Friendly: USA-Holland report card

Posted by Creaven on March 4, 2010 under USMNT, United States | 8 Comments to Read

Stuart-Holden-001In six months, the United States-Holland friendly on March 3 in Amsterdam will be remembered by U.S. fans for one of two reasons:

1. People will vaguely remember Jonathan Bornstein throwing away any chance of a starting spot at the World Cup and the national team resurrection of DaMarcus Beasley.

Or.

2. People will vividly remember it as the match Stuart Holden’s 2010 World Cup ended before it began.

I really hope it’s No. 1. Not only do I like Holden, but I think he’s a critical player for the U.S. If it was up to me, he would be the starting right midfielder against England even if everyone is healthy. But that’s assuming Nigel de Jong didn’t snap his shin in half (see the previous blog post).

When it comes to the team’s performance, I thought it was a mostly positive 2-1 defeat. To the grades…

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The MLS SuperDraft car wreck

Posted by Creaven on January 15, 2010 under Major League Soccer | 12 Comments to Read

RackMultipart.10135.0_featureAwwwww, Major League Soccer. If anyone should be an MLS fan it should be me. I grew up playing the sport; I love watching the sport; I’ve covered the sport at the high school, college and professional level; I have a blog called IntelligentSoccer.com. If the MLS can’t win me over there’s something seriously wrong.

So why doesn’t MLS connect with me? First, the product is terrible compared to other leagues. Why would I want to watch the Kansas City Wizard play the Columbus Crew when, every week, I can watch matches from the English Premier League, La Liga, Seire A and Bundesliga? What is MLS’s solution to the product problem? Expansion, of course. Copying the NHL’s over expansion plan might no be a brilliant idea, just throwing it out there.

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World Cup Qualifying: United States-T&T report card and more stuff

Posted by Creaven on September 11, 2009 under Premier League, USMNT, United States | 11 Comments to Read

cup550It’s always encouraging when you field a bad team and win on the road. It took some luck — Cornell Glenn hitting the crossbar, Ricardo Clark turning into Steven Gerrard for a split second — but the United States beating Trinidad and Tobago 1-0, is a result the Americans probably had to get.

But let me reiterate, this team Bob Bradley selected was bad. If this exact lineup plays against Hondurus Oct. 10 the U.S. loses by at least two goals (I think U.S. is the underdog against Honduras no matter what the lineup is). That said, the Americans left the Port-of-Spain with three points and that’s what’s important.

To the grades…

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English Premier League: Altidore, ESPN, Liverpool and Spector

Posted by Creaven on August 27, 2009 under England, Premier League | 6 Comments to Read

gerrard_gutted_2I’ve had multiple column ideas bouncing in my head the last couple days but haven’t been able to focus on one thing. So, to solve this, I’m just going to write about everything.

Here we go…

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Fantasy: Play fantasy soccer with IntelligentSoccer.com

Posted by Creaven on August 2, 2009 under England, Fantasy, Premier League | 4 Comments to Read

teaser-enI know there are some purists out there who detest fantasy sports. That’s great, but I don’t want to hear it. To me, the invention and explosion of fantasy sports is the third best thing to happen in sports in the last 30 years (dozens of sports channels on television is No. 1 and the Internet is No. 2).

Fantasy gives fans an excuse to dissect the minutia of sports, it opens up hundreds of debates (Is Player A better than Player B? Is Player B better than Player C?) and it gives the fan a reason to watch games between terrible teams. I LOVE fantasy sports!

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Confederations Cup: United States vs. Brazil reaction

Posted by Creaven on June 30, 2009 under USMNT, United States, World | 25 Comments to Read

88153494RM147_USA_v_Brazil_Note: First, sorry I’m way late. Second, I’m not doing a report card because I’ve read other people ratings and I feel like it has poisoned by objectiveness.

Re-watching the Confederations Cup final is a painful exercise for U.S. fans.

