2014 Major League Soccer season


The 2014 Major League Soccer season was the 102nd season of FIFA-sanctioned soccer in the United States and Canada, the 36th with a national first-division league, and the 19th season of Major League Soccer. This season featured 19 total clubs, each playing 34 matches during the regular season.
The 2014 Regular Season started on March 8 with Sporting Kansas City, the defending MLS Cup champion, playing at the Seattle Sounders FC. The 2014 Major League Soccer All-Star Game was held on August 6 in Providence Park in Portland, Oregon and featured a team of MLS All-Stars against Bayern Munich, the Bundesliga champions for the past two seasons. The game resulted in a 2–1 victory for the MLS All-Stars. The regular season ended on October 26; Seattle Sounders FC won the Supporters' Shield and the LA Galaxy went on to win the MLS Cup.

Teams, stadiums, and personnel

Schedule

Teams play 34 games: 17 at home and 17 away. The nine Western Conference teams face each West club three times, with the home teams reversed from the previous year. The 10 Eastern Conference teams will play 7 East teams three times and two East teams twice. Eastern and Western Conference teams will play each other once, with the home team reversed from previous year.

Stadiums and locations

Chicago FireChivas USA/
LA Galaxy
Colorado RapidsColumbus CrewD.C. UnitedFC Dallas
Toyota ParkStubHub CenterDick's Sporting Goods ParkCrew StadiumRFK Memorial StadiumToyota Stadium
Capacity: 20,000Capacity: 27,000Capacity: 18,086Capacity: 20,145Capacity: 19,467Capacity: 21,193

Houston DynamoMontreal ImpactNew England RevolutionNew York Red BullsPhiladelphia UnionPortland Timbers
BBVA Compass StadiumSaputo StadiumGillette StadiumRed Bull ArenaPPL ParkProvidence Park
Capacity: 22,000Capacity: 20,801Capacity: 22,385Capacity: 25,189Capacity: 18,500Capacity: 20,438

Real Salt LakeSan Jose EarthquakesSeattle Sounders FCSporting Kansas CityToronto FCVancouver Whitecaps FC
Rio Tinto StadiumBuck Shaw StadiumCenturyLink FieldSporting ParkBMO FieldBC Place
Capacity: 20,213Capacity: 11,500Capacity: 67,000Capacity: 18,467Capacity: 30,000Capacity: 21,000

Personnel and sponsorship

Note: All teams use Adidas as kit manufacturer.
TeamHead coachCaptainShirt sponsor
Chicago Fire Quaker
Chivas USA n/a
Colorado Rapids Ciao Telecom
Columbus Crew Barbasol
D.C. United Leidos
FC Dallas AdvoCare
Houston Dynamo BHP Billiton
LA Galaxy Herbalife
Montreal Impact Bank of Montreal
New England Revolution UnitedHealthcare
New York Red Bulls Red Bull
Philadelphia Union Bimbo
Portland Timbers Alaska Airlines
Real Salt Lake Jeff Cassar LifeVantage
San Jose Earthquakes n/a
Seattle Sounders FC Xbox
Sporting Kansas City Ivy Funds
Toronto FC Bank of Montreal
Vancouver Whitecaps FC Bell Canada

Player transfers

Major League Soccer employs twelve methods to acquire players. These mechanisms are the following: via allocation; via the Designated Player Rule; via the annual SuperDraft; via trade; placing a discovery claim; via the Homegrown Player Rule; via the annual Re-Entry Draft; via the annual Waiver Draft; through weighted lottery; through an "extreme hardship" call-up; by replacing a player who has been placed on the Season Ending Injury List; by replacing a player who has been placed on the Disabled List.

Allocation ranking

The allocation ranking is the mechanism used to determine which MLS club has first priority to acquire a U.S. National Team player who signs with MLS after playing abroad, or a former MLS player who returns to the League after having gone to a club abroad for a transfer fee. The allocation rankings may also be used in the event two or more clubs file a request for the same player on the same day. The allocations will be ranked in reverse order of finish for the 2013 season, taking playoff performance into account.
Once the club uses its allocation ranking to acquire a player, it drops to the bottom of the list. A ranking can be traded, provided that part of the compensation received in return is another club's ranking. At all times, each club is assigned one ranking. The rankings reset at the end of each MLS League season.
Original RankingClubDate Allocation UsedPlayer SignedPrevious ClubRef
1Philadelphia UnionJanuary 27, 2014 Maurice Edu Stoke City
2Seattle Sounders FCJanuary 31, 2014 Marco Pappa Heerenveen
3Houston Dynamo∞July 23, 2014 DaMarcus Beasley Puebla
4Columbus Crew SCOctober 7, 2014 Kei Kamara Middlesbrough
5FC Dallas
6Los Angeles Galaxy
7Vancouver Whitecaps FC
8Chicago Fire
9San Jose Earthquakes
10Montreal Impact
11Colorado Rapids
12New England Revolution
13Chivas USA
14D.C. United
15New York Red Bulls
16Toronto FC∞
17Portland Timbers
18Real Salt Lake
19Sporting Kansas City

On January 14, 2014, Philadelphia Union acquired the No. 1 ranking and Ethan White from D.C. United in exchange for the No. 6 allocation ranking and Jeff Parke.

