Showing posts with label US National Team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US National Team. Show all posts

Never tell me the odds!

>> Sunday


Get your Dollars, Pesetas, and Euros down now. Odds to win the World Cup, per SI.com. As far as chance for profit goes, I'd say Germany at 12-1 is probably your best bet.

9-2: Spain
9-2: Brazil
6-1: England
9-1: Argentina
12-1: Germany
12-1: Italy
14-1: Netherlands
16-1: France
16-1: Portugal
22-1: Cote d'Ivoire
40-1: Chile
66-1: Ghana
66-1: Paraguay
66-1: Serbia
80-1: USA
80-1: Cameroon
100-1: Mexico
100-1: Australia
100-1: South Africa
100-1: Denmark
100-1: Nigeria
100-1: Greece
100-1: Uruguay
150-1: Switzerland
200-1: Japan
200-1: Slovakia
200-1: Slovenia
250-1: South Korea
300-1: Honduras
300-1: Algeria
500-1: North Korea
1,000-1: New Zealand

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DRAW!

>> Thursday

Tomorrow morning, the ping pong balls will bounce around and the "random" draw for the World Cup will be held. So much of getting out of the group stage next summer in South Africa will be determined on the draw. Unfortunately, the US has been sufficiently screwed in pot allocations.

Since North America is a bit of a footballing ghetto on the world stage, the Yanks have been placed in the group with the other "minnows," teams from Asia and Oceania. It's the Stars and Stripes' curse for being the big fish in a little pond. Teams from the same continent cannot be drawn against each other outside of two European teams in each group (ie: Algeria cannot be drawn against South Africa, Paraguay cannot be drawn against Brazil)

Goal.com has a great piece on what the best and worst-case scenarios would be for Landon, Timmy, Jozy and the gang.

Pot 1 (Seeded teams: Host country and top 7 teams in October '09 FIFA World Rankings)
South Africa
Brazil
Argentina
Spain
England
Italy
Germany
Netherlands

Pot 2 (North American, Asian, and Oceanian teams)
USA
Mexico
Honduras
South Korea
North Korea
Australia
Japan
New Zealand

Pot 3 (African and non-seeded South American teams)
Algeria
Cameroon
Nigeria
Ghana
Ivory Coast
Uruguay
Paraguay
Chile

Pot 4 (Non-seeded European teams)
Serbia
France
Denmark
Portugal
Greece
Switzerland
Slovenia
Slovakia

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Pack Your Bags, Boys

>> Sunday

You're going to South Africa.

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British Empire unaware of the existence of periods

>> Wednesday

As seen here, British announcers have a tendency to use run-on sentences in a way so that a regular sentence is as likely as the result of today's semifinal match in the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup in South Africa (a warmup tournament for the 2010 FIFA World Cup; also in South Africa) where in a gutsy performance by keeper Tim Howard, and on the backs of goals from Villareal benchwarmer Jozy Altidore and Fulham FC role player Clint Dempsey, coupled with incredibly solid games from the US backline of Oguchi Onyewu, Carlos Bocanegra, Wisconsin's own Jay DeMerit, and Chicago's own Jonathan Spector, the United States of America upset Spain; the European Champions and the #1 team in the world, who were owners of a world-record 15-game winning streak, and a tied-world-record 35-game unbeaten streak (having last lost in 2006) by a scoreline of 2-0 to reach their first ever Final in a FIFA competition in a game that has already been dubbed "The Miracle on Turf" and "The Shock Heard Round the World," a reference not only to the 1775 Battle of Lexington, which signaled the beginning of the American Revolutionary War, but also to a 1989 FIFA World Cup Qualifier where the United States faced off against Trinidad and Tobago in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, where Paul Caligiuri scored to lead the US to a 1-0 win, clinching qualification for the 1990 World Cup in Italy, the Yanks' first appearance at soccer's showcase event since 1950.

Next sentence.

EDIT: According to Yanks Abroad, the South African crowd chanted "USA! USA!" in the closing minutes of the game. I can only assume this means that the US and the rest of the world are cool again.

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Random Political/Sports Cameo of the Day

>> Monday

Team USA has called in the big guns in an attempt to land either the 2018 or 2022 FIFA World Cup: Henry Kissinger.

Kissinger was previously part of the US Bid Committee in 1986 that tried to be the backup host after Colombia relinquished the World Cup due to drug violence (the effort was unsuccessful, and the World Cup ended up going to Mexico).

