Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Colorado?s Daniel Winnik, T.J. Galiardi traded to Sharks for Jamie McGinn, prospects

Jamie McGinn was "distraught" after the San Jose Sharks lost to the Minnesota Wild on Sunday night.

Imagine how he feels now that he's no longer a Shark.

McGinn, averaging 12:33 in ice time this season in 61 games, was traded with center Michael Sgarbossa and former Minnesota-Duluth forward Mike Connolly for two solid depth players from the Colorado Avalanche: Forward T.J. Galiardi and left wing Daniel Winnik, along with the seventh-rounder.

Where this should immediately help: On the Sharks' penalty kill.

Winnik was third on the Avs in average shorthanded ice time (3:02) while Galiardi has also seen time on the PK.

McGinn, 23, is an RFA this summer, making $680,000. Winnik and Galiardi are UFAs.

For this trade: Two Milburys.

A good depth move for the Sharks, but McGinn has had a breakout season. We're fans of Galiardi. He's two years removed from a 24-goal season. From Mike Chambers of All Things Avs:

Quick thoughts: McGinn is an up-and-coming youngster, Sgarbossa is tearing it up in the O and Connolly was the best forward for NCAA-champion Minnesota-Duluth last season. Galiardi and Winnik will be missed, no doubt. Great, great guys.

Looking back at this one in a few years, it wouldn't surprise us to see one side as the clear winner.

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Podcast: Free on a Bosman IV

- Jason Davis

The fourth installment of the Free on a Bosman program, enumerated with the classy Roman numeral desigination, is here for your enjoyment.

Jared and I start with the good news and the bad news around the USMNT. Just when Holden gets back, down goes Torres. Gooch is playing well (maybe?), and youngster Tim Ream is mostly not.

We hit MLS topics, including the hypocrisy of DeRo avoiding suspension for his dive, Marquez's comments and suspension, and the state of the playoff race.

Also, Bob Bradley, Michael Bradley, emails, and more.

Be sure you check us out on Twitter for updates. @mfusa @jrodius

The new show also has a Twitter feed @bestsoccershow and a Facebook page, so be sure to follow and like respectively. You're gonna want to. We have stuff to give away.

Please share this link as violently and liberally as you can. New show launches in two weeks following the USMNT game on Saturday, October 8th.


Available through the old MFUSA iTunes feed.

Download directly here.

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Podcast: Free on a Bosman III

The third installment of FoaB has Jason and Jared talking about the rumors surrounding Timmy Chandler, Klinsmann effort to find dual internationals, Jozy, Beasley, a round up of MLS and the playoff race, the MLS A-Team and much more.

Be sure you check us out on Twitter for updates. @mfusa @jrodius

It might be a good idea to check this and this out as well. 

There's date and a name, plus a few places to get connected with the new show before it starts. Go forth and spread the word.




Download the show directly or get it on the MFUSA iTunes feed.

Music:

Segment 1: Summer of the Beatdown (Bru Lei) / CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
Segment 1: Football Boys (Concrete Schoolyard) (My Mind) / CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Segment 2: Hey Young World Instrumental {6th Sense} (6th Sense) / CC BY-NC 3.0
Segment 2: Them Never Love No Bans - DnB Mix (Germany) (Hot Fire) / CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Segment 3: Journey To The Moon (DjCode) / CC BY-NC-ND 3.0

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MLS Talk Podcast : This Week in US Soccer, February 29, 2012

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Floyd Mayweather: Legendary Boxer's Ego Will Continue to Cause Trouble

After Floyd Mayweather made the entire boxing world look silly by requesting more than a 50/50 split in his fight with fellow star Manny Pacquiao, the undefeated champion let his ego get the better of him again.Mayweather has never been accused of using his brain, but the truth of the matter is that the star has gotten more egotistical by the day and his recent Twitter controversy proves it.

