Two Pumas Headed Abroad

Mexico’s World Cup campaign may have ended in disappointment, but two young players showed enough skill to earn transfers to Europe. Pablo Barrera and Efrain Juarez, both from the Pumas school, are embarking to start a new chapter in their lives, with West Ham United and Celtic respectively.

The two are part of that “Golden Generation” that won the U17 in 2005. They join Giovani Dos Santos, Carlos Vela, and Hector Moreno (another Pumas product) over in Europe. Another member of the age group (but did not play on the U17 team in Peru), Javier Hernandez will be joining Manchester United at the end of the month. Andres Guardado, who is also 23, has been at Depor for three years. And Jonathan Dos Santos is with Barcelona.

Barrera did very well coming off the bench for Mexico in South Africa. He can play on either wing, although he is most comfortable on the right. He is fearless, has good speed, manages both feet well, and has vastly improved his on the ball skill over the past few years. He led Pumas in scoring last season with 6 goals, even after truncating his season for Tri duty.

Juarez caught the eye of the Celtic brass during Mexico’s friendly at Wembley and his World Cup was serviceable, but not spectacular. His biggest strength is his lung capacity. No one runs harder for the full 90 than he does. He has the skillset, and in the right situation, Juarez can develop into the world class holding midfielder. It looks like Celtic will be able to get him going in that regard. And they have Champions League games to boot.

As a Pumas fan, I am very happy for both of them, but wonder if Pumas has adequate replacements ready to jump into the starting XI. Pumas fans have been teased mercilessly by the considerable skill of one Fernando Morales, but he has been cursed with one season ending injury after another. He is no longer a promising youngster, though. David Cabrera, though, is a very promising youngster, and hopefully will work hard enough to win a spot on the senior side.

In 2006, a number of Mexican players were able to make the move abroad after the World Cup. Most of those players, though, had already established themselves and were making mid career moves. These guys, however, are all young, and will likely form the base of the national team for the next two World Cups.

Paul Mariner to TFC?

Our freinds at the BEEB ARE REPORTING that former longtime New England assistant Paul Mariner has parted ways with Plymouth Argyle.

Argyle is, to put it bluntly, broke, and combined with Mariners' demotion this season when Peter Reid was handed the reins and it's been obvious that Mariners' days were numbered.

Now comes word that earlier today he asked to be released from his contract.

Now, Fox Soccer and the Toronto GLOBE AND MAIL are both reporting that he's headed for TFC.

Prior to the unfortunate hiring of Prkei early last year, there was speculation that Mariner was being seriously considered. A longtime MLS assistant, he was touted for every coaching vacancy for years before finally heading overseas.

It would be the smart thing to do for sure. Which is why they'll probably sign someone else.

Isn't it time gay footballers were able to come out?

Recently, Bayern Munich and Germany striker Mario Gomez urged gay footballers to come out. “We have a gay Vice-Chancellor, Berlin's mayor is gay … professional football players should commit to their inclination," Gomez said. “They would play as if they were liberated”

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This raises an interesting issue. When will a gay footballer publicly come out?

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Whatever your personal views on homosexuality, it is undoubtedly true that gay people will make up a part of your everyday life. You probably work, go to school with or socialise with a gay person. By and large, gay people, rightly, have the same rights as everyone else. However, for one reason or another, football seems to be different and is lagging behind both society in general and other sports in that homosexuality is still taboo.

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The only footballer to have publicly come out was former Norwich and Nottingham Forest striker Justin Fashanu. Fashanu’s story is a sad one. He earned a move to Nottingham Forest, becoming the first black player to be transferred for £1m, after a string of great performances and goals for Norwich, including a brilliant strike
against Liverpool, the 1980 Goal of the Season.

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At Forest, things started to go wrong for him. He lost his confidence and was terrified of legendary manager Brian Clough, who made some derogatory comments about the rumours surrounding Fashanu’s rumoured visits to gay bars. Clough recalled in his autobiography on dressing down he gave him "'Where do you go if you want a loaf of bread?' I asked him. 'A baker's, I suppose.' 'Where do you go if you want a leg of lamb?' 'A butcher's.' 'So why do you keep going to that bloody poofs' club?"

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Fashanu was at the tail end of his career when
he publicly came out in 1990, in an interview with The Sun, who showed their usual tact and sensitivity by spicing the story up with lurid tales of his supposed relationships with MP’s, other footballers and celebrities. Fashanu was disowned publicly by his brother, John, and received a backlash from some of the public. His career suffered, with clubs being unwilling to offer him a contract and ended his career overseas.

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Fashanu ended up coaching the Maryland Mania. While there, a 17-year-old made an allegation of sexual assault against him and Fashanu fled back to England believing there were warrants out for his arrest. Convinced he was going to be extradited and found guilty, Fashanu commited suicide in May 1998. It was discovered that the police had already dropped their investigation into Fashanu and no warrants had been issued.

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No other footballer has come out in England since.

