Stallions, Breakers meet again

Alex McGough talks about the rematch with New Orleans before Wednesday’s practice.

The Week Three matchup between the Birmingham Stallions and New Orleans Breakers was a memorable one for Skip Holtz’s team. Those memories, however, are hardly fond ones.

New Orleans rolled to a 45-31 victory, racking up 283 passing yards and 200 more on the ground while converting four of five red zone opportunities.

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The result moved the Breakers to the top of the South Division, forcing Birmingham to play catch-up.

But much has changed since that April 29 clash.

The Breakers (4-2) still hold the tiebreaker over the Stallions (4-2), but the defending USFL champions have a chance to surge ahead when the teams face each other again on Saturday at Protective Stadium.

Birmingham is coming off a solid 27-13 road victory over the Michigan Panthers, while New Orleans has dropped two in a  row – the latest a 16-10 setback to Philadelphia.

Houston, meanwhile, is also 4-2 with a win over the Stallions, and the Gamblers play Memphis (3-3) on Saturday.

Translation: the margin for error is small.

“You’re looking at the standings right now, both in the North and the South, and every game has relevance,” Holtz said. “Every game matters. It’s still anybody’s game. To relate to NASCAR, it’s like the yellow flag dropped and we’ve got four laps to go right now, and everybody’s in a big pack. So, it’s gonna be interesting to see what the last four weeks are gonna hold here in the season.

“We know we have a big game with a New Orleans team that we lost to the first go-round. Our team is excited to play and especially on the defensive side of the ball show we’re a much better defense than the effort we put out before.”

Alex McGough earned Offensive Player of the Week honors thanks to his play against the Panthers. The signal caller was 19-24-0 for two touchdowns and 133 yards, registering a 117.5 passer rating.

He added 82 rushing yards on 11 totes, and added another score.

McGough leads the USFL in passing touchdowns (12) and points (90), and is making a strong case for USFL Most Valuable Player consideration.

“I think Alex continues to grow as a football player, and not just his talent, his skills,” Holtz said. “He has the same talent this year as last year, but he’s just a completely different leader. He’s an encourager in in the huddle … I told him I was most proud of him when he jumped up after a long run, tosses the ball to the official and starts clapping his hands, going around patting guys on the rear-end.

“He’s making throws, making runs, but the impact he’s having on the field is making everybody better around him right now.”

In the loss to the Breakers, McGough threw for 238 yards and two touchdowns. To prep for the rematch, the QB says he does more than just review that particular game.

“I think you look at that game and even the games we played against them last year, because they had a certain plan for us,” McGough said. “But you also study where they might have certain plans for other teams. So yeah, you take everything into consideration … just try to look at it all and get a big picture of what they’re trying to do.”

Despite totaling just 20 points over their last two games, the Breakers still feature the USFL’s top yardage makers through the skies and on the ground.

McLeod Bethel-Thompson has passed for a league-high 1,512 yards while receiver Sage Surratt leads the circuit with 411 receiving yards.

Wes Hills has an even 500 yards to top all USFL ballcarriers.

“We’ve gone from being able to do anything we want to not being able to do anything right the last two weeks,” New Orleans coach John DeFilippo said after his squad’s latest loss. “It’s my job to get this thing fixed, and I plan on doing that.”

Holtz said he’s game-planning for a team similar to the one they played in Week Three.

“We know what they’re capable of,” Holtz said. “You don’t know who was out for them, who was injured, who’s playing hobbled, what type of things happened to them the last three weeks. I’m looking at it like we’re gonna play the team that scored 45 points.

“We love the challenge. We can go back and look at some of the mistakes that we made, and we can do a better job for sure. They’re gonna make some plays, so we have to play together as a defensive unit and we have to shore some things up.”

The Stallions get Deon Cain back this week, and his 491 yards in kick returns and two runbacks are best in the league even though he’s missed two games.

And C.J. Marable hit the 100-yard rushing mark a week ago and reeled in a TD toss, giving opposing defenses something else to think about once the ball is snapped. With ZaQuandre White on the inactive roster, he could play an even more active role against New Orleans.

“The offensive line was able to make some holes for me to run, and I was able to make people miss and make lanes,” Marable said. “And that was a phenomenal pass Alex threw for the touchdown. Looking forward to doing more of that on Saturday.”

Kickoff is set for 3 p.m. with FOX televising.

