Former Panthers QB Matt Corral signs with UFL’s Birmingham Stallions

Matt Corral, a 2022 third-round pick of the Panthers, has signed to the Birmingham Stallions of the UFL.

Former Carolina Panthers quarterback Matt Corral has resurfaced . . . in another league.

As announced on Tuesday night, Corral has signed with the Birmingham Stallions of the United Football League. The Ole Miss standout was selected by Carolina in the third round of the 2022 NFL draft.

To get to that spring’s 94th overall pick for Corral, the Panthers traded a 2023 third-rounder and a 2022 fourth-rounder (137th overall) to the New England Patriots. The Patriots, in turn, used those picks to take Western Kentucky quarterback Bailey Zappe in 2022 and Sacramento State linebacker Marte Marpu in 2023.

After missing the entirety of what would have been his rookie campaign due to a Lisfranc injury, Corral was waived by the Panthers on Aug. 30, 2023. He’d then be claimed, funnily enough, by the Patriots and released later that September.

The UFL, a product of the merger between the XFL and the USFL, will kick off its first season at the end of March.

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U.S. youth star Osundina joins Feyenoord from Orange County SC

The 19-year-old joins the Dutch powerhouse from the USL Championship side

U.S. youth international forward Korede Osundina has completed a transfer to Dutch champion Feyenoord from Orange County SC.

ESPN reported that Feyenoord paid $215,000 for Osundina, with that fee potentially rising to more than $1 million if incentives are met. The 19-year-old will be loaned to Dutch second-tier side Dordrecht for the 2023-24 season.

“I’m beyond thrilled to move to Feyenoord and continue my career in the Netherlands,” Osundina said in a club release. “OCSC gave me the opportunity to play professional soccer and develop me, with a clear path to playing in Europe that I couldn’t have found elsewhere. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed every moment of my time in Irvine, and want to thank everyone at the club for their incredible support.”

Over two seasons with the USL Championship club, Osundina made 37 appearances. He’s scored four goals in the current campaign.

Osundina’s transfer is the first between OCSC and Feyenoord, after the two clubs announced a strategic partnership in February of this year.

“Since our partnership with OCSC began, it became clear to me that the club offers a clear pathway to Europe for emerging talents in the USA,” said Mark Rijul, head of global football at Feyenoord.

“OCSC has a very good technical infrastructure, highly competitive environment and a long-term vision that develops players like Korede for the next level. With this move, we believe Korede can take the next steps in his career, and we are thrilled to help him with that at Feyenoord.”

Osundina, an Illinois native, has been capped by the U.S. at the U-17 and U-19 levels.

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USL Championship side San Diego Loyal will fold after 2023 season

The USL franchise was under threat after MLS awarded San Diego an expansion team for the 2025 season

The San Diego Loyal will cease operations after the 2023 USL Championship season, the club has announced.

In a statement, USL said that the decision was made because a “viable near- and long-term stadium solution in the market did not materialize.” The club has been playing at Torero Stadium on the campus of the University of San Diego.

“I’ve come to the conclusion that this will be the last season for San Diego Loyal,” the club’s owner Andrew Vassiliadis said in a video posted on X (formerly Twitter).

“For those of you who got to know me, spent some time talking to me, you know how much this hurts for me to say. I love our city, I was born and raised here, and I will always be loyal to San Diego.

“I don’t see myself taking this project anywhere else, and I refuse to put an inferior product in front of you.”

The long-term viability of the Loyal was put into doubt this May, when MLS awarded San Diego an expansion franchise that will begin play in 2025.

At the time, Vassiliadis issued a statement declaring his intent to continue on, concluding: “Our plan is simple. We aren’t going anywhere.”

Vassiliadis started the franchise in 2020 alongside co-owner and U.S. soccer legend Landon Donovan, who served as the team’s head coach for three seasons. After the 2022 season, Donovan stepped down as coach and took a role as executive VP of soccer operations.

The USL said the Loyal’s franchise rights will be transfered to a new ownership group.

“Having a modern, commercially viable stadium solution is vital to our clubs’ long-term success and is a pillar of the USL’s growth strategy,” said USL Deputy CEO Justin Papadakis. “Despite collectively pursuing multiple potential options with SD Loyal’s leadership in the San Diego area, an appropriate stadium solution has not materialized.”

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USL Super League aims to compete with NWSL — but it won’t be easy

The USL Super League is giving itself a mountain to climb

The USL Super League will seek Division One sanctioning from U.S. Soccer, a major shift for the burgeoning women’s league that would position them as a potential rival to the NWSL.

The Super League’s aim is to launch in August 2024 with 10-12 teams, but their ambitions have grown since stating in 2021 that they would pursue Division Two sanctioning. Per an announcement on Tuesday, USL intends to create a top-flight competitor for the NWSL that runs from fall to spring.

