вторник, 30 ноября 2010 г.

American Exports: Spector, West Ham rout Man. United

AMSTERDAM -- A pair of Americans clocked in for midweek cup duty in England, with West Ham United's Jonathan Spector stunning former employers Manchester United with two first half goals in a 4-0 Carling Cup quarterfinal rout at Upton Park.

Given a rare start in midfield, the US defender nodded home a chipped feed midway through the opening stanza to break the ice. Then, eight minutes before halftime, Spector doubled the hosts' lead with a once-interrupted solo run and finish.

The American, who has struggled mightily for playing time this term, was given an"8"rating by Sky Sports for his Tuesday night performance in the place of suspended captain Scott Parker.

Meanwhile, Frank Simek went the distance at right back as Carlisle United reached the Northern final of the Johnstone's Paint Trophy with a 3-1 defeat of his visiting old club, Sheffield Wednesday.

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понедельник, 29 ноября 2010 г.

American Exports: Loan offers enticing Milan's Onyewu

AMSTERDAM— Outcast AC Milan defender Oguchi Onyewu could reverse course and accept a winter loan spell for the sake of more playing time, MLSsoccer.com has learned.

Until now, the US star had refused repeated offers of more playing time elsewhere, but sources close to the situation indicate that loan offers may force a decision from Onyewu soon.

Though the center back's agent would not confirm the change in attitude toward a stint away from San Siro, he did admit to taking several recent enquiries around Europe.

“There's a lot of interest from clubs wanting to take him on loan,” Lyle Yorks told MLSsoccer.com."It's something, in the coming weeks, that I think he's going to make a decision on it."

Various reports have Palermo, Rangers and former club Standard Liège making loan offers for Onyewu. Italian tabloids have also linked his name with Bari, Chievo, Fiorentina and Parma in recent months. FC Cologne and Wolfsburg were also briefly mentioned as potential suitors in Germany during the fall.

Nevertheless, Yorks says his client would not want to stray too far from Milan.

"There's interest in all those countries,"said the agent."But his first preference would be to stay in Italy."

Having missed a large part of last season to a knee injury, Onyewu has struggled mightily for playing time with Milan. He made but one Champions League sub appearances last term and new manager Massimiliano Allegri has yet to call on the American.

Last summer, Onyewu was the target of widespread loan interest, but opted to fight for a place at Milan. The 28-year-old is contracted to the Rossoneri until the summer of 2013.


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пятница, 26 ноября 2010 г.

'Caps keep it in house, add 3 more to roster

VANCOUVER– The Vancouver Whitecaps' inaugural MLS roster continued to take shape on Friday with the club announcing the signings of Philippe Davies, Wes Knight and Jay Nolly from their USSF-D2 roster.

Davies becomes the club’s first ever homegrown player. The 19-year-old midfielder was part of the Whitecaps FC Residency Program from 2007 to 2009 before being called up to the Whitecaps’ USSF-D2 first team last season. The native of Longueuil, Quebec, also recently participated in a training camp for Canada’s U-23national team.

Fans will be happy to see Knight join the MLS roster after the defender won the club’s"Fan Favorite"award in 2010. The native of Easley, S.C., became a staple of the team’s back line the past two seasons, starting 69 of his 72 appearances. He was also a finalist for USL-1 Rookie of the Year in 2009 after registering a league-leading eight assists.

Nolly will be looking to translate three productive seasons in the second division into a starting role in MLS next season. The 28-year-old backstopped the Whitecaps to the 2008 USL-1 championship, followed by a return to the finals in 2009, and this past season he was named USSF-D2 Goalkeeper of the Year. The native of Littleton, Colo., holds the club record for consecutive matches played with 78, and is second in career shutouts with 41.

The trio join Jay DeMerit,Joe Cannon,Atiba Harris,Jonathan Leathers,Shea SalinasandJohn Thorringtonon the Whitecaps FC 2011 MLS roster.

The announcement coincided with the Grand Opening of the new Whitecaps FC team store located in Metropolis at Metrotown in Burnaby, British Columbia.

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четверг, 25 ноября 2010 г.

Alvarez: RSL fits my style of play

SANDY, Utah—Real Salt Lakebraced for the worst on Wednesday, assuming they would lose two important players in Wednesday’s expansion draft

They did indeed lose two, but neither was a major blow, andRSLeven managed to pick up a new weapon before the day was done.