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Other sports, even those more macho than football, have openly gay players. Even Rugby has had openly gay players, including current Wales international and former British Lions captain Gareth Thomas. There have been gay boxing World Champions, gay Olympic gold medalists, gay grand-slam winners in tennis and gay NFL, MLB and NBA players (though they came out after they retired). So why aren’t there publicly gay footballers?

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Maybe one of the problems, here in
England anyway, is that the vast majority of footballers fit into very small pigoenholes and anyone that is a little bit different is looked upon with suspicion, if not excluded altogether.

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Former Chelsea, Blackburn and England defender Graeme Le Saux was taunted throughout his career for his supposed homosexuality, despite being heterosexual and married with children. This seemed to stem because Le Saux didn’t fit the usual footballer stereotype. He was university educated, liked to read newspapers that contain words of more than one syllable and his hobbies included art and antiques. Similarly, Sol Campbell was subjected to homophobic chants from some Spurs fans whilst playing for Portsmouth. Like Le Saux, there is nothing to suggest that Campbell is gay.

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So if someone like Le Saux can be ridiculed for nothing more than being middle-class and having different interests than most players, what chance does a gay player have of being accepted?
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Former professional Paul Elliott claimed he knew of 12 gay players who were afraid to come out. The foremost publicist in the UK, Max Clifford, claims he has been approached by two high-profile Premier League players about coming out and has advised both to stay in the closet because of the abuse they would receive. Clifford also said “It's a very sad state of affairs. But it's a fact that homophobia in football is as strong now as it was 10 years ago. If you'd asked me in 2000 whether I thought we'd have a famous, openly gay footballer by 2010 I would have said yes.”
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There are also suggestions that maybe clubs are blocking players from coming out. The chair of the FA’s “Homophobia in Football” group, Peter Clayton (the only openly gay FA councillor) says “There are also barriers to a player coming out from some clubs, firstly because the players are commercial assets and the clubs don't want those assets damaged, and secondly because a player coming out would cause disruption”.
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I don’t think that would be the case at all. In fact, I think the opposite would probably happen. There is no way any company that is big enough to be able to afford a celebrity endorsement would disassociate themselves with a gay footballer, for fear of the negative press they would generate, if nothing else.
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Despite general attitudes to homosexuality here in the UK and in many countries worldwide having improved since Fashanu came out, football has lagged way behind. It was only two years ago that homophobic chanting was banned. Recent fan polls have suggested that should a player come out the fans really wouldn’t be that bothered, it wouldn’t make any difference to their opinion of that player.

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Unfortunately, this doesn’t look like a problem that will be resolved soon. This year the Professional Footballers Association in England had to pull a anti-homophobia campaign video after being unable to find any players willing to participate in fear of being ridiculed. The FA’s own viral anti-homophobia campaign, was stopped after criticism that it could do more harm than good.

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It is ridiculous to suggest that this is just a problem in the Premier League. There are no high profile gay players (that I know of anyway) in the major European leagues. Therer has been a French coach and players from Norway and Germany who came out after retirement but no current players. Sadly there have also been some high-profile names in football that have expressed homphobic views publicly.

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Recently, Vlatko Markovic, the head of the Croatian Football Federation, said “while I’m President of the Croatian Football Federation, there will be no homosexuals in the national team”. He has since apologised, Unfortunately he was followed by by the executive VP of Dinamo Zagreb, Zdravko Mimic said in the past week “"I would not have Gay people playing in my national team either. Gay people are for ballet. They can be journalists or writers. They would never put their head in front of a football boot"

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New USA midfielder Jermaine Jones was once asked if he thought there were any gay players in the Bundesliga. He controversially replied “Hopefully not”

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In England, the FA has done a good job in its anti-racism initiatives. The bad old days where black players were routinely abused from the stands have thankfully been consigned to the past. The FA and football authorities around the world should put the same effort into stamping homophobic abuse out of the game, through education and by enforcing the anti-homophobia measures already taken.

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There are a few steps in the right direction being taken. Manchester City has been accredited as a gay-friendly workplace and more and more footballers are speaking out about the issue of accepting gay players into the football community. However, until more is done to stop homophobic chants and taunts, and attitudes from those inside the game in general change, it may be a long time before another gay player comes out, which in these times is a really sad thing.

When the Dust Settles, Televisa's Grip on el Tri will be Stronger than Ever

An axiom exists in the world of footie. I can’t remember the way it goes, but I know it ends with …and the Germans always win.

You can apply a similar corollary to the world of Mexican futbol, just add …and Televisa always gets its way.

They definitely got their way this week, and then some.

For those who don't know, Televisa is the Mexican media Giant and (not so invisible) invisible hand that rules Mexican futbol.

After Mexico failed to qualify for the Olympics, and Televisa saw their ad revenue disappear with every sitter missed that night in Carson two years ago, it looked like Jorge Vergara, the mercurial Chivas owner, had assumed control of the national team and its future. I wondered if his power play catapulted him to the top of the FMF food chain.

His first move was to sack Hugo Sanchez and bring in SGE. With three votes, Televisa waited until everyone else had cast before doing so themselves.

The Swede only lasted 8 months, and had left Mexico in a deep hole in WCQ.

