4/25/16 Champions League Final 4 Tues/Wed + Europa Semis Thur

Anyone want to gather this week to watch games – late lunch 2:45?

GAMES of the WEEK

 

Mon, Apr 25 

3:00 p.m., NBCSN       Tottenham Hotspur vs. West Bromwich Albion

Tues, Apr 26 (CHAMPS LEAGUE Final 4)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Man City vs Real Madrid   A huge home game for City looking for Champs League home Glory vs UCL stalwart Real

Weds, Apr 27 (CHAMPS LEAGUE Final 4)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Athletico Madrid vs Bayern Munich – Can Atletico pull the upset again at home vs Pep G in his last Champ League with Bayern?

Thurs, Apr 28 (Europa League-Semis)

3 pm FS1                          Villareal vs Liverpool  – Klopp looks to bring a trophy to Anfield in his first few months  – this on the road

3 pm FS2                          Shakhtar Donetsk vs Sevilla FC  – Can Spain put another team into the Finals?

Champions League Semi’s Tues/Wed 2:45 pm FS1

Champions League Predictions

Champions League W2W4

Fitness a concern for Ronaldo and Benzama who both sat this weekend head of Semi’s

 

USA

US 17 Year Old Dortmund Mid Christian Pulisic youngest Bundesliga player to hit Brace

See Pulisic Score a Brace for Dortmund

Morris Scores Again for Seattle

Klinsmann admits youngsters are pushing to make Copa Roster

Bayern face Atletico battle, Cristiano Ronaldo questions as Madrid face City

The Champions League has reached the semifinal stage, with four clubs just one step away from the final.

Can Atletico Madrid’s defence shut down Bayern Munich’s high-octane attack? And can Manchester City capitalise on any lingering fitness issues Cristiano Ronaldo may face with Real Madrid?The Champions League semifinal first legs take centre stage for Europe’s heavyweights — predict the outcome in our match polls …

ATLETICO MADRID: After taking down Barcelona in the Champions League and chasing them down in the La Liga title race, Atletico go into this game riding the crest of a wave and will be full of confidence when the Bavarians come to town. Fernando Torres has eight goals in his last 14 appearances, while Antoine Griezmann has been the matchwinner in a number of big games of late. Going forward, Los Rojiblancos are a side who can just manage to conjure up a goal out of nothing, and in front of what is bound to be a raucous Calderon they will feel they can once again upset the odds.The watertight backline will note Diego Godin’s absence, but the return of Jose Maria Gimenez could not be better timed. The young Uruguayan, along with 20-year-old Lucas Hernandez, will be faced with the biggest battle of their short careers against Robert Lewandowski and co. They have both risen to all the challenges put before them and Diego Simeone will have every confidence they can do so again this time round.
Atletico Madrid 1-0 Bayern Munich — Joe Walker

 

BAYERN MUNICH:  Whisper it quietly but Bayern would probably much rather have played Real Madrid than their “noisy neighbours” Atletico. Simeone’s tenacious, defensively-sound side love a scrap and were hardly the plumb draw in the last four. Bayern expect the sternest challenge against opposition dubbed “a passionate monster” by director of football Matthias Sammer. Pep Guardiola will have to ensure his treble-seeking side are up for a real dogfight in the Vicente Calderon in what he describes as “the best atmosphere in Europe.”The Bavarians must improve on a woeful record on Spanish soil against La Liga sides, winning only two of 12 previous clashes and suffering a whopping eight defeats, including successive semifinal first leg losses against Real (1-0) and Barcelona (3-0) in the past two seasons. Guardiola will hope to avoid an unwanted hat trick in his final crack at the Champions League with Bayern.The opening joust in Madrid is likely to be a cagey affair. A 0-0 draw is not beyond the realms of possibility, which would be a much healthier result for the Rojiblancos, who’ll be content to sit back, defend deep and strike on the counter. Guardiola’s side must take advantage of Godin’s probable absence at the heart of the Atletico defence and strive for a crucial away goal to take back to Munich. Atletico Madrid 0-1 Bayern Munich — Mark Lovell

 

