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2024 Union II preseason: Florida phase

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2024 Union II preseason: Florida phase


Photo: @PhilaUnionII

Union II played four matches during its Florida preseason, and unsurprisingly, the record is mixed.

Both the levels of the opposition and the levels of their own game rosters were mixed. They won the first against lesser competition, lost the next against a Division 2 side, won the third against a younger fellow Division 3 developmental team, and lost the last to Division 3 veterans.

Day date Opponent Result League Level
Tue, Feb. 6 Florida Premier FC W  5  –  0 ECNL Boys Amateur
Fri, Feb. 9 Tampa Bay Rowdies L    4  –  1 USL Championship Division 2
Wed, Feb. 14 Colorado Rapids 2 W  2  –  0 MLS NEXT Pro Division 3
Sat, Feb. 17 Orlando City B L    4  –  0 MLS NEXT Pro Division 3

 

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These two preseason scrimmages will occur after the side returns north.

Day date Opponent Venue League Level
Sun, Feb. 25 Loudoun United FC Chester USL Championship Division 2
Fri, Mar. 1 Hartford Athletic Hartford USL Championship Division 2

 

The 28-game regular season schedule opens at Subaru Park on Sunday, Mar. 17 at 3:00 p.m. against Toronto FC II.

 A lean preseason roster

The collected data (see below) suggests that Union II both practiced and played with fewer than two full elevens until the first team left for Costa Rica. In no match were more than six substitutions reported. From the beginning, some players were asked to play full 90s.

We estimate that between signed professionals and academy amateurs, there were perhaps 15 or 16 players in camp, including keepers. Once the first team left, some of its deeper reserves stayed in Florida with Union II.

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We have some potential explanations:

  • The total salary budget may have been divided more heavily in the first team’s favor in 2024 at the expense of the second team to provide greater first-team depth to cover deep runs in their three secondary competitions.
  • The U17 pool is now being depleted from both its top (as it always has been) and now its bottom, since the academy’s new U16 side may mean U16s are no longer “playing up” at the U17 level.
  • Given Academy Director Tommy Wilson’s role in building past professional second-team squads, his departure may have affected the acquisition of this year’s Union II players, although he would have helped with the trialists who went to Florida.

The strongest probable explanation arises from the variability of 2024’s first team schedule.  Its roster size necessarily anticipates deep runs in all three of its secondary competitions. But were no such runs to materialize, a surfeit of players would exist if both rosters were fully staffed. There would be too many players for not enough game minutes.

Last season with a smaller first-team roster there were too many bodies. Once the Champions League was over, Brandan Craig was loaned out to try to get minutes (July 5). After the Leagues Cup had begun Andres Perea was likewise loaned (July 28).

Similarly, this year’s larger roster might easily see more mid-season and end-of-season loans away.

When players sit without playing, their roster asset values drop, a consideration for the club’s balance sheet. Balance sheets affect the club’s ability to get short-term financing, perhaps a contingency to consider when undertaking a building project such as phase two of the WSFS Sportsplex.

Schedule variation

The quantity of first-team games could vary from as many as 21 extra to as few as five. The calculation below assumes Open Cup participation will follow last year’s pattern, but there is no official confirmation of that.

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  • Concacaf Champions Cup could add as many as nine games or as few as two.
  • Leagues Cup could add seven or two.
  • The U. S. Open Cup, five or one.

The first team’s currently healthy roster totals 26. It is expected to rise to 27 (José Riasco), and with luck will rise to 28 (David Vazquez). Two more are currently rehabbing from surgeries, one for a few months (Leon Flach, a torn pec) and the other for probably longer (Isaiah LeFlore, an ACL).

Union II’s roster sparseness helps ensure sufficient future minutes for its occupants’ proper development. It also tested the mental fortitude of those who had to play full 90s from the beginning, itself useful as both a growth opportunity and an evaluation.

The data

Utilizing social media, we collate below the minutes from players by position across the Florida matches and what levels of competition they faced. It is not certain that the data is fully complete.

Tactical shapes and individual positions are usually inferences but sometimes estimations. Only sometimes were substitutes concretely linked to whom they replaced. Players with asterisks are first-teamers. Players in italics are academy amateurs. Goals scored are indicated by superscripted “G”s. The remaining unidentified trialist is assumed to be — or have been — a professional.

