Toronto FC makes veteran defenders available in MLS expansion draft

Nov 16, 2019 | 9:34 AM

Veteran Toronto FC defenders Drew Moor, Justin Morrow and Laurent Ciman and Montreal Impact goalkeeper Evan Bush and striker Anthony Jackson-Hamel are among those made available for the MLS expansion draft Tuesday.

Nashville SC and Inter Miami CF will select up to five players each from the eligible player list.

Nineteen teams had to make players available. The Vancouver Whitecaps, D.C. United, FC Dallas, Houston Dynamo and New York Red Bulls are exempt by virtue of losing a player in the 2018 expansion draft.

The 19 participating teams were able to protect up to 12 players each from their roster. MLS homegrown players ages 25 and under, as well as Generation Adidas players who did not graduate from the program following the 2019 season are automatically protected.

The Generation Adidas program allows talented underclassmen to sign a contract with the league and enter the MLS draft early.

Teams can lose no more than one player in the expansion draft. But clubs can leave players unprotected and then make deals with expansion franchises not to pick them — or to re-acquire them if taken.

Wingers Nicolas Benezet, who joined Toronto in July on loan from French Ligue 2 side Guingamp, and Tsubasa Endoh were also left unprotected. Endoh came on in the second half of the season, winning a starting spot for Toronto.

Other Toronto players left unprotected are goalkeeper Caleb Patterson-Sewell, defender Ashtone Morgan and forwards Jon Bakero, Patrick Mullins and Ryan Telfer.

The 28-year-old Morgan is Toronto’s longest-serving player, having made his pro debut for the Reds in 2010 in the CONCACAF Champions League against Arabe Unido.

Telfer spent the season on loan with York 9 FC in the CPL while Bakero was loaned out to Phoenix Rising FC of the USL Championship.

Other unprotected Impact players are defenders Zachary Brault-Guillard, Rudy Camacho, Jorge Corrales, Rod Fanni and Bacary Sagna, midfielders Ken Krolicki and forward Maximiliano Urruti.

Midfielder Omar Browne was also on Montreal’s unprotected list although the midfielder returned from loan to Panama’s C.A. Independiente de La Chorrera in August. The Impact retain his MLS rights.

Also on the Montreal unprotected list is Jeisson Vargas, a midfielder who spent the 2019 season on loan to Chile’s Universidad Catolica.

Goalkeeper Clement Diop took over for Bush at the end of the season, ending his streak of 66 consecutive league matches. At 37, Fanni has been around the block a few times while Argentina’s Urruti made a whopping US$1,071,000 this season for four goals and six assists.

The 26-year-old Jackson-Hamel had three goals in 16 games this season. He has won nine caps for Canada. The 36-year-old Sagna’s distinguished resume included stints with Arsenal., Auxerre and Manchester City.

At $375,000 and $435,625 this season, the 35-year-old Moore and 34-year-old Ciman are big-ticket TFC items in the autumn of their careers. The 32-year-old Morrow ($330,000) and forgotten centre back Eriq Zavaleta ($296,600) also don’t come cheap.

Names of interest left unprotected by other teams include Atlanta veterans Jeff Larentowicz, Justin Meram, Michael Parkhurst and Brek Shea. The 35-year-old Parkhurst has announced his retirement.

FC Cincinnati made Kekuta Manneh, Darren Mattocks and Fanendo Adi available.

Fullbacks Steven Beitashour and Jordan Harvey, formerly with Toronto and Vancouver, and Canadian defender Dejan Jakovic were left unprotected by LAFC.

Star forward Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who has announced he is leaving MLS for greener pastures, was on the Los Angeles Galaxy’s unprotected list. 

Canadian Will Johnson and fellow midfielder Sacha Kljestan were made available by Orlando. Former Toronto goalkeeper Joe Bendik was left unprotected by Philadelphia while forward  Joao Plata, another TFC alumnus, was not protected by Real Salt Lake.

The MLS champion Seattle Sounders made available MLS Cup MVP Victor Rodriguez as well as veteran Panama defender Roman Torres, who scored the winning penalty against Toronto in the 2016 MLS Cup final. 

Teams that lose a player in the draft receive $50,000 in general allocation money.

 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 16, 2019.

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Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press