Sunday, February 27, 2011

Liverpool bites it and Arsenal blows it. My men's team can't hack it. Not in the mood for creative writing

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Successful showing by Kuyt today. Wish that Joey Cole would have gotten his goal too. He really needs on bad. Its a cryin shame he doesn't play more often

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Not going to be writing for a while. Having issues with time management.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Overjoyed

Charlie Davies to DC United for a year-long loan. A match made in heaven. I am so proud of all the positive moves my beloved United have made in the last few months. I believe that the DCU Front Office has proven to its fans that it is serious about winning some trophies this year. Just amazing. After such a poor season, we have a great chance to go from bottom of the table all the way up to the top. Vamos United!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Rooney - Goal of the Year!

<a href="http://msn.foxsports.com/foxsoccer/video?vid=c8a41e32-5995-47a4-aeb0-75279ec6bbbb" target="_new" title="">Wayne Rooney's goal on Fox Soccer</a>

Friday, February 11, 2011

Who's Got Two Thumbs And Can't Wait For The Carolina Challenge Cup? (And C'mon Charlie! C'mon!)

THIS GUY! Sorry for that...

As the Charleston Battery are making their preseason shaking and moving, my beloved DC United are doing the same. But before I get to DC news and comment, a huge congrats goes to the Battery front office for coming to terms with Colin Falvey, Zach Prince, and Keith Wiggans, who were all members of last years USL 2 Championship Battery team. Pending the red tape, we would be for the better with these guys on the field. Which does take me back to 2003...when we won the A league and then just about every great player on the team left for other teams. I boycotted the Battery for the entire month of February 2004. I understand how contracts work, people get paid, and how players don't really have loyalty when it comes to a bigger paycheck...so....i got over it. But some of the guys that took me out for my 21st birthday left the team that year and left me holding on to memories instead of making new ones....and it also sucked that I no longer got free tix and passes to the 3 Lion's.  That 2003 team was amazing to watch. It was a shame that we couldn't have seen a legacy begin. You know, they did this to us at DC after we won the Cup a few times. They have this horrible mindset in US Soccer that freaks them out when teams win multiple consecutive championships. Something to do with blaming the collapse of the NASL on the NY Cosmos winning the championship every year. And of course that is a myth. Yeah, for sure the Cosmos was the face of the NASL, but there was other talent and other winners over the 17 seasons the league was in existence.

Fans pay tribute to Charlie Davies in October 2009.But on to the Charlie Davies news and DC United. Dunno for sure if its gonna happen, but if he gets signed... the fans coming out to Battery Park for the Challenge Cup better get started on the #9 signs and be ready to cheer on the boy. He needs all the support we can give.  This is what welomed the US players as they came onto the field vs Costa Rica days after Charlie's accident. A match in which Charlie Davies was sure to delight USMNT fans with another display of his ability, his speed, his finishing, and his charm.  With DC picking up some very experienced veteran players to come in up top and score some goals as well as impart a bit of wisdom to the younger recruits of Olsen's Army...the team would do well to bring on board a player such as Davies.

RFK being just a short distance from the site of the fatal car crash where Davies career was buried. The home of DC United could, and I believe  it absolutely should, very well be the site of his career's resurrection. Having played with Davies in the 2007 Copa America, Head Coach Ben Olsen know exactly what Charlie is capable of when he is 100%. "I love Charlie..." Olsen says, " It’s no different than any other trialist..", "We’ll evaluate him physically, mentally, tactically and all the things we look for in players. We’ll see."  With a decision to come as early as tomorrow, I am one soccer fan who has recently bitten off all my fingernails with the end of the transfer window last week and is currently widdling his fingers down to nubs over this news to come.

With the Barra Brava and the Screaming Eagles already singin' songs to Charlie, this seems like its a done deal............but its not. So, for now, lets just sing a while and hope that good things keep coming our way.


His leg is fine,
His play's sublime.
He's Charlie Davies,
United's #9!

