By Ridge Mahoney DWAYNE'S WORLD. Houston finished its preparation for its CONCACAF Champions Cup series against Puntarenas of Costa Rica by beating Chicago, 3-1, in Lake
Buena Vista, Fla., Saturday.
Ryan Cochrane, Alejandro Moreno and
Corey Ashe scored the goals for Dynamo, which plays Puntarenas away in the first leg Wednesday. Houston will
host the second leg March 1 on the campus of Texas A&M in College Station.
Midfielder
Dwayne DeRosario, who is renegotiating his contract, played the first 62 minutes for
Houston. He earned a base salary of $140,000 last season but with achievable bonuses his compensation came to approximately $200,000. He is believed to be seeking a salary of at least
$250,000.
DeRosario had been represented by
Lyle Yorks of Proactive Sports Management but several months ago left Proactive to sign with
Richard Motzkin, formerly of his
own agency, SportsNet, which last June was acquired by London-based Wasserman Media Group.
DeRosario's move was somewhat a reversal of a trend. Several prominent American players -
DaMarcus Beasley, Carlos Bocanegra, Clint Dempsey - left SportsNet for Proactive, which some players believe to be more aggressive in placing MLS players with European teams.
SportsNet, again in the view of some players, was renowned for negotiating the best deals for players remaining in MLS, and this month
Taylor Twellman and
Brian Ching, both
represented now by WMG, signed new deals with the league.
However, the list of former SportsNet clients who have gone to Europe while under contract include
Tim Howard and
Bobby Convey. A Bundesliga club was reportedly interested in acquiring DeRosario during the January transfer window but no formal offer was tendered.
KEEPERS KEPT. The
other MLS representative in the CONCACAF tournament, D.C. United, has nailed down its goalkeeping situation. Finally. Both were keepers among the lowest-paid players in the league last year.
Starter
Troy Perkins, who earned $29,400 in base salary, has signed a new deal that triples his salary, according to the Washington Post. Perkins earned honors as league Goalkeeper of
the Year last season.
Backup
Jay Nolly, who was traded by Real Salt Lake in December as part of the
Freddy Adu deal but had refused to sign a new deal with MLS while he went
on trial with European clubs, has agreed to terms with D.C. United. He earned $28,000 in 2006 and with the 2007 minimum set at $30,000 that's what he'll get.
Nolly played the full 90
minutes as United, which rested regulars Perkins and
Christian Gomez, among others, played a 0-0 tie against Kansas City Sunday to conclude its preparation for the CONCACAF series, which it
opens Wednesday against CD Olimpia in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. The return leg is March 1 at RFK Stadium.
Ex-United keeper
Nick Rimando, who refused to sign a new deal with Real and
was traded to the New York Red Bulls, has agreed to a contract worth approximately $75,000, a rather steep cut from the $96,800 (base) he earned last year. Real cited its cap issues - it waived
midfielder
Andy Williams in an effort to lower his salary enough to fit him under the cap - as the primary reason it couldn't agree to terms with Rimando.