James Riley: From MLS to the ConIFA World Football Cup with Cascadia
autty 2018-05-25 03:34:03 评论
At age 35, James Riley—who played with seven different MLS clubs over an expansive, decade-long career—is readying for his first international tournament this summer, though not the one for which the soccer worlds been preparing.
Earlier this year, Riley was recruited to be the captain of the team representing Cascadia at the Confederation of Independent Football Associations (CONIFA) World Football Cup taking place in London from May 31 to June 9. Cascadia will be the first-ever North American entry in the tournaments history.
The World Football Cup, held every other year since 2014, features teams from what CONIFAs website declares to be “nations, de-facto nations, regions, minority peoples and sports-isolated territories.”
Riley will lead a squad of 23 players—16 of whom are connected by birth, upbringing, current residence, or family to the Cascadia region that the Seattle Sounders FC, Portland Timbers, Vancouver Whitecaps, and their legendary legions of fans call home.
Cascadia have been drawn into a group with Barawa (a Somali city whose London-based FA is the tournaments “host"), Ellan Yannin (what the native Manx people call the Isle of Man, located between Great Britain and Ireland), and Tamil Eelam (representing the Tamil people of Sri Lanka). The top two in each group advances to an eight-team playoff, though the bottom two go to their own separate bracket to play for ninth through 16th place.
Because some of Cascadias players are currently living in England, the team hasn’t yet been on the same field together, and won’t have their first official practice with coach James Nichols (of England’s Kendal Town Football Club) until the day before the World Football Cup kicks off. In fact, Riley notes that Nichols has been communicating with the team via WhatsApp to initiate plans.
Despite this unconventional approach to preparing a team, Rileys excited to get on the field with his new teammates and represent the region that’s won two of the last three MLS Cups.
“Everyones trying to stay fit on their own, and we’ll connect when we’re there,” Riley said. “We’ll try to have a good showing for Cascadia. For me, it’s a very intriguing opportunity. I know that for me, it will be a very competitive environment. I’m taking it very seriously with my training.”
“I think there will be some fantastic individual players there,” he added. “Itll be a chance to show well, individually and collectively.”
He notes that most of the players on the Cascadia team, including Vancouver-born former Manchester United U-23 midfielder Joshua Doughty, are much younger, and will be vying to catch the eye of the many scouts expected there—especially those who are currently free agents and could conceivably land with English League One or League Two teams.
Riley, starting his career with the New England Revolution, was part of a team that went to three straight MLS Cups (2005-07), and Riley played most of the teams heartbreaking ’05 MLS Cup loss to the LA Galaxy. In fact, his 107th-minute clearance led to the Galaxy corner kick producing the game’s lone goal. Conversely, Riley played the entirety of the Revolution’s 2007 U.S. Open Cup Final, helping them win their first-ever trophy.
“It was huge to have him be part of this,” said Aaron Johnsen, president of the Cascadia Association Football Federation sending the team to London. “Having a player of his caliber, whos played at the highest levels of MLS at the MLS Cup and US Open Cup, has really added something to the team.”
For Riley, being on Team Cascadia gives him the chance to teach and lead players as part of a post-career spectrum of experiences hes sought: either in coaching, as an executive, or as a broadcaster. He's recently set out to accumulate experience in all three areas, while building a personal brand encompassing mental training, nutrition, and personal coaching.
Riley was recently able to gain executive experience through two years at MLS headquarters as the leagues director of player relations starting in 2016, an experience he termed as “fantastic,” noting he was grateful to “connect with some very influential people inside and outside of Major League Soccer.”
But this past February, Riley seized upon an opportunity that allowed his new family to settle in the exurbs of Seattle instead of New York Citys hustle-and-bustle, joining the Sounders broadcast team. He’s currently anchoring their pre-game, post-game, and halftime shows, and calls games for the club’s Tacoma-based Seattle Sounders FC 2 USL squad.
He sees being part of the Cascadia squad as deepening his bonds with Seattle and the rest of the region, building on his three years as a Sounder ('09-11).
“I think Cascadias put itself on the map with its history in the game,” Riley says, noting the fierce three-team rivalry that even predates MLS, evident in the historic 100th meetup between the Sounders and Timbers earlier this month. “Seattle and its fans took MLS to a different level with fan culture, establishing soccer as a place where soccer could flourish, and then Portland and Vancouver entered the league and amplified that. For me, everyone who knows soccer knows Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver, and so this will just help bring awareness about what Cascadia’s about.”
- 消息参考来源: MLSSOCCER
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