Cape Breton Post

Canadian Premier League to partner with U Sports on sharing talent

- BY NEIL DAVIDSON

The Canadian Premier League is joining forces with U Sports to help funnel young talent to the fledgling men’s pro soccer league.

Student-athletes will be able to play with a CPL club, while preserving their eligibilit­y, in the spring and summer before returning to U Sports competitio­n. The student will be paid for his efforts after signing a CPL-U Sports developmen­tal contract.

A U Sports-specific player draft will take place Nov. 12 following the university men’s championsh­ip in Vancouver.

“It showcases our talent, our coaches, our programs,” U Sports CEO Graham Brown said of the new partnershi­p. “I really believe it’s going to have an impact on young soccer players deciding to go to a Canadian university and play soccer as opposed to possibly heading south.

“And I’m not opposed to heading south. But I’m opposed to the young people who head south and they’re not really going to a comparable education as one of our institutio­ns.”

The CPL, which currently has seven franchises, is slated to kick off the third week of April. The U Sports season runs August through November.

Student-athletes who join a CPL club will be released to return to their U Sports team on Aug. 15. Once their U Sports team has wrapped up their season, the student-athlete may rejoin the CPL side.

Any drafted player who returns to university following the CPL season - and continues to meet draft-eligible rules - will go back into the CPL draft in subsequent years.

Student-athletes who have graduated or whose eligibilit­y has expired can declare themselves available for the general CPL draft.

“We are thrilled to announce this groundbrea­king partnershi­p between the CPL and U Sports,” CPL commission­er David Clanachan said.

U Sports includes 48 men’s soccer teams.

The CPL’s soccer operations department, with input from U Sports coaches, is scouting players to establish a prospects list.

The new league has not divulged full details on how it plans to flesh out its rosters. But it has talked of building around experience­d Canadians called “foundation­al players.” A second list, featuring under-23 Canadians, has been submitted to the league’s soccer operations office in advance of those players being approached.

Further roster additions, including survivors from the league’s more than 1,400 trialists, will be revealed by early November.

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