City SC traded up in the MLS SuperDraft on Tuesday, jumping from No. 50 to No. 17, and used that pick to draft Hosei Kijima, a midfielder from Wake Forest.
Kijima, 21, is from Japan — he watched the draft from there early on what for him was Wednesday morning — and will need an international spot on the City SC roster when he signs with the team. City SC acquired an extra international spot last week from Nashville.
City SC got the No. 17 spot in another trade with Nashville, sending it the No. 50 overall pick and $75,000 of 2024 general allocation money.
“I couldn’t be more thankful for this opportunity,†Kijima said in an interview during Apple TV+ coverage of the draft. “The challenge starts now, and I can’t wait to start on a great journey.â€
He’s already been on a great journey, coming to America from Yokohama, Japan, when he was 12 years old to attend the IMG Academy in Florida to further his soccer career. From there, he went to Wake Forest, starting classes when he was 17. He had nine goals and 10 assists in 63 games over four seasons at Wake Forest and was a second-team all-ACC selection as a senior.
People are also reading…
He has one skill that is always appealing to City SC: versatility. Though he was a midfielder in college, he can also play as an outside back, on the left or the right.
“I think one of my main aspects, or a key, to my game is versatility,†Kijima said to Apple TV+. “I think I can play most of the positions on the field, and mentality-wise, I’ll do my best to perform no matter what position I’m playing. And as long as I’m on the field I’m doing my best to help the team win.â€
City SC went through a series of left backs last season before settling on Anthony Markanich at the end of the season, and the right back spot rotated between veteran Jake Nerwinski and newcomer Akil Watts. Kijima, an eager student of the game who thrives on analyzing formations and tactics, would increase the team’s ability to use the changing formations coach Bradley Carnell loves to have his team utilize.
Kijima played last summer for the Sarasota Paradise in USL League Two and was selected to the all-league team at right back.
In the third round, with the 71st pick overall, City SC picked Brendan McSorley, a forward from Providence College. He led the Friars in points (23) and goals (11). He made the all-Big East first team.
Joey Maher, a defender at Indiana who is from Caseyville, was chosen by Toronto with the first pick of the second round, the 30th pick overall. His older brother Jack plays for Nashville SC, while his younger brother, Josh, has been City SC’s academy system.
City SC announces preseason schedule
After its schedule in the CONCACAF Champions Cup was finalized Monday, City SC announced its preseason schedule Tuesday. As in its first season, the camp will again take the team to Florida and California, and its six-game preseason schedule will include games against the teams that played in the MLS Cup final.
City SC will open camp Jan. 13 in ºüÀêÊÓƵ, two days later than its inaugural camp opened but instead of spending a week in ºüÀêÊÓƵ quickly will relocate to Port St. Lucie, Florida, on Jan. 15 and train there until Jan. 26. Last season, the team trained at Inter Miami’s facility in Fort Lauderdale, but that location figures to be a bit more hectic this year.
While in Florida, City SC will play two preseason games, against Nashville on Jan. 20 and against MLS Cup champion Columbus on Jan. 26. The team will return to ºüÀêÊÓƵ later that day and train at CityPark until heading to California on Feb. 2. The team will start with a game against the Los Angeles Galaxy at its facility in Carson on Feb. 3 and then head to the Coachella Valley Invitational in Indio near Palm Springs for games against Los Angeles FC, which lost the MLS Cup final, on Feb. 7 and the New York Red Bulls on Feb. 10.
The team will return home Feb. 12 and play a closed-door friendly with Louisville City of the USL Championship, a team once coached by City SC assistant coach John Hackworth, on Feb. 15 at CityPark before playing the Houston Dynamo on Feb. 20 in its opening game of the CONCACAF Champions Cup.
MLS will release its regular-season schedule Wednesday.