It was Pachuca’s turn. Their owner, Jesus Martinez, had Mexican President Felipe Calderon, write Javier Aguirre, requesting a return to the Tri.

Clearly embarrassed by the Ericksson fiasco, Vergara somehow still had some influence on the decision making. He kept his seat on the National Team Committee, and was able to put one of his guys, Nestor de la Torre, as the National Team Director.

It was always going to be an uneasy relationship, and it was strained further when de la Torre refused to grant Televisa even more access than they already had. After the World Cup, rumors were flying that Televisa wanted de la Torre out. “I am no one’s puppet.” De la Torre said.

And then there was the party. Which the press was more than happy to exploit.

De la Torre fined some players, and suspended others after the players had a much publicized get together after a friendly in Monterrey.

He applied the rule of law. He says players broke rules, so they must face consequences. The players, though, would have preferred the matter handled internally.

How many times have we heard teams release statements that players have been fined or suspended for breaking unspecified team rules and the matter will be handled internally? No problem, we move on.

Not Nestor. He called a press conference, read the names of the guilty parties and the rules that were said to have been violated. The press ate it up, adding to the narrative that the players were good for nothings that would rather rock out with their co%#s out than play for Mexico.

The players were furious. They asked not to be called up until their were changes made at the institutional level in a letter that they requested not to be released to the press (which of course it was, almost as soon as it was received). The sponsors were even more furious. They shelled out a lot of cash so that their branding would be associated with Chicharito, Rafa, Ochoa, and the like.

FMF didn’t cave to players, but the sponsors? Well….

Publicly, Femexfut was behind de la Torre and his decisions 100%. But let us not forget that the top two names on the Femexfut org. chart were lifelong Televisa employees. They stood by as Nestor continued this very public circus act. They even provided the rope for the Flying Nestor number. All he had to do was hang himself.

He did.

The players took a firm position against Nestor. The fallout from the party, it turns out, was the culmination, not the beginning of the bad blood between the two. The FMF admitted to the players that mistakes were made and apologized. The players were always fine with sanctions, but demanded a public apology from Nestor. He refused, and would rather resign. Which is what he did.

It all makes me wonder if Televisa knew this would happen. Someone in FMF had to know that the players had reserved one of the halls at the Monterrey hotel. They also had to know that de la Torre would respond to the press, like he did during the whole Bobadilla thing before the World Cup. So they were able to get rid of a guy they didn’t want without getting their hands dirty.

Now televise can install another yes man at the post. And the news gets better for them because their biggest headache in Tri decision making has removed himself from the process. Jorge Vergara, believing that the FMF turned their back on Nestor, stepped down from his position on the National team committee. It is a shame. Vergara seems to have to have as more of a sporting interest than just an economic one.

So now what? Much, much more of the same. A coach will be named next week. 4 year projects are nice to talk about, but a Mexico coach’s success will depend not on what he does on the field, but what he can deliver to the bottom line. Televisa's bottom line.

And for better or worse, Televisa will get their way.

Club over Country; or, Natty Dread

Well, I've narrowed down the pronunciations for Qatar. I can't decide between "catarrh" and "gutter."

Oh, and I see I have a brand-new all time least favorite team. Terrific.

So in the interview/rant I did with Brett and Derek's interview I touched briefly on one of the reasons I thought FIFA had two bids at once. Basically, there was no sensible reason for it…unless you wanted twice as many countries giving you bribes.

This is what makes the Russia/Qatar awards so unusually and astonishingly corrupt, even by FIFA standards. How will FIFA coerce and cajole other nations now, with no significant carrot to offer until 2026? Say what you want about the Mafia, but at least they have some institutional respect. You'd have thought FIFA would at least do what's good for FIFA, but that's clearly not the case anymore. I made the joke about them believing in the Mayan calendar, but these are guys trying to make the maximum amount of money in the short term. That's the precise opposite of "for the good of the game," and I look forward to charting how many members of ExCom retire in luxury in the next couple of years. I'm putting the over/under on "all of them." Except Geoff Thomas, poor guy. But including the two guys who were caught on tape by the Sunday Times.

I feel bad for the lower-echelon bureaucrats, who had been patiently waiting until it was their turn to be lionized beyond the dreams of avarice. Will no one think of the next generation of greedy swine? This is how empires usually fall, Sepp – not from outside challenges, but from internal palace revolts. Hope Qatar gave you enough to hire a food taster.

Sadly, few of us are ever going to be in a position to feed hemlock to Jack Warner. So what can we do, already?

There's one very easy solution. Club over country.

Actually, that's an extremely difficult solution. I don't think we're ready to give up international soccer. I don't think we can afford it, either. But unless we come up with an alternative, then that's the cost of doing business.

Based on the reactions of my last couple of posts, we're not even willing to give up international club soccer in this country, which means there's nothing we can do about FIFA now or ever. Yes, I know, "thou shalt not confuse Internet posts with reality." But that's the easiest battle, it's where FIFA affects American soccer the least, and where the price of battle would be the cheapest from the MLS and USSF point of view.

