Who else is there? He's pretty good, Toronto played Friday vs. most MLS teams played on Saturday and I don't really think there's a huge difference between him and other MLS similar age group goalkeepers.
I'm assuming Horvath will travel to Europe to play in those two friendlies/he didn't even make the 18 for Brugge most of the year.Horvath has an extremely higher ceiling, he’s in camp, and he’s trying to get a move to a new club. Seems obvious
If ur gonna pull someone from MLS, it should be Steffen
Mckennie is basically our Naingollan
I'm assuming Horvath will travel to Europe to play in those two friendlies/he didn't even make the 18 for Brugge most of the year.
We have probably played against that exact keeper as the Bolivian National Team are probably the only 23 Bolivians well off enough to afford a copy of fifa and an internet connection slightly better than a potatoHuman controlled pro clubs keeper right there
My analysis so far - Bolivia is really bad
Hamid has been poor
It's 7 year old RUSS now? I think I'd rather have it remain 7 year old Lebron and 7 year old Randy Moss
I mean, why not all three?
Also, I forgot my annual complaint about US soccer culture. Thanks to Football Manager, I found out the other day that two neighbor kids (immigrants from Nigeria to Oklahoma for some reason) who lived in the house behind ours when I was in high school are both professional soccer players now.
One of them just recently went home to the OKC Energy, and while I was looking them up I saw that the OKC team has *five* different hooligan/supporter associations, all with stupid Oklahoma references in their names.
Why? Why is this a thing? And is the answer "because the Brits do it?"
'White soccer teams don't pay upfront': how race unlevelled US playing fields
A few years ago, Exequiel Soltero wanted to rent two soccer fields in a well-to-do Seattle suburb. Finding places for his Latino immigrant soccer league to play matches had become quite a challenge: the area’s soccer fields were always snatched up by wealthy, mostly white clubs who had the money and expertise to navigate the city’s leasing process. It was a complaint he often heard from other clubs in Seattle’s lower income communities.
They felt shut out.
So Soltero was thrilled when he found two fields that were clean, well-maintained and available at the times he needed. But when he called the local recreation scheduler, he was told the fields had been rented. Suspicious, he drove to the park on the day he had requested – and found the fields empty. They were available. Just not, it seemed, to Mexican immigrants.
“I went to his office and confronted him,” Soltero says. “I said: I went by the fields and I stayed there for over an hour and nobody was there.”
The official eventually leased Soltero the field, but only after demanding he pay the rental fee upfront. Soltero says he was also asked to provide a list of the players along with their home addresses to prove they were “local”.
Sitting at a table in the Mexican restaurant he owns in the mostly African-American and immigrant Seattle neighbourhood of Dunlap, Soltero still seethes.
“If you were a white team they wouldn’t ask you for addresses,” he says. “I don’t think the white teams have to pay upfront.”
Why? Why is this a thing? And is the answer "because the Brits do it?"
“You don’t make wholesale changes based on the ball being 2 inches wide or 2 inches in,” said then–U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati on the night of the collapse, referencing Dempsey’s near equalizer.