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

The Spring Season Is Upon Us

As some hit the gyms, some others hit the fields, and a lot of the rest keep putting off their preseason work outs...one thing is certain:  We are all counting down the days to the beginning of the Charleston Soccer League's Spring season. We are 5 days out. Just enough time to run a few miles and touch the ball a bit.

 For my team, the Wolves, we are pitted against a team I have previously lamented about (previous post). A team that has seen us beat the last two times we've met on the pitch in the preseason. So...the Plague Rats...we meet again and so soon....

I am completely looking forward to this match up. Having seen what they have to offer and making the necessary adjustments to our game, I believe that we will have a great chance to beat them come Sunday.  Unfortunately for us, we have had the least productive preseason in the last couple of years. Usually we have quite a few games, but things did not work out in our favor. And to top it off, there is a bit of a difference of opinion on how best to go line-up on the field this season. The team is quite heavy on midfielders and defense, and a bit light in attacking options. I our semifinal against Madra Rua last season, we started in a 3-2-3-2. The idea was focused on the strength of a double-stopper system. However, the system seemed to stagnate our attack. A lot of balls were played forward to our strikers, who were left with a ton of space between themselves and any help. We looked disorganized and unimaginative in the first half. At halftime, we went back to 4-4-2 and finished the game as winners. Some of the team would like to work on the 3-2-3-2 and some would rather see their own eyes poked out.

 I am hoping that we could give a try to another formation altogether. I would like to see the same sort of lineup used by Liverpool in their last 4 games. They play to their strengths, which is their midfield and defense. And with 4 clean sheets in a row, I think the formation carries merit. This is the 3-6-1, and I like it. 

Here is a snippet from  The Offside's Liverpool Blog regarding the formation , how it was used against Stoke, and how well it can work overall:

By Noel: February 3rd, 2011


Everything is connected. Everything is related. The system works because it is the perfect system for the opponent and the players are effective in their roles, not because any one player grabs the game by the scruff of the neck and carries the team to victory.
3-6-1 base formation

i.
In defense, three central defenders comprehensively negate Stoke’s solitary target. Carew is the outlet, the bullseye for long balls, and they are a largely agrarian side lacking guile. They lack the pace on the wings, the touch in the center, the skill to play football from the back. Hoof, hold, attack. Look for onrushing midfielders sprinting ahead on the counter. Look for an opposition defense stretched by their own increasingly frustrated attempts to break through. Stay tight and counter.  It seems somehow familiar.
Still, Stoke, though simple, is generally an effective side. They’re good at what they do: Rugged, direct attacks launched over the middle without the benefit of natural width, hoping for the best. Hoping that if Plan A doesn’t work a grafted free kick or long throw will salvage a point here and there over the course of a long season.
Setting out with three in the back, then, with the tall Kyrgiakos tightly man-marking Stoke striker Carew while Agger and Skrtel provide immediate support as needed and Lucas and Aurelio interchange in front of them, both aware of their defensive responsibilities, gives Stoke no outlet for their natural game. They are grossly out-manned at their only possible point of attack, and must hope for a lucky break that leads to a throw, leads to a set-piece. Leads to something. They never get that lucky break.

