Sunday, October 18, 2009
Links
The Original Winger has a video of US National Team Fans celebrating the win at CBS Scene here.
Oh ladies, Cosmo had picked Taylor Twellman as one of the 51 Sexiest Bachelors. Link comes complete with cheesy boy band type photo and banal quotes.
Charlie Davies has been moved out of the intensive care. US soccer has a whole section of their website for updates on how he is doing and fans can email him at charliedavies9@yahoo.com
Scene and Heard

A couple of additional notes about watching at CBS Scene.
First about the broadcast - the closed circuit broadcast was pretty poor. The picture was not sharp and they would show 7 or 8 consecutive replays and then cut back to the game and you had no idea what you missed. The broadcasters doing the English broadcast were great though. I don't know who they were, but ESPN should hire them and replace Harkes and Delacamera immediately. They were incisive and knew the game. They pointed out things that Casey was doing well that Harkes for one would have missed. He would have moaned about how Casey wasn't chasing the ball enough - just like he always does about Dempsey. I am not sure what Harkes looks for in a soccer player, but I think it must involve constant pointless running around. At any rate listening to announcers who really knew soccer was refreshing.
Second being at CBS Scene meant I saw some soccer celebrities. At the table across from our booth Max Bretos (of FSC) was sitting with two bouncer looking guys who I can only assume were bodyguards. He must be worried that some Massachusetts fans were going to rough him up for constantly referring to Jay Heaps as being from New Hampshire when everyone knows he grew up and played high school soccer in Longmeadow, MA. And rather then actually watch the game, he was constantly talking on his cell phone or texting. The only time I heard cheers from his table was when Honduras scored their first goal. It just confirmed my already low opinion of him from listening to his announcing idiocy on FSC. And then during one of the trips to the restroom I was standing in line next to Greg Lalas who announces for Channel 38. I was tempted to ask him why he got all the brain in the Lalas family, but decided that wasn't a good idea. I am sure they were other NE soccer celebrities there (our friend Herb mentioned he had talked to Mike Burns), but alas, I would not know most of them from Adam.
US score a coup in Honduras
So once the New England Revolution game was over we trooped down to the entrance for the closed circuit viewing party. We met a new friend in line (Herb) who was gracious enough to offer the one member of our group who didn't have a reserved seat, an extra seat he had. We then heard that the upstairs was open and all went upstairs and the 5 of us squeezed around a booth. It was an interesting way to watch the game.
Honduras started out a fast and were carrying the attack to the U.S. The U.S. however had the best chances in the first half as Bocanega hit an open header over the crossbar and Davies scuffed a rebound over everyone with an empty net in front of him after drawing a great reaction save from the goalkeeper on a header of a Holden cross. Casey (yes that Casey) looked good in the first half and was doing a nice job as the target forward. He has much better control then Altidore and seems to have better footwork then Ching. Having seen him play against the Revs and against Everton in the MLS all star game, I was wondering if he could translate that to the bigger stage of the National team. He had some appearances under Arena before he was injured and had some moments in the Confederations Cup and Gold cup, but not as a starter. So it was somewhat of a surprise to see him start. I have felt that with a full game he would wear down defenders and begin to create space. And in the second half that is what happened. But first we had to have the classic CONCACAF reffing call of a foul on Onyewu for what replays showed were a clear dive by the attacker. The Honduran converted, but unlike the game against Costa Rica, it seemed like the goal pissed off the U.S. players and they started to take the game to Honduras. Casey got a classic Casey goal using his size to hold off the goalkeeper and head the ball into the net. The thing I like about Casey is he uses his size intelligently. He doesn’t throw elbows, he doesn't grab, he positions. His second goal showed off his footwork. Then Casey draws a foul and Donovan hits a great free kick to put the U.S. up 3-1 and I am thinking we've got this.
Of course not. Honduras pulls back a goal after no offsides was called with three players at least two feet offside. But, hey this is CONCACAF, if the U.S. doesn't get a few bad calls it wouldn't be right. And then Holden commits a bonehead handball foul in the box (similar to the bonehead foul he committed against Holland in the Olympics) and the Hondurans are awarded (rightly) a P.K. Fortunately Pavon skied it over the crossbar and it was all over but the shouting. The U.S. came back from the goal deficit to score 3 in a row and dominated play for long stretches of the second half.
A couple of additional notes - for all those saying Holden should start for Dempsey (and I have seen many) Holden has a penchant for silly fouls. The one against Honduras (which fortunately didn't cost the U.S.) the one against Holland in the Olympics - which cost the U.S. a chance to advance out of group play and there have been others. He is a wild card in a bad way. For those who say we should have qualified a while ago, this was the strongest Hexagonal I have seen. Usually there are at most 3 good teams, but this year one could make the argument that there were 5 good teams. So now we go into the Costa Rica game with no pressure.
The Revs Aren't Allright
Monday, September 7, 2009
The Cranky Donkey
The Offside Rules
Javier Morales is a close second for my favorite of these ads!
or on youtube. For some reason the link above doesn't seem to be working for me.
The Cranky Donkey
Douchebag Ref of the Week Award

Yes to our two readers I realize that this is not a weekly feature but with the premier league back on and world cup qualifiers I'm sure that this can be a more frequent article.
So this week's award goes to Jasen Anno, the official for the Kansas City versus New England Revolution game on Saturday.
Congratulations are definitely in order to Mr. Anno. He really worked hard for this honor, not only did he give an absolutely asinine red card to Shalrie Joseph early in the first half, he also missed a very obvious hand-ball by a Kansas City defender in the box when the Revs were just down by one, this was in addition to his inability correctly identify when to call a foul and when to call advantage which is typical of many MLS officials. Hint to Mr. Anno, if the team has to pass the ball back to their defenders to keep possession after a foul that is not as advantageous as giving them a free kick on the 25 yard line.
Although complaining about MLS officials is like complaining about the weather in New England in January I feel this game merits this special mention because impact in totality of the very bad calls by Mr. Anno in reality cost New England the game. Yes, they the Revs need to mark better in the back and yes they need to figure out an offensive stragey that works in Dube and Jankauskas as Dube and Jankauskas and not as Taylor Twellman stand-ins but when you take away a player 20 minutes into the game for a foul that was maybe a yellow and ignore fouls throughout the game then not call an intentional and obvious handball in the box then the Revs not only have to play hard against Kansas City but against the constant free kicks and thuggy fouls and that is not how the game of soccer is supposed to be played.
