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Author Topic: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas  (Read 3762 times)

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Offline Tallman

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Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« on: June 28, 2005, 05:58:53 AM »
Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
Real Salt Lake FC


Real Salt Lake announced today that it has placed DF Marlon Rojas on waivers in order to make room for a trade that is expected to take place this week.

Rojas, 25 of Trinidad & Tobago, was signed by RSL on March 1, 2005. This season, the left-sided defender appeared in seven games, started six games, and logged 507 minutes during the team's 15 games.
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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #1 on: June 28, 2005, 07:09:22 AM »
like Rojas need to come back home and start all over again?  tough season for him.  dropped from national team and club in the space of a couple weeks.

Offline football king

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #2 on: June 28, 2005, 07:19:22 AM »
yeah hope he keep head up and work hard he was not a bad player
how old is rojas?

Offline KND2

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #3 on: June 28, 2005, 07:34:09 AM »
The problem here is not so much how Rojas is performing but rather the foreigner limits in the league.

Rojas and Tiger probably battling for the same spot on the roster

Offline Tallman

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #4 on: June 28, 2005, 07:39:21 AM »
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Offline Touches

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #5 on: June 28, 2005, 08:35:56 AM »
Look a lil explanation as to the MLS roster thing.

As Rojas is 25 I think he is no longer a junior international and moves to seniors international. Thus he taking up space.
I doe think he qualifying as a developmental player either.


The 2005 MLS competition rules follow below:

I. MLS ROSTER COMPOSITION
A Major League Soccer team’s full roster is comprised of the Senior Roster and the Developmental Roster. The full roster shall exceed no more than 28 total players: 18 players on the Senior Roster and no more than 10 players on the Developmental Roster. All 28 players are eligible for selection as part of the gameday squad during the regular season and playoffs.

(A) SENIOR ROSTER
Other than at specified times during preseason, through injury situations (a player added as a season-ending injury replacement) or in cases of extreme hardship, an MLS team shall have no more than 18 senior roster players at any time. The senior roster is comprised of the following players, who all count against a team’s salary budget:

(i) DOMESTIC PLAYERS
A domestic player is either a U.S. citizen, a permanent resident (green card holder) or the holder of other special status (e.g., has been granted refugee or asylum status).

(ii) SENIOR INTERNATIONAL PLAYERS
Each team shall be allowed up to four (4) Senior International players on its roster – non-domestic players who turn 25 years or older during the season in question. Although these players can be traded by MLS teams, the Senior International slots themselves cannot be traded.

(iii) YOUTH INTERNATIONALS
A Youth International is a non-domestic player (i.e., non-U.S. citizen and non-green card holder) who is 24 years old or younger during the season in question. At the beginning of the year in which the player is due to reach the age of 25, this player will be re-classified as a Senior International. Following the 2004 MLS season, each MLS club was allotted three (3) youth international spots with two (2) additional ones provided to the two 2005 expansion teams for their first two (2) seasons. Unlike senior international spots, all youth international spots can be traded on a permanent or temporary basis (the slots revert to the original team in the latter case). Youth International players may be signed to senior roster contracts or developmental roster contracts (see “Developmental Roster” below). A team may opt to have a youth international occupy one of its senior international slots.

The current list of available youth international spots per team follows (including trades that involved the transfer of some spots as of March 23, 2005): CD Chivas USA (6), Chicago Fire (3), Colorado Rapids (3), Columbus Crew (3), D.C. United (3), FC Dallas (2), Kansas City Wizards (3), Los Angeles Galaxy (4), MetroStars (5), New England Revolution (3), Real Salt Lake (3), San Jose Earthquakes (2).

(B) DEVELOPMENTAL ROSTER
MLS teams may not have more than 10 developmental players on their developmental roster at any time (unless a player is added as a season-ending injury replacement). Developmental players can be either domestic or international and must be 24 years of age or younger during the season in question. These players do not count against a team’s salary budget. They are signed to non-guaranteed contracts and thus, can be waived at any time. Teams are permitted an unlimited number of signings during a given season to ensure all 10-man developmental roster spots are occupied at any one time.

Generation adidas players, who are domestic underclassmen, form part of a team’s Developmental Roster. They are acquired by MLS teams through the SuperDraft or through the Lottery system if they join the League after the SuperDraft.

