The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Paul Dalglish finds he has nowhere to go

SAYS PAUL DALGLISH

- By Mark Guidi SPORT@SUNDAYPOST.COM

David Beckham is encounteri­ng difficulti­es in establishi­ng a Major League Soccer club in Miami.

Florida residents are showing some resistance to his plan, first hatched in 2014, to set up a club in the Florida metropolis and build a 25,000-seater stadium and entertainm­ent complex on city-owned land, currently occupied by a golf course. Obstacles and frustratio­n are nothing new in American “soccer”, however. Just ask Paul Dalglish. He has been coaching and managing in the United States for more than a decade.

Paul has just been voted the NPSL (National Premier Soccer League) Coach of the Year award after guiding Miami FC to become champions of the Sunshine Conference Division. But from there, his team has nowhere to go.

There is no promotion or relegation in the USA.

Of FIFA’S 211 member countries, only the States and Australia are in that situation. But Down Under, they have recognised the folly in that, and will introduce it next season.

That will leave the States as the only nation in the world without a competitiv­e pathway, and that has left Dalglish as one frustrated individual. Most people involved in the game Stateside are disillusio­ned that the MLS top tier is a closed shop, with no pathway into their top flight.

Soccer over here is growing at a rapid rate – much of that was down to David Beckham

You need to be invited by the game’s hierarchy, as was the case with Beckham and his consortium for the Miami team – they will introduced in season 2020.

Such is the outrage – driven by billionair­e Miami FC owner, Riccardo Silva – that the club has issued a lawsuit against the MLS, and appealed to FIFA as no promotion/relegation is against the ethos of the game, according to their rulebook.

They have also filed a paper to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in Europe.

Paul is awaiting developmen­ts with interest.

Being the son of Sir Kenny – Scotland’s most-capped player, who enjoyed phenomenal success at Celtic and Liverpool – making a name for himself was never going to be easy.

But he didn’t do too badly as a player with a host of clubs on both sides of the border.

Paul feels he is now developing nicely in the dugout, and hopes it leads to him going on to an extremely high level in the game.

The 41-year-old suspects he may be hampered, however, by the fact that there is no promotion and relegation in American soccer, and a proper measure of someone’s capabiliti­es can’t be taken until that fundamenta­l aspect is introduced.

In an exclusive interview, sitting in the plush offices of Miami FC, Dalglish told The Sunday Post: “With no promotion and relegation, if you want to coach at a higher level, you need to leave the club.

“That’s not right. You should be allowed to grow with the club and show loyalty.

“If promotion and relegation was introduced, why would I ever want to leave Miami FC? It’s an amazing club, with really profession­al and ambitious people in charge.

“But there needs to be an avenue to allow promotion and relegation in the overall structure of the leagues. It creates competitio­n and excitement.

“It’s a big frustratio­n. So hopefully it will change in the not-too-distant future.”

Miami FC chief executive, Sean Flynn, is working tirelessly to correct this dysfunctio­nal set-up.

He said: “We all deserve to know why we are the only country not complying with FIFA regulation­s. We need to fix our game.

“There is a massive upside to introducin­g promotion and relegation. It will change the sport dramatical­ly, and create a real competitiv­e edge which will improve things on the park and give the supporters a real edge-of-the-seat experience.

“It will also attract better players, more television and advertisin­g money, and create more compelling storylines.”

With that fundamenta­l change, Dalglish is confident soccer in the USA can genuinely become one of the best in the world.

He reasoned: “Soccer over here is growing at a rapid rate.

“I came over in 2006, and there were only 12 teams in the MLS. Now we have 23.

“I think much of that was down to David Beckham coming to LA Galaxy. “He added a whole new dimension and interest from all over the world when he headed for California in 2007.

“The game over here is now past the stage of ‘taking off ’. It has already taken off and is now flying high.

“It will get bigger and bigger and bigger. It will catch up with the biggest leagues in the world.

“But there is still a bit to go. “Beckham will go for it in a massive way when he gets the go-ahead here.

“I’m certain he will bring in a couple of really big hitters to join his club, probably guys in their prime rather than in the last year of their careers. “He created a huge buzz in the States a decade ago, and he’ll do the same with his new club. He is a proper superstar.

“Beckham is now part of showbusine­ss.

“He was on the Ellen Degeneres TV talk show recently, and that’s massive over here. That sort of thing will help

grow football further in the USA. The stadiums are already packed, and that’s a great sign. The next step needs to be – and will be – that the people who sell the MLS television advertisin­g get the really massive companies on board.

“That’s why the English Premier League has become massive and is watched all over the globe.

“The sort of demand there is to advertise on television during the Super Bowl is what we need to try to create for soccer.

“Soccer is now the biggest sport in the USA in terms of participat­ion. More people play it than basketball and baseball.

“Who’d have thought that 20 or 30 years ago? That’s probably got a lot to do with both sexes now playing football in a big way.

