Buffalo Offering Spring Youth Soccer – Register By March 23rd

Parkview Youth Soccer CampBuffalo Parks and Recreation will accept registration for youth spring soccer, for children 4 years of age to senior high, now through Wednesday, March 23.

Games will be held on Saturdays starting April 16. Each team will play six games.

Game times are: 4 year old through kindergarten, 10 a.m.; first to third grade, 11:30 a.m.; fourth to sixth grade, 12:30 p.m.; and seventh grade to senior high, 1:30 p.m.

Application forms may be picked up at City Hall or download the form online at www.buffalomissouri.us. Registration fee is $25; make checks payable to City of Buffalo.

Applications received after March 23 will have a $5 late charge. Due to shirt order deadline, no application will be accepted after March 25.

People interested in sponsoring a soccer team or willing to coach or be an assistant coach, contact Bobbie Heard at City Hall, (417) 345-2701.

Is Your Team Competing In State Cup or the Presidents Cup?

Presidents Cup LogoThe two state-wide competitions have registration deadlines quickly approaching. Last year one Girls team (Missouri Elite FC U14 Girls) competed along with two Boys programs – Springfield SC and Total Demize in State Cup. Will your team compete?

The alternate choice is the President’s Cup which offers a lower tier of competition but the result is still an opportunity to move on to Regional competition and even a National tournament. Due to low registration numbers there have been teams that moved directly to Regional tournaments and therefor fun trips to Midwest tournaments during the summer. If you are looking for a nice opportunity, consider the President’s Cup. The State qualifying will be in Springfield in late May if needed.

2011 Missouri State CupRegistration link
The Missouri State Cup will be held June 11-15, 2011 at the SLYSA Complex in St. Charles, MO. All U13-U19 competitive teams are eligible to participate in State Cup.

2011 Missouri Boys Presidents CupRegistration Link
The Missouri Boys Presidents Cup will be held May 20-22, 2011 at the Lake Country Soccer Complex in Springfield, MO. All U14-U17 competitive boys teams are eligible to participate in the Presidents Cup.

Missouri State Youth Soccer Camp Registration Now Open

Missouri State Soccer CampNow entering its 19th exciting year, the Missouri State Soccer School is known as one of the finest quality teaching soccer camps in the nation. The Missouri State Soccer School offers players the opportunity to enhance their individual skills and further develop the concepts of team play. Missouri State University, located in Springfield, Missouri, the gateway city to the Ozarks, provides an ideal environment for all players.

The Missouri State Soccer School offers serious players the opportunity to train and develop under the guidance of the first-rate instructional staff. Come and experience what thousands of players from around the nation have chosen as their summer home for soccer.

This is the camp I sent my nephews to for years and it was always something they enjoyed. Your son or daughter can commute or stay on campus in the dorms (like the college kids) and there are also Team Camps for High School programs that want to come and train together. Details available on the website

Portland Timbers Preview

Jack Jewsbury, Portland Timbers by Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian

Jack Jewsbury, Portland Timbers by Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian

Major League SoccerTalk offers this Preview

2010 REVIEW:
A 3rd place finish in the USL Conference and 4th overall saw the Timbers round off their time in the USL with a good finish.

Despite making the play-offs it was short lived after a 2-1 aggregate defeat to fellow MLS newcomers Vancouver Whitecaps. They were able to reach the final of the US open cup but an agonizing 4-3 defeat over two legs saw them end the season without a trophy.

ROSTER ADDITIONS: Numerous new faces have joined the club in their inaugural MLS season. Notable newcomers include former Arsenal youngster Kerrea Gilbert who has been brought in to give the defence steel alongside Rodney Wallace. Also head coach John Spencer chose to sign fellow Scotsman Adam Moffat for the midfield meanwhile in attack Kenny Cooper looks set to lead the line with exciting prospect Darlington Nagbe. Troy Perkins was signed as starting goalkeeper.

Former Man United trainee Eddie Johnson was signed from the USL as well as Ugandan Brian Umony on loan. Sal Zizzo moves north from Chivas USA along with Jack Jewsbury who joins from Sporting Kansas.

SB Nation weighs in, although prior to Jack Jewsbury’s signing it would seem since he’s not listed anywhere in the article – Portland Timbers Not Acting Like An Expansion Team

Who do you expect to be in the starting XI on First Kick?

John Spencer has been pretty adamant that every player is vying for a starting position. Given that the Timbers have been recently promoted to MLS I’d say that for the most part that’s true. Most players coming in have probably, or will probably be given an equal shot at earning a place on the starting 11. There are a few of exceptions, however.

