FIFA Under Investigation By Switzerland, USA

Developing story

https://www.admin.ch/gov/en/start/documentation/media-releases.msg-id-57391.html

The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland (OAG) has opened criminal proceedings against persons unknown on suspicion of criminal mismanagement and of money laundering in connection with the allocation of the 2018 and 2022 Football World Cups. In the course of said proceedings, electronic data and documents were seized today at FIFA’s head office in Zurich.

http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/nine-fifa-officials-and-five-corporate-executives-indicted-racketeering-conspiracy-and

Nine FIFA Officials and Five Corporate Executives Indicted for Racketeering Conspiracy and Corruption

The Defendants Include Two Current FIFA Vice Presidents and the Current and Former Presidents of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF); Seven Defendants Arrested Overseas; Guilty Pleas for Four Individual Defendants and Two Corporate Defendants Also Unsealed

Why Piojo’s Summer Tournament Goalkeeper Choices Make Sense

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Ochoa, right, on the bench against Ecuador, March 2015.

It’s unofficially official: goalkeeper Jesus “Chuy” Corona of Cruz Azul will guard Mexico’s goal during the Copa America tournament in June. Guillermo “Memo” Ochoa will do the same the following month for the Gold Cup tournament, which coach Miguel “Piojo” Herrera has prioritized as a must-win.

The selections make sense. Corona had a great game against Ecuador last month where he made a number of key saves including stopping a penalty kick in his team’s 1 -0 victory. Corona and Mexico will face Ecuador again in the C.A. group stage alongside Chile and Bolivia.

His regular spot in La Maquina’s starting XI guarantees he’ll be in fine form entering the tournament, which will be packed with World Cup-caliber CONMEBOL teams looking to win the Copa and its coveted 2017 Confederations Cup spot.

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(l – r) Andres Guardado, Corona, Miguel Layun in the starting lineup against Ecuador, March 2015.

Meanwhile, Ochoa’s move to La Liga hasn’t turned out as promising as he and fans his had hoped. The keeper who stunned the planet with his breathtaking saves at the 2014 World Cup has spent much of his time with Malaga CF as its secondary keeper behind Idriss Kameni.

His spot in CONCACAF’s Gold Cup will give him a month between the end of La Liga and the start of the aforementioned tournament to train with his World Cup squadmates. That could help boost his morale given his current situation.

The tournament would also provide an avenue for Ochoa to regain any form he’s lost on Malaga’s bench. Mexico’s G.C. opposition is on a competitively lower level with El Tri set to face Trinidad & Tobago, Guatemala, and Cuba in the group stage. It’s a far cry from Corona taking on Chile, Ecuador, and possibly Brazil or Colombia later on.

Those early matches c/should help the keeper regain his footing and form in time for the next round of matches against tougher CONCACAF opposition (possibly Honduras, Costa Rica, and the USA).

Corona will get to show off his skills in South America against tough competition and Ochoa will rejoin his World Cup squad for an opportunity to show the world he hasn’t lost a step despite his role as a secondary goalie.

Photos From Mexico vs. Ecuador International Friendly Match

The national teams of Mexico and Ecuador met at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Saturday March 28th for an international friendly match. Mexico won the game 1 – 0 thanks to a goal by Javier “Chicharito” Hernandez, his 39th for the national team which moved him past Cuauhtemoc Blanco as Mexico’s second leading goal-scorer.

It goes without saying I attended and got some great photos in the process. The full album of photos is on my flickr. Below are some of my favorites from the event.

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Free Agency & The Heart Of Major League Soccer

Major League Soccer’s 2015 season is set to kickoff in exactly two weeks but there’s a chance first kick will be delayed indefinitely. The league and the MLS Players Union are currently sitting with a federal mediator in order to update the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) between the two, which expired at the end of January. Members of the MLSPU have threatened to go on strike if both sides are unable to reach an agreement.

Should we get to a point before the season where things and negotiations aren’t where they should be, we are ready to strike, and we are united as a group to make real progress in terms of the way players get treated in this league.

Michael Bradley, Toronto FC

I think at this point a strike is imminent if we don’t get what we want.

Brad Evans, Seattle Sounders

What the players want is free agency and they’re now at the point of putting the league and their careers on hold in order to get it, as the quotes from Bradley and Evans illustrate. MLS is a special type of beast in the soccer world (along with Australia) in that it’s a closed, single-entity system in which the league itself dictates everything. Teams aren’t owned and run separately but run by league “investor-operators.” As such, player contracts are also owned by the league and not individual teams.

