Posts Tagged ‘Major League Soccer’

My 100th Post…What I’ve Learned

Friday, February 6th, 2009

After worrying that I’d get bored with both football and blogging, it seems that the worry was all for nothing. I’m proud to have hit the milestone that is my 100th post, and I’m not even close to boredom. I love this!!! To me, every aspect of footie is exciting and new and dynamic and I’m learning something new every day! So with this post, it’s time to look at the sum result of all those days and recap what I’ve learned on both the football side and the blogging side.

Starting with the football side, I learned that…

I Need To Give Managers More Respect I gave it to them, just not enough of it. From the club league level, I always assumed that footie managers organized a few plays and whichever manager was the better organizer would win the game. Not true. A good manager is a combination of organizer, cheerleader, drill sergeant and psychologist that knows when and where to apply each role. A good manager consistently gets his team to international competitions like the Champions League and Asia Cup. A good manager faces the variety of playing styles that these competitions attract and may not always win the prize, but always gets a good showing. And since most managers (not all but most) focus on the game and not the gossip mags, the TV rights debates, the women and all the other stuff created as a result of football’s gentrification, managers as a whole may be the last pure characteristic of the game. While there are many good managers in all corners of the world, Sir Alex Ferguson is best of breed. It gives me no joy to write this as a Chelsea man, but it’s a fact.

I Need To Brush Up On My Footie Fundamentals I came to this conclusion after a comment back-and-forth with the Brain over at Arsenal Column, a blog that focuses on tactical football from a Gunner’s point of view. I embarrassed myself during the back-and-forth, implying that center backs (the two defenders in the middle) are the same as fullbacks (the two defenders at either end). He politely pointed out my mistake and I had to plead me ignorance. The fundamentals are something that I’ve glanced at from the periphery and that needs to stop. I’ll probably start my research on Wikipedia and work my way up to a book or two.

I Need To Focus On Italian, German, & American Soccer My fear of getting bored of football came from my narrow view as all I watched was English Premier League and Spanish La Liga games. It got to the point that I had the game on in the background, barely paying attention to it while doing my laundry. But I’ve begun to focus on Germany’s Bundesliga and the Italian Serie A League and feel reinvigorated. I’ve discovered new players, new teams, new playing styles and the game is brand new to me once again. While these two leagues are great in their own right, I need to focus on the soccer in my backyard and divert some attention to Major League Soccer. There’s a lot of homegrown soccer talent in the US, much of it in the MLS. I need to educate myself on this.

And on the blogging side, I learned that…

I LOOOOOVE Writing I’ve wanted to be a writer since I was 12 but never really acted it, save for a few small things every now and then. This blog has allowed me to write on a regular basis.

I’ve Become An Organized Blogger But There’s Room For Improvement In my first “What I’ve Learned” post, I commented on what tough work blogging was, and it remains that way. Part of the reason it was tough was because I was posting anything that came to mind at any time of the day. The end result was certain posts that seemed rushed in terms of content and contained sloppy mistakes like misspellings and improper punctuation. I fixed this by spending some quality time playing with Wordpress and realized that, when used properly, it’s a fabulous organizer. I also started using simple things like a pen and paper. All of this made me a much more structured blogger and I started to take my time writing posts…maybe too much time. I’m spending up to an hour on each post to make sure that it’s as close to perfect as possible, which is good but not if it eats into my lunch hour at work or makes me late to the dinner table. Now that I’ve organized my blogging process, I need organize my time.

I’ve Have An Audience That May Be Small, But I Need To Cater To It I’ve started to use Twitter and Facebook to promote my blog. Most of my Twitter follows are knowledgeable about either football or all sports in general, but it’s not like this on Facebook. And according to Google Analytics, Facebook is where the majority of my traffic comes from. In order to keep these FB readers that I’m VERY thankful for, I need to make sure that they can relate to my posts as much as possible. This means that the inside footie jokes and references will be kept to a minimum and that any complicated soccer terms will be succinctly described. I’ll also try to inject more humor. This will be a challenge since I want to start researching football’s tactical side, but I can do it.

Taking all this into consideration, the future of this blog is to continue to track my footie learning process by writing about it. Expect more Bundesliga and Serie A related posts, particularly Serie A as I now have a team to support there, which is AC Milan. I will be researching football fundamentals but will be posting about in a way that attracts a non-football fan.

This is what I’ve learned. Anyone out there think that this learning process was fruitful or that I should be taking a different approach with this blog? Please let me know as I encourage your comments.

REALLY Good Post On The Beckham/MLS Fiasco

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

David Beckham
Courtesy of Major League Soccer Talk.

Great analysis! Becks has caught a lot of flack for failing to boost football’s profile in the States…this post does a great job of properly spreading the blame around. I agree with point 2 about how the different playing styles hampered things, and ABSOLUTELY agree with the first point about blaming Alexi Lalas. The former L.A. Galaxy GM has gotten some blame for al of this but not enough.

 

Barca Getting Rid of Henry?!?!?!

