Orlando Apollos alone at the top

Parity is apparent among teams two through eight in the Alliance of American Football, with just two games separating squads with the second best record and the worst.

As for the number one team, though, the Orlando Apollos (5-0) are separating themselves from the pack.

Steve Spurrier’s charges thumped the Birmingham Iron 31-14 on Sunday at Legion Field, grabbing a two-game lead in the Eastern Conference as the regular season hit its halfway point.

Orlando rolled up 468 yards of total offense against the league’s top defensive unit.

The Apollos’ own underrated “D” held Birmingham to just 272 yards and recorded a pick-6 courtesy of Keith Reaser’s 40-yard interception return.

“De’Veon Smith had an excellent game, and D’Ernest Johnson had a beautiful game,” Spurrier said during his Monday press conference. “Those are two outstanding running backs. They break tackles, and hit the open holes and run through people. Then, of course, (quarterback Garrett Gilbert) had another outstanding day. No picks, I don’t think we had any sacks, the offense had no turnovers again.

“You run the ball 32 or 33 times, throw it 32 or 33, you have a good balance that you hope for, and it’s worked out that way the last two games.”

Gilbert continued his impressive play, connecting on 23 of 35 passes for 286 yards and two TDs.

As usual Charles Johnson was his primary target, catching six balls for 83 yards and a score.

“We did something with play action pass, setting up the run, and that started with our offensive line doing a really nice job of creating those holes early on,” Garrett said. “We were able to create some space with some play action passes and our receivers as usual, our tight ends got the ball, which was awesome and they did a great job making plays and finding open areas.”

Orlando QB Garrett Gilbert talks with head coach Steve Spurrier during their game against the Birmingham Iron at Legion Field last Saturday. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/AAF/Getty Images)

Despite the perfect start to the season, Spurrier realizes his team has been fortunate.

“We’re all smart enough to know we could have lost a couple of those games of the first five, so we’re really not talking about what our record is,” Spurrier said. “We’re trying to improve from week to week, and if we can do that, we’ll have a chance to win the Alliance (championship).”

SHOWDOWN IN THE WEST

The San Antonio Commanders and San Diego Fleet are each 3-2, have already split their regular season series and are now tied for the lead in the Western Conference, one game ahead of Arizona (2-3) and two games clear of Salt Lake (1-4).

They are also becoming two fun teams to watch.

On Saturday the Fleet knocked off Salt Lake, 27-25, thanks to Donny Hageman’s 44-yard field goal as time expired, while on Sunday San Antonio held off a furious Arizona rally in 29-25 conquest of the Hotshots.

With Arizona fading and the Stallions tied with Memphis for the league’s worst record (1-4), the Commanders and Fleet look like a pair of teams headed to the postseason.

Two representatives from each conference qualify for the four-team postseason, and those spots are in the grasp of the Alliance squads from Texas and Southern California.

With five regular season games to go nothing is settled in the West, of course, but on paper San Antonio has the clearest path to a conference title.

The Commanders’ remaining opponents have a combined 7-18 record and three of their last five games will be played at the Alamodome where they draw the largest crowds in the league.

The Fleet, on the other hand, will negotiate a field that stands at 13-12, only two of their games will be in San Diego, and they have to face unbeaten Orlando on the road.

ATLANTA TRENDS UPWARD

Aaron Murray was named the Legends’ new starting quarterback in the week leading up to Sunday’s home game against Memphis, and the former University of Georgia star is taking advantage of his opportunity.

Atlanta’s Aaron Murray looks to pass against the Memphis Express during the first quarter of their game at Georgia State Stadium on Sunday. (Photo by Grant Halverson/AAF/Getty Images)

Murray – who played most of the previous week’s game after an injury to former starter Matt Simms – was 27-43-0 for 306 yards and a touchdown in Atlanta’s 23-20 victory over the Express at Georgia State University Stadium.

Younghoe Koo broke a 20-all tie when he kicked a 35-yard, game-winning field goal with nine seconds remaining.

“We made a great play on defense when they were threatening late in the game and took the ball down on offense for the winning field goal with ‘Koo and the Gang,’” Atlanta coach Kevin Coyle said. “We call (Koo) and our snapper and our holder ‘Koo and the Gang,’ and they do a great job.”

The Legends (3-2) have endured tremendous turmoil this season, with a head coaching change and two changes at offensive coordinator – including one two days before a Week 3 game against Birmingham.

Today, however, the team is just one game out of second place in the East.

“We’re an exciting team,” Coyle said. “We’ve got talented players who are doing everything they can to represent this city in a first-class way. We want to win football games and make the city proud.”

PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Offense: QB Logan Woodside, San Antonio. Threw for 290 yards and 2 TDs in win over Arizona.

Defense: DB Kameron Kelly, San Diego. Had 3 INTs including one returned for a TD in win over Salt Lake.

Special Teams: K Younghoe Koo, Atlanta. Kicked 3 field goals including the game-winner against Memphis.

