In early December last year, and just as Adam Braz was reacquainting himself with the club, the Impact set about finally announcing the re-signing of club captain Patrice Bernier and the addition of two new players in Marco Donadel and Nigel Reo-Coker. In light of the fact so many under-performing players from 2014 had previously been jettisoned, it was nothing too surprising to learn the Impact 2015 squad was filling out. Between that time and through this week, the polar opposite of a fire sale has occurred down Stade Saputo way. Through the official FIFA January transfer window period, club lawyers and bean counters have burned even more midnight oil than their irrational Barclays Premier League cousins. Not ever in the Impact’s 20-plus-year history have we bore witness to such frenzied activity on the trade and talent upgrade fronts. Frank Klopas laid it out to TSN.ca following an extended training session at Olympic Stadium on Thursday evening. “Obviously, we evaluated the season, he said. We had a plan. Our plan was to strengthen the spine of the team. So we went out and I think we’ve accomplished that”. No kidding, Frank. At last count, I think the Impact now have more central midfielders and centre-halves than there are balls in the training camp kitbags for them to have one each. Sharing duties on the pitch during the course of the season and sharing balls off it will certainly go a long way in the all-important relationship-building stakes. In so much, the player ranks have swelled, but the marquee signing the club had expected, and are in desperate need of, hasnt materialized. It was exactly a week ago we found out 32-year old Alberto Gilardino would not be leaving China for Canada. Any club worth its salt always has a Plan B, plus other options up its sleeve. Klopas would not be drawn, though, on who that player specifically is. If, indeed, he, or they, still even realistically exist. Instead, Klopas preferred to remind us of how fickle the murky world of football transfer dealings is. Obviously, we had more than one player, explained Klopas. Gilardino was definitely a player we were interested in, but obviously, you have to have more than one player in mind because things like this happen.” After the type of gruelling season Klopas had, that was then quickly followed up with an action packed off-season, ask yourself how many football managers would have done what he willingly did when he had some down time to catch his breath and take a much needed vacation. “I think it’s the most difficult time for us [head coaches] the off season, but I managed to grab 10 days vacation, Klopas said. I went with my wife and mother-in-law to St. Maarten. Taking the mother–in-law to the Caribbean? With a sense of humour like that, book that man a spot in this year’s Just For Laughs Festival. In light of the fact the Impact rebuild has reached the topping-out stage with the extreme likelihood there will be few, if any more, additions or subtractions come the scheduled season kick off in away to DC United on March 7, I asked Klopas how confident he was that the squad he now oversees will reach the promised land that is the MLS playoffs. He seemed to give a thumbs up. “I’m always very optimistic, said Klopas. More so this season because of the changes we made. Every year we are competing for a championship and getting into the playoffs is the first step.” A walking before running philosophy will serve Klopas, his players, the club front office and the fans well this season. This, after all, is the club that finished dead last in MLS in 2014. The 19th franchise, finishing in 19th place, during the league’s 19th season is hardly the marketing speak which will help resurrect the Stade Saputo gate, one which last season saw well over a 15 per cent drop-off when compared the previous year. Then add in the fact that rarely, if ever ,did the Impact look like they could actually win a match away from the intimate confines of Stade Saputo. Achieving that in 2015 is not the biggest challenge confronting Klopas this season. Blending all the brand new separate and diverse personalities, egos, accents and dialects into the singular cohesive unit will take far greater effort and will only come with time. Alongside thi,s the players, especially when things go pear-shaped, will have to set aside personal issues for the better good of the whole. It’s unrealistic to expect the players will get on fabulously at all times. But just like diving, fake it if you have to. The road to the playoffs has been made considerably easier to attain as, yet again, the MLS playoff equation has a brand new formula for 2015. Mathematically speaking, you now have a far greater chance to advance than ever before in league history. That figure now sits at an inflation-busting 60 per cent. Not sure this was the best idea for a league that will roll the red carpet out all season long as it celebrates its 20th anniversary. Two seemingly ever presents during recent seasons in the Eastern Conference playoffs in Sporting KC and the Dynamo have been sent to the far tougher Western Conference to make room for the dynamic expansion duo of New York City FC and Orlando City. Klopas, though, doesn’t view this as beneficial to the Impacts cause. “I think every team has got better, he explained. I know that even the two expansion teams have bought in some quality players. Two strong teams moved on, but I know that the new teams that have come in to replace them are quality, so it’s going to be an exciting and interesting season”. Currently half-way through a two-week indoor training camp stint at Olympic Stadium, the Impact will next embark on the second phase of training camp, where in preparation for February 24s CONCACAF Champions League first leg against in Pachuca, they will leave February 8tfor the much warmer Mexican clime for the vitally important outdoor phase. Yet to play any friendly matches, Klopas confirmed to TSN.ca this will all change in Mexico. “There will be at least three games, said Klopas. Cruz Azul reserve team will be one opponent and we are currently finalizing other matches. We haven’t finalized them yet, but are close to doing so.” How appropriate it would be if one such opponent turns out to be Santos Laguna? Time to pack Eddie Sebrango in their carry-ons. Speaking of baggage, there is very little sign that the white smoke of a CBA deal is even close to emerging – with each passing day, the overhang of a player strike increases in probability. Free agency, an absolute mandatory condition for the players, could well be the torch paper for a scenario that, if it were to come to fruition, could place MLS way back to the dark days of planet futbol ridicule. When I engaged Klopas on how confident he felt the season would start on schedule, the diplomat