The USL says that this more ambitious posture is one “reflecting its commitment to the highest standards in American soccer and a collective vision to be a global leader in women’s soccer on and off the field. The USL Super League will follow U.S. Soccer’s sanctioning process.”

Per a press release, USL CEO Alec Papadakis said that the new league “will sit at the top of our women’s pyramid with strong ownership groups, modern stadiums, and passionate fans that will deliver immediate viability and long-term sustainability.”

Papadakis added that the intention is “to make the USL Super League globally recognized and admired for its financial stability, operational excellence, community building and high-level competition. We are establishing and growing our national footprint while ensuring that all our teams are owners or primary tenants of a soccer stadium.”

That group of initial markets includes the following eight, with the league saying that more will be announced in the coming months:

  • Charlotte, N.C.
  • Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas
  • Lexington, Ky.
  • Phoenix, Ariz.
  • Spokane, Wash.
  • Tampa Bay, Fla.
  • Tucson, Ariz.
  • Washington, D.C.

Six of those markets have some significant connection to an existing USL team on the men’s side. In some cases, the links are straightforward: the Phoenix, Lexington, and Tucson teams will be run by the ownership groups that control Phoenix Rising FC, Lexington SC, and FC Tucson. The Spokane entrant in the Super League is linked in the release with a forthcoming USL League One team set to begin play in 2024.

In some cases, the connections are present, if not outright stated. While the release makes no mention of USL League One’s Charlotte Independence, the Charlotte group is planning to play in the same venue (American Legion Memorial Stadium) and share the same majority owner (Dan DiMicco) as the Independence, whose CEO Jim McPhilliamy is leading “the formation of the club’s ownership group.”

DiMicco was previously said to be in the process of selling his Independence shares in the wake of Covid-19 conspiracy theory tweets and, per a report in The Athletic, concerns over alleged racial stereotyping. DiMicco was in 2021 condemned by the Independent Supporters Council for “hate speech, blatant racism, and conspiracy theories.”

The Washington, D.C. group will be run by Loudoun United FC majority owner Attain Sports and Entertainment, with the USL release saying that the new team would be operated “in partnership with D.C. United.” United already has the NWSL’s Washington Spirit as a tenant at Audi Field, as well as at their training facility in Leesburg, Va.

The USL Super League announcement lists five more cities as “initial markets for subsequent seasons (pending completion of a stadium project).” Those groups include:

  • Chattanooga, Tenn.
  • Indianapolis, Ind.
  • Jacksonville, Fla.
  • Madison, Wisc.
  • Oakland, Calif.

Four of those groups will be partners with existing USL men’s teams, while Jacksonville is connected to a future USL Championship expansion side aiming to begin play in 2025, and has an ownership group including former NFL player Tim Tebow.

“Following the inaugural season, the USL Super League will strategically expand its national footprint. Multiple expansion teams are confirmed to join the league upon completion of their stadium and infrastructure projects,” read the USL Super League statement. “In the coming months, the USL Super League will announce additional markets whose clubs will play in the inaugural season, and additional markets for future expansion.”

Challenges ahead for Super League

There is surely more room for a larger pool of professional soccer clubs for women in the United States, and the USL Super League knows it. Their announcement points to the fact that there are 101 professional clubs for men, while the NWSL’s 12 teams represent the entire pool in the women’s game.

It’s also no secret that the player pool exists to stock more teams. Dozens of players leave college for European contracts to keep playing, while NWSL teams often have unsigned players training with them. Many more players simply opt out of pursuing a career in soccer, taking their degrees and heading off into careers outside of sports.

There is also some degree of value in testing the oft-stated theory that a fall-to-spring league might have success on some fronts that U.S.-based leagues have found to be a headache. Will winter weather be too difficult to play through, or too daunting to draw crowds? Will aligning on a transfer market and international window front make for a smoother season? It hasn’t been tested, and the USL Super League could end up being a pioneer if the idea proves to be a success.

However, on two fronts, the USL has taken on a massive challenge. Firstly, there is some degree of precedent for multiple leagues wanting to hold Division One sanctioning, and it is ugly. The NASL, after years of acrimony with MLS and the USL, collapsed over a lack of a pathway to gain that approval from U.S. Soccer, and an inability to maintain a stable of teams that could actually meet the standards involved.

Moreover, in the women’s game, the NWSL’s very recent history is a crystal clear example of what happens when individual team resources aren’t significantly higher than what is listed in U.S. Soccer’s Pro League Standards.

