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    Guest

    CSN Awards - Game of the Year

    By Guest, in It's Called Football,

    This was a tough one for 2010. Unlike past years when Montreal winning the first NCC in 2008 and Vancouver's USL championship win in 2009 were clear picks, there wasn't really a single game that jumped out. Was the game of the year Montreal's brawl filled season capper in Carolina (too negative), or Vancouver's definitive 2-0 playoff win over Portland (maybe if it came later in the playoffs).
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    What about the MLS Cup (um, no)? The NCC clincher (anti-climatic)?
    No matter the pick there would be debate. In the end it came down to two games.
    The CONCACAF women's championship game between Canada and Mexico was undoubtedly the most important game played by a Canadian team this year. It's not often that Canada wins a championship after all. However a couple things make this one the runner-up. First off it wasn't the most compelling game. Whether it was nerves, or the pressure of the moment, the women played far more attractive games this year (the 2-2 game against Brazil earlier this month for instance). It's no disrespect to the women to have played the second best game of the year.
    In the end we went with one of the most stunning upsets in the CONCACAF Champions League's short history. Mexican teams do not lose to MLS sides. They especially don't lose to four year old MLS teams from Canada. The way TFC's season ended might make some forget how incredible that warm August night when Cruz Azul came to town was.
    Mista scored! 2-1 for the good guys!! An aesthetically pleasing and important win.
    It was the last good night of the season at BMO. Anytime you beat a Mexican side it's a worthwhile pick for game of the year.
    Besides, how often did we get to see this at BMO this year?



    Guest

    Don't blame the victim

    By Guest, in 24th Minute,

    Above is a quote from a Canadian soccer insider -- and one that can hardly be called a supporter of TFC. Jason deVos Tweeted today that DeRo was "so wrong that he couldn't see right from where he was."
    The reaction from those within the game has been consistent. De Rosario's decision to blindside MLS and TFC by going on trial with Celtic without permission is indefensible. TFC owners MLSE can be blamed for many things, but they can hardly be blamed by the actions of a player and agent that have gone completely outside football world's established rules.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Within a few minutes I will have a MLSsoccer.com article up with some fresh quotes from both TFC and MLS. You can read the words of others there. However, what I will tell you now is that the first time someone from Celtic talked to anyone from either TFC or MLS was Tuesday morning -- hours after DeRo had finished his first training session with Celtic.
    Additionally TFC told the DeRo camp that they would grant him permission to train with another club. They only required that a training agreement -- again the norm throughout the football world -- be in place before he go on trial.
    MLS also told me that Celtic indicated to them that DeRo and his agent had indicated to them that they had permission. TFC is adamant they did not and, frankly, I'm inclined to believe them. The reaction from both club and league today seemed sincere and consistent with what you would expect by someone that was blindsided.
    One has to wonder what this might mean for DeRo. Celtic can't be too happy with a no-name (to them) player from a minnow country making them look like bad guys. De Rosario may be able to add something to Celtic, but he's hardly a rare commodity. Today's news isn't likely to help his cause at Parkhead.
    Although they won't say it publicly, TFC does not believe that DeRo is worth much more to the club than he's already being paid. The near $400,000 cap hit could be better used. Where he is valuable is on the marketing front and that's what complicates the situation for the club.
    And that X-factor has been most evident today. Although the soccer community is pretty much in total agreement that DeRo is 100 per cent to blame for this mess, the fans are almost universal in directing their scorn towards management. They believe that if TFC had its management structure taken care of that DeRo would have been re-signed and none of this would be happening.
    Wanting TFC to get moving on finding the replacement for Mo Johnston and Preki is fair enough. However, it has nothing to do with DeRo failing to inform TFC of his intentions and misleading Celtic of his availability.
    That's all on him