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Thierry Henry
The flame thrower, make your peeps afraid to know ya.

How many times I told ya, “play your position” small soldier

Gangstarr – “Full Clip”

It’s now one of those rare moments where I post a transfer rumor and I refuse to believe that it’s true. But if it’s true, then it’s tied to a recent football learning experience of mine so I need to get my feelings out on the subject ASAP!!!!!

It’s rumored that FC Barcelona will unload striker Thierry Henry. Supposedly, they’ll try to dump the ex-Arsenal man while simultaneously attempting to snag current Arsenal man, Cesc Fabregas.

I spoke to my Barca-loving wife prior to posting this and if it’s true (and again, “if”), then she’s fine with it. Henry’s rumored to have an arrogant streak and she’s not a big fan of arrogant players (hates Cristiano Ronaldo). She also feels that he only scores when he wants to and that there are other players that can easily fill his Barcelona role, so he’s not as special as many think he is, including himself.

Maybe. But in an old Manchester United post, I stated that United in its current form is unbeatable, partially due to its scoring armada of a lot of forwards and attacking midfielders. Barcelona is Man U’s Spanish counterpart in this sense and Henry, I feel, has gone above and beyond in contributing to this makeup.

And there’s more. As I spend this season painfully observing the two teams I support, Real Madrid and Chelsea, I’ve learned that a whole bunch of new players doesn’t mean that that the team will immediately start to win. I’ve watched Madrid bring in Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Rafael van der Vaart and other “good” players in the hopes that they’ll win games for the team. And although Madrid’s on is winning right now, the value of the contributions from the new guys is questionable. Huntelaar has rarely played since he came over and van der Vaart’s been benched a lot lately. With this, it’s tough for me to make the case that these new additions deserve a whole lot of credit for Real Madrid’s current winning streak.

And Chelsea? Well, Nicolas Anelka’s been making me eat my words all season. I’ve implied that the striker has been of no value to Chelsea since he came aboard last year. Fast forward to now and he’s the current leading scorer in the English Premier League!!!!! I’ll be touching on my Anelka mistake in (maybe) my next post.

I’ve learned that it takes time for a player to get accustomed to a new team in footie, so Thierry Henry is no different from Huntelaar, van der Vaart and Anelka in this respect. He had a crappy season last year, putting the ball in the back of the net on the rarest of occasions. Now look at him…kicking a** alongside Samuel Eto’o and Lionel Messi. And speaking of Messi, he may be putting in some awesome strike work for Barcelona now, but remember that he barely caused a ripple for the team for the two years prior. He was given time to find himself.

Thierry Henry is consistently delivering results for FC Barcelona in the results-oriented business that is football. FCB needs to let this small soldier stay where he is and let him play his position.

Okay…he’s 6′2″ so he’s not that small. But the opening Gangstarr quote fits in nicely anyway.

Courtesy Yahoo/UK.

Really Good Perspective of Major League Soccer

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Found this story from the Soccer Tickets Online blog. While the title comes off a tad spam-y, it’s got some very well-written posts, including this one.

It’s a well thought out perspective on the struggles that US-based Major League Soccer are facing. Not only is stadium attendance down, but the TV viewing audience is taking a hit as well. It begins its analysis at David Beckham’s arrival to the Galaxy and ends at last year’s UEFA Champions League final.

And this sentence hits it all home:

…Americans will watch soccer, but they want to watch competetive[sic], entertaining soccer.

Like the EPL/La Liga/Bundesliga brand of soccer. Sadly, I agree.

Barcelona Close To Setting Up an Expansion Team in the MLS. Real Madrid Already Has One.

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008


Maybe this is old news but I’m just hearing about it. SI.com is reporting that FC Barcelona is in talks with MLS officials in setting up a sister team in the Miami area, provided that they get some sort of tax break. And apparently, Real Madrid has already set one up with Real Salt Lake.

If the deal goes through, then the new club will setup two soccer academies. I have a couple of nephews that are really REALLY good at footie and are based in Atlanta…which is a little less than 700 miles from Miami. So my nephews have a chance to hit that camp if all this works out…a little greedy on my part perhaps but I’m cool with that.

Steven Cohen criticizes the LA Galaxy for signing David Beckham…again

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008

He may have been saying this for a while and I think he flip-flops his opinions sometimes, but I like Steven Cohen and respect what he has to say. The host of the World Soccer Daily radio show and the Fox Football Fone-in TV call-in show has, once again, gone off on the LA Galaxy organization for their overhyping Beckham as THE one to bring Soccer to the U.S. masses and failing miserably in the process:

“It was a smash-and-grab. They wanted the money and season-ticket sales and didn’t take into consideration he was injured. It was fraudulent and disingenuous to sell Beckham (ticket) packages when he didn’t play.”

Money was definitely a factor in all of this, but I really think that Alexi Lalas and Co. had a some altruism on the brain and really wanted to raise soccer’s profile in America. But Steve makes some good points.

Read the full article here.