PLAYER STATUS (via Stallions Twitter)

Transferred Player to Active Roster: CB Bryan Mills, RB Ricky Person Jr., LB Rashad Smith, OT Jahmir Ross-Johnson, WR Deon Cain, DE Darrion Daniels.

Transferred Player to Inactive Roster: RB ZaQuandre White, WR Austin Watkins, CB Donnie Lewis, LB Brody Buck, OT Darius Harper, DE Jordan Thompson.

Game status: DB Christian McFarland: Probable (R Hamstring, R Shoulder), DB JoJo Tillery: Probable (B Ankles), CB Donnie Lewis: Probable (R Hand), CB Brian Allen: Probable (L Shoulder), LB Rashad Smith: Probable (L Ankle), OL Cole Schneider: Probable (R Shoulder), WR Deon Cain: Probable (Illness), DE Joe Jackson: Questionable (R Ankle), LB Elijah Sullivan: Questionable (R Foot), CB Lorenzo Burns: Full Go (Illness), DL Willie Yarbary: Full Go (Illness), DE Jordan Thompson: Questionable (L Hamstring), OL Matt Kaskey: Full Go (R Thumb).

PLAYER STATUS (via Breakers Twitter)

Transferred Player to Active Roster: S Adonis Alexander, WR Jovon Durante, S Greg Eisworth, DE Justin Cates, OT Salesi Uhatafe.

Transferred Player to Inactive Roster: LB Zakoby McClain, FS Sidney McCloud, S Saquan Hampton, WR Dee Anderson.

Game status: S Jarey Elder: Probable (L Shoulder), OG Kirk Kelley: Probable (R Knee), WR Johnnie Dixon: Probable (L Quad), RB Wes Hills: Probable (R Low Leg) S Greg Eisworth: Questionable (Head), S Jamar Johnson: Out (R Hamstring), OLB Jordan Brailford: Out (Low Back), OL Jack Kramer: Probable (R Ankle), S Derrion Rakestraw: Probable (R Ankle), OL Marquis Lucas: Probable (R Ankle), CB Adonis Alexander: Full Go (L Hamstring, WR Dee Anderson: Out (L Groin), LB Shaheed Salmon: Full Go (R Wrist), CB Alex Thomas: Full Go (Dental).

Career change agrees with Brandon Aubrey

Brandon Aubrey was an All-USFL performer in 2022.

As a defender on the soccer pitch, it was Brandon Aubrey’s job to halt attacks and prevent goals. And in 76 appearances with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, he did a masterful job of it, earning All-American, All-Atlantic Coast Conference and Academic All-American honors during his time in South Bend.

It was a natural progression for the athlete who began kicking round balls at a young age growing up in Plano, Texas, and excelling at the game.

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“I started in rec leagues, like most kids do, and I found that I was pretty decent at it,” Aubrey said before Wednesday’s Birmingham Stallions practice session at Legion Field. “Then I got recruited to a local club team, the Dallas Texans, and played there from just about 10 all the way up until they moved me from the club team to the academy system.

“And I played travel soccer with the Texans from 16 to 18, traveling around the country, playing all the other academy teams and just enjoying it. At that point in high school, freshman year, they made us pick one sport, so I went with soccer.”

That led to his recruitment to Notre Dame, which he chose for both athletics and academics.

“South Bend really stood out to me as the best of both worlds with academics and soccer,” Aubrey said. “They were competitive every year and were moving to the ACC, which was the premier college soccer conference. I just really wanted to push myself and I thought that was the best platform.”

Playing the game at the professional level was the logical next step. After being drafted by Toronto FC of Major League Soccer, he played in 21 matches with their affiliate in 2017 – United Soccer League’s Toronto FC II – and 27 more a year later as a member of Bethlehem Steel, also a USL franchise.

More defending … more stopping goals instead of tallying them.

However, Aubrey found himself wanting something more – something different – and American football fit the bill. Thus, when he was signed by Birmingham’s entry in the new United States Football League in 2022, his job description changed dramatically.

Instead of preventing goals, his placekicker duties involve converting them (in the form of field goals).

Oh, and kicking extra points and pinning the opposition deep on kickoffs are also on his task list.

Aubrey’s last season of pro soccer was in 2018, and he joined the Stallions four years later.

“I kind of burnt out of soccer,” Aubrey said. “Transitioning from an attacking player to a defensive player, I really wanted to do something where I could get out there and score some points. I’ve been watching football my whole life. I’ve loved football and obviously I would have kept playing football as a high schooler if I had the option. So, I just wanted to go out and see if I could make football work.”

