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Evan Hallstrom Moving To Super Late Models

Published in Racing
Monday, 22 April 2019 14:13

NORTHFIELD, Vt. – Evan Hallstrom is making the transition from late model racing to super late model competition.

“I’m excited to have the opportunity to go full-time super late model racing this season,” he said. “It will be a transition from late models to super late models because supers just have different moving parts than a late model does. We actually made a couple of super late model starts last year just to get a feel for it. That will definitely help us with our transition as well.”

The Hallstrom Motorsports driver is going into his fourth year of racing, but it will be his rookie season as a super late model driver. His tentative schedule consists of 15 races with the Pro All Stars Series in addition to some of the bigger super late model races, such as the Oxford 250 at Oxford Plains Speedway in Oxford, Maine.

“I’m really looking forward to getting back to Oxford,” Hallstrom said. “It’s one of the tracks that I felt like came naturally to me in the late model. I struggled there in the super late model, but we’re going to work really hard to improve there and get plenty of seat time in preparation for the Oxford 250.”

Hallstrom is also looking forward to returning to his home track of Thunder Road Int’l Speedbowl in Barre, Vt., for a couple of super late model races as well as making his debut at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, N.H.

“Obviously with Thunder Road being my home track I’m always excited to go back there,” he said. “It’s cool to be able to see how far I have come already with the help of my parents, sponsors and fans. It’ll be neat to be able to race in front of the hometown crowd in a super late model now.

“Loudon is another one that is circled on the schedule. The place is just bad fast and I can’t wait to get a solid lap around there at top speeds. I love the speed and I love flat tracks, which both sum up Loudon so hopefully we will find some success there too.”

Hallstrom will kick off his season on Saturday and Sunday at Oxford Plains Speedway with the PASS North Super Late Models.

Ryan Bowers Joins BDS Motorsports

Published in Racing
Monday, 22 April 2019 14:18

HAM LAKE, Minn. – Ryan Bowers has joined forces with BDS Motorsports to run the Midwest Power Series.

“It’s really good and I’m excited for the opportunity,” Bowers said. “It’s definitely a top-notch operation. My confidence is high knowing I have a great team behind me and I’m ready to get started.”

The 360 winged sprint car series goes green on May 3 at Princeton Speedway in Princeton, Minn., and continues the following day at Cedar Lake Speedway in New Richmond, Wis. However, Bowers will make his debut with the team next Saturday at Knoxville Raceway in Knoxville, Iowa, to shake things down.

Bowers is hopeful to be on point once the Midwest Power Series season starts and that he will be a contender each night as $3,000 is up for grabs to any driver who can sweep the opening weekend. With the first two nights each paying $3,000 to win this makes the first weekend potentially worth a total of $9,000.

“My goal is to win the championship,” he said. “To do that I’m going to need to stay competitive along the way and in contention every night.”

The Midwest Power Series is slated to run 16 races across four tracks from May through September. The series primarily runs at Jackson Motorplex in Jackson, Minn., which hosts 10 nights. The series visits Cedar Lake Speedway three times and makes a lone appearance at Princeton Speedway for the opener, at Knoxville Raceway on June 1 and at Ogilvie Speedway in Ogilvie, Minn., on June 22.

Bowers said BDS Motorsports will also race a combination of 410 and 360 sprint car events during select shows in the Midwest, including at Jackson Motorplex and Knoxville Raceway, when the Midwest Power Series is off.

“Along with staying competitive every night I’m really looking to bring home some wins along the way,” he said. “I’m excited to get the opportunity to run for this top-notch organization and I want to put the car in Victory Lane early and often.”

Eldora Sets Start Time For Season Opener

Published in Racing
Monday, 22 April 2019 14:31

ROSSBURG, Ohio – Encouraged by a favorable spring forecast, Eldora Speedway officials have announced the 66th season opener scheduled for Saturday night will use a traditional showtime of 7:30 p.m.

A four-class bash, highlighted by a $5,000-to-win feature for the Sunoco American Late Model Series plus the winged sprint cars of the K&L Ready Mix NRA Sprint Invaders, DIRTcar Modifieds and Eldora Stock cars will kick off the 2019 season. The pit area will open to competitors at 3 p.m. and the grandstands will open at 4 p.m. The cars will hit the high-banked half-mile clay oval for hot laps and qualifying at 6 p.m. The first race will go green at 7:30 p.m.