II. METHODS OF PLAYER ACQUISITION
MLS teams may acquire players and add them to their Senior and Developmental rosters via the following 10 mechanisms:

(A.) ALLOCATIONS
A club earns an allocation for (1) failure to qualify for the MLS Cup Playoffs; (2) as a replacement in the case of the departure or transfer of key players; or (3) due to expansion status. The two new expansion teams each received three allocations in 2005.

Each year the MLS Competition Committee determines how many allocation spots are made available to each team and whether they are classified as “major” or “minor” allocations (based on the monetary value applied to each allocation by the MLS Competition Committee which considers various factors in determining the figure). Allocation spots or portions thereof (see splitting of allocations below*) can be traded by teams.

Each year, allocations are given a ranking by the MLS Competition Committee. In 2005, one of the three expansion allocations ranked first (the order as between the two expansion teams determined by coin toss at MLS Cup 2004), followed by the major allocations for failure to make the playoffs (ranked between themselves in reverse order of finish in 2004), followed by major replacement allocations in reverse order of 2004, minor replacement allocations in the same order and, finally, remaining portions of split allocations.

In the event that a U.S. National Team player signs with MLS, (and, if he is a player returning to MLS, if his original club does not have a right of first refusal), the club with the first ranking allocation (see current rankings below) has the option of using its allocation to acquire the player in question.

Allocations or portions thereof may be used to re-sign current MLS players, with League approval.

Here's the current order for allocations.

*Beginning in 2005, teams may split major allocations into up to three portions. Once an allocation has been split, the remaining portion(s) shall drop to the bottom of the allocation order. Teams may trade allocations and split portions of allocations.

If a team has an unused outstanding replacement allocation for a departed player, or has not received a replacement allocation, that team has right of first refusal in the event of his return to MLS. If a team has utilized its replacement allocation, by acquiring another player, through a trade or through a split, the team loses its right of first refusal to such returning player, who is then assigned in the normal manner.

(B.) SUPERDRAFT & SUPPLEMENTAL DRAFT
These are players drafted by teams at the annual MLS SuperDraft, which consists of four (4) rounds beginning in 2005, and the MLS Supplemental Draft, also consisting of four (4) rounds beginning in 2005. These players may include college players, Generation adidas players and players from lower divisions. Players classified as Youth Internationals may also be part of the SuperDraft or Supplemental Draft. The selection order for both drafts is based upon each team’s on-field performance during the previous season.

A player who was drafted by a particular team through the SuperDraft or Supplemental Draft and did not sign with the League, is placed on that team’s “College Protected List” until the second December 31 immediately following the draft in question, after which the team loses the rights to the player.

(C.) TRADES
Players, rights to sign players, SuperDraft picks, allocations (or split portions thereof) and Youth International slots may all be acquired and exchanged in trades approved by the MLS League Office provided all of the necessary rules regarding roster and salary budget compliance are met and the trade is consummated during the valid trading period. The current trade window opened on Monday, November 22, 2004 and will close at the 2005 trade deadline of Thursday, September 15, 2005 (in conjunction with the close of the secondary international transfer window).

(D.) DISCOVERY SIGNINGS
Each team has the opportunity to make six (6) discovery signings per season (up from three (3) discovery signings allowed in 2004). The two expansion teams in 2005 will have ten (10) discovery signings each in 2005 and six (6) in 2006 and beyond. The last day for discovery player signings is September 15, 2005 - coinciding with the close of the secondary international transfer window and the roster freeze date. The six (6) discovery signings can be used to fill senior roster spots only.

(E.) DEVELOPMENTAL ROSTER SIGNINGS
Teams are permitted an unlimited number of developmental player signings during a given season to ensure all 10-man developmental roster spots are occupied at any given time. Youth international limits per team still apply.

(F.) WAIVERS
A team may place a player on waivers at any time during the regular season at which point he is made available to all other teams. The waiver claiming period shall commence on the first business day after the League delivers a notice to teams and shall expire at 5:00 p.m. EST on the second business day after the Waiver Period Commencement Date. The claiming period is 48 hours.

Clubs each have the opportunity of claiming a player off waivers in reverse order based on points-per-game total during the current season. If the waivers occur before every team has played three regular season games, the point totals of the previous year are instead taken into consideration with the team with the worst point total having the first option.

Once a team selects a player off waivers, that club is automatically moved to the bottom of the priority list for subsequent waiver selections in a given season, regardless of its points-per-game total. Players who may be placed on the MLS waiver wire are as follows:

(i) A player eligible for a previous SuperDraft who went undrafted; or

(ii) a player who has played in MLS previously where his last MLS team does not wish to exercise its right of first refusal or no longer has the right of first refusal since 12 months have passed since the player’s date of release, except in the case of returning U.S. National Team players as stated below.

