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Seattle Sounders bring home winning streak into matchup with San Diego FC

Seattle Sounders bring home winning streak into matchup with San Diego FC

San Diego FC (8-4-3, second in the Western Conference) vs. Seattle Sounders FC (6-4-5, fifth in the Western Conference)
Seattle; Wednesday, 8:30 p.m. EDT
BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Seattle -132, San Diego +330, Draw +272; over/under is 2.5 goals
BOTTOM LINE: The Seattle Sounders host San Diego FC looking to prolong a three-game home winning streak.
The Sounders are 6-4-4 against Western Conference teams. The Sounders rank fourth in the Western Conference with 77 shots on goal, averaging 5.1 per game.
San Diego is 8-3-2 in conference matchups. Anders Dreyer leads the fourth-ranked scoring team in the MLS with six goals. San Diego has scored 27.
Wednesday's game is the second meeting between these teams this season. San Diego won the last meeting 3-0.
TOP PERFORMERS: Albert Rusnak has scored seven goals and added three assists for the Sounders. Ryan Kent has three assists over the past 10 games.
Dreyer has scored six goals with five assists for San Diego. Hirving Lozano has five goals and three assists over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Sounders: 5-2-3, averaging 1.5 goals, 5.4 shots on goal and 5.4 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.2 goals per game.
San Diego: 6-3-1, averaging 2.0 goals, 4.6 shots on goal and 4.5 corner kicks per game while allowing 1.3 goals per game.
NOT EXPECTED TO PLAY: Sounders: Danny Musovski (injured), Jackson Ragen (injured), Jordan Morris (injured), Paul Arriola (injured).
San Diego: Hamady Diop (injured), Andres Reyes (injured), Emmanuel Boateng (injured), Marcus Ingvartsen (injured).
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

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New Jersey's Stockton University prepares to host soccer players ahead of FIFA Club World Cup
New Jersey's Stockton University prepares to host soccer players ahead of FIFA Club World Cup

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New Jersey's Stockton University prepares to host soccer players ahead of FIFA Club World Cup

This New Jersey university is preparing to host a Brazilian soccer team ahead of FIFA Club World Cup This New Jersey university is preparing to host a Brazilian soccer team ahead of FIFA Club World Cup This New Jersey university is preparing to host a Brazilian soccer team ahead of FIFA Club World Cup Some of the best soccer players in the world will soon arrive in New Jersey. Lincoln Financial Field will host matches for the inaugural FIFA Club World Cup in Philadelphia, but Stockton University has also been selected as a training site. Focusing on straight lines and overlapping passes, the grounds team at the school in Galloway Township is mowing the soccer field with precision. Crews are working around the clock after FIFA announced CR Flamengo from Brazil will be the team spending roughly two weeks training in South Jersey. "CR Flamengo is one of the most popular teams in the world with over 57 million followers," said Jeff Haines, the associate director of athletics and recreation at Stockton. "The university realizes how big of a deal this is, not just from a local soccer standpoint, but a global standpoint that puts Stockton on the map." Fresh lines were painted on the soccer field on Tuesday, and FIFA shipped new goals ahead of the practice sessions. The university's athletic director, Tony Berich, said representatives from Brazil visited the campus in December, and one of the selling points was the Bermuda grass inside G. Larry James Stadium. "I don't know if we would have this opportunity if we didn't have this field, I don't think we would have even been considered," Berich said. Stockton's field was grown at Tuckahoe Turf Farms in Hammonton, the same farm working with FIFA and Lincoln Financial Field, so it will be a smooth transition for CR Flamengo. Tuckahoe Turf Farms CBS News Philadelphia All of the practices on Stockton's campus will be closed to the public. The university installed temporary fencing around the stadium to keep the players and the field more secure. "We do have experience in hosting big events and soccer teams, this is another big exciting event that we're really looking forward to," Haines said. In 1994, Stockton hosted Saudi Arabia's team ahead of the World Cup. "We were also fortunate enough to host Nigeria in 1996 for their Olympic training camp as well. Nigeria went on to win the gold medal," Haines said. Now, Stockton is preparing for CR Flamengo's arrival on June 12, and the team will train in Galloway Township through June 23. Officials say the field and facilities will be ready. "This is the one chance that we have to be associated with … a worldwide event like this," Berich said.

2025 Club World Cup power rankings: Where all 32 teams stand — from European giants to hopeful underdogs
2025 Club World Cup power rankings: Where all 32 teams stand — from European giants to hopeful underdogs

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2025 Club World Cup power rankings: Where all 32 teams stand — from European giants to hopeful underdogs