ii.
A central box of four midfielders, supplemented by wingbacks in the wide areas, heavily outnumber Stoke’s midfield. If the five men so commonly credited with providing a man advantage in the myriad 4-2-3-1 and 4-3-3 variant systems can outnumber their less astute 4-4-2 brethren, here there is no match in a possession game based around a minimum of six players passing and moving in midfield. Liverpool use their advantage to hit 61% possession while putting Stoke under exceptional pressure any time they get the ball and attempt anything more creative than pumping long-balls to the heavily outnumbered Carew.
Still, it is a plan in large part reliant on Stoke. Or at least on Stoke’s shortcomings and their inability to compensate for them within the course of the match. For if there was a skilled, speedy winger to dink the ball to wide over the top, it might well stretch Liverpool’s three narrow defenders and open up room for Stoke’s lonesome striker. But Stoke don’t have that player, or if they do they have not prepared to use him in such a manner.
So Liverpool is free to ping the ball around at will, building their attack, and all Stoke can do on the occasions they do reclaim possession is pump it over the top. To a tightly marked Carew. Whence it comes right back at them.
iii.The attack relies on those six men in midfield–in a single striker system, most of those who will join the attack are necessarily part of the collective bossing possession–as well as quality hold up play from an industrious Dirk Kuyt, looking as good as he has at any time this season. It is even supplemented by the outside central defenders, Skrtel on the right and Agger on the left, both willing to provide an emergency outlet as Liverpool builds their way into the attacking zone. Beyond simply providing an outlet, though, they also often move up the pitch, forming a portion of the base of midfield and allowing one of Lucas or Aurelio to push fully into the attacking third while maintaining a defensively solid quartet in the middle of the field. It is an efficient accordion–or domino–action, with one of the three central defenders moving forward into a temporary defensive midfield role as the ball enters the final third, allowing one of Lucas or Aurelio to join the attack without worrying about a hole being left if Stoke breaks quickly.


3-6-1 in attack
The defense shifts from a central back three to a quintessentially South American defensive quartet, a pair of center backs with a pair of volantes camped in front of them, and suddenly at the back Liverpool looks much like a modern 4-2-3-1 defending the most dangerous central areas of the pitch against fast breaks. The six man midfield, meanwhile, has given the wingbacks enough time to advance through their possession, and with the ball then sent out to the left or right, as many as five Liverpool attackers are able to flood the box and hunt for crosses.



In the course of the match, if for example Skrtel and Kyrgiakos have stayed at home behind Lucas and an advancing Agger, then in front of that you will have, at the end of a well built move, Kelly delivering the ball from wide on the right while Kuyt, Gerrard, Meireles, Aurelio, and Johnson all attack the box. Or Johnson will deliver from wide while Kelly runs for the far post from the opposite side. In fact, on a number of occasions towards the end of the first half and early in the second Liverpool’s attacks manage to look exactly like this, and while the Liverpool players settle in their roles and push ahead, Stoke appears completely overrun by the attackers flooding their box after long stretches of build-up play have worked Liverpool en masse into the final third.


iv.
Once Suarez and Shelvey come on, and with Liverpool having gone up 2-0, the team clearly takes to a much more defensive 5-3-2, but until then it is a masterful example of just how useful a formation with three defenders can still be on occasion in the modern game. It makes it exceptionally difficult to break down for a team with a single central target and little natural width; it allows six men in midfield and an even greater numerical advantage in possession; and it encourages wing play and whipped in crosses more than most other modern systems whose wide men–the fullbacks–start from deeper.



It is, however, still a system with weaknesses. Against a team that themselves play with width one will be faced with the risk of pinned back wingbacks and a resulting de facto five man back line, making for an exceptionally defensive side. That in turn will lead to an outnumbered midfield likely to lose the possession battle while the single striker becomes increasingly isolated. Conversely, insisting on pushing the wingbacks forward in such circumstance, attempting to dominate the midfield battle no matter the consequences, will only leave the central three increasingly in danger of being pulled apart as they attempt to cover vacant wide areas.



With the proliferation of single striker systems the problem more often than not with three center backs became that you either had too many defenders committed to protecting against that single central man, or you had too few defending against a side that could effectively use the wings to deliver crosses to that central man. The issue has never been that a central three is too many men committed to defense on the whole, since most systems commit at least four players almost exclusively to defense as part of either a flat back line or some form of stacked defensive quartet of center backs and holding midfielders while the fullbacks rush forward. The problem is that as sides look to exploit three central defenders it inevitably leads to the need for the wingbacks to defend to a greater degree, and so sooner or later one decides that a four man back line can do the job just as well as what has suddenly become a five man back line, and then a central defender is swapped for a player pushed forward somewhere else. But against a side unable–or simply unprepared–to properly exploit a three center back system, it can actually be quite advantageous, contributing to an even stronger position in the midfield battle.