    Guest
    Sick of our voices yet? Well, we hope not, because we've got a whole new hour of programming for you today: our second annual Year-In-Review special, the culmination of our December podcast series.
    Today it's just the three of us, unless you consider heavily-alcoholized eggnog to be a "guest" (during recording, we certainly did). We take a look back at 2010 for our men's and women's national teams, make passing references to another disastrous year for Toronto FC, give our thorough analysis of any bits of controversy surrounding the words "FIFA World Cup" (there were plenty) and wrap up the year with a final round of Promotion/Relegation.
    Plus, we find out if anyone can hate Andres Iniesta more than Grant does, Jamie gives us his best Howard Dean impersonation, and Squizz goes off on Sepp Blatter in a special year-ending rant.
    Download the podcast directly or subscribe to our show on iTunes.
    Thanks to everyone for listening, and we'll be talking to you again in the new year.[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    Guest

    Hard to deny this

    By Guest, in It's Called Football,

    <a href="http://twitpic.com/3kjm0d" title="DeRo at Celtic on Twitpic"><img src="http://twitpic.com/show/thumb/3kjm0d.jpg" width="150" height="150" alt="DeRo at Celtic on Twitpic"></a>
    It would appear Dwayne DeRosario has begun his trial at Celtic.
    Celtic Manager Neil Lennon told STV this morning that DeRo will be with them for a week.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Whether this is games being played by DeRo's agent - a negotiation tactic intended to improve his contract terms - or DeRo is actually seeking out other options in the off-season is unknown at this point.
    Canadian Soccer News will have reaction throughout the day.

    Guest

    Should Europe change its calendar?

    By Guest, in Euro File,

    Much has been made in recent weeks about European club soccer that insists on playing through the winter months.
    It's a debate that inevitably pops up every time a bit of winter weather passes through the continent, with critics wondering why football stubbornly marches on through the worst weather period of the year.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    As Canadians, we tend to chuckle when anyone elsewhere in the world complains about "tough" weather this time of year, which usually means a couple of centimetres of snow and perhaps a (gasp!) windchill factor thrown in for good measure.
    Hell, Canadians poke fun at one another when their compatriots complain about the winter. And God forbid if your city calls in the army to dig out of a major storm!
    But I digress.
    This year's spate of frosty weather is more than merely just sheltered Europeans whining about a dusting of snow. This time around it seems more serious, and certainly a lot more wide-ranging.
    Consider that this was a story weeks ago, when the first cancellations in places like Scotland, northern England and Germany were reported. Sure, in those countries, the odd snowy day is to be expected, but when teams in Spain were having problems moving around, people started to take notice.
    And when weeks passed, and things didn't get better, the chatter started getting louder.
    Perhaps it was time to re-open the age-old debate of playing club soccer in Europe... in the summertime.
    Let's get one thing clear, there is no universal "European calendar" for football. Despite what many Eurosnobs in this part of the world claim, the entire world does not abide by a single scheduling standard.
    In places like Sweden and Norway, a football club's fixture list looks a lot like that of your average MLS or NASL side. That is, they play their first match of the season in early spring and wrap things up in late fall before the frost sets in.
    Other countries with not-as-harsh-yet-still-significant winters employ long breaks, taking as many as three months off during the middle of the season to allow for the worst of Mother Nature's wrath to pass.
    The first major European soccer figure to speak out about a possible schedule change was Arsène Wenger, the famous Arsenal manager who last week publicly pondered a February to November schedule for the Premier League.
    Later that same day, George Peat, the self-described "anti-summer football" president of the Scottish Football Association, was forced to change his tune as the slew of cancellations piled up throughout the club pyramid in his country.
    "When would you have a winter break? December, January or February? I am now beginning to think: 'Have it for December, January and February and play from March to November,'" Peat told The Guardian.
    "You wouldn't have postponements. Now it is time for a change. The only problems would be when you have competitions like the World Cup and the European Championship. But other countries can find a way round it."
    Therein lies the rub, though. Summertime is usually when international competitions are played, and North American fans know all too well how club and country can clash at that time of year.
    Of course, with FIFA deciding that Qatar should host the 2022 World Cup, the weather issue - this time to do with excessive heat - has now seeped into international football as well.
    The solution is simple, says Franz Beckenbauer.
    Play the World Cup in winter.
    "One should think about a different solution," the German legend told Bild. "In January or February you have a comfortable 25 degrees there. Plans for the biggest leagues would have to change for 2022 but that would not be a major undertaking."
    The World Cup in winter, and the Premier League in summer? It's certainly a huge departure from the norm, and would take a lot of political tip-toeing to pull off.
    But would it make a good permanent choice? I'm not too sure.
    For one, those pesky winter storms that are now causing mayhem throughout European club football would do the same to the World Cup or European Championships (depending on location, of course), and given the extremely tight timelines of those events, such problems would be amplified exponentially.
    A schedule switch would also permanently eliminate the possibility of some countries from ever hosting such tournaments again. Those dreamers among us who cling to the hope of Canada one day hosting a World Cup would have to completely discard of such a notion, as a January tournament would only work in British Columbia, and even that would be a crapshoot.
    The fact is, there is no "right" time to play soccer, at least not from a global perspective. Each league and region needs to do whatever is best for their own clubs, players and fans.
    Whether that means Euro leagues that abide by the "traditional" schedule would start playing in the summer months, well that remains to be seen.

