FC Georgia United Teams Win in Florida and Japan

Over the MLK weekend, both the FC GA United 060 and 065 teams won their age division at the 2015 Florida Classic. This was the 6th consecutive win at the Classic for the 060 team, and the 2nd consecutive win for the 065’s.

Another FC GA United 065 team as well as their 070 team traveled to Japan to play in the Ichihara International Masters Tournament. The 070’s captured 1st place in their age group, while the 065’s, the defending champions, finished 2nd this year. This is the 3rd trip to Japan for the Club.

While in Japan, both teams played a series of “friendly” matches in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka, winning all matches.

FC Georgia United is a 501(c)3 charitable organization whose members have a common interest in and love of soccer, with male members 50 years and older, and female members 40 years and older. They play every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday morning in the Roswell area.

If you are interested in more information about the Club, or would like to join, please contact: Steve Lang, slang02@bellsouth.net.

Blank, MLS Commissioner welcome Atlanta’s appetite for soccer


It was not a casual sporting event for either of them. Blank, the owner of the Atlanta Falcons; and Garber are closing in on a deal for Blank to become a new franchise owner for a MLS team that would play in the new Falcons stadium that is supposed to open before the 2017 football season.
The sold-out Mexico-Nigeria match – a prelude the 2014 World Cup in Brazil – was yet another indicator of whether Atlanta would welcome professional soccer.
“You look at the crowd, and you see the spirit that’s here,” Blank said during a 10-minute sit-down interview in his suite during the game. “It is a great tribute to Atlanta and the appetite that Atlanta has for soccer at the highest level.
Asked about the status of his talks with MLS to buy an expansion team, Blank said: “I would say they are substantial.”
Is a deal about to be announced?
“All I will say is that the talks are substantial,” Blank said. “They have an interest in Atlanta. They love Atlanta, and we obviously know Atlanta. We are building a world-class sports facility for professional soccer. If you look at their map, there’s a huge hole in the Southeast, and Atlanta is the hub of the Southeast.”
Blank said he had told Commissioner Garber that when he and Bernie Marcus decided to launch Home Depot in Atlanta in 1978, the metro area’s population was about two million. Today it is closer to six million people, and Blank said the population could reach 10 million in the not too distant future.
“Atlanta is going to be one of the largest cities in the country,” said Blank about why it is important for MLS to have a team in the city.
Recent transactions have set the cost of acquiring an expansion soccer franchise at between $70 million to $100 million.
“They are going for what they’re going for,” Blank said. “The talks are substantial. We understand what the franchise investment would be, and I understand what it takes to build a business from scratch and what it takes to market a new team.”
Blank has had a long-standing interest in acquiring a professional soccer team, and he held talks with MLS “a number of years ago about a potential franchise in Atlanta.”
But it took the building of a new stadium that is being designed with soccer in mind to revive and intensify the talks with MLS.
Dan Courtemanche, executive vice president of communications for Major League Soccer, said that selling out the Georgia Dome on a weeknight “illustrates the opportunity” that exists in Atlanta.
“Ultimately, it’s a strong statement of the interest you have in soccer,” Courtemanche said. “It does confirm that the market exists.”
In every new market, Courtemanche said MLS said three criteria must be met:
A community needs to have a tremendous market, a great geographic location, corporate sponsors and a strong television market with a sizable population. “Clearly Atlanta meets that criteria,” he said.
You need to have an owner with the financial resources who preferably has experience in sports and entertainment properties as well as an owner who has a passion for the sport. “Clearly Arthur has that,” Courtemanche said.
And you have to have a stadium, preferably one that was built with soccer in mind. Construction on the new Atlanta Falcons stadium is scheduled to begin in mid April.
“Atlanta is the only top 10 market in the United States without a MLS team,” Courtemanche said. “It’s the home of some of the biggest brands in corporate brands in corporate America, and that’s extremely appealing. After tonight, there’s no doubt that top flight soccer can be successful in Atlanta.”
Atlanta has other ingredients that are important to MLS. It has a large Hispanic population, and it is a transportation center – making it accessible for fans who want to travel to Atlanta to watch a game.
For Wednesday night’s game, there were ticket buyers from 40 states. It also attracted tremendous international media attention – rivaling any other major sporting event with about 450 accredited media, most of them coming from outside the United States.
Lastly, Courtemanche said soccer is a sport that appeals to a younger audience – an enviable trend for major league sports. Part of that can be attributed to growth of youth soccer in communities throughout the country.
“The millennial generation does not live without Major League Soccer,” Courtemanche said.
The popularity of the sport is having a far-reaching impact.
Blank said he met his girlfriend, Angela Macuga, when their sons were playing on the same soccer team.
“It’s a love rooted in soccer,” Blank said.
In early February, Blank and Macuga became engaged – two years after their first date.