The process of playing for a paycheck in another kind of football was a deliberate one. After leaving soccer and working as a software engineer with GM Financial, he ultimately decided a 9-to-5 desk job wasn’t what he wanted – at least not yet.

“I enjoyed my time there … everyone was great,” Aubrey explained. “But I realized quickly that I’m still young, my leg’s still working, and I’ve got to figure out a way to get back into professional sports.

“So, I took the ball to the field and started kicking, and I saw I had some talent at it. And then from there, it took me about two and a half years of going to one-on-one kicking coaches across the country and going through the circuit. Just really honing my craft before I got an opportunity here with the Stallions, which I’m very grateful for.”

So, how has the career switch worked out?

Well, Aubrey made the all-USFL team in the circuit’s inaugural season, and he remains a consistent performer in his second year with the club.

“He was a huge story a year ago because here’s a guy that never played a football game in college, and all of a sudden he’s out here kicking for us,” Birmingham head coach Skip Holtz said. “I go all the way back to when I talked to (former NFL kicker and kicking coach) John Carney and he’s telling me I should go with this guy, this guy … he names about five guys to pick in our kickers draft. And I said, ‘Those guys are great, but they’re all going to be gone because I picked last for kicker.’”

That’s when Aubrey’s name came up.

“He goes, ‘Well, I’ve got one guy and he’s gonna be a risk. But if he comes through, he can be as good as any of them,’” Holtz said. “But then he said, ‘How he’s going to handle it mentally, I just can’t answer that question for you right now.’ And of course, he was great last year, but he has been phenomenal for us this year.”

During 10 regular season games in 2022, Aubrey led all kickers with 76 points, hitting 18 of 22 field goal tries and 22 of 24 PATs.

In a 31-17 playoff win over New Orleans, Aubrey kicked a 38-yard field goal and made all his extra points. The 33-30 championship game victory over the Stars saw him connect on field goals of 42 and 28 yards and go three-of-four on points after.

His season-long performance was good enough to land a spot on the inaugural All-USFL Team.

This season, Aubrey has picked up where he left off.

Through six games he is eight-of-nine on 3-pointers and has made all 21 of his extra point tries.

He also has a league-best two touchbacks, which is quite a feat considering USFL kickoffs are made from the 20-yard line.

“He’s got great lift on the ball,” Holtz said. “I think he’s got an NFL leg. And I think he’s gonna continue to get better with every game that he plays and every bit of experience he gets, because the talent is certainly there and I think he has taken it to a whole ‘nother level this year.

“He has continually gotten better, and I’m really proud of the progress he’s made.”

Now that Aubrey has gone from a former USL player to a current USFL standout, he hopes to continue a career path that has him kicking oval balls instead of round ones.

“I would always come home from soccer practice and watch football, play fantasy football, all that sort of stuff to just keep in the loop with my family, who loves football,” Aubrey said.

“They enjoyed watching me play soccer, but they didn’t really enjoy watching soccer.”

Getting my kicks

I truly wish my relationship with association football wasn’t so freakin’ complicated.

Since soccer is my favorite sport, I ought to be able to just sit back and enjoy it. And on an international level, I can.

Scott Adamson writes stuff. Follow him on Spoutable @ScottAdamson, Post @scottscribe, Mastodon @SLA1960 and Twitter @adamsonsl

And I do.

I’m gonna watch Celtic F.C. every time they play, Borussia Dortmund every time they play (unless they conflict with a  Celtic F.C. match), Manchester United every time they play (unless they conflict with a Celtic F.C. or Borussia Dortmund match), and Birmingham City F.C. whenever they happen to pop up on ESPN+ (unless they conflict with a Celtic F.C., Borussia Dortmund or Manchester United match).

I’m sure I break some sort of gatekeepers’ rule by supporting all four of those clubs, but I don’t care … it’s my gate, and I’ll let in or keep out whomever I please. (Actually, it’s eight clubs … I also root for the women’s teams bearing their brands).

Thing is, American professional soccer has seemed foreign to me, even though I’m an American. I mean, talk about a checkered history.

My favorite domestic professional club – the New York Cosmos – haven’t kicked a ball since 2020. I fear they might have been sent to a farm so they can run and play with the Los Angeles Aztecs, Dallas Tornados, Philadelphia Atoms and other sidewinders from my youth.

