or college soccer in Alaska, so they could easily be the biggest show in town. There’s also quite a solid youth soccer foundation in Anchorage with the Alaska Rush and Anchorage Youth Soccer Club.
For a venue, they could easily play at the Anchorage Football Stadium, a 4,500 seat football/soccer/track stadium that doesn’t have any major full-time tenants other than high schools. And the stadium has plenty of space for seating expansion. It’s not D2 ready, but it should work for any D3 or CPL requirements.
As for my thoughts on branding, they should play to the strengths of the state flag and the Anchorage city seal. Blue and yellow work well.
ARIZONA
Arizona is the youngest state in the mainland, and yet they already have a long history of professional sports. We even see Phoenix Rising in USL bidding to join MLS. But outside of the Phoenix metro area, there are only two professional teams in the remainder of the state: the Tucson Roadrunners in the American Hockey League and the Northern Arizona Suns of the NBA G League. And those, coincidentally, are the two markets we’ll be considering today.
Tucson
-Metro population: 1,010,025
-Averaging 4,211 in AHL hockey
Tucson is such a great potential soccer market. And we already see how successful FC Tucson has been, averaging well over a thousand per game in the PDL. Phoenix Rising has taken notice, and purchased the team to serve as their PDL affiliate a few weeks ago. The team recently wrapped up their fourth-consecutive regular season title. The Tucson metro area is growing, the team has some excellent ties to the community and the organization is very professionally run. This is another easy pick, as I’m confident that FC Tucson would shine in USLD3 with very few changes. Their stadium will work at the D3 level, and thanks to Phoenix Rising, they definitely have the cash.
2017 Mountain Division Champions @FCTucson have been acquired by @USL club @PHXRisingFC.#Path2Pro | https://t.co/IOxCfrkvKx pic.twitter.com/nnJRF6RqKm
— USL PDL (@USLPDL) October 11, 2017
Also considered is Flagstaff, with a metro population of 139,097 and home to Northern Arizona University. The city is steadily growing, along with (relatively) nearby Prescott Valley, and the Northern Arizona region seems like it could support professional soccer pretty well. I’ve found that places with good college sports support tend to also do well with professional soccer, as there’s a good bit of overlap of interests and target demographics, and this could be another promising place.
ARKANSAS
Ah, Arkansas, my adopted second home. I spent three years in Fayetteville at the University of Arkansas, and I absolutely love that city and the state as a whole. Arkansans are ridiculously passionate sports fans, and the whole state gets behind their Hogs year after year, even when they’re consistently the okayest SEC team. Anyway, back to soccer.
Little Rock
-Metro Population: 724,385
-Averaged 4,975 in Double-A baseball
So many people that I’ve met shit on Little Rock, and that really irritates me. I love this wonderful little city. The city somehow only has minor league baseball for pro sports, but it feels like they could have so much more. And I’m clearly not alone, as the Little Rock Rangers have been going strong for two years now. This is another one of those “here’s a well-run amateur team, let’s make them professional” sections, but whatever.
The Rangers are already playing in the NPSL and WPSL, have a strong and growing list of sponsors, are well supported and even have an academy running already. They currently play in the massive, cavernous War Memorial Stadium, and because of that, a good crowd of 2,500 is dwarfed by more than 50,000 empty seats. We’ll want to change that. I’m thinking either use Quigley-Cox Stadium with a bit of a renovation, or possibly even the Arkansas Travelers’ ballpark, Dickey-Stephens Field. Both feature a much nicer capacity for D3 soccer.
Also considered was the Fayetteville/Springdale metro area, with a population of 461,966. The northwest corner of the state is constantly growing thanks to the University of Arkansas and Walmart. The area has minor league baseball and a new NPSL team, Ozark FC. With the number of students who live in Fayetteville year round, and the thousands who end up working locally after graduating, this could be another great soccer town. The Razorbacks soccer team routinely fills its 1,500-seat stadium, and that little venue would be perfect for the USL D3.