REAL MADRID: Cristiano Ronaldo trained with the squad on Sunday and should be fit to play but Karim Benzema is doubtful after limping off against Rayo on Saturday. Gareth Bale rescued Madrid with a virtuoso performance and appears to have found devastating form at just the right moment. Lucas Vazquez also excelled and if Benzema is ruled out, the former canterano should get the nod to start as his willingness to hassle defenders and direct running on the ball can unsettle City at the back.Casemiro will be reinstated and charged with the onerous task of shackling Kevin De Bruyne, but the Brazilian’s presence allows Luka Modric and Toni Kroos to get forward in support of the front three. Sergio Ramos and Pepe are likely to start at the back to keep an eye on Sergio Aguero, who is worth a goal a game in the Premier League but hasn’t replicated that form in Europe this season, scoring just twice. This is City’s debut semifinal, and Real’s sixth in a row. The visitors’ greater experience will tip the balance of the tie, particularly if City concede first on Tuesday and are forced to chase a result at home.Manchester City 1-2 Real Madrid — Rob Train

 

MAN CITY: City’s form in the league has picked up markedly over the last three weeks and they reach this unprecedented milestone in their history in good shape, with confidence growing. They have reserved all their best performances for the Champions League this season and in opponents Real Madrid they have the best suited opposition of those left in the tournament. Real will leave spaces at the back which Aguero, De Bruyne and David Silva will be able to exploit if they can all find their very best form.The likes of Borussia Monchengladbach, Sevilla and Dynamo Kiev will testify to the fact that City in full flow are a real handful, capable of inflicting damage away as well as at home with a coruscating ability to counter attack with speed and numbers. The steep Champions League learning curve is gradually being tamed by Manuel Pellegrini’s side. However, a big question mark must be placed alongside City’s ability to withstand the nerves such an occasion automatically brings. The club has never reached such exalted heights before, while their regal opponents stand tall in the semifinals for the 27th time.Will experience hold out or can the novices rock the boat? Manchester City 2-2 Real Madrid — Simon Curtis

 

Champions League, Europa League W2W4: Real’s hopes rest on Ronaldo

With the Champions League and Europa League semifinal second legs this week, Miguel Delaney recaps the storylines worth watching.

 

How important is Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid’s chance of progress?

The big storyline ahead of Real Madrid’s trip to Manchester City on Tuesday is Cristiano Ronaldo’s fitness

, but it leads to an even bigger question about the Spanish team, and one that could decide the entire Champions League season itself. Do Zinedine Zidane’s team have any chance without the Portuguese even at his best? He’s been that good again, that dominant. Ronaldo’s recurring injury problems and flatter performances had actually led to a growing suspicion he could be definitively past his peak. Certainly, when Lionel Messi recaptured the Ballon d’Or in January, it didn’t feel like the Real striker would ever be getting it back. That could change, because Ronaldo has changed the tone of this season.

While Messi’s Barcelona are now out of the Champions League, his great rival ensured the same fate did not befall Real by scoring a brilliant hat trick to beat Wolfsburg 3-2 on aggregate, again canceling out his team’s problems on his own. It symbolised a comeback in so many ways, and only followed his fine first-leg goal against Roma in the round of 16. It also felt like he was on something of a one-man mission, but that is possibly because he knows so much of this will decide one man’s legacy. Because, for all the goals that Ronaldo has hit in his seven years in Madrid, he has only really won two major trophies: one league and one Champions League.It is oddly underwhelming given his personal contribution, but another European Cup — and second in three years — would clearly overrule that. If he is not even fully fit, however, he will have to depend on his teammates to temporarily step up. That is because, so far in this knockout stage, Real’s games have come down to a balance between the team’s problems and Ronaldo’s prolific strike rate.

Can Manuel Pellegrini claim revenge and redemption by readjusting?

So much of Manchester City’s run to a first Champions League semifinal has been framed around what might unexpectedly be the ultimate happy ending for manager Manuel Pellegrini before he leaves in the summer — but even that has taken on a deeper dimension. The Chilean could yet win the competition by eliminating the last team that sacked him in Real Madrid, and then his successor, if Pep Guardiola’s Bayern Munich get past Atletico. It would be some redemption tour.To get that far, though, Pellegrini is probably going to have to come up with something rather different. Most of his management — and particularly his respectable time at Real in 1999-00 — has been characterised by getting an array of attacking players into a workable and attractive system. If he leans on that against the current Real, though, City are likely to be torn apart on the break. So, he has to innovate a bit, and probably defensively. There were signs of it in the second half of the quarterfinal against Paris Saint-Germain, when City’s defence held firm. They will have to get even tighter here. Pellegrini is likely going to have to show Real something they didn’t see during his time there. It could yet see him into the final.

Can Pep Guardiola figure out how to successfully attack Atletico Madrid?