After tweeting about New York Knicks star Jeremy Lin last week and saying that the only reason there is hype surrounding him is because he is Asian, the outspoken boxer was not backing off.Mayweather told the New York Daily News about his lack of regret for his tweet and why he thinks what he said was justifiable.

Do I regret what I said? Absolutely not. I stand by what I said and I meant what I said. It’s OK for Miguel Cotto to represent the Puerto Rican fans and represent the Puerto Rican flag. I’m a black American. I believe in supporting my own first. That’s where I come from. They can feel my struggle if they come from the same background that I come from. That’s what I’m going to stand by. It’s so crazy. I’m not racist at all. I have Jewish people that work for me. Dominican, Mexican, Puerto Rican, white people who work for me. One of my best friends, Kip, is a white guy. All-American. That’s my guy.

While there are so many things I want to yell, I feel that UFC President Dana White summed it up perfectly.Mayweather doesn’t see his comment as racist, but most of the normal people in the world don’t think what he said was anywhere near correct or justified. It was flat-out racist.

The problem is that when a guy like Mayweather, who already has a severe Napoleon complex, gets too much power, he lets it go to his head. For years, Mayweather has thought he was above everyone and could say and do as he pleases.

The backlash against him proves that thesis was wrong.

With an ego that will never cease to amaze the fans and the media, you can expect this self-destructive behavior until we see a story about the former champion declaring bankruptcy in 15 years.

 

Check back for more on Boxing as it comes, and check out Bleacher Report’s Boxing Page to get your fill of all things from the squared circle. For more on boxing, check out Ring Rust Radio for all of the hot topics.

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Chicago White Sox: Jerry Reinsdorf Offers Alternate Slogan: "Don't Write Us Off"

Chicago White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf coined what be considered the team's rallying cry this spring when his message to the fans heading into the 2012 season consisted of four words: "Don't write us off."

Sounds good to me. It beats the heck out of "Appreciate The Game."

Reinsdorf was being interviewed by Chuck Garfein of CSNChicago.com when the subject of Chicago's chances in the Central Division came up. Detroit appears to be the front-runner for the division title, but the White Sox self-described check writer had this to say:

“Don’t write us off. Nobody thought we’d win the World Series in 2005, but we did. There are years when we think we’re great and we’re bad. I mean the funny thing about this game is that you can’t figure it out.”

Reinsdorf is correct, as we found out last season. The "All In" White Sox failed to take hold of the division and wound up finishing third behind the Tigers and Indians in what was a disappointing 2011. 

Sure, Detroit is the odds-on favorite in the Central. That doesn't mean the White Sox aren't going to have 162 games to say different.

“We would have won the division in my opinion last year if everybody just had normal average year," Reinsdorf went on to say. "That goes the same this year. If people have their normal average year, we should be able to contend.”

Again, there is logic in Reinsdorf's statement. There is also a good degree of optimism.

I remember looking over the White Sox opening day lineup in 2005 and not being overly impressed. The only Chicago baseball championship in most of our lifetimes wasn't something we could see coming.

Of course, we've all been sucked in before, with last season as the most glaring example. The dropoff of Adam Dunn and Alex Rios is fresh in our minds. It's hard to seriously consider the notion that this team could contend. That doesn't mean they won't.

A lot of things would have to come together for this White Sox squad to be a factor down the stretch. That's a whole other article, which I plan of unveiling later next month.

The point here is that rather than concede the division and convince fans that merely enjoying the games at U.S. Cellular is enough, Reinsdorf's mantra at least offers the promise of a team that is going to go out, play hard and let the chips fall where they may.

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With new contract behind him, Dwayne De Rosario looks ahead with D.C. United

D.C. holds Dwayne De Rosario in high regard. How high?

?As far as I am concerned,? club president Kevin Payne said Tuesday, ?Dwayne is the most accomplished professional athlete in Washington, D.C. ? actually by a pretty considerable margin."