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Real Madrid (Spain) Year 1 of Madrid's latest galactic era produced far more frustration than fireworks. Kylian Mbappé was decently prolific, but Vinicius Jr. and Jude Bellingham regressed in his shadow. Injuries took their toll, and holes appeared, and arrogance exacerbated everything, and you know what? Los Blancos still produced a season that 99.9% of soccer would envy. Because they are still uber-talented. They've recently signed Dean Huijsen and Trent Alexander-Arnold. They have a chance to start fresh under new coach Xabi Alonso at the Club World Cup, and all the pieces necessary to win it. 3. Bayern Munich (Germany) It's been an unremarkable season by Bayern Munich's modern standards. And unremarkable seasons by Bayern's modern standards equate to 'really good team in the mix for multiple trophies.' Almost by default, with other giants playing below par, the Bavarians have a place in our top four. 4. 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Inter Miami (United States) Ever since breaking the MLS regular-season points record last fall, Miami has been moderately messy (pun somewhat intended). It crashed out of last year's playoffs; named a new head coach and sporting director (both with strong Messi ties); started 2025 well but then began to struggle. Eye tests and underlying data alike would tell you that this is not a team capable of making a Club World Cup run. But the man wearing No. 10, and still bamboozling defenders at age 37, would tell you the opposite. 22. Fluminense (Brazil) Unlike Palmeiras and Flamengo, Flu's presence at the Club World Cup is a bit fluky. Over the past decade, its Série A finishes have been: 13th, 13th, 14th, 12th, 14th, 5th, 7th, 3rd, 7th, 13th. Its performance this summer, therefore, will be an intriguing test of the Brasileiro's depth. 23. Boca Juniors (Argentina) Boca, aesthetically, has been a soccer eyesore for a while now. It has very few, if any, exciting youngsters. It has a few World Cup vets — Edinson Cavani, Marcos Rojo, Luis Advíncula — but all are well past their prime. Its xGD in the Argentine league has hovered right around 0 for three seasons and counting. And yet, it is Boca. It subsists on intrinsic passion. It should pack stadiums, and its zealous following could propel it through a tournament that, for many other teams, might feel somewhat stale. 24. Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa) The richest club in Africa recently ousted Al Ahly and another Club World Cup participant, ES Tunis, from the CAF Champions League. It has won eight straight South African Premiership titles. But does it have the juice to make noise at a global tournament? Fortunately, it probably has the weakest of the eight groups. 25. Seattle Sounders (United States) The Sounders have been Major League Soccer's most consistent franchise since entering the league in 2009. They have a sharp, dependable, adaptable coach in Brian Schmetzer, and a wise, deep roster by MLS standards. But the current iteration lacks top-end talent. Two U.S. national team veterans, Jordan Morris and Paul Arriola, are currently injured. It's very tough to see Seattle challenging PSG or Atleti in Group B. (And a battle with MLS and ownership over the players' share of Club World Cup prize money probably won't help.) 26. Pachuca (Mexico) They aren't the most famous or deep-pocketed club in Mexico, but Tuzos keep on keeping pace with wealthier and more popular rivals. That said, though: Their 2024 CONCACAF title keeps looking more and more like an anomaly. They're a mid-table team that will try to measure up to the Club World Cup's toughest group — Real Madrid, Salzburg and Al Hilal. 27. ES Tunis (Tunisia) Eight consecutive Tunisian league titles, and even a few runs in the CAF Champions League, aren't enough to convince us that ES Tunis can hang with Flamengo and Chelsea. 28. Urawa Reds (Japan) Many domestic leagues around the world are dominated, year after year, by the same club(s). Japan's J1 League is not one of them. And while its parity is largely a good thing, parity doesn't help a single representative compete in an international tournament. Which brings us to Urawa Reds, who haven't won the league since 2006; eight other clubs have won it since their last title. They're here because they won the Asian Champions League in 2022, but none of that information suggests they're ready to make a splash in the U.S. this summer. Advertisement 29. Wydad (Morocco) They're Morocco's winningest club, but they're far from the peak of their powers at the moment. 30. Ulsan (South Korea) The champions of Asia in 2020 appear, on paper, to be overmatched at the Club World Cup. But they do have two winnable group games. 31. Al Ain (United Arab Emirates) The out-of-nowhere Asian champs in 2024 appear to be even more overmatched, especially in a group featuring Juventus and Manchester City. Tier 6: The amateurs 32. Auckland City (New Zealand) They're perennial powers in Oceania. They're also amateurs. (New Zealand's best clubs compete in Australia's A-League, which is under the Asian soccer confederation.) It's tough to overstate how wide the gap is between Auckland City and the rest of the field.

Former MLB exec blasts Royals' 'irresponsible' move with top prospect Jac Caglianone
Former MLB exec blasts Royals' 'irresponsible' move with top prospect Jac Caglianone

Fox News

time27 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Former MLB exec blasts Royals' 'irresponsible' move with top prospect Jac Caglianone

Kansas City was ecstatic when the Royals called up their top prospect, Jac Caglianone, but one former MLB executive called it the "single-most irresponsible move I've seen in quite a long time." Former Miami Marlins team president David Samson vocalized his displeasure with the Royals' front office bringing Caglianone up to the big leagues despite his success in the minors. It wasn't Caglianone's performance Samson was referencing in his opinion. It has to do with service time. "If he's going to be that good, how do you call him up now where he will hit arbitration a full year earlier than if they waited until after around June 17?" Samson wondered. "I have no idea how a team that's not in the top 10 of payroll is not paying attention to dates. And the Royals forcing the issue, that's a bunch of horse hockey. You take the extra two weeks because it gives you an extra year and compounds itself in arbitration." Caglianone will reach arbitration a year early because Kansas City brought him up before the Super Two deadline. Service time has been a debated topic for some time among baseball experts and fans because teams do have the ability to keep prospects down on the farm to ensure another year of control. But Kansas City clearly doesn't mind bringing up Caglianone now. He was just called up, but Caglianone is one of the top prospects in baseball and has been raking in the minors this year with a .322/.389/.593 slash line with 15 homers and 56 RBIs between Double-A and Triple-A. Samson believes calling up Caglianone now puts more pressure on him to perform right away because of the service time scenario. "This is a $10 million decision they made. He better be Vladimir Guerrero Sr., and he better start now," Samson said. Caglianone went 0-for-5 in his major league debut Tuesday against the St. Louis Cardinals. Kansas City is hoping Caglianone can get acclimated to the big leagues sooner rather than later, and they're hoping to reach the playoffs in back-to-back seasons after breaking an eight-year skid last year with a wild-card berth. The last time the Royals reached the playoffs before that was the 2015 campaign, when they defeated the New York Mets in the World Series.

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