"I can't believe I'm saying this, but I think we're better than we were at the beginning of the day,” RSL general manager Garth Lagerwey reportedly told Michael Lewis of theSalt Lake Tribune.“We lost {Robbie Findley} who wasn't coming back, and we lost {David Horst}, who didn't play a minute for us last year."

The newly acquiredArturo Alvarez, who was picked by Portland and then traded to RSL in exchange for a second round pick in the 2011 SuperDraft, has been on RSL’s radar for some time. According to Lagerwey, RSL wanted Alvarez in 2008, when the El Salvador international joined San Jose, but couldn’t afford the price at the time.

The eight-year veteran is still just 25, and after bouncing around some, the move to Rio Tinto Stadium presents a new opportunity within a team that values the skillful ball-handling and attack-first mentality Alvarez has always had.

“I think Salt Lake has the best style of soccer in this league,” Alvarez told MLSsoccer.com on Wednesday. “They have really good technical players, very skillful players. They keep the ball really well, so I think that fits my style of play. Obviously my experience is running at people, goingat people one-on-one. I’m very attacking-minded.”

Alvarez has generally played well against RSL. This season, he scored an 88th-minute equalizer in an Open Cup match that RSL won in penalties. In 2009, he struck a long-distance Goal of the Year candidate against RSL.

It remains to be seen where Alvarez will slot in. He’s mostly played on the flank, either side, but has also played as withdrawn striker on occasion.

“I consider out wide on the flank my best position,” Alvarez said. “But I’m going to come into training camp, and whatever positions that the coaching staff needs from me I’m willing to attempt that, and just work hard and have fun.”


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среда, 24 ноября 2010 г.

American Exports: IU alum Ackley to Czech league

AMSTERDAM– Former Indiana University ace Brian Ackley is set to ink a two-year deal with Czech top-flighters FK Pribram on Thursday, MLSsoccer.com has learned.

The 24-year-old North Carolina native, who played mostly in midfield with the Hoosiers, will be counted on by manager Roman Nádvorník to bolster the suburban Prague club's strike stable.

"What we've talked about is, yes, I will absolutely be able to compete for a starting position and playing forward,"Ackley told MLSsoccer.com by phone from the Czech Republic."They play a 4-4-2 and they see me as more of a target forward."

After spending some time with New Zealand league outfits Auckland City and Team Wellington last season, Ackley began a trial trail at Polish top division club Arka Gdynia last month that eventually led him to Pribram.

"I was in New Zealand and had an opportunity to go to Poland, went there and it didn't really work out,"he offered."I went to Holland and was training with Sparta Rotterdam. From there, I got a trial here."

Pribram– 11-time Czech champs and 1967 European Cup semifinalists once known as Dukla Prague – are currently the lowest-scoring side in the Gambrinus Liga with just 11 goals in 17 games.

"They've been having some troubles scoring goals,"said Ackley, who led the Big 10 tourney champs in scoring as a sophomore in 2006."They are looking for me to come in and have a big impact."

The Americans is eager to test himself against the rough-and-tumble defenses of a league known for exporting big strikers.

"I'm absolutely ecstatic right now,"stated Ackley."Every place I've been is a different style of soccer, from New Zealand to Poland to Holland to here. Here it is definitely a fast, physical style of soccer. I'm very excited to get started and I'm feeling confident in myself. I'm ready to get in some games and see how I fare."

The Gambrinus Liga has begun its extended midseason hibernation, with Pribram 12th, three points above the relegation zone. Ackley will join up with his teammates for midseason camp in January, with the club set to resume its league slate by hosting fifth-place Mladá Boleslav on Feb. 26.

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вторник, 23 ноября 2010 г.

Postcard from Europe: Dempsey keeps on fighting

AMSTERDAM — Given leave from international duty last week by US national team coach Bob Bradley, Fulham attacker Clint Dempsey enjoyed some rare rest and relaxation away from a match schedule filled with gripping contests that go down to the final whistle.

If you're unsure whether that was a reference to his outings with the national team or the heavy grind that is the life of a Premier League ace, don't feel bad. For MC Deuce, these beats rock more alike than you'd generally think.

Fulham life is and has been full of meaningful games, consistently tight scrapes, the odd glimpse of championship glory and hope for another chance at it. He is often happily shuffled around the formation, but always can be found somewhere on the field when the chips are down.