WEEK 5 ATTENDANCE

San Diego drew the top crowd of the week when 20,823 fans came to SDCCU Stadium to watch the Fleet defeat Salt Lake.

Birmingham hosted 13,310 fans in its next to last home game; 10,829 came to Atlanta; and Arizona had the low turnout of the weekend with 9,351 paying customers in Tempe.

UP NEXT

Saturday: Memphis at Salt Lake, 4 p.m. EDT, BR/Live; Arizona at Orlando, 8 p.m. EDT, NFL Network.

Sunday: San Antonio at Atlanta, 4 p.m. EDT, CBSSN; Birmingham at San Diego, 8 p.m. EDT, NFL Network.

Scott Adamson can be reached by email at sladamson1960@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl

Founders Cup takes shape with release of schedule

Since immersing myself in amateur adult American soccer over the last year, the primary circuit in my orbit has been the National Premier Soccer League. And considering my locale (the Upstate of South Carolina), Asheville City SC, Greenville FC, Atlanta SC (formerly the Atlanta Silverbacks FC) and Chattanooga FC have been the clubs I’ve kept the closest watch on.

Scott Adamson’s column on soccer appears periodically, usually when he’s feeling especially soccerish.

It’s been fun to map out the “must-sees” of the summer schedule and watch the rollout of players via Twitter.

However, my biggest fan-boost came just a couple of days ago when the NPSL Founders Cup released its fall schedule.

That made it finally seem “real.”

Actually, it’s been real for a while now; the NPSL officially announced its professional venture on Nov. 15, 2018. Still, for me, sporting endeavors don’t reach the “Hey, it’s happening!” stage until a schedule is put together, and a schedule is now what we have.

The Founders Cup begins with East Region play beginning on August 10, West Region action starting on August 24, and the tournament finale taking place on November 9.

That’ll set the table for a full season starting in the spring of 2020.

So ladies and gentlemen, let’s have a warm round of applause for Chattanooga FC, Detroit City FC, Miami FC, Miami United FC, Milwaukee Torrent and New York Cosmos in the East and ASC San Diego, Cal FC, FC Arizona, Napa Valley 1839 FC and Oakland Roots in the West.

Eleven clubs – not franchises or satellites from a single entity business model, but clubs – will chart a new course in American soccer. And the cool thing is, no one really knows where that path will lead.

That’s scary, I suppose, but it also opens the door for so much opportunity.

You can pick any club out of the 11 and find a lot to like.

Chattanooga FC, of course, started offering equity shares in the club earlier this year, and is more than halfway to its goal of $1,070,000 raised through fan ownership.

Yep, I bought in because I want to say I was part of American soccer’s new beginning. I have no illusions that I’ll be given a suite at Finley Stadium, but how sweet is it to think you got a chance to move some earth and alter the landscape?

Fan ownership has given a boost to Chattanooga FC. (Scott Adamson photo)

And while it’s tempting to call CFC “America’s Team” because it now has owners across the country, international supporters have also staked their claim.

The footprint is big and getting bigger; from a soccer standpoint, the Scenic City is, indeed, making quite a scene.

And from a personal standpoint, I was thrilled the Cosmos jumped into the Founders Cup.

This is a “brand” I’ve followed since its original North American Soccer League days, and one I’ll continue to support.

While not an official member of the 5 Points, I’m still #ForeverGreen and forever grateful the Cosmos are reborn.

Chattanooga FC hosts the Cosmos on August 10, so my conscience will have to balance ownership and a newfound love for a club founded in 2009 against a passionate rooting interest that is well into its fifth decade.

I guess that’ll be existential angst I can work through on my 250-mile drive to the stadium.

And if you want to apply a really, really broad definition to promotion/relegation, you can say that Napa Valley 1839 FC is the first team in the NPSL to “move up.”

When California United Strikers FC withdrew from the Founders Cup and NPSL, Napa Valley made the jump from amateur to pro.

After spending this summer in the NPSL West Region Golden Gate Conference, its players will play for pay starting in the fall.

I know, I know … it’s really not a pro/rel situation, but there’s nothing wrong with projecting, especially when you’re talking about a league that gets to write its own history.

My hope for the immediate future is that the Founders Cup proves to be a successful launch of what we’re currently calling “NPSL Pro.” Beyond that, I envision passionate supporters transforming a league into a revolution.

While I have no clue how it will ultimately be structured, I’d love to see a day when clubs like Asheville City SC, Atlanta SC and Greenville FC can play their way up – and into – this league.

Ideally, I want fan ownership to be the rule, not the exception, and hope a time comes when the Beautiful Game can be as attractive as any town chooses to make it.

For now, though, I’m just happy the Founders Cup is taking shape.

Its schedule is official, so I’m officially on board.

Polian, Johnston pleased with direction of Alliance

By Scott Adamson
Adamsonmedia.com

The Alliance of American Football is heading into the midway point of its inaugural season, and today AAF co-founder Bill Polian and San Antonio Commanders general manager Daryl “Moose” Johnston offered up their thoughts on the state of the league.

