Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Hard- working Le Toux retires as Union member

- ByMatthew DeGeorge mdegeorge@ 21st- centurymed­ia. com @ sportsdoct­ormdonTwit­ter

CHESTER » Sebastien Le Toux is the first to admit that things in Philadelph­ia weren’t always perfect. As he signed a new contract Tuesday afternoon for a third separate stintwith the Union, that fact would’ve been hard to escape had he tried.

But through it all, through three coaches and two trades out of town, Le Toux always returned to what is now his home. It’s a testament to what the Philadelph­iaUnion means to the forward. But it’s also a reflection of the consonance between Le Toux’s journey and that of his club: Occasional­ly rocky, not always as wildly successful as hoped for, but still something special and poignant to be shared with a fan base, a relatabili­ty that stints at five other MLS clubs will never dim.

“My heart, it’s here,” an emotional Le Toux said Tuesday while penning a one- day contract to retire with the Union ahead of his induction as the founding member of the club’s Ring of Honor before the June 23 game with Vancouver. “It’s how I felt since the first game when I scored a hat trick at Lincoln Financial, and there was a connection. I met my wife who’s from here. Everything brings me back here, not just the soccer part but everything else.”

The adoration of the fans has been similarly constant for Le Toux, who signed his first MLS contract with the expansion Seattle Sounders onMay 8, 2008, 10 years to the day of his retirement.

In that illustriou­s decade, Le Toux has left a stellar legacy, first and foremost as the face of a fledgling Union franchise. In 263 MLS games, the native of Mont- Saint- Aignan, France, scored 59 goals and 57 assists, one of only 19 players in league history to hit 50 in both scoring categories­and 50. He finished with exactly 50 and 50 in 175 games with the Union; all three franchise records.

Le Toux made instant history by scoring a hat trick in the Union’s inaugural home game, a 3- 2 win over D. C. United on April 10, 2010. Until last year, it stood as the club’s only hat trick. He scored the Union’s only goal in the 2011 MLS Cup playoffs, a two- leg loss to Houston. And Le Toux, who won the 2009 U. S. Open Cup with Seattle, is the all- time leading scorer in the modern era of that competitio­n, helping lead the Union to the 2014 and 2015 finals on home turf.

“To follow my dreams and be a profession­al soccer player, it was not easy,” Le Toux said. “You will have some things denied by teams that you think you can play but you’re not good enough for some people, and I had to work hard in my youth to reach the level I have. I’m just glad I fulfilled my dreams and worked hard to do so.”

“As a lifelong Philadelph­ian, anytime you see someone who embraces our city as their own, you feel a certain kind of pride,” said Union manager Jim Curtin, who played against Le Toux before coaching him. “He loves this town, had an instant bond with the fans in this town, and it wasn’t just the goals he scored or the assists. It was the little things, like sticking around until this stadium was almost empty to sign every last autograph, take every last picture. He has a real loving relationsh­ip with the fans. They embraced him from Day 1 for good reason — a hat trick in your opening game always helps to ease that process. But he did more than just on the field. And again, he’s a good person, first and foremost.”

In many ways, the visceral pain of two separation­s from the fan base so endeared to him strengthen­ed Le Toux’s bond, serving himwell as ambassador for the club.

Le Toux was an All- Star in 2010 and led the team to the playoffs in 2011, but was traded before the 2012 season in a dispute over a new contract with manager Peter Nowak. Vancouver dealt Le Toux to the New York Red Bulls — around the time Nowak was fired by the Union for conduct that spawned several lawsuits — and Le Toux returned to Philly in 2013.

 ??  ?? Sebastien Le Toux, center, holds up his ceremonial jersey after signing a one- day contract to retire with the Philadelph­ia Union. Joining Le Toux are, from left, Chief Business Officer Tim McDermott, sporting director Earnie Stewart, manager Jim...
Sebastien Le Toux, center, holds up his ceremonial jersey after signing a one- day contract to retire with the Philadelph­ia Union. Joining Le Toux are, from left, Chief Business Officer Tim McDermott, sporting director Earnie Stewart, manager Jim...

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