It certainly worked a charm against Stoke, a side unable to cope with a striker man marked by Kyrgiakos, supported as he was by two additional center backs while the wingbacks stayed high up the pitch to support both possession and defensive pressure from midfield. It worked against a side that wasn’t set up to effectively stretch the wings and force Liverpool into a catch-22 where they either defended with three and got picked apart, or defended with five and lost that advantage in midfield. It worked against the agrarian lumpers of Stoke–it worked wonders. But it’s probably not the long term answer.


v.
Even assuming that every side faced had the same deficiencies as Stoke, one imagines the eventual goal for Liverpool is to have both Suarez and Carroll in the starting lineup. The problem then becomes that you either have to drop Suarez into an attacking midfield role in place of Gerrard or Meireles, or switch to a two man front as Liverpool did towards the end of the match. In the latter case, despite the braying of clueless pundits the world over, an extra striker doesn’t always make things more attacking–it certainly didn’t make Liverpool more attacking against Stoke, and with good reason. The system Liverpool used to such great effect for the bulk of the match was a system that thrived on possession, on pass and move and overloading the midfield while slowly shifting the entire team forward and looking to overwhelm an opposition defending in numbers with numbers of their own. With one man up top, it meant there could be six men in midfield, and the time afforded by that allowed Liverpool to move forward as a unit and flood the box with attackers once Stoke was pushed back against their own goal line. On the other hand, two up top would have meant–did mean, towards the end–that Liverpool would lose the time provided by that midfield advantage and be forced to play a more direct game through the two strikers, a tactic more suited to a counter-attacking underdog than a dominant home side. Perhaps two strikers sounds more attacking on the surface, but the match against Stoke saw one striker and four or five players attacking the box to start, and then two strikers but only two or three players able to attack the box to end, which just goes to show it’s about finding the proper balance for your side’s players and the opponent, and not about how many strikers are on the pitch. It also goes to show that the most effective attacks can come from first effectively controlling areas other than the final third.



In the end it seems that it’s always about balance and team, and the way that the defense supports the transition and possession informs the attack. Yesterday, then, Liverpool–whether it was down to Kenny Dalglish or Steve Clarke’s specific tactics on the day–got it absolutely, brilliantly right. It won’t work against everybody–in fact, it likely wouldn’t work against Chelsea, though the self-evidently more defensive 5-3-2 Liverpool finished the match with and that could be used while looking to hit them on the counter might actually have some merit on Sunday, even if the resulting concession of midfield would mean nervy moments and a lot of long balls. It probably isn’t best suited to Liverpool’s best eleven at present in any case, either. But sometimes, something like what was seen yesterday will be the right formation to get the job done due to the opponent and available players.



Nobody knew this Liverpool had it in them to approach a match like that, and it was an absolute tactical master-class. A perfectly balanced, perfectly modern twist on the 3-4-2-1 with a focus on dominating midfield possession, one that completely nullified Stoke’s ability to do anything at all. In the glow of such victory, it’s hard not to wonder if with the right personnel in defense–perhaps with a ball playing center back on the right to match Agger on the left, and with a new Sami Hyypia in the middle to clean things up–such a formation might, with enough practice, have the flexibility to be more generally useful in modern football. Especially with the way the defensive side of the team transitioned to a very Brazilian stacked quartet once the ball reached the final third. Still, the personnel probably isn’t there to make it work week in and week out right now, both in that there’s an absence of a second Daniel Agger at the back, as well as the presence of a certain Luis Suarez at the front. But for at least one night it was a thing of beauty, and once it started clicking, Stoke didn’t know hit them.