Here’s how Mike Jarosi explains it:

Insiders, and the attorneys, call the MLS structure “the budget” and the players’ projected compensation “the budget number.”  This accurately reflects the compensation structure.  That is, MLS LLC determines (as part of the collective bargaining process) how much it will spend on player compensation, and allocates that amount for each investor/operator to assign to its players (I will not muddy this piece with the “designated player” structure).  MLS LLC then pays the players.

That’s only the tip of the iceberg. MLS’s structure dictates that all players are employees of the league and not the team they play for. As such, there are a number of rules and regulations in place that any foreign player would deem arcane and ridiculous.

Consider the case of Herculez Gomez who I wrote about last month in Remezcla:

Gómez cut his teeth in MLS up until 2009 when he left Sporting Kansas City (then the Kansas City Wizards) and the USA to sign with Puebla F.C. in Mexico following a dispute with then-coach Peter Vermes. Gomez has expressed a desire to return to MLS, but continues to be hindered by one important limitation: the fact that Kansas City controls his rights to play in the league under the right of first refusal. Gómez’ career in the US is at the mercy of a team he hasn’t played with in seven years.

His current situation is similar to that of Jean-Marc Bosman. Bosman’s career, however, took a very different and deeply influential turn as Scott Nicholls details in Prost Amerika:

Bosman was playing for Belgian club FC Liege when his contract ran out in 1990. He wanted to play for Dunkirk in France but in an effort to keep Bosman at Liege, the team slapped a huge and unrealistic transfer “fee” on his head, despite being out of contract. This ultimately deterred Dunkirk because they could not afford the transfer fee.

The case of Union Royale Belge des Sociétés de Football Association ASBL v Jean-Marc Bosman changed modern football. The member nations of the European Union (EU) had agreed on ‘free movement of labour’ as they strove towards a stronger economic union.

Bosman took the Belgian Football Federation to court for five years, claiming that as a citizen of the EU he could play wherever he wanted to because he should be allowed “freedom of movement” as any citizen in other occupations was guaranteed.

Every ruling was appealed, but in 1995 the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg ruled in Bosman’s favour. It was too late for Bosman, but the consequences of the case were much, much bigger regarding the development of world football.

Gomez is most likely not planning on taking MLS all the way to the Supreme Court anytime soon, if ever, especially since he’s been enjoying his time playing in his parent’s home country of Mexico. Bosman’s situation was also more complicated (he had to go to an international court, after all) but the basic idea, however, is similar. The MLSPU wants the league to incorporate free agency in order to give players the freedom to decide where to play with less restrictions and, thus, more control over their careers as players in the USA.

Free agency, however, would risk the very nature of the structure of MLS. Again, Mike Jarosi:

First, and simply put, free agency would just plain muck everything up:  payroll, workers’ compensation payments, application of individual state laws versus a centralized system, etc., etc.

Second, it would shift the player compensation financial liabilities — and the accounting of the same — to the investor/operators (technically, the LLC “Members”).  This, in turn, would affect the taxing structure and the revenue flowLimited liability companies can elect to be taxed on a “pass-through” basis, which is a huge advantage.

Third, MLS has enjoyed 20 years of slow, steady growth.  There are ways to increase player rights and compensation without free agency.  Free agency would put the league in a position to seriously risk repeat of the NASL — spending itself out of existence in an arms-race for over-the-hill foreign players.

Most importantly, if MLS continues to shift its structure to where it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it’s probably not a single-entity LLC.

That last paragraph is very important. The incorporation of free agency would radically redefine what type of entity and structure MLS is and would open the metaphorical floodgates for further radical changes that could be enforced by the courts.

Chase Woodruff elaborates on this further in Eight By Eight:

The league contends that free agency could lead to out-of-control salary costs and hinder its ability to compete on the global transfer market, but its real concerns likely have to do with the battle that began in a Boston courtroom nearly twenty years ago. Since the Fraser ruling, it’s grown increasingly difficult to view the league as a single, unified organism, and not what it really is: a league like any other, composed of various constituent parts with diverse and at times conflicting interests. Over the past decade, the number of MLS franchises has close to doubled and continues to grow. Most clubs play in slick new soccer-specific stadiums, command millions in kit sponsorships and other commercial deals, and compete to sign high-priced talent from overseas through the Designated Player system. And in addition to run-of-the-mill American billionaires like Robert Kraft and Stan Kroenke, its “investor-operators” now include an Austrian energy drink company, a Brazilian venture capitalist, an Italian-Canadian dairy magnate, and the Abu Dhabi Royal Family.

