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Bradley to Toronto done, set to earn $6.5 million per season

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  • Bradley to Toronto done, set to earn $6.5 million per season

    Report: Bradley to Toronto done, set to earn $6.5 million per season after $7-$10 million transfer fee


    Richard Farley
    Jan 8, 2014, 6:55 PM EST

    Within a matter of hours, Michael Bradley’s switch to Toronto FC has gone from Twitter sensation to verified move, with sources confirming to ESPN that the 26-year-old midfielder is on his way back to Major League Soccer. For a fee of between $7 and $10 million, the Reds are set to acquire the 82-time U.S. international from Italy’s AS Roma, with Bradley set to earn near-$6.5 million per season at BMO Field.

    As with anything that hasn’t been officially announced, the exact numbers are still blurry. Reports have Bradley’s contract in Toronto as either a five- or six-year deal. While one source is telling ESPN that Roma will get $7 million to allow Bradley to return to MLS, league sources are saying Roma will get “in excess of $10 million” for a player they bought from Chievo in the summer of 2012.

    Bradley’s reported salary would be a huge step up from the wages he garnered at Roma. Paid €800,000 after tax in Italy (roughly $1.1 million), the former Metro Stars midfielder would be making between five- and six-times more money to shift back to Major League Soccer. While they’ll certainly be questions about the motives of a 26-year-old midfielder swapping Serie A for Toronto FC, the pure financial motivation makes it difficult to argue with Bradley’s move.

    One lingering question with the deal is who will pay the transfer fee, though if the Clint Dempsey example is any indication, Major League Soccer may have again broken out the checkbook. While it was initially assumed the Seattle Sounders had paid the price of Dempsey’s summer acquisition from Tottenham, reporting by Sports Illustrated later revealed the league had paid the former Spur’s transfer fee. As the 2013 season progressed, it was revealed other teams had benefitted from new policies allowing the league to pay part or all of certain players’ transfer fees.

    One remaining snag for Toronto is their Designated Player situation. With the acquisition of Jermain Defoe, Toronto have used up their allotment of DP slots, with the former Spurs striker joining Matias Laba and Gilberto on the Reds’ books. Laba, an Argentine midfielder brought in under Kevin Payne, appears to be the on his way out, with Toronto looking for a home for the 22-year-old former Argentinos Juniors midfielder. If he can’t be traded, Laba’s contract will have to be renegotiated (or, its salary cap hit paid down by allocation money) to make room for Bradley.

    It’s an unfortunate externality of the Bradley transaction, but with the former Heerenveen, Borussia Moenchengladbach, and Aston Villa midfielder returning to Major League Soccer for the first time since 2005, it’s a small price to play to add a marquee name. Bradley not only becomes a focal point in midfield for Ryan Nelsen’s team, but he also represents a huge acquisition for Tim Leiweke – the Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainment chief executive who is overseeing the revitalization of TFC.

    Today, Leiweke’s taken two huge steps toward replicating the star power he accumulated in Los Angeles, where he served a similar, architect’s role. With the Galaxy, Leiweke was crucial to the acquisitions of David Beckham and Robbie Keane, and while Bradley and Defoe may not carry the same star power, their signings represent an instant credibility boost to a team that’s never made the playoffs.

    That lack of success has translated into only 17 wins in the last three years, something that’s led to a major hit at BMO’s turnstiles. A team that regularly sold out their park over its first five years has seen a near-10 percent drop in attendance over the last two, with average crowds at Toronto games hitting an all-time low of 18,131 last season.

    The acquisitions of Bradley and Defoe give Leiweke ammunition to reverse that trend. Not only has he given Toronto the type of talents they’ve never had in the franchise’s five-year history, but he’s also given supporters reason to halt the exodus from BMO Field.

    http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2...oronto-fc-mls/
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    the league paid the transfer fee? what in tarnation is going on here...

    Comment


    • #3
      The ownership structure of the MLS allows for that.

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

      Comment


      • #4
        what kinda mickey mouse league is that...they gonna pay transfer fees for every team in the league?

        Comment


        • #5
          City bruck yuh bad wid dem team spending?

          Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

          Comment


          • #6
            Huh? What dat haffi do wit this? If the leaghue pays exorbitant transfer fees for one club wouldn't they have to do it for all? Or MLS a colt the game?

            Comment


            • #7
              yes but is not them initiate it ....

              just like the nfl and nba there are some markets that are prime and others not so and so the way that the legaue is set there is some subsidising ... i am sure that it will come out in the franchise arrangement in terms of payback where the franchise holders pays back the league or something like that...

              Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

              Comment


              • #8
                The league actually has interest in each player's contract...