If you, the fan, aren't on board with that, well, that gives us very, very few options. I don't think the fan base is willing to do anything at all to risk the national team – not when even the silly little Confederations Cup had a huge impact on the American soccer fanbase, i.e., showing how big it actually was. Fighting back against FIFA could mean, at least, blowing up the Gold Cup and punting a Confederations Cup or two.

See, you're furrowing your brow, worried that this will somehow hurt the American game – and you're probably right. There's no way in hell we're willing to roll the dice and risk 2014 qualification.

So, what, if anything, can be done?

Maybe Interpol or the FBI does our work for us. That would be nice. But considering how long it took to bring Roman Polanski to justice, I have low hopes.

Maybe FIFA reforms itself from within. See, this is why I'm such a fantastic comedy blogger – I come up with jokes like that.

Maybe this holiday season, Sepp Blatter will be visited by three Christmas ghosts who will terrorize him into changing his ways. More than likely, he'll snottily tell them Christmas has no jurisdiction over football.

Any other course of action the USSF or MLS could take could be difficult and expensive. I still like my idea of MLS deciding to stop recognizing European contracts, like Colombia did back in the 50's, but I don't know if we could afford that stunt. I'm pretty sure MLS can't outbid the Manchesters yet. We're lucky they can outbid the Mansfields.

We could wait to see what England does. But I think we'll be disappointed.

On the surface, English clubs more than any would be willing to defy FIFA. They were around before FIFA, after all. They were around before most every national team. They've defied FIFA before, although back when FIFA wasn't the behemoth it is now. They've done without international soccer before, too, although unwillingly. There's no question that English clubs would survive a war with FIFA. The Premiership is the biggest league in the world, after all. They don't need the international game at oh, wait, Champions League, never mind. Cancel the revolution.

Hm, the Champions League. There's a thought. As far as the big CL teams are concerned, international soccer is only good for taking away their players and bringing them back injured. They'd love to get rid of the World Cup, or at least bring international soccer to its rightful, subordinate position. And they're the ones who pay the players. FIFA would lose a war with the Champions League clubs. Some players would stay loyal – Brazilian ones, certainly through 2014 – but, well, if Champions League players weren't motivated by money, they wouldn't be on Champions League teams.

So, if there's hope in defeating FIFA, the Champions League will lead us.

Hm? What's that? If there's one thing Champions League clubs hate more than international soccer, it's lower division soccer? And given the option, a permanent Euro Champions league would wipe out literally hundreds of small but storied and beloved clubs without a second thought?

Boy, it's almost as if there are no good guys in big-time soccer.

….so, Akron. That's a nice story.

The 24/3 list

Going to try to be fair to MLSsoccer.net. For one thing, people say "NHL hockey" and "NFL football" and "NBA basketball," so "MLS soccer" isn't something to get Zombie Will Strunk on a rampage. Certainly better than "The MLS."

Oh – "themls.com" was taken, too. Well, pro soccer will be in America longer than the housing market, so it's just a matter of time.

So I'm not trying to hate on the new web site for no reason. Yeah, they apparently got a deal on the font from the Championship Manager 2003 screen. Fine, that's their choice.

What does frost my almonds, though, is the inability to conveniently get information that was easily available on the old site. Like, say for some weird reason you wanted to find out how many players were over the age of 24 and had 3 years of experience. That would be two clicks on the old site.

On Major League Soccer Soccer? Fat chance. Had to look on each individual roster, because even the alphabetical listings are incomplete – assuming you wanted to do twenty-six freaking clicks to look at the league's players. Thanks a diaperful, new site.

Anyway, there are 112 players with three years or more experience who are over twenty-four (four players – Gaven, McCarty, Ward and Wynne – have three or more years of MLS service but are under twenty-four). It will be interesting to see, in the age of guaranteed contracts, how that number changes in future years.

I've listed the players below so you can check my math. I did not list Busch and Van Den Bergh, because MLSsoccer doesn't.