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the making of pelada

the filmmaker on a global journey and the fight to make sure you see it
—-
You’ve probably heard of the soccer documentary Pelada, and probably wished it had been you who made it. If not the travel alone, than how about the film? To have that document for the future–stories for the grandkids–and [...]

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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

the making of pelada

the filmmaker on a global journey and the fight to make sure you see it
—-
You’ve probably heard of the soccer documentary Pelada, and probably wished it had been you who made it. If not the travel alone, than how about the film? To have that document for the future–stories for the grandkids–and [...]

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In which Nashville traded a first-rounder for Paul Gaustad

After there was chatter about a trade to the Detroit Red Wings, Buffalo Sabres center Paul Gaustad instead was traded to their Central Division rivals, the Nashville Predators.

Nice player, that Gaustad. Truculent. Defensively sound. Great for depth up the middle. A $2.3 million cap hit that expires after this season, as he's an unrestricted free-agent.

But for a first-round pick?

As reported by The Tennessean, Nashville sent a first-round pick in the 2012 draft to Buffalo in exchange for Gaustad and a fourth-round pick in the 2013 draft.

From Buffalo Rising:

At the end of his term in Buffalo, though, Gaustad may be best remembered for what he didn't do than what he did. He was the 'toughest guy' on the ice when Bruins tough guy Milan Lucic ran Sabres goalie Ryan Miller in the open ice and Gaustad, like the rest of the Sabres, responded with nothing.

Again, this isn't to say that Gaustad isn't a tough player, or that he won't be an asset for the Predators. GM David Poile is going for it this season with his most aggressive moves ? Andrei Kostitsyn, Hal Gill and now Gaustad ? but the price for that last one is significant.

We'll give this trade Three Milburys.

The Predators fans will honk for the Goose. But after seeing Sammy Pahlsson move for a pair of 4s, seeing Gaustad (and a fifth) go for a first is a little stunning.

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Puck Daddy chats with ?Goon? star Liev Schreiber about honoring Bob Probert, politics of hockey fighting

After the handlebar mustache, the most immediately memorable aspect of Ross "The Boss" Rhea in the new movie "Goon" is his voice: The deliberate, rumbling cadence of a take-no-crap hockey brawler from Newfoundland, emanating from an occasional sly grin.

It's the voice adopted by Liev Schreiber, who plays Rhea and provides the film with an idol and inevitable antagonist for Seann William Scott's Doug Glatt. His gravitas balances out the cruder (and hilarious) aspects of the script by Jay Baruchel and Evan Goldberg, which chronicles the rise of a hockey enforcer from bar bouncer to minor league player.

This isn't the first time Liev Schreiber's voice has elevated a hockey production: His voiceover work for HBO Sports on projects like "Broad Street Bullies" and "24/7" is as vital to their success as any visual element or editing.

Schreiber, a New York Rangers fan, spoke with us on Friday about making "Goon", his inspirations for the role and the politics of hockey fighting. Enjoy!

Q. You were a hockey fan before this film, but the producers had you learn how to play hockey for "Goon." How did learning hockey inform your fandom?

SCHREIBER: Until you've been on the ice and played the game, I don't think you can really comprehend why people go so crazy for it, although there are probably millions and millions of hockey fans that have never laced up skates in their lives.

There's a very particular joy that comes from moving around the ice that quickly and playing the game. It's a really special feeling.

You watch a hockey game, and the hand-eye coordination and the speed is really miraculous; how those guys track the puck alone, just following it with their eyes. They're thinking 30 seconds ahead of every play, knowing where other players are going to be. It amazes me.

Which NHL players inspired your character and performance in the film?

I watched a lot of film, talked with a lot of guys about the game. Guys who caught my attention were guys like Dave Schultz, Brashear, Laraque. But I got the most out of watching and reading Bob Probert's book. He wasn't a guy the character was really based on, but was certainly on my mind while I was playing the part.

There's an aspect of world weariness to Rhea about being the heavyweight champ that was shared by Probert during his NHL career.