Throw in free agency, with clubs bidding against one another for talent on the open market, and it becomes nearly impossible to consider MLS a single-entity. In the event of future antitrust litigation, the league’s single-entity defense might fall apart, and MLS players would gain the additional leverage of the so-called “nuclear option” to decertify their union and sue the league in court. Even other leagues, like the ambitious NASL, might sense an opportunity to follow in the footsteps of baseball’s Federal League and challenge MLS’ division-one status with an antitrust lawsuit.

There you have it. At stake here are the rights of US players to dictate their own careers clashing with the very structure at the core of MLS. But what are the odds of changes happening this year? The MLSPU has demanded free agency in the past but acquiesced for less, such as in 2010 when the league and the union agreed on the Re-Entry Draft and a number of other changes and improvements.

Noah Davis sees history repeating itself in favor of the league. From his piece in Grantland:

Still, if a players’ union was ever going to prevail against management, it seems like it should be the MLSPU in 2015. But it’s not likely to happen. Whether you talk to sources around the league or just think about the situation, you arrive at the same conclusion: Kraft needs MLS to play this season a lot less desperately than your average MLS player does. If MLS ceased to exist tomorrow, the owners would be disappointed. Portland Timbers owner Merritt Paulson would have to find someone else to get into Twitter fights with, but he would be just fine. The vast majority of the 500-plus players in the league, however, wouldn’t. They’d be out of jobs, unable to go to Europe or Mexico or anywhere else to play soccer professionally because they aren’t good enough or because those rosters are already settled.

The proposed strike also comes during a huge year for the league and the national team.  The Gold Cup tournament will take place this summer, MLS will debut two new teams (Orlando City and NYCFC), and the league signed some very hefty TV contracts with ESPN and FOX Sports.

It’s impossible to know what will happen come March 6th, but if history does repeat itself, both sides will repeat the negotiation process of 2010 when the league and MLSPU arrived at a consensus two days before first kick. The MLSPU didn’t win free agency then but did win a number of concessions that gave them a bit more freedom.

The MLSPU will need its own Bosman ruling to eventually win this fight. Unfortunately for the players and the union, a ruling like that probably won’t happen for many years and many more CBA negotiations to come.

Delantero Sin Equipo: The Embarrassing Saga of Alan Pulido

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Alan Pulido

There are easy ways and difficult ways for a football player to cut his teeth and cleats in Europe. Mexican forward Alan Pulido has chosen, to quote the ancient knight from Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, quite “poorly” and has now placed his “current” club Levadiakos FC against his “former” club Tigres UANL in a legal battle over his contract.

At the heart of the matter, is Pulido who has claimed free agency since his return to Mexico from the World Cup in Brazil (as one of the substitutes.) The drama began on July 31st, 2014, when Pulido released a public statement that claimed he was no longer a player at Tigres and was actually a free agent. The announcement arrived days after he skipped a number of training sessions with the team. On August 6th, Tigres president Alejandro Rodriguez claimed/clarified that Pulido’s contract is binding until June 30th, 2016.

READ THE REST AT REMEZCLA

The World Cup Reader

The World Cup is less than two weeks away and I’ve found myself neck-deep in compelling and insightful stories/articles about the event, the sport, and host nation Brazil.

I’m going to share my favorites in this post. Bookmark this link because I’ll be updating it with new stories as I come across them.

When The MLShit Hits The Fan

Major League Soccer’s (MLS) 2014 season will kick off this Saturday and, as expected, the league has been hard at work hyping up opening weekend. Unfortunately for the league, a few factors are looking to rain on the MLS parade: renewed competition from the North American Soccer League (NASL) and, more urgently, the impasse between MLS’s Professional Referee Organization (PRO) and the Professional Soccer Referees Association (PSRA).

PRO announced this morning that they have decided to lock out referees from the PSRA this opening weekend. The league will resort to its backup plan of non-union (re: scab) referees composed of foreign referees, former MLS officials, and refs from other leagues. The PRO even held a mini-camp for potential temporary replacements last week. Things could go well enough with no one noticing any changes…or they could be utterly disastrous.

Members of the PSRA voted 64 – 1 in favor of a strike back in February and talks on the group’s first collective bargaining agreement with the PRO earlier this week failed. The PSRA also filed charges with the National Labor Relations Board claiming bad-faith bargaining and accusing members of PRO with making threats against members of the PSRA.