CALIFORNIA
California is goddamn massive. Like, seriously, I’m Texan and I think that place is fucking huge. Also, there are two massive metro areas that dominate professional sports in California, and for this exercise I think it’s best if we just ignore all of Los Angeles and the Bay Area when searching for a new market. So, with San Diego possibly maybe sort of joining the NASL in 2018 — or the USL if the NASL dies — and Fresno joining the USL in 2018 along with Sacramento still supporting the Republic, we need something different.
Bakersfield
-Metro population: 839,631
-Averaging 4,504 in AHL
Bakersfield is the ninth-largest city in California and one of the largest independent markets. The city is home to Cal State Bakersfield in NCAA D1, and host the Bakersfield Condors in the American Hockey League. The fact that the Condors have played continuously since 1995, with consistently solid attendance, gives me confidence in the potential success for professional soccer. As for a stadium, I like the Cal State Bakersfield Main Soccer Field with a capacity of 2,000, or the more ambitious and slightly aged Memorial Stadium that seats 20,000. The latter could use a bit of love and money to get it a bit shinier, but it’s a nice-looking stadium with plenty of room to grow nonetheless. And if this theoretical Bakersfield team were to market and operate like Sacramento’s, they could fill that thing.
That’s all for Part I of Project 50/50. I hope you enjoyed this sprawling wall of text that really doesn’t mean much other than speculation and maybe a bit of attention calling to some teams. But I enjoyed it.
Part II is our next group of five states: Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida and Georgia.
Follow John on Twitter: @JohnMLTX.
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Las Vegas Lights FC Archives – Soc Takes
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STORIES Archives – Page 3 of 51 – Soc Takes
With the recent announcement that the WPSL will be partnering with Movement Interactive, Soc Takes was interested in exploring the idea and science behind using accelerometer-based equipment for diagnosing concussive injuries. The idea behind using accelerometers is fairly simple, at least in premise. It has to do with g-forces…
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VIDEOS Archives – Page 3 of 3 – Soc Takes
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Kevin Johnston, Author at Soc Takes – Page 3 of 15
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Former collegiate footballer Younes Dayekh begins recovery process after serious car accident

Younes Dayekh. Remember that name.
For college soccer teammates at Bradley, St. Mary’s College and Illinois-Chicago (UIC), they know that name all too well. He’s the one they can count on to bring his A game both on and off the field. He has an infectious smile, is full of life and by far is the one who lights up a room.
The light is a bit dimmer these days, but hopefully not for long.
On May 13, Dayekh was riding in a car with two of his best friends, Jack Dunn and David Gjeraker. The trio of former Bradley teammates reunited to celebrate Dunn’s upcoming nuptials to his high school and college sweetheart, Grace Markovich, one day later. The three old friends couldn’t have been happier.
“Younes and David came in early,” Dunn said. “It was absolutely tremendous. We just had the best couple of days ever. It was just like freshman year. We went on runs, played soccer and just hung out.”
And then — a car T-boned theirs. Dunn’s door was smashed in and he was in a lot of pain. Gjeraker had minor injuries. But Dayekh wasn’t doing well. Dunn immediately called Markovich to tell her what had happened.
“The lady turned right into us,” Dunn said. “There was a brief period of time where I may have been unconscious. I called Grace. I knew someone was already calling 911. I wanted to let her know because I knew Younes was in bad shape.”
Luckily for everyone, the ambulances arrived quickly. Markovich, who is an ER nurse, raced to the scene, with her parents not far behind. When she got there, both Dayekh and Dunn were on their way to the hospital. But Gjeraker was still there.
“When Jack called I knew it wasn’t a simple crash,” Markovich said. “He told me Younes is in bad shape. He’s breathing but he’s not responding. When I got there David was standing by the car. I asked him what their conditions were. He said Jack was in extreme pain, but seemed fine. Younes was not good. I talked to the firefighters to see if they called any codes. They called full trauma on both of them. But when they didn’t call a code on Younes, I knew he was still with us.”