    Guest
    We all have those moments in time - the kind where you remember where you were when it happened.
    Whether it was Jason DeVos heading in that goal against Colombia, Simeon Jackson's chip over the Ukraine keeper or Ali Gerba's half volley to beat Jamaica, they get you up out of your seat and send those electric chills down your back when you remember them.
    The 2010 CSN Goal of the Year by a Canuck is just that. A perfect strike at a time when it was needed the most.
    We all watch football for moments like this ...
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qDNGkyKny0
    CHRISTINE SINCLAIR
    Trailing 2-1 to Brazil with under 10 minutes remaining in the Four Nations Cup, Canada was playing down a man thanks to (let's just call it as it is) a shit call by a Brazilian referee.
    Canada needed only a draw to win the tournament, while Brazil, who had been pressing forward most of the second half, needed the win.
    It was at that moment that Christine Sinclair, Canada's female player of the year, showed why she'd won the honour six years running.
    Carrying the ball deep into Brazilian territory she cut a pass back to an on-running Melissa Tancredi. A scramble ensued and the ball fell right back to Sinclair's foot.
    Without hesitation, from 23-yards-out and on her left foot, Sinclair curled a world-class finish into the top corner of the Brazilian net.
    With all of her success and years of accomplishments, the look of shock on her own face - almost bewilderment, as if to say, 'What did I just do?' - in the seconds after the goal, teammates converging on her, was fitting of the moment.
    And it's why we've chosen Christine Sinclair's goal against Brazil as the CSN Goal of the Year by a Canadian for 2010.

    Guest
    For our year-in-review podcast series, we spoke to soccer fans from across the country about their experiences during 2010. A new episode will be released on this site and via our iTunes feed every day, leading up to our own year-in-review special on December 28.
    On the final fan-based podcast of this series, we complete our cross-country journey in St. John's, where we find Mike Power, a player development coordinator with the Newfoundland & Labrador Soccer Association. Mike gives us a coach's perspective on the progress made by Stephen Hart and Carolina Morace, talks about what the situation is like for young soccer players in his province, and fills us in on the best place to grab a beer and watch the game when you're in St. John's.

    Download the episode directly, or subscribe to our podcast on iTunes. Tomorrow, we finally, conclusively wrap the year up with the second annual Some Canadian Guys Year-In-Review Special.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    Guest

    DeGone?