MLS Goal of The Week
Goal of the week
Sunday, August 16, 2009
A Gold Cup to Remember – And Have Nightmares About
Blake Here:
So how about that Gold Cup? There have only been a few sporting events that left as bad a taste in my mouth as that one did in the end. The 69 Super Bowl when the Jets beat my beloved (and heavily favored) Baltimore Colts 16-7. The 69 World Series when the Mets beat my beloved (and heavily favored) Baltimore Orioles 4-1. The famous Kings-Lakers series when David Stern called the refs after the third quarter of the sixth game and told them “Make sure the Kings Lose”. And now this. Losing to Mexico. On home soil. For the first time in 11 years. 5-0. 5-0! Are you kidding me – that was perhaps my lowest moment as a U.S. National team fan. Worse then going out in the first round or the World Cup in 2006 and knowing we could have done better. Worse then all those defeats in Azteca in qualifying. But in the end perhaps not entirely unexpected. We had seen signs of cracks in this team. Going down 2-1 to Haiti in group play. Giving up goal early in the 2nd half to Panama. And seemingly after each game, additional members of the squad released. Steve Cherundolo released back to Hannover 96. Freddie Adu released back to Benfica. Charlie Davies released to his new club Sochaux. Benny Feilhaber released back to AGF Aarhus. And so in the finals we are playing a team of which a grand total of 3 maybe 4 have a chance of traveling to South Africa should the U.S. National Team qualify. Those 3 would be Ching, Pearce and Holden with Robbie Rogers having an outside chance. And if anyone says what about Kenny Cooper, despite scoring 2 goals, he demonstrated again why Bradley doesn’t call him in on a regular basis. He came in against Mexico and did what?
The worst part about the game was that every time the U.S. wasted a scoring chance against Mexico in the first half (and their were 5 or 6 chances simply wasted) the feeling of dread gnawing at my stomach got worse. And then the horrible penalty call was made. As Greg Seltzer (of No Short Corners and Soccer365 blogging fame) put it “since when is being elbowed in the mouth a penalty foul?” Which takes me back to that infamous Kings-Lakers game 6 when Mike Bibby was given a foul for hitting Kobe’s elbow with his face. In both cases I knew the gig was up if for completely different reasons. Once the foul was called and the PK made, the air went out of the U.S. National team and they looked collectively like a deer in the headlights. Defenders almost colliding trying to mark their men, Mexican players with time in the middle to take a nap and then keep dribbling. It was an astonishing collapse. And after the game they had an interview with Brian Ching and he could barely contain his anger. Now I am not a big Ching fan, but that anger was what this whole team needed after the PK. I don’t want to hear about tired legs and B team or C team. This is Mexico. We haven’t had a loss that bad on home soil since 1985 (a 5-0 drubbing by England). And to Mexico? Our biggest and most hated rival? And the worst part of it all was having to listen to the egregiously bad FSC announcers. I tried watching with the sound off, but just like being unable to look away from a bad accident, I kept turning the sound back on.
And what exactly was Bob Bradley doing with the team roster. Increasing the level of difficulty for each match by letting good players leave? Thumbing his nose at all his critics and saying “I’ll show you – I’ll get to the Gold Cup final with a sandlot team and recreate the “Bad News Bear”? I recognize that this is not a sanctioned tournament and particularly for the European players being in camp for pre-season is important. But Jay Heaps? And I am a NE Revolution fan. I love Jay – but he is not a right back for the national team. If you’re going to bring in a Revolution player to get beat for goals why not Kevin Alston? He at least has speed to cover for his mistakes (and they would be many). And he has potential for 2014. Or course as the Marvell Wynne experiment proved, that might have turned out to be a worse disaster. But really 5-0, 6-0, 7-0? At that point, what is the difference? Why not Geoff Cameron? After watching him in the MLS All Star game, he has some definite potential. Why not Edson Buddle? Why not Jeff Laurentowicz? If you’re going with the sandlot team lets go all out. Now it is nice that Jay Heaps got 4 caps with the National Team, but I don’t think he’ll be telling his grand kids the story of the 5-0 defeat at the hands of Mexico.
So what if anything good came out of this Gold Cup. Well – we did get to the finals with a sandlot team. We gave Stuart Holden and Robbie Rogers a taste of what it’s like to play in a high stakes final in front on a hostile crowd. We gave Sam Cronin some baby steps in the national team mix. We gave Heath Pearce another 6 games to work out his kinks (and hopeful land a playing gig in Europe). And maybe with any luck the game will leave such a bad taste in the collective mouths of the U.S. National Team that they will take it out on Mexico in Azteca.
And as bad as it was – at the end of the day on Sunday I was able to shrug it off and go cook dinner because I am 40 years older then the kid who was crushed when his favorite teams lost in 69 and bad as the ref was, he did not steal the game like the refs did in that infamous Kings-Lakers game 6.
A tie that felt like a loss and a tough win away
Blake here
Well the Toronto game was irritating although less irritating then it might have been. With the Revs having yet another starting lineup with Heaps back and the new striker (Edgaras Jankauskas) healthy. Have the Revs started the same lineup for two games in a row once this year? As it turned out we would get a chance to see Edgaras Jankauskas for a full a game. I have to say I was generally impressed. For a big man he has really good footwork. Unfortunately (though not unexpectedly) he didn't always seem on the same page with Dube and Ralston and there were a couple of times in the first half where it seemed he was looking for the pass which wasn't there, rather then his shot. Still and all, I look forward to seeing more of him. I think once he gets on the same page with his teammates, he will be much more productive.
The Revs actually started well, but the extremely physical challenges by Toronto seemed to take the starch out of the Revs attack. Then again when you're getting kicked in the back of the leg every time you receive the ball and calls are only made on the most egregious fouls, that's not surprising. The center ref (Terry Vaughn) seemed to have decided he would only call fouls when he could issue a yellow card. Ali Gerba in particular was a beast - and not in a Conner Casey use your body and physical strength to control the ball and generate chances way, but in a I'm going to knock you down or throw you out of the way and since Terry Vaughn is the ref it won't get called kind of way.
The second half started much the same with Joseph replacing Dube at the start of the second half. Chad Barrett picked up a second yellow in the 50th minute and with a man advantage for 40 minutes, well, I believed the Revs would pick up a couple of goals and get the win. But for the first time in three games the introduction of Joseph did not have the desired effect. It seemed as if he and Jankauskas kept getting in each others way. Chances were wasted and every decision in the final third seemed the wrong one. After Barret was sent off Videra replaced Osei as the Revs went to a three man back line, but still the attack faltered in the final third. It seemed as if everyone was having a bad decision night. Laurentowicz had more then a few chances for one of his trademark blasts from outside the penalty area but passed them up. Mansally took pointless shots when he had viable targets in the box for a cross. And Ralston, Joseph and Jankauskas all seemed more interested in an assist then a goal. Finally Heaps combined with Joseph and Jankauskas with Jankauskas scoring the tying goal. But a second goal proved elusive and the Revs had to settle for a tie. With a man advantage for 40 plus minutes this felt like a loss.
