Atlanta included in U.S. World Cup bid
Atlanta has been included among the 18 cities that will constitute the U.S. World Cup bid proposal for either 2018 or 2022.
The USA Bid Committee on Tuesday unveiled the venues and cities that will be submitted to FIFA this spring as part of its formal World Cup proposal. FIFA will select the host nations for both events in December.
Should the U.S. receive a bid for either of those World Cups, Atlanta might become the rare city to host most of the major global and North American sporting events. The city has played host to the Super Bowl, several Final Fours, a number of World Series involving the Braves and the 1996 Summer Olympics.
FIFA likely would approve games in no more than 12 of those cities, and the list does not have to be finalized until five years before a World Cup.
The Georgia Dome played host to two crowds in excess of 50,000 for international soccer matches last summer. But the Atlanta bid also stipulates that if a new stadium is built for the Atlanta Falcons, that facility could be the site for World Cup matches.
“The game is on!” said Gary Stokan, president of the Atlanta Sports Council, which spearheaded the Atlanta bid committee.
He said the committee will continue to work with the USA Bid Committee and prepare for a visit later in the year from FIFA representatives, who will be inspecting all 18 cities in the U.S. proposal.
“We’ve been on pins and needles about this, because it means a lot to our community,” said Georgia Soccer executive director Rick Skirvin. “I felt pretty good about our chances because of how hard so many people worked to support this bid. We were doing things right from the beginning.”
Perhaps the biggest signs of support were a petition signing-drive launched by Georgia Soccer and a compansion fundraising effort that netted $75,000. Keeping Atlanta in the World Cup mix also gives the organization, which represents 70,000 youth players and their families around the state, a chance to build further momentum around its events and tournaments.
“All the events we put on will have an extra touch to it,” Skirvin said, referring specifically to the Atlanta Cup, Georgia Soccer’s biggest event, a youth tournament held on the Labor Day weekend that is one of the biggest in the Southeast.
The Atlanta bid also includes an offer for the city, as a major transportation and media hub, to serve as the site for an International Broadcast Center for the World Cup.
There’s a real Sun Belt feel to this selection of cities, which include Miami, Tampa Bay, Houston, Dallas, Phoenix and — perhaps the biggest inclusion — Nashville, which had a crowd of more than 30,000 for a U.S.World Cup qualifying match last year.
The glaring absences: No Chicago, which recently lost its bid to play host to the 2014 Olympics. Not only is it the home of President Barack Obama, but also for the U.S. Soccer Federation.
The San Francisco Bay Area also was excluded after serving, along with Chicago, as a 1994 venue.
Cities that were 1994 World Cup venues and are on the list of 18 include Boston, Dallas, New York, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and San Francisco.
Also on board are Philadelphia, Baltimore, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Denver, San Diego and Seattle, which quickly has become one of the biggest soccer hotbeds in North America with the inclusion of the Sounders in Major League Soccer.
January 12, 2010 2 Comments
Atlanta second in World Cup venue poll
While Seattle is the clear fan favorite to play host to World Cup matches — should the event return to America in the next decade or so — a poll on the USA Bid Committee’s Web site reveals that Atlanta is in second place.
Of the top 10 vote-getting cities, only Dallas was a venue for the 1994 World Cup.
Georgia Soccer has raised $75,000 in a show of financial support that is one of many factors taken into consideration by the committee, which is expected this month to pare down its final list of cities to be submitted to FIFA for the 2018 or 2022 World Cup.
Here’s an argument from an Atlantan who says poor fan support for pro teams should rule Atlanta out as a World Cup host.
I think that rationale is all wet, and here’s why: Atlanta soccer fans haven’t been given much to cheer from a litany of badly-run franchises. I know, because I’ve covered most of them since 1995.
Some, like Johnny Imerman and Vincent Lu, ultimately left the old A-League Ruckus by the side of the road.
The various parties involved in the Silverbacks have been more committed, and have enjoyed some occasional success. But last summer, while more than 50,000 people gathered at the Georgia Dome not once, but twice, to watch soccer played there for the first time, the Silverbacks lay dormant.
The ongoing dispute involving the United Soccer Leagues doesn’t appear to be any closer to a resolution, and there’s the possibility that there won’t be pro men’s soccer in Atlanta again next summer.
I know some loyal Silverbacks fans who have spent a lot of money for tickets, T-shirts, souvenirs and road trips over the years and who ultimately have soured on the idea of ever spending another dime on that team if it is resurrected.
The bottom line is that for most of the last decade and a half — since the last World Cup — there hasn’t been a good enough product on the field that’s been worth anyone’s patronage.