Notes:

  • Francis Westfield is 2024’s Swiss Army knife in the defense and the midfield. He has played anywhere in front of the goalkeeper and behind the attacking mid, having added left back to his previously demonstrated versatility. He is also preseason’s Union II ironman being the only player accumulating all 360 available game minutes.
  • Both of Kyle Tucker’s goals were free kicks.
  • Cavan Sullivan’s date of birth makes him slightly less than 14 ½ years old.
  • At this writing, Jose Riasco is still rostered to Union II but is expected to sign with the first team.
  • We believe Trialist 2 has been recently-announced Union II defender Randy Meneses who is on loan for the season with a purchase option from LDUQuito’s U20s in Ecuador.
  • We believe that Trialist 1 is “Sequera” who was listed by surname as a substitute against Orlando, likely referring to 17-year-old Venezuelan attacking mid Giovanny Sequera who played at last fall’s Indonesian U17 World Cup and has not yet been officially announced by Union II. Delays in the United States might perhaps be related to international paperwork since P1 visas historically have been difficult to get for minor league soccer players but this has not been confirmed.
   

Florida Premier FC

 

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Tampa Bay Rowdies

 

Colorado Rapids 2

 

Orlando City B

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             Inferred Shapes 4-1-2-1-2 3-5-2 4-1-2-1-2 4-1-2-1-2
1 Andrew Rick GK 75’ GK 90’ GK 90’ GK 90′
2 Jonathan Evans GK 15’
3 Jack Andrus LB 90’
4 Carlos Rojas LCBG 90’ DM 30’ RCB 49’
5 Gavin Wetzel RCB 90’ LCB 90’ RB 15’ RB 49’
6 Francis Westfield RB 90’ CCB 90’ LB 90’ LB 90′
7 Jamir Berdecio* RCB 90’ RB 75’ RB 41’
8 Kyle Tucker DMG 90’ RDMG 90’ DM 60’ DM 90′
9 CJ Olney LWB 90’ LM 75’
10 Nick Pariano* RWB 90’ RM 90’ AM
11 Antonios Horozoglou LMG 45’ LM? 15’
12 Trialist 3 LM? 45’
13 Alex Perez RM 45’ LDM 54’ RMG 45’ RM 41’
14 Randy Meneses RM? 45’ LDM 36’
15 Giovanny Sequera AM 45’ AM 90’ AM 30’ RM 49’
16 Cavan Sullivan AM 45’ S 45’ AM 60’ S 49’
17 Edward Davis S 45’ S 45’ S 30’
18 Ryan Zellefrow S 45’ S 45’
19 Sal Olivas SGG 90’ S 45’ S 60’ S 90′
20 David Vazquez AMG 45’ S 41’
21 Neil Pierre RCB 90’ RCB 41’
22 Olwethu Makhanya* LCB 90’ LCB 90′
23 Sanders Ngabo* LM 90′
Author: Tim Jones
Still learning soccer after nearly five decades. A southwestern Ohio buckeye transplanted to Chester County. Used to teach history, enjoys new ideas, sometimes bakes bread, is a sports fan, and loves apparently unconnected connections.





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Florida

Cold weather brings chaos, delays and cancellations to travelers at South Florida airports: “It’s a big mess”

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Cold weather brings chaos, delays and cancellations to travelers at South Florida airports: “It’s a big mess”


People flying out of Miami International Airport knew there were going to be significant delays and cancellations due to the winter storm, but they didn’t know they would also be waiting in long lines before even heading inside to catch their flight.

“I mean, I get it, weather is weather. But I mean, if you look at this place, bags aren’t going to make the flights,” said traveler Logan Toby, who is heading to Dallas. “Hopefully, we make the flights.”

People flying out of MIA on Sunday were met by long lines. Already facing the fear that their flight would be impacted by winter weather, their nightmare started in the bag drop-off with a line stretching across the American Airlines ticketing area. 

“It’s a big mess,” said Desiree Cedgwick, who is traveling to Salt Lake City. 

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Cedgwick had her sunny vacation impacted last week. 

“Our flight got canceled from Phoenix to Charlotte. So they rerouted us a few different times,” she told CBS News Miami. “We finally made it to Charlotte a day later. Had to get on the cruise that day. We sat on the tarmac for four hours, missed our cruise by three minutes.”

When she got to MIA with her family and saw the baggage line, it was like reliving a nightmare all over again.

“My kids are very nervous to travel back — they keep asking me if their flight’s cancelled or if they’re going to get home,” Cedgwich said. “We’ll get home eventually.” 

Passengers were eventually told that if their bag was tagged to be left in a designated area near the ticketing counter. Bags eventually piled up and sat as travelers made their way to another long line: TSA. 

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Marybel Ellen Killburn, who is traveling back home to Tennessee, decided to arrive hours before her flight

“We knew it was going to be impacted, so we went to Joe Stone Crab — an iconic meal. We just got here and we’re going with the flow,” she told CBS News Miami.

Cold weather is causing delays and cancellations at South Florida airports

A spokesperson for MIA told CBS News Miami that due to cancellations and low temperatures, there would be delays with bag processing. 

At MIA, there was a total of 263 delays and 25 cancellations on Sunday. 

At Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, there were 267 delays and 51 cancellations. 