On the other hand the win in Houston against a Dynamo team that hadn't lost at home all year was the kind of tough gritty win that the Revs used to specialize in. The defense was solid all game an in the closing minutes Alston found Ralston with a beautiful pass splitting the defense and Ralston chipped it over Onstad for an easy tap in by Dube. Onstad had kept Houston in the game while the Revs back four (Alston, Barnes, Osei and Tierny) shut down the Houston attack all game. The injection of Joseph at the start of the second half seemed to spark the Revs offense and they were able to get some much needed points on the road. With a couple of games in hand, if the Revs can get full points from those games, they are right in the thick of the playoff picture potentially holding down one of the two automatic conference games.
Sunday, June 21, 2009
U.S. vs. Brazil - The U.S. team is even more dreadful then the refs
Blake here:
So as the game was going on I was taking the following notes:
* So Brazil gets a foul call on nothing and score off the resultant free kick. Another phantom foul is called at 10:00 minutes. Again the U.S. is playing against both the opponent and the ref. Meanwhile no fouls called on the other side when Donovan and Altidore are taken down. Its not that those are necessarily fouls, but if the ones against Brazil are called then those should be called too
*Why is Beasley in the game? An egregious giveaway on a corner, Brazil is off to the races and it is goal #2.
*Another harsh red card - clearly a yellow -but a red? And ESPN of course isn't even following the action and misses the issuance of the Red card completely. Can't ESPN send anyone to South Africa? After seeing when the card was giving, it is clear that the ref was influenced by the length of time the Brazilian player spent on the ground.
*3-0. The game is basically over and the U.S. is done in the Confederations Cup. The U.S. haven't really showed anything in this game - unlike the game against Italy. I don't really understand starting Beasley. He hasn't had a good game in ages and if you want to roll the dice, why not roll the dice with Adu or Feilhaber. I am not a fan really of either, but Beasley isn't the player he was 3 or 4 years ago before the knee injuries and the arguments against starting Adu (he can't get playing time or make the bench for his club team) apply equally right now to Beasley. But there is no one really on the bench besides those two that can offer creativity on offense.
*And where is Donovan in this game. Unlike the Italy game, Donovan has offered nothing all game long. As I say this he takes a free kick and it is too high. Can we please find someone who is good on free kicks?
*Dempsey taken down - no call. Clearly the refs in this tournament don't think the U.S. belong and they are not going to get any calls.
*Bornstein gets wiped out - foul but how is that not a card. The double standard gets clearer and clearer. They refs in the Italy game and this one are making the MLS refs look far less bad.
Now after sitting and stewing on this game for a few days and reading the various forums ripping the U.S. Men's team for a lack of heart and Bob Bradley for, well, everything, I have a few thoughts. What happens in the Italian game if Italy scores early on a bogus call? Does the U.S. team quit like it seemed to do against Brazil? Or did the bogus foul call which lead to a the goal just confirm to the U.S. players that they were once again playing 11 on 12? And were they just a bit intimidated by Brazil where they clearly weren't against Italy. Or perhaps it was giving up that early goal. In a way I think it was similar to what happened when the U.S. gave up the early goal to Costa Rica in Saprissa. In both cases, the U.S. has a history of futility and perhaps that was in the players minds. Going down a goal so early made the task perhaps seem insurmountable. And going down on a completely bogus foul call. Then Beasley has the dreadful giveaway - not just the giveaway but hanging his head. The U.S. were fortunate not to be down more then 2-0 going into the half.
So when the second half starts, the U.S. are looking better - they create some chances (Casey and Altidore work a nice give and go, but Altidore, just like the change he wasted against Italy, wastes this one as well. At least put the ball on frame. Then of course the harsh red to Kljestan and the game is basically over. With 10 minutes to go, the U.S. picks it's collective head up and his the crossbar twice, but by then, it is too little too late. Unless the players really start to believe they can come from a goal down against the world's best, they won't.
Again, I don't understand the substitution pattern or the starting eleven. Down 2-0 why not roll the dice with Adu? Yes he hasn't gotten off the bench for his club team, but he has proved in the youth world cup tournaments that he is able to step up in big competitions. Why start Beasley at all? How has he earned a start? And to all those who think Dempsey isn't trying or didn't try till the end, those of us who watched him play for the New England Revolution know this. He may disappear for awhile, but the guy always generates scoring opportunities in the game. He also played well in defense heading a number of corners and frees kicks out of danger from his own penalty area. Yes, I am biased, but Dempsey is the only player on the U.S. Men's team who has scored a brace against Chelsea. Something Robinho can't say and something I don't think anyone on either Brazil or Italy can say (which isn't quite fair as they rarely play against Chelsea - but still).
Thanks to Egypt (who the U.S. team plays next) there is still the slimmest mathematical chance the U.S. can advance. Brazil needs to beat Italy by 3 or 4 goals and we need to beat Egypt by 3 or 4 goals and we would advance on goal differential. A slim change to be sure and I would be happy with a win of any kind. Egypt is clearly a very good team having played Brazil to a standstill and beaten Italy.
U.S. vs. Italy or why does the U.S. always start 11 vs. 12.

Blake here:
This match will rankle for a while. The U.S. was playing well against Italy and could have (and probably should have) scored two goals in the first 30 minutes. Italy had a chance and in the 30th minute the ref changes the course of the game by issuing a Red card to Ricardo Clark on a foul that nine times out of 10 draws at worst a yellow. Later in the first half the an Italian defender elbows Donovan in the head and gets a Yellow. A Yellow? For an elbow to the head? When Clark gets a Red for his tackle? If one is a red the other is a red. But the U.S. keeps fighting. Altidore draws a PK on a foul the could have drawn a Yellow (which would have been the Italian's second yellow). Replays show the Italian defender kicking Altidore once he is past. If Clark got a red card shouldn't that have been at least a yellow? Donovan puts the PK away and the U.S. is up 1-0 while down a man.
The Italians substitute the mercenary traitor Rossi in at the 58th minute. Dempsey gets trapped on the sideline and tries to make the pass to Feilhaber in traffic who has his pocket picked by Rossi. Rossi walks in and blasts a shot into the net from 30 yards and the Italians are tied 1-1. At this point the U.S. has been playing a man down for over 30 minutes. The midfielders have been chasing the action and Bradley has made no substitutes. Undoubtedly tired legs contributed to Rossi's ability to dibble unchallenged as he did. Fifteen minutes later the Italians took the lead with a long shot by De Rossi (the Italian defender who famously hit Brian McBride in the 2006 World Cup).