    By Guest, in 24th Minute,

    What was a rumour a couple week's ago is now a full-blown panic attack for many TFC fans. Celtic boss Neil Lennon has confirmed that Dwayne deRosario will be on trial with the club next month.
    It's unclear whether Celtic is looking at DeRo for a short term loan or for a full-time move.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Initial requests for comment to both TFC and the deRosario camp were not answered. This story will update if a response is had.
    The tone of the Scottish report is very much in line with a "sure we'll look at him, why not?" attitude. Lennon admits that he hasn't seen much of him and that he's receiving the invite based on a recommendation. So, this is far from a done deal. Actually, from the sound of the report this has about as much importance as running a 17-year-old from the youth side out for a look might.
    Lennon said: "I’m not saying we are going to sign everyone who comes our way, and I’m not saying this is a done deal. But it might just be a little bonus for us along the way without it costing us the earth."
    So, don't expect a really big press conference if he signs.
    From a TFC perspective it's a bit bigger news of course. It's hard to imagine replacing DeRo's offense. There is a feeling out there by some that DeRo might not be the right fit in Toronto though and his $300,000 cap hit could be better used.
    Time (might) tell. This still seems a long way off. From a Canadian national team perspective there might be some benefit to seeing the ultimate big-fish-small-pond player tested in Europe (although whether Hamilton Academical is really any better than the New England Revolution is up for debate).
    Update: The club denies that DeRo is going anywhere.

    Guest

    Edmonton putting itself out there

    By Guest, in 24th Minute,

    FC Edmonton is shaking babies* and kissing hands the next three days as it continues its efforts to let Northern Alberta that it exists. The club is the guest of honour at the annual Polar Cup indoor soccer tournament in Edmonton.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Yes, they will be selling season tickets. They'll be playing a "friendly" against a local Special Olympics all-star team Wednesday as well -- bookmakers have the expansion side installed as slight favourites.
    But, seriously...it's good that Edmonton is trying to get itself out there because the visibility of this team is disturbingly low. Yes, it's an expansion side and yes it's hockey season (if that's in fact what the Oilers are playing), but this club is going to need all the buzz it can get heading into the season. Hopefully as the winter continues the club will be doing more and more of these type of outreaches -- and not just at youth soccer events. They should also be at the soccer pubs (pub?) Saturday mornings to reach out to the ex-pat, beer drinking crowd. If you convince those folks that it's worthwhile you are halfway there.
    FC Edmonton represents the first real test of the sports' post '07 swagger. Did MLS' arrival to Canada and the success of the 2007 u20s really represent the moment the sport truly became mainstream, or was its success merely a regional phenomena/temporary blip? If it works in Northern Alberta we can safely start to believe the former. If it doesn't...
    * Canadian Soccer News in no way supports the shaking of babies. That's, like, really, really stupid.

    Guest

    There’s this ball, see?

