SJ Frogs - SF Seals:
A Question of Style
Friday, May 2nd, 2008
Tonight's game was a perfect opposition of style, laced with high physical intensity and attack minded players on both sides...Read Match Report |
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San Jose Frogs Set For a Successful Season
Friday, April 18th, 2008
The PDL season (3rd division run by USL, generaly considered as the National 4th Division after MLS, USL-1 and USL-2) is about to start. For the San Jose Frogs, the Big Day is scheduled on Friday, May 2nd at 7:30 pm, when they receive their Bay Area rival, the San Francisco Seals. Aaron Castro (General Manager) and Jorge Espinoza (Head Coach) were proud to invite us to their new home stadium, a brand new turf field located on the James Lick High School Campus with a capacity of 2,000. Their ambition is high for the team as much as for their players... Read Full article
TheBaySoccer.com partner of
Carnaval SoccerFest 2008

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008
TheBaySoccer is proud to introduce SoccerFest, a unique annual event which intends to help you discover or re-discover the fun and festive side of Soccer. Far from competition and performance considerations, we invite you to 2 days of free fun and games with professional players, all of them members of the USA national Beach Soccer Team.
Read More about SoccerFest
Tyneside Journal:
A season in the heart of an amateur team
Tyneside is an amateur team playing in the Second Division of SFSFL (San Francisco Soccer Football League)
By publishing in real time, week after week, the messages of their manager, Nic, and the reactions of the players, we allow you to enter the life of a group of amateur players aiming to win their League and earn promotion to the First Division.
Read Tyneside Journal
Read Tyneside's History and Facts
More
than a Worldwide Sport,
A
Local Passion
You,
like me, probably always wondered why, in the US, Soccer has not became
the popular sport it is in almost all the rest of the world.
Like me, you probably heard many times the common explanations: TV
channels don't invest in this sport because there are not enough breaks
to insert commercials; Americans find it boring because very few goals
are scored; A sport in which the best players are not always those who
score goals makes no sense in a country used to see statistics as the
explanation for everything, etc...
I don't find any of those explanations satisfying. I actually feel
exactly the opposite: Soccer doesn't take off in this country because
we are trying to sell it for what it is not: another international
sport with worldwide celebrities and, as a consequence, a big money
maker for promoters, TV channels and players.
Those of you who....
Read Full
article