And yet the U.S. is still attacking. Donovan gets crushed in the box - but no call from the Chilean ref. It is as if there were two different standards in this game. He is willing to alter the course of the game and give a harsh red to Clark - but doesn't give the penalty here when it would likely lead to the equalizer. It is o.k. to make harsh calls against the U.S., but not o.k. to do the same to the Italians. Given the fact that the U.S. probably don't have the same level, having to play 10 against 12 (the center ref) makes it that much harder. Finally the U.S. gets caught in a counter pressing for the equalizer and the mercenary traitor Rossi scores a third.
Many may disagree, but the U.S. wins if the sides are even. We created better scoring opportunities and outplayed them while the sides were even. That said, I think Bob Bradley's substitution pattern was curious. Why bring Beasley on at all? I understand the Bradley coached him in Chicago and has a soft spot for him - and certainly Bruce Arena was no stranger to playing players past they expiration date (Jeff Agoos, Eddie Pope, Claudia Reyna), but Beasley has not played well for the U.S. team in a long time - probably since the game in 2006 against Italy. The problem was that with Clark red carded, Bob had no true defensive mids on the bench. Torres doesn't qualify, Adu doesn't qualify so perhaps Beasley makes the most sense. Unfortunately after Beasley was announced and before he could get in the game, the Italians scored the go-ahead goal. If you look at the midfielders Bradley brought, I just don't understand the philosophy. With Edu hurt and Mastreoni having played his way off the team, why not bring in Stuart Holden, or Jeff Laurentowicz. In the game - if you're going with defense - why not bring in Pearce and move Bornstein to left mid? Why not play Califf as a defensive mid? Perhaps he closes down the mercenary traitor Rossi and the thug De Rossi. Where it the tactical preparation? If you are a man down and up a goal going into halftime, why not play for the win or tie? But Bradley doesn't make a move until the first goal is in and while he is preparing to make a move the go ahead goal is scored.
Yet with all that - if the ref calls the P.K. for the foul on Donovan, I think we escape with a tie. And that's why this match will rankle for a long time. The ref essentially took the game away from the U.S. and gave it to Italy.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Red Bull Crush


Blake Here:
For the second straight game, the weather at Foxboro was delightful. The Revs lineup featured a lineup that I think we will see most of the time when Twellman is not on the field. The backline appears to have stabilized with Alston – Osei – Barnes – Heaps. The midfield lineup was Nyassi – Phelan – Laurentowicz (apparently recovered) – Mansally. Ralston and Joseph up top with Reis in goal. The first half was a back and forth game and both sides generated chances. The Revs broke through in injury time with Heaps (Heaps?!?) scoring the goal – and not off a header. With that assist it is clear whatever slump Joseph was going through is now over. He had his best game of the year. And although we didn’t know it at the time, that goal at the end of the half was the beginning of a rout.
Twellman came on for Phelan at the start of the second half with Joseph dropping back into the midfield which gave the Revs the lineup I think is probably the best in the league. The Revs came out firing on all cylinders and scored 3 goals in the first 20 minutes of the half. The first was off a great bit of work by Heaps (yes Heaps!). After losing the dribble near the end line Heaps hustled to pick the defenders pocket and then sent in a perfect cross which Ralston headed in for the goal. Shortly afterward Joseph sent one of his great long balls to the far post for Twellman to knock in for the third goal. Ralston fed Twellman for the fourth goal. If Twellman hadn’t decided to try and return the favor to Ralston, I think he could have had 2 more goals. It was great to see Twellman get a goal – which turned out to be his 100th MLS goal. Reis got his 50th shutout and Heaps played in his 300th game in the MLS while scoring a goal and getting an assist. I can’t remember the last time Heaps had a goal. All in all a great night for Revs fans. The Rev next travel to Kansas City and we will get a chance to see if the Revs are ready to go on one of their runs. After that it will be time to defend their SuperLiga title and I will be in my usual seats in section 106 watching each of those games.
One question I have on this game though. How much did Red Bulls pay Kraft so they could send a couple of parachutists (in Red Bull parachutes) to deliver the game ball? Although one was wearing a Revs uniform, it was irksome to see Red Bull parachutes drifting down into Foxboro. And then after the game – they were giving out cans of Red Bull outside the stadium. As the victory was a crushing defeat for the Red Bull, I accepted the gift while refraining from crushing the cans right there. I hope the Kraft’s got good money, because if the Revs had lost, that would have been salt in the wound.
Dempsey’s Redemption
What is it with the U.S. team lately? Giving up goals in the first 5 minutes on a regular basis isn’t really a good tactical approach. Sure it makes a victory that much sweeter – but it also leads to 3-1 blowouts on the road. And Dempsey? One of my favorite U.S. national team players and one of my favorite Revs players? What the heck were you thinking? That was quite the gaff. Still, where were Clark and Mastreoni? When Clint turned the ball over, the whole midfield was basically empty. Luckily unlike the game in Saprissa though, the U.S. didn’t fold up their tent and quit. They had the better of the play the rest of the half and should have gotten the penalty when Clark was taken down in the box. The Mexican ref basically was forced to call the handball penalty in the second half – to ignore that would have been to make his allegiance all too clear. Although to be fair, I have to say he is one of the less biased refs in CONCACAF when doing U.S. games. Unlike the infamous Peter Pendergast. Still, I don’t understand why CONCACAF doesn’t get CONMEBOL or UEFA refs for the qualifiers. It might cost more, but you avoid the whole suspicion of refs influencing results to benefit their home country.
Anyway, after that initial gaff, Dempsey played one of his better games for the Red, White and Blue. He sprang Spector on a couple of nice runs (one a clever backheel), earned fouls in dangerous positions and whistled a couple of 30 yard shots over the crossbar. And of course he rose up to knock Donovan’s corner back into the mix for Bocanegra to hammer home with a diving header. Then he helps kill off the match by making runs to the corner to kill the clock. A lot of folks think he whiffed on the past from Feilhaber in the second half, but he had to stretch for that ball. It was just a little too far. A little closer to him and he puts in the back of the net like he did he his first in the brace he scored against Chelsea during his premier league season.