As he seeks to finally win what would be a career-defining Champions League with Bayern Munich, Pep Guardiola fittingly faces a legacy-defining challenge. The Catalan probably would have been the first manager to retain the trophy since Arrigo Sacchi had it not been for the intense defending of Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan in the 2009-10 semifinals, in what was the ultimate clash of opposing philosophies.Guardiola now comes up against a side that might actually be an upgrade on that Serie A defence, and are certainly the closest to them in style. It was actually the attacking style the Catalan himself instilled at Barcelona that initiated a new era in Champions League football, influencing goal averages to shoot up. The newly open football of the competition seemed to favour attacking teams — until Diego Simeone started shutting them down.The modern game hasn’t seen locked-down defending like it for some time, and it is as if they’ve given modern attacks problems they’ve forgotten how to solve. The new Barca certainly found that in the quarterfinals, as not even Messi could get past Atletico’s supreme defence. Guardiola is now going to have to figure out how. It represents possibly the most intriguing tactical duel the competition has seen in half a decade, and is a challenge so fitting of this stage. If Guardiola gets through this, he will really have earned this Champions League.

Will Antoine Griezmann go from a productive player to properly dominant one?

Atletico aren’t all about brilliant defending, and neither was their win over Barcelona. It was settled by the growing star that gives that defending the ultimate outlet: Antoine Griezmann’s burning pace. Barca couldn’t handle it, and it has even been a factor in releasing Fernando Torres to return to levels more like his old self. It is little wonder Chelsea and Manchester United are now chasing the French star, as are so many trailing defenders.He is so promising. He now just needs to properly fulfil that promise, by producing even bigger moments. Beating Barcelona should be the start. He now needs to make it even more consistent against the top sides, although Bayern could suit him in that regard. Guardiola’s high line could be especially susceptible to his speed. Atletico need him to fly. The only possible criticism you could have of Simeone’s side is that they are too dependent on narrow wins, that there is always a danger the 1-0s could become 0-0s, and they aren’t quite cutting enough. If anyone can change that, an evolving Griezmann can.

Can Liverpool continue a special campaign to split the Spanish?

After Liverpool’s sensational comeback against Borussia Dortmund, it seemed like their Europa League campaign enjoyed another boost, as they avoided competition specialists Sevilla. That could be a dangerous line of thought, because it’s possible Villarreal are a bigger threat than anyone. Sevilla may be aiming for a third successive Europa League, but they are three Liga places below Marcelino’s side, who have arguably put in better performances this season than Dortmund.Villarreal have beaten both Real and Atletico — who they are unbeaten against in the league — and also claimed a draw off Barcelona. If they replicate those performances, it will likely be too much for Liverpool, who made need another epic response. Either way, it sets up a tie that could yet, somehow, be as entertaining as the quarterfinal.Miguel Delaney is a London-based correspondent for ESPN FC and also writes for the Irish Examiner and others. Follow him on Twitter@MiguelDelaney.

Cristiano Ronaldo fitness a key point in Manchester City vs. Real Madrid semi

Manchester City face Real Madrid for a place in the Champions League final.

A place in the Champions League final is at stake. Who will make it to the San Siro — semifinal debutants Manchester City or 10-time winners Real Madrid?

David Mooney (City) and Ed Alvarez (Madrid) debate the last four showdown.

Who has the edge ahead of this one?

David Mooney: Manchester City have never really got going throughout the Premier League 2015-16 but Manuel Pellegrini’s side have really excelled in Europe. It feels like their breakthrough season in the competition.

Ed Alvarez: The semifinals couldn’t have arrived at a better moment for Real Madrid. Since Zinedine Zidane’s team won at the Camp Nou three weeks ago, they have finally started to play at the level that was expected from such a talented squad. The French coach has found a solid lineup and has also instilled a sizeable dose of motivation into the side. The positive results have fuelled a great atmosphere.

How key is Cristiano Ronaldo’s fitness?

DM: This could be a crucial factor in the tie. Madrid could be without one of their most influential players and missing Ronaldo would be huge. He was the man who turned the tie at the Bernabeu in 2012 when City lost 3-2 and he’s got more goals than he’s made appearances for the Spanish side. With City’s struggling defence, it’d be a relief to see him miss out.

EA: Two stats show how instrumental Ronaldo is for Real Madrid, as well as how the team fare without him. In the last seven seasons, Real have scored 2.95 goals per match when he played and 2.47 when he was absent. As David mentioned, Ronaldo scores more than one goal per match, so numbers say the team only picks up half of that when he is not available. On top of his scoring, the Portuguese has recovered his ability to tear teams apart on the left flank. Although Real Madrid’s bench is strong, Ronaldo is irreplaceable.

Who would make for a better finalist?