From Dave Zirin at The Nation:

The Professional Soccer Referees Association, otherwise known as the refs union, has been attempting to negotiate their first collective bargaining agreement in league history. The amount of money that separated the two parties is not vast, estimated between $440,000 and $1 million for the lifetime of the deal. The main financial issue was that in recent years, MLS mandated far more trainings for referees to improve the quality of officiating. The refs, however, were not compensated for the extra hours.

The greater issue, however, was political. It was the fact that the refs union refused to sign a no-strike pledge. As the MLS league negotiator Peter Walton said, “Since they will not give us a guarantee they will not go on strike immediately prior to our match we are left in a position where we must use replacement officials.”

Some of the more cynical comments about this situation that I’ve read in various articles claim this was a move by the PRO for publicity. All publicity is good publicity and the issue will be resolved in due time but only after a good amount of publicity about this situation makes a few rounds.

Steven Goff has provided the best coverage of the situation in his Soccer Insider column at the Washington Post.

On a smaller but potentially larger problem down the road, NASL commissioner Bill Peterson called out Garber and the MLS for some questionable moves regarding the league’s expansion fever.

Just a few days ago, MLS commissioner Don Garber hyped up Texan cities Austin and San Antonio as a possibility for the home of a future MLS team. That news came weeks after David Beckham announced plans for his own MLS franchise in Miami, Florida, all of which prompted a few comments from NASL commissioner Bill Peterson during a press conference call early last week.

NASL commissioner Bill Peterson (Dave Martinez, Empire Of Soccer)

The NASL has teams in San Antonio, Atlanta, Minneapolis, New York City and Miami…all cities where MLS will expand or has looked into expanding. MLS will likely be at 24 teams total by 2020.

Peterson originally announced that the reborn NASL (the original league folded in 1984) would not compete directly with MLS and, instead, focus on building its own separate fan base and focus on creating a system of promotion/relegation after some growth.

His tune changed immediately last week when MLS began digging footholds in his league’s turf.

From Franco Panizo of Soccer By Ives:

“Can somebody tell me, is he going to have 32 teams or 42 teams?” Peterson asked rhetorically of Garber without mentioning him by name. “How many is he going to have? Every day he announces another city. I’ve got to send him an update of where we’re going so he can announce that next.”

What few, if anyone, persons have pointed out is how this expansion echoes the past. The original NASL was a closed league (as MLS is today) that eventually fell apart due to rapid expansion among other factors…including some that are beginning to appear in MLS (expansion, union disputes, etc.).

Naturally, there’s been plenty of speculation of where this road will eventually lead to; a second American Soccer War, an implosion of the MLS, a temporary setback to MLS domination, etc. Whatever the final result may be, we’ll look back at 2014 as simply a pebble in MLS’s shoe or the first sign of the levee breaking.

Fans Irate After ESPN2 Misses USMNT’s Opening Goal Against South Korea

The US national team started 2014 with a bang as forward Chris Wondolowski opened the match with a goal at the four-minute mark. Unfortunately, Team USA fans watching on ESPN2 missed it. The station continued to show the final minutes of college basketball match between Clemson and Florida State.

Seven minutes into the game and the station finally switched over. As you can expect, this didn’t sit too well with USMNT fans who watched the game on ESPN2.

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The game wasn’t a official FIFA matchday and not an incredibly important one in general besides it being a warm-up/team tweak for the World Cup. However, it’s a sad state of affairs at ESPN when a college basketball game is considered more important than a soccer game featuring the national team, especially in light of the team’s very successful 2013 campaign.

What does it mean when Spanish-language UniMas shows the same game from beginning to end when English-language ESPN doesn’t? This on top of the fact that ESPN/NBC lost viewers in its MLS coverage while UniMas actually gained viewers:

The Spanish-language audience on UniMas increased almost 6 percent from last year’s audience to 514,000 viewers, more than double what they were only three years ago on another Univision network, Galavision.

The numbers are consistent with the trend during the 2013 regular season. Univision reported that the average viewers on UniMas’ MLS regular-season broadcasts (223,000) topped those on ESPN2 (181,000).

Sports Business Daily had reported that the average viewership dropped 29 percent on ESPN/ESPN and 8 percent to 112,000 on NBCSN (which had benefited in 2012 from usually high viewerships due to lead-ins from its London Olympics coverage).

Courtesy Soccer America.