Even if history repeats itself and the US doesn't get to host the World Cup, it will all be worth it if I can hear Kissinger say "Steve Cherundolo" or "Josmer Altidore" in his creepy German mad scientist voice.

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That'll Make for a Tense Second Leg in Barbados

Team USA opened World Cup Qualifying with an emphatic 8-0 throttling of Barbados Sunday. The ball found the back of the Bajan Pride's net in the 1st, 12th, 20th, 59th, 63rd, 82nd, 86th, and 89th minute. The thrashing set a new USA record for margin of victory in a World Cup Qualifier, bettering an 8-1 scoreline against Cayman Islands in 1993. Dempsey's first goal, scored at 0:52 set a new USA record for fastest score from the start of a game.

If USA scores the first goal in Sunday's return leg in Barbados, the hosts will need to score 10 goals to advance to the regional semifinals.

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US National Team Good Enough to get Relegated from the Premiership

>> Wednesday

SI.com offered "Fulhamerica!" as its title, but I wanted something that sounded less like some cheesy stage show.


US National Team member Eddie Johnson signed with Fulham FC of the English Premier League. Johnson is the fifth American on the West London club's 25-man roster; joining fellow "colonials" Clint "There aren't enough rap songs about soccer..." Dempsey, Carlos "Charley Blackmouth" Bocanegra, washed-up goalkeeper Kasey Keller, and Chicago area product and all-around badass Brian McBride.
Sadly, Johnson may not be a Premiership player for long. It has long been agreed on internet message boards devoted to the Beautiful game that the best team in MLS is probably on par with the best team in the League Championship (England's Triple-A) or the worst team in the Premiership (still would be one of the best 40 teams in the world). Sadly, in Fulham's case, this appears to be a dead-on prediction.
Each season the three worst teams in the EPL are sent down to "the minors" and replaced with three of the best teams from the League Championship. Fulham is presently in 19th out of 20 teams- five points from safety and will need Johnson's scoring touch to kickstart their escape from the drop zone.

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Stop! Grammar Time!

>> Thursday

Sometimes spell check just isn't enough.

"The United States will play Poland in an exhibition March 26 in preparation for the European Championship."


I was not aware that the United States was in Europe. I hope our extension cords work in their outlets.
Correct version: "POLAND will play THE UNITED STATES in an exhibition March 26 in preparation for the European Championship."

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World Cup Draw Features Political Intrigue Aplenty

>> Sunday

While parts of the world have been moving towards FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010 for some time now, the draws for North America, Europe, Africa, and Asia were completed today. As always, the interesting part is seeing

A) Where there's the most chance for soccer to bring out the worst in people by becoming a metaphor for their national existence, and
B) Who Team USA is playing, "cuz this is Am-ay-ree-ka"

The answer to the latter is the winner of the Dominica-Barbados first round home-and-home-total-goals series. The Stars and Stripes received a bye to the second round series. Should Dominica advance, it could even mean two home games for the Americans. Dominica's facilities were somewhat lacking during qualification for the 2006 World Cup, and had to play their "home" game for their series against Mexico in San Antonio in front of a pro-Mexico crowd.

Should USA advance (Which is a damn near certainty), then they will enter a group stage semifinal round. Their opponents for this group will likely be Trinidad and Tobago, Cuba, and Guatemala. Of the three group stage semifinals, this one is shaping up as the most interesting. For starters, it is the only semifinal stage to have two teams who qualified for the 2006 World Cup (USA, T&T). It also features a politically-charged match in Havana as the US travels to Cuba. Guatemala is also always a tough trip. The top two in the group advance to the Regional Finals in 2009. The US should advance, but it could get dicey along the way.

Elsewhere, the Asian draw features a spicy North Korea-South Korea matchup in Group 3.

Likewise, the European draw seems to be little short on drama.

  • Group 5 features regional heavyweights Turkey against minnows Armenia. Turkey perpetrated a genocide against Armenians many years ago and a lot of people haven't let it go. Could get prickly.
  • Group 6 not only features England against Croatia (the team that knocked them out of the 2008 European Championships), but also three different former Soviet Republics playing against each other (Belarus, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan). Ethnic hatred galore.
  • Group 4 features Russia going against former Dubya-Dubya-Two enemies Finland and Germany
  • Group 3 features the Czechoslovakia reunion as Czech Rep. and Slovakia meet. Also, fun with tongue-tied announcers as Slovakia faces off against Slovenia.
  • Group 8 sees Ireland return to the site of their humiliating defeat to Cyprus. It also sees tiny Montenegro, in their first official competition as a footballing nation, taking on World Champions Italy. Welcome to the party, boys.
  • Group 2 is WIDE OPEN. There really is no clear favorite among Israel, Greece, Switzerland, Latvia, Luxembourg, and Moldova. Frankly there shouldn't be.
Top Political Drama matches
USA-Cuba, Russia-Germany, Czech Rep.-Slovakia, Turkey-Armenia, Korea Republic-Korea DPR

Top GAMES to look forward to
England-Croatia, Possibly Canada-Mexico, Scotland-Netherlands, Italy-Ireland, England-Ukraine, Russia-Germany.