DM: This is new ground for City and it would be fresh for the competition to see them go all the way to the final. Whether or not it’s romantic that Pellegrini’s side are progressing is a different matter, especially given the money that’s needed to be spent to do it, but it would be a fairytale ending for the season, especially with it being the manager’s last year in charge. What better legacy could he leave than overcoming the odds and getting past his old team to win the competition?

EA: Real Madrid have played 13 Champions League or European Cup finals, winning 10 of them. In terms of credentials to play a final of the tournament, those are second to none. In addition to that, making the final with the scorer of that stunning winning goal back in 2002 in the dugout and the competition’s top scorer ever on the pitch — Ronaldo has scored 93 times in this competition — and a whopping 16 this season — seems fair.

Has Pellegrini been unfairly treated at both clubs?

DM: For his time at City, the answer is both yes and no. In his first season, he didn’t get the credit he deserved for turning around a divided dressing room and pulling the squad together to win the club’s first league and cup double. However, since then, he’s underwhelmed. City shouldn’t be scrambling to make the top four and they shouldn’t be out of the title race by February.

EA: In Madrid, absolutely yes. In his first and only season with Real Madrid, he took the team to 96 points in La Liga. In the history of the league, only Jose Mourinho’s side two years later and two Barcelona teams have earned more points. That Pellegrini squad also scored more than 100 goals in La Liga for the first time since 1990. He paid the price for a shocking Copa del Rey elimination to Alcorcon, at that point in the Spanish equivalent to the third division, which prompted a sector of the media to go after him mercilessly.

Let’s also remember that Pellegrini competed with the best Barcelona side in history. Many still wonder what would have happened had he kept his job for one more season.

Who needs a place in the final more — Pellegrini or Zidane?

DM: This has to be Pellegrini. Zidane is still in the infancy of his managerial career and building a great reputation, having turned around Madrid’s fortunes. Pellegrini, meanwhile, has been going downhill at City for two of his three seasons. The Chilean needs to make the final to protect his legacy with his club.

EA: I agree with David. Zidane has already shown enough promise to keep his job next season. However, Pellegrini’s unclear future at this point would become less daunting if he takes City to the Champions League final. He would leave on a very high note.

Prediction

DM: 1-1. It won’t be an easy match for City and they might struggle if they concede an away goal.

EA: 2-2. Both teams have average defences. The match should become a frantic, two-way contest, with plenty of scoring chances and a great watch for the neutrals.

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4/22/16 Carmel FC DOC leaving, FA Cup, EPL + Spain Title Races Heat Up, Indy 11 beat NY Cosmos, Champ League Semi’s next wk

Sad to announce that Carmel FC DOC Paul Telfer will step down as Director of Coaching at the end of the season in June.  He’ll be returning to his native home in the UK. “Paul has been instrumental in raising the level of training and credibility of the Carmel FC Program,” says Carmel FC Commissioner Jeremy Slivinski.  “The groundwork he has laid in less than two years as our DOC was expected to take closer to five years.  He will be greatly missed by our coaches and players.  It is important to note that Paul’s departure will not stop the club’s commitment to continuing our progress and growth. We are excited that a new DOC will be joining us as we open our training office at Shelborne Fields which will support new training opportunities for all of our players and coaches.” Telfer’s thoughts on the club when sharing news of his departure. “This club is special.  The volunteer coaches have a level of commitment that you don’t normally see in paid coaches with the same experience and background.  The commitment by Carmel Dads Club to see this program grow is exceptional.  Whoever is hired as the next Director of Coaching is stepping into a fantastic opportunity.  I will keep tabs on the club from back home.  My family and I will miss all the friends we have made and thank you for the welcome you have provided us in the community during our time here.”

Now on to our Indy 11 – wow what a ballgame on Saturday night at the Mike – the Indy 11 – came from behind in dramatic fashion to pull of a 2-1 victory over the defending NASL Champion New York Cosmos with new signee and NASL player of the week forward Eamon Zayed scoring the game winner in extra time.  Perhaps this team is turning the corner – you can certainly see we have better players this season, the defense is much more stout and the offense is coming along.  See video here of the excitement from the BrickYard Briggade. Carmel FC’ers don’t forget its Carmel FC Night at the next home Indy 11 game – on 7:30 pm May 7 vs Edmonton – ask your team manager about discount tickets to sit in our section.