Atlanta Silverbacks FC was my second favorite in the pro ranks.

Same farm … same fate.

Closer to home, I was a big supporter of the Birmingham Grasshoppers, a top-shelf amateur team in the early and mid-1990s that competed in the United States Interregional Soccer League. They weren’t pro, but they carried themselves like professionals.

Gone.

And I still miss Greenville FC of the semi-pro National Premier Soccer League. They were “my” team for two seasons when I lived in Greenville, South Carolina, but now exist only as a website and a memory.

The men’s team I follow most closely these days is Chattanooga Football Club, members of the National Independent Soccer Association. I even bought shares in the club in 2019 (I have stock in Celtic F.C. and Manchester United as well, so yeah, I’m something of a soccer tycoon. I get a check from Man U each year for nine cents).

I also have a soft spot for the Asheville City FC men and women and in the National Women’s Soccer League, I – along with Batman – stand with Gotham FC.

But last night, I was at Protective Stadium to watch Birmingham Legion FC of the United Soccer League Championship take on Major League Soccer’s Charlotte FC in a U.S. Open Cup Round of 16 match. When I lived out of state, I kept up with the hometown team during their embryonic years as the Birmingham Hammers in the NPSL … I even own a couple of Hammers T-shirts.

I’ve been back in the Magic City for two years and have seen the Legion play a handful of times, but my fandom has been casual.

In fact, I’ve seen more FC Birmingham matches, primarily because the United Premier Soccer League side is coached by my friend Preston Goldfarb, a Birmingham-Southern, NAIA and Jewish Sports Heritage hall of famer. (He also founded and coached the Grasshoppers, so there’s some history there).

Honestly, I’ve been on the outside looking in when it comes to “mainstream” U.S. men’s soccer for several years now. Once I took a deep dive into the roadblocks lower leagues and women’s soccer deal with, I started resenting the United States Soccer Federation’s far too cozy relationship with MLS. It’s like they’re fine with stifling growth and competition beyond anything bearing or sharing its acronym.

And when the USL and MLS signed a deal to integrate MLS reserve teams into the Second Division league in 2013, that was a turn-off for me.

I long for a system based on sporting merit, I believe promotion/relegation is the only way the sport can reach its full potential, and it sucks that there are hundreds and hundreds of soccer clubs that can never make it to the top tier unless they buy their way into MLS.

In a nutshell, I think the infrastructure of soccer in the United States is a monument to dysfunction that needs to be rebuilt from the ground up.

But you know what?

I’m tired of looking for reasons not to go to soccer matches that are played seven miles from where I live – matches that feature athletes who love the game and play it at a high level.

If I stopped watching sports because I don’t like their business model, I wouldn’t be watching much sports.

So, Wednesday, I tabled all my grievances in favor of cheering a squad representing the city I live in and jeering one representing another of my favorite cities (Charlotte is great) – but one competing under the banner of the evil empire.

It was the most fun I’ve had as a fan in decades.

I’ve spent much of my life around people who’d flee in terror and confusion if you even said the word “soccer.” It’s always a pleasure for me to sit among those who are into it.

And there were 12,722 of them – a Legion record – in front of me, behind me and beside me on a chamber of commerce night in the Ham.

I’m not a flag-waving, drum-beating, chanting, vuvuzela-tooting kind of guy, but I like being in the company of those who are. (In the interest of full disclosure there were no vuvuzelas … which was kind of a shame).

Having fun is a beautiful thing, especially when you’re watching the Beautiful Game.

Things got loud when Charlotte’s Adilson Malanda was sent off after being issued his second yellow card of the evening in the 50th minute.

Things got much, much louder 10 minutes later when Prosper Kasim scored a goal on a rocket to the far post (Juan Agudelo assisted). The man who accounted for the first goal in club history back in 2019 tallied one of the Legion’s biggest ever, because that was the lone score of the night.

Birmingham 1, Charlotte 0.

Or as I like to think of it, Birmingham 1, Major League Soccer 0.

When the whistle blew to end the match, 12,000 people sounded like 112,000.

The victory moves the home team forward in the Cup, where they’ll host Inter Miami on June 7 in the quarterfinals.

Definitely going to that one.

In fact, I think I might just become a regular.

And why not?

On Wednesday, my relationship with association football wasn’t complicated at all.

Maybe it doesn’t have to be anymore.