That description not only aptly covers his USMNT experience, it also pretty well sums up his time with theNew England Revolution. Between a pair of MLS Cup heartbreakers, successful relegation battles, a Confederations Cup roller coaster that ended with a final collapse and a loss in the first ever Europa League final, surely there are few people out there who could best Dempsey's knowledge of nail-biters – or about striving for more.

Keeping It Close

On the back of dramatic runs in the 2009 Confederations Cup and the 2010 World Cup, Dempsey and his US teammates have been lauded for their character and their"never-say-die"attitude. But for Dempsey, nothing changes in the drama department when the American is stationed near London's West End theatre district.

In fact, before being ambushed 4-1 by Manchester City this past weekend, Fulham had spent exactly 46 minutes of game time in 13 league matches with a score differential of more than one. The one time they did manage to build a multi-goal lead, it came courtesy of a first-half Dempsey brace in an Oct. 30 win over Wigan.

It's no surprise, therefore, that the Cottagers have compiled eight draws on the season. They are not alone: Six other Premier League clubs have compiled seven ties on the youthful season.

Getty Images

"The league's tight,"Dempsey told MLSsoccer.com from Craven Cottage by phone."It's difficult to get points in the Premiership, especially away from home."

Though he feels Fulham's style is a bit more aggressive, the Texas native admits that, for both club and country, playing matches air-tight is quite by design.

"We do play an attacking style, but at the same time, pick and choose our moments,"Dempsey said of the Cottagers game plans."You can't afford to be too careless."

Another similarity to consider between playing for Fulham or for the US lies in the squad personalities. Dempsey knows he is in with two separate groups willing to slug it out until the 15th-round bell, if need be.

"We have a lot of character in the team,"he says."No matter if we go up or down {a goal}, we battle until the end and that keeps things close. That's the way things have been for a while now. Even under Roy {Hodgson, Fulham's former manager}, I think we were a team that was never too far away in games and had quite a few draws."

In 2002, Fulham returned to the Premier League after a 38-year absence, and the tightly contested matches that the Cottagers have played underscore another layer of pressure: staying where the money is, the Premier League.

Dempsey's done his part. Barely six months into his Fulham tenure, Dempsey scored the most fiscally valuable goal in club history, a 1-0 winner at Liverpool in May of 2007.

The strike, which came 21 minutes from time, was Dempsey's first in the EPL, saved the club from relegation and spared them an revenue loss estimated at up to $100 million. The following season, Dempsey and Fulham had an even closer scrape, surviving on goal differential after finishing the season with three straight wins.

"We'd like wins more than draws, but a draw is better than a loss,"Dempsey explaned."You've got to get as many points as you can because the most important thing is staying in that top half and not finding yourself in the relegation zone."

Road Warriors

He says the team may soon be ready to turn some of those draws in for victories – even on the road. Notoriously bad away from Craven Cottage, Fulham have not won a league game outside it in 25 tries.

Getty Images

Along with Carlos Bocanegra andBrian McBride, Dempsey took part in snapping a 33-game road win drought in 2008. He sees improvement in their away form, and apparently so have other Fulham observers in the media and the stands.

"You know, away from home is always difficult,"he said."The fact that we got points from five of the seven {road contests thus far on the season} is positive. It's something where you don't have to worry about listening to people talk about."

Not that Dempsey is bothered much by what's written in the papers, said on the call-in show or hollered from the seats.

"At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter,"he declared."The most important thing is playing hard and working hard to get better as a team."

A Taste of Europe

In the 2008-09 season, Fulham worked hard enough to finish seventh, which offered up the Europa League invite that eventually made Dempsey the first American to play in a UEFA cup final.

He was key to the run throughout, most notably when he scored the now famous stunner to cap a rally that knocked European bluebloods Juventus from the tournament. When final foe Diego Forlán broke a 1-1 deadlock in the 116th minute, Atlético Madrid became champs and the American – who went 65 relief minutes – was so disappointed initially that he walked past press row without even remotely breaking gait.

Now that he has had time to reflect on the ride, not to mention the silver medal prize at the end, Dempsey can hardly say a bad word about the experience. It has to be said, the man has proven he knows how to use disappointment as forward-thinking motivation.

Getty Images

"It was pretty special leading up to and in the fashion that we did it, especially playing a part in it with that fourth goal in the Juve game,"he stated."It was good to play in a final.

"Obviously, we wanted to win, but the team played hard and did the best they could. Unfortunately, we came up a little short. The positive was that we were in to the very end, pushed the game to overtime after conceding early in the game."