Not a ton of huge games this weekend or week – FA Cup Semi’s on Sat 11 am on Fox Sports 2 with Everton facing Man United, and Sun 11 am again on FS2 with Crystal Palace facing Watford. The EPL title race continues of course with Leicester City 5 pts ahead now without their star Vardee who’s out at least 1 game on suspension after his controversial Red Card for “Diving” in last week’s thrilling come from behind 2-2 tie by the Foxes.  Leicester hosts Swansea on Sunday at 11 on NBCSN, while Tottenham host West Brom on Monday at 3 pm on NBCSN.   In Spain’s La Liga – Barcelona and Atletico Madrid are tied with 79 pts, while Real Madrid are just 1 pt back with 4 games left in the season.  Champions League Final 4 – resumes the next 2 weeks with Man City vs Real Madrid Tues at 2:45 on Fox Sports 1, and Athletico Madrid vs Bayern Munich on Wed same time and channel.

Europa league Semi-Finals has Liverpool vs Villareal, and Shakhtar Donetsk vs Sevilla FC 3 pm Thurs on Fox Sports 1 + 2.

Shout out to former Carmel High and Carmel Dad’s Club star Matt Hedges, Defender and Captain for FC Dallas – as he recovers from a meniscus injury in his left knee-he’s expected to be out 4-6 weeks.

I saw this quote from Megan Rapinoe this weekend and thought I should share with everyone. Quote from Megan Rapinoe US Women’s National Team Star

What did you do at a younger age, like at age 12 (like me) to be able to play on the U.S. Women’s National Team. – Erica

Listen, Erica: I’m going to tell you something you probably don’t hear enough … HAVE FUN! Don’t just concentrate on soccer. Play all kinds of sports. It will help you be more well-rounded athletically and help you have a more well-rounded life. I was lucky from a young age to have coaches who valued creativity on the field and who let me make mistakes. Don’t worry about being perfect out there. Use your imagination. Be creative with the ball. Can I tell you a secret? My teams lost all the time when I was growing up. Don’t worry too much about winning yet. My teams didn’t start winning until I was midway through high school. Oh yeah, and watch a ton of soccer on TV.  Listen, Erica’s parents: People are starting to take youth soccer way too seriously. Don’t have your kids play year-round. They need a break. In reality, 99 percent of kids aren’t going to make it to the pros. But there’s a misconception out there that you can plot your kid’s road to stardom. I sympathize with parents, because I think they’re sold this idea: If you do this, this and this … if you have your child join this club, then do this camp, then meet this coach, then they will be on the path. The only true path is this: Give your child the freedom to have fun and be a kid and see what happens. See Full Story Here

 

GAMES of the WEEK

Sat, Apr 23

7:45 a.m., NBCSN       Manchester City vs. Stoke City – Man U continues push for Final 4 Champions League Spot

9:30 am Fox Sports 2 Hertha Berlin vs. Bayern Munich – Can US defender John Brooks help Hertha win at home vs German League leaders?
FA Cup (Semifinal)

12 pm Fox Sports 2   Everton vs. Manchester United – Can Van Gaal bring home a FA Cup Trophy to help save his job?

 Sun, Apr 24

9:05 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs. Arsenal

FA Cup (Semifinal)

11 am Fox Sports 2   Crystal Palace vs Watford
11:15 am NBCSN:        Leicester City vs. Swansea City

2:45 pm beIn Sport   Fiorentina vs Juventus
3:30 pm ESPN3             San Jose Earthquakes vs. Sporting Kansas City 3:30 p.m.   US stars Matt Beasler and Zuzi look to stay near top in the West.

Mon, Apr25 

3:00 p.m., NBCSN       Tottenham Hotspur vs. West Bromwich Albion

Tues, Apr 26 (CHAMPS LEAGUE Final 4)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Man City vs Real Madrid   A huge home game for City looking for Champs League home Glory vs UCL stalwart Real

Weds, Apr 27 (CHAMPS LEAGUE Final 4)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Athletico Madrid vs Bayern Munich – Can Atletico pull the upset again at home vs Pep G in his last Champ League with Bayern?

Thurs, Apr 28 (Europa League-Semis)

3 pm FS1                          Villareal vs Liverpool  – Klopp looks to bring a trophy to Anfield in his first few months  – this on the road

3 pm FS2                          Shakhtar Donetsk vs Sevilla FC  – Can Spain put another team into the Finals?

