Showing posts with label Josh Wicks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Josh Wicks. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Impeccable Timing

Nothing like extolling the praises of an entity that ceased to exist the previous day.  Having missed every game last season, attending a Real Maryland match next year will not be an option:


Hello Everyone,

How are you? I hope this email finds you well.

I am sad to inform you that Real Maryland FC will suspend operations for the 2013 Season after a great 5-year run.

The ownership group has decided to forgo next season as they have turned their attentions in another direction.

I have been working this past month with the USL in trying to find a new ownership group for the Real Maryland FC Franchise.

The turn-around time for a new group to come in for the 2013 Season has proven to be too short of a window for potential investors.

The Rights are now with the USL and interested investors should contact them directly.

While this is a sad and unfortunate turn of events, I don’t believe that this will be the last time the area will see a USL PRO/PDL/W-League Franchise. I am sure 2014 will see something stirring about; I hope.

This will be one of my last emails in addition to a report on how the last three remaining Real Maryland FC Monarch Teams do in the up-coming USL Super Y League North American National Finals this December.

Please help me wish the U12 RMFC SYL Boys (Coach Luis Calderon), U13 RMFC SYL Boys (Coach Julio Arjona) and the U15 RMFC SYL Boys (Coach Tim Francis) the best of luck in the finals.

At this time, I would like to say THANK YOU to everyone who helped out with Real Maryland FC over the course of the past 5 years. Without you, I wouldn’t have been able to do any of this.

Lastly, the office will be open today (Wednesday), tomorrow (Thursday) and Friday from 10am – 3pm. I am cleaning out the office and all gear must go!

All gear items will be on sale for $10 each – warm up pants, warm up jackets, rain jackets, training tops, polo’s, sweatshirts, blankets, banners, socks & shorts, medals, hats, professional game jerseys, replica game jerseys and game shorts are some of the items that will be available. These items will make great holiday gifts and memorabilia. All items will be sold at a first come, first serve basis.

Please keep playing the game like there is no tomorrow, support one another and you will reach great heights.

I hope to see all of you again soon.

Thank you everyone.

Dave

David B. Noyes
General Manager
Real Maryland FC
12114 B Heritage Park Circle
Silver Spring, MD 20906
P: 301-933-6460
E: gm@realmaryland.us
W: www.realmaryland.us
F: Real Maryland FC Facebook Page
Whatever else might be said about the club, Real Maryland afforded a platform by which soccer players -- including Draymond Washington -- could either launch or sustain their professional careers.

With Real Maryland alum Mason Trafford again anchoring the back line, IFK Mariehamn recorded the club's best ever position in the Veikkausliiga table -- fourth on 51 points in 33 matches.  Trafford is out of contract, with some hope he will return to the club, and has had a remarkable run in Finland regardless.

Iceland's Thor Akureyri also had a terrific season, including continental competition in the Europa League and a return to the top flight after topping the second division table.  Real Maryland alum (and IFK Mariehamn dissident) Joe Funicello played a big part in the club's run and the team recently announced an agreement for his return next year.  Joe will be joined -- again -- by someone we saw in the stands at Richard Montgomery, as Josh Wicks has also signed up for another year with the club

And more recent Real Maryland alum Jake Pace headed home the winning goal yesterday that sent the Terrapins back to the College Cup as Maryland avenged Louisville's win at Ludwig in the tournament last season.

Four players:  NASL Champions, fourth in Finland's Veikkausliiga, first in Iceland's First Division, and in the NCAA men's college soccer final four.  Although Real Maryland may not have been a success as a financial operation, it had an impact and will be missed.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Icelandic (and Aland Islandic) Football News

On Saturday, Thor Akureyri secured its return to the Icelandic top flight in 2013 with a 3-1 victory over Viking.  Three Americans were in the starting eleven for Thor:  Real Maryland alum Giuseppe (Joe) Funicello, D.C. United alum Josh Wicks, and former Connecticut Huskie and Wilmington Hammerhead, Chukwudi Chijindu.

There are several Americans plying their trade in the Icelandic second division this season, including the remarkable N.C. State alum Kris Byrd, who plays for Hottur.  Oddly, there is a relative dearth of Americans in the Landsbankadeild, the Icelandic top flight, but perhaps Joe, Josh, and Chukwudi will stick around to change that next season.