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People who cover Landon Donovan think he's a great player

I know otherwise.

Landon Donovan has won the Honda US Player of the Year award.
The reason was because he scored 9 goals this year during National team duty. That is fucking horseshit. 5 of those goals were scored from the penalty spot, where if you miss, there is a major problem with your offensive capability.

Had YCS been given a vote, my vote would have been for goalkeeper Tim Howard or defender Carlos Bocanegra, who anchored a US "First-Team" backline that surrendered 8 goals in 13 matches (4 to Brazil). But because the award is voted on by the media, and Landy's the most-recognized player, he gets it.

I'm not sure if I'm more pissed off that Donovan won it, or that the soccer writers who vote on the award just didn't bother to do any research.

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I Think I'll Take That Bet

>> Tuesday

Now that the dust has settled from last week's catfight/"First and Ten"-a-thon/FIFA Women's World Cup, SI.com's Grant Wahl all but proclaims that the United States MEN'S National Team will win their first FIFA World Cup before the United States WOMEN'S National Team wins their third.

Wahl stops just shy of making the audacious to say the least claim on the back of this paragraph.
The U.S. men out-Brazil(ed) Brazil at the Under-20 World Cup this summer. The U.S. men are producing more talented players than ever before. Last year's World Cup results notwithstanding -- the U.S. men are a growth stock, a program on a slow but undeniably upward trajectory.

I'll go with him on that, but here's the problem with that turn of phrase. It's kind of like saying if I start walking north from Mexico City eventually I'll hit Canada. It's true, but that doesn't mean it will happen anytime soon. Despite the admittedly rapid rise of the sport in America on a proficiency level, youth level, and in public awareness over the last 10 years, the training, coaching, fan interest, and general player identification and grooming infrastructure is so far below the traditional world contenders like France, Germany, Brazil and the like that while they're on a climb, it could take a while to get to the point where the Yanks are legitimately mentioned among the favorites coming into a World Cup. (In 2006 they were mentioned as a "dark horse to win it" by ESPN, a tag which I thought was overwhelmingly generous.)


I think Wahl fails to realize just what an exclusive club World Cup Winners are. It's perhaps one of the most exclusive clubs in sports. Since the first World Cup in 1930, only 7 nations have won the World Cup (Brazil, Argentina, France, Germany, England, Uruguay, Italy). Those powers (except maybe England and Uruguay) aren't going anywhere and will be among the top dogs for years to come. Established international powers who have been in the game and succeeding for far longer than the US has are still without a World Cup. Portugal, Holland, Russia, Turkey, Spain, and Mexico are still sitting on ZERO titles. The USMNT has admittedly become the dominant regional power, but then again, teams like Tunisia, South Korea, and Australia are also dominant regional powers, and they aren't winning World Cups any time soon either.

Meanwhile, despite the USWNT's loss to Brazil in the recently concluded FIFA Women's World Cup, the Lady Nats are likewise at their core, a young team. The relaunch of a professional women's league in 2009 could do for the US Women's National Team what the launch of MLS in 1996 did for the Men's team, by giving it a shot in the arm. Players could finally hone their skills through regular meaningful competition. In fact, the new league might even help MORE than MLS helped the men because due to the lack of professional women's leagues around the world, the United States league, however low paying (rumored team-wide Salary cap of $1 million) may be among the highest paid in the world. Women's players from around the world could be coming to the US in the same way that men's players around the world go to Europe.

The tournaments themselves are slanted more heavily against the men winning a World Cup before the women. The Women qualify out of the North American region, where they more or less get a pass to the semifinals because there is not that much competition. The games are played in California in front of a crowd of pigtails and thundersticks. The men slog it out over two years of qualifying in blistering Latin American heat in front of hostile crowds in a much deeper talent pool. Their reward? A trip to the World Cup Finals where in some cases, one loss in group play against a collection of the world's best could mean the end of your tournament. The 32-team mens' tournament also contains a round of 16 knockout stage that the 16-team WWC (for now) does not.