First, you watch the first half. Dempsey’s flick and the Davies-Donovan give-and-go-and-goal puts a smile on your face. You realize at the end of the first half, U.S. soccer had just completed the greatest 225 minutes in its history. In that span, the U.S. out-scored its opposition 7-0, it beat the No. 1 team in the world and was up 2-0 against the best team in South America; it might be decades before U.S. soccer has a better stretch.

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Confederations Cup: United States vs. Spain report card

Posted by Creaven on June 24, 2009 under USMNT, United States, World | 26 Comments to Read

ba-south_africa__0500301228Outside of the World Cup, the United States’ 2-0 victory over Spain Wednesday was its most impressive victory ever.

Torres, Villa, Xavi, Fabergas, Puyol, Pique, Casillas — these aren’t very good players, they’re the best in the world. Even with the loss, the reigning European Champions and No. 1 team on the planet are still the clear-cut favorites to win the World Cup next year and are one of the best national teams ever. For Americans who might not be soccer fans, Spain aren’t the equivlant of the 2009 Lakers, they’re closer to the 1996 Bulls.

For the U.S., who seemed on the verge of crisis four days ago, to beat Spain, who hadn’t lost in 35 matches (and had won 15 straight), is almost beyond comprehension. As fantastic a victory as it is, this doesn’t make the U.S. World Cup contenders (or even favorites to get out of the group stage), but who cares. On a field on the Southern tip of Africa the U.S. scored more goals than the best team in the world. Unbelievable.

To the grades……

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Confederations Cup: United States vs. Egypt report card

Posted by Creaven on June 21, 2009 under USMNT, United States, World | 81 Comments to Read

South Africa Egypt US Confed Cup Soccer“I could explain the scenario to you, on how the United States could make into the semifinals, but we would be on television longer than Jerry Lewis on Labor Day.”

A pretty weak joke by ESPN’s Recce Davis before the U.S.’s Confederations Cup match against Egypt Sunday. In reality, it wasn’t too complicated. The U.S. and Brazil needed to win 3-0. But I get what Davis was saying: it was mathematically possible for the U.S. to get into the semifinals, but highly improbable.

Two hours later, what seemed not just improbable but impossible had happened. A team that hadn’t scored a goal in the run of play in four matches scored three as the U.S. shocked Egypt, 3-0. Brazil scored three times on what has historically been the best defensive team in the world, beating the Italians 3-0 (when was the last time Italy lost by three goals?).

The Confederations Cup: Where amazing beyond comprehension happens.

To the grades…

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Confederations Cup: United States vs. Brazil report card

Posted by Creaven on June 18, 2009 under USMNT, United States, World | 19 Comments to Read

South Africa US Brazil Confed Cup SoccerBrazil beating the United States 3-0 isn’t what made Thursday’s performance disgraceful. Brazil is one of the best teams in the world and, in short, the U.S. isn’t. But not showing up, playing scared, stupid mistakes, puzzling tactics and a lack of passion made the U.S.’s loss one of its most embarrassing in modern history. The match felt over after a couple minutes and was over after 20 minutes. To the grades….

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Confederations Cup: United States vs. Italy report card

Posted by Creaven on June 15, 2009 under USMNT, United States, World | 42 Comments to Read

 

Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press

Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press

“Yikes” is what I said when I saw Ricardo Clark throw his legs at Gennaro Guttuso.

“Awwwww,” is what I said when I saw the red card above Clark’s head.

I talked myself into the United States getting a draw against Italy (maybe even winning) but all my hope burst out of me when Clark was ejected in the 32nd minute. Donovan’s penalty did make me think,”well, you never know,” but it was impossible to ignore reality.

The top tactician in the world, up a man, with world-class players was going into halftime to figure out a strategy to break down a backline of Spector, DeMerit, Onyewu and Bornstien. There was no way the U.S. was going to hold on and they didn’t. In 45 minutes, 1-0 U.S. turned into 3-1 Italy. To the grades….

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