Canada, perhaps more than most countries in membership with FIFA, has often experienced difficulty defining its professional soccer structure and this is due in part to Canadian teams playing in leagues based in the United States, while at the same time a number of North American leagues have come and gone during the second half of the last century.
Today, there are three Canadian teams – Montreal Impact, the Vancouver Whitecaps and Toronto FC – in membership with the U.S.-based Major League Soccer, while Edmonton FC is the lone Canadian team in a new North American Soccer League which was launched in the
The other component of
It’s been hard to define the three Canadian MLS teams as a Canadian division in
The CSL is the only league in direct membership with
The feasibility study will include similar work done in other countries and is expected to be concluded by the spring of 2012.
The CSL, which has an opportunity to fill that role under the guidance and rules of the CSA, has already planned for eventual expansion on a regional basis. This means except when required for special once-in-a-while championship games involving teams from each region, there will not be extensive travel with the attendant costs that caused the demise of numerous teams and leagues and which plagued North American soccer through to the end of the last century.
It now appears the day is not too far off when this country’s professional soccer will be clearer for everyone and stronger, a favourable development that should help