Albright (NY)
Alvarez (SJ)
Arnaud (KC)
Ballouchy (COL)
Barrett (TOR)
Barrett (HOU)
Beckerman (RSL)
Borchers (RSL)
Bornstein (CHV)
Boswell (HOU)
Brown (CHI)
Buddle (LA)
Burch (DC)
Burpo (NE)
Califf (PHI)
Cannon (SJ)
Carr (CHI)
Carroll (HOU)
Ching (HOU)
Clark (COL)
Cochrane (SJ)
Conde (CHI)
Condoul (NY)
Conrad (KC)
Convey (SJ)
Corrales (SJ)
Cunningham (DAL)
Davis (HOU)
De Rosario (TOR)
Donovan (LA)
Dunivant (LA)
Garcia (TOR)
Garey (CLB)
Gaven (CLB)
Glen (SJ)
Goldthwaite (NY)
Gordon (LA)
Grabavoy (RSL)
Graham (SEA)
Gruenebaum (CLB)
Harris (DAL)
Hartman (DAL)
Hejduk (CLB)
Hernandez (DAL)
Hernandez (SJ)
Hesmer (CLB)
Ianni (SEA)
Ihemelu (DAL)
Jaqua (SEA)
Jazic (CHV)
Jewsbury (KC)
Joseph (NE)
Kamara (KC)
Kirovski (LA)
Klein (LA)
Kljestan (CHV)
Kovalenko (LA)
Larentowicz (COL)
Leitch (SJ)
Lewis (LA)
Magee (LA)
Mapp (CHI)
Marshall (CLB)
Marshall (SEA)
Mastroeni (COL)
Mathis (LA)
McBride (CHI)
McCarty (DAL)
McTavish (DC)
Mendes (NY)
Moor (COL)
Moreno (PHI)
Moreno (DC)
Miglioranzi (PHI)
Mullan (HOU)
Mulrooney (HOU)
Namoff (DC)
O'Rouke (CLB)
Oduro (HOU)
Onstad (HOU)
Oughton (CLB)
Pause (CHI)
Perkins (DC)
Petke (NY)
Peterson (TOR)
Pickens (COL)
Quaranta (DC)
Reis (NE)
Riley (SEA)
Rimando (RSL)
Robinson (CHI)
Robinson (HOU)
Sala (DAL)
Serioux (HOU)
Simms (DC)
Stammler (NY)
Sturgis (SEA)
Sutton (NY)
Thomas (PHI)
Thornton (CHV)
Thorrington (CHI)
Twellman (NE)
Vagenas (SEA)
Wahl (SEA)
Waibel (HOU)
Ward (CHI)
Williams (RSL)
Wingert (NE)
Wolff (KC)
Wolyniec (NY)
Wondolowski (SJ)
Wynne (COL)

I listed the guys in bold because during this CBA they will, of course, be in the guaranteed contract category, assuming they renew with MLS. Here's the breakdown by team, which I list because a couple of teams stand out.

Chicago – 9.
Chivas USA – 4.
Colorado – 7.
Columbus – 9.
DC United – 7.
Dallas – 7.
Houston – 12.
Kansas City – 5.
Los Angeles – 10.
New England – 4.
New York – 8.
Philadelphia – 4.
Salt Lake – 6.
San Jose – 8.
Seattle – 8.
Toronto – 4.

The real surprise is New England – Steve Nicol has been furiously trying to remake that team. If this past weekend is anything to go by, he'd better keep trying.

Meanwhile, their arch-enemies in Houston have kept as many veterans around as possible. Hard to argue the Dynamo haven't done well with the players they have, but that is a fine way to get too old in a hurry…like New England did the past couple of years. Of course, whether Houston has kept the right guys is open to serious debate.

The Galaxy stat is wildly misleading – the only guys on that team from 2005 are Donovan, Dunivant and Alan Gordon (and Dunivant spent a year or two away). LA's roster turnover has been proverbial in the Beckham era, it's just that Bruce Arena wanted veteran leadership for his expansion team last year. (And that's not even counting guys like Berhalter, Birchall and Ricketts, who weren't what you'd call prospects.)

Toronto, Kansas City and Chivas USA have been furiously hitting the "undo" button, so their lack of veterans is no huge surprise.

But so few veterans on the Union is, counterintuitively, unusual. Philadelphia stands in sharp contrast to the other recent expansion teams – most of the new teams feel comfortable with a heavy amount of MLS retreads – er, I mean, experienced veterans. Nowak, on the other hand, wants young, fresh innocents.

Will it work? Chicago imported a bunch of solid pros for 1998, and won a double. Miami tried to build a young team around Valderrama, struggled, got really good, then folded. San Jose tried to bring back as many of the old gang as possible, and have fallen flat on their Amways. Chivas USA blows up their teams every year, but so did Salt Lake until recently. Toronto has been a revolving door since before they ever took the field; Seattle stuck with largely familiar names.

Nowak, obviously, was around for the 1998 Fire, so if he's choosing a different tack, one imagines he has his reasons.

Anyway, back to the actual point – as of today, about one out of every three and a half players in the league will qualify for guaranteed contracts. How many guaranteed contracts the league will end up writing…that's something we'll find out.

Hicks and Gillett under fire again, this time by an MP!

Peter Kilfoyle the MP for Walton (an area of Liverpool not too far away from Anfield and Goodison Park) has come out with an attack on the owners of Liverpool and says that the club risked “going down the tubes” unless the current ownership is changed.