Joe and Josh's former team, Finland's IFK Mariehamn, and their former teammate, Real Maryland alum Mason Trafford, are enjoying a great season in the Veikkausliiga.  Mariehamn is currently fourth in the league table after 24 matches -- the highest position the club has ever finished in Finland's top flight -- and is mounting a serious challenge for a place in the European tournaments with nine games to go.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Catching Up

When Cameroon's football squad shook off both the lengthy Fecafoot imposed suspension of Eto'o for his alleged role in organizing a protest against remuneration for national team duty and the ignominious expulsion of Roger Milla from the FA to beat an even more dysfunctional Democratic Republic of Congo squad that had eight players ignore call ins to the national side for a world cup qualifier, Iya Mohammed -- yet another cherub adorning Sepp Blatter's collection of angels throughout the world -- might have whispered a prayer of gratitude that Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting managed to convert his penalty.  Or not.  Because, of course, in Blatter's FIFA being accused of long-standing corruption while simultaneously pissing all over the players that make football great in your country nets you an invite to manage the 2014 World Cup.

No matter.  I can fiddle while FIFA burns as much as the next man and, frankly, the only reason I cared about this match was a player that came on as a substitute in the eightieth minute.  Crystal Palace Baltimore alum Matthew Mbuta earned yet another cap for what is, despite Fecafoot's best efforts to sabotage them, a pretty good side.  The same Matthew Mbuta who plied his trade as a professional athlete in front of dozens of moderately-interested fans at UMBC's Retriever Soccer Park.  The same Matthew Mbuta who could gain no serious run out with an MLS team -- including D.C. United -- to harness his exceptional footballing skills.

Mbuta has, obviously, moved on and has a new (likely far more serious) professional employer, Sweden's Syrianska FC.  Thus far in the 2012 Allsvenskan, Mbuta's only played sporadically for Syrianska, seemingly appearing in only three of the club's dozen fixtures to date.

Syrianska is only in its second season of top flight football in the club's history; surviving a relegation playoff last season to retain a place in the Allsvenskan this year.  I had planned on learning about and following Syrianska closely this season after Steve Goff reported that D.C. United's Josh Wicks was set to join the club earlier this year.  But perhaps because Wicks added another incident (this time a headbutt leading to a red card and league suspension) to the litany of moments where impulse control would have helped his squad, any deal between the keeper and club failed to materialize.  Wicks would appear to still be in need of a club.

At the same time, while D.C. United's front-office staff showed little interest in the raw talent of a youthful Mbuta, the team remains interested in past-their-prime European players that are being shown the door by clubs within which they've become living legends.  This time, someone on staff appears to have traveled somewhere other than Vienna, and has focused on Hibernians' former captain Ian Murray.  Unlike the tabloid-concocted Ryan Nelsen return rumors shot down by Greg Seltzer, there is no obvious reason why a link between United and Murray would be invented.

The thirty-one year old center half has previously expressed an interest in leaving Scotland now that he's been released by former Bohs gaffer Pat Fenlon from a decade long affiliation with the Edinburgh club.  Murray has "always hankered for an American style of life . . ." and is reportedly keenly interested in moving to the MLS, so perhaps D.C. United's been the target of his agent's inquiries.

Murray's preference would seem to be to play as a center back or defensive midfielder.  If United is interested it would seem to be another person brought in to bury Ethan White (rather than to address weakness at fullback).  White deserves much better, but at this point, I need to stop complaining about the composition of the squad.  The team this season has been far more entertaining than I had anticipated and I am once again looking forward to games at RFK.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Reputation

If you google "Josh Wicks," its not terribly flattering. Wicks' Wikipedia entry, at the moment, highlights some of the things that led United supporters to turn on him. Then you have to sift through more results -- many exceedingly negative -- before you run across this terrific article by Craig Stouffer including Wicks' candid assessment of his shortcomings and his personal demons.

But perhaps that will change.

Last Saturday, IFK Mariehamn traveled to Helsinki and frustrated HJK for 80 minutes. The team dropped points after Wicks botched a punch trying to clear a corner kick that was put into the netting to secure a 1-0 win for the homeside.

The result was disappointing, but IFK's play this season has once again exceeded expectations and Wicks is being called one of the best players in the Veikkausliiga this season.

The dramatic change in Josh's fortunes has led him to be the subject of another terrific article by Brian Sciaretta over at Yanks Abroad which highlights just how far Josh has come. Gone, but likely not forgotten, are the days of just trying to get someone to give him a chance.

Now, instead, what is articulated is fulsome ambitions: (1) contribute to IFK finishing in the top four (or, better yet, three) of the league; (2) play at even higher levels in Europe; and (3) catch the eye of U.S. Soccer officials to earn a national team cap.

No doubt some will call Wicks delusional, but it would be a mistake to -- once again -- underestimate what he can achieve.