Both Dayekh and Dunn were transported to Genesis Trauma Center for further evaluation. Dayekh’s spleen was lacerated and removed before they airlifted him to University of Iowa Hospital in Iowa City. In addition to the lacerated spleen, Dayekh had neck and back fractures and also suffered a brain injury. Dunn had suffered some fractures and was taken by ambulance.
Dayekh’s father, Kamal, and brother, Yosuef, were in Texas when they got the call.
“My Dad got home from work and said I’m going to catch a plane ticket. It’s for Younes,” Yousef Dayekh said. “He was getting phone calls. I overheard them say he was airlifted in a helicopter. I was just praying everyone was OK. I knew everyone from pictures. He was super excited to be there. We packed a few clothes and just drove as fast as we could.”
Immediately, everyone was praying. And the wedding was put on hold until Younes can walk down the aisle with Dunn and Markovich. They were asking for prayers from around the country. The power of prayer and the power of hope can be very helpful.
“My dad has been a role model,” Yousef Dayekh said. “He keeps saying keep your faith in God. Everything happens for a reason. We’re Dayekhs. We’re always strong.”
Recovering from a brain injury takes time. Younes Dayekh is breathing on his own and is responding, just not as fast as everyone would like.
“Younes has been special his entire life — special in the game and special in life,” Dunn said. “I know he’s going to do something special here.”
Freshman year at Bradley, Dayekh and Dunn were part of a quartet. But soon it became just the two of them. Well, three if you count Markovich.
“Younes is my close friend,” Dunn said. “He became a part of my family, coming home for holidays.”
“When we met freshman year, I was the girlfriend hanging around the guys,” Markovich said. “He became a sibling. When he came home for holidays, he came to my parents’ house as well. I was part of the group.”
No sign of friendship may be greater than senior night on the pitch at UIC. Dayekh’s family couldn’t make it in for the event. So he asked Dunn and Markovich to escort him.
“He’s a very talented soccer player,” UIC head coach Sean Phillips said. “But what speaks louder about him is the valuable relationships he made and how quickly he made them. This couple he met his freshman year at Bradley walked him out on senior night. The impact he’s had on people is immeasurable.”
Dayekh began his collegiate career at Bradley. How did a kid from Northern California end up in the Midwest? It’s easy — networks.
“One of my first recruits was out of the Bay Area, Gavin Glinton,” Bradley head coach Jim DeRose said. “He was running a club in the Bay Area. They brought their club to a camp at Bradley. Gavin introduced Younes to me. A year later, he was playing on our team. His two years here were fantastic. He loves soccer. It’s in his DNA.
“How you carry yourself and treat people speaks volumes. Younes is very respectable, very coachable, very selfless. After the hardest day, the hardest practice, win or lose he always said thank you.”
After his sophomore year, Dayekh transferred to St. Mary’s College in California, where he finished his degree.
“I’ve known him since he was about 15,” St. Mary’s College head coach Adam Cooper said.” We recruited him out of high school, but we didn’t have a scholarship available. When he was looking to transfer, he contacted us and we made it happen.”
While it wasn’t the easiest decision to make, Dayekh left and made sure it was on the best of terms.
“He needed to go back to Northern California,” Bradley assistant coach Tim Regan said. “It was so selfless. It’s not normal for a player to transfer and keep great relationships. In his case, it was always for the right reasons. He’s pretty well liked everywhere, from coast to coast.”
At St. Mary’s, Dayekh relied on his experience to help lead the team.
“The experience and leadership he brought to the club as a transfer student was so helpful,” Cooper said. “We had a young group and he did a great job with the young kids. Of course, he also added to the firepower that we had. He was a big brother to all the guys. He’s a great role model and leader.”
Dayekh then finished up his collegiate career by attending graduate school at UIC. He made instant friends every step of the way.
“He’s engrained himself into three soccer families: Bradley, St. Mary’s and now UIC,” Phillips said. “The outpouring of support he’s received speaks to the type of kid he is. It’s very rare for someone to be at three programs and leave lasting relationships at all three.”
Phillips said they also had a relationship with Dayekh when he played his final year of eligibility at UIC.