You can’t blame the fans for any of that.
January 5, 2010 3 Comments
How much would Atlanta gain from World Cup?
The AJC’s Kristi Swartz cites the figure reported in a study commissioned by the U.S. Soccer Federation’s World Cup bid committee at $80 million, and I’m certainly hoping that number isn’t too optimistic.
The report concludes that having the World Cup within these borders in 2018 or 2022 would have a benefit of $5 billion across the board.
But I remain skeptical when I hear about any touted financial windfall associated with sports — whether it’s building a new stadium or playing host to a major event.
How are these figures arrived at? Which sectors of a local economy benefit?
Those are the perpetual questions that really never get quite fully answered.
October 27, 2009 No Comments
One place to see U.S. vs. Honduras in Atlanta
There’s only one place in Atlanta where soccer fans can watch Saturday’s critical World Cup qualifier between the U.S. and Honduras.
Fado Atlanta, located at 247 Buckhead Ave. (near the intersections of Peachtree
and West Paces Ferry), will be that nirvana. It’s one of the city’s top soccer watering holes as it is, but for unexplained reasons, the Brewhouse Café is not showing the game on its premises in Little Five Points.
The complicated story behind the decision by the Honduran federation to sell only close-circuit availability is here, and Yahoo’s Martin Rogers doesn’t hesitate to blame American soccer marketers for letting it reach this point:
“As is always the case with bureaucratic pileups of this nature, a swathe of finger pointing and insinuation has ensued. In reality, though, the primary fault lies with U.S. Soccer and Soccer United Marketing, the subsidiary company which owns its commercial rights.”
The U.S. can qualify for the World Cup in San Pedro Sula, a four-hours’ trips from Tegucigalpa and one of the most difficult venues on the continent. And even when there’s not a political crisis like the one that has consumed Honduras in recent months.
And then there was the so-called “Soccer War” that involved Honduras.
It was Conyers native Clint Mathis who etched an indelible moment in American soccer history eight years ago in San Pedro Sula. Another Atlantan, Ricardo Clark, gets ready for his first trip.
Game time is 10 p.m. ET, but given the nature of Buckhead traffic in general, and on Saturday evening in particular, getting to Fado with plenty of lead time is highly recommended.
October 9, 2009 No Comments
Georgia Soccer wants (needs!) your signature
The U.S. Soccer Federation is making its final rounds this fall before narrowing down the list of venue finalists for its 2018/2022 World Cup bid early next year.
Those lucky cities that move on will have shown significant local support for their city. And like any good bidding effort, signatures are required, with 50,000 the ideal threshold for this particular event.
The folks over at Georgia Soccer, an integral part of the Atlanta venue committee, have a way to make it very easy for you to do this online.
So if you haven’t been able to sign a petition at a local soccer event, take a few minutes now and type in your name in support of Atlanta’s bid.
The U.S. chances for landing the World Cup might have improved greatly when Mexico withdrew its bid and promised to lend support to the American effort.
September 30, 2009 No Comments
Clark’s goal lifts U.S. World Cup hopes
The teams were mediocre — lousy, even — and so was the match. Except for one crackling moment in the second half when Atlanta’s own Ricardo Clark pounced on a loose ball just outside the penalty area and thumped it in the net.
The shot by the former AFC Lightning and St. Pius X star proved to be the only goal of the game as the U.S. improved its World Cup chances Wednesday with a 1-0 win over Trinidad & Tobago.

Associated Press
If you need your player ratings fix, here you go. Clark, Landon Donovan and Tim Howard won’t get many detractors as men of the match.
The meme coming out of Port-of-Spain, and one that sums up how the Yanks look overall, is that three points are three points. Another World Cup berth is virtually in the books as the U.S. has a slim lead at the top of the CONCACAF qualifying table.
In the coming weeks and months, there will continue to be much that is written about the mediocrity of the U.S. team, and how just getting to the World Cup isn’t good enough any more. I do largely agree with this thesis, but for the time being some proper perspective is needed. Beyond accepting the reality that the Americans are who they are, and that they grow up in a country that develops players quite differently than the world powers of the sport. That is a subject for another time.
It was nearly 20 years ago at the very same Hasely Crawford Stadium that a goal by Paul Caligiuri — the so-called Shot Heard ‘Round the World — ended a 40-year World Cup drought for the Americans. Clark’s goal was strikingly similiar in many ways, and perhaps years from now we’ll look at his shot as important in its own way: That it likely has kept alive a World Cup streak vital to the continued development of the game in America. Such as it is.
It sure beats what Argentinians are thinking this morning.