Absolutely. I don't it was just that. I think it was also the fact that Probert was a great hockey player, overall. Because he had a big boulder on his back, he was only perceived as an enforcer. But this was a guy who, until the very end of his career, was constantly evolving his game. I think that was an issue for his own life.

There is one other clue that it was Probie that I was after: The taped wrists. He used to always tape his wrists. I guess I was going to the really obscure hockey fans on that one.

Well, that's one of the joys of the flick. There are so many Easter eggs and little touches that speak to hockey fans through the movie.

I thought there were so many elements that were so realistic, and the choices that they made that weren't so realistic were just to promote the comedy, and I thought they worked too. Like the fact that Doug could make it as far as he did in the minor leagues without being able to skate is just hilarious to me.

The facial hair that your character wore; where did that come from?

It seemed pretty important to the narrative that there was a sense that the new guard was taking over from the old guard. Having narrated "The Broad Street Bullies" on HBO, that was certainly on my mind. Dave Schultz in particular. I wanted some of the older hockey fans to feel like they were being represented.

And I also liked that caveman element about it. There was definitely something pass� about the mullet and the handlebar mustache.

The scene with you and Seann in the restaurant was like a hockey-centric version of Pacino/DeNiro in "Heat." I also think it presented an idea ? that the crowds and media just want you to bleed ?� that can be applied to other occupations. Do you see any correlation between actors and hockey enforcers?

Absolutely. There are definitely parallels for me as an aging actor that were useful to me playing an aging hockey player. But I think the bigger, more impactful point of that scene for me ? and because I had Probert on my mind when we were shooting this ? was that his younger player was saying this very redemptive thing to this older player. That you're not just a goon, you're not just an enforcer, you're a hockey player. For all that you've given to the game, that's what you get back ? your passion for the game. And that's why you do it.

I thought that was such a smart element for Jay to include because the events of the last couple of years have not been kind to the game.

The film does come from a very specific point of view, sympathetic to hockey enforcers but supportive of hockey fighting. It seemed like a brave choice given that climate in the NHL when it comes to player safety and fighting's future.

Ironically, none of that stuff was in the media when we were making this film, but what Jay and Mike have created is a great response to it. That at the end of the day, it's about the character it takes to play this game and the contributions that these guys have made to the game.

If we're talking about those deaths last summer, those deaths were due to ? from what I gathered ? depression and abuse of pain medication. What "Goon" leaves me with is a very redemptive message about the players and the celebration of their contribution to the game.

I think it's something that might have cheered a couple of those guys up.

What's more challenging: Fighting Stifler at center ice or fighting Wolverine in a barn? (Schreiber played Sabretooth in "Wolverine.")

[Laughs] I've actually had some time to think about this question. As challenging as it was to fight Seann William Scott, [and] ice is the key part of that, there was a lot of wire work in that "Wolverine" fight and we rehearsed it for about two months. I'm afraid Wolverine wins this one.

Special effects? So you weren't really on top of a nuclear reactor fighting Deadpool at the end of the film?

No.

Jay Baruchel said your voice-over work on HBO is as much as performance as anything you do on-screen. What's your approach to doing something like 24/7?

I have to give all credit to a guy named Aaron Cohen, who's the head writer for most of the HBO Sports shows and wrote those "24/7" pieces. The reality is that I go in there, I read the script and then I go home. The work that the producers and Aaron do to make that language sync and sing with the images is incredible. They have a four-day turnaround.

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Was Maple Leafs GM Brian Burke?s inaction at the NHL Trade Deadline admirable?

My father has played the lottery every week for the last three decades. He wins a little here and a little there, not nearly enough to justify the investment. But he has an unwavering mantra about his habit, borrowed from the New Jersey Lottery's tagline:

"Ya gotta be in it to win it."

That's often how I feel about the NHL Trade Deadline. If you're close to a playoff berth and clearly need a few pieces to solidify that, then ante up, right? Become one of the Final 16, see where it all leads.