And I think we may have found a left back. Jonathan Spector also had a very good game. The contrast between him and Wynne was like night and day. He was dangerous coming forward and was solid on defense. Clark was also excellent. I don’t know why Mastreoni got the start after his dreadful game against Costa Rica and I looked in vain for him on that initial Honduras goal. Alitdore and Casey were o.k. Altidore clearly shows the effects of not playing. His first touch was seldom controlled and as a result he was never able to turn on his defender and make a run towards goal. Casey missed an open look in the first half (off a Dempsey header) and although he did a better job holder the ball with the first touch, was unable to make connecting passes. Donovan had a much better game than against Costa Rica and hammered home the penalty with authority. Why he still takes all the free kicks is beyond me though. He makes maybe 3 out of 10 good free kicks. Most of the time he doesn’t get it over the first defenders and as a result free kicks in dangerous areas are wasted. This should be our strength. With our height and the number of players who can score off the header (Casey, Altidore, Onyewu, Bocanegra and Dempsey against Honduras), we have to take better advantage of those opportunities. With better free kicks, I think the U.S. gets another goal or two. Bornstein while much better then Beasley had a couple of giveaways in the defensive half that could have been disastrous.
They showed a lot of heart and grit against Honduras and this was the first comeback victory for the U.S. since 1985. I want to see that heart and grit for a whole game on the road. I am no longer as nervous about qualifying and clearly the tie at El Salvador looks a lot better after Mexico’s loss there – but it was a game we could have and should have won. If we roll over against Mexico at Azteca like we did against Costa Rica, then I don’t see how we can even pretend we could make a run to the quarters (or beyond) like we did in 2002.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Why are all Central America Players Such Fakers and Who Should Start Against Honduras
This was written before the game but I was out of town all weekend and didn't check my e-mail to post it sorry.--Jenni
Blake here.
A couple of things happened in the game against Costa Rica that I just couldn’t leave unmentioned. I have seen a lot of comments on Charlie Davies kicking the Costa Rica player in the groin but when I saw that play happen it sure didn’t look like he was anywhere near the groin area. Replays were pretty inconclusive. Later there was a foul against a U.S. player (I don’t remember who) and the Costa Rican player went down clutching his face. Replays in this case clearly showed that the foul was a kick to the shin in an attempt to get the ball and no where near the player’s face. Not only that, but he doesn’t start clutching his face until the center ref looks in his direction. In both incidents the Costa Rican player either embellished or outright faked an injury. Amado Guevara got suspended a couple of games in the MLS for that kind of antic, but you can be sure FIFA and CONCACAF will do nothing. And it is wrong. Until such stuff gets punished with suspensions, players will continue to do it and soccer will never challenge the big 3 in the U.S. And Costa Rica? You’re up 3-0 at that point. You don’t need to pull such antics and it makes you look bad.
So who should start against Honduras? At this point, our midfield is depleted and our back line looks shaky, old and inexperienced quite a combo and it takes real talent (or lack thereof) to pull that off. All that said, here is who I would start:
Howard
Spector – Onyewu – DeMerit – Bocanegra
Dempsey – Clark – Donovan – Torres
Casey – Davies
I could go with Kljestan in place of Clark, but then who is your midfield destroyer. And I just don’t see how you can play Mastreoni, but I am sure Bradley will. As for the forwards, Altidore just isn’t going to be able to go full speed just 3 days after playing 90 minutes as he hasn’t played a match with his club team all year. Potentially you could put Adu in place of Davies, but again, he hasn’t played a match with his club team all year. Casey and Davies have both been scoring often for their respective club teams.
I went back and forth on the back line and could just has easily gone with Spector – Onyewu – Bocanegra – Bornstein (or Pearce) but that would mean throwing a newbie into a World Cup qualifier cauldron or rolling the dice on Pearce. Neither seems palatable, but then neither does having Bocanegra there either. Whoever Bradley puts there, if the defense plays as poorly as it did against Costa Rica, then we lose and are now sitting in fourth place with the hardest part of our qualifying to come (at Mexico, at Honduras, home to Costa Rica). At any rate, I will be perched on my coach with my jersey, hat and scarf and hopefully will be a happy fan come the end of the game.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Si se puede?

As I was watching the debacle unfold (Costa Rica up 1-0 within 2 minutes and 2-0 before the quarter hour), a couple of things occurred to me: 1. Is it possible that playing in the English Premier League has made Dempsey both a better and worse U. S. National team player. The better is easy to see – his composure on the ball, his ability to make clever passes and his ability to hold the ball and not lose it. The worse is those very same clever passes. On more then one occasions Dempsey would make a quick pass to a space that on his Fulham team a forward would be headed to. However on the U.S. team (at least on this night) no one was making those runs to the spaces he put the ball. I counted at least five occasions where this happened in the first half and then gave up. 2. Torres has great composure when dribbling, makes nice passes and nice attacking runs. He has no right foot. I don’t think he touched the ball more then twice with his right foot. I am not clear how he does it but he manages to dribble in either direction with only one foot. I still don’t understand why Bradley took him off at the beginning of the second half. Why not take Mastreoni off? 3. Mastreoni may have gotten old overnight. He looked terrible in this game. He was slow, out of position, and was partially responsible for each of the first 2 goals. 4. John Harkes is beginning to grow on me as an announcer. After replays of the third goal showed Bradley getting beaten, Harkes made the very valid point that Bradley had already chased the ball down three other times leading up to that play to force passes. Where were the other midfielders? Where were the defenders? 5. This is the second time in a row that the U.S. has looked flat and/or uprepared for an away game. They were able to come back and tie against El Salvador but they never appeared in the game against Costa Rica. Part of me wants to blame Bradley, but part of this has to fall on the players. How can they come out flat for a game of this magnitude? You are playing for your country – if you can’t get up for that why are you playing for the National team? 6. It is becoming ever clearer that Landon disappears in tough games away from the U.S. This makes him a liability in those game, because no coach is going to leave him on the bench, but when he disappears for those long stretches its as if the U.S. is playing a man down. I have said this before but for a guy who claims to want a leadership role on this team, he does not act or play like it in critical game.
So now the U.S. has a couple of days to prepare for another tough qualifier. At least this one will be on home soil and on grass, but the U.S. will be without Bradley which is fairly critical given that Edu is out with an injury and Mastreoni is apparently done. They are also without Kljestan which hurts but not as much. So the U.S. now has questions in the midfield to go with the ongoing questions at right back, left back and forward. I pronounce myself officially concerned that the U.S. could conceivably miss out on qualifying for the World Cup. I don’t think it will come to that but if I’m Bob Bradley, I have to think that if I don’t beat Honduras, I am out of a job…
Debacle in Saprissa Re-Cap

First of all – what was I thinking in saying Marvell Wynne should start at left back. Did I forget that playing well at left back for the MLS is relatively easy given the propensity of teams to go for hulking forwards instead of speed? Did I forget that playing a qualifier on the road is probably the worst place for a young player to make his first U.S. National Team? Did I forget that Sparissa stadium is perhaps the toughest place for the U.S. to play in CONCACAF? Yes, yes and yes.
