Philadelphia Union, Seattle Sounders and Vancouver Whitecaps were among
the teams who best bolstered their squads for the upcoming season...
The MLS summer transfer window has drawn to a close, and while there
weren't any superstar additions on the level of a Thierry Henry or a
David Beckham, teams throughout the league made this one of the busiest
summers in recent memory.
The league's new player acquisition tool, targeted allocation money,
not only paved the way for teams to be more aggressive on the
international player front, it also gave teams another trade tool to
work with even if they were focusing on talent already in the league.
The MLS transfer window closed late Wednesday evening, and while
teams can still pick up free agents, most of the important roster
building for the stretch run was completed this week. Here is a look at
the teams that made the most of the transfer window, and the teams that
missed their chance to load up for the playoff stretch.
PHILADELPHIA UNION. The clear-cut winners this
summer. Yes, the Union paid a high price for the services of U.S.
national team midfielder Alejandro Bedoya, but the reality is he is a
serious upgrade and his versatility will give Jim Curtin plenty of
options when trying to put together a starting lineup. He also provides a
veteran locker room presence on a young team. The addition of Charlie
Davies gives the Union the kind of fast forward option they were
lacking, and his relationship with close friend and former college
teammate Bedoya should help boost the Union locker room.
SEATTLE SOUNDERS. The addition of Uruguayan
playmaker Nicolas Lodeiro is a game changer and, while he has played
just one game so far, that appearance only heightened expectations about
what he can do for the struggling Sounders attack. The Sounders also
brought back Alvaro Fernandez, a move that was overshadowed by Lodeiro's
arrival, but one that should also help the club make a late playoff
push.
CHICAGO FIRE. It will take some time to know just
how successful this window was for the Fire, but they were certainly
busy trying to revamp the roster and brought in a pair of players Veljko
Paunovic will be hoping can provide an upgrade. Michael de Leeuw was
acquired in May, but only recently made his debut in July and has shown
signs of being a quality addition. Armenian striker David Arshakyan is
an unknown quantity to American soccer fans, but the 6-foot-4 forward
should give the Fire a physical presence up top. Luis Solignac is a more
known quantity in MLS, and should be an upgrade.
Where the Fire made out was in their trading of the top allocation
spot to the Philadelphia Union. They landed a first-round pick, close to
$200,000 in allocation money and a discovery option on an unnamed
player. That deal, coupled with the FIre's ability to unloaded unwanted
forward Gilberto and send Kennedy Igboananike to D.C. United, should
help in the long run. Unfortunately for Fire fans, there were no
high-profile signings that might help truly turn the season around.
COLORADO RAPIDS. You can argue that Tim Howard's
contract was a steep price to pay for a goalkeeper, but it's tough to
argue with the idea that he steps in right away as one of the best
goalkeepers in MLS and the perfect leader to help a team that suddenly
has championship aspirations. Replacing Luis Solignac with longtime MLS
veteran Sebastien Le Toux could also wind up being a significant pickup.
NEW YORK RED BULLS. The days of superstar
acquisitions are on hold these days at Red Bull Arena, but moves like
the two made this week show a Red Bulls team committed to winning its
first MLS Cup.
Newly signed designated player Omer Damari
gives the team sorely needed forward depth and Austrian winger Daniel
Royer gives them an experienced player to help fill the void left by the
departure of Lloyd Sam.
VANCOUVER WHITECAPS. It was a very busy summer
window for the Whitecaps, who landed some players capable of
contributing right away in attack and defense. The addition of Giles
Barnes was a shrewd one, and the Jamaican attacker should help boost an
offense that has struggled without injured speedster Kekuta Manneh. The
arrival of Canadians David Edgar and Marcel de Jong have also given the
team depth.
The Whitecaps were sellers as well, moving Octavio Rivero to Chile
and flipping Fabian Espindola to Necaxa for a tidy profit after
acquiring him from D.C. United.
COLUMBUS CREW. Remember when Kei Kamara was traded
and the belief was that the big haul received from New England would
help the Crew improve? Well, not only has the Crew's season devolved
into a nightmare, but those major reinforcements didn't really arrive.
Norwegian defender Nicolai Naesse should help the team on the defensive
front, and Zack Steffen is a future star at the goalkeeper position.
That said, the Crew don't look like a team that did enough to really
turn around a terrible season.
SPORTING KANSAS CITY. Peter Vermes spoke out
recently about what he believes to be an inflated transfer market,
comments that came as Sporting KC failed to make a major splash this
summer. To be fair, the winter saw free agent pickups Brad Davis and
Justin Mapp, but you feel like Sporting KC could have used one more
starting-caliber forward.
FC DALLAS. Why is a team currently leading the
overall MLS standings on this list? Blame Fabian Castillo. His transfer
saga has become an ugly eyesore and now it has dragged on to the point
where it seems like FC Dallas will have no choice but to sell. The
prolonged ordeal now means that even if FC Dallas agrees to sell, a
transfer won't help the club improve this season's squad. And if
Castillo stays in Dallas? Things won't be pretty.
HOUSTON DYNAMO. Owen Coyle's departure was always
going to lead to a shakeup in Houston, and Giles Barnes' departure was
part of that. The Dynamo essentially raised the white flag on the 2016
season with the acquisition of some younger international players in
Keyner Brown and Yair Arboleda. Eric Alexander could turn into a useful
pickup, but overall it felt like an underwhelming summer for a team that
has endured several down years.
NEW ENGLAND REVOLUTION. The Revs don't make this list
because they traded Charlie Davies to the Union. They're here because
they didn't do anything to improve the roster in the summer window. To
be fair, they made their big splash in April with the acquisition of Kei
Kamara, but for a team still chasing a playoff spot, the summer window
felt like a wasted opportunity for New England.