The Leafs begin play on Tuesday three points out of the No. 8 seed in the Eastern Conference, although a 2-7-1 streak and systemic problems in goal make the hole seem deeper. The goaltending wasn't addressed at the NHL Trade Deadline; neither was any other part of the lineup.

Said GM Brian Burke in his post-deadline debriefing of the media:

"Panic can't be part of your vocabulary if you're a general manager," he said. "If you want to win a championship, that can't be part of it. Setbacks for 10 days or 12 days, that can't be how you guide the ship. You can't change your course because you have 10 bad days out of 180 or 190 days in the season.

"You can't. And I don't. I still believe that this group can get it back on the rails."

GM Brian Burke, historically the Trade Deadline's most vehement detractor, bristled even harder at this year's extraordinary price tags for players. (And by that we mean a first-round pick for Paul Gaustad.) Yet despite that, Burke also didn't want to be a seller, despite overtures for players ranging from Mikail Grabovski to Luke Schenn.

"Ya gotta be in it to win it," goes the saying. But in Burke's case, there are reasons why not pushing for deadline talent acquisitions was admirable.

Here's JP Nikota of Pension Plan Puppets:

I think I'm in good company when I say that Brian Burke being relatively quiet at the deadline is a good thing for the Leafs. It does, of course, mean that Ron Wilson's head is going to roll if/when this team doesn't make the playoffs. Burke believes in this group, and if Wilson can't take them to at least a first-round exit, I think we all know what's going to happen.

Of course, if they don't make the playoffs ? here's Marcus Hondro of Digital Journal:

If they fail to get into the Stanley Cup playoffs, not making a deal at this trade deadline may be the swan song for Brian Burke. Those are the stakes. Burke knows that and could have dealt away the future for a veteran or two. But he has too much integrity, and too much hockey sense. Given the market, the fact he handed the reigns to his players will cause criticism with every loss from hereon in. But he knew that before he took his hand off the trigger.

"It is different here. And I'm not blaming the media or being critical," Burke said Monday. "That's life. It's part of why people love this team. It's the coverage. It's part of the reason why it's so special to play here. But there are times in the year where it's a big millstone."

Dave Feschuk of the Toronto Star on Burke vs. the Milestone:

Call his theory addition by subtraction of distraction. The GM likened the incessant trade rumours that surrounded his club for most of the past couple of months to "a millstone" around his players' necks. He called Toronto "the hardest market to play in from that perspective." He said he and his staff had even talked of instituting a 10-day trade freeze in the lead-up to the deadline to relieve the Leafs of the stresses of TradeCentre. (And as he spoke you could almost see the lightbulb ignite above the heads of the all-sports TV executives who have turned trade talk, or lack thereof, into a mini-industry: Why not have two deadline days every February? Burkie's day followed by everyone else's ? ratings gold!)

? If he was essentially absolving his employees of the skid that had seen them fall to 10th place in the East heading into Monday night's action, he was also sending along an implied message to the denizens of the dressing room: Specifically, that the time for excuses has passed. Leaf fans can only hope the head coach will also take the hint.

If the skaters play better unburdened and if Reimer finds some semblance of consistency, the Leafs can make the playoffs. And of they do, then Burke deserves credit for not selling off assets or overpaying for others.

But here's the thing: Even if they don't, Burke has insulated himself from criticism in some ways. It's admirable that he put the responsibility back on the players. It's admirable that he isn't going to move an asset for the future to scrape and claw into the postseason just to save his or Ron Wilson's jobs ? despite that being the logical thing to do for the team and its fans.

Above all else, there's the notion that the Leafs could do something dramatic this summer, as the Rick Nash Derby extends to the NHL Draft. That even if this season yet again falls short of a playoff berth, there's still hope on the horizon.