Many are saying that Bradley showed guts in starting a lot of the youngsters on the road. Well only if satisfying insane idiot bloggers like myself is a sign of courage. Seriously – how do you start a newbie at left back and a guy at right back who not only doesn’t play right back, but hasn’t played competitive soccer since December against Costa Rica in Saprissa Stadium. Now given Bradley’s options perhaps he didn’t have many choices, but a have to believe that Spector’s experience in the Premier League is worth more than Wynne’s MLS experience. At right back, why not put DeMerit as a center back and push Bocanegra to right back – a position he plays for Rennes in Ligue 1 in France. I can’t quibble with the rest of the lineup given the options and I thought Torres played the best of anybody on the U.S. team in the first half. But that raised the question – when Ching went down, why not bring another target forward like, oh I don’t know, Conner Casey? As it was he went with Altidore, Donovan and Dempsey in what was ostensibly a 3 forward attack. The problem with that is that Landycakes never plays forward even when he is one. And Dempsey has been playing midfield for Fulham all season. When a team only has a couple of days to train together, moving folks into positions they don’t usually play just doesn’t strike me as a great idea
All carping aside, this was always going to be a tough game. It was moved up in the schedule to accommodate the Confederations Cup and many of the U.S. players (and not just MLS players) had games over the weekend for their club teams. In addition those in the European leagues (excluding Scandanavia) were coming off the end of a long season. That coupled with the appalling turf surface at Saprissa made this a very difficult game going in. Then when the veterans don’t show up, well you get a 3-1 posting that wasn’t that close.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Who I Think Will Start, Who Should Start and Who Should Really Start Against Costa Rica
photo courtesy of US Soccer.Blake Here
So the U.S. has a couple of tough matches over a four day period. The first is at Saprissa Stadium in Costa Rica – a place that has been not been friendly to say the least. The U.S. has never won in Costa Rica and has never even gained a point at Saprissa Stadium. Having watched the U.S. only manage a draw on the road against a vastly inferior El Salvador side, I am very concerned about this match. The U.S. needs to come out with a lot more intensity then they did against El Salvador if they want to have any hope of managing a draw let alone a win. Given the fact that the savior against El Salvador is out (Hejduk), Altidore’s lack of experience and Pearce’s poor play over the last two games, here is what I think the starting lineup will look like:
And here is the lineup I would like to see given who is in the National Team camp:
And here is who I would like to see if I could pick from the entire U.S. Player pool:
I saw Casey against the Revs a couple of weeks back and he was a beast. Big, physical and with a nice touch. I think I and every other Revs fan in the stadium breathed a sigh of relief when he was subbed out. He had a couple of call ups while Arena was coach and got some limited minutes. I liked what I saw then and he has improved greatly since then. As for Parkhurst, as a Revs fan I have a great fondness for Parkhurst. He is always overlooked because of his slight build, but no U.S. Defender since Pope in his salad days reads the game better. And the drop off in the Revs defense since he left is all too apparent. I though about Feilhaber and Kljestan but Kljestan looked terrible in his last full start and has not looked all that great on the field for Chivas in the MLS. Feilhaber disappeared after that wonder goal against Mexico in the Gold Cup, but his creativity is something the U.S. could use. I know that many would select Adu, but if he can’t get any playing time for Monaco in France, then he doesn’t have what it takes to crack the U.S. midfield. With the exception of Donovan all the midfielders I have selected play on teams in leagues that are considered (and rightly so) far superior to the MLS and not only hold spots on these clubs but also made positive contributions to their teams' standings. I know Wynne hasn’t played overseas yet, but his speed makes up for a lot of mistakes and until Alston from the Revs is ready, he is my pick.
I think we will know within 15 minutes whether or not the U.S. is likely to get a good result. If Costa Rica scores in that first 15 minutes, I think the U.S. loses. If the U.S. scores in that first 15 minutes, then I think they have a chance to walk away with a victory which would be a great achievement for this team. If it is 0-0 I will be nervous as a cat. I will be nervous as a cat the whole game anyway unless the U.S. goes up 3-0 or down 3-0. I look forward to the game and hope to be able to post on a historic victory.
Douchebag Ref of the Week Award First Installment!!!!!!!!
photo courtesy of www.examiner.com2. Very particular about where throw-ins were taken.
3. Missed an obvious penalty kick call when Taylor Twellman was unceremoniously taken out in the box.
4. Called nothing when Osei was pushed by a DC player, twice, right in front of him.
5. Managed to get the Fort to boo him for every whistle he blew past a certain point in the second half.
Vote Matt Reis for Save of the Week

photo courtesy of the New England Revolution official site
Save of the Week for Matt Reis!
According to MLSnet.com Matt Reis has been nominated for best save of the week of May 25-May 31 so cast your vote now at the link above.
The Return of Twellman
Blake here
For the first time at a home game this year, the weather was neither cold nor wet. The Revs had a lineup similar to the TFC game with one change being Nyassi replacing Thompson after the horror show at Toronto.
At around the 25th minute, Larentowicz took a soccer ball to the face from about 10 yards away, Larentowicz went down and although it was clear he wanted to stay in the game, the medial staff took him into the locker room. This set the stage for the return of Twellman. There was a standing ovation when Twellman entered the game and it seemed the Revs began to play with more intensity. Twellman had two chances within the first 5 minutes after entering; both headers and both within easy reach of the goalie Wicks. I think some rust was showing particularly with the first, because I have seen him in the past power headers like that past the goalie. Still,it was great just seeing him stick his head in for the attempts after the horrific punch he took from the L.A. Galaxy goaltender last year. D.C. also seemed to pick up the intensity as well and in the 36th minute after hitting the crossbar twice Fred (Not the good Fred who played for Brazil in the 2006 World cup, but the MLS Fred…) put one in the back of the net. The half ended with D.C. up 1-0 .
Stevie Nichols made a substitution to start the second half putting Mansally in for Tierny. An interesting substitution and it paid off as Mansally seems much more comfortable in the midfield then he did as a target forward. Midfield is the position he plays for the Gambian national team and Nichols use of him as a target forward was I think based on a lack of options for forward. Mansally played a key role in the Rev’s first goal which started with a nice knock down header to Ralston by Twellman (isn’t it nice to have a true target forward). Ralston laid it off to Mansally who made a great cross that Sharlie Joseph drilled in the far corner of the net. On that play the goalie came out and knocked Twellman down. Scary moment for the Revs fans but after a few minutes down of the ground Taylor got up and seemed little worse for the wear.