Adult admission is $19 and children ages 12 and younger are admitted free to all general admission areas. Eldora continues to provide free parking for its patrons immediately adjacent to the grandstand.

Family-friendly pricing at the concessions is a staple of the 66-year old venue. Coca-Cola products in 12 oz. cans are still just $1 and the Eldora’s ‘World Famous Pizza Burgers’ and chicken wings will be hot and ready.

A full-service bar is located under the historic covered grandstand and ice-cold beer is still $2 per 12 oz. can.

Starworks Confirms Parker Chase For Full IMSA Effort

Published in Racing
Monday, 22 April 2019 16:41

POMPANO BEACH, Calif. – Starworks Motorsports has locked Parker Chase in for the full IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season.

Chase was originally scheduled to co-drive the No. 8 Audi R8 LMS in just the endurance races on the IMSA schedule, but will now contest the full season with the team.

His primary sponsor, Vertical Bridge, has committed to the upcoming rounds at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Detroit, Watkins Glen Int’l and Road America, with hopes to fill out the remainder of the races.

“I’m very excited to be racing in the sprint races as well as the four endurance races,” said Chase. “I can’t thank Vertical Bridge Enough for their continued support this year, and I’m ready to get on track at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course next week.”

Chase will race alongside sports car racing veteran Ryan Dalziel, who is also committed for the remainder of the season.

“We’re excited to officially have Parker secured as Ryan Dalziel’s co-driver,” said team owner Peter Baron. “He’s a great young talent and shows strong speed everywhere we go. He and Ryan have proven to be a great combination, and hopefully our luck turns as we begin the next segment of races so we can fight for some valuable points. We’re looking forward to fighting at tracks where our Audi R8 LMS GT3 EVO will be competitive.”

Bruins' Cassidy questions Leafs' skating tactics

Published in Hockey
Monday, 22 April 2019 15:49

Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy has told officials to watch the Maple Leafs' skate-bump tactics.

"I'd just call it feet contacting feet," Cassidy told reporters in Boston on Monday, one day after the Bruins staved off elimination to force a Game 7. "Whether it's by accident or by design I don't know. I don't want to speculate."

Game 7 is in Boston on Tuesday -- the second-straight year a first-round series between these teams needed to go the distance. The Bruins won in last year's seventh game, 7-4.

On Monday, Cassidy was asked by a reporter whether he felt slew footing was an issue in the series.

Cassidy said he didn't think so, because the act of slew footing requires an arm -- but the coach did say he felt Toronto players were bumping into the back of Bruins skates a lot. "Whether it's just dumb luck, or how they battle for pucks," Cassidy said, "we've brought it up with the supervisor."

The NHL assigns a supervisor of officials to each NHL series, and coaches are encouraged to open a dialogue with the supervisor about any trends they see on the ice.

"There's a couple of things we find that Toronto does that we brought up," Cassidy said. "That's what [the supervisors] are here for, that's what they asked for. Is there anything you see? I'm sure Toronto brings some stuff up with us. We'll see where it goes."

Cassidy provided a few examples of the skate bump tactics. He said "there's been a few of them every game" and "that's what I believe caused the [Jake] DeBrusk/[Nazem] Kadri battle."

DeBrusk and Kadri had a few scuffles in Game 2; Kadri cross-checked DeBrusk late in the third period and was suspended for the remainder of the round.

Cassidy also pointed to a time when Sean Kuraly "went down from behind" after a faceoff.

When asked by a reporter about a play in the first period of Game 6 -- when Bruins forward Joakim Nordstrom was called for high sticking after he appeared to have his skates taken out because of contact from Toronto defenseman Travis Dermott -- Cassidy was emphatic.

"There you go," Cassidy said. "They go into the corner and he all of a sudden is flying backwards and his stick gets up. So it will be pointed out. It's still a high stick if it catches a guy in the face, unfortunately. But I think the original contact caused the high stick. Because Nordy's stick was on the ice battling for it. Usually, a high stick comes up in the act of ... this one came up in the act of falling backwards because his foot got kicked out, so I would hope they would notice the contact there."

Texas family charged in Masters tickets scheme

Published in Golf
Monday, 22 April 2019 11:18

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Four members of a Texas family have been charged with federal crimes in what prosecutors say was a scheme that used stolen identities to get tickets to the Masters golf tournament, then resell those tickets at a healthy profit.