http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liver…omments-bottom
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Mr Kilfoyle told the Liverpool ECHO: “It’s going to go down the tubes if it’s not careful. I’ve got no idea who runs the club since Rick Parry left. Christian Purslow is a managing director, he’s not the chief executive. As far as I’m aware, and what he has told me three times, is he is there to sell the club, not to run it. Running a football club is a hell of a lot different from being a banker, which is what he is. He is there to sell the club – that’s what he’s there for, that’s what he is employed to do.”/www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>/www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>
Well yes, Christian Purslow doesn’t have a background in football. Is that really a pre-requisite of the job? Personally, I’m very happy with the work he has done for the club this season. He has secured the biggest sponsorship deal in the club’s history and has helped to reduce the debt associated with Liverpool (remember folks, the vast majority of the debt is on Kop Holdings, the parent club of Liverpool, rather than the club itself). He’s here to run the business side of things, not the football side of things so I see no problem with him not having a background in football.
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As for him being there to sell the club, that’s what most fans want isn’t it? I’ve read a few forums on this and some people are still under the impression that if DIC owned the club it’d all be sunshine and roses. DIC were the investment arm of the Dubai government, not one man’s private equity. That’s the same Dubai that came really close to going bankrupt and had to be bailed out by the government of Abu Dhabi. Unlike Abu Dhabi, Dubai’s money wasn’t from oil either, but other revenue streams including tourism, which has dipped. To say we’d be in a stronger financial position if we had accepted their bid is in all likelihood, incorrect.
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Mr Kilfoyle also said “It’s all about culture, it’s about attitude. The Americans view football clubs as an asset to be bought and sold.”
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To those fans who say Hicks and Gillett are only out to make a profit, so what? Any fan that expects someone to come in, throw a crapload of money at the club and then expect nothing back in return is living in dreamland. DIC stated they would be looking to own Liverpool for seven years and sell it on. The point is, to make a profit when selling it on; they have to increase the value of the club. Hicks and Gillett have tried to do this by building the new stadium. It’s a matter of bad timing that they haven’t been able to do this, with the price of steel shooting up meaning that the cost nearly doubled and then the credit crunch meant that they couldn’t get the lines of credit they were depending on. Also, that doesn’t make them liars, which really pisses me off when people call them that. They were going on the information they had at the time.
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The club have responded by saying “The management of Liverpool FC have great respect for Peter Kilfoyle and his record of public service in our local community. We also respect his passionate views as a football fan./www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>/www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>
“He is right that there is a need for new investment into Liverpool FC and he should rest assured that the management are working round the clock to achieve this as well as trying to drive the business forward and, most importantly, support our management and players at this key time in the season.”
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New investment maybe arriving sooner rather than later. The Rhone Group, a private equity firm based in New York, has apparently tabled a £110m bid for a 40% stake in the club, meaning they value Liverpool at £275m. That is below the value Hicks and Gillett have placed on the club. Also, a 40% investment would dilute both of their shareholdings in the club to 30%, which may not be acceptable to them.
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Christian Purslow has stated that there are “six or seven” serious bidders and are maybe hoping that the Rhone Group bid will flush them out and a higher offer will come in. Regardless of whether the bid is accepted or not, it is at least a sign that the club is still seen as an attractive option to investors and that Purslow is bringing people in.
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There is a bit of a time crunch for Liverpool with the Royal Bank of Scotland demanding that at least £100m of the debt owed by Kop Holdings (which is estimated to be between £200 and £240m) is repaid by July. If we can use this money to pay this off, the hope is that the club will be able to get credit on building the new stadium.

Also, it may mean that there is money available for the new manager (please God!) to bring players in during the summer transfer window.
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As for Torres’ comments this weekend, they were those of a man who is pissed off. He is pissed off because he wants success with Liverpool. He said so in his statement. Ignore all the sensationalist headlines about him going and concentrate on the last part of his statement; “The fans are worried about players going, it’s a problem when you start to fear that your players are going because you know it’s because the club is not moving forward, but I don’t think that is going to be the situation here. Since the arrival of Christian Purslow, Liverpool have had an important boost, we signed with a big-money sponsor to match Real Madrid, then things are going to move forward”
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Doesn’t sound like the words of a man leaving to me.

We play Lille tomorrow night and need to win, not go out not to lose but go out to win. Hopefully Benitez noted on Monday that when the players are actually allowed to go forwards, they can do it and do it well. Also, play Aquilani!

Who'll be #8?

I have spent the last week or so working on a TV truck at Arlington Stadium. Because of that, my mind has been a raging torrent, flooded with rivulets of thought cascading into a waterfall of statistical data.

Since I have been living in the stats world for the past week, why not take a look at some of the World Cup stats.

Spain has 6 out of the top 8 passers in the tournament, led by the incomparable Xavi. He averages 95 passes a game, and completes 77 of them for an 81% completion rate, which coincidentally is the same rate for the team. And here I thought Germany looked like Guatemala playing at the Azteca, when, in fact, they just never had the ball at all because the Spaniards wouldn’t give it to them.

Spain has also completed 1000 more passes than anyone else with 3,387. Holland is third at 2,434. One would expect that all that possession would lead to scoring chances, and it has. Argentina, though, finished the tournament as the team with most shots on goal at 43. They should be eclipsed by both finalists, though, as Holland and Spain are at 41 and 40 respectively.

All that running around with the ball has added up for Spain. They have run a total of 288KM with the ball, which is about the distance between Mexico City and Acapulco. The team that had the ball least was Honduras at 94 km. Such a shame. I know they had a lot of people out, but they still had enough talent to play a little more offensively. The Catrachos were a big disappointment.

Individually, distance covered is dominated by the two losing semi-finalists. Bastian Schweinsteiger and Sami Khedira each ran the equivalent of 6 miles every game.

And I still can’t get over the fact that Chicharito was the fastest player of the tournament.

