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Posted: Friday July 11, 2008 5:56PM; Updated: Friday July 11, 2008 6:08PM
Soccer America Soccer America >
INSIDE SOCCER

MLS needs firepower for SuperLiga

Story Highlights
  • MLS teams will try to break the Mexican-club jinx in the second SuperLiga
  • Houston, New England, D.C. United and Chivas USA are MLS' representatives
  • Mexico counters with Chivas, Santos Laguna, Atlante, defending champ Pachuca
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Chivas de Guadalajara and D.C. United are frequent foes in international tournaments.
Chivas de Guadalajara and D.C. United are frequent foes in international tournaments.
Reuters

By Ridge Mahoney, Special to SI.com, Soccer America

One of the scenarios plaguing MLS teams as they struggle to match their Mexican-league counterparts is being played out on the eve of SuperLiga 2008, in which four teams from each country compete for a $1 million prize.

Along with depth and roster size, MLS teams suffer against foreign teams because they can't afford to stockpile a deep enough forward corps. Goal-scorers are the most prized commodity in soccer, and in terms of both salaries and length of contract guarantees, MLS teams struggle to accumulate enough talent.

Unless MLS changes its stance regarding contracts for its better domestic players, the league won't ascend to the next level whereby its best teams can consistently measure up against Mexican and South American opposition. The key is not just more money, but more commitment.

Nate Jaqua is by no means a great player, but the goals he scored last for Houston helped the Dynamo win MLS Cup, and the dragged-out negotiations of a deal that would bring him back personify one of the league's most glaring shortcomings.

Traded by Los Angeles to Houston last season, he scored seven regular-season and playoff goals, then let his contract expire and left to play in Austria on a short-term deal that paid him slightly more than $100,000 for six months of work.

According to his agent, Patrick McCabe, if an MLS deal isn't done by the weekend, Jaqua will fly to Europe, where McCabe says there are offers or interest from clubs in Austria, Germany, Norway and Sweden. Houston president Oliver Luck says talks have been held by which Jaqua would finish the season with the Dynamo and then perhaps be traded to expansion team Seattle. (Jaqua grew up in Portland and would like to play in the Northwest.)

McCabe insists the sticking point is not strictly salary, but the league's reluctance to guarantee contracts for more than one year, if that. "Guys can make more money in Europe, sure, but they can almost always get guaranteed contracts for two or three years, which is very hard to do in MLS for most players," says McCabe.

Houston does have Brian Ching, but its lack of a dependable second forward prompted head coach Dominic Kinnear to push midfielder Dwayne De Rosario, who had begun his MLS career as a forward in '02 with San Jose, to the front line.

It has one of the league's best defenses, and last year narrowly lost to Pachuca on penalty kicks in the SuperLiga semifinals after a 2-2 tie, but having lost both Jaqua and Joseph Ngwenya from that team, are shorthanded heading into what has become a prestigious and extremely competitive tournament in just its second year.

The Mexican teams are hamstrung somewhat by the timing of SuperLiga; the Mexican league doesn't start until next month and teams have been training for only a few weeks.

But unlike their MLS counterparts, Mexican teams don't have to recharge following a long offseason. Most of their players have been off only about a month, and several have played for Mexico in its CONCACAF qualifiers as well as club friendlies in the past two weeks.

Chivas de Guadalajara lost to the New York Red Bulls 1-0 and beat FC Dallas 2-1 to prepare for SuperLiga. Santos Laguna blasted Real Salt Lake 4-1 on Wednesday.

"Those who think SuperLiga are preseason are sorely mistaken," says Santos Laguna midfielder Fernando Arce, whose team qualified for SuperLiga by winning the Mexican-league Clausura title last spring. "We have it in our heads to win every competition we participate in, especially if they are international. We didn't come to train, we came to win."

With goal-scorers Luciano Emilio (D.C. United) and Ante Razov (Chivas USA) in good form, and New England getting goals from Adam Cristman, Steve Ralston, Kheli Dube and Kenny Mansally as Taylor Twellman completes his recovery from injury, those three teams might have an edge on Houston in very competitive group play.

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