Asheville City SC gears up for second season in NPSL

By Scott Adamson
Adamsonmedia.com

The inaugural season of the Asheville City Soccer Club was solid on and off the pitch.

Averaging nearly 2,000 fans at Memorial Stadium – led by the South Slope Blues supporters group – ACSC finished 3-6-3 and reached the National Premier Soccer League playoffs.

Not bad for a first-year club.

It was community soccer done well, and ultimately a NPSL success story.

Now under the guidance of Coach Mick Giordano, Asheville City looks for even better results as the 2018 campaign draws near.

“I think most people would say I’m a players’ coach,” said Giordano, a UNC Asheville alum who is also assistant men’s soccer coach at Wofford College. “I care about the guys on the team and want them to be successful. While I’m easy to talk to, I’m also intense during training and show my emotions. I hold our group to an extremely high standard and won’t settle for anything less. I want things done a certain way and I care about winning more than breathing. I know what the guys can achieve and want to be instrumental in helping them reach their goals as well as our standards.”

Back in the fold are last year’s leading goal scorer, Elma N’For, and assists leader Tom Deely. Once the full roster is set ahead of a May start, Giordano will decide what style best fits his team’s personality. He isn’t going into the season with a preconceived notion.

“In terms of a formation, I think it is completely based on personnel,” he said. “Too many people want to force a 4-3-3/3-5-2/4-4-2 down a team’s throat when they aren’t built for it. It’s mine and my staff’s job to make sure we put the boys in a formation they can find the most success. At the end of the day, it’s a players’ game and the players are the ones that count. It’s my responsibility to help them find ways to be successful. When we win games it will be because the players did the work and played for the badge.

“If we lose, it’s because I’ve made a mistake in our preparation and didn’t do what I needed to for the group to find success.”

ACSC learned Memorial Stadium provided a decided home field advantage a year ago, and Giordano says the bond between the city and its fans is a strong one.

“I’d say our supporters represent the city of Asheville,” he said. “The South Slopes Blues, our supporter group, is wonderful. They truly represent what we stand for as a club. That being said, we have numerous fans from out of town and watch our live stream every chance they can.”

And while Major League Soccer and the United Soccer League have established themselves as the darlings of the country’s soccer establishment, NPSL teams – like the one nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains – are carving out their own niche.

The mission statement of the league (which unofficially functions as a fourth division circuit) is, “to grow the sport of soccer in the United States of America by providing our members with a sustainable business model and professionally managed soccer platform, and by serving as an inspiration to players and soccer fans in our members’ communities.”

That philosophy is ideal for ACSC and keeps it a community-driven club.

“The NPSL is the perfect fit because it allows our club to grow, learn how to compete at a high level, build our brand, and bring in homegrown (youth players) from our local community along with some of the most talented players in the college game that come from all over the world,” Giordano explains. “The NPSL gives us a platform to understand how we need to operate, from ticket sales to recruiting and scouting without jumping straight into, say, a Division III or Division II level within U.S. Soccer and having to take our lumps.

“I think it’s a massive risk to jump straight to that level as a new club. You have no basis and no foundation. The NPSL allows us to build a foundation for our club in a regionalized league. I’d say our conference is one of the toughest in the entire league. So we’re battle tested every time we put on the City badge. We need to find success here and focus on the present before thinking of playing at a different level.”

On Friday, May 4, Asheville City hosts the Myrtle Beach Mutiny of the Premier Development League and begins NPSL regular season competition on May 8 when the Georgia Revolution comes to Memorial Stadium.

Both matches will give Giordano’s club a chance to build some early momentum in front of a partisan crowd. And it’ll establish even deeper ties between ACSC and its supporters.

“I think having a close bond with the team gives our community another opportunity to believe in something,” he said. “It gives them another reason to celebrate, hopefully. Or when we stumble, it ruins their day just as it does for the staff and players. I think it also brings the knowledge and love of the game to more people. Our country is behind the world in a lot of ways when thinking about football. Some of this has been seen with our failure to qualify for the World Cup. I think having a community club helps grow the game and will continue to inspire players to achieve more. It will raise the overall knowledge of the game.

“While there are more issues to fix in this country, improving the overall passion and interest in our game are two things that will help push us forward.”

For ticket information, go to ashevillecitysc.com.

NPSL soccer worth supporting in Greenville

Last week’s announcement that Greenville is a founding member in the United Soccer League’s new Division III circuit was met with plenty of excitement.

Scott Adamson opines about The Beautiful Game periodically in Sidewinder Insider.

Gathering at Clemson University’s International Center for Automotive Research,  city officials, dignitaries and the Greenville chapter of American Outlaws listened to owner Joe Erwin talk about a “multimillion-dollar commitment” to the franchise, which begins play in 2019.

For a town that has already embraced its South Atlantic League baseball team, the Drive, there’s every reason to believe this new association football team in an American football hotbed will be an unqualified success.

The USL has legs, and they’re strong ones.

But while the Greenville TBAs won’t begin play for another year, Greenville FC – under the direction of Lander University coach Lee Squires – hits the pitch this May, representing the city’s entry in the National Premier Soccer League.

And if you truly care about soccer, you need to care about this team. Although the NPSL is more a blend of amateur and semi-pro teams scattered across North America, it also represents the sport in its most organic form.

Grassroots soccer in this country needs stronger roots, and I’m hoping those of us who live here in Greenville can do our part to help it grow locally.

I’ve already talked to several fellow soccer peeps who are experiencing a bit of angst when it comes to the NPSL club – part of the United States Soccer Federation’s unofficial fourth division – and the USL Division III entry.

Will those who fly the flag for Greenville FC this summer abandon them when D3 begins play next March?

