Season Preview 2016: Reclamation

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Come let’s fall in love again, let’s turn all the dirt in this world to shiny gold.Rumi

Time is a powerful force. It withers bodies that were once strong, reduces mountains to pebbles, and transforms history into myth. One thing it can’t do, though, is kill an idea that has taken root in the human mind. The idea doesn’t have to be something as grand as liberty or equality; it can be as simple as a few people sharing a vision of how they’d like to shape their small corner of the world.

In one of those corners known as Hamtramck stands a stadium whose eighty years have not been kind to it. Like much of the city that surrounds it, it’s been tossed aside and neglected, in dire need of money, love, and attention. As the saying goes, however, one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, and so the old ground is now being tended to by those who’ve looked past the crumbling concrete and warped wood and seen the beauty underneath.

If Detroit City Football Club has an underlying theme to its existence, it is community building and enrichment. This is the reason so many people have formed such a deep attachment to the club in just a few short years. More than just the simple, straightforward consumption of a sporting entertainment product, supporting the club allows you to contribute to its overall growth, as well as take a direct hand in many of its local efforts.

The latest of these, the renovation of Keyworth Stadium, is the most ambitious. This isn’t because of the amount of construction work required, the bulk of which will be finished in a few weeks, completing just a three-month schedule; it’s due to the fact that the work was funded entirely by private individuals, many of whom invested just a few hundred dollars. Whenever I write about the community spirit between DCFC and its supporters, it often feels a little vague and nebulous, as if it’s just a warm fuzzy feeling rather than something tangible. It’s definitely there, though, and nearly three quarters of a million dollars invested into a lower level soccer club that only started up in 2012 is hard proof of its existence.

A significant, if less drastic, rebuild is taking place on the field, necessitated by the departures of a number of players, most notably club mainstays Josh Rogers, Will Mellors-Blair, and Bret Mollon. Despite competing at a level in which rosters can fluctuate wildly from year to year, City has been able to maintain a steady core of players from the get-go, and, on paper, it appears that the team has been re-stocked with a substantial amount of talent.

Question marks remain, though, especially following a season which, viewed from the distance of nine months, seems a bit underwhelming. That may seem harsh, and that’s how it feels to write it, but in spite of all the amazing moments – Seb Harris’ late winner against Cleveland, 10>11 and the firetrucks in Cincinnati, WMB’s dagger through Lansing’s heart – the results in the Open Cup and in the Midwest playoffs bookended the year with disappointment.

As with its new home, City is going through a time of transition. Luckily, the annual divisional reshuffling has matched them up with what looks to be a fairly manageable group of opponents. With a bevy of new attacking options, Danny Deakin foremost among them, this year should not lack for excitement and entertainment. There will also be frustrations along the way, but in the end, this may be the club’s best shot at a Midwest title since 2013.

Regardless of results, 2016 has already been a resounding success for the club and the movement that it’s inspired. Time tried its hardest to make people forget about Detroit, but its people wouldn’t let it die. Soon a little old stadium will be filled with a greater number of people and a higher level of noise than it’s ever seen before. Fixing her up won’t save Hamtramck or magically solve all of its problems, but by wiping some of the dirt away, we’ve made one piece of our city shine a little brighter.

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Photo by Konrad Maziarz

My Favorite Thing

If you’re reading this, I assume you know what I’m going to talk about, but I’ll summarize just in case you don’t. MLS is coming to Detroit, and the team will have no affiliation with Detroit City FC (probably). I could dissect all the statements and news that’s come out, I could examine all the possible scenarios for the future of DCFC, or I could take the low road and make personal attacks on the billionaires responsible for this new venture. None of these will accomplish much, though, and I know none of them will put me in a better mood, so I’ll take a different route and just say what I feel.

I’m bummed.

Not disheartened, not really angry, just bummed. Partially because I’m writing this instead of about who I think will start at striker this season (which I’d planned on doing earlier in the day before all hell broke loose), but mostly because for the first time, my favorite thing in the world is facing a threat to its very existence.

I love City because of how different it is from all the other sports in town. At any other game, you’re treated at best like a customer, and more typically like a money cow to be milked. You go through the metal detectors and pat-downs, pay for your drastically overpriced merchandise and concessions, consume your nicely-packaged sporting product – complete with plenty of advertisements – then scurry back to your car with the thousands of other people and go home.

I love City because it’s where I met most of my friends. It’s what inspired me to start writing again and create this blog, my main vehicle for self-expression. After three years of doing this, it’s allowed me to dream a tiny tiny bit that maybe, one day, I might be able to get paid to write, no matter how small the check is.