Here's Your Chance to be a Pro

Atlanta offers chance to join NASL club

The Atlanta Silverbacks will hold two dates of open tryouts to uncover the NASL's next phenomenom. With the NASL Spring Season's April 4 kickoff quickly approaching, Silverbacks coaches and front office administrators will be on hand to evaluate each prospective player.
The tryouts will be on Feb. 7 and 14 at Silverbacks Park. Tryouts cost $160 per date with lunch and two official tryout shirts provided.
To register, contact the Atlanta Silverbacks front office at 678-608-0627.

By 

The race will take place at the Polo Fields in Cumming in early February.

A soccer academy which serves the Cumming community is planning a 5K race in Cumming to raise funds for its scholarship program.
According to United Futbol Academy, the first-ever Race for the Goal 5K and 1K Fun Runwill be held at 2 p.m. on Feb. 8 at the Polo Fields in Cumming. Runners who register before Feb. 1 will be eligible to receive a free t-shirt, the academy says. The cost toregister for the 5K is $25, while the 1K fun run will cost $15. Race day registration costs $5 extra.
All proceeds generated by the event will benefit the academy’s scholarship fund, which provides opportunities for disadvantaged youngsters to play in recreational and competitive leagues that they would not normally be able to afford to participate in.
For more information on the race, please contact United Futbol Academy at 678-648-7033 or info@unitedfa.org.
Fun Run(ning) Fact: A 5K may seem like a long distance, but it’s a warmup for the average soccer player. During a full 90-minute match, a player usually runs more than 11 kilometers. That’s a seven mile run!
PREMIER SOCCER SERVICES
4th Annual Open Cup 2015
April 10-12 GIRLS weekend
April 17-19 BOYS weekend 
Decatur, AL  - 3.5 from Atlanta
PLAY ON THE BEST FIELDS IN THE SOUTH! 
 85% of all teams from out of state or country!  
13 different states already accepted!

Open Cup Girls
Great teams from u10s to 19s!  A, B, C levels
University tournament in conjunction with Showcase!  matches will include: U of Alabama, Evansville, South Alabama, U of Memphis, Samford, MTSU, Ole Miss and More!

Open Cup Boys 
International Teams from Mexico- Bermuda- El Salvador and More!
Pro Club Academy Monterrey Rayados joins tourney!

National Rush Select from Colorado accepted!
Compete and be seen by universities!
college showcasing in older ages!

Have you played on perfect fields yet?
Exciting Improvements for 2015!  The split weekend format will provide:
  • more teams the opportunity to play - every year has been a sell-out!
  • more teams allow for more divisions per age group to allow for Gold, Silver, and Bronze for a variety of competitive level
  • Split weekend allows for All games on Fri and Sat to be at the famed Jack Allen Complex with only consolations on Sunday at 2nd locations
  •  
  • Boys weekend: with international teams and teams from all over the midwest and south again- we have early commitments from teams from Brazil, Bermuda, Mexico, already!
  •  Girls weekend: this will now be a Girls College Showcase weekend for the U15-19s with recruiting opportunities PLUS special SHOWCASE college matches for top Division 1 programs to accent the weekend
Under 9-12 Boys and Girls:
3 Divisions
Under 13-16: 2 divisions
Under 17-19: Showcase format 

 