in him emerged. “There’s always that thought in our minds, but it is out of our control, he said. So we hope for the best and that there will be a resolution which is the best for everyone involved.” Let’s hope both sides, when making their final considerations and offers, do so by first of all asking themselves one vital, but continually overlooked, question in any CBA discussions - Is this in the best interests of our fans? If not, MLS and MLSPA, then take your ball and go home for a final think. Klopas and his squad will welcome Impact supporters with open arms during Saturday morning’s open practice session at Olympic Stadium, something that Klopas is relishing. He’s got to know the Impact support up close for over a year now and is most appreciative of what he has seen and heard. “The thing for me I found last season is that the fans here in Montreal are extremely passionate about their team, Klopas said. I believe Saturday morning’s open practice is a fantastic opportunity for them to come out and support us and see firsthand the new players we have bought into the team. I am looking forward actually to seeing a lot of our fans come out Saturday morning to Olympic Stadium.” And with that as the late evening emerged and signaled the end of an eight-hour Olympic Stadium shift, Klopas likely went straight home and cooked supper...for three. I wonder if the mother-in-law did the washing up. Noel.Butler@BellMedia.ca @TheSoccerNoel on Twitter Nike Vapormax Panske .com) - Wimbledon runner-up Eugenie Bouchard notched a win, while second-seeded two-time champion Ana Ivanovic, third- seeded Australian Open runner-up Dominika Cibulkova and fifth seed Sabine Lisicki all exited the draw at the Generali Ladies Linz tennis event. Vapormax Plus Bílé . -- John Fox will coach the Denver Broncos from the sideline and not the booth upon his return Sunday five weeks after heart surgery. http://www.vapormaxlevne.cz/vapormax-flyknit-boty.html . Cavaliers shooting guard Craig Ehlo makes a solid play on the ball, but still Jordan hits the amazing shot. Vapormax Boty Cz . Cavaliers shooting guard Craig Ehlo makes a solid play on the ball, but still Jordan hits the amazing shot. Vapormax Off White Fake . Head of clinic Josef Obrist tells the Austria Press Agency on Thursday that Morgenstern "is doing surprisingly well. ... He still has a memory gap but thats nothing unusual." Morgenstern has moved to a rehabilitation clinic in Klagenfurt for further recovery.NYON, Switzerland -- Big-spending clubs Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain were fined 60 million euros ($82 million) by UEFA on Friday and ordered to limit their Champions League squads to 21 players next season for breaching the bodys financial fair play rules. In the first series of sanctions handed down by UEFA over its new regulations meant to curb over-spending by wealthy owners, nine clubs in all were handed punishments -- but those given to the Premier League winner and the French champion were by far the heaviest. City said it will accept the sanctions and will not appeal, but insisted that the club has a "fundamental disagreement" with UEFA about its "interpretations of the FFP regulations on players purchased before 2010." PSG also accepted the punishment "in spite of the tremendous handicap they represent in terms of the clubs ability to fully compete on an equal footing against Europes biggest teams." PSG also said in a statement that it "deplores the fact" that UEFA hasnt recognized "the full value" of its partnership with the Qatar Tourism Authority, which the governing body said was inflated. The fines given to City and PSG are the heaviest ever handed by out UEFA. However, UEFA said 40 million euros will be returned to the clubs if they fulfil their financial obligations over the next two years. Those obligations include limiting the deficits to 10 million euros in the financial year ending in 2015 for City, with PSG allowed a deficit of 30 million euros for that period before being obligated to break even by 2016. City said it expects to break even by the end of 2014. UEFA said both clubs have agreed to "significantly limit" their spending in the transfer market over the next two years. However, City said it is allowed to spend 60 million euros, plus whatever it earns for selling players, in this summers transfer window. It said the UEFA sanction "will have no material impact on the clubs planned transfer activity." The reduced Champions League squads may not have much of an impact either. Teams are ordinarily allowed 25-man squads for the competition, but few end up using that many. Cityy and PSG both used 21 players on the field this past season -- not counting unused substitutes.dddddddddddd "Our ambition to build one of the best and most competitive European Football clubs will not be undermined by these measures," said PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi. "We will continue to invest in developing a highly competitive team and will continue our investments in our stadium and training infrastructures while at the same time remaining, as we are today "debt free." The FFP rules require clubs who play in the Champions League and Europa League to balance their finances, and are meant to curb huge investments by owners and excessive spending on transfers. The sanctions were handed down five years after UEFA President Michel Platini launched the program to tackle "cheating" by overspending. No club was expelled from next seasons Champions League or Europa League, which had been billed as the harshest punishment available. The other clubs to have failed FFP were Galatasaray, Trabzonspor and Bursaspor from Turkey, Russian sides Zenit St Petersburg, Anzhi Makhachkala and Rubin Kazan, as well as Levski Sofia from Bulgaria. Those were handed fines ranging from 200,000 euros -- for Galatasaray, Trabzonspor, Levski and Bursaspor -- to 12 million euros for Zenit. UEFA was expected to rule against Man City and PSG, which far exceeded a limit of 45 million-euro losses over the first two seasons of very complex accounting rules for FFP assessment. Both clubs tried to balance their finances with inflated sponsorship deals linked to their owners in Abu Dhabi and Qatar, respectively. City was also scrutinized for booking tens of millions in revenue from selling image rights and consultancy fees to third parties. Critics of FFP say it was effectively manipulated during UEFAs lengthy consultation with clubs who saw an opportunity to lock out emerging rivals whose new, wealthy owners wanted to spend quickly to join the elite. Clubs such as Barcelona, Bayern Munich, Manchester United and Real Madrid, which have lucrative commercial deals worldwide, will all likely benefit from City and PSG now having to rein in their transfer strategy. ' ' '