September 10, 2009 1 Comment
U.S. soccer needs some Mathis-like imagination
With Saturday’s massive World Cup qualifier in his adopted home town, former U.S. national team forward Clint Mathis went down memory lane with Sports Illustrated’s Grant Wahl, who famously dubbed the Conyers native “Cletus” for his Southern iconoclasm. It’s a nickname that stuck as he became an American soccer folk hero for an all-too-brief spell earlier this decade.
When the Yanks meet El Salvador in Salt Lake City facing the possibility of missing out on the World Cup altogether, I’ll be thinking of the inventiveness Mathis demonstrated, his instinctive playfulness that is a virtue in soccer around the world but all too rare in the development of the game in America. It’s a quality that is glaringly missing from Bob Bradley’s current team, which features Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey and a promising attacker in Jozy Altidore but otherwise has one thinking “work rate:”
“Not since Reyna retired has an American shown his cleverness at varying the pace and direction and rhythm of possession by holding the ball as well as running with it or passing it. Calmness and patience and diversity in attack, especially against a bunkered-in opponent, is still hit-or-miss. Having a lot of the ball doesn’t guarantee a lot of success.”
If Mathis had been able to blend his innate skills with better discipline, we might not be thinking of him now as a could-have-been. He parlayed his international success into a disastrous spell with Germany’s Hannover, where he contemptuously dropped his shorts after being put into a game by a coach who rarely played him. He’s settled down now, a husband and a father, still enjoying a respectable career in Major League Soccer at the age of 32.
The memories shouldn’t haunt, but might perhaps inspire a younger generation of American players riding an exasperating roller coaster this summer. Humiliation at Costa Rica, victory over No. 1-ranked Spain, agony at the hands of Brazil after going up two goals early, leaving it late against Mexico at Azteca. And now, needing three points against lowly El Salvador to stay out of the CONCACAF danger zone.
The searing free kick goal Mathis scored in San Pedro Sula to down Honduras during this very same stage in qualifying eight years ago was one of the defining moments of recent U.S. soccer history. Then there was the goal against co-hosts South Korea in the 2002 World Cup. When asked days before the game about the unpredictability of Mathis, then-U.S. coach Bruce Arena sheepishly told reporters: “Clint could show up for the game bald for all I know.”

Cletus' finest moment, albeit a fleeting one
So Cletus went out and got himself a Mohawk instead.
In the clanging hothouse of Daegu, Mathis was cool and precise under pressure. The Americans got a vital point against a South Korean side riding the euphoria of tens of thousands of youths joyously gathering in the streets, all over the country. It was hard to tell which was louder: the deafening thundersticks in the stadiums, or the marching, chanting and viewing parties on big screen TVs in downtown Seoul.
Mathis’ goal was pure brilliance, and so was the service:
“I just remember Johnny O’Brien played a phenomenal ball. But what I’ll remember most telling my grandchildren is, you couldn’t hear anything during the game. There were 65,000 home fans screaming. You couldn’t hear each other ask for the ball. And when I scored that goal, you could hear a pin drop. It was a really cool feeling. In sports, people always like to get the crowd up and to hear your fans, but in my opinion, there’s no better feeling than to silence a crowd.”
He was maddeningly inconsistent, and he’s honest with Wahl in explaining some of his regrets. But the combination of fearlessness and free play that was crafted on hardscrabble ground in Rockdale County, and against ruthless older brothers, gave Mathis the confidence to reach an exalted place in world sports. His perspective now, offered to his successors, is both instructive and hopeful:
“You don’t need to really be peaking now. You need to qualify for the World Cup but you need to be peaking next summer . . . It’s just about the timing. Hopefully this new era of kids can withstand the pressure, because it is a lot of pressure. You’ve got a billion people watching you. I can’t think of any other sport that has that. It’s crazy to even fathom.”
September 5, 2009 No Comments
Atlanta Cup tied to city’s World Cup bid
What’s billed as one of the largest youth tournaments in the United States gets underway all around the metro area Saturday as the Atlanta Cup swings into action through Labor Day.
Here’s the complete schedule of games, venues, teams and other information. More than 600 youth teams will be in action, as well as a handful of women’s teams in the first year that the Atlanta Cup has been open to adult teams.
In addition to being the biggest fundraiser for Georgia Soccer, the Atlanta Cup is an integral part of Atlanta’s bid for a World Cup venue. One of the factors examined by the U.S. Soccer Federation is community support. 