Onward, But Not Outward

Dempsey, having gotten that first taste of Europe, does want more of it. But the Fulham man doesn't currently seem terribly interested in leaving the cozy confines of Craven Cottage to find it on a more consistent basis.

Last summer, Dempsey's agent confirmed that there were some Champions/Europa League regulars monitoring him. When considering his club road to European success, the American is quick to remind that staying at Fulham has not exactly stopped him from the chance to raise important silver.

"Well, I got to the Europa League final when I was with Fulham, so it's something that can happen here,"he stated."After this season, I'll still have two years on my contract and we'll see what happens. Right now, I'm trying to make the most of my football where I'm at– at Fulham.

"We like to play in major competitions,"Dempsey admitted."You want to try to win trophies in your career, so hopefully that's in the cards for me. But all you can do is work hard where you're at, make the most of it and see what happens."

For a man who has had to endure both the bad times and the good with his country, as well, it's easy to imagine the conviction in Dempsey's words.

Continued Growth

Getty Images

Of all the similarities between Dempsey's club and country, the most obvious similarity is how he's used on the pitch. With both Bradley and Fulham boss Mark Hughes, one never knows quiet where the US No. 8– or Fulham No. 23 – shirt will pop up. But they do know it will pop up.

"I think it makes you more of a complete footballer, having an understanding of other positions,"Dempsey explained."It makes you more well-rounded, so it's something that doesn't bother me."

"Whenever I can play at any position that's going to help the team, I'm all about that. It's allowed me to stay on the field more often than not. The more flexibility you can give a manager, the more options they have to help the team do better. I give them an option, so it's a good thing."

Dempsey's flexibility on the field has been instrumental for the Nats recently, and should continued to be throughout the preparations for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, the player's third such cycle.

"We just need to keep working on the things we've been working on and try to improve,"said of the US side."I think we're moving in the right direction. We made the final of the Confederations Cup and advanced from the group stage at World Cup, taking Ghana to overtime. We were right there in the thick of the things, so hopefully we can improve on the things we were doing. I think we'll be fine."

As with the Cottagers, Dempsey figures the US play it smart in order to give themselves the most chances to win.

"You have to stay competitive at the back,"he insists."If you don't concede, then you don't lose. You try to pick and choose your moments when to get forward and try to be effective as you can. We've been able to get goals. We're a team that is dangerous on the attack and doesn't concede too many goals."

Sounding a bit like either of his coaches, he hits the point:"It always gives you a chance {to win} when you can do that."


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понедельник, 22 ноября 2010 г.

Soehn presents Expansion Draft dilemma for DC

WASHINGTON— This week’s MLS Expansion Draft for the Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps FC will present conundrums for most every team in the league, butD.C. Unitedmay occupy the most unenviable position of the 16 other clubs.

After all, it’s hard enough to rebuild your own team without the prospect of an old coach swooping in to claim one or two of his favorite players.

Former United head coach Tom Soehn is now director of soccer operations for the Vancouver Whitecaps, and his thorough knowledge of much of the DC roster leaves the Black-and-Red feeling somewhat exposed as they consider how to hang on to as many assets as possible.

“Everybody knows Tommy has his guys that he likes – I can’t say that I’m one of them, I don’t have any idea,” DC defenderMarc Burchsaid.“But I know Tommy has his guys that he likes, people with the attitudes and the {style of} play and everything, his style of people. So I think there will be some guys that played for Tommy that he’ll be definitely looking at if they don’t get protected.”

With DC’s young talentsAndy Najar(right),Bill Hamidand Conor Shanosky already protected by the league’s homegrown player policies, it might seem strange for the league’s last-placed team to fear being plundered by an expansion side. But coaches and players who spend time together “in the trenches” through long MLS campaigns develop a familiarity that cannot be easily replicated with trials and scouting reports.

Tony Quinn/Major League Soccer

“A big thing with coaching is knowing guys intimately and knowing exactly what you get, because the unknown factor is a tough one,” United technical director Chad Ashton said last week. “Because you don’t know their personality, you don’t know at crunch time what kind of guy you’re going to get. And when you’ve coached guys ... you know what kind of guys you’re getting. You know their strengths, you know their weaknesses.

“I’m sure {Soehn’s} got an idea who he’s going to be going after,” he added. “It’s a tough situation for us, but it is what it is.”

Ashton was Soehn’s second-in-command during Soehn's three-year stint at the helm in Washington, and the two men still keep in touch, though Ashton says soccer matters are rarely broached.