“So the grassroots are there. Kids are now growing up supporting MLS teams rather than European clubs. That’s a massive step forward. “The World Cup coming here in 2026 will give it another massive lift. “We need to bring in more big money from sponsorshi­p and that will allow us to compete for players with the big leagues in Europe.”

Right now, the US TV deal for the MLS sits at around $50m per season, which isn’t great.

Many believe that figure would more than quadruple overnight if promotion and relegation was introduced.

Away from the politics, Dalglish’s work isn’t going unnoticed. He is an intelligen­t man and a great student of the game.

He’d love to be able to hit the heights with Miami FC, but if red tape continues to thwart his ambition, there will be interest in him, both in the United States and back on British soil.

The 41-year-old continued: “As the game grows here, my reputation is also growing.

“People in the States know what I can do and the qualities I possess. If I had to go back home, I’d be starting from scratch.

“People ask: ‘Would you ever go back to Scotland or England to coach?’ I’d never say never – but it would need to be something exciting and

My ultimate dream in football is to manage Liverpool FC, the club dearest to my heart

challengin­g because I love being with Miami FC .

“I feel I am developing and improving. In coaching terms, I’m still young and learning all the time.

“So far, I’ve been lucky enough to have had a wee bit of success. I just want to build on that, but it’s not easy. “I try to get my team to play attractive football, score as many goals as we can in 90 minutes and concede as few goals as we can.

“I’m very conscious that the football supporter works hard all week to have money to buy a season ticket or to travel to an away game, and he or she wants to be entertaine­d.

“Rightly so. They want value for money. Winning is not enough. You need to win AND entertain.”

While Dalglish’s ambition is to be around if and when the structure of football in the USA changes, he admits his mind does wander occasional­ly.

“My ultimate dream in football is to manage Liverpool Football Club,” volunteere­d Paul.

“It’s highly unlikely that will ever happen, but that’s what I dream of. It’s the club dearest to my heart.

“As a kid, I was fortunate enough to watch Liverpool in the 80s and 90s and they played some brilliant football. “Ian Rush, John Barnes, Ray Houghton, John Aldridge, Jan Molby, Steve Mcmahon and many more.

“Barnes was exceptiona­l. And what he helped Liverpool achieve was just phenomenal.

“I was lucky enough to play with him at the end of his career when we were both at Newcastle United, and he was still exceptiona­l.”

Kickabouts with the old man in the back garden were never mentioned!

Dundee United manager Csaba Laszlo last night admitted he shared his supporters’ sense of frustratio­n – and pleaded for time to turn his new-look side into a force.

The Tangerines are now all but out of the Betfred Cup with two games to play, and their fans were again left to endure another lacklustre afternoon which saw them lose to Alloa on a penalty shootout at Tannadice in front of only 1,659 fans.

Laszlo said: “It’s frustratin­g for me. I understand the fans frustratio­ns, but I see these guys every day in training and I know there’s more to come from them.

“I’ve got complete faith in these guys. If we can hit the ground running in the league, then not many people will remember days like today.

“It’s frustratin­g because we played well for 80 minutes and then made a sloppy mistake which has cost us again.

“We’ve made a lot of changes this summer, so I think that may have something to do with it.

“Our performanc­es haven’t been good enough in the League Cup so far.”

It all started pretty positively for the hosts. There was a freedom and purpose to their attacking play in the early stages.

However, it was the visitors who had the first scoring opportunit­y when new signing Greig Spence flicked an effort into the side netting following some neat interplay in the final third.

James Keatings then smacked a freekick over the bar from distance before Nicky Clark’s header hit the woodwork after good work from Jamie Robson.

The opening goal then arrived for the hosts just as the natives in a sparse Tannadice were starting to get anxious.

Frederic Frans, the summer arrival from Partick Thistle, met Fraser Aird’s delivery and bulleted the ball home.

United has opportunit­ies to extend the lead, too. Young starlet Declan Glass twisted and turned before forcing Parry into a save. Then Paul Mcmullan’s rebound was thwarted by some heroic Alloa defending.

And they soon got their reward when Frans turned from hero to villain, fouling Jake Hastie inside the box for a penalty. Alan Trouten made no mistake from the spot as Alloa forced the match into penalty kicks for the bonus point.

The Wasps were faultless from the penalty spot while Stewart Murdoch and Mcmullan both missed for United.

The extra point lifts Jim Goodwin’s side to second in Group A and he said: “Over the whole piece, I thought the game plan worked really well. The guys carried out their duties to the letter of the law and we gave as a good as we got.”

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 ??  ?? Paul joins sister Kelly (Cates, now on TV and radio) to help dad Kenny show off his MBE in 1984. 34 years on (right) Paul is building his reputation as a coach at Miami FC
Paul joins sister Kelly (Cates, now on TV and radio) to help dad Kenny show off his MBE in 1984. 34 years on (right) Paul is building his reputation as a coach at Miami FC
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 ??  ?? Jake Hastie gets away from United’s Christoph Rabitsch
Jake Hastie gets away from United’s Christoph Rabitsch

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