    By Guest, in Onward Soccer,

    It’s a time of year I find myself wondering how we all got here from somewhere else. Pick a starting point, let some time go by, and try to figure what the heck just happened.
    In soccer, the most basic starting point has got to be – the ball. It’s lying on a grass field. Someone kicks it. Someone else runs after it. Off we go!
    So … how does such a simple act of joy and freedom turn into salary caps, transfer rumours, GM firings and governance flaps?
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Equally, how does it become the heart-pounding emotional roller coaster endured and celebrated annually by passionate fans of every large or small soccer team on the planet?
    I’ve spent a fair bit of time, in recent years, watching groups of soccer supporters emerge from the tunnel under the railway tracks at Toronto’s Exhibition grounds, headed for BMO Field to back their boys (or girls). It’s the moment the stadium is in sight. It’s the giddy time the crowd – and opposing support – can see, hear – and assess – the new arrivals.
    Montreal Impact fans, Canada fans, Colorado Rapids and FC Dallas fans, Peru fans, Costa Rica fans – and the massed singing, chanting and outright cussing of U-Sector, Red Patch and the rest when Toronto FC fans surge southward together for a particularly important match.
    Eternally, I’m intrigued. How does the flight of a ball get us here?
    It’s all deep in the heart, of course. Guys and gals everywhere kick soccer balls. We want to believe, as we struggle through whatever else we’re struggling through, that our guys and gals kick the ball better than their guys and gals. That our colour shirt is worthier and grander than theirs. That someday – maybe – we will prevail.
    “Just yesterday I was in a shopping mall in Texas and it was a hundred degrees outside,” I heard a Dallas fan say on the way to November’s MLS Cup final at BMO. “And now it’s a day later, and I’m freezing cold on the Great Lakes.”
    Fella uproots himself from his life, puts himself on an airplane at considerable expense, and goes marching through a strange, cold city at night. Oh, and his team eventually lost.
    On the other side of the Cup Final coin that night, Toronto and Colorado fans took turns beerily serenading each other at a watering hole in the warehouse district, with great joy and enthusiasm – all because somebody, somewhere, long ago, kicked a ball.
    Well, and good, but we still haven’t figured out “the business side.” Budgets and rules and transfer windows, oh my!
    Somewhere along the way, this kick-the-ball thing got popular with the working man, who was willing to shell out some shillings on a Saturday to watch his team. At multi-billions of dollars annually, soccer remains a fairly modest industry, by international standards, but the global emotional investment far exceeds all combined fortunes the kicking of soccer balls has ever – future, present or past – produced.
    Which means, if you want to be lucky enough to write about all this stuff, you’re likely going to be writing about constitutions and balance sheets as much as sweeper systems or two-man couterbreaks.
    There was a moment, at the end of the MLS Cup match, where no soccer balls were left to be kicked. A team won a trophy, their fans were ecstatic, the television cameras were rolling, sponsor banners lined the field, and everyone in the pressbox was busily banging out whatever take they had on what it meant – not just to the teams or the fans, but to the business.
    Which is deeply odd, if you step back and consider it, because so many of us put our business on hold for a couple of hours each week to watch our teams – our allies, our hopes, our ambitions, our dreams – kick around a soccer ball.
    It is the human condition at its most simple and creative – and most snarled and corporate. Before a professional soccer ball can fly, business have to be incorporated, stadiums have to be built, governments need cajoling, agents and lawyers have to do their thing, salaries have to escalate, and hearts must be broken.
    Then the whistle blows, and the real emotional roller coaster begins.
    And why would a man who, as a young teen, discovered this odd ball-kicking business and decided to tag along, have to write seven stories in a row on soccer administration in Canada in general and Alberta in particular?
    Because someday – along with many, many others writing countless other things – it might actually help lead to a talented lad in a Canada shirt kicking a live ball in a real match at the FIFA World Cup.
    And how much would all our yearning hearts love that?
    Happy holidays to all!
    Onward!

    Guest
    In the past, this award has been strictly a TFC vote but as we've expanded out with CSN this year we've made sure to include a goal of the year for each of Canada's biggest clubs.
    With the help of our writers in each market, and the assistance of a few friends elsewhere, we've selected the best goal by the Vancouver Whitecaps, Montreal Impact and Toronto FC for 2010.
    But, because we like to be definite with our decisions here at CSN - and because nobody likes a three way sister kissing tie - it's up to you to vote for the goal you thought was the best overall.
    Vote in the comments section for your team or, if you're capable of it, the actual best goal of the year. Vote twice if you're so inclined.
    The overall winner will be announced on New Years Day.
    The nominees are ...
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
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    FROM TORONTO
    Chad Barrett for his equalizer in the 79th minute against Montagua, putting Toronto FC up 3-2 on aggregate. The goal itself is nothing all that spectacular - a broken play that happened to fall nicely to his foot - but it assured Toronto's entrance into the group stage of the CONCACAF Champions League - the farthest they'd ever been in the competition.
    ________________________


    FROM MONTREAL
    Rocco Placentino for his left footed volley/thunderbolt against the Austin Aztec. The 30-yard inswinger cross pulls away from Placentino and would have made it difficult enough just to get a touch on, but coupled with how he hits it cooly in stride made this an easy decision for Montreal goal of the year.
    (Start the video at 0:45)
    _____________________

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GisA2YvnAEI
    FROM VANCOUVER
    Ridge Mobulu for his clever footwork along the touchline against the Austin Aztec. One part creative, penetrating run, mixed in with an extraordinary confidence on the ball under pressure and an ability to make several defenders look foolish on the finish, made this Vancouver's goal of the year.
    ___________________
    Now make the call. Did we miss one? Another goal that should have been included?
    What was the Canadian club goal of the year?

