‘Gold standard': training centre could be gamechanger for football in US
Thirty minutes away from the hustle and bustle of downtown Atlanta, the land becomes greener, the trees are taller and builders are working in the intense Georgia sun to ensure US Soccer's new National Training Center is ready for action in time for the men's World Cup next year.
It is an enormous site, spanning more than 200 acres in Trilith, Fayette County, and the hope is it will be the best training facility in the world when it opens. Funding has partly come from Arthur M Blank, who owns three sports teams in Atlanta, and executives are confident everything is on schedule for the doors to open in April.
Advertisement
Those driving the project, which is expected to cost up to $250m, see it as a gamechanger for football in the US. They have travelled to Europe to observe other training centres and find out what works best. It helps that Matt Crocker, the technical director, previously worked at the Football Association. St George's Park, home to England's various national teams, is an obvious inspiration. Other sites visited by executives include Tottenham and Manchester City's training grounds, Clairefontaine in France, the US Tennis Association and Olympics and Paralympics training venues.
Related: How the US men's national team values diversity, even in the Trump era
'I think it will be the gold standard,' says David Wright, US Soccer's chief commercial officer. 'It will combine sporting and non-sporting all in one facility. A lot of times it's either one or the other, but to have everything consolidated to one location is also a unique point of difference for us.'
Cindy Parlow Cone, the federation's president, has made building the NTC one of the defining features of her tenure. Much is made of having a single central hub for the country's 27 national teams. It is less than ideal that the federation currently has to arrange a different location during every international break. 'Right now we have 27 national teams,' Chelle Alexander, US soccer's chief financial officer, says. 'Every time we have a camp for any of our national teams we have to go out, we have to source fields, hotels, transportation. We ship our equipment all over the United States – and internationally. Now we're all underneath one location. It'll provide consistency, so our teams know they're coming here. We'll be able to host multiple teams at one time as well.'
Advertisement
The facility is a building site at the moment – health and safety regulations means proper tours are currently out of the question – but in the end there will be two beach courts, one futsal pitch, 13 grass pitches and three artificial pitches. Indoor facilities and plenty of locker rooms are other features. A lot of time and effort is going into making sure the grass is of the highest standard. The one surprise is there is no plan for accommodation facilities. There is also talk of developing players, coaches and referees.
The project has an aspirational aspect. There is excitement at youth players being able to mingle with members of the senior squad in the canteen. It is about building connections; about ensuring pathways remain open for development squads. 'You've got youth fields set below the senior national team field,' Wright said. 'You could be a youth player who has aspirations to play for the senior national team and you're looking up saying: 'I want to get there one day.' That's a great example of the attention to detail we serve as an inspiration.
'I also think it's going to be a heartbeat for the sport. We've got our national teams, but we also make them think about coaching education, referee certification. You'll start to see this really become the hub and go to for all things soccer.'
Atlanta is the self-styled epicentre of football in the States. Atlanta United, who play in the striking Mercedes-Benz Stadium, averaged crowds close to 45,000 for their Major League Soccer fixtures last season. Having the NTC nearby makes sense. 'We did a very comprehensive study that looked at over a thousand markets throughout the country,' Wright says. 'But when you factor in the climate, proximity to Europe for ease of player transportation, corporate support and a host of other factors it became pretty clear that Atlanta made sense.'
Advertisement
Alexander points out that the NTC will help the local economy. Hundreds of staff are relocating from the federation's offices in Chicago and no one is complaining that the grand opening will come just before the World Cup. 'I think it should come as no surprise,' Wright says. 'The timing is perfect. There's this crescendo behind this work.