First, Kenny Cooper will most definitely be an immediate starter. To put it bluntly, the Timbers didn’t go through all the stress and waste an allocation spot on a player they have planned for the bench. At the press event introducing Cooper, Spencer even said as much.

Second, everything I’m hearing coming out of training is that Darlington Nagbe is a beast of a player. I would expect him to perform very, very well in this upcoming season and, at this point, I’d be ready to declare him as being on the first team.

And Goal.com offers their MLS Guidebook

What went right?

Making a smooth jump from lower-tiered soccer leagues – USL-1 and USSF D-2 – to the upper echelon of United States soccer, Major League Soccer. Portland, along with maintaining its ownership in the transition to MLS, also brought 10 (of the 23) players with them to aid chemistry in their inaugural season. Veteran additions Kenny Cooper, Jack Jewsbury, Eric Brunner and David Horst should set the stage for a competitive inaugural season.

Youth Soccer – What’s Important?

Mike Woitalla of Soccer America has a series of interviews on their Youth Soccer Insider section with successful Club programs around the country. Two recent interviews offer an interesting juxtaposition of influences.

This week, he talked with Tab Ramos

Tab Ramos, considered one of the USA’s most skillful players ever, played for the USA at three World Cups, two Copa Americas, and in the Olympic Games. Two years after retiring in 2002 from a playing career in Spain, Mexico and MLS, he founded the New Jersey youth club NJSA 04. In 2008, he coached the NJSA 04 Gunners to the U-14 U.S. Youth Soccer national title, marking the first national championship for a New Jersey club in two decades.

SOCCER AMERICA: If you had a magic wand, how would you use it to improve youth soccer in America?
TAB RAMOS: Wow. I’d have to think about that …
One of the things that’s been most important for our club is, from the first moment, eliminating parents’ opinions from what we do. The opinion of the parents of the players here is completely irrelevant to us. And that’s been a good formula for making this club a real soccer club.
SA: What would be an example of detrimental parent interference?
TAB RAMOS: There are a thousand things. But I’ll start with an example of a parent who had the right attitude.
On our U-16 [U.S. Soccer Development] Academy team we have a great player who starts all the games. He’s been at our club for four or five years and just about every year previously he’s been a substitute. He did not start. He happened to be on the team that won the national championship, but he didn’t start.

It’s the perfect case of a parent who figured it out the right way. This boy’s father is a soccer guy. He kept his son at the club even though he wasn’t starting. He could have moved him somewhere else and started for another team. He stayed here while he was a substitute — trying hard all these years. Now he’s 16 — in the year that it really matters for him — and starts every game. I think that’s the right formula.

Love that last comment – Now he’s 16 — in the year that it really matters for him — and starts every game. Go to Soccer America to read the rest of the interview

In late February, he talked to Cony Konstin, Director of Coaching of Westside Metros SC, a small club based in Beaverton, Ore., that has gotten national attention with the success of its U-19 Internationals boys team and has sent players to the U-15 national team pool. Previously, Konstin served as the Director of Houstonians FC, which became a model for inner-city youth soccer. Konstin spoke to us for the Youth Soccer Insider’s ongoing series in which leaders of U.S. youth clubs address key issues on the state of American youth soccer.

SOCCER AMERICA: If you had a magic wand, how would you use it to improve youth soccer in America?
CONY KONSTIN: I’d create “soccer courts” all over the place, where children can play soccer, or futsal, anytime. You don’t need a giant soccer field for that. There are so many abandoned tennis courts they could convert to multi-purpose futsal courts and let the kids just play.

Coaching is totally overrated. Players win championships, not coaches. Talent wins championships, not coaches. For the USA to create great talent we need to create an environment for kids, in the inner city and the suburbs, to play everyday.

In American youth soccer, you don’t step on the grass if it rains a little bit. They throw you off the field. How are kids going to become passionate about playing if you punish them for going on the field because you want to keep the grass green? Who cares if the grass is not green? As long as they’re playing and staying out of trouble, we should be happy about that.

So Coaching is totally over-rated. Konstin has more to offer, read it all here

MLS Soccer Opens With Sounders vs. Galaxy Tuesday on ESPN

MLS logoThe ESPN networks are set to broadcast 21 MLS regular-season matches in 2011, with a major emphasis on the fiercest rivalries in the league. The Cascadia Cup series in the Pacific Northwest (Jack Jewsbury’s Portland Timbers vs Seattle Sounders), the Superclásico in Los Angeles (Galaxy vs Chivas), and the always-testy I-95 clashes between the New England Revolution, New York Red Bulls, Philadelphia Union, and D.C. United. ESPN2 will also show both bicoastal marquee matchups between the Galaxy and Red Bulls.