Sure, some will.

But many won’t … and they shouldn’t.

A new supporters group, the Mill Town Operatives, is already behind Greenville FC and will be out in full force for home matches at Eugene Stone Stadium this season.

I also have a suspicion the local A.O. Chapter will be cheering and chanting for both teams starting in 2019 because these are the supporters who are passionate about U.S. soccer in whatever form it takes.

They’ll be able to share their loyalties – not split them.

And let’s not forget the “bang-for-your-buck” factor going forward.

Finances will be an attendance factor once Greenville’s soccer footprint doubles in size, and a family outing at an NPSL match will certainly be less expensive than spending an evening with the USL team.

For those who can afford both, great. You’ll see a lot of really good soccer

But for those who have to pick and choose, some will choose the more economical option.

That won’t mean they’ll be selling themselves short.

Greenville FC President, Marco Carrizales, played at Furman University and put an NPSL club in his adopted city to give community players a chance to be part of a community-driven team.

When Greenville FC faces Anderson University Saturday night in a “trialist exhibition” at the Kroc Center, many players who went through the high school and club ranks in Greenville will be battling for roster spots.

Those who earn them will be able to take their game to the next level without ever leaving the Upstate.

That’s what NPSL brings to the table, and that’s pretty cool. Ultimately, that’s the kind of soccer that makes soccer strong.

A couple of weeks ago in a column I wrote about how the sport is fragmented in the United States, I quoted a line from the soccer-themed movie “The Game of their Lives.”

It bears repeating here:

“You want to know why soccer is the world’s greatest sport? I’ll tell you why. Because all you need is the ball and an open space. You don’t need fancy equipment or special fields. You don’t have to be big or strong or tall. It’s the most democratic of all the sports. The people’s game. Your people’s game. And America’s game in the future.”

Greenville FC is our team in our town.

When they open the home portion of their regular season on May 12 against Inter Nashville FC, there will be players on the field you once saw play in high school and college.

Some will go on to bigger things, but all will be doing their part to make Greenville FC the biggest soccer thing going this summer.

It may lack the glitz and glamour of the franchise that arrives in 2019, but this is the team that’s right here, right now.

And I hope they’re here to stay.

For ticket information, go to gvlfc.com.

Our new rescue pup already making his mark

Captain America, Steve Rogers, is a supersoldier who battled Axis powers in World War II, was frozen for seven decades, and then was reanimated so he – the First Avenger – could fight alongside the modern Avengers.

Brain Farce is an alleged humor column written by Scott Adamson. It comes out basically whenever he feels like writing it. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

Steve Rogers, Captain America, is our new dog – a rescue Chihuahua who fights a small stuffed monkey, gets kissed on the head a lot, and is now a member of what amounts to a Fantastic Four of animals that live with me and my wife.

For whatever reason, having four critters establishes the proper feng shui in our household, so to that end order has been restored to our corner of the universe.

Steve joins Charlie the Sheltie and Bane and Thor, two shelter cats, as a full-fledged family member.

But …

Steve is very young.

Steve is also very Chihuahua.

And that means on a scale of 1 to 10, Steve has an energy level of 793.

Having never raised human children from their infancy, I have no real point of reference when it comes to the differences between nurturing toddler humans and nurturing toddler canines.

I realize you probably shouldn’t crate train humans or teach them to poop in the yard, although to each his own.

I don’t judge.

And I understand human babies are fragile, sometimes cry in the middle of the night, and can be very high maintenance.

Chihuahuas present different challenges, of course, but are most certainly high maintenance.

Steve freaks out any time my wife or I leave the room, making this weird, high-pitched noise which sounds similar to the sounds I imagine Gilbert Gottfried makes while getting goosed.

He also pees a little every time he gets excited, which is quite often. I’m not sure if that will go away as he grows up, but I can’t really fault him.

I pee a little every time I get excited, too, like when I find a Pop Tart I didn’t realize I had, or hear the theme song to the “Batman” TV series.

One issue that has been a bit of a problem, though, concerns his randy nature.

Although he was “fixed” 10 days ago, Steve remains quite the horndog.

In the brief time we’ve had him he has been romantically linked to Charlie’s bits and pieces, both my wife’s and my right arm, a neighbor’s left calf, and several cardboard boxes (boxes that I am not at liberty to name due to nondisclosure agreements).

Oddly – yet thankfully – he largely ignores both cats.

Thor, our oldest feline, sized him up fairly quickly the first day we brought him home, gave him a hiss and a paw swipe to the nose, and then went about his business.

Steve won’t even look at him and Thor responds in kind.

Bane, who is still technically a kitten but is on pace to be the size of a Bengal tiger by Christmas, seemed almost fearful of Steve at first.

He stayed mostly on the porch and waited to eat during that 10-minute window late at night when Steve decides to sleep.

But after two or three days he started getting closer and closer to the Chi, trying to figure out if Steve was merely an oversized rat and edible.

Ultimately, Bane apparently has come to terms with the fact that the 4-pound dog is not a snack, and now passes by him without incident or acknowledgement.

As of this writing, Charlie is sprawled out on the floor napping while Bane and Thor are snoozing away in the two rocking chairs situated in the corners of our den.

And Steve?

Well, Captain America is currently licking my chin and forcing me to type one-handed because I’m holding him in my left arm.

At any moment he’ll leap down and attempt to assault Charlie – who has learned the hard way that restraining orders are not honored in the animal kingdom.

Then Steve will rip and snort and run and jump and flip and flop and probably pee a little.

And I’m gonna love every single minute of it.

And maybe pee a little, too.

Steve Rogers wishes you all a Happy St. Patrick’s Day.