 FULL – GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV –

 

Sat, Apr 23

7:45 a.m., NBCSN       Manchester City vs. Stoke City

9:30 am Fox Sports 2 Hertha Berlin vs. Bayern Munich
10:00 a.m., NBCSN     Liverpool vs. Newcastle United
10:00 a.m., USA          Bournemouth vs. Chelsea
10:00 a.m., ET:             Aston Villa vs. Southampton

10 am beIn Sport        Rayo Vallencano vs Real Madrid

FA Cup (Semifinal)

12 pm Fox Sports 2   Everton vs. Manchester United

12:30 p.m., Fox??      Schalke 04 vs. Bayer Leverkusen

2:45 pm beIn Sport   PSG vs Lille – League Cup

7 pm ESPN 3                   Ft Lauderdale Strikers vs Jacksonville (NASL)

7:30 pm  beIn Sport Tampa Bay Rowdies vs Carolina (NASL)

8 pm EPSN3                    Minn vs NY Cosmos

Sun, Apr 24

9:05 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs. Arsenal

FA Cup (Semifinal)

11 am Fox Sports 2   Crystal Palace vs Watford
11:15 am NBCSN:        Leicester City vs. Swansea City

2:45 pm beIn Sport   Fiorentina vs Juventus
3:30 pm ESPN3             San Jose Earthquakes vs. Sporting Kansas City 3:30 p.m.   (US stars
7:30 pm FS1                   New York Red Bulls vs. Orlando City, 7:30 p.m.

Mon, Apr 25 

3:00 p.m., NBCSN       Tottenham Hotspur vs. West Bromwich Albion

Tues, Apr 26 (CHAMPS LEAGUE)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Man City vs Real Madrid

Weds, Apr 27 (CHAMPS LEAGUE)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Athletico Madrid vs Bayern Munich

Thurs, Apr 28 (Europa League)

3 pm FS1                          Villareal vs Liverpool

3 pm FS2                          Shakhtar Donetsk vs Sevilla FC

Sun, May 1

3:30 PM espn                Portland Timbers vs. Toronto FC
8 pm FS1                         Sporting Kansas City vs. Los Angeles Galaxy

Tues, May 3 (CHAMPS LEAGUE)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                        Bayern Munich vs Athletico Madrid

Weds, May 4 (CHAMPS LEAGUE)

2:45 pm Fox Sport 1                         Real Madrid vs Man City

Wed, May 25

8 pm                                    United States men vs. Ecuador, international friendly

Sat, May 28

FS1                                        United States men vs. Bolivia, international friendly

MLS TV Schedule

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

COPA AMERICA 100 –GAMES IN CHICAGOstill seats left for USA Game , Argentina game and Semi-Finals.

NASL

Zayed’s Game Winner is Play of the Week

Andrew Luck was at the Game

This Team Defeats NYC – Permanent Relegation Aaron Gunyon

Indy 11 Recap – win vs NY

3 Things Indy vs NY

Talking Tactics – Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos –  BYB – CFC Coach Josh Mason

Eamon Zayed from PR

Furballs and Futbol Nite May 7

Indy 11 Stands in 4th place

USA

US 17 yr old Christian Pulisic scores 1st goal for Dortmund in 90 minute display

US Hot List – Watch the Video here on Christian Pulisic and the Great Yellow Wall of Dortmund

US Soccer Perception Problem

US Ladies Get Path During Olympics  France/Columbia/New Zealand

US Leads in 2026 Bidding for World Cup –Grant Wahl SI

Klinsmann deny’s interest in Everton Job

Fulham’s US youngster Emerson Hyndman just needs more Time

Man U excited with young US teen Matt Olosunde

US Carli Lloyd – A Day in the Life Of – the Goal Keeper Jon Tannenwald

NWSL Starts Season as the US Ladies Shine

Champions League  

European Clean Sweep for England or Spain?

Are Bayern and Real Madrid Big 2 Now?

Real vs Man City

Real Madrid favorites vs Man City – ESPN FC

Athletico vs Bayern Munich

EPL + World Leagues

Whats Trending

When can Leicester City Foxes Win the Title

Leicesters Vardy Faces Suspension of 1 to 3 games?

Foxes Rely on the Longball

How SPURS Manager Pochettino transformed Tottenham into Contender

EPL Table

La Liga Surprising Title Race

Barcelona Still Slipping

Who will Win Goal Race Messi or Renaldo?

