MLS last holdout as NASL joins USL in treating Canadian, U.S. players the same
TORONTO — The North American Soccer League has joined the United Soccer League in counting Canadian players as domestics south of the border, leaving Major League Soccer as the lone holdout.
“Canadian players have played a big role in the development of our league on the field,” NASL interim commissioner Rishi Sehgal said in a statement Thursday. “We believe that this change will help us become better contributors to the growth of the game, not only in Canada but in the U.S. as well.”
MLS, which has 19 teams in the U.S. as well as Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal in Canada, is at the top of the soccer pyramid in North America. Both the NASL and USL are operating this year with provisional Division II status, as per the U.S. Soccer Federation.
NASL teams are allowed seven internationals. Under the league’s new rule, any American or Canadian player on an NASL roster will count as domestic and not affect that international player count.