On December 11, 2013, Seattle Sounders acquired the No. 2 allocation ranking from Chivas USA in exchange for the No. 13 allocation ranking and Tristan Bowen.
∞ On July 23, 2014, Houston Dynamo acquired the then-no. 1 allocation ranking and allocation money from Toronto FC in exchange for the then-no. 14 allocation ranking and Warren Creavalle.
On July 29, 2014, Los Angeles Galaxy acquired the then-No. 3 allocation ranking from D.C. United in exchange for the then-No. 11 allocation ranking, a second-round selection in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft, and Kofi Opare.

Managerial changes

Ownership changes

Rule changes

The rules for the 2014 season are largely identical as those in 2013, with one major exception. For the first time in league history, the away goals rule will be used in two-legged MLS Cup playoff matches. MLS will use the version of the rule employed in CONCACAF competitions, which is applied only at the end of regular time of the second leg and not after extra time. MLS has also tweaked the tiebreaker rules for the league standings. The first tiebreaker remains total wins, but the second and third tiebreakers have been swapped—goal difference is now second and goals scored is third. All other tiebreakers remain the same as in 2013.
More minor changes include the following:
The salary cap for 2014 has also been adjusted upward. The team salary cap, which as in previous years covers the first 20 of the 30 available roster spots, has increased to $3.1 million. The cap charge for a Designated Player is now $387,500, up from $368,750 last season. Midseason Designated Player signings carry a cap charge of $193,750. The minimum salaries for "off-budget" players have also increased from last season.

Standings

Conference tables

Eastern Conference

Western Conference

Overall table

Note: the table below has no impact on playoff qualification and is used solely for determining host of the MLS Cup, certain CCL spots, the Supporters' Shield trophy, seeding in the 2015 Canadian Championship, and position in the 2015 MLS SuperDraft. The conference tables are the sole determinant for teams qualifying for the playoffs.

Tie-breaking

The teams are awarded three points for a win, one point for a tie and zero points for a loss. If teams have an equal number of points the following tie-breaking procedures apply: The second and third tiebreakers, goal differential and goals scored, have swapped places from the 2013 season.
  1. Most wins
  2. Goal differential
  3. Goals for
  4. Fewest disciplinary points
  5. Road goals
  6. Road goal differential
  7. Home goals
  8. Home goal differential
  9. Coin toss or drawing of lots

    MLS Cup Playoffs

Statistics

Top scorers

Source:

Top assists

Source:

Top goalkeepers

RankGoalkeeperNationClub
1Nick RimandoReal Salt Lake1.0471252160247
2Eric KronbergSporting Kansas City1.1045221800207
3Bill HamidD.C. United1.131103427003010
4Jaime PenedoLA Galaxy1.1481332610298
5David OustedVancouver Whitecaps FC1.18964030603413
6Steve ClarkColumbus Crew1.24111423060348
6Raúl FernándezFC Dallas1.2466251818204
8Bobby ShuttleworthNew England Revolution1.2594402880328
9Donovan RickettsPortland Timbers1.38105442861327
10Jon BuschSan Jose Earthquakes1.47138503060346
10Luis RoblesNew York Red Bulls1.47111503060346
10Stefan FreiSeattle Sounders FC1.4799503060349

Source:

Individual awards

Monthly awards

Weekly awards

The player of the week is voted on by North American sports journalists. All other weekly and monthly awards are decided by an online fan vote.

Scoring

PlayerNationForAgainstResultDate
Seattle Sounders FCPortland Timbers4–4
New York Red BullsHouston Dynamo4–0
New York Red BullsChicago Fire4–5
Chicago FireNew York Red Bulls5–4
Real Salt LakeHouston Dynamo5–2
DC UnitedMontreal Impact4–2
FC DallasSan Jose Earthquakes5–0
New York Red BullsSeattle Sounders FC4–1

Discipline

AwardPlayer/Club
Most Valuable PlayerRobbie Keane
Defender of the YearChad Marshall
Goalkeeper of the YearBill Hamid
Coach of the YearBen Olsen
Rookie of the YearTesho Akindele
Newcomer of the YearPedro Morales
Comeback Player of the YearRodney Wallace
Golden BootBradley Wright-Phillips
Fair Play Player AwardMichael Parkhurst
Fair Play Team AwardPhiladelphia Union
Humanitarian of the YearA. J. DeLaGarza
Referee of the YearMark Geiger
Assistant Referee of the YearPaul Scott
Goal of the YearObafemi Martins
Save of the YearLuis Robles

MLS Best XI

Source:

Coaches

Eastern Conference