(G.) LOTTERY
Some players shall be assigned to MLS teams via the weighted Lottery process. Any team assigned a player through the lottery in any particular season shall not be assigned another lottery player that season unless and until all teams have received a lottery player or have agreed to waive their option to participate in a Lottery. The players made available through lotteries include:

(i) Generation adidas players signed after the MLS SuperDraft;

(ii) Draft eligible players to whom an MLS contract was offered but who failed to sign with the League prior to the Draft.

The weighted lottery takes into consideration each team’s performance over its last 32 regular season games and the most recent postseason. The team with the worst record over its last 32 regular season games (dating back to previous season if necessary) will have the greatest probability of winning the lottery. Teams are not required to participate in a lottery. Players are assigned via the lottery system in order to prevent a player from potentially manipulating his destination club with a strategic holdout.

(H.) EXTREME HARDSHIP CALL-UPS
Teams may add players to their roster in cases of “extreme hardship” as follows: (1) a team has less than two available goalkeepers or (2) a team has less than 15 available players. Extreme hardship call-ups are made on a game-by-game basis.

(I.) SEASON-ENDING INJURY REPLACEMENTS
A team with a player lost to a season-ending injury can replace that player on its roster, while remaining responsible for the full amount of the injured player’s salary. International player limits still apply at the time a season-ending replacement is made (with the player being replaced not counting against those limits).

(J.) RETURNING U.S. NATIONAL TEAM POOL PLAYERS
In the event a U.S. National Team pool player playing abroad returns to the U.S. and there is interest from multiple MLS teams, preference will be given first to a team prepared to use an allocation. If there is more than one team prepared to use an allocation on a particular player, the current season’s allocation rankings as determined by the MLS Competition Committee would be used. In the event no team is willing to use an allocation, the player will be assigned via waivers.

NOTE: No changes may be made to a team's active full roster during the period beginning on September 15, 2005 (Roster Freeze Date) through the day after MLS Cup. Nevertheless, a team may obtain players in accordance with the extreme hardship rules and procedures to replace players who are injured or otherwise legitimately unavailable after the Roster Freeze Date. Any other replacements after the Roster Freeze Date may only be made in exceptional circumstances in the League’s sole and absolute discretion.

(III.) METHODS OF RELEASING PLAYERS

(A) WAIVERS
Teams may waive players based on performance at any time during the MLS season. Players on guaranteed contracts or players waived on or after July 1 of any year, however, will continue to have their salary count against the team’s salary budget and the team waiving the player will not receive a replacement except under the normal player acquisition mechanisms. Players may not be waived while they are injured, unless the League reaches a settlement with the injured player for his release. In such a scenario, the settlement amount will be charged to the team’s salary budget. Upon return to fitness, however, a player may be waived normally.

(B) TRANSFERS AND LOANS
An MLS player may be transferred or loaned at any time to a team outside the League. Beginning with the 2004 season, FIFA does not recognize player transfers that take place outside of the two following transfer windows:

January 1 – March 31 (Primary Window)
August 15 - September 15 (Secondary Window)

FIFA does allow for the registration of free agents outside of the primary and secondary windows in limited circumstances. Visit www.FIFA.com for more details.

(C) CONTRACT EXPIRATION
When a player’s contract expires, the player does not count against the roster or budget of the team in question. A team retains the rights to the player indefinitely following the expiration of a contract only if attempts were made to re-sign the player. In exceptional circumstances where an important player could not be re-signed, a team may be awarded a replacement allocation.

NOTE: No changes may be made to a team's active full roster during the period beginning on September 15, 2005 (Roster Freeze Date) through the day after MLS Cup. Nevertheless, a team may obtain a goalkeeper in accordance with the extreme hardship rules and procedures to replace a goalkeeper who is injured or otherwise legitimately unavailable after the Roster Freeze Date. Any other replacements after the Roster Freeze Date may only be made in exceptional circumstances in the League’s sole and absolute discretion.

(IV.) PLAYER RIGHTS

The following explains the status of player rights in specific instances:

WAIVED PLAYERS:
a team waiving a player who clears waivers holds a right of first refusal to such player for 12 months from the date of his release.