From Jeff Blair of the Globe & Mail:

Burke couched his notions with the caveat that he wanted to make sure his hands weren't tied by imposing his own deadline ? in effect, taking his ball and going home, to hell with the rest of you. For that, Leafs Nation ought to take comfort, because Burke's homemade rules too often mitigate the financial clout this organization ought to wield. Really, isn't the point to try and screw over the other guy, not be your brother's keeper?

So, too, is there comfort that Rick Nash is still with the Columbus Blue Jackets because Burke's chances of acquiring the power forward are much greater in the summer than at the deadline. It's going to take three or four high-quality assets to get Nash, who is tailor-made for the Leafs, and putting a package together that addresses all of Columbus's needs is easier in the summer when Burke has time to fill in any gaps that might be created. Besides, if the Leafs continue their slide, Toronto's first-round draft pick this year becomes an even more valuable asset to the Blue Jackets.

The last time the Toronto Maple Leafs appeared in an NHL playoff game was May 4, 2004. Bryan McCabe led the team in ice time. Brian Leetch was a minus-2. Joe Nieuwendyk was at center, seven years before he was named GM of the Dallas Stars. Ed Belfour was in goal, seven years before he was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame.

The last time the Leafs were in the playoffs, Rick Nash was an NHL sophomore with a career-high 41 goals.

Right now, Burke's inaction is admirable. But it can't last if Nash is available in the summer, and would be willing to become a Leaf. Which, based on his previous decisions to remain anonymous in Columbus, may not be a guarantee.

But we know Burke will be in on it. To win it.

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Wednesday kickaround: Oguchi Onyewu?s knee injury, Charlie Davies and Sochaux, Argentina vs. Brazil, UEFA Champions League TV, D.C. United?s Hamdi Salihi and cows

*Juergen Klinsmann will soon unveil his U.S. national team roster for the Italy friendly next Wednesday in Genoa. One player definitely not on it is defender Oguchi Onyewu, who will be sidelined at least two months after injuring his knee in a Sporting Lisbon match over the weekend.

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Tom Gilbert comes home, as Minnesota deals Nick Schultz to Edmonton

Edmonton Oilers defenseman Tom Gilbert is a famous Minnesotan in hockey. Now, he's a member of the Minnesota Wild, dealt hours before the NHL Trade Deadline for defenseman Nick Schultz.

Gilbert brings an offensive element to the Wild blueline that they lost in Marek Zidlicky ? not when he was traded, but when he stopped being Marek Zidlicky. The former Wisconsin Badger averaged 0.41 points per game in his career, with 17 in 47 games this season for the Oil.

In Schultz, the Oilers get a much more physical D-man and a shot-blocker (121). Bryan Reynolds of Hockey Wilderness didn't want to see him go:

Russo mentioned Nick Schultz as a possibility to be moved. While some feel this would not be a major loss to the team, what Schultz brings to the table is far beyond the score sheet. He is a prime example of why stats cannot always explain the game, or who is good at the game. A quiet, rock steady D-man who makes few mistakes, and is a constant minute muncher? Yeah. That's a loss if you trade him away.

One point of embarrassment for the Wild, according to Michael Russo: "Nick Schultz wasn't even told by Wild that he was traded before Oilers tweeted it. Pretty ticked off organization here." Russo also reports Wild players were as stunned as Schultz was.

We're going to give this deal Two Milburys.

Both players are signed through 2014, but Gilbert has the higher cap hit ($4 million to $3.5 million). The Oilers could win this one down the line.

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LOOKING FOR LOVE AT MLS CUP
Ratings for MLS Cup plunged 44 percent from last year and grabbed just 748,000 viewers, a near record low. It’s almost as if ESPN knew what was coming–the game, the crowd, the referee, the weather, the ratings. Why else would they not promo the game during their international friendly double-header [...]