Atletico full of confidence in title Race

La Liga Table

MLS

MLS Review Week 7

FC Dallas Captain Matt Hedges (former Carmel High School and Carmel Dad’s Club Player out 4-6 weeks with knee – MLS.com

MLS not a Retirement League Says Tim Howard

Jordon Morris Scores his first Pro goal for Seattle

Orlando’s Keeper Bendik raises status with strong play – MLS.com

David Bingham wins Save of Week 6

Atlanta promises 1st Class Facility

Former US Soccer striker Charlie Davies – Recovery from Deadly Car Crash – Unrelenting  Video

Wondo back at the top of the MLS scoring chart

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Carmel FC Night @ Indy 11 Game May 7 7:30 pm vs Edmonton

Ask your manager about discount tickets in our group – our just show up and come find us in the stands!   +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The Scene from the Mike – Sat Night – BYB style at the Indy 11 game

Soccer Camps – Boys and Girls -Ages 6 – 14

Ok so its almost Summer Camp time – below are some nice options for Soccer Camps this summer

Post2Post GOALKEEPER – Soccer Camp – May 31-June 3 –  9 am till 3 pm

CFC and Carmel High Coach Carla Baker – former National Team Goalie for Canada will run her annual GK camp June 1-4 9 am to 3 pm $195 each @ Badger Field

Indy 11 Soccer Camp June 20-23 — 9 am till 12 noon Ages 5-14 $135 @ Badger Fields

Post2Post Soccer Camp
Former Pittsburgh Head Coach Sue-Moy Chin and Former Iowa Coach Carla Baker run their annual field player camp for players of all abilities July 25-28 — 9 am to 3 pm $195 each @ Badger

Goal2Gol Soccer Camp
CHS Men’s Head Coach Shane Schmidt, a former U-20 US National Team player, runs his annual camp from 9 am to 2 pm July 11-16. $150 before 6/30 @ River Road Fields.

THREE THINGS – INDY VS NEW YORK

Three things from three points at home v. Cosmos

Apr 18, 2016

Following every game in 2016, IndyEleven.com will give each game a little time to breathe before going back for one last look at the proceedings, extracting three takeaways to walk away with before taking a look ahead.In this week’s edition of “Three Things,” we praise “Coach Hank’s” switch to the 4-4-2, Eamon Zayed’s total show, and the team composition to overcome a 1-0 deficit to take all three points.

1) Coach Hank throws two up top in formation switch

Despite what we wrote last week about Hankinson’s love affair with the 4-2-3-1, his clear switch to the 4-4-2 brought both Eamon Zayed and Justin Braun to the apex of the attack – and it worked.The distribution of personnel saw Indy Eleven complete over 75.7% of their passes, their highest total through three games, and swing in more crosses (20) than The Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception during mass. Brad Ring and Nicki Paterson were at the heart of the midfield line of four and were especially influential in the successful distribution, completing a combined 78/94 (82.9%) of their passes.Despite the Eleven largely playing out of the back in the first two games, this week’s midfield domination saw top passing combinations go to Dylan Mares, Brad Ring, and Nicki Paterson, as the team charged through the center often – and successfully.

Ring, Mares, Paterson chart

Up top, Eamon Zayed and Justin Braun played tight as a tandem and hardly drifted from each other. Braun will be disappointed not to have opened his Indy Eleven account after having a goal called back on a close offside call (and just missing a potential game-winner on a diving header), but his flick forward sent Dylan Mares in on goal in the 95th minute. Mares rifled the shot at Cosmos ‘keeper Kyle Zobeck who saved well, but Zayed was there to tap in the rebound and put the “Boys in Blue” in front with seconds to spare.

2) Eamon Zayed’s total show

Speaking of the Irishman, Zayed showed two facets of a good striker with his composed penalty finish and quick thinking in front of goal to complete his two-goal performance. In the 88th minute, Cosmos defender Hunter Freeman fouled Eleven defender Greg Janicki in the area following an excellent delivery from Don Smart on a rushed corner. This allowed Zayed to step up to the spot with a dream chance to equalize against Zobeck, and the No. 9 would bury it to his right, despite the fact the regular Cosmos backup netminder correctly guessed his decision.

How the winner unfolded

Just a few minutes later, Braun started the afore mentioned bang-bang turn of events inside the area that ended with Zayed sweeping up Zobeck’s spilled save of Mares’ shot on the doorstep, causing madness to ensue yards away in the West Stand.The pair of goals were the new man’s first in an Eleven kit, but if he continues to work for his chances like he did on Saturday, they surely won’t be his last.

