Florida
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 |
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.
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.
- 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
|
Tampa Bay Rowdies
|
Colorado Rapids 2
|
Orlando City B
|
||||||
| 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′ |
Florida
SpaceX rocket launch this weekend. See liftoff from the Treasure Coast
A so Florida thing is coming up to kick off the weekend. A rocket launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, is scheduled for the same day as the first full moon of May 2026 (yes, there are two full moons in May this year).
SpaceX plans to launch a Falcon 9 rocket carrying 29 Starlink broadband satellites into low-Earth orbit on Friday, May 1. The four-hour launch window opens up 10 minutes after the May 1 full moon peaks in the sky.
Though rockets here launch from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center or Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, people from the Treasure Coast can sometimes see this phenomenon.
Weather permitting and depending on cloud cover and trajectory, a rocket launch from Florida’s Space Coast could be visible as far north as Jacksonville Beach and as far south as West Palm Beach.
When there’s a launch window in the middle of the night or very early morning, there’s an opportunity for unique photos — the rocket lights up the dark sky, and the contrail after makes for a great photo.
Below is more information on the next rocket launch from Florida and suggestions on where to watch it from the Treasure Coast.
For questions or comments, email USA TODAY Network Space Reporters Rick Neale at rneale@floridatoday.com, Brooke Edwards at bedwards@floridatoday.com or Eric Lagatta at elagatta@usatoday.com. For more space news from the USA TODAY Network, visit floridatoday.com/space.
Is there a rocket launch from Florida today? Next launch is Friday, May 1
SpaceX Starlink 10-38
- Mission: A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket will launch 29 Starlink broadband satellites into low-Earth orbit.
- Launch window: 1:33 p.m. to 5:33 p.m. ET on Friday, May 1.
- Trajectory: Northeast.
- Location: Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
- Sonic booms: No.
- Live coverage starts 90 minutes before liftoff at floridatoday.com/space: You can watch live rocket launch coverage from USA TODAY Network’s Space Team, which consists of FLORIDA TODAY space reporters Rick Neale and Brooke Edwards and visuals journalists Craig Bailey, Malcolm Denemark and Tim Shortt. Our Space Team will provide up-to-the-minute updates in a mobile-friendly live blog, complete with a countdown clock, at floridatoday.com/space, starting 90 minutes before liftoff. You can download the free FLORIDA TODAY app, which is available in the App Store or Google Play, or type floridatoday.com/space into your browser.
Where to watch a rocket launch in Sebastian, Vero Beach, Florida
- Sebastian Inlet State Park, 9700 S. State Road A1A, Melbourne Beach, Florida (cost to enter)
- Wabasso Beach Park, 1808 Wabasso Beach Road, Wabasso, Florida
- Ambersands Beach Park, 12566 N. SR A1A, Vero Beach, Florida (free parking)
- South Beach Park, 1700 Ocean Drive, Vero Beach, Florida (free parking)
- Merrill Barber Bridge in Vero Beach, Florida
- Alma Lee Loy Bridge in Vero Beach, Florida
Where to watch a rocket launch in Fort Pierce, Jensen Beach, Florida
- Fort Pierce Inlet State Park, 905 Shorewinds Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Blind Creek Beachside North and South, 5460 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Blue Heron Beach, 2101 Blue Heron Blvd., Fort Pierce, Florida
- Frederick Douglass Memorial Park, 3600 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Dollman Park Beachside, 9200 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
- Herman’s Bay Beach, 7880 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
- John Brooks Park Beachside, 3300 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Middle Cove Beach, 4600 S. Ocean Drive, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Normandy Beach in Jensen Beach, Florida
- Pepper Park Beachside, 3302 N. SR A1A, Fort Pierce, Florida
- Walton Rocks Beach, 6700 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida (dog park)
- Waveland Beach, 10350 S. Ocean Drive, Jensen Beach, Florida
Where to watch a rocket launch in Stuart, Florida
- State Road A1A causeway in Stuart, Florida
- House of Refuge and beach, 301 S.E. MacArthur Blvd., Stuart, Florida
Watch rocket launches with NASA on Prime Video
Watch NASA+ content with Amazon Prime Video
NASA content, including some rocket launches, is available to watch through NASA+ on desktop, both from its official site and YouTube. The platform is also available to download as a mobile app on smartphones.
All NASA+ content is also available to those who have Prime Video downloaded on any of their devices – whether it be a smartphone or smart TV.
The content, which does not require a Prime subscription to view, is one of Prime Video’s FAST channels (free ad-supported television). Viewers can find it under Prime’s Live TV section at the top of the screen when they open the app.
Lianna Norman and Jennifer Sangalang are trending reporters for the USA TODAY NETWORK-Florida, covering pop culture, rocket launches, Florida wildlife, breaking news and more. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday by signing up for the free newsletter, Florida TODAY, at https://floridatoday.com/newsletters.
Florida
Secretive push to build new Florida slaughterhouse endangers Lake O
Florida
Truck driver’s body found after he disappeared in Florida
The body of Alejandro Jacomino Gonzalez, 41 was discovered in coastal Georgia, according to FBI officials.
The body of a truck driver was discovered in Georgia nearly two weeks after he went missing from a Florida rest stop, officials said.
Alejandro Jacomino González, 41, of Miami, picked up vehicles in Georgia on April 16 and was transporting them to Miami. He stopped at a rest stop in Brevard County, Florida on April 17 about 1:21 a.m. and rested for several hours.
The truck’s GPS showed shortly before 8 a.m., the truck “traveled one exit south and then turned north toward Jacksonville, Florida,” according to the FBI.
“Shortly after, González stopped responding and the truck was reported missing,” the FBI said.
The truck, without some of the vehicles González was transporting, was located in Port Wentworth, Georgia. Three vehicles were recovered in Florida, FBI officials said.
González’s body was located in coastal Georgia. Details on how he died, when and how his remains were located were not provided.
FBI seeking help from public in case of killed Florida truck driver
The FBI is seeking anyone who has photos or video from the Brevard County rest area in Grant-Valkaria, Florida between 1 a.m. and 8 a.m. April 17.
Officials are especially interested in the southern portion of the rest stop, near the ramp reconnecting to Interstate-95. Images can shared through an online form.
Michelle Spitzer is a journalist for The USA TODAY NETWORK-FLORIDA. As the network’s Rapid Response reporter, she covers Florida’s breaking news. You can get all of Florida’s best content directly in your inbox each weekday day by signing up for the free newsletter, Florida TODAY, at https://floridatoday.com/newsletters.
-
Connecticut43 seconds agoConnecticut Senate Approves More Towing Reforms, Expanding on Landmark 2025 Legislation
-
Delaware7 minutes ago
America250 in Delaware: What to know about the 250th birthday plans
-
Florida13 minutes agoSpaceX rocket launch this weekend. See liftoff from the Treasure Coast
-
Georgia19 minutes agoRivian downsizes new EV factory after Trump’s DOE slashes loan agreement
-
Hawaii25 minutes ago
Tin Can Mailman: Preserving Hawaii’s past, one paper treasure at a time
-
Idaho31 minutes agoSix transgender residents sue Idaho after state criminalizes use of bathrooms
-
Illinois37 minutes agoIL Accountability Commission refers federal agents for investigation, possible prosecution
-
Indiana43 minutes agoIndiana standoff ends after SWAT armored vehicle rams home: sheriff