'Real' soccer details coming
Checketts may be working on deal with Madrid team
Those details may be a few weeks late, but the team says it expects to begin making some big announcements this week.
There's a chance the biggest and most noteworthy announcement of them all will have an international flavor.
Last month as the keynote speaker at the annual meeting of the Economic Development Corp. of Utah, Checketts discussed potential names for the expansion team such as Salt Lake Glory, Salt Lake Alliance, Salt Lake Highlanders and Real Salt Lake.
Based on audience feedback, no one cared that "real" meant royalty in Spanish, they didn't understand the context of why a team would be Real Salt Lake (pronounced Ree-AL). Since Real Salt Lake was mentioned as a possibility by Checketts, message boards on nationwide soccer websites have criticized the name as a cheap rip-off of the storied Spanish soccer team.
Despite that, speculation is that representatives from Salt Lake's MLS team are leaning toward Real Salt Lake so much so that an official announcement may come this week.
Speculation is that Checketts reached an agreement with European soccer power Real Madrid to form a type of affiliation. Real Madrid's roster includes international heroes such as David Beckham, Ronaldo, Luis Figo and Zinedine Zidane. No other MLS team has a working relationship with a European club.
What does this mean for Salt Lake City's team if the rumors are true.
Imagine an expansion basketball team opening in Italy, in cooperation with the Los Angeles Lakers. Then imagine the Lakers sending their 18- and 19-year-old draft picks overseas to sharpen their skills during the summer league. Those few months turn into a few years as the teenagers continue honing their skills on a daily basis instead of sitting on the bench in the NBA.
The NBA example isn't logical, but in soccer it's more than logical. It's common for European clubs to loan players to lower division clubs to gain experience. Many people don't realize that the contract of American soccer sensation Landon Donovan is owned by German club Bayern Leverkusen. Knowing Donovan wasn't good enough to play for Leverkusen when they signed him as a teenager, they loaned him to the San Jose Earthquakes of the MLS instead of a lower-division team in Germany. He's since won two MVP awards in the MLS, and will likely be recalled to Germany on Jan. 1, 2005.



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