Their clubs have already shown a mutual interest in one of this year’s top young prospects, United States youth international Omar Salgado, aGeneration adidassigning who has trained with Vancouver, Portland and most recently DC. The rangy striker is likely to be one of the top picks in January’s SuperDraft.

Meanwhile, Ashton and United general manager Dave Kasper will try to minimize the interest of the league’s newcomers in Wednesday’s expansion draft, even as they accept the likelihood of losing at least one player. 

“You definitely want to protect your best guys, but at the same time, you may leave guys unprotected that you think they don’t want or won’t pick,” Ashton said. “I know one time we had nobody picked, and everybody looked at it like we were just a bad team. But to me, you’ve made somereally good decisions if nobody gets picked. You’ve figured out what they’re looking for and what positions they’re trying to fill and that sort of thing.

"You’re probably going to lose at least one guy but if you don’t lose anyone, it’s a real positive.”

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воскресенье, 21 ноября 2010 г.

Mastroeni spurned Euro interest to stay with Rapids

TORONTO–Colorado RapidscaptainPablo Mastroenisays he spurned overseas interest from clubs in Italy and Spain to stay in Major League Soccer.

Mastroeni is in his ninth season with the Rapids and will play in his first career MLS Cup againstFC Dallason Sunday (8:30 pm ET, ESPN/Galavision).

The height of the foreign interest in the two-time World Cup veteran began in 2007, when Italian Serie B outfit Brescia made advances. But Mastroeni says the club"didn't really offer anything to sway the league"at the time.

The following year, which saw the Rapids experience an upheaval with Gary Smith taking over for Fernando Clavijo as head coach, Spanish La Liga club Malaga inquired about the Argentine-born Mastroeni.

Those talks did not go far after Smith convinced Mastroeni of his plan to lead Colorado to be a contender.

“If I had pursued it any more it probably would have been a legitimate situation,” Mastroeni said of the Malaga interest. “It was always a possibility. But deep down inside I really wanted to stay in Colorado win in Colorado.

“When Gary took over and said ‘I want you to stay on board and help me grow this,’ I looked at it like a perfect opportunity for myself … It was close but in the end I ended up where I wanted to be.”


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суббота, 20 ноября 2010 г.

MLS donates $2 million to US World Cup Bid Committee

TORONTO– With the US World Cup bid in the final stretch ahead of FIFA’s Dec. 2 announcement of the 2018 and 2022 hosts, MLS Commissioner Don Garber announced that the league and its marketing arm, Soccer United Marketing, will make a $2 million donation to the US Bid Committee.

“We hope it will help our federation to be able to use additional resources both to build the sport but also to bring home the bid in the next couple of weeks,” Garber said at a US Bid Committee luncheon on Friday.

“We recognize that the league has an enormous amount to gain should the World Cup come to the United States, not just with what we could do to build our league further and get more deeply connected with fans and help develop more players, but also the obvious benefits that will come with having that 12-year run-up.”

MLS has supported the bid by providing assistance with marketing and promotion while also housing US bid staff at the league office in New York. Two MLS owners and Garber are also on the World Cup Bid Committee.

For the first time, US Soccer President Sunil Gulati commented on the suspension of two members of the FIFA Executive Committee this week ahead of the vote to determine the World Cup hosts. The US now has to convince at least 12 of the remaining 22 members to vote for the American bid.

“It’s going to be 12 votes instead of 13, so it’s going to be easier,” Gulati said. “I don’t think it changes the game dramatically for us.

“They went a long way in trying to bring order to the process and make sure the process was fair. I’m confident that this will be a fair process.”

On Friday, the full FIFA evaluation reports for each bid were released and Gulati addressed the issue of government guarantees, which was flagged by the world governing body.

“Because of the federative nature of our government, we were not able to sign the guarantees in the exact form that FIFA wanted,” Gulati said. “But they’re quite comfortable with the guarantees we’ve given them.”

In addition, Gulati said that should the US win the bid, it would consider any new facilities that are constructed before 2022. He also said that he expected World Cup finalists to establish their base camp in Canada.

With a European country guaranteed to host the 2018 World Cup, the 2022 event is being contested between CONCACAF and Asian confederations. That plays into the US’ favor, according to Gulati.

“FIFA’s system, in terms of its rotation policy, is based on confederations,” he said. “Asia has had a recent World Cup in 2002. From that perspective, if you follow the rotation policy – a policy of fairness – it needs to come back to CONCACAF.”