I love City because, after years of watching football and seeing supporters from around the world, I’ve gotten to experience what they experience.

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As it stands, a hypothetical Detroit MLS team likely wouldn’t begin play until 2020 at the earliest. I have no say in that matter, but what I do control are my own thoughts and actions. I’m going to continue doing what I’ve been doing, and I will never stop as long as I have a club to support.

To be perfectly clear, if all goes according to plan and the Gilbert & Gores creation comes into being, I will not support it in any way, shape, or form. My heart belongs to another.

Okay, enough of all that. I have a season preview to write. I think this Deakin kid’s gonna be pretty good, y’all.

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Season Preview Announcement + 2016 Pocket Schedule

I’m currently working on the 2016 Season Preview and I think it’s going to be the biggest and bestest I’ve done yet. (Click to view the 2014 and 2015 editions). I’m breaking it up into five parts and I’ll post one part each day next week, Monday through Friday, leading up to the final preseason match against Muskegon on Saturday.

Until then, feel free to share the 2016 Pocket Schedule I’ve put together (and revised several times – never try to do work while simultaneously watching GoT). Save it, copy it, print it out and stick it in your wallet, purse, bulletin board, tuck it in your football sock, or wherever else you may want to keep it. Make sure to share it with as many kids as possible. Detroit City is for the children.

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Guest Post: My Journey to Detroit City F.C.

First in a series of guest posts by Tony Preston

After reading about DCFC and getting to know more about the fans I wanted to find a way to get involved.  In my search for information on DCFC I found this blog and a little while later an idea formed.  To get involved I could write a few pieces about my experience as someone who is new to attending the games and just now becoming a true fan of the team.  I approached Andrew and he liked the idea so here is my first piece.  Enjoy!

I am a new season ticket holder to for Detroit City F.C.  I am also a sports nut.  Soccer has always been my sport of choice, probably because it is the sport that I grew up playing.  I also believe in picking a team and sticking with it and not just being a bandwagon fan.  For me my teams are my hometown teams, the Red Wings, Tigers, Pistons and the Lions.  I watch a ton of sports even when one of “my teams” is not playing. I will sometimes root for one team usually because I despise a player or coach on the opposing team or sometimes just hope it is an entertaining game.  When one of “my teams” is on though, I am all in, which often results in me screaming at the TV.

Now that you have that background, here is why I am a new season ticket holder for DCFC.  I remember hearing that the team was starting up and thinking “I’m glad Detroit is finally getting a soccer team.”  At that time, I also thought Detroit getting an MLS team was long overdue and a fantastic idea.  Now I’m hoping they skip over Detroit again, but that’s a story for another time.  Back to DCFC, I followed the team for the last few years mainly through Facebook and just looking at the results every few weeks online.  I wanted to actually go to a game, but my work schedule at the time did not allow it.

A few weeks ago I decided that since my work schedule now allowed for me to go to games I was going to make sure I made it out to at least a couple this summer.  After looking over the schedule, talking with friends who had nothing but good things to say about DCFC, and my nature of being all in for “my teams” I decided to buy season tickets instead.

At the same time, due to my all in nature I was scouring the internet for anything I could find to learn more about DCFC, and also learned a little about the Northern Guard.  After reading about the Northern Guard I was not sure if I should just sit on the side for regular fans or stand with the supporters, mainly because I did not want to feel out of place.   I did not realize how involved the Northern Guard was until I posted a picture of my season tickets on my social media accounts.  A couple days after posting the picture I noticed that Duke had retweeted the picture on Twitter and others from NGS had liked the picture.  Soon, from just a few interactions on Twitter, I could see how tight knit of a group it was and how much they loved DCFC.  Everyone was also very welcoming and made me want to be a part of it.  Now I am anxious for the season to start so that I can go watch the game I love and stand with the Northern Guard to root for DCFC.  Also any advice for a new fan is greatly appreciated.

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Keyworth Construction Photos

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Photos by Detroit City FC

Just over a month away from the home opener, a few photos have leaked (read: have been freely taken since the stadium is an open public venue) showing some of the work that has been done at Keyworth Stadium.

The one that excites me the most shows the benches from the supporters’ section have been removed, creating a traditional concrete standing terrace:

Photo by Konrad Maziarz
Photo by Konrad Maziarz

Another shows that an entrance to the supporters’ section, previously closed up, has now been opened:

Maziarz
Maziarz

Click below to view the rest of the gallery (Photos by Konrad Maziarz and Timothy Clark):

[foogallery id=”1919″]

Update 4/17 – New Benches:

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DCFC

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