Documents filed in U.S. District Court in Augusta don't say how many Masters tickets the four defendants are suspected of obtaining, or how much money they made from any resales. Court records say that from 2013 through 2017 the family used the stolen identities in an effort to cheat the lottery system that distributes tournament tickets and to circumvent Augusta National Golf Club's rules allowing people to apply only once to enter its ticket lottery.

Stephen Michael Freeman of Katy, Texas, was charged with conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud as well as aggravated identity theft. Freeman's parents - Steven Lee Freeman and Diane Freeman of Helotes, Texas - and a sister, Christine Oliverson of San Antonio, were also charged with conspiracy.

The family purchased bulk mailing lists to obtain names and addresses of people that were used to create fake accounts for Augusta National's online ticket lottery, according to the court documents filed by federal prosecutors. Those accounts were submitted with email addresses controlled by Freeman and his relatives.

The family would then ask Augusta National to change the addresses associated with the bogus accounts, using ''false driver licenses, false utility bills and false credit card statements in the identity of the fake user accounts'' sent by mail, the court documents said. That would ensure any tickets won through the lottery would be mailed to addresses where Freeman and his relatives would receive them, prosecutors said.

The family ''could then resell the tickets at a substantial profit,'' the charging document said.

Court records did not list attorneys who could speak for Freeman or his charged relatives.

The office of U.S. Attorney Bobby Christine said in a news release that the charges carry potential penalties of up to 20 years in prison, as well as substantial fines.

Relevent to sue U.S. Soccer over Miami match

Published in Soccer
Monday, 22 April 2019 11:26

Multimedia sports and entertainment company Relevent, a promoter of international soccer matches, has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Soccer Federation and its secretary general, Dan Flynn, after the USSF refused to sanction the playing of an Ecuadorian league match in Miami.

According to the filing, Relevent was attempting to stage a match between Ecuadorian sides Barcelona SC and Guayaquil City FC, to be held May 5 at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium. As the national governing body for soccer, the USSF is charged with sanctioning all applications for international soccer matches held in the U.S.

The suit alleges that the USSF's decision to deny permission for the match violated its stated purpose "to promote, govern, coordinate, and administer the growth and development of soccer in all its recognized forms in the United States for all persons of all ages and abilities, including national teams and international games and tournaments" and that the USSF is required to sanction a match unless "the Federation decides by clear and convincing evidence that staging the match would be detrimental to the sport of soccer."

The suit goes on to contend the reason for the USSF's decision is that it "is economically conflicted and is abusing its authority, in order to protect Major League Soccer ["MLS"], a for-profit entity with which USSF has extremely close financial and personal ties."

Relevent competes against MLS' marketing arm, Soccer United Marketing (SUM), to promote soccer matches in the U.S, and it is in this area that the suit could have a broader impact.

The lawsuit, which was filed in New York, seeks to have the USSF's decision annulled and vacated, and asks the USSF to sanction the match as well as not denying any future applications made by Relevent without lawful reasons.

The lawsuit is one of several the USSF is facing, including a gender discrimination filing by the U.S. women's national team players, as well as an antitrust lawsuit filed by the NASL.

The USSF and a Relevent spokesman declined to comment when contacted by ESPN FC.

Relevent first applied to have the match sanctioned on March 29, 2019. Documents obtained by ESPN FC showed that Relevent applied for and received approval to put on the match from LigaPro Ecuador -- the league in which both Barcelona and Guayaquil play -- the Ecuador Football Association, and CONMEBOL, the governing body for the sport in South America.

A source familiar with the suit said CONCACAF approval wasn't needed and the only required approval that remained to be obtained was from the USSF.

On April 5, 2019, Relevent submitted its application fee and performance bond totaling $9,700. The USSF initially said Relevent's application was incomplete, on the grounds that Relevent chairman Charlie Stillitano, who was referenced as the FIFA match agent for the event, wasn't listed on FIFA's website as being eligible to fulfill that role. It was alleged that Stillitano's match agent insurance was in the process of being renewed.

Relevent, with the help of FIFA, soon provided documentation that Stillitano was indeed eligible to serve as the event's match agent, but the USSF wasn't satisfied. On April 12, the USSF wrote a letter to Relevent stating that until Stillitano's name appeared on FIFA's website, the issue would remain unresolved.

