2005 MLS supplemental draft

(Redirected from 2005 MLS Supplemental Draft)

Following the signature of the first MLS players' union contract, the MLS Superdraft was limited to four rounds. As a result, the Supplemental Draft was re-incarnated to hold the additional rounds. The 2005 MLS supplemental draft, held on February 4, 2005, was the first re-incarnation of the MLS supplemental draft. The four-round event followed January's 2005 MLS SuperDraft, as teams filled out their developmental rosters. Expansion clubs Real Salt Lake and Chivas USA received the first picks in each round.

The most notable draft picks include fourth round draft picks Chris Wondolowski, who is one of the top career goalscorers in Major League Soccer with over 140 career MLS goals, and Jeff Larentowicz, who has played more than 380 matches in more than 10 seasons in Major League Soccer.

* Denotes player who has been selected for an MLS Best XI team

Round 1

edit
Pick # MLS team Player Pos Affiliation
1 Real Salt Lake Steven Rhyne M Clemson University
2 Chivas USA Javier Barragan GK Cal State Dominguez Hills
3 Chicago Fire Justin Cook F Ohio State University
4 FC Dallas[R1 trade 1] Kevin Wilson M University of San Diego
5 San Jose Earthquakes Brett Rodriguez D Creighton University
6 MetroStars Jason Hernandez D Seton Hall University
7 Colorado Rapids Sasha Gotsmanov F University of Rhode Island
8 Columbus Crew Matt Oliver D University of Virginia
9 Columbus Crew[R1 trade 2] Bill Gaudette GK St. John's University
10 Los Angeles Galaxy Benjamin Benditson D Cal State Northridge
11 Kansas City Wizards Edwin Ruiz F Hartwick College
12 D.C. United Matt Nickell F Drake University

Round 1 trades

edit
  1. ^ #4: FC Dallas → D.C. United → FC Dallas. 23 June 2004: FC Dallas acquired this first-round pick, originally a fifth-round selection in the 2005 MLS SuperDraft, and future considerations from D.C. United in exchange for defender Ezra Hendrickson. When the 2005 SuperDraft was reduced to four rounds, Dallas received this first-round selection in the 2005 Supplemental Draft from D.C. to complete the trade.[ref 1] On 30 April 2004, D.C. has acquired this pick, originally "future considerations", from FC Dallas in exchange for defender Milton Reyes.[ref 2]
  2. ^ #9: New England Revolution → Columbus Crew. 24 April 2004: Columbus Crew acquired this first-round pick, originally a fifth-round selection in the 2005 MLS SuperDraft, from New England Revolution in exchange for midfielder Luke Vercollone. When the 2005 SuperDraft was reduced to four rounds, Columbus received this first-round selection in the 2005 Supplemental Draft from New England to complete the trade.[ref 3]

Round 2

edit
Pick # MLS team Player Pos Affiliation
13 Real Salt Lake Mike Lookingland D Bucknell University
14 Chivas USA Helmis Matute M Virginia Commonwealth University
15 Chicago Fire David Mahoney GK Cornell University
16 FC Dallas Abe Thompson F University of Maryland
17 New England Revolution[R2 trade 1] Jamie Holmes F Birmingham Southern College
18 San Jose Earthquakes[R2 trade 2] Robby Fulton GK Stanford University
19 Los Angeles Galaxy[R2 trade 3] Drew McAthy F UC Santa Barbara
20 Columbus Crew Eric Vasquez M University of Central Florida
21 New England Revolution Ryan Latham F Southern Methodist University
22 Los Angeles Galaxy Matt Kovar D Loyola Marymount University
23 FC Dallas[R2 trade 4] Aaron Pitchkolan D West Virginia University
24 FC Dallas[R2 trade 5] Drew Cavanagh D College of Charleston

