Waquoit
Mr. Positive
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
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All you need is a Finebaum or a Doyel to latch on to it -
Was wondering why you cared so much that you would multiple posts about this and now I know. You are insane.
All you need is a Finebaum or a Doyel to latch on to it -
My takeaway is that JK is a heck of a coach.
Was wondering why you cared so much that you would multiple posts about this and now I know. You are insane.
I liked the hubbub a few months back about the USMNT rebelling against JK. Not necessarily true, but I don't want JK being too buddy buddy with the team. I think Bradley became too much that way, and I don't think it serves the program any. Top down structure is better for managing egos imo.
That's brilliant, Waquoit. Way to throw out the "insane" card. Calling someone "insane" for having the temerity to politely suggest that maybe a conversation about the U.S. men's soccer team be taken elsewhere ON THIS SITE stifles conversation about UConn football-related stuff than anything else.
That's brilliant, Waquoit. Way to throw out the "insane" card. Calling someone "insane" for having the temerity to politely suggest that maybe a conversation about the U.S. men's soccer team be taken elsewhere ON THIS SITE stifles conversation about UConn football-related stuff than anything else.
I think it is one of those things where "if you aren't interested or don't like it, don't click on it".
sound advice. Will follow. Probably will be a lot to ignore here during meat of American college football season
U.S. World Cup qualifying schedule
Sept. 6 vs. Costa Rica TBD
Sept. 10 vs. Mexico
Oct. 11 vs. Jamaica
Oct. 15 vs. Panama
Anyone following the team since pre-Arena can see the change in culture from Bora-Simpson-Arena-Bradley squads and the current version.
Past team hold on 2-1 or 3-1 against minnows like El Sal. A few choke away a goal early in the 2nd half.
If you need a specific example, watch Break Shea. 8-10 years ago he is starting at left midfield. With his speed, mediocre touch and bullrush metality he would fit right in with the defense first, counterattack slamball style.
This squad has a purpose in the final third. They don't rely on set pieces, lucky bounces, and individual brilliance from there best player.
Still problems and questions, but finally the US has style that can win against tougher opponents besides the bunker mentality shown in 2009.
There will be a ton of guys fighting for the last 3-4 spots in 2014. Form will be everything.
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So you are saying soccer is more powerful than football? Finally, someone admits it!![]()
(j/k of course)
I think it is one of those things where "if you aren't interested or don't like it, don't click on it". Note, the MBB board has soccer posts all the time and it doesn't do anything to stifle discussion of BB.
I liked the hubbub a few months back about the USMNT rebelling against JK. Not necessarily true, but I don't want JK being too buddy buddy with the team. I think Bradley became too much that way, and I don't think it serves the program any. Top down structure is better for managing egos imo.
In the past it was easy to assume we didn't have the talent or the depth to attack. This group is like a chessboard of player with different skill sets but at a high enough level with the challenge being putting together a complimentary group on the field. Certain guys like Bradley, Donovan etc look like they could be the glue that holds it together.
The description of purpose in the final third is what sticks with me as a defining contrast. That element of skill with the ball at their feet and mental recognition between players to make connections. One thing is for certain. You can't become a good attacking team without practicing it during games so at some point you need to make the leap and change the mindset to see if you have what it takes. In our case we may score goals but on the big stage how many will we give up is a question that comes to mind. In any case it's exciting soccer and fun to be along for the ride.
I found the unattributed comment of one of the players in the recent JK dustup telling: “They want us to play the beautiful game, but we’re not a technical team like the Germans. We’re not Spain or Brazil,” the player said. “What we’re good at is we work hard, we fight and we compete. We have great athletes and we’re a good counterattacking team. Maybe we need to go back to what we’re good at.”
Which is odd to me, given that US players on a national level are so pressed defensively during there international careers; you'd think they'd develop. I still maintain this is why we churn out such good goal keepers. They face so much pressure throughout their careers, that they develop at a superior rate to their overseas counterparts. My tongue is mostly in cheek there, but not entirely.
Just a pet hypothesis that has but the tiniest basis in reality.
My theory is that in a country of 300 million people at any one time someone should be a hell of a goalie.
So where's our Messi??? Should be at least one. I'll even take a Romario type. Just one.
I'm still a bit worried about the back line or our marking in general. It's awesome that the attack is yielding goals but when we are up against top 10-15 teams in the WC quarterfinals we may have to win 1-0 and 2-1 instead of 4-2, and if there are still vulnerabilities those squads will find ways to exploit them.
I'm still a bit worried about the back line or our marking in general. It's awesome that the attack is yielding goals but when we are up against top 10-15 teams in the WC quarterfinals we may have to win 1-0 and 2-1 instead of 4-2, and if there are still vulnerabilities those squads will find ways to exploit them.