Source: McBride to Chicago, Barrett to Toronto
A deal has finally been strick between the Chicago Fire and Toronto FC for the rights to former Fulham FC captain Brian McBride.
Brian McBride is coming to Chicago. And Chad Barrett is heading north of the border.
On the heels of MLS commissioner Don Garber’s announcement at halftime of the MLS All-Star Game that a deal had been struck between Brian McBride and the league, a source within Toronto FC has confirmed to Goal.com USA that the Chicago Fire will send Barrett, a first-round SuperDraft selection and allocation money to Toronto in exchange for the former Fulham FC captain.
McBride, who played his entire MLS career with the Columbus Crew between 1996-2003, decided to leave Fulham earlier this summer in order to return to MLS. While the three-time World Cup participant for the U.S. National Team made it known that his desired location to play was Chicago, Toronto FC held all the cards in the process, as the team at the top of the allocation list. Several deals have been talked about over the last several weeks, with negotiations even reaching a stalemate at one point. Getting the first-round selection in the SuperDraft was apparently a sticking point with TFC in order to get the deal done, which finally came together during the All-Star festivities in
Toronto FC is getting a player in Barrett who led the Fire in scoring with five goals through the team’s first 16 games. The 23-year-old striker, who is in his fourth season in MLS, will likely start up top alongside Danny Dicchio for John Carver’s side since veteran goal-scorer Jeff Cunningham has fallen out of favor in recent weeks.
MLS is expected to make a formal announcement of this deal on Friday.
-- Goal.com
-
RIGG: Milan striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic is certainly no Mr. February
The Swedish striker traditionally struggles in February. Facing a three-match ban this month, the jinx looks set to continue.
-
DEMPSEY'S DIARY: Playing in the World Cup was the ultimate dream
In his latest diary entry for Goal.com, the U.S. international and Fulham midfielder talks about playing in his first World Cup despite a back injury and what it meant to score.
-
ROGERS: Capello resigns as coach, but the villain is FA chairman Bernstein
Capello and John Terry are far from blameless in the England saga, but the real culprit is the FA chairman.
-
LABIDOU: Is MLS falling behind? The league's new younger direction
With high-profile players like Nicolas Anelka and Luca Toni rejecting MLS for other developing leagues, is the league falling behind its competition?
-
ROSANO: Mexican soccer needs to address referee treatment
Nick Rosano argues that Mexico's continued officiating problems may have less to do with referees themselves and more to do with how they are treated by the federation.