Play continued back and forth which each team generating chances. Around the 80th minute of so a ball was served into Twellman at the edge of the box. Twellman flicked the header up to turn and go towards goal and was flattened by Wicks. No call. A clear foul and the Revs were incensed as this was way too close to how Twellman got his concussion last year that put him out until now. Twellman was down for a few minutes and Heaps picked up a Yellow for arguing as did the D.C. Goalie Wicks. Why Wicks was yapping was beyond me. He got away with one and should have just shut up and stayed out of it. But then D.C./Revs games always seem to have at least one or two near brawls. Needless to say the Revs fans were incensed and Wicks and the Ref came in for some verbal abuse. The Revs fans however got a lot happier with the Ref in the closing minutes of the game as D.C. was called for a foul in the box when Namoff pulled down Twellman in the box. I have to say that this call was iffy, but after the non-call on Wicks (and the non-call on Namoff’s handball in the box in D.C.) it seemed to be justice. Ralston put away the penalty and all that was left was a few tense moments and a lot of whining from the D.C. United players. And with that a very happy crowd of Revs fans gradually filed out of the stadium.
photo courtesy of the Official New England Revolution website.
Monday, May 25, 2009
Where Thompson tarries, Guevarra makes marry
The Revs started the first half strongly with shots from Steve Ralston and in the 12th minute Shalrie Joseph scores on a beautiful header shot off a nice crisp cross into the box by Chris Tierney. The following minute was the only time the Revs were winning this match as a poorly marked Amando Guevara rockets in a goal at around 13:02.
The Revs miss a couple of scoring opportunities in the remainder of the half most notably when Joseph has the ball in the box one on one with the keeper and took one too many touches. Lucky for the Revs so did Toronto.
After the half Dwayne De Rosario scores in the 68th minute after Emmanuel Osei and Jay Heaps run into each other while trying to mark Danny Dichio. Guevara decides to destroy any ounce of hope of a late comeback for the Revs by hammering in his second goal off a free kick that bounced of the notorious Toronto turf past Matt Reis into the goal.
So the Revs are now in a distant 4th in their division and have not won a game since their home opener but I am still hopeful for the season. Moving Tierney into the midfield has been a positive change and will allow for more scoring opportunities, as will the eventual return of Twellman. The Rev's defense has been shaky on communication and marking but it has also been switched up nearly every game. I think the current line-up of Alston, Barnes, Osei and Heaps has shown the most promise and will work they just need to learn how to work together. Something I'm hoping will be done by next Saturday.
Now a few words for Mr. Wells Thompson who is not my most favorite Revs player at the moment. In one of my stupider jobs it was once stated that any criticism should be sandwiched between two compliments to make it more likely to be accepted by the person being critiqued.
Your crosses have improved, Thompson you caused both of Guevara's goals to be scored one by your inattentive marking and one because you commit stupid and needless fouls right outside the box, um you look good in dark blue?
Till Saturday!
Friday, May 15, 2009
When a tie is way better then kissing your sister.
Blake here:
Before last Saturday’s game with Chicago, I was dreading another RSL-like blowout. The Revs played some of their worst games last year against Chicago and were beaten 3-0 on more then one occasion, one of which I had the misfortune to see in person. So with the Revs starting yet another lineup and playing in Chicago, I had my doubts. The lone Chicago goal was a bit of a fluke after a corner kick into the box ended up dropping at the feet of Conde who blasted it home. Sharlie Joseph after 2 consecutive poor games was playing well in the striker role. Still going into the second half I was wondering how the Revs were going to score.
Well the Revs answered the question shortly into the second half after a nice bit of possession led to a Larentowicz shot from just outside the penalty area. Not a great shot, but it ended up at the feet of Joseph and he blasted it home for the goal. All that was left was for Reis to make the game saving diving stop of a McBride header and the Revs escaped Chicago with a point – something that didn’t happen last year.
It was an interesting lineup with Nichols going with a back four that had Alston back on the right side and Heaps on his customary left side with Tierney playing in front of him as left side midfielder. The latest entrant to the Revs lineup was Emmanuel Osei who had a very good game, aside from a few nervous making moments dribbling around in the box (something I am sure Coach Nichols will speak to him about). Overall Osei played calmly and colloborated well with Barnes. Ralston came in for Dube late in the game which was good to see, in his first two minutes he immediately set up two scoring opportunities. It was interesting to see Nyassi not in the lineup, but he has not been playing well lately.
So what will be the lineup for the Rapids? Tough to say. If Ralston is fully recovered, I think he starts. The back line (assuming no new injury nicks) will likely be the same. That leaves the midfield and forward positions. Is this the game we see Twellman? Does Nyassi make it back into the lineup? Did Tierney play well enough as Left-mid to get another run-out (I say yes)? At any rate I think it is likely that we will see yet another different starting lineup, the seventh in eight games. I will be in section 106 cheering them on.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Well at Least it Wasn't 6-0
It was a grey and dreary game which was appropriate for the grey and dreary weather. The Revs started yet another lineup with Steve Nichols going with his preferred 3-5-2 formation. Given the torching of Chris Tierney by Real Salt Lake in the last game, I can understand why. Igwe moved over to Tierny’s spot with Heaps managing the right back position and Barnes in the middle. The game started fairly slowly like the slow drizzle that was falling on us while we watched the game from our seats in section 106. Around the 25th minute, Stuart Holden of Houston unleashed a long shot that I was so sure Reis would save, I turned away. When I looked back the ball was in the net. What the heck happened? On the replay it looked like Reis simply let the ball go through his hands. The blunder seemed to deflate the Revs and when Reis “saved” a gently rolling header later in the first half there was a derisive cheer from the home fans. The only scoring opportunity the Rev had was on a nice free kick from Larentowicz into box that Sharlie simply mistimed his jump on and the chance was squandered.
Around 13 minutes into the second half, Ching scored a header of a corner kick and that was pretty much the game. A bright note for the Revs was the debut of the Cameroonian striker Stephane Assengue 20 minutes into the second half. He almost converted a half chance with a wicked volley and was certainly more of a force then either Dube or Mansally. Also, it was good to see Twellman at least make the substitutes bench. The sooner he can get back on the pitch, the sooner the Revs attack will perhaps show some life. After 2 straight defeats in which the Revs generated few scoring opportunities, it is clear that neither Mansally nor Dube can fill that goals scorers role. And it is even more clear how much Ralston is missed when he isn’t on the pitch.
Here’s hoping for more offense the next time.
Friday, May 1, 2009
Always Look at the Bright Side of Life
1. Videira had his first start of the season and in the second half was the only player on the Revs side that looked like a professional soccer player, his passing was good as was his ball control.