OUT OF CONTRACT PLAYERS / OPTIONS NOT PICKED UP: a team retains the right of first refusal to the player indefinitely only if attempts were made to re-sign the player.

DRAFTED BUT NOT SIGNED: a player who was drafted by a particular team through the SuperDraft or Supplemental Draft and did not sign, is placed on that team’s “College Protected List” until the second December 31 immediately following the draft in question, after which the team loses the rights to sign the player.

PLAYER TRANSFERRED OUTSIDE MLS: if a replacement allocation is granted, a team does not retain a right of first refusal unless the team has not yet used the compensatory allocation. In such a case, the team may retain the right of first refusal on the player provided they surrender the full amount of the replacement allocation.

Source:Mls net


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Offline FF

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #6 on: June 28, 2005, 08:42:01 AM »
The problem here is not so much how Rojas is performing but rather the foreigner limits in the league.

Rojas and Tiger probably battling for the same spot on the roster


Tiger has a green card so he does not take up any of the foreigner spots with respect to Rojas...

Rojas just been badly out of form for the most part of the year... plain and simple... he need to ketch back heself...  I hope he gets another MLS team but I wouldnt be surprised to hear he drop down to the A-league
THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES

Offline Bally

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #7 on: June 28, 2005, 11:08:08 AM »
Thats why I said MLS is not a good place for T&T players they can do waive at any time with out paying you and make trades to any team they like without asking the player.
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Offline Tallman

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Offline Marcos

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #9 on: June 28, 2005, 11:21:11 AM »
touches u doin real research boy like u really wanna take alvin job
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Offline Tallman

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Explanation of waivers
« Reply #10 on: June 28, 2005, 06:36:17 PM »
Nine players waived by MLS teams
Players released as teams prepare for contract deadline
Major League Soccer


On Friday, July 1, all Senior Roster player contracts are guaranteed for the remainder of the year, meaning that a team cannot waive a player in order to free up salary budget space on or after that date. If a team does not plan on keeping a player, the player's contract must be terminated prior to July 1. This deadline only applies to players on the 18-man Senior Roster, since players signed to Developmental contracts do not have guaranteed contracts nor do their salaries count toward the team's salary budget. In addition, each team is given the option to extend the guarantee date of up to two players past the July 1 deadline.

On Monday, nine players were officially placed on waivers by Major League Soccer teams:

Alfonso Loera (Chivas USA)
Ryan Suarez (Chivas USA)
Eugene Sepuya (Colorado Rapids)
Mamadou Diallo (MetroStars)
Gilberto Flores (MetroStars)
Cassio (New England Revolution)
Felix Brillant (New England Revolution)
Noah Palmer (Real Salt Lake)
Marlon Rojas (Real Salt Lake)

Players are placed on waivers for a 48-hour period, at which point the teams with the lowest points per game during the current season would have the highest priority claiming opportunity. The ranking of the priority order is as follows:

Teams with the lowest points per game during the current season that have selected the fewest number of players off waivers in the current season (since they have all played more than three games). The priority ranking is set at the time the players are placed on waivers (Mon. June 27)

The teams are grouped by lowest points per game among those who have selected the same number of players.

The teams that have selected the fewest number of players off waivers during the current season have priority above those with more players selected.

If a team chooses to request to claim a player, they must submit their request to the League office by Wed., June 29 at 5 p.m. ET. If more than one team requests the rights to the same player, the team with the highest priority will obtain his rights. At the end of the 48-hour waiver claiming period, if a player is not claimed by any team his former team retains a right of first refusal should the League re-sign the player. This right lasts for 12 months following the date of his waiver.

The next dates of relevance to the roster composition are:
# Aug. 15 - International Transfer window opens.
# Sept. 15 - International Transfer window closes. MLS trade and discovery deadline. MLS Rosters are frozen until the conclusion of the season.

