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MLS Next (stylized as MLS NEXT) is a youth soccer league in the United States and Canada that is managed, organized, and controlled by Major League Soccer. It was introduced by the league in 2020. It is a successor to the U.S. Soccer Development Academy. The system covers the under-13, under-14, under-15, under-16, under-17 and under-19 age groups.
Chula Vista FC was originally established as a youth soccer organization and added a senior team in 2011. The club's stated goal for the senior team is to provide a bridge between youth and professional soccer for players not in the college soccer system. [1]
Acoreano Sport, Bay Valley Suns Sports Club, City SC San Diego, FC Balboa, FC Folsom, Independente Los Angeles Futbol Club, Irvine FC, Laguna United FC, Napa Valley 1839 FC, Real Galt FC, San Diego Internacional, Trojans FC, Valley 559 FC 4 Southwest Premier League Chula Vista FC, Desert FC, JASA RWC, Playmaker FC 2
San Diego FC had been used as a working name and placeholder at the time of the expansion announcement in May 2023; [22] the team is the eleventh in MLS to use the "FC" suffix. [50] The name and crest, which were leaked by The Athletic a day prior to the October unveiling, both garnered a generally negative reception online.
All 2023 regional champions in active NISA Nation regions, Battleborn FC (Pacific), Golden State Force (Southwest) and FC Brownsville (Texas), are back in 2024 to defend their titles. 2023 National Championship finalists Las Vegas Legends accepted an invitation to promote to NISA, but will only do so in the 2025 season.
On December 6, 2021, the San Jose Earthquakes were named as one of 21 clubs that would field a team in the new MLS Next Pro league beginning in the 2022 season. [1] [2]On March 11, 2024, the Earthquakes announced that "commercial operations" of their MLS Next Pro team would be taken over by the East Bay-based The Town Group.
Arriola was born in Chula Vista, California, a suburb of San Diego, to Dawn and Art Arriola. [3] Arriola attended Mater Dei Catholic High School in Chula Vista and iHigh Virtual Academy in San Diego. [4] [5] Arriola holds a Mexican passport which he obtained through his great-grandparents who were born there. [6]
Adair grew up in Chula Vista where he played soccer as a youth. When he was five, he underwent open heart surgery. [1] Adair attended Hilltop High School. [2] He was inducted into the Hilltop Hall of Fame in 2001. [3] In 1989, he entered San Diego State University where he played one season with the men's soccer team.