Let's even look at the current rash of results. Before the loss to Brazil, the US Women had not lost in 51 straight games. That included matches against regional and world heavyweights. They bounced back from their loss to Brazil with a 4-1 annihilation of world power Norway in the third place game, and preceded the loss with a 3-0 destruction of rising power England in the quarterfinals. The men on the other hand are finally playing some top-flight opposition outside of qualifying and World Cups, but are in a bit of a slump; failing to get the victories in meaningful competitions and friendly exhibitions alike, and being outscored 13-4 in their last 5 games.

Even the suggestion that a US Women's team that is already among the world's best and will now be receiving more regular top-flight-competition will not get the requisite luck needed in cup tournaments before the Men's team crashes the exclusive cabal that is FIFA World Cup winners is laughable.

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Son-of-a-BITCH! Law School I hate you already!!!!

>> Monday

One day.

Literally, one day after moving into my new pad in the Gateway City (Radio stations start with Ks here!!! WIERD?!?!?!), the USSF (based in my usual stomping grounds of Chicago) has announced that instead of traveling to Mexico City on September 9th to take on Mexico for the third time this year, the US Men's National Team will be playing an international friendly against Brazil at Soldier Field.

The Gold Cup Champs will be taking on the Copa America champs for what I can only imagine is for the title of "Champion of the Western Hemisphere."

Thanks guys. Thanks a whole lot. Your timing is PERFECT.

I'll probably miss out on a spontaneous full-contact game on the concourses too. Weak.


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Time to go, Kasey

I've always been a Kasey Keller fan. It's kind of hard not to be. The man was tough-as-nails on the field, easily one of the best (if not the greatest) American goalkeeper in history, a metalhead who rarely gave a shit in interviews with the press, and lives in a German castle. But it's time for him to go.

Keller is listed as the Americans' starting goalkeeper for tonight's Copa America match against Paraguay. The whole point of sending a roster devoid of stars and regulars to Copa America was to develop the kids. By exposing a young group of players to the intense pressure cookers and world-class teams in South America's premier tournament, the team hoped to have a leg up for the bright lights of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

Kasey Keller will not and SHOULD NOT be on that team. He is 37 years old now, and will be 40 come 2010. He's at least the 3rd or 4th best keeper in the US Player Pool. While Keller was a great keeper for the US National Team, "was" is the key word in that sentence. More cerebral goalkeepers can play into their 40s, but a keeper like K eller whose skills are based more on quick reaction time and reflex saves cannot. Keller's continued inclusion on the roster can only be attributed to misplaced loyalty for his years of service or to serve as a "field general" or "mentor to the kids." However, both of these can be accomplished in a coaching or reserve keeper role.

So what's the alternative? In the United States' 4-1 loss to Argentina last week, admittedly no keeper could save the US from Argentina's world-class strikers, but had backup keeper Brad Guzan (who figures to be on the 2010 World Cup roster) been playing, the US could have at least gotten some player development and experience out of the process. Keller still believes he is a top-flight keeper, despite being cut from his now-Second Division German club. With Keller's aging body and slowing reflexes, it is plainly obvious to anyone who watched his performance against Argentina, or against Canada in the Gold Cup, that he has lost a step. I wish him the best of luck finding a new club, but it is clear that he is the past, not the future of the US National Team, and as such, should be benched by Coach Bradley.

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"Act like you've been there before"

That's what my Dad always told me on the rare off-chance that I actually succeeded at something on the field of play. My entire soccer career from "the Lazers" through Creeping Death United, I only scored one goal. It was celebrated with a single fist pump and a congratulations of my fellow "Orange Crush" teammates in the Willowbrook Park District U-13 league. Act like you've been there before, sez the man who controlled my meager allowance. Had I known that would be the only goal I would score in at least the next ten years, I probably would have lived it up a little more, making a total ass of myself in the process.

Besides, acting like you've been there before is never fun. As such, on this blog, we've noticed we sometimes sputter in our predictions. Despite all our collective sports expertise, sometimes the games just don't play out the way we think they will, or the way we think they should. But this is one time where I was dead on, and I don't mind crowing about it, because it may be another decade before I nail a prediction this well. I'm celebrating like I've never been here before, and like I never will. [pop open champagne bottle]

Back in February, with US soccer fans bitching and moaning about the US staking the CONCACAF Gold Cup as its priority tournament this summer, instead of the glitzier Copa America, where the US would get a chance to slug it out with world heavyweights Argentina and Brazil, I dove inside US Coach Bob Bradley's head and figured it all out. And I couldn't have been more correct [cartwheels]. Say what you will about soccer and its relative importance in the US sports landscape, but as far as this blog goes, we didn't really have the best of success with our "Lock of the Week" in football season so we should take anything we can get.