'Clearly there's some connectivity there. But I think it's more from a macro perspective. We think about where the sport's going and this is just one of many indicators of the growth of the game.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
14 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Pelicans trade McCollum and Olynyk to the Wizards for Poole and Bey, AP source says
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The New Orleans Pelicans have agreed to trade veteran guard CJ McCollum, center Kelly Olynyk and a future second-round pick to the Washington Wizards for guard Jordan Poole, wing Saddiq Bey and the 40th overall pick in Thursday's second round of the NBA Draft, a person with knowledge of the agreement said. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the trade has not been announced. McCollum, a 12-year veteran who has averaged 19.6 points per game throughout his career, now joins his third team since 2022 after spending the bulk of his career with Portland. Poole, a six-year veteran who has averaged 16.8 points per game, also joins his third franchise after spending his first four seasons with Golden State and the past two with the Wizards. The Wizards — who are clearly maximizing the youth movement now — will gain a ton of financial freedom in the deal, which they can use going forward to continue their rebuild. They easily could have around $100 million in cap space for the summer of 2026, largely by clearing $57 million in expiring contracts for McCollum and Olynyk this coming season. It's likely that Washington will look for guards with their two first-round picks Wednesday — No. 6 and No. 18 — and continue adding to the youth movement that started with the Bradley Beal trade. The Pelicans are entering a new era under the direction of Joe Dumars — a former NBA champion as a player and general manager with Detroit — who was hired in April to replace David Griffin as executive vice president of basketball operations. Last week, Dumars acquired a second first-round draft choice — 23rd overall — to go with the club's seventh overall pick in a trade that send a 2026 first-rounder to Indiana. Olynyk, a Canadian, spent less than a season in New Orleans after being dealt by Toronto as part of a deal that sent high-scoring wing Brandon Ingram to the Raptors. The 12-year veteran has averaged 10.2 points and 5.2 rebounds during his career. Bey, a 19th overall pick out of Villanova in 2020, has averaged 14.1 points per game with Detroit and Atlanta. He spent last season with Washington but did not play while recovering from reconstructive knee surgery. In the short term, the deal could also make the Wizards more competitive. They were next-to-last in 3-point shooting last season; McCollum and Olynyk should be improvements there. McCollum is a locker room leader, a union president and still a very productive player — one of three players averaging at least 20 points in each of the last 10 seasons. The others are LeBron James and DeMar DeRozan. ___ AP Basketball Writer Tim Reynolds in Miami contributed to this report. ___ AP NBA:


CBS News
14 minutes ago
- CBS News
Legendary Boston University coach Jack Parker elected into Hockey Hall of Fame
Legendary Boston University hockey coach Jack Parker will take his place in the Hockey Hall of Fame later this year. Parker was elected into the Hall on Tuesday as a builder, following his incredible 40-year career with the Terriers. Parker led the Terriers to 897 wins over his four decades on the BU bench, along with three National Championships (in 1978, 1995, and 2009). Boston University won 21 Beanpot titles under Parker, to go with six Hockey East tournament titles and eight Hockey East regular season championships. The Spencer Penrose Award for the top Division 1 hockey coach was awarded to Parker three times -- in 1975, 1978, and 2009 -- making him one of just three three-time recipients of the honor. Parker's 897 wins with BU is the most in NCAA history for a coach at one school. He also has the most NCAA appearances (24), Frozen Four appearances (13), and most importantly on the BU campus, Beanpot victories (21). Parker, who was born in Somerville and attended Catholic Memorial, started at Boston University as a player in 1965. He centered three Beanpot championship teams and was captain of the Terries in his senior season. Ater his playing days were over, Parker started as an assistant coach at Boston University in 1969, and was the program's head coach by 1973. Hockey Hall of Fame Class of 2025 Parker will be enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame as a "builder inductee," a special section for non-players who helped build the game. Women's coach Daniele Sauvageau (currently the GM of Montreal's PWHL team) will also be enshrined as a builder, the first woman to receive the honor in the category. In addition to Parker and Sauvageau, former NHL players Zdeno Chara, Joe Thornton, Alexander Mogilny, and Duncan Keith were elected on Tuesday, along with women's hockey stars Brianna Decker and Jennifer Botterill. Botterill played professionally in Canada following her four-year career at Harvard University from 1998-2003, where she was a four-time All-American and became the first player to win the Patty Kazmaier Award (given to the best player in college hockey) twice.