 
Atlanta is one of 24 U.S. cities interested in hosting a portion of the 2016 Copa America Centenario soccer tournament. 
The Copa America, which will be held for the first time outside South America, is the championship for the continent. Ten teams from South America are expected to compete. Additionally, U.S., Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica and two more teams from North and Central America and the Caribbean will compete. The tournament will be held in June.
Cities must submit proposals to U.S. Soccer by March 16.
“World-class sports events help the city’s economy by drawing visitors and providing a global stage to showcase metro Atlanta, and the Copa America Centenario is certainly that type of event,” said Dan Corso, president of the Atlanta Sports Council. “We look forward to working with our partners in the region to explore the opportunity to host this event.”
The other cities are: Phoenix, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Denver, Washington D.C., Jacksonville, Orlando, Tampa, Chicago, Indianapolis, Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, Kansas City, St. Louis, New York, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Nashville, Dallas, Houston and Seattle.
The tournament is expected to be hosted at between 8-13 sites. The winning cities will be announced in May.
Atlanta would host the game in the Georgia Dome. The new stadium that will replace the Dome isn’t scheduled to open until 2017. It will host Atlanta’s MLS team and the Falcons, among other events.
Should Atlanta win, it would be another sign of its growing interest in soccer.
Atlanta is among the cities that will host a portion of the Gold Cup later this year. The Gold Cup is the championship tournament for the countries that comprise North America, Central America and the Caribbean. Atlanta hosted a pair of games for the Gold Cup in 2013, as well as hosting a friendly for the U.S. women’s national team in February last year.
Doug Roberson The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Women’s pro soccer team possibly coming to Atlanta

Doug Roberson The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An investment group is considering starting a women’s professional soccer team in Atlanta.


Led by Atlanta native and resident Trey Brantley, the team would play in the National Women’s Soccer League.

Brantley and a team of 15 volunteers have spent more than 1,000 hours of due diligence on the team, which would be named the Atlanta Vibe and would play at Grady Stadium in midtown.

Before they go further, Brantley is asking for soccer supporters to go to www.Atlantavibe.com and fill out a survey that he said will take 30 seconds to complete. The survey will close on Wednesday. Brantley said the results will carry “tremendous weight.”

“We just need Atlanta to tell us that they want this,” he said.

If there is support, Brantley said he would like to try to start the team in 2016, a year ahead of Atlanta’s MLS expansion franchise owned by Arthur Blank. Brantley declined to say if he has had conversations with the NWSL or with any of the teams in the league. An NWSL spokesman said the league is exploring the possibilty of expanding in 2016, but wouldn’t comment on any specific market or ownership group.

Brantley also declined to say how much capital would be needed to start the team, but did say he and the ownership group, which includes Southfund Partners, has enough capital to run the team for three years without any revenue.

Atlanta has a checkered history with women’s professional soccer. The Atlanta Beat twice folded when its league folded, most recently when the Women’s Professional Soccer league ceased operations in 2012. The Atlanta Silverbacks women’s team is operational and plays in the W-League.

The NWSL is composed of nine teams with a schedule that stretches from April through August. The league was founded in 2012 and began play in 2013. The league doesn’t have a team in the Southeast. Playing in the league are U.S. national team standouts Abby Wambach, Hope Solo, Alex Morgan and Heather O’Reilly, among others.

Brantley, 50, got the idea to start the team two years ago when the WPL folded. Brantley, who attended Southern Poly, has spent most of his career in the telecommunications industry. He recently sold his company, which gave him time to devote to the new soccer venture.

His interest in the sport derived from watching a niece play, and now watching his 12-year-old daughter, Emma who is a center back, play. Brantley said he serves on the managemetn committee of Gol Soccer Academy and the board of the Tucker Youth Soccer Association.

“I look at things as ‘who could be her role model?’ ” Brantley said of his daughter. “It’s great to bring in an MLS team, but I want something these girls can strive to do. It shows what a successful player can do.”

The name Vibe came about organically.

During meetings with the volunteers, Brantley said one of the first things they wanted to do was give the team a name, something that captured the vibe of the sport and the city.