I was all set to continue the narrative of South American dominance. Was it the Southern Hemisphere’s weather cycle? Were the other teams more freaked out by water going down the drain backwards? And then just like that, they were all gone. Are the two best teams of the tournament in the final? Well, considering that neither team lost in qualifying and they have combined for over fifty wins and only three losses in the last 2 years, I would say yes.

Holland may have scored more goals, but they haven’t had to run through the defensive gauntlet that Spain did. Portugal, Paraguay, and Germany combined to give up only 3 goals in their 12 games before playing la Furia.

This World Cup started off slow and boring, and I was all set to proclaim it to be the worst World Cup since 1990. The knockouts, though, have been very compelling, dramatic, and heartbreaking. It hasn’t been the best World Cup, but certainly hasn’t been the worst. The mundial picked up speed, and we can only hope that the best game of the tournament has yet to be played.

But I’ll be in that truck, missing it.

New Zealands' Belo Horizonte – Almost

They're calling it the biggest upset of the tournament and, on the face of it, you certainly can't argue.

With the defending champions lining up against possibly the weakest side in the field, the common assumption was that the "Docile Flightless Birds" were being led to the slaughter.

An assumption which, unfortunately, Italy's players seemed to share. They strutted, they swaggered, they whined and moaned and non-chalanted and pranced about like the sleek show ponies they clearly feel themselves to be.

The referee was complicit in the conspiracy, not allowing anyone in a white shirt to bump into, breathe on or cast a mean glance at anyone in blue without a whistle.

That wasn't enough for the Azzuri who embellished, exaggerated and, when all else failed, flat out dove their way through an embarrassing 90 minute farce which they deserved to lose and, frankly, except for the idiot with the whistle, they did lose.

Mark this down as the day I moved Italy above France as "The Team I Love to Watch Lose".

The only thing which allowed the defending – but not for long – champions to salvage a point was an utterly ridiculous De Rossi dive in the box which Mr. "I Love The Boot" dutifully deemed worthy of a spot kick, apparently on the basis of artistic value..

New Zealand worked for and frankly earned the win today, but they're so delirious about the draw that they're not likely to notice for a few days.

Their grittiness at the end, when they looked for all the world like Mohammed Ali absorbing blow after blow until you couldn't figure out how he was still standing, was a performance for the ages.

Conversely, if their opponents had shown a tenth of that kind of heart, they might have actually won instead of needing blatant cheating and a clearly biased referee to merely salvage a tie.

As for Italy, that arrogant insult to the game which they casually tossed out there, apparently on the assumption that it was theirs by virtue of birth, they need to try and at least pretend to respect their opponents and the game itself before they'll deserve anything more than what they got today.

Which was a lot more than they deserved.

Congratulations Rafa: Liverpool are now Blackburn!