Aside from the infrastructure, the US believes FIFA values a very important aspect of the American bid: the size of the country.

“The legacy, the upside of a market like a country like the United States, to be more engaged in the world’s game, is something that is unique and extraordinary,” Gulati said. “One of our goals is to go from 100 million who watch the World Cup to 200 million. There aren’t many countries who are bidding that can do that. Size matters.”

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American Exports: Weekend preview

AMSTERDAM — Several players given a midweek US national team breather are set for tough league challenges this weekend. All times are ET.

ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE

Bolton vs. Newcastle United

Saturday, 10 a.m. on FoxSoccer.tv

American: Stuart Holden (BOL)

A couple of teams off to somewhat surprising starts meet up at the Reebok, with Holden set for one of his toughest assignments of the season. Former Bolton ace Kevin Nolan runs the middle for the Magpies and co-leads the EPL with teammate Andy Carroll with seven goals. However, both Joey Barton and Cheikh Tioté are suspended for this one. Wanderers have won six of the last seven home clashes with Newcastle.

Fulham vs. Manchester City

Sunday, 11 a.m. on Fox Soccer Channel

Americans: Clint Dempsey, Eddie Johnson (FUL)

Winless in their last four Craven Cottage meetings, Fulham will try to tackle fourth-place City. Surefire starter Dempsey has three career league goals against Man. City, but none of them at home. The visitors will arrive having won just once in five and perhaps without defenders Joleon Lescott and Micah Richards. Fulham, meanwhile, are missing left back Carlos Salcido and bookend Chris Baird's availability status is questionable. If the Cottagers win, Holden's Wanderers can ascend to the fourth spot in the table with a win against Newcastle.

LA LIGA

Villarreal vs. Valencia

Saturday, noon

American: Jozy Altidore (V'real)

The US striker will again be available for relief duty when the Yellow Submarine face neighboring archrivals Valencia in a battle for third place. Villarreal have won 15 of 16 games at El Madrigal, as well as the past three home derbies by a combined 8-1 count. The visitors will have several key absences; David Albelda is serving a ban, starting keeper César and handyman Jérémy Mathieu are ruled out, and wing star Juan Mata is doubtful.

BUNDESLIGA

Hannover 96 vs. Hamburg

Saturday, 9:30 a.m. on Dish German Sports

Americans: DaMarcus Beasley (H96)

The Reds will need to battle HSV without suspended captain Steve Cherundolo, but Beasley could play a key role in this regional fight to stay near European places. Standing just a point shy of seventh-place Hannover, the guests will arrive far less than fit; Dennis Aogo, Romeo Castelen, Guy Demel, Marcell Jansen, Gojko Kacar, Joris Mathijsen and first-string netminder Frank Rost headline a long injury list. The '96ers, beaten by Hamburg just once in the last eight AWD-Arena meetings, have added Mohammed Abdellaoue and Karim Haggui to their shelf.

LIGUE 1

Saint-Étienne vs. Auxerre

Saturday, 1 p.m.

American: Carlos Bocanegra (ASSE)

The USMNT skipper is slated to start, but it remains to be seen exactly where. After their match with Valenciennes was postponed last week,Les Vertsdropped all the way to 10th place in a tightly packed Ligue 1, but are just four points off the top with a game in hand on seven above them including Saturday's guests, who have won six in a seven-game unbeaten streak in all competitions. However, Auxerre have only won once on their last eight trips to Saint-Étienne. Both sides are in with nearly complete selections available.

Best of the Rest

Bundesliga: Eintracht Frankfurt (Ricardo Clark) vs. Hoffenheim - Sat. 9:30 a.m. on Dish German Sports

Bundesliga: Borussia Mönchengladbach vs. Mainz 05 - Sat. 9:30 a.m. on ESPN3.com/Dish German Sports

Bundesliga: Schalke 04 (Jermaine Jones) vs. Werder Bremen - Sat. 9:30 a.m. on GolTV/Dish German Sports

EPL: Blackburn vs. Aston Villa (Brad Friedel, Brad Guzan, Eric Lichaj) - Sun. 8:30 a.m. on Fox Soccer Plus/FoxSoccer.tv

RPL: Sibir Novosibirsk vs. Tom Tomsk (Eugene Starikov) - Sun. 6 a.m.

SAS Liga: FC Copenhagen vs. FC Nordsjælland (Michael Parkhurst) - Sun. 10 a.m.


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