Georgia Soccer executive director Rick Skirvin said petitions in support of Atlanta’s bid will be available at the Atlanta Cup venues. Players, parents and fans will be encouraged to make videos, among other things, to show their support. Atlanta is one of 27 remaining cities in the mix for inclusion in the USSF’s bid to play host to the World Cup in either 2018 or 2022.
“These efforts will be going on beyond this weekend,” Skirvin said. “It’s a chance to see how strong the local interest is. What is clear is that Atlanta is capable of handling major sporting events. What is unclear is how big a soccer community we have and how far our reach is.”
Georgia Soccer was involved in promotional efforts for the AC Milan-Club América World Football Challenge match at the Georgia Dome that drew 50,000 spectators in July. Like a June match, also at the Dome, that featured Mexico and Venezuela, spectators came from around the state and the Southeast.
Jürgen Maika of the USA Bid Committee said he got “a very good feel and understanding of the city” when visiting during the World Football Challenge, but spoke in general terms about what prospective bidding cities needed to do to show community support. Atlanta’s experience during the so-called “Summer of Soccer” in North America, he said, was not uncommon.
“What we saw in Atlanta is a clear example of what we have seen around the nation,” he said. “There is a passion for the game, greater than what people might imagine. There’s a sense of soccer being elevated to having a much stronger social consciousness in the States. It gives us a sense of relief that we know how to host large events. Our cities are well-prepared for this.”
Maika said another trip to Atlanta is not scheduled before the bid committee pares down its list of potential venues to 18 cities by the end of the year because visits to other sites still need to be made.
September 4, 2009 No Comments
Atlanta stays in contention for World Cup venue
The U.S. Soccer Federation has whittled down its working list of cities and venues bidding for World Cup venues for 2018 or 2022, and Atlanta is among the 27 cities and 32 venues reaching the next phase of the process.
Among those bidders from the Southeast not making the cut: Birmingham, Fayetteville, Knoxville, New Orleans.
Still in the picture: Charlotte, Jacksonville, Orlando, Miami, Nashville, Tampa.
The USSF ultimately will submit around a dozen finalists when it formalizes its proposal to FIFA next May.
Here’s one soccer blogger’s rundown of the field. He puts Atlanta in the “near-lock” category.
But not everyone in Atlanta is working for a successful U.S. bid. An Atlanta-based consultancy, Helios Partners, has been hired to help craft Russia’s bid for the World Cup, also for either 2018 or 2022.
But a caveat here: Helios worked with Russia for its winning bid for the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi.
August 20, 2009 No Comments
U.S. vs. Mexico: A crucible for Ricardo Clark?
Even before he confidently predicted victory in a place the U.S. national team has never won (more on that in a moment) Ricardo Clark was priming for what figures to be the biggest game of his budding soccer career.
When the Americans take on Mexico Wednesday at the forbidding Estadio Azteca in a colossal World Cup qualifying match (4 p.m., mun2, Telemundo) the former AFC Lightning club and St. Pius X standout is a likely candidate to be in Bob Bradley’s starting squad.
After numerous fits and starts that have included injuries and disciplinary issues (including a red card in the Confederations Cup), Clark has recovered nicely this summer to raise his game and his profile.
His play in South Africa, filling in at defensive midfield for an injured Maurice Edu, earned him some interest overseas, including an offer from Livorno of Italy’s Serie A that he may accept by the end of the year.
And Clark’s form is cresting for Major League Soccer powerhouse Houston Dynamo, as he scored his first goal of the season over the weekend.
With the U.S. needing three points to virtually seal another trip to the World Cup — and potentially slay the aspirations of its fiercest rival — Clark sounded quite ready for the challenge when he proclaimed: “It’ll be a great experience, and it’ll be nice to beat Mexico on their soil.”
No pressure at all, mate.
The Americans will probably be soaking up pressure everywhere with El Tricolor coming off a 5-0 thrashing of the U.S. “B” team in the finals of the CONCACAF Gold Cup. A re-energized Mexican attack features the young, free-flowing Giovani dos Santos, who scored during the team’s June win over Venezuela in the Georgia Dome. As one of the first lines of defense, Clark’s going to be fiercely tested.
But will it be any more intense than the consecutive games against Spain and Brazil in the Confederations Cup? If the Americans can’t draw from their experiences in those games, then they may never claim Mexico’s scalp in this “House of Horrors.”
There’s certainly going to be plenty of scrutiny paid to Landon Donovan, whose skill, leadership and brio will be crucial for the Americans to end their winless drought.
From our little parochial corner of the American soccer universe, this game represents Clark’s best chance not only to solidify a place on the U.S. team, but also to help write no small piece of American soccer history.
August 11, 2009 No Comments