This is the same system that the Red's played against Chelsea as they thouroughly outplayed the Blue's on Sunday. They swamped Chelsea for most of the match and found options time and time again all over the pitch.


I think that this formation would be most beneficial for our team to adapt to. Now the problem is getting the rest of the guys on board. Wish me luck.

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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Enough With The Transfers Already...I Have To Focus On My Anniversary

Ten years. This February 5th, it will be ten years since I married my beautiful, amazing wife. When I sit and think about the past ten years...I think at first that it has simply blown by way to fast. But then my memories start to really take hold and time starts to slow down in my mind. And I mean SLOW DOWN...like a Heinz ketchup bottle leisurely dripping its delicious sauce from atop a tall apartment building and onto my hot dog. Which randomly reminds me of this commercial...


Omigosh! That's Matt Leblanc!  But I digress...

My wife started out as my friend. And after some long nights sitting and talking at Waterfront Park, and walking and more talking through Downtown Charleston, she became my best friend. We had a lot in common, so naturally we had quite a bit to talk about. One great gold nugget of knowledge that I found out about her was that she was a soccer player. Not only did she play, but she was a champion. And I saw the plaques on the wall to prove it. This was a serious turn-on. I was starting to have quite a bit of trouble containing my emotions around her (and about her).  I was seriously falling in love with her. And I came to a point where I simply couldn't hide it any more. Things were moving along swiflty. Shortly after we started hanging out, I had moved in with her. And the really cool stuff started happening. (Mind out of the gutter, please) 

One day I came home and I had a moment. Kind of like when you have that moment of realization.... like when the lightbulb pops on over your head, or when the heavens shine down on you to light your path forward...and at that moment, I knew that I wanted nothing more than to marry this absolutely gift of a human being. 

You ask, what was this moment? Well to be truthful, it was a series of moments that had been building to a crescendo culminating in a harmonious moment of true symphonic exhilaration. I came home one day and my future wife was watching soccer on tv. Not only was she watching the match, but she gave me the play-by-play, catching me up to speed to the 65th minute of Liverpool vs Everton. I loved Liverpool. And I loved her. Oh...how I loved her.  Even though she supports Man Utd. (yeah, haha, have a laugh won't you)

So this may not be a completely forthcoming history of all the ins and outs of our love life and marriage (again, get out of the gutter). In fact, it is nowhere near the large body of work that our love's history would require me to honestly chronicle in whole.  But it is an insight into what got us off on such the right foot. Soccer. It's the passion that we started out sharing and continue to embrace together today. And we share our love with our friends and our family. We now have two little ballin' rugrats that are sure to carry on our futbol legacy of love for a long time to come.

So it's our ten year anniversary. Over the past decade together we've seen Liverpool win the European Cup the Super Cup and the Champion's League among other great moments.  And yes, I guess that we've seen Manchester Utd win a few games here and there too...its really not important. Thankfully, I have been blessed to have her share my intense love for DC United. I don't think I could have been able to deal with the past couple of MLS seasons without being able to have her shoulder to cry on.

I truly cannot and do not want to imagine what my life would be like if I did not meet her at a bar, in an ally, off of John Street one spring night in Charleston. I am blessed. And for the next ten years, I am going to do my best to make sure that she know how much she means to me. She certainly has shown me over the past ten years how much I mean to her. I get to go play footie whenever I like. She lets my life revolve around the beautiful game just as much as it revolves around her and our family. Love and Soccer, two amazing gifts that my wife has given me for ten years. Add in the babes, and my last decade has been a dream. So again, for the next ten years to come, I have a mission to fulfill. My duty is to honor her by being the best that I can be for her, for our kids, and for the game.

So here you go babe. I love you. I tried to be more romantic by finding you something to do with Man Utd...but alas, there is nothing out there even remotely romantic in regards to those blokes. But these fellas should do just fine. They happen to be Tottenham Supporters, but hey...at least they aren't Chelsea or Arsenal fans...