As the word vibe was continued to be used to describe the metro Atlanta area, Brantley said it struck him that Vibe should be the team name.

http://www.ajc.com/news/sports/womens-pro-soccer-team-possibly-coming-to-atlanta/njjMt/

Atlanta Black Harts? Locomotives? Resurgents? Help pick new Atlanta soccer team's name

Why not the Blanks?
The members of Terminus Legion, the grassroots fan club that has rallied for Atlanta to be selected for a new Major League Soccer team, has spent months debating names for the club. And now the time has come to help them select a name that would be presented to team owner Arthur Blank and Darren Eales, the club president. (Team executives would get the final say.) Here are the choices, plus some explanations:
Bantams
Bantams are small chickens noted for their aggressive nature. This would allow the team to embrace a scrappy, tenacious form of play. Chicken images could be interesting especially in an aggressive stance. In contrast, it would be natural for the opposition to call us cocks or chickens. Bantamweight is one of the lower weight classes in boxing and referencing a cock-fighting breed may not be widely accepted.
Black Harts
Hart is the Old English word for a stag or a deer. The southeast is known for having a large deer population, and it is not uncommon to see them in Metro Atlanta. We added the color Black to match the black color of the team and to allude to the cold-hearted attack of the victors. The downside to this name is that few will know the reference, might consider it misspelled and that no deer are actually black. Neutral, but an interesting fact, the EPL side Spurs home field is called White Hart Lane.
Empire
Georgia is known (unofficially) as the Empire State of the South, which is meant to represent the desire to be the leaders in industrial and economic development in the Southeast. As it refers to an MLS team, the name Atlanta Empire would symbolize the aspirations our team has to be at the top of the league. It could also represent the breadth of the Atlanta team’s fanbase, as we already have fans in Alabama, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, and Tennessee. A downside to this name could be that it may be confused with the official state nickname of New York (the Empire State).
Firebirds
While many of us completely dread even the slightest chance of being called the Phoenix, a description of a phoenix could work, in the name Firebirds. Perhaps even the Fire Birds. The imagery could be outstanding and it would reference the Atlanta seal. The association with the defunct Pontiac car could provide a negative unless we as a supporters group completely embraced it. The name doesn’t inspire a lot of passionate responses that we have heard and seems almost a “safe default.”
Kings
In addition to superiority, the Kings name would bring incredible heraldic imagery with crowns, scrolls, and a legitimate reason to have a shield shape. It would also bring a nice nod to Atlanta’s civil rights history. The name would have exactly zero chance of being misunderstood. The downside is that there is already an NHL and an NBA team with the name, so it wouldn’t be distinctive in sports, though it would within MLS. The connection with the MLK family would need to be carefully managed as well.
Locomotives
Atlanta was founded as Terminus, the end of the line of the Western and Atlantic Railroad, which connected Savannah to the Midwest. Atlanta was the railroad hub for the South during the Antebellum era. Locomotives would allow for a strong train theme appearance and celebrations. Downside is that not many may know this bit of Atlanta history as the city is known much more currently as an airline hub.
Railrunners
The railroad history of Atlanta is distinctive and strong. A team name in conjunction with those rails would really tie into the city. The railrunner is an intermodal system that converts truck trailers for rail use for cheaper shipping. It also is used for work trucks so that they can do maintenance on the rails. There have been various other versions of this name, Railmen, Railers, Railbirds, Railspikers, etc. Voting for this name is a vote for us to explore this name further. Unfortunately this name would be associated with Carolina’s NASL team and may be interpreted as a little too minor league.
Resurgents
The beauty of this name is two-fold. First, it is not a common word, so much so that Chrome spell-check underlines it, but it is still immediately understandable. So we could own the name but wouldn’t need to explain it. Secondly, the meaning is perfect. A version of Atlanta’s Latin motto “Resurgens,” the team name would mean those who rise again. Over losses on the field or personal. Over the stigma of Atlanta as a sports town. Over the doubters of soccer as an American sport. The shortened ‘Gents presents a wonderful set of chants and cheers. On the negative, it might sound a little awkward to those uninitiated, and could perhaps need explained to a few unfamiliar.
No name
There are some who feel that a team name could be an organic process and point to the EPL which is full of teams simply named after their city. Many of us believe that in order to attract a wider audience across the southeast and within our city that the team needs a name for the fans to yell. It also would be quite awkward to have the sign on the side of the stadium to say, “The home of the Atlanta Falcons Football Club and the Atlanta Football Club”
In addition, there's the question over whether the team should be "soccer club" or a "football club." Myself, I'm partial to "Atlanta FC," "Terminus FC," or "Resurgens FC." Let them know your views here.