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Florida

Medicaid expansion campaign in Florida relaunches for 2028

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Medicaid expansion campaign in Florida relaunches for 2028



Florida Decides Healthcare suspended their efforts in September due to legal roadblocks.

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  • A Medicaid expansion campaign is relaunching its effort to get a proposed measure on the 2028 Florida ballot.
  • The group, Florida Decides Healthcare, is legally challenging a new state law that restricts the constitutional amendment process.
  • The new law, HB 1205, has increased signature verification costs and tightened deadlines for petition groups.

A Medicaid expansion campaign is relaunching a push to get its proposed measure on the 2028 ballot, despite its continuing legal battle against a Florida law restricting the process to amend the state’s constitution.

The group, Florida Decides Healthcare, in September delayed its campaign for the 2026 ballot, saying HB 1205’s roadblocks made it “nearly impossible” to succeed in a shorter timeline. But starting Feb. 1, they’ll launch a digital campaign and send out mail with prepaid return envelopes for voters looking to sign a petition.

They’re hopeful that 2028 will be successful against the hurdles from Florida’s new laws, and especially because they believe they’ll be successful at trial, said Mitch Emerson, the executive director of Florida Decides Healthcare. The trial for their challenge to Florida’s law is scheduled to start Feb. 9.

“The state crossed constitutional lines, and what Florida did here violates the First Amendment rights of Floridians to participate in the constitutional amendment process,” Emerson said. “Every win (against) HB 1205 is a step in the right direction for democracy.”

Expired health care subsidies for the Affordable Care Act have pushed thousands of Floridians off coverage plans, Emerson said, and he said access to Medicaid is paramount in Florida.

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HB 1205: Tougher road to the ballot

Florida’s new signature gathering law raised penalties and tightened deadlines for petition groups, along with a provision banning nonresidents and noncitizens from gathering signatures. Another provision limits each volunteer to only collect 25 petitions.

The group may also struggle financially, since supervisors of elections across the state increased their signature verification costs because of the new procedures outlined in the law. In September, Leon County Supervisor of Elections Mark Earley said his office’s fee used to be 85 cents per verified petition, but it increased in $4.16.

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Additionally, Florida officials have fought to uphold the invalidation of petition signatures. A circuit judge in November ruled state officials weren’t wrong to order elections supervisors to dump 200,000 signatures supporting a recreational pot campaign.

Deadlines also are tighter, since all petitions must be turned in to local elections offices within 10 days, and groups can be fined for late petition returns and missing voter information.

Petition groups’ lawsuit against Florida

The Medicaid expansion group filed the lawsuit in May against Florida’s secretary of state, attorney general, the 67 supervisors of elections and the state attorneys, the elected chief prosecutors for each of Florida’s 20 judicial circuits.

Additional groups joined to request parts of the law be blocked, including Smart and Safe Florida, an adult-use recreational pot campaign, and Florida Right to Clean Water.

In July, U.S. District Judge Mark Walker, who sits in Tallahassee, upheld most of the petition law, but he issued an order against the provision on nonresident and noncitizen circulators, saying it imposed a “severe burden on political expression.”

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But that order didn’t last long, since a divided federal appeals panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the law, disagreeing with Walker’s notion that the law violated the groups’ First Amendment rights.

Walker acknowledged that the case was quickly developing a “rich procedural history,” since repeated orders have been requested – and struck – relating to whether the state could enforce the law, or even some parts of it.

For almost a year, petition advocates have argued that these limitations under state law impinge on the First Amendment’s freedoms for political speech and to petition the government. But the state disagrees, arguing it tackles fraudulent petitions.

This reporting content is supported by a partnership with Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners. USA Today Network-Florida First Amendment reporter Stephany Matat is based in Tallahassee, Fla. She can be reached at SMatat@gannett.com. On X: @stephanymatat. 

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Snow flurries seen from Tampa to Tallahassee as extreme cold hits Florida

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Snow flurries seen from Tampa to Tallahassee as extreme cold hits Florida


An arctic blast brings below-freezing temperatures and snow to parts of Florida Saturday.

There were reports of snow flurries in the Tampa Bay area.

The last two times the area got snow was flurries in January 2010 and December 1989. A record 2 inches (5 centimeters) of snow fell in January 1977 about 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of Tampa.

Snow flurries were also seen in Tallahassee, according to NBC affiliate in Orlando WESH.

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There were also reports of snow flurries in Gainesville as much of Central Florida is under an extreme cold weather warning.

The snow flurries also made an appearance in the Jacksonville area. A light amount of snow was reported at Jacksonville International Airport.

The cold front continues its advance from west to east and temperatures are forecast to drop even further in the early hours of Sunday, with highs near 32 degrees and even lower.

Miami-Dade and Broward counties will be under a Freeze Warning from 10 p.m. Saturday night until 10 a.m. Sunday.

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