    Guest
    For our year-in-review podcast series, we spoke to soccer fans from across the country about their experiences during 2010. A new episode will be released on this site and via our iTunes feed every day, leading up to our own year-in-review special on December 28.
    It's rare that we get to speak to champions on our show. So it was a treat to speak to Jonathan Vos, of Charlottetown, who led Churchill Arms F.C. to the first-ever Challenge Trophy win for a P.E.I.-based team in 2010. Jonathan was also named P.E.I. male player of the year, and opened a new soccer goods store in Halifax (to complement a long-standing location in Charlottetown) this year. Throw in the Canadian national teams and the World Cup and yeah, we had plenty to ask him about.

    Download the episode directly, or subscribe to our podcast on iTunes. For our final fan-based podcast of the series, we finish our west-to-east journey out on The Rock.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    Guest
    The 'If Only Football Was Played On Ice' award is about honouring the workaday guy that gets overlooked because he lacks the flash of the superstars.
    He works hard in every appearance, can throw an elbow as well as he can make a penetrating run up the wing and most of all, he's the kind of guy you'd want to have a beer with.
    Coming in a close second was Vancouver Whitecaps' Terry Dunfield - a guy, who if he had been around for a little while longer, surely would have won this award. He embodies everything we like in footballers who could be hockey stars and is one guy, upon joining MLS next season, we're expecting big things from.
    But, after several heated debates, it was one particular moment that sealed it for the winner. This year's award goes to ...
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    DAN GARGAN
    Mr. Gargan's now famous shirt off celebration gave him the edge over Dunfield in the end. With a schoolboy-like enthusiasm, the Garganator sprinted forty yards down the wing, swinging his jersey wildly above his head like he'd won a championship. It wasn't - just an equalizer against Houston.
    But with strength that can see most any throw-in reach the 18-yard-box, a rib shot that will knock the wind square out of any defender and ability to be immediately likable, Dan Gargan is this year's If Only Football Was Played On Ice winner.
    And, with that, we must insist to the TFC brass reading this (yes, we see your MLSE IPs on here quite a bit) ...
    Don't Release ... The Gargan

    Guest

    Bored? Watch Fever Pitch

    By Guest, in Euro File,

    Hate your family yet? Stuffed with turkey? Looking to fill the time now that the gifts are unwrapped, the food is eaten, and there's literally nothing else to talk to your loved ones about?
    How about a football movie?
    Fever Pitch is the 1997 film about a man's lifelong obsession with the beautiful game, and the way his love of the game puts him at odds with leading a "normal" life. In other words, each and every one of the people who visit this site should be able to relate (each individual's level of obsession may vary).
    And for some inexplicable reason, it's on YouTube in its entirety (below the jump):
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MTuuznJbfE
    It's based on the stellar book by Nick Hornby (author of High Fidelity and About a Boy, among others). I'd highly recommend picking up a copy of the book if possible, as it differs significantly from the film. In fact, it's far superior, but the movie still stands up on its own merits.
    Do not confuse this movie with the 2005 adaptation/abomination about the Boston Red Sox. That one just sucks.

    Guest
    For our year-in-review podcast series, we spoke to soccer fans from across the country about their experiences during 2010. A new episode will be released on this site and via our iTunes feed every day, leading up to our own year-in-review special on December 28.
    You can take the man out of Nova Scotia, but can't take the Nova Scotia out of the man. I'm not sure what that means, but in any event, today's podcast features Cal MacLellan, a Halifax native now living in Toronto, who spent 2010 as a TV colour commentator for the Canadian Soccer League. He tells us about the year that was in the CSL and its potential (or lack thereof) to grow nationally, he muses about whether Halifax is finally ready to build a new stadium, and he tells us about why he feels sorry for poor ol' Julian de Guzman.
    [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
    Download the episode directly, or subscribe to our podcast on iTunes. If you're stupid enough to head to the malls for Boxing Day, be sure to load up your MP3 player with tomorrow's episode first.

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