I started this blog to cover the Vancouver Whitecaps. It was fun first season despite the losing and turmoil. I have been asked to write for some bigger publications. You can find my work AFTN and Prost Amerika. Thanks for the support.
Steve
The first signs that Camilo situation would be resolved was last Thursday when the striker arrived in Vancouver, after an excused absence, and it was revealed that there were ongoing negotiations between the club and the Brazilian’s agent. When Sebastien Le Toux was acquired from the Union, once again Camilo was mentioned as a possibility of leaving through trade or transfer. But the early morning announcement cleared up any concern as it was clear that the Caps were excited to be the only MLS club to have three players that scored in double digits last year.
It was revealed a few days ago that Victor Turcios, 23, would be joining the Whitecaps in Arizona by newspapers in El Salvador. Earlier in the year the midfielder/defender attempted to secure a contract in with several Eastern European clubs when it was revealed that there was interest from a Canadian MLS club. The Salvadorian international has 25 caps for his country scoring once and was a standout in the 2011 Gold Cup for the surprising El Salvador who made the quarterfinals. Turcios, while listed as a defender, has the pace and vision to play in the midfield as a holding midfielder for the Whitecaps. While on his tour of Europe, Turcios suffered an ankle injury which will hold him out of training for the first few days.
There haven’t been many changes to the strikers group but the one that left gave major notice of the man who was in charge. There were rumblings that Mustapha Jarju would be given an opportunity to prove himself in camp but Rennie pulled the trigger just before the weekend, departing ways with the Gambian DP. Releasing Jarju confirmed that Rennie was fully in charge and that the Caps ownership was willing to pay for obvious mistakes.
Signed during the summer transfer window, Mustapha Jarju arrived with much fanfare as the first African designated player in MLS. Despite playing as a central midfielder for the national team as well as it being the Whitecaps greatest need, the club announced that he would play as a striker. Unfortunately in his ten appearances (five starts), totaling 450 minutes, Jarju was unable to find the back of the net. In fact it seemed like he had given up to the supporters and failed to make a showing in the last three home games at BC Place.
The Whitecaps made a minor non-player trade that will allow them to keep an additional international player on the roster for next year. In the trade the Caps sent an undisclosed amount of allocation money to the Colorado Rapids for a 2nd round pick in 2014 and an international roster spot for the next three years. Each team in MLS has eight roster spots for players that aren’t domestic which for Vancouver include Canadian and American players.
Born in Japan to American parents Davidson returned to the States for high school after which he returned to Japan to play for Omiya Ardija in division 2. He remained with the club for an additional two seasons after they gained promotion to the J. League in 2005. After bouncing around with four club in three seasons in Japan, Davidson returned to United States to sign with Carolina and Rennie in 2009.
While Brad Knighton is coming from the NASL, he has spent the majority of his career in MLS spending time with New England and the expansion Philadelphia Union. His first three seasons, including a short loan with Portland, after college were spent with the Revolution where he saw only six starts in three seasons. He was selected by the Union in the expansion draft but did not see his first action until late in the season and only appeared in eight games.
The 2011 draft saw the Whitecaps select a future project with a higher ceiling in Omar Salgado instead of going for a possible immediate return, bypassing defender Perry Kitchen. The only other option was Darlington Nagbe but his apparent refusal to play north of the border removed him from the board. There were flashes of skill displayed by Salgado in his limited playing time coming off the bench as a late game substitute. However when he did get a start the teenager looked physically overmatched and frustrated by the often lack of service.