GENERATION ADIDAS
(Redirected from Generation adidas)
'Generation Adidas' is a joint venture between Major League Soccer and the United States Soccer Federation aimed to raise the level of young soccer talent in the United States.[1] The program, sponsored by adidas, encourages early entry (without college graduation) of American players into MLS. Until 2005, the program was sponsored by Nike and was called 'Project-40'.[2]
Carlos Parra was the first Project-40 player when he signed with the league and was allocated to the New York/New Jersey MetroStars in 1997. Since then, the program had its shares of successes (Tim Howard, Josh Wolff, DaMarcus Beasley, Carlos Bocanegra, Bobby Convey, Eddie Gaven, Michael Bradley, and numerous others) and failures (Jamar Beasley, Nino Da Silva, Barry Swift, Maurizio Rocha, Judah Cooks, Martin Klinger, etc.).
Generation adidas players do not count against the MLS senior roster and usually earn a salary not much higher than the league minimum (although in several cases, most notably Freddy Adu, that is not the case). Entering into the program automatically classifies a player as "professional" and thus, disqualifies them from playing college soccer. As a result, Generation adidas players are also guaranteed scholarships to continue their college education should their professional career not pan out.
From 1998 to 2000, MLS entered a team of Project-40 players, supplemented by other MLSers who did not get much playing time, into the A-League in the USL.
1. US U-20 players headline 2006 class
2. What is Nike Project 40
'Generation Adidas' is a joint venture between Major League Soccer and the United States Soccer Federation aimed to raise the level of young soccer talent in the United States.[1] The program, sponsored by adidas, encourages early entry (without college graduation) of American players into MLS. Until 2005, the program was sponsored by Nike and was called 'Project-40'.[2]
Carlos Parra was the first Project-40 player when he signed with the league and was allocated to the New York/New Jersey MetroStars in 1997. Since then, the program had its shares of successes (Tim Howard, Josh Wolff, DaMarcus Beasley, Carlos Bocanegra, Bobby Convey, Eddie Gaven, Michael Bradley, and numerous others) and failures (Jamar Beasley, Nino Da Silva, Barry Swift, Maurizio Rocha, Judah Cooks, Martin Klinger, etc.).
Generation adidas players do not count against the MLS senior roster and usually earn a salary not much higher than the league minimum (although in several cases, most notably Freddy Adu, that is not the case). Entering into the program automatically classifies a player as "professional" and thus, disqualifies them from playing college soccer. As a result, Generation adidas players are also guaranteed scholarships to continue their college education should their professional career not pan out.
From 1998 to 2000, MLS entered a team of Project-40 players, supplemented by other MLSers who did not get much playing time, into the A-League in the USL.
| Contents |
| 2007 players |
| 2006 players |
| Project-40 in the A-League |
| Notes |
2007 players
| Player | Age | Position | Home Town | College/prior |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chris Seitz | 19 | GK | San Luis Obispo, California | Maryland |
| Bryan Arguez | 17 | D/M | Miami, Florida | US Under-20 |
| Anthony Wallace | 17 | D/M | St. Petersburg, Florida | South Florida |
| Amaechi Igwe | 17 | D | Belmont, California | Santa Clara |
| Maurice Edu | 20 | M | Fontana, California | Maryland |
| Nico Colaluca | 20 | M/F | Coventry, Rhode Island | Virginia |
| Bakary Soumare | 21 | D | New York, New York | Virginia |
| Abdus Ibrahim | 15 | F | Richfield, Minnesota | US Under-17 |
2006 players
| Player | Age | Position | Home Town | College/prior | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Josmer Altidore | 16 | Forward | Boca Raton, Fla | US Under-20 |
| 2 | Patrick Ianni | 20 | Def/Mid | Lodi, CA | UCLA |
| 3 | Kei Kamara | 21 | Forward | Lawndale, CA | Cal-Dominguez Hills |
| 4 | Sacha Kljestan | 20 | Mid | Huntington Beach, CA | Seton Hall |
| 5 | Dax McCarty | 18 | Mid | Winter Park, Fla | N. Carolina |
| 6 | Jacob Peterson | 19 | Forward | Portage, MI | Indiana |
| 7 | Willie Sims | 21 | Forward | LA, CA | Cal State Northridge |
| 8 | Nathan Sturgis | 18 | Def/Mid | St. Augustine, Fla | Clemson |
| 9 | Blake Wagner | 17 | Def | Tampa, Fla | US Under-20 |
| 10 | Marvell Wynne | 19 | Def | Poway, CA | UCLA |
| 11 | Jed Zayner | 21 | Def | Orland, Ill | Indiana |
Project-40 in the A-League
| Year | Division | League | Reg. Season | Playoffs | Open Cup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | 2 | USISL A-League | 5th, Pacific | ''Did not qualify'' | ''Did not qualify'' |
| 1999 | 2 | USL A-League | 2nd, Central | Quarterfinals | ''Did not qualify'' |
| 2000 | 2 | USL A-League | 4th, Central | ''Did not qualify'' | 3rd Round |
Notes
1. US U-20 players headline 2006 class
2. What is Nike Project 40
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español