Associated Press
23 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Team physicians in college sports wary of greater liability risk with athletes now making big money
The professionalization of college sports has prompted concern among team physicians that they will be exposed to a greater risk of being sued by athletes who claim a poor outcome from treatment caused them to lose future earnings. Before July 2021, when college athletes were cleared to be compensated by third parties for the use of their name, image and likeness, such lawsuits would have been virtually unwinnable. Four years later, and with schools set to share millions directly with their athletes, team physicians are wary. Some of the most high-profile college athletes are already signing multimillion-dollar deals and six-figure contracts are common. Though no malpractice lawsuits seeking lost future earnings at the college level are known to have been filed, it's only a matter of time, said Dr. James Borchers, Big Ten chief medical officer and president and CEO of the U.S. Council for Athletes' Health. 'The complexity for the clinician is going to be significant,' he said. 'I do think there are people who are going to evaluate this and say, 'I didn't sign up for an 18-year-old making a million dollars and then saying the decision I make affected their ability to make money.' I think you may see people say this isn't for me.' Eagles case grabbed attention The case of former Philadelphia Eagles player Chris Maragos jolted the sports medicine field in 2023 when a jury ordered his surgeon and an orthopedics group affiliated with the team to pay him $43.5 million for lost future earnings and pain and suffering after he alleged improper care of a knee injury. The orthopedics group ended its two-decade association with the Eagles out of fear of future lawsuits. At the college level, it still would be hard for an athlete to contend a team doctor's errant care cost them an opportunity to make money in professional sports because there are no guarantees to play at the next level. However, a college athlete who didn't have an optimal recovery could argue treatment reduced their ability to make NIL money or to transfer to a higher-level school where they could make more money. 'You had an ACL tear, I did surgery and you never quite made it back — back in my day, you just had bad luck,' said Borchers, who played football at Ohio State from 1989-93. 'You're making a million dollars and that happens, you're probably having a different discussion.' Borchers offered a hypothetical situation to illustrate his concerns about the pressures faced by team doctors. A receiver is treated for a hamstring injury, returns to play and reinjures the hamstring. The receiver says the injury never felt fully healed and his agent takes him to another doctor who has a different opinion on how the injury should have been treated. Borchers said the receiver would have been better off to sit out longer and miss a few more games. 'But there wasn't money tied to that,' he said. 'Now you could say you hurt my ability to go out and perform, so I'm not going to get as much money or (it) has cost me the ability to put more tape out there so I could have transferred to a better situation and made more money. Those are the types of issues we're hearing about that used to not exist in college sports.' Who is liable? Typically in college sports, team physicians are employed by a university-affiliated medical center or local medical group. Athletic trainers are employed by the athletic department. Team physicians must carry liability insurance either individually or through the medical center or group. The most common limits for a malpractice insurance policy are $1 million per incident and $3 million total in a year, said Mike Matray, editor of Medical Liability Monitor. 'You can see how an athlete's economic damages, should a medical error end his/her career, would easily exceed those limits,' Matray wrote in an email to The Associated Press. MLM has followed the medical liability insurance industry since 1975, and though the publication does not track data specific to sports medicine practitioners who perform surgeries, Matray estimated rates for that specialty to be more than $100,000 per year in some states. Dr. Jon Divine, head team physician at Cincinnati, said Big 12 team doctors are discussing among themselves and university general counsels whether they should increase their liability insurance limits, perhaps to $2 million or $6 million or more. Divine said he and other team doctors also are taking extra steps in evaluating injuries in the new era of college sports. 'I've probably ordered more MRIs than I ever have in 25 years in the last two years,' he said. 'It's to make sure we're getting it right for the (coaching) staff, for the kids, for the kid's family. There's that much more riding on it.' Changing relationships A former Penn State football team doctor, Scott Lynch, alleged in 2019 that coach James Franklin attempted to interfere with medical decisions. A Penn State internal review found evidence of 'friction' between Lynch and Franklin but could not determine whether Franklin violated NCAA bylaws or Big Ten standards by interfering with medical decisions. Lynch was awarded $5.25 for wrongful termination by the hospital that had employed him. Dr. David McAllister, head team physician at UCLA who has been practicing for 27 years, said the relationship between team doctor and athlete has gone from one built on trust to now being transactional and at times adversarial. When athletes spent four or five years at the same school, as once was the norm, friendships were formed and the team doctor continued to provide care for the some athletes long after their playing days. Now, McAllister said, many football and basketball players are taking advice from agents and business managers whose priority is the athlete's earning power, and that puts pressure on team physicians. 'There are seasoned, experienced people that do what I do who either recently got out of it or are really considering it because they don't want to be exposed to the liability,' McAllister said, 'and they don't find it that much fun anymore.' ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: and