“When he graduated, the uniqueness of eligibility extensions led him to us,” Phillips said. “We already had a relationship with him. He scored a lot of goals for us. But his energy and passion for the game was very unique. He did whatever it took. And he loved it with an endearing passion — a passion for the game or the team he was playing for, or Liverpool who he was cheering for. It was infectious.”
After graduation, Dayekh was still exploring opportunities to play. He hoped to play professionally. Soccer is a part of who he is. But it’s not only who he is. At 23, his life is just beginning.
“The soccer, that’s the least of our worries,” Regan said. “There are so many more important things in life. It’s the reason we all meet and get together. But life is more than just kicking a ball into the net. He’s well traveled for a young guy. He’s seen a lot. This is just something else for him to overcome.”
The Dunn and Markovich families have adopted Kamal and Yousef for now. They’re providing them with a place to stay, home cooked meals and family while Younes improves slowly but daily. Dayekh’s friends and family have stressed the power of prayer from the beginning. They also set up a fund to help with medical expenses.
It is going to be a long and expensive recovery. If you can help in any way, even by just saying a prayer, please do.
Follow Kathryn on Twitter: @Katknapp99.
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How City of Angels FC put together a venue, team, kit and badge in just two weeks – Soc Takes

Image credit: City of Angels FC
City of Angels FC are the club that appear to have it all. Sting, the rock icon, wears branded T-shirts on stage at his concerts; Cobi Jones, the former United States international, is the newly appointed director of football; they recently put on a soccer clinic with Manchester United and have basked in international media coverage.
And yet their first season in the fourth-tier National Premier Soccer League was, to put it mildly, a complete mess.
A quick glance at the final Southwest Division table indicates many of their problems — just two wins out of 16 games played and an incredible 88 goals conceded. It does not tell the full story of the club’s problems on and off the field, though. Far from it.
That one of the club’s co-owners is Sting’s son, Joe Sumner, immediately thrust the club into the spotlight when they launched last December. But a badly thought-out TV interview soon after gave Sumner and, specifically, co-owner PJ Harrison just two weeks to come up with a venue, an entire team, a badge and a kit. Harrison took up the story.

City of Angels FC co-owner Joe Sumner. Photo credit: Joe Sumner
“Joe and I did a live TV interview and didn’t necessarily say the right things,” the Englishman told Soc Takes in a telephone interview. “We were in a situation where league called to say, ‘Hey, it can’t be true but we heard that you said that you want to play next year [in 2018]. We said, ‘Yes, we do but we we’re hoping to talk to you about that more before it went public.’ They spoke with the owners in our division and the league came back and said, ‘Everyone wants you to play this year and if not you’re in danger of not being able to participate next year.’
“Professionalism can be judged in different ways – it isn’t necessarily unprofessional to delay something but it can be unprofessional to go out and get started. Which one of those reflects worse on the league is an objective thing but my opinion is that the latter thing is more destructive. But it meant that we had to get into it. It’s not a regret but we did struggle on the pitch — and it was stressful because we went from having no venue, no team, no badge, no kit, nothing, to having all of it in two weeks. And that was something I pretty much had to coordinate myself, and a lot of it by phone from England.”
The NPSL said in a statement: “It’s true that there were conversations for the team to delay their launch to 2018, but due to the timing of those conversations earlier this year when the schedule was largely finalized among the other members in the conference, it was decided that they would begin play in 2017.
“City of Angels FC put the interests of their other partners before their own, which speaks to the quality of the individuals running that team and the cooperative spirit among the membership of the NPSL ownership platform.”
With limited options to find a local venue at quick notice and with a limited budget, City of Angels FC ended up playing at a practice soccer facility at LA Valley College. Not only was there no allowance for any spectators — meaning the club played behind closed doors — but Harrison had to buy paint for the college groundskeeper to put lines on the field.
Harrison added: “It was like renting a car and there’s no tires on it. We rented a field and there were no lines on it. There were weeds that were knee-high — fortunately the groundsman was very cool and removed them by hand. I wasn’t in a good mood the day when I saw the pitch.