Alliance co-founder Bill Polian says the AAF is off to a better start than he could’ve hoped for. (Scott Adamson photo)

In a nutshell?

So far, so good.

The pair spoke with media members via conference call, and sounded upbeat about the direction of the spring circuit.

“First of all you want to take a look at fan engagement, and television numbers have surpassed anything that we would even remotely dream about for a brand new endeavor, so that’s been a huge success,” Polian said. “And it continues to grow. We’re holding the rating, which is something that other leagues have not done.”

The original XFL, which played one season in 2001, had spectacular ratings for its season opener before the league quickly – and dramatically – dropped from viewers’ favor.

“I think the fact that you’re holding the rating shows that it’s moved beyond the curiosity factor and, ‘Hey, let me see what this is about,’ to an appreciation for the game and the style of play that’s being displayed on the field,” Johnston said. “I think we’re getting back to where the league has parity in it and like any Sunday in the NFL, you can be knocked off by your opponent and if you haven’t prepared, you’ll find yourself on the wrong end of a scoreboard.”

With rules that curtail blitzing and generally favor the offenses, it was expected that the Alliance would be a scoring-heavy league.

Overall, however, that hasn’t been the case.

The average score of a league game is 24-13, and last weekend’s slate of contests had the lowest scoring output of the season.

The winning teams combined for just 72 points while the losers totaled 56. Final scores were Memphis 26, San Diego 23; Orlando 20, Salt Lake 11; San Antonio 12, Birmingham 11; and Atlanta 14, Arizona 11.

Still, Polian insists such score lines aren’t unexpected.

“It’s always easier to put together a defense because it’s reactionary,” Polian said. “An offense requires choreography and difficult and complicated movements. And they require synchronization, so that’s the last thing to come. And although we’ve moved the ball, generally speaking, up and down the field quite well, we’ve been very, very slow to develop in the red zone and that’s an area I think the coaches are going to take a hard look at going forward.”

Dropped passes have been a huge culprit in stalling drives and keeping teams off the scoreboard.

“I was taught a long time ago if you can touch it, you can catch it,” Polian said. “That’s an old Bear Bryant line. I put most of it on the receivers, although there have been some bad balls. I facetiously said today I’m going to send a little note around to each team because they all have JUGS machines (electronic passing and kicking equipment) to remind them to get out there and have receivers catch about 50 balls after practice every day. If you work on the JUGS machines, you can improve your hands. I’m the first to admit we need to be better there.”

Johnston adds that it’s frustrating to see offenses click everywhere but within striking distance of paydirt.

“Our game last week with Birmingham, we had six running plays from inside the 2-yard line and couldn’t get it in the end zone. A little bit of that is good defense on the goal line by Birmingham, and poor execution by us.

“I’ve seen teams move up and down the field. We had a 21-play drive for nine minutes and 54 seconds and ended up with a field goal. So we’ve got to get better in the red zone and get better with the 2-point play. The offenses, in my opinion, have been much more efficient than I thought they’d be, but when we get into the red zone, that advantage shifts to the defense.”

San Antonio, in a three-way tie for the Western Conference lead with a 2-2 record, has been the league’s biggest box office hit. In two games at the Alamodome, the Commanders have drawn 57,033 fans for a 28,517 average.

The only other team in the league averaging at least 20,000 fans per contest is the undefeated Orlando Apollos, which opened the season in front of 20,191 fans and had a paid attendance of 20,394 at their second game at Spectrum Stadium on the University of Central Florida campus.

The other six teams have had modest to poor turnouts; last Sunday Birmingham drew an AAF-low 6,539 fans while Arizona had just 8,865.

Through 16 games, the league has seen 250,267 fans click the turnstiles for an average attendance of 15,642.

“We have franchises like San Antonio that are really remarkable at the gate,” Polian said. “And we have other franchises like Birmingham, for example, which has a really good team, but has had a slew of bad weather.”

Polian thinks better weather – and a good matchup – could result in a big crowd when 4-0 Orlando takes on 3-1 Birmingham on Saturday at Legion Field.

“We’ve got a big game this week, Orlando at Birmingham, that’s a big game in the Eastern Conference,” he said. “A high-powered offense against a dominant defense, so it’s everything you want in a football game. I’m pretty excited about seeing that. It’s the fifth week of our league, and I think we have a game that a lot of people around the country, not just the local markets, will be interested in.

“We’re really positive where we’re going and all the credit belongs to the GMs and coaches and players who put on a tremendous show.”

As for level of play, Polian thinks the Alliance is acquitting itself quite well.

“Our hope was that we could put a quality product on the field that would be real football by real football people for real football fans,” Polian said. “We have some different rules than the NFL, but the thing that’s so gratifying is that these guys play as hard as can be, all the time. These are hard-hitting, professional games.

“Take away the four finalists in college football and maybe two or three other teams and put any other college team out there (against an Alliance team) and it might not be a fair fight. These guys are men.”

Scott Adamson can be reached by email at sladamson1960@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @adamsonsl