Back in February I posited that Bradley would send his cream-of-the-crop team to the Gold Cup to earn a berth in the FIFA Confederations Cup 2009, a sort of BCS-style dry-run the year before the World Cup in the same stadiums. I then said the States would send a younger, B-team to Copa America that would then be coming into its prime in three years for the 2010 World Cup, during which time they'd have already played on the world stage. [shooting off fireworks]

Wouldn't you know? Team USA won the Gold Cup, defeating Mexico 2-1 in front of a pro-Mexican crowd at Soldier Field Sunday. [Firing six-shooters into the air]
Then, Coach Bradley released a Copa America roster with 16 players with 10 or fewer caps (appearances for the National team), but who look to make up the bulk of the 2010 World Cup team. While we may not know for sure how this will all shake out for three years, I think I've got a decent idea, and that's more than assholes like Jamie Trecker had.

So I hate to say "I told you so," but I kinda did, and on this blog, that comes not nearly as often as we'd like.

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Bob Bradley (like everyone) is smarter than Jamie Trecker

Several news outlets including the Joe Morgan to my Vinnie, Jamie Trecker at Fox Sports, apparently have some beef with Team USA's priorities.

With new USA coach Bob Bradley 2-0 and still with his interim tag attached, questions are abounding about this relatively unique upcoming summer in US Soccer. The Gold Cup, the regional championship of North America ends just a few days before Copa America, the regional championship tournament of South America, where the Yanks are invited guests along with Mexico.

There is a belief out there that the United States Soccer Federation is misguided in fielding two teams for the two tournaments (because clubs will be reluctant to release their players for so long), and that the US is wasting a chance to earn some serious respect in the international soccer community by sending its B team to Venezuela this summer to take on first round opponents Argentina, Paraguay, and Columbia, while its A team stays home to try and hoist the oversized Gold Cup at Soldier Field on June 23 (DAMN MY COUSIN FOR SCHEDULING HER WEDDING THAT SAME WEEKEND!!!!) The Americans are the favorites to win the 2007 Gold Cup and are also defending champions.

Isn't the point of being in Copa America to try and earn some respect by playing in front of an international crowd and get some experience in front of hostile crowds? Why not send the best team you can to Venezuela and try to win the tournament? Claim a scalp against Argentina, or maybe a second-round draw with Brazil? That would go a long way towards regaining the reputation the Stars and Stripes lost at the last World Cup.
True, but frankly, only to me and other people who visit soccer message boards. You can have all the respect in the world (cough, Spain, cough) and it still won't get you results at the World Cup.
Bob Bradley isn't stupid. He knows soccer is still a niche sport in the United States and that by and large, the success of the sport is hinged to the success of the National team, and the casual sports fan only tunes in once every four years in June for the World Cup Finals.

Bob Bradley's plan here is almost absurdly brilliant. Bring your A-team to the Gold Cup , win the North American championship, and earn yourself a place in the Confederations Cup, a tournament held the year before the World Cup in the same country, featuring the 6 continental confederation winners, the World Cup Champion, and the host nation. Send your B-team, full of young, untested prospects to Copa America and see if you can't claim a scalp or two while you're down there.

The team in their prime runs through a weak Gold Cup field (Guadeloupe? Cuba? Honduras? Canada?) and gets USA to the 2009 Confederations Cup, potentially getting matches with World Cup sides Italy, France, possibly Brazil again , and a hungry South Africa team in the same stadiums as will play host to the World Cup the next summer. By that time, the 2007 Gold Cup Champions will be too old to warrant serious consideration for the World Cup squad, but the 2007 Copa America team will be coming into their prime, having already experienced hostile crowds and high-pressure situations in Venezuela two years earlier. Even if let's say on the far outside fringe shot that the United States knocks off Brazil and Argentina to win Copa America, that still won't get them to the Confederations Cup in 2009 because as a North American team they can't represent South America in that tournament.
When the team arrives in South Africa the next summer, most of them will have already been there the year before, and that added familiarity can't possibly hurt on the world's biggest stage, the only international stage that Americans really pay attention to, and in a non-European World Cup, where history has shown that European teams traditionally underperform in, opening the door for US overachievement like in South Korea in 2002.

Bob Bradley's not stupid. He knows his job security depends on World Cup success, and he's aiming for it by serving youth in South America this July.

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