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Monday, February 27, 2012

Expansion and the MLS Meta

- Jason Davis

In 2011, after Seattle and Philly and Portland and Vancouver and Montreal and the wave that came before them (yes, San Jose counts) and all of the talk of candidates and fees and ownership groups and stadium plans and color schemes and whether names should be "historical" (since 1975!) or "euro" or plain old American city-and-nickname, I'm tired of expansion. Or, rather, I'm not tired of expansion, I'm over it as a major part of Major League Soccer's future, which means I'm over writing about it. Actually, I'm almost certain that my attention has shifted because there are now enough teams and enough stability that MLS has hardened around the edges and has the consistency of a "real" league.

But the expansion talk continues, whether I remain actively engaged or not (my interest, surprisingly, has no bearing on the rolling expansion train or the discussion surrounding it...who knew). The country is big, MLS will continue to be in the growth phase - in one area or fifty - forever, and there is STILL no team in the Southeast. Oh, and MLSHQ continues to publicly covet another franchise in New York, either because they themselves are sick of having to trek over to Jersey to see a game, or...no, that's probably it. I hear the PATH trains are a disaster.

The latest development in the expansion story is that MLS has no immediate plans to grow beyond the 20 clubs the league will have once Montreal joins in 2012 and someone in New York who was lucky enough to have never met Bernie Madoff finds $100 million to invest. This has come as a shock to some because stopping at 20 only makes sense if MLS is A. retaining the balanced schedule (they're not) B. tired of expansion fees (doubtful) or C. convinced that there are no more cities ready for professional soccer (maybe, but unlikely). Suddenly everything we know about MLS 2.0 is threatened by public statements of conservatism. If MLS isn't expanding, what does that mean exactly?

Richard Whittall, the newly minted editor at The Score's Footy Blog and a top bloke, lays it out pretty simply in a manner I might have had I thought to tackle the story first and wasn't tied up doing other things:

First, no more rotating conversation about viable American (or Canadian) soccer markets, so that MLS can deal with working with its existing markets, and shoring up some of the weaker ones. It gives a sense of fixed identity to the league?this is it, for better or for worse. A little familiarity goes a long way, and as Lorne Michaels apparently said once: ?the longer you?re here, the longer you?re here.? Halting expansion seals off MLS and gives the league a sense of permanence.

Richard's point about too much of the coverage of MLS being "meta" is a good one, and although it cuts me personally as this blog was launched to tackle many of the very meta issues he identifies, pushing topics like "who's next" to the periphery is crucial to the graduation of MLS from novelty level to full and tenured member of major professional sports leagues. The sooner MLS can be just about the games, the players, and the coaches (with the occasional distraction of the latest best-small-soccer-stadium-in-the-world opening), the better. Permanence isn't awarded after a certain number of years or teams or even fans is reached; it's an entirely subjective characteristic that only takes hold as a widespread feeling at some indeterminable point when the greater culture finally takes the league's existence for granted. That might require an older generation of sportswriters/editors/talking heads to recede into their retirements where they can't influence an easily manipulated public, or it might just be something that comes when MLS pauses to tidy up the house already built instead of worrying about the next new addition.

Which, judging by the attendance issues in Columbus and Dallas and the (still) unresolved stadium situation in DC (among other things), MLS should do. The NBC TV contract represents an opportunity to buckle down and generate genuine interest in the sport beyond the hardcore locals it has already attracted. Expansion should and must be commensurate with the ability of teams to find and pay for decent talent. That probably means stopping at 20 teams, at least for now.

One less meta issue to bat around and speculate on means less fodder American soccer blogs that can't help themselves. And that's a good thing. MLS still, and probably will for the foreseeable future, feels like more of a counterculture movement than a actual part of the fabric of sport in the United States and Canada. That might give us a greater feeling of solidarity and uniqueness as fans, but it remains a barrier to MLS becoming the legitimate and accepted league it hopes to be.

As long as we're talking about the way the league is run, where it might pop up next, how to pay expensive names to play here, etc., etc. more than we talk about the narratives playing out on the field, MLS won't just be niche, it will feel ephemeral.