In total, there are four matches on ESPN and 17 on ESPN2. ESPN Deportes will broadcast all 21 matches. In addition, ESPN and ESPN2 have eight windows in the summer in order to broadcast international matches involving MLS clubs. I’ve added them all to my Soccer on TV calendar.

Sporting KC will be featured once – their game at the Chicago Fire on June 9th, one week prior to opening their new stadium

Date – Time (ET) – Match (home team listed first) -Network
Tue, March 15 – 9:30 pm – Seattle Sounders vs. LA Galaxy -ESPN/Deportes
Sat, April 9 – 7:00 pm – Philadelphia Union vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN2/Deportes
Thu, April 1 – 11:00 pm – Portland Timbers vs. Chicago Fire – ESPN2/Deportes
Thu, April 21 – 8:00 pm – D.C. United vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN2/Deportes
Sat, May 7 – 11:00 pm – LA Galaxy vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN2/Deportes
Sat, May 14 – 11:00 pm – Seattle Sounders vs. Portland Timbers – ESPN2/Deportes
Sat, May 21 – 10:00 pm – Chivas USA vs. LA Galaxy – ESPN2/Deportes
Thu, June 9 – 10:00 pm – Sporting Kansas City vs. Chicago Fire – ESPN2/Deportes
Thu, June 23 – 10:00 pm – Seattle Sounders vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN2/Deportes
Sun, June 26 – 2:00 pm – Chicago Fire vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN/Deportes
Sat, July 2 – 10:30 pm – San Jose Earthquakes vs. New York Red Bulls – ESPN2/Deportes
Sun, July 3 – 9:00 pm – Colorado Rapids vs. Houston Dynamo – ESPN2/Deportes
Mon, July 4 – 8:30 pm – Real Salt Lake vs. New England Revolution – ESPN2/Deportes
Mon, July 4 – 10:30 pm – LA Galaxy vs. Seattle Sounders – ESPN2/Deportes
Sun, July 10 – 5:00 pm – Portland Timbers vs. Seattle Sounders – ESPN/Deportes
Wed, July 27 – 8:30 pm - MLS All-Star Game – TBD
Thu, August 18 – 9:00 pm – Chicago Fire vs. D.C. United – ESPN2/Deportes
Sun, August 28 – 7:00 pm – New York Red Bulls vs. LA Galaxy – ESPN2/Deportes
Thu, September 29 – 8:00 pm – Philadelphia Union vs. D.C. United – ESPN2/Deportes
Fri, October 14 – 10:30 pm – Colorado Rapids vs. Real Salt Lake – ESPN2/Deportes
Sun, October 16 – 9:00 pm – LA Galaxy vs. Chivas USA – ESPN/Deportes
Thu, October 20 – 8:00 pm – New York Red Bulls vs. Philadelphia Union – ESPN2/Deportes

Champions Challenge Tournament At Lake Country Soccer – Sunday

Mason

Mason

I enjoyed a pair of lively finals today. The first game was the U13 Boys game, featuring the Springfield SC 97/98 Gray squad against the Sedalia Select Sting. Familiar foes, it was a fun match to cover as the boys showed skill and enthusiasm. The home squad had a pair of early chances they were unable to finish while Sedalia came closest, once late in the first half and then late in regulation when they were denied by first the goalkeeper and then the upright when the deflected shot bounced back into the keepers arms. In the first OT period Sedalia had a corner kick that hit the cross bar twice but didn’t fall into the net. The Sting ultimately won the game in PK’s.

Photo Gallery – U13 Boys, Springfield SC vs Sedalia Sting

The second game was a U12 Girls 8v8 Final, between Springfield SC 98/99 Gray and the Northwest Arkansas Lightning Strikers Black. The Strikers took a 1-0 lead in the first half that was matched when Rachel split the defense and slid her shot underneath the diving keeper midway through the second half. Unfortunately the Strikers got the game-winner when they buried a ball after a scramble in the box. Photos can be found on my photo site (link below) and on Facebook.

Photo Gallery – U12 Girls Final, Springfield SC vs NW AR Lightning

Champions Challenge Tournament Saturday

Springfield SC vs MO Elite, U14 Girls

Springfield SC vs MO Elite, U14 Girls

Caught the opening match today in the U14 Girls group, featuring a pair of local squads. The first outdoor game of the season, both coaches were subbing regularly to keep the team fresh.