The suit also alleges that the USSF, in the same letter, referenced "the absence of 'exceptional circumstances'" from Relevent's application and that the USSF "threatened to penalize Relevent if it were to advertise the Match without formal USSF sanction, with penalties including fines, withholding of approval of matches, and 'any other penalty or combination of penalties that the Federation deems appropriate in its sole discretion.'"

The suit goes on to detail how the economic interests of the USSF and MLS are intertwined, with MLS commissioner Don Garber and Atlanta United vice president Carlos Bocanegra both sitting on the USSF board. It also highlights the fact that the league's marketing arm, SUM, has a contract to control the USSF's commercial rights.

"In refusing to sanction Relevent's application, USSF has thus elevated the economic interest of a select group of its members over its statutorily mandated purpose," the suit reads. "The decision is as arbitrary [it cannot be supported by a rational factual basis] as it is capricious [it represents a willful disservice to American soccer in the name of profit]. It is also [sic] represents a failure to perform a duty enjoined on it by law. USSF's decision to ignore or deny Relevent's application must be annulled, and the Match must be allowed to proceed."

This isn't the first time that Relevent and the USSF have been at odds over the staging of international matches on U.S. soil. After fan violence forced the postponement of the second leg of the Copa Libertadores final between River Plate and Boca Juniors last year, Relevent offered to stage the game in Miami, but was rebuffed by the USSF and its president, Carlos Cordeiro. The match was eventually held in Madrid.

Relevent also tried to schedule a La Liga match involving Girona and Spanish giants Barcelona, only for the Royal Spanish Football Federation to refuse to sanction the event.

This is also not the first time that a Stillitano-led company has been involved in litigation with the USSF. Back in 2006, Stillitano's previous company, ChampionsWorld LLC, filed an antitrust lawsuit against the USSF, alleging that the Federation and MLS conspired to drive the company out of business. In 2012, the case was decided in favor of the USSF, before the ruling was appealed and the two sides eventually settled.

Sources: Sarri angry at Burnley bench obscenities

Published in Soccer
Monday, 22 April 2019 17:58

LONDON -- Several individuals on the Burnley bench riled Chelsea head coach Maurizio Sarri by repeatedly calling him "s--- Italian" prior to the touchline brawl that marred Monday's 2-2 draw between the clubs at Stamford Bridge, sources have told ESPN FC.

Sarri was sent down the tunnel in the closing minutes of the match by referee Kevin Friend and fourth official Roger East after losing his cool with members of Sean Dyche's backroom team, though the Burnley manager himself was not involved.

Sources have told ESPN FC that Sarri's anger boiled over when he was branded a "s--- Italian" by multiple members of the visiting club, and Chelsea's head coach was so offended by what he had heard that postmatch media duties were delegated to his assistant Gianfranco Zola.

Details of the words exchanged between the two benches are expected to be included in the referee's report given that East was in position to hear everything, and after the game Zola suggested that Chelsea could ask the Football Association to take action against Burnley for what was said.

"He's very frustrated, so he'd prefer not to come over here," Zola said of Sarri. "He's been sent off. I think he's been offended as well, so he didn't feel it was the right thing to do, to speak to you.

"I think he's been told something from their bench, but don't ask me exactly what. I don't want to go down that line, but we'll see what we can do about that.

"I think there will be a follow [up] on that. Maurizio felt very unhappy. We understand it's a football game. You say words because of the adrenalin, but he wasn't particularly happy."

Emotions between the benches flared early in the game, with Dyche's assistant Ian Woan pointing out that Sarri was encroaching on the visiting technical area while Chelsea took issue with what they perceived as cynical Burnley time-wasting from midway through the first half onwards.

Tensions escalated as Burnley stubbornly repelled waves of Chelsea pressure and acted to slow the game down in the closing minutes, and at the final whistle a mass of angry bodies from both clubs converged at the entrance to the Stamford Bridge tunnel.

Burnley goalkeeping coach Billy Mercer had to be restrained after becoming incensed with Chelsea goalkeeper coach Massimo Nenci and fitness coach Paolo Bertelli, while defender Antonio Rudiger also waded into the melee despite currently nursing an injured knee.

Both clubs are likely to face punishment from the FA for failing to control their players and staff, but individuals on the Burnley side could be punished further if they are shown in the referee's report to have provoked Sarri.

