A few years ago, Ricardo Clark made the move from Major League Soccer’s Houston Dynamo to Eintracht Frankfurt. A few months later, he in the German second division.
Around the same time, Benny Feilhaber was going through a demotion with Denmark’s Aarhus. Thanks to the competitive vagaries of European soccer, not all quests for top-flight action stay on course.
Today, another U.S. international’s announced a move that could turn sour.
After a UEFA Champions League campaign that saw him get a crack at Chelsea, Juventus, and Shakhtar Donestsk, former New England Revolution defender Michael Parkhurst is making the move to Germany’s first division. The 28-year-old has signed a two-and-a-half year deal with Augsburg of the Bundesliga.
Don’t underestimate the role of that “fantastic atmosphere.” It’s a quality that’s benefitting some teams at home, and the consistent presence of large, loud, television-friendly crowds was a major factor in the rise of England’s Premier League. It’s also one of the reasons many evaluate the Bundesliga as the world’s second-best league.
And no doubt about it: This is a great move for Parkhurst. The specter of the second division’s obviously worth noting, but this is his shot at playing in one of the best leagues in the world, even if that only lasts for six months. He not only has to jump at that chance, he should see it as a major career achievement.
“I worked my way into the Bundesliga.” Something nobody can ever take away.
More on Parkhurst’s fit at Augsburg:
As of now, Augsburg sits 17th in the 18-team Bundesliga - relegation territory. They’re three points back of 16th-place Hoffenheim, but that spot’s not exactly safe. That only gets you into a relegation playoff against a 2. Bundesliga team. Augsburg are actually 10 points back of true safety.
So while this is a banner day for Parkhurst - a man who paid his dues in Denmark before getting this big break - in six months, it could turn sour. And for that matter, the professional lives of Hoffenheim’s Fabian Johnson and Danny Williams could take a turn for the worse come May.
Germany’s first division: Taking inventory of its U.S. internationals.