--

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Puck Daddy?s 2012 NHL Trade Deadline Live Blog, Hour 7

Puck Daddy's all-day trade deadline coverage rolls on. We're publishing fresh posts every hour with breaking news, fresh rumors and "live blog" analysis. Please share what you've heard and what you think will happen down in the comments. Read Hour 6 here. Be sure to also check out the�Chatter Box for the Twitter feeds of top insiders and beat writers all in one spot. Watch�Sportsnet's live stream here.

3:24 p.m. EST -- Nashville stays active and acquires Paul Gaustad from the Buffalo Sabres and a fourth-round pick for a first rounder. More on this soon.

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3:15 p.m. EST -- Mark Spector of Sportsnet reports that big John Scott is headed to Broadway after the Chicago Blackhawks dealt him to the Rangers for a fifth-round pick.

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3:02 p.m. EST -- According to Nick Kypreos of Sportsnet, the Boston Bruins have acquired Brian Rolston from the New York Islanders. Rolston was placed on waivers over the weekend and cleared at noon ET today. Arthur Staple of Newsday adds that the Islanders also are including Mike Mottau and will receive Yannick Riendeau and Marc Cantin.

The last-minute deals keep trickling in.�RDS reports that the Minnesota Wild have dealt Greg Zanon to the Boston Bruins.

One Milbury head. The Bruins add some veteran depth that could help them some playoff time, while the Islanders shed a pair of expiring contracts and grab two prospects out of the deal. McKenzie reports the Wild receive Steve Kampfer.

And finally, Rick Nash is staying according to Scott Howson, via Portzline. Wysh chimes in here.

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2:47 p.m. EST -- Remember: deals can still be announced after the 3 p.m. EST deadline as they could get held up in the trade call line with the NHL.

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2:40 p.m. EST -- Harrison opines on the Sammy Pahlsson deal.

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2:35 p.m. EST -- Wysh on the Winnik/Galiardi deal.

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2:26 p.m. EST -- Mike Commodore, a fellow ginger, clearly ready for his arrival in Tampa Bay:

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2:15 p.m. EST -- Blackhawks GM Stan Bowman trades with his former assistant GM Kevin Cheveldayoff as TSN reports that Johnny Oduya has been traded from the Winnipeg Jets for a second and third round pick in 2013. After picking up Grant Clitsome off waivers earlier, the writing was on the wall for the pending UFA Oduya. With Clitsome having another year on his deal, Oduya quickly became expendable.

Two Milburys here. Giving up two picks for Oduya, who's not of the "missing piece" variety seems to be a big price to pay.

In which Nashville traded a first-rounder for Paul Gaustad

After there was chatter about a trade to the Detroit Red Wings, Buffalo Sabres center Paul Gaustad instead was traded to their Central Division rivals, the Nashville Predators.

Nice player, that Gaustad. Truculent. Defensively sound. Great for depth up the middle. A $2.3 million cap hit that expires after this season, as he's an unrestricted free-agent.

But for a first-round pick?

As reported by The Tennessean, Nashville sent a first-round pick in the 2012 draft to Buffalo in exchange for Gaustad and a fourth-round pick in the 2013 draft.

From Buffalo Rising:

At the end of his term in Buffalo, though, Gaustad may be best remembered for what he didn't do than what he did. He was the 'toughest guy' on the ice when Bruins tough guy Milan Lucic ran Sabres goalie Ryan Miller in the open ice and Gaustad, like the rest of the Sabres, responded with nothing.

Again, this isn't to say that Gaustad isn't a tough player, or that he won't be an asset for the Predators. GM David Poile is going for it this season with his most aggressive moves ? Andrei Kostitsyn, Hal Gill and now Gaustad ? but the price for that last one is significant.

We'll give this trade Three Milburys.

The Predators fans will honk for the Goose. But after seeing Sammy Pahlsson move for a pair of 4s, seeing Gaustad (and a fifth) go for a first is a little stunning.

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