After the game Dyche made a light-hearted effort to play down the ugly scenes as "handbags, bumbags, manbags," but did confirm he had sought out Zola at half-time to raise the issue of Sarri encroaching on the Burnley technical area.

"He said at half-time [Sarri] is not quite getting it," Dyche said of his conversation with Zola. "I said he was going over into my box. He just said he didn't quite get the reality of it -- they're bigger in Italy. OK. He's been here a while, mind. I said fine and accepted it."

When it was put to him that Sarri had exchanged angry words with members of his backroom team including Woan, Dyche joked: "I don't think the coaches' language skills are that good. It wouldn't have been a deep conversation. Woany's from the Wirral [near Liverpool in England]."

Chelsea's Hudson-Odoi ruptures Achilles in draw

Published in Soccer
Monday, 22 April 2019 16:15

LONDON -- Callum Hudson-Odoi's season is over after the Chelsea winger confirmed he ruptured his Achilles during Monday's feisty 2-2 draw with Burnley at Stamford Bridge.

The 18-year-old appeared to land awkwardly while attempting to control a dropping ball shortly before the 41st minute and limped from the field with the help of two Chelsea physios and was replaced by Pedro Rodriguez.

Chelsea were ultimately held to a frustrating draw by Burnley as goals by N'Golo Kante and Gonzalo Higuain were cancelled out by strikes from Jeff Hendrick and Ashley Barnes, but Hudson-Odoi's injury could have much bigger implications.

"Really gutted to end my season with an Ruptured Achilles, gotta work hard and try and come back stronger for next season!!!" Hudson-Odoi posted on Twitter.

Assuming postmatch media duties in place of Maurizio Sarri, Chelsea assistant Gianfranco Zola confirmed that the 18-year-old is set for a long absence.

"It's not an easy one," he said. "I think it's a serious injury. It's his Achilles tendon. I cannot tell you the extent of it. I don't know -- he'll have to have an examination, but it's not looking good."

Hudson-Odoi's injury adds a further layer of uncertainty to what was set to be a summer of intense speculation about his future.

Sources told ESPN FC as recently as last month that Hudson-Odoi remained intent on leaving Chelsea this summer, despite failing in his attempt to force through a January move to Bayern Munich with a formal transfer request.

Hudson-Odoi and his representatives have so far rebuffed Chelsea's attempts to re-open talks over an extension to his current contract, which expires in June 2020, but the prospect of months on the sidelines could force him to re-evaluate his options.

Chelsea also lost N'Golo Kante to injury at half-time against Burnley, but Zola does not expect the France international's problem to prove serious.

"N'Golo was taken down on the counter and, as he fell, he fell on the foot of a player, so he had a contusion in his ribs," Zola explained. "He couldn't breathe totally. He'll be alright [to face Manchester United on Sunday]."

Chelsea went into Monday's game knowing a win would greatly boost their chances of a top-four finish, following defeats for Tottenham, Manchester United and Arsenal over the weekend.

But instead Sarri's men were picked apart at set pieces by Burnley and frustrated by the visitors' deep defending and time-wasting.

"We tried everything to win the game," Chelsea defender David Luiz told Sky Sports. "It's difficult when you play against a team who have two chances and score two goals and didn't want to play the game.

"It's anti-football. Losing time [time wasting] all the time, especially when you have the ball. Their players went to the floor and stopped the game.

"They were playing 11 inside the box. It's difficult to score against a team like that."

Zola added: "There was too much time-wasting. We thought five minutes [added time] wasn't enough to compensate for the time-wasting. But we did everything we could. That's the reason we're frustrated."

Burnley coach Sean Dyche, whose team are near locks to avoid relegation after the hard-fought point, bristled at the "anti-football" suggestion and praised his players for withstanding Chelsea's pressure.

"There are nights like tonight when you just have to give everything, every inch," he said. "You know, it used to be a really good thing when fans see their team give everything. They used to love it and maybe it's still got a place."

David Beckham's Inter Miami: What's the latest?

Published in Soccer
Monday, 22 April 2019 08:14

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- The vow almost comes too easily from Jorge Mas. He's discussing the fact that the team he co-owns, Inter Miami CF, will be spending its first two seasons not in the Magic City but 35 miles up the coast in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

This has been tried before in MLS with the now-defunct Miami Fusion, but will people make the trek from Miami-Dade County to Broward? Can Inter Miami capture the hearts of a fickle and fragmented sporting public in South Florida? Mas and the ownership group, which includes soccer legend David Beckham, Simon Fuller -- who created the "American Idol" franchise -- Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son and former Sprint CEO Marcelo Claure, are hoping so.