“I was in a pub at midnight, calling Los Angeles, ‘Can you cut the grass please? Can we use the locker rooms?’ ‘Yeah you can but you can only use one.’ It was weird to be in this situation after you’ve paid a lot of money.”
“And we had an attendance of zero just because we had to put a team out as we had pressure from the league to get a venue. It’s easier than it sounds to find somewhere else. Particularly when you only have two weeks to find a venue – we only signed a venue a week before our first home game.” -PJ Harrison
Harrison added: “I think the league and owners could have been much more helpful — I don’t know how damaging it would have been for us to defer this year, build and then come back next year. But that was the situation we were in.
“It remains to be seen if we play (at LA Valley College) next year. We’re in different situation now — people know who we are.”
Luke Davis, the Supervisor of Administrative Services at LA Valley College who dealt with Harrison, said: “It wasn’t as if PJ rented the facility and then found out all these things, such as no spectators and no lines on the field. They were all addressed before he paid to rent the facilities.

Image credit: City of Angels FC
“In my opinion we went above and beyond for someone who is using a grass pitch that is used for nothing more than practice.”
With a venue — no matter how unsuitable — found, Harrison and his coaching staff quickly had to put a squad together and did so via open trials. Unsurprisingly, the team suffered on the field, conceding an average of over five goals a game. Harrison was angry that division rivals did not let up against City of Angels FC’s defense as they racked up cricket scores against the struggling newcomers.
“We put it out on social media that we were having trials and it was phenomenally successful. We got a big, big response,” Harrison said. “It wasn’t easy but next year it will be a lot different. Cobi will help in that process and we’ve got to know the landscape better. The recruitment process will be a lot different.
“Regardless of that we should never had conceded that many goals. There’s a lot of players who don’t have the heart and think it’s recreational — they won’t wear the shirt again.
“There were some unacceptable scorelines but it was strange trying to see a team try to score double figures on you. Not even Germany did that against Brazil in the 2014 World Cup [in a 7-1 win]. Some of the other clubs were also making fun of us for having no fans. Firstly, they weren’t bringing in many fans themselves and also we subsidized them by giving them three points and an extra home game.
“We expected a little bit of class, which wasn’t forthcoming, and that eats away at your respect for your colleagues. I don’t know if they had the subtlety to understand the difference between banter and inappropriate criticism, but it wasn’t very welcome.
“And we still didn’t finish bottom of the table, which has to be some level of success.”
Despite the initial problems, Harrison has enjoyed the overall experience of seeing his club gain a foothold in the LA community, something that will be hugely aided by the arrival of Jones.
NEW SIGNING!
US legend Cobi Jones joins @cityofangelsfc https://t.co/cnX6fS9mnJ#coafc #cobijones #npsl #losangeles pic.twitter.com/Ik2f6ChG5y— cityofangelsfc (@cityofangelsfc) July 14, 2017
“We are very picky about the people who we work with,” Harrison said. “Cobi is a good guy, fun to be around, very knowledgeable and has a really powerful personal brand in LA which really connects with people. We’ve only just started working together. He is going to be working with everything in playing side, the commercial side and the overall philosophy of the club.
“The confidence people have in him will now extend through the club, which is a big thing. It’s a very significant moment for the club.”
Sting, for his part, has not been to a game — he has been on tour — nor is he an investor. “He is supportive, like any father is of his son, and he’s a football fan as well,” says Harrison. “We appreciate him going out wearing a T-shirt on stage — he has a topless biker girl on his T-shirt.”
NPSL division rivals SoCal SC recently ceased operations, indicating just how difficult life is in lower-league soccer in the United States. But Harrison remains optimistic about City of Angel FC’s future.
“We’ve become part of the community and it’s been very rewarding,” he says. “Even though it was particularly stressful in January when we were trying to get it all together, it wasn’t a particularly big price to pay.”
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You can follow Bob on Twitter: @WilliamsBob75.
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