Springfield SC won 3-1, taking the lead in the 2nd half when a cross into the box was picked up on the far side. Olivia cut across the face of the goal before getting her shot off from outside the six yard box. Missouri Elite came back with some nice ball movement down the right before getting an open net goal after a square ball pulled the keeper out. SSC got the game winner when they pushed numbers into the box again where Abbie (?) buried a loose ball inside the six yard box. The final goal came on a breakaway and shot that got past the keeper.

Pictures for this game and the first half of the U14 Boys game between Springfield SC 96/97 1 against Edmonds Black are available on my photo site and Facebook.
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Sporting Kansas City Preview

Omar Bravo, Mexican National Team

Omar Bravo, Mexican National Team ( AFP PHOTO / JAIME RAZURI)

From the Sporting KC website – 2011 Sporting Kansas City Preview

The Tweet and Lowdown:
SKC may just be the sleeper pick to pace the Eastern Conference if they can weather an early road trip and continue building on last season.

Setting the Scene:
For the former Wizards, 2010 was a season of extremes spent yo-yoing between debilitating lows (nine-game winless streak and missing the MLS Cup Playoffs for the second straight season) and epic highs (a victory against Manchester United and a thrilling run back into the playoff picture).
Though the team embarked on an 8-5-3 run to finish the regular season, inconsistent scoring production and a defense that struggled with conceding soft goals kept manager Peter Vermes’ squad from the playoffs in his first full season at the helm.

Now, after an offseason rife with organizational change, newly christened Sporting Kansas City hope they have addressed their shortcomings before a 2011 season that kicks off with much higher expectations than years past.

Read all the details from Sporting KC’s review

SB Nation chimes in with Sporting Kanas City Has Sights Set On Playoffs

It’s “Playoffs or Bust” for KC in 2011. Quite simply, this is Vermes’ second full year as head coach with the team, and fifth as technical director. After he fired Curt Onalfo and appointed himself head coach in August 2009, he put himself on the clock. The team was vastly overhauled between his interim spell to finish 2009 and his first full year in 2010. He signed almost half of a new roster, brought in his players that he wanted to coach to play the way he wanted to play, and had varying degrees of success doing so.

And here’s Yahoo’s take – Fan preview: Sporting Kansas City should make 2011 MLS Playoffs

The 2011 Major League Soccer season hasn’t even begun and I will make a not-so-bold prediction. Sporting Kansas City will make the playoffs this year.

There are several reasons the team will be in the post-season. First, we start with forward Omar Bravo. He’s the team’s lone designated player so far. Although other teams will have their flashy players lured with larger contracts, Bravo will be a hit with a team looking to score.

Teal Bunbury is another reason Sporting will be in the playoffs. At 21 he’s an up and coming star. He’s already a hit with Bob Bradley on the U.S. Men’s National Team. If Bunbury can stay in shape and not get his dislocated elbow tweaked he’ll be a fine striker alongside Bravo.

Davy Arnaud is the heart and soul of the team…

The Goal.com MLS Guidebook offers

Newcomers made a huge impact for Kansas City in 2010. Longtime Goalkeeper Kevin Hartman was replaced by Jimmy Nielsen, who proved to be one of the top goalkeepers in the league. Guadeloupe international Stephane Auvray solidified the spine of the team as a holding midfielder, and Englishman Ryan Smith turned into one of the more creative and dangerous wide men in the league.

What went wrong?

Though Nielsen performed admirably in goal, Hartman was even better for FC Dallas, leading them to the MLS Cup, where they lost to Colorado. After a solid 2009 season, veteran striker Josh Wolff regressed in 2010, leaving the team thin up top. Central defense was constantly in a state of flux, as Jimmy Conrad played with several partners in the middle, none of which were particularly successful.

The loss of Conrad and Jack Jewsbury also leaves the side potentially lacking leadership; midfielder Davy Arnaud is now the club’s longest tenured player.

Jack Jewsbury Named Captain Of Portland Timbers

Jack Jewsbury, Portland Timbers by Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian

Jack Jewsbury, Portland Timbers by Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian

From the Timbers Insider soccer site comes great news

Recent midfield signing Jack Jewsbury has been named the Timbers captain for the 2011 season, the club announced today.

“Jack is a good leader and an experienced professional with nine years in MLS,” said coach John Spencer in the Timbers official press release. “It was not an easy decision, as we have a lot of good candidates on the team, but Jack stood out and came to the top of the list.”