2. Heaps won almost every challenge in the air.
3. Larentowicz had a crackerjack of a shot from distance in the 2nd half.
4. If Movsisyan didn’t have a tendancy to wait tll he was on the goal line to take a shot revs would have been down by 10 easily.
5. OK 5 positive things about the game may have been stretching it so enjoy this video instead.
Slaughter in Salt Lake
Blake here:
Apologies to our myriad fans for the lateness of this post on the Real Salt Lake fiasco (the two of you know who you are). As a longtime Rev fan this last result was difficult to take. After a fairly desultory first half that ended as a 0-0 tie with the only real scoring chances turned in by Real Salt Lake, the second half turned into a debacle. The second half actually started pretty brightly for the Revs with Nyassi whipping in a cross that Mansally just missed. However, it went downhill quickly after that. First Olave was completely unmarked and powered a header into the goal off a great corner from Morales. Shortly thereafter on another corner, Mathis scored off a great volley that Revs announcer called before it happed. Mathis was standing at the top of the box towards the far side of the goal waving his hand with no one within 10 feet of him. Sure enough the cross comes in and he blasts a beautiful volley that Knighton had no shot at. The scored stayed at 2-0 until the 70th minute when it appeared that the Revs started to tire. In the next 20 minutes RSL scored four more goals, the first by Movsisyan off a great splitting pass by Mathis.
This was without a doubt the worst half of football I have ever seen the Rev’s play. It rivals the abomination that the Revs turned in against Joe Public last year in the CONCACAF Champions league. At least I didn’t pay to see this one as I was watching from my couch rather than sitting in the stands in a slow drizzle. I don’t know whether it was the altitude, the early travel schedule or yet another starting lineup, but the Revs never showed any fight in this one. I will be sitting in the stands on Sunday hoping they bounce back...
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Recap of the D.C. United Revolution game
Blake here,
New England has started off the season pretty brightly given the injuries they have been coping with. Last night’s game against was the third different starting lineup in four games. The game started well for D.C. with Ben Olsen forcing two saves from Knighton in the first 20 minutes. In the 20th minute the Revs should have gotten a penalty kick when DC United player Namoff clearly intentionally handles the ball in the box. I don’t know where the referee, Jair Murrufo, was but the call was obvious on the first go-around and more so on the replays. Announcer John Harkes tried to cover for his old teammate, but there could be no doubt. Two more bad calls from the ref follow and the half ends 0-0.
The second half started better for the Revs. In the 50th minute Ralston crosses the ball off a throw-in to the back side post where Joseph headed it in for the 1-0 lead. Murrufo continued to make curious calls and miss obvious ones. At one point two D.C. United players collided and he called a foul against New England. Later Emilio threw Heaps down on a D.C. United corner kick and no call was made. Hand balls in the box and throwing people down are apparently not fouls. I missed that when I took my ref classes but that was a few years ago so perhaps the rules have changed.
Late in the game (injury time) with D.C. pressing for the goal, Fred (a second half substitute) has the ball in the corner by the Revs goal, shadowed by Nyassi. Fred flops and Murrufo makes the call. I had a feeling that was going to cost the Revs and sure enough Jaime Moreno hit a great free kick towards the back post where Ben Olsen made a great effort to get to it and head it into the goal off of Phelan. I give full credit to Moreno and Olsen. It was a great play. But the opportunity that gave rise to it shouldn’t have been given at all.
Perhaps I am mistaken, but it does not seem like the refereeing in MLS is getting better and in fact it sees to be getting worse. As the Revs weren’t playing last week, I satisfied my MLS fix by watching the Chivas/LA Galaxy game in which the ref gave out 3 red cards and 7 or 8 yellows. One of the red cards was off a second yellow on an obvious dive by Landon Donovan. (Is he taking diving lessons from Christiano Renaldo?) And in the game against D.C. United Murrufo makes 2 bad calls which effect the outcome of the game directly - the non-call on the obvious hand ball in the box and the phantom foul on the Revs that lead to a goal. Ah, but as they say, that is part of the game.
At the end of the day the Revs were outplayed in the first half and D.C. was outplayed in the second half. The draw was a fair result all-in-all.
A couple of final thoughts: Without the efforts of Knighton (who was man-of-the-match for me) the Revs are down at least a goal going into halftime. Barnes was again a tower of strength in the backline and I though Igwe had one of the best games I have seen him play. I hope that Wells Thompson develops a better sense of timing, I like his defensive work, and his dribbling has improved but when he goes forward he is still making one dribble too many and losing the ball. As a Revs fan I am very happy Sharlie Joseph is still with the team, but how can he not be in Europe. He is ready for that next challenge. Another Rev that is ready for the next challenge is Larentowicz who just keeps getting better. Lastly (and I think I speak for all Revs fans here) I hope that Twellman is able to come back soon at his usual form. It is clear that the Revs don’t have an answer at the forward spot yet. Dube and Mansally have their moments, but neither seem to be able to get in scoring positions the way Twellman does.
That’s all for now.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Thoughts and Reflections on the T&T game
After thinking back a bit more on the U.S. Men’s team match against T&T I still don’t know what to think. The away game against Costa Rica on June 6th will be a much better indicator of where the U.S. is as a team. We have never beaten Costa Rica on their home field (a fact which doesn’t get mentioned a lot unlike our lack of success against Mexico) and a win there would be a truer indicator of our dominance in CONCACAF claimed by so many fans and commentators. Yet another home win against T&T? Even a dominant one? Not so much. As for the players, one of the things that has become apparent is how much Dempsey’s game has been improved by his time in the English Premier league. He is much quicker with the pass and far less likely to lose the ball in traffic. He seems to always attract two or three defenders and rarely gives the ball away. In addition his defense has improved significantly. When he was with the Revs, he wasn’t necessarily a weak link on defense but was certainly not one of their stronger players on defense. Plus he was prone to the occasional yellow when he would get beaten on defense and take the player down to prevent a fast break. Now he is a much more complete player and rarely seems to get caught out of position. Bradley has improved significantly as well. Although he did pick up one of his trademark foolish yellow cards against El Salvador, against both Mexico and T&T he played a complete controlled game. It will be interesting to see how he does in the hostile climates of Costa Rica and Mexico for the away games in those countries. And what to think about Altidore? He has his champions and certainly played as complete a game as you could expect against T&T for a kid his age. And his goal in the El Salvador game obviously was critical in sparking the comeback. But the image of him getting shoved out of the way by Hejduk prior to Hejduk scoring the tying goal just sticks in my mind. A true goal scoring forward would not have let that happen. It was, well, Landon-like. Now if he starts and scores a brace against either Costa Rica or Mexico on their home fields – well maybe then I might jump on the Altidore bandwagon. Until then I will be cautiously hopeful…