NWSL clubs, even the ones that went through the worst troubles in the wake of the Yates and joint NWSL/NWSLPA investigations, met those standards, yet were still demonstrably unsafe environments. Players were subject to a lack of institutional protections at the club level, whether that be from harmful staff or owners or from the perspective of adequate facilities on the soccer side.

There is surely room for a hypothetical team that that meets USSF Division One standards and does not have a billionaire owner, Many of the problems the NWSL has run into were not entirely down to lack of funds, but instead involved bad actors, a lack of professionalism, and a lack of desire to do right by players. However, the resources help prevent all of those things, and in so many cases across the NWSL, better investment has lead to better outcomes.

It has been difficult for all of soccer’s history in this country to find the number of stable, well-run ownership groups needed to run any league. MLS was infamously pronounced dead by its cadre of team owners before Lamar Hunt rallied them to carry on, while USL has seen six fully professional men’s teams fold since the end of the 2019 season.

Two whole women’s soccer leagues have gone under since the turn of the century, and most of the early history of the NWSL (and many of its failings) centers around fear of collapse rather than striving to build something great. NWSL has had multiple teams fold or relocate in a hurry, and its 2023 progress still has to be seen as the fragile early moments of something more sturdy taking root. This is a hard business to be in, and an even harder one to do right.

The USL Super League, if it can meet the goals it has laid out, would be a dramatic step in the right direction. However, when placed in the context of both women’s sports and professional soccer in the United States, their own stated objectives — 10-12 teams, at soccer-specific venues where they hold control over the schedule, beginning play in 15 months — are going to be immensely difficult to pull off.

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Paul McDonough, once banned from MLS, is the new USL president

McDonough was Inter Miami sporting director when the club violated MLS roster and budget rules

The United Soccer League announced on Monday that Paul McDonough has been named president and chief soccer officer.

The veteran soccer executive replaces Jake Edwards, who stepped down last month after 10 successful years with the USL, including eight as president.

McDonough has plenty of experience at the highest levels of American soccer, having previously served as chief soccer officer at the Wasserman agency, chief operating officer and sporting director at Inter Miami, and vice president of soccer operations for Atlanta United, among other roles.

He will now oversee the sprawling USL, which has three professional leagues (USL Championship, USL Super League, and USL League One), seven total leagues, 36 professional clubs, and nearly 200 pre-professional teams across the United States.

“The USL is thrilled to welcome Paul McDonough, one of the most respected and qualified soccer executives in the United States, at a pivotal moment in our evolution as the largest and fastest-growing soccer organization in the United States. His experience and knowledge of soccer in America and football abroad are unmatched as it relates to both the on-field product and the business of sports,” USL CEO Alec Papadakis said in a news release.

Unsurprisingly, that release did not mention the one rather glaring blight on McDonough’s otherwise sterling resume: his MLS suspension for league rules violations during his time with Inter Miami.

In May 2021, MLS announced that McDonough had been banned through the 2022 season after Inter Miami violated league roster and budget rules by having four designated players on its roster in 2020. The club also underreported the salary budget amounts for three players.

In addition to McDonough’s ban, Inter Miami was fined $2 million and MLS reduced the amount of allocation money the club could use for the 2022 and 2023 seasons.

After the suspension, McDonough was forced to leave his position with Atlanta United, which he had joined after leaving Miami.

In March 2022, McDonough was reinstated from his ban early.

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Hey, is that Gabriel Obertan scoring in the USL League One playoffs?

The ex-Manchester United striker is still banging in the goals in the American third tier

Gabriel Obertan was once supposed to help replace Cristiano Ronaldo at Manchester United. Now, he’s scoring solo stunners in the USL League One playoffs.

Obertan signed with the Charlotte Independence last year, joining after a long career in Europe that included a high-profile stint at Old Trafford.

Manchester United purchased Obertan in 2009 from Bordeaux. With Ronaldo having been sold to Real Madrid, the Frenchman was expected to help pick up the goalscoring slack. It didn’t quite work out.

Obertan scored just once in 28 appearance for United before joining Newcastle in 2011. He would go on to spend five seasons with the Magpies before stops in Russia, Bulgaria, England and Turkey.

The Frenchman has had a mixed spell with the Independence, but he came through with a big goal in Saturday’s quarterfinal against the South Georgia Tormenta.

The 33-year-old took possession in his own half and sailed the length of the field before slamming home a shot from a tight angle. The goal opened the scoring but Tormenta would come back to win the match 2-1 and end Charlotte’s season.

“Goals always help players of course, and when they are forwards in particular. There is a goal in Gabby, there is no question of that.”

That was what Sir Alex Ferguson said shortly after Obertan joined Manchester United. Clearly, it still applies.