Congratulations Rafa. Mission Complete. You’ve now totally destroyed the football philosophy of pass and move Liverpool were famous for and have turned us into Blackburn Rovers. Last week Sam Allardyce accused Benitez of playing the same tactics as his Bolton teams and the way his Blackburn team now plays. For once, Sir Alex's faithful lapdog has a point.
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Last night exemplified the dreary, dismal, insipid, uninspiring football that our esteemed manager is providing Liverpool fans with at present. Can anyone tell me when was the last time we beat a team by playing them off the park? Not by grinding out a result or by nicking a goal then sitting back for long periods. Not by turning the game into a midfield slugfest and hoping we come out on top. Even the Man United game was more of a case of us digging in for long periods at a time.
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While I’ve hated every miserable second of it, I could understand why Benitez decided to try and stop the defeats by making us even more defensive than usual. But surely that was only meant to be a temporary measure? Surely the idea was to stop the slide and give us a platform from which to build on? It’s like when you’re driving and you get a flat tyre, you put the spare on but that’s only meant to get you home or to a garage, you’re not meant to keep driving on it.
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Here are some facts:
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· We’ve not scored in 6 of our last 8 away games
· We’ve not scored in the last 4 away games
· We’ve scored 12 away goals in 15 matches this season, worse than Bolton, Wigan and Sunderland and only one better than Burnley, who have gained one away point all season.
· Only Fulham have a worse away goalscoring record in the current top ten.
· Our away goal difference is –5
· We’ve dropped 29 points away from home this season
· We haven’t scored more than 2 goals in any league game since September (6-1 win over Hull) and only scored more than two once in all competitions since then.
· We’ve picked up 11 bookings in our last two away games.
· We’ve now lost 9 in the league
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I could go on.
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Lat night was simply pathetic. Now Torres is back we’ve reverted to the tactics we used to play on my school playground when I was seven, give the ball to your best player and hope he does something. We had no attacking game plan at all, it was just wait for something to turn up.
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Team selection was totally wrong, not for the first time. Once again Mascherano was wasted at right-back, way to develop Martin Kelly and Stephen Derby, Rafa. Unlike the Blackburn game, it didn’t work. Mascherano was horribly out of position for the Wigan goal, we’ll never know but my guess is a proper defender would have known to mark goal side of Rodallega, which probably would have prevented the goal.
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Lucas got the nod in the middle and ran the show…for Wigan. His sloppy passing was setting Wigan attacks all over the park and his inability to judge when to make a challenge led to Wigan getting free-kicks all around the box.
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With Gerrard accompanying Lucas in the middle, which I’m in favour of as long as it’s Mascherano alongside him, that meant Kuyt, Maxi and Benayoun where behind Torres. Maxi would have had just as productive a game if he’d have brought a chair onto the pitch and had a sit down for 90 minutes. He put in one good cross all night but was totally anonymous otherwise.
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Benayoun was a non-factor in possession and useless in defence. Insua was getting targeted all night because he was getting no protection from a player who is about as strong in a tackle as a wet piece of toilet paper.
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Kuyt was Wigan’s best defender by a mile. He broke up every Liverpool attack where the ball came near him and managed to set up Emerson Boyce for the cross that resulted in Wigan’s goal, with one of his brainless passes when he wasn’t really under pressure.
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Even our usually dependable players were poor. That was the worst Jamie Carragher has played in years, he was consistently out of position and made poor decisions all night. One of them was to abandon Rodallega to cover a player who was never going to be given the ball for Wigan’s goal.
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Torres was a frustrated figure all night. We didn’t create a clear-cut chance for him, he did hit the outside of the post and sent an overhead volley just wide but basically the tactic of hoping he could beat 4 defenders and two holding midfielders all by himself was flawed. Gerrard was terrible; he looked listless and disinterested all night. Once again when the team needed a lift on the pitch, he didn’t provide it.
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Liverpool’s passing was abysmal all game. I lost count of the amount of times someone just surrendered possession when under no pressure or someone ran themselves into a cul-de-sac and lost the ball. While credit should be given to Wigan’s midfield for their performance, the fact is Liverpool made it easy for them. Only when Aquilani was brought on did Liverpool start to retain the ball better, but they still did nothing with it. Once again the team that finished the game for Liverpool was better than the one that started it, that is down to the manager.
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One of the by-products of Benitez drilling defence, defence, defence into Liverpool is that they have forgotten how to attack. We were clueless going forwards and it was embarrassing. We did nothing with our set pieces once again, still can’t fathom why Gerrard is allowed to take corners when he’s been consistently poor at taking them for the past 4 years. On incident sums Liverpool up. We were given a free-kick just inside the Wigan half. Most teams, especially those who are a goal down and looking to score, would take the opportunity to swing a ball into the box and see what happens. What did Liverpool do? Took a short kick backwards, with the ball ending up at our centre backs who than lost it. That is not good enough for any team, let alone one with supposed title ambitions.
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Once again the manager showed he has no idea how to change a game that is not going to plan. Plan B was the usual keep trying plan A until it works. Despite being a goal down to a team who having had won only once in 13 matches, would be expected to be a tad nervous going into the last half-hour, Benitez did not see fit to change the formation to a more attacking one, with like-for-like substitutions being made. With the 0-0 draw he came for no longer a possibility, preserving Wigan’s clean sheet seemed to be his priority. He did have one ace up his sleeve, one last example of his propensity to attack. Kyrgiakos was drafted into attack for the final 3 minutes of injury time (we got a very generous 5 minutes, but it could have been 50 and we wouldn’t have scored). That is what Blackburn do when Chris Samba is sent up front when they’re chasing a result. Needless to say it didn’t work as we kept giving stupid fouls away and surrendering possession.
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Benitez’s demeanour on the sidelines was one of a man going through the motions, just like his team. The side look to be over-coached. Football is one of those sports where you can tell the team how to set up, give some instructions on how best to attack and defend, what to do on set-pieces and what to look out for from the opposition but it is almost impossible to control every facet of the game. You need to trust your team to make the right decisions during a game. Benitez does try to control every little thing and it’s got to the point where the players’ natural instincts are being suppressed. The team yesterday were clueless going forward and it’s because they have so many instructions they have forgotten just how to go out and just play.
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If we have any chance of 4th place, and it is a slim chance, we have to go out to win every game. Not go out not to lose or go out to sit back and hope for an opportunity on the break, but go out and grab the game by the scruff of the neck and go for it. Benitez is not capable of allowing his team to that (his ego won’t allow him to give up any control) and I don’t think he’s capable of inspiring them to do it. The team don’t look as though they’re enjoying playing for him and there’s maybe a hint he’s started to lose the dressing room.

Liverpool have degenerated from a team that was renowned for short quick passing, into a team that just lumps long balls into the box and who can only win by playing spoiler to the opposition rather than by outplaying them. A team who throw a centre-back up front in desparation. They are the new Blackburn Rovers.
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I’d be shocked (but not surprised) if the Liverpool board haven’t decided to sack Benitez at the end of this season so why not do it now? Put Kenny Dalglish in charge until the end of the season, at least he’ll be able to inspire the team.
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This has been a truly dreadful season for Liverpool. Jamie Carragher recently summed up Liverpool’s season recently by saying “That’s what we’re doing, grinding (results out). We’ve come back through fight, desire to do well, and we could never be accused of lacking that. But we’re still not playing fantastic football, we’re not good enough to.”/www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>/www.bigsoccer.com/forum/images/smilies/tongue.gif[/img]>
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Says it all.