"You win, people go," Mas says following last week's MLS Board of Governors meeting near Los Angeles. "We'll win."

When it's pointed out that the Fusion won too, he says, "I know, but it's a little different." Such is Mas' charisma that the impulse is to believe him, but where do things stand with Inter Miami CF on some key points ahead of their 2020 debut?

Wait, why are they playing in Fort Lauderdale?

"They've got an office in Coral Gables. That's all they've got," now retired Sun-Sentinel soccer columnist Jeff Rusnak said of Inter Miami. "They don't have a training facility. They don't have a stadium. They're now under a massive time crunch. This is nuts."

A referendum to build Miami Freedom Park, which will include a 25,000-seat soccer stadium on the site of the Melreese Country Club near Miami International airport, prevailed in November by a comfortable 60-40 margin. In a city that still feels burned from the Marlins Stadium fiasco, one in which the city ended up paying $536 million of the $640 million cost and then had to sell bonds to pay what was owed, that's no small feat.

Despite the star power of Beckham, the club has encountered more obstacles than a competitor on "American Ninja Warrior" in its quest for a home. The Melreese Country Club is its fifth attempt to find a suitable site for a stadium. The deal isn't done, either: Mas and his group still need to negotiate a 99-year lease with the Miami City Commission and obtain approval from four of the five commissioners. Two commissioners, Manolo Reyes and Willy Gort (in whose district the site is located), are already on record as being against the project.

The venue won't be completed until the 2022 campaign, and Mas struck a deal in Fort Lauderdale to demolish the old Lockhart Stadium, replacing it with a training facility and an 18,000-seat stadium. Playing in Fort Lauderdale and basing some operations there would have its advantages in terms of location and would provide leverage in any kind of negotiation with the city of Miami over the stadium site, but that also runs the risk of sending mixed messages.

"You branded your team from day one as Miami. I think you need to play your MLS games in the city you're named after," said Piet Brown, who is a founding member of the fan group the Southern Legion and runs a YouTube channel called Futbol Miami TV. "I went to all the Miami Fusion games, and it feels like there's a few similarities. Lockhart's not the reason that the Fusion failed, but being named 'Miami' and playing in Fort Lauderdale sure didn't help."

The timeline to get a redeveloped Lockhart Stadium and training facility up and running by the start of the 2020 season is hugely aggressive. Yet there is a sense that if anyone can pull this off, Mas and his group can.

"Mas is sort of like the big brother saying everything is going to be OK," said Dr. Jim Riordan, the director of the MBA in sport management program at Florida Atlantic University.

Inter Miami has certainly been laying the groundwork to get the lease for the Melreese site negotiated. Mas said Inter Miami had held 10 meetings in the past month and has "touched and spoken to around 1,000 people" in those gatherings. Mas anticipates being able to bring the lease before the City Commission in the next month. As for the votes, Mas is confident that he'll prevail on that front as well.

"It's too compelling," he said of the Melreese project. "The community is clamoring for it, and the community has said yes."

Does Inter Miami CF have a staff yet?

Skeptical observers such as Rusnak, who have heard every promise and every lie about the viability of professional soccer in South Florida over the years, feel cautiously optimistic about Mas' ability to deliver.

"Mas is a force of nature. If he's wrong and he's a forceful personality, it will go down the drain like all the others," Rusnak said. "But he's proven to be open and savvy."

That is especially the case in terms of the organization currently being built by Mas and Beckham. Jurgen Mainka was hired as the chief business officer after a stint with CONCACAF. Paul McDonough was spirited away from reigning MLS champions Atlanta United to be the sporting director; he brought in former Orlando City GM Niki Budalic and former LA Galaxy player personnel director Kurt Schmid to help put the roster together.

Jason Kreis has been hired to be part of the coaching staff, though his commitment to the U.S. U-23 team will limit his availability over the next year. Juan Carlos Michia, Victor Pastora and former Real Salt Lake midfielder Javier Morales were brought on as academy coaches.

The search for the first manager is ongoing, with McDonough expecting the hire to be made in September or October. Mas and Beckham have been involved in the process, and candidates from inside and outside MLS have been interviewed.