Round 2 trades

edit
  1. ^ #17: San Jose Earthquakes → New England Revolution. 8 April 2004: New England Revolution acquired this second-round pick, originally a conditional MLS SuperDraft selection, from San Jose Earthquakes in exchange for forward Chris Brown.[ref 4]
  2. ^ #18: MetroStars → San Jose Earthquakes. 16 January 2004: San Jose Earthquakes acquired this second-round pick, originally a sixth-round selection in the 2005 MLS SuperDraft, from MetroStars in exchange for a sixth-round selection in the 2004 MLS SuperDraft. When the 2005 SuperDraft was reduced to four rounds, San Jose received this second-round selection in the 2005 Supplemental Draft from MetroStars to complete the trade.[ref 5]
  3. ^ #19: Colorado Rapids → Los Angeles Galaxy. 31 August 2004: Los Angeles Galaxy acquired this second-round pick, originally a sixth-round selection in the 2005 MLS SuperDraft, from Colorado Rapids in exchange for defender Ricky Lewis. When the 2005 SuperDraft was reduced to four rounds, Los Angeles received this second-round selection in the 2005 Supplemental Draft from Colorado to complete the trade.[ref 6]
  4. ^ #23: Kansas City Wizards → FC Dallas. 24 February 2003: FC Dallas acquired this second-round pick, originally a conditional selection in the 2005 MLS SuperDraft, from Kansas City Wizards in exchange for defender Lee Morrison.[ref 7]
  5. ^ #24: D.C. United → FC Dallas. 23 July 2004: FC Dallas acquired this pick, originally "future considerations", and a fourth-round selection in the 2006 MLS SuperDraft from D.C. United in exchange for forward Jason Thompson.[ref 8]

Round 3

edit
Pick # MLS team Player Position Affiliation
25 Real Salt Lake Noah Palmer GK University of Maryland
26 Chivas USA Mike Munoz M University of California
27 Chicago Fire Chris Karcz M Rutgers University
28 FC Dallas Christopher Schwarze D University of San Francisco
29 San Jose Earthquakes Noah Merl D University of California
30 MetroStars Patrick Hannigan GK Temple University
31 Colorado Rapids Eugene Sepuya F Alabama A&M University
32 Columbus Crew Ryan Kelly D St. John's University
33 New England Revolution Easton Wilson M University of Connecticut
34 Los Angeles Galaxy Ryan Shaw F University of California, Davis
35 Kansas City Wizards Doug Lascody M Southwest Missouri State University
36 D.C. United Andrew Terris GK Stanford University

Round 3 trades

edit

No trades reported.

Round 4

edit
Pick # MLS team Player Pos Affiliation
37 Real Salt Lake Cameron Knowles D University of Akron
38 Chivas USA Dan Kennedy GK UC Santa Barbara
39 Chicago Fire Hollis Ryan Donaldson D Liberty University
40 FC Dallas Sammy Tamporello M Ohio State University
41 San Jose Earthquakes Chris Wondolowski M Chico State University
42 MetroStars Usiel Vasquez F Southern Connecticut State
43 Colorado Rapids Dan Gargan D Georgetown University
44 Columbus Crew Chris Lee F Marquette University
45 New England Revolution Jeff Larentowicz D Brown University
46 Los Angeles Galaxy Jeremiah Gallegos F University of Cincinnati
47 Kansas City Wizards Ryan Caugherty D Wake Forest University
48 D.C. United Shawn Kuykendall M American University

Round 4 trades

edit

No trades reported.

Trade Note

edit
  • On 1 February 2005, MetroStars acquired a draft pick and an allocation from Real Salt Lake in exchange for defender Eddie Pope.[ref 9] MetroStars had the choice of swapping first-round selections in the 2005 Supplemental Draft with Real Salt Lake or taking the highest RSL second-round pick in the 2006 MLS SuperDraft. MetroStars chose the latter.

References

edit
  1. ^ Goff, Steven (June 24, 2004). "D.C. United Turns to Hendrickson for Defensive Help". Washington Post. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  2. ^ "MLS: Dallas Burn signs Milton Reyes". Soccer America. April 30, 2004. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  3. ^ "Revolution acquire midfielder Luke Vercollone from the Columbus Crew". New England Revolution. April 24, 2004. Archived from the original on December 7, 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  4. ^ "Brown Heads to San Jose". Major League Soccer. April 8, 2004. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  5. ^ "MetroStars Pick Six In 2004 MLS SuperDraft". Our Sports Central. January 16, 2004. Retrieved January 6, 2011.
  6. ^ "Galaxy free developmental spot, send Lewis to Rapids". Major League Soccer. August 31, 2004. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  7. ^ "Team Departs for Florida Today". Our Sports Central. February 24, 2003. Retrieved December 4, 2014.
  8. ^ "D.C. United Signs F Jason Thompson". Our Sports Central. July 23, 2004. Retrieved December 17, 2010.
  9. ^ "MetroStars Acquire an Allocation and Draft Pick from Real Salt Lake in Exchange for Eddie Pope". Our Sports Central. February 1, 2005. Retrieved December 17, 2010.