The current priority order for claiming is as follows (with players claimed on waivers in 2005 season):
1. San Jose (from D.C. United)
2. Kansas City
3. New England
4. Salt Lake (Leighton O'Brien)
5. Columbus (Denny Clanton)
6. Los Angeles (Josh Saunders)
7. Chicago (Jared Montz)
8. Dallas (Alex Woods)
9. Chivas (Milton Blanco, Michael Erush)
10. MetroStars (Dan Kennedy, Mike Ueltschey)
11. D.C. United (from San Jose) (Andrew Weber, John Wilson)
12. Colorado (Michael Cardenas, Bouna Coundoul, Eric Denton, Marcus Sagastum
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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #11 on: June 29, 2005, 05:35:09 PM »
Real Salt Lake acquires defender Paul Broome
Real Salt Lake Media Relations 

SALT LAKE CITY - Real Salt Lake General Manager Steve Pastorino and Head Coach John Ellinger today announced the acquisition of DF Paul Broome via trade with the Los Angeles Galaxy. Broome was acquired in exchange for a Second Round 2007 MLS SuperDraft pick, the pick acquired by RSL in March in a trade with CD Chivas USA in exchange for the rights to DF Douglas Sequeira. In order to make room on the team's senior roster for Broome, RSL waived DF Marlon Rojas Monday, who had appeared in seven of the team's 15 games this season.
"Paul Broome is a talented, experienced defender and somebody we'd hoped to get in the initial 2004 MLS Expansion Draft. But the opportunity presented itself for us to obtain him and we went for it," Ellinger said. "He adds great technical ability and pace, and our hope is that he can bring some additional stability and depth to our defense."

Broome is a natural left-sided player who added consistency to the Los Angeles Galaxy defense since his acquisition in July 2003. He played the first four-plus years of his career as a teammate of RSL captain Jason Kreis with the Dallas Burn before being traded to Los Angeles, and has played in 116 career games, making 87 starts.

"Paul is a fast and tenacious left-sided player who can step into the Real Salt Lake lineup immediately and contribute to our backline," Pastorino said.

The 30-year old Broome started in 20 games during the Galaxy's 2004 campaign, tied for the second-most in a single season in his career the last coming in the 2002 season when he was with the Dallas Burn. He split the 2003 season between the Galaxy and the Burn after being traded to Los Angeles on July 11, playing in 11 games and making 8 starts between the two teams. The Dallas native started in 64 games and played in 87 games for the Burn and made his MLS debut on March 20, playing the final 25 minutes against Kansas City.

"Paul is a tenacious defender and is quite good with his feet. He is one of the fastest if not the fastest player in the League," Kreis said. "He is an extremely competitive professional and should be exactly what our team needs right now."

Offline Trini _2026

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #12 on: June 29, 2005, 08:30:14 PM »
Roja was not ready fuh true well a local club will sign him fuh sure.
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Offline dcs

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #13 on: June 29, 2005, 10:27:29 PM »

Yea, he was trying though but he have some things to work on.
I think he can be a better player....hopefully he finds a new club fast....Pro League and not NSL.

Offline Andre

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #14 on: June 30, 2005, 10:12:32 AM »
trini players just doh have luck in MLS eh. stern, avery john, and brian haynes (who never play for t & t) was de only exceptions.




Offline FF

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #15 on: June 30, 2005, 10:28:36 AM »
trini players just doh have luck in MLS eh. stern, avery john, and brian haynes (who never play for t & t) was de only exceptions.







Brian Haynes has several caps... I am sure I saw him play in some Shell Cups back in de day also WCQ vs Jamaica in 92 I think...

... this looking like a job for "Tallman"

somebody send out de "Tall-Signal"
THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES

Offline football king

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #16 on: June 30, 2005, 10:31:06 AM »
brian hanes definitely play for tt- early 90's i believe right after the strike squad left midfied.

Offline Tallman

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Brian Haynes represented T&T
« Reply #17 on: June 30, 2005, 10:48:47 AM »
Brian Haynes has several caps... I am sure I saw him play in some Shell Cups back in de day also WCQ vs Jamaica in 92 I think...

... this looking like a job for "Tallman"

somebody send out de "Tall-Signal"

I eh know how much caps de man have, but he play in WCQ's ahready. As a matter of fact, he score against Jamaica in de WCQ match yuh referring to. Dat was on August 16, 1992 in Jamaica. We draw 1-1. He also played against Costa Rica in ah WCQ on September 1, 1996.
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Offline Maradona7

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #18 on: June 30, 2005, 11:20:50 AM »
I'm sorry they waited that long!

Offline Andre

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #19 on: June 30, 2005, 12:24:29 PM »
my bad. i though he was a YBT (yankee breed trini).

Offline football king

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Re: Real Salt Lake waives Marlon Rojas
« Reply #20 on: June 30, 2005, 12:26:24 PM »
COME TO THINK OF TI HAYNES SHOULDA BEEN ON THE STRIKE SQUAD-maybe cause he a foreign based.

 

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