The Ongoing Learning Process

afootballreport:

“For me, life is just an ongoing learning process.” - Jurgen Klinsmann

By John Smith-Ramos, writing from Washington DC

It hasn’t been the ideal start for Juergen Klinsmann.  A draw against Mexico, followed by a pair of 1-0 losses - home and away - over the past week is not particularly impressive form. 3 games, however, and friendlies at that, are not enough to start judging Klinsmann based purely on his results.  But is it also too soon to ask if the team is headed in right direction?  And what direction is that, exactly?  

Klinsmann’s long-term goal, at least, is simple.  The US needs to advance out of its group at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.  Simply qualifying for the tournament is no longer enough.  The past two decades of growth, on the field and off it, has turned the US from plucky underdogs to regional power. The CONCACAF region is simply not strong enough to justify a soccer program of the US’s size and wealth’s failure to reach international football’s biggest stage.

However, just because American fans have come to take World Cup qualification for granted doesn’t mean it’s going to be easy.  Fueled by the rise of Chicharito, the gulf in class between the USMNT and Mexico appears to be widening, and, as Friday’s defeat against Costa Rica reminds us, there are signs that the smaller countries may just be beginning to fancy their chances of overtaking the United States. Reversing that trend will be Klinsmann’s immediate short term goal as US boss.  Why is that happening? Because time is catching up. The team’s two most talented players (proven talent at least), Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey, will be 32 and 31 by the time 2014 rolls around.  Both will have a lot of miles on them — it will be Donovan’s 4th Cup, Dempsey’s 3rd.  At the back, team captain Carlos Bocanegra will be 35.  Assuming he’s still playing, it will be his 3rd World Cup as well.  It’s no guarantee that US fans can expect the kinds of performances from them in 2014 that they’ve seen in the past. Replacements must be found.  To his credit, Klinsmann  seems to realize this, and the three friendlies the team has played so far have been marked with plenty of fresh faces.  How Klinsmann tracks these players’ development over the next 2 years and fits them into his squad will be the key to his success or failure as the team’s manager. It’s a new era. 

Read More

Worth reading. Brilliant analysis of Jurgen’s tenure so far.

Everyone’s been going crazy about Harry Potter, but Reblog if you’ve been freaking out about today’s match!

inventfootball:

FY RAPINOE!

getstuckin:

eric-beard:

genuineinspiration:

They Don’t Play For My Team, But I Still Love Them Spam.

Clint Dempsey, Fulham


Amy this is amazingggg

Indeed

getstuckin:

eric-beard:

genuineinspiration:

They Don’t Play For My Team, But I Still Love Them Spam.

Clint Dempsey, Fulham

Amy this is amazingggg

Indeed

afootballreport:

AFR is going to chat with London-based artist and lifelong Fulham supporter Example sometime in the near future about football. He’s finishing up a tour around the UK performing songs like “Kickstarts”, “Won’t Go Quietly”, and “Watch The Sun Come Up” off of his new album entitled “Won’t Go Quietly”. We want to open the interview up to you guys. So feel free to include any questions you might have below.
What would you like to ask the Cottager and “dysfunctional electro pop” artist? (Artwork above by Jon Horner. Example’s “Kickstarts” Music Video is below.)





Isn’t it obvious? Example needs to invite Clint to do a verse on one of his tracks.

afootballreport:

AFR is going to chat with London-based artist and lifelong Fulham supporter Example sometime in the near future about football. He’s finishing up a tour around the UK performing songs like “Kickstarts”, “Won’t Go Quietly”, and “Watch The Sun Come Up” off of his new album entitled “Won’t Go Quietly”. We want to open the interview up to you guys. So feel free to include any questions you might have below.

What would you like to ask the Cottager and “dysfunctional electro pop” artist? (Artwork above by Jon Horner. Example’s “Kickstarts” Music Video is below.)

Isn’t it obvious? Example needs to invite Clint to do a verse on one of his tracks.

Why venturing across the pond could be greatest motivation to promote the beautiful game across New England

philosofooty:

By Eric Beard, a Bostonian writing from Emory University

Ask any New Englander and you’ll find that there’s only one football to be found in the region. Sure, the local MLS side, the New England Revolution, may play in the same stadium as the NFL’s New England Patriots (both owned by billionaire Robert Kraft), but the general public consciousness and amount of media coverage among the two organizations is not even comparable. You don’t go into an average bar in Boston and talk about the footy. You talk about the Red Sox, the Bruins, the Celtics, and the Patriots, arguably the most successful group of sports franchises out of any city in the world. The average Bostonian might be able to tell you, through vague recollection, about

Clint Dempsey

or Taylor Twellman, but not much else. However, within a span of less than a week New England has experienced arguably its two biggest moments in the region’s history of developing the beautiful game since hosting World Cup matches in 1994 and having an MLS team come into existence the year after.

Though the Red Sox organization and New England Sports Venture (NESV) group will get all the media attention around the world for their takeover bid of the storied Liverpool Football Club, the fact that New England’s two true sports tycoons, Robert Kraft and John Henry, both made a significant, long-term monetary commitments to the beautiful game is indisputably a huge milestone. These events are not only meaningful to the game around Boston, but also for bringing progress to the perpetual struggle of getting the world’s game to be accepted by the mainstream American media, particularly in Boston.

Read More

Legends Never Die. Good read for any Revolution fans who want to capture anything close to the quality they had when Deuce was on the team.

terelicious:

Dont Tread!

terelicious:

Dont Tread!

eric-beard:

One of my favorite moments of the summer: chatting with Clint Dempsey before the 2010 World Cup

Growing up in Boston, Clint Dempsey was the playmaker with my local MLS team: The New England Revolution. His swagger and confidence was something I had never seen before in the league. Anyway, watching the interview, you might think it was a little odd that I asked him whether or not he missed Mexican food. However, my friends and I would always go to Anna’s Taqueria in Porter Square on Friday afternoons for lunch, and we saw Clint there a good half dozen times eating a signature “Super Burrito”. For a week or so after this summer, I gained demigod status amongst my friends for asking that question about Anna’s, which was more of an icebreaker than anything. In short, Clint Dempsey is a burrito-loving honorary Bostonian, and a cool guy. He also likes to say “bro”, bro.

theprincessandrajah:

I guess I could stand to post a few USMNT pics before I turn in for the night…

Merk the knight!

theprincessandrajah:

I guess I could stand to post a few USMNT pics before I turn in for the night…

Merk the knight!