"I'm going to patient with it. I'm not in a rush," McDonough said of the timeframe for hiring a manager. "I think it's more about signing the right guy. I think the hard part was you saw what Tata [Martino] was and what he did in Atlanta and how it worked out. There have been similar guys who were big names and haven't done well.

"I think it's really more important for us that we find the right person that I can work with and build the club as we move forward."

Who's going to play for this team?

This is the third time McDonough has been charged with building a technical organization and roster ahead of an expansion season. In Orlando, he had the advantage of an entrenched USL side as a springboard for an MLS team. In Atlanta, he was starting from scratch. What's different about Miami is the extent of the diversity in the fan base.

"What I tell them all the time is, 'Look, the Colombians, the Salvadorans, the Haitians, they'll all cheer for a really good player, no matter where he's from because they're all smart soccer fans, and they want good soccer,'" McDonough said.

McDonough will be hoping to replicate in Miami what he did in Atlanta, and given that the academy season starts in August, that is where he has focused his initial efforts.

"I either had to start [the academy] six months early or six months later than the first team," he said. "And I just think to get the homegrowns and get it all going, it made sense to get the jump start because, look, it doesn't really affect me in year one, but it's going to affect me in year three, so the sooner I can get it going, I can get to year three faster."

How involved is David Beckham?

Beckham's title is director of soccer operations, but as the face of the organization, his remit is broader than that. He is involved not only on the technical side but also with partnerships and anything related to merchandise. He has been making periodic visits to South Florida as well, including twice in the past six weeks.

McDonough confirmed that he and Beckham are setting the direction of the club in terms of style and that the hiring of a coach and the signing of players will be determined based on that style. Like he did in Atlanta, signing players will happen before a manager is hired, with the first announced before the summer. Those players will likely be loaned out until the 2020 season.

As for the rumored links with Mexican defender Hector Moreno, McDonough said, "We have not had discussions with Moreno or his representatives."

McDonough was vague as to what the club's style would be, trotting out the standard line of "We'll play attacking soccer." But given that Miami is often viewed as a gateway to Latin America and McDonough's history with Atlanta, it's not a reach to think the team will have a heavy influence of South American players, though he will also cast a wide net. Beckham's magnetism doesn't hurt, either.

"I think South American players really translate well here," he said. "I think the one thing about Miami -- and it's similar to New York and L.A. -- is that it's a global city. So European players, you pick the phone up, and you call a European player, and you say, 'Hey, you've been playing in England or Germany, and I want to bring you to Miami,' they're going to listen.

Will Inter Miami be forced to change its name?

Complicating Inter Miami's path to the pitch have been some recent issues in court.

FXE Futbol, whose competing bid to renovate Lockhart Stadium was rejected, recently filed suit in Broward County court, alleging that the City of Fort Lauderdale failed to adhere to Florida state law as it relates to unsolicited offers for the development of public land by a private entity by not getting "an architect, landscape architect, or an engineer licensed in this state" to review the proposals. State law also requires an "independent analysis" to demonstrate the public-private partnership's cost-effectiveness.

"We can no longer stand on the sidelines while our due process is being violated," FXE's managing partner, John F. Reynal, said in a statement posted by the company on Twitter.

As for the trademark dispute, last month MLS filed a notice of opposition to an application Inter Milan made back in 2014 seeking to claim exclusive rights to the term "Inter." Mas expects that the latest lawsuit won't hamper his plans in Fort Lauderdale, nor is he concerned about the trademark spat with Inter Milan.

As Mas noted dryly, "There's going to be no confusion over Inter Milan and Inter Miami."

Yet there is a haunting sense of déjà vu in terms of the move -- however temporary -- to Fort Lauderdale.

"In South Florida, you make judgments about how far will I drive to see something," Rusnak said. "I'll do anything if it takes me 15 minutes. If it's an hour, it better be really worth my while. I think there's a Balkanization a little bit down here, like this invisible line between Dade and Broward County. We do get into this mentality of it 'being up there' or 'being down there.' And the density of the traffic keeps getting thicker and thicker, and there's a general frustration down here that driving takes more time than it should."

The reality is that what happens in the courtroom and city hall will be just as important as anything the team does to get ready on the pitch. It will take every bit of Mas' business acumen and the team-building powers of McDonough & Co. to make Inter Miami a success.

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