                Ownership
                See also: Major League Soccer owners

                Major League Soccer operates under a single-entity structure in which teams are centrally owned by the league.[4] Each team has an investor-operator that is a shareholder in the league. In order to control costs, the league shares revenues, negotiates player contracts, and holds players contracts instead of players contracting with individual teams. In Fraser v. Major League Soccer, a lawsuit filed in 1996 and decided in 2002, the league won a legal battle with its players in which the court ruled that MLS was a single entity that can lawfully centrally contract for player services. The court also ruled that even absent their collective bargaining agreement, players could opt to play in other leagues if they were unsatisfied.

                The league's cost-controlling measures have attracted new ownership that have injected more money into the league.[citation needed] Examples include the Anschutz Entertainment Group's sale of the MetroStars to Red Bull, for in "excess of $100 million."[24] Commissioner Garber said that, "the sale was part of a plan to have AEG decrease its holdings in MLS."[25]

                Commissioner Garber stated that having multiple clubs owned by a single owner was a necessity in the league's first 10 years,[25] but now that MLS appears to be on the brink of overall profitability and has significant expansion plans, he wants each club to have a distinct owner.[citation needed] In order to attract additional investors, the league made changes to the operating agreement between the league and its teams to improve team revenues and increase the incentives to be an individual club owner.[26] These changes included granting owners the rights to a certain number of players they develop through their club's academy system each year, sharing the profits of Soccer United Marketing, and being able to sell individual club jersey sponsorships.[26]

                The league now has 20 investor-operators for its 21 clubs. At one time AEG owned six clubs in MLS, and have since sold the Colorado Rapids, the MetroStars (now the Red Bulls), D.C. United and the Chicago Fire to new owners. AEG's remaining teams are the Los Angeles Galaxy and a 50% interest in the Houston Dynamo.[27] The other major owner-investor in MLS, Hunt Sports, once owned three franchises, but now own only FC Dallas, having sold the Columbus Crew and the Kansas City Wizards.

                Player quality and salaries

                David Beckham joined the L.A. Galaxy in 2007 as the first Designated Player.
                The average salary for MLS players is $160,000 as of 2013,[28] lower than the average salaries in the Football League Championship, the second tier of English football ($322,670)[29] or Holland's Eredivisie ($445,000).[30] The median salary for MLS Players is $100,000 as of 2013.[citation needed]

                MLS salaries are limited by a salary cap, which MLS has had in place since the league's inception in 1996. The purpose of the salary cap is to prevent the team's owners from unsustainable spending on player salaries, a practice that had doomed the North American Soccer League during the 1980s, and to prevent a competitive imbalance among teams. The salary cap survived a legal challenge by the players in the Fraser v. Major League Soccer lawsuit. For the 2013 season, the salary cap is $2.95 million per team and the maximum salary for any one player is $368,750. The Designated Player Rule allows teams to sign players whose salary does not count against the league's salary cap. The DP rule was instituted in 2007, and David Beckham was the first signing under the DP rule.

                The league has developed several additional initiatives to improve quality of players—particularly young players—while still maintaining the salary cap. These initiatives have brought about an increase in the league's ability to compete on the field.[31]

                The league has required all of the league's teams to operate youth development programs since 2008.[32][dead link][33] The ability to sign up to two of its own home grown players to the senior team each year gives the league's teams an incentive to improve the quality of the league's home grown talent. One of the first examples of success in "home-grown" development was New York's Jozy Altidore, who rose to prominence as a teenager in MLS before his record transfer fee $10 million move to Villarreal in 2008.[34] The various MLS teams' development academies play matches in a developmental league against youth academies from other leagues such as the Division II NASL and Division III USL Pro.

                The league operates a Generation Adidas program, which is a joint venture between MLS and U.S. Soccer that encourages early entry of young American players into MLS.[35] The Generation Adidas program has been in place since 1997, and has introduced players such as Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, Tim Howard and Michael Bradley into MLS. Players under the Home Grown Player rule are signed to Generation Adidas contracts.

                The league operates the MLS Reserve League, which gives playing time to players who are not everyday starters for their MLS teams. The Reserve League has been in place since 2005 (with the exception of the 2009 & 2010 seasons). Beginning in 2013, MLS reached an agreement with the United Soccer Leagues to integrate the MLS Reserve League with the Division III USL Pro competition.[36]

                The league's "Core Players" initiative allows teams to re-sign players using retention funds that do not count against the salary cap. Retention funds were implemented in 2013 as a mechanism for teams to retain key players instead of losing them to foreign teams.[37] Among the first high-profile players re-signed in 2013 using retention funds were U.S. national team regulars Graham Zusi and Matt Besler.


                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_League_Soccer
                "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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