Watch Obertan score for Charlotte

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Tim Tebow invests in expansion USL team in Jacksonville

The former NFL quarterback is aiming to bring pro soccer to Jacksonville in 2025

Tim Tebow has been announced as co-owner of an expansion USL Championship franchise in Jacksonville, which is aiming to begin play in 2025.

The former University of Florida star joined lead investor Ricky Caplin, with the club set to feature men’s and women’s professional soccer as well as a youth academy.

The club would be Jacksonville’s first soccer franchise in a fully professional league since 2017.

“This is a fantastic and exciting development for our community here on the First Coast,” Tebow said in a release. “I’m thrilled to be part of the new ownership group that seeks to bring some incredible pro teams and world-class facilities to our area that will be accessible to the whole community.”

The club’s 2025 kickoff date is, according to the release, “contingent on securing a home venue on the First Coast for the club.”

Tebow played three seasons in the NFL from 2010 to 2012, before he switched to baseball and spent three years in the New York Mets farm system between 2016 and 2019.

The 35-year-old attempted an NFL comeback last year as a tight end, but was cut by the Jacksonville Jaguars in training camp.

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Charleston Battery goalkeeper Joe Kuzminsky scores stoppage time equalizer

Charleston needed a goal, and got one from…their goalkeeper?

Charleston Battery goalkeeper Joe Kuzminsky lived out every goalkeeper’s dream Saturday night: going forward on a late corner and scoring a vital goal in second half stoppage time.

Charleston’s USL Championship match against Loudoun United wasn’t going well. On the road and down 1-0 against a team that entered the night on an eight-game losing streak, the Battery—themselves desperate for any positive results after starting the season with eight losses from ten games—had the slimmest bit of hope come in the 85th minute, when Loudoun went down to ten men due to a red card to captain Rio Hope-Gund.

Still, their chances seemed remote. They’d scored just six goals all season, after all and had missed a penalty kick earlier in the evening.

Enter Kuzminsky. With four of the six minutes of stoppage time completed, Charleston got a corner, and Kuzminsky sprinted up, taking up a near post spot. The initial delivery didn’t find him, but amid the chaos, the Battery kept the play alive, and Kuzminsky barged past Zamudio to bundle the ball over the line, setting off wild celebrations for Charleston and protests for Loudoun.

Watch Kuzminsky’s goal

ESPN finally did a U.S. Open Cup whip-around show and it was a hit

The show achieved something rare in the age of social media: everyone loved it!

The U.S. Open Cup can be wildly exciting and, at the same time, extremely hard to follow.

For instance, on Wednesday night there were 10 Open Cup games taking place, with most of them overlapping in some way. Even with all the screens in the world, no one human could possibly keep track of all of the key moments from all the games. For years, fans had been crying out for a way to follow all of the Open Cup action in one centralized place.

The Futbol Americas crew finally sorted that out on Wednesday, and their whip-around show seemed to achieve something bordering on the impossible in the social media age: Everyone loved it.

Herculez Gomez and Sebastian Salazar hosted the Futbol Americas U.S. Open Cup Goalcast on ESPN Plus, doing the lord’s work by staying on the air for more than seven hours while round-of-32 games took place from coast to coast.

Gomez and Salazar brought in players from games that just finished as guests, as well as Open Cup luminaries like John Harkes, Sebastien Le Toux and Brad Evans.

The pair facilitated a relaxed atmosphere that included bathroom breaks, eating and texting on air – the kind of events viewers don’t normally see but are required when on the air for longer than a cross-country flight.

For years, fans have been wondering how to increase the Open Cup’s popularity. As a tournament featuring teams from the amateur ranks all the way to MLS, the unpredictability and natural underdog stories that emerge should be appealing to the same country that devours Cinderella stories every March in college basketball.

The Futbol Americas crew won’t make the Open Cup a marquee event on their own, but Wednesday’s show was undoubtedly a step in the right direction.

Former Notre Dame soccer star McCabe signs with Orange County SC

Tommy McCabe, a former Notre Dame soccer star, signed a contract with Orange County SC, a team in the United Soccer League.

Tommy McCabe, a former Notre Dame soccer defensive midfielder, has officially signed with Orange County SC today.

This is great news for the former 29th overall pick in the MLS Superdraft in 2019 by FC Cincinnati. Although McCabe started his career on loan to North Carolina FC, he scored two goals in 10 games, making a mark early in his professional career. One of his scores won goal of the week.

McCabe’s Irish career saw him start 60 of 61 contests and during his junior season, he was named Male athlete of the year by The Observer. McCabe was also named to the All-ACC third team that season, making it two time’s he was selected for an All-ACC team, also making it on the All-Freshman team.

Congratulations to Tommy and we look forward to continuing to watch his post-Irish career in the United Soccer League as part of Orange Country SC.