3) The fight back continues

Coming back from a deficit is ideal for no one, but it’s also something that “Indiana’s Team” is familiar with. It was a theme in the preseason on separate occasions, it happened during the home opener against Ottawa, and the opportunity to fight back once again presented itself on Saturday against New York.After the offside flag went up against Justin Braun in the 49th minute, New York countered on the other side like lightning. Juan Arango dashed out on the wing and swung in a cross towards Sebastian Guenzatti, but before the attacker could reach the cross Greg Janicki’s sliding challenge drew a whistle from the head official – penalty to New York. At that point, it was new Cosmos midfielder and Croatian international Niko Kranjcar with the chance to put the visitors in front, and he did so beating Jon Busch to his right with a fine spot-kick.The fight was on. Coach Tim Hankinson examined the circumstances and decided to bring on Don Smart to replace Duke Lacroix in an adjustment on the wings. After nine more scoreless minutes, the Eleven were forced into their second substitution of the night as Nemanja Vukovic went down with an injury allowing Marco Franco into the match. Three minutes later, the final substitution was made as midfielder Nicki Paterson made way for forward Wojciech Wojcik in an all-out-attack move by the veteran coach. The fact that Hankinson did not wait until late to fill out all three of his substitute cards – all subs were used by the 76th minute – smacked of a coach willing to force good things happen rather than wait for them to do so.Like last week against Ottawa, the Eleven left it late as Zayed notched his brace. All in dramatic fashion, it appeared the “Boys in Blue” had swept the rug from under the Cosmos’ feet to send them home empty-handed.

Zayed Heat Map

The three points were extremely valuable for Indy Eleven as the sprint through the spring season advances. The win puts “Indiana’s Team” in fourth place through three games with five points, just behind Minnesota United FC and the New York Cosmos (6 pts) and four off the leaders, the Carolina Railhawks (9 pts).Having staked their claim to what was perhaps the biggest “statement win” to date in franchise history, the Eleven will use their Spring Season bye and root for favorable results across the league this weekend before heading west to the Sooner State to face new franchise Rayo OKC in Yukon, Oklahoma.

RECAP – IND 2 : 1 NYC

Eleven knock off Cosmos thanks to late brace from Zayed

Apr 16, 2016

Indy Eleven Collects First Win in Comeback Fashion over New York

Eamon Zayed’s Pair of Stoppage Time Goals Lifts “Boys in Blue” to 2-1 Win over First-Place Cosmos

INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, April 16, 2016) – Indy Eleven turned a potentially disappointing defeat into a breath-taking victory during second half stoppage time against the New York Cosmos, as Eamon Zayed’s late brace gave the home side a 2-1 comeback win in front of 9,067 fans at IUPUI’s Carroll Stadium.Indy Eleven looked poised to end its six-game draw streak against the Cosmos with a loss after going down on Nico Kranjcar’s 51st minute penalty kick, but it instead snapped the run with a victory thanks to Zayed’s late-game dramatics.Neither side could break through during a stingy first 45 minutes of play. Indy Eleven had some early joy in attack through wide play and the crosses that came from it, but only one opportunity – Nemanja Vuković’s sidewinder off a Brad Ring service that bounced just wide in the 31st minute – would result in any danger.  New York’s four shots in the half would all come from distance, with Sebastian Guenzatti’s 33rd minute effort from 20 yards out that missed high looking the most threatening.Indy Eleven’s Dylan Mares would have the best chance of the stanza in stoppage time when he turned inside on his defender and fired a left-footed blast from 15 yards that forced Cosmos netminder Kyle Zobeck into a two-handed parry over for a corner.The home side looked to get the go-ahead goal in the 49th minute when Justin Braun nodded home another Ring cross at the top of the six, but the offside flag came up on a bang-bang call. That wave-off would loom large just a minute later, as New York countered on the other end to set up the game’s first tally. Guenzatti’s lunge for Juan Arango’s cross inside the six was judged to be altered by the sliding tackle of Greg Janicki, which drew a penalty kick for the visitors that Kranjcar slammed past the right of Indy goalkeeper John Busch to put New York up 1-0.While Indy would push numbers forward for an equalizer, it was New York that would get the better chances on the counter up through the end of the regulation 90 minutes. Jairo Arrieta would get a good look in the 56th minute, but Busch did well to cut off the angle and force the shot to be pushed into the outside netting. Lucky Mkosana almost made an immediate impact following his insertion for Arrieta in the 81st minute, as he slipped through the Indy center backs and fired off a shot from 20 yards out that missed just wide of the right post.The home side would enter the five minutes of injury time by taking its own trip to the penalty spot, ironically with Janicki being fouled by New York defender Hunter Freeman as he tried to track a looping corner that was sent into the heart of the area by Don Smart. While Zobeck would correctly guess to his left on the PK, Zayed placed it just out of reach and inside the right post to even the proceedings at 1-1.Indy fans might have thought the seventh straight draw between the two sides was meant to be after Justin Braun’s diving header off of Smart’s exquisite first-time cross four minutes into stoppage flashed just wide left. However, the home side’s push wasn’t over, as on the game’s final attack Mares’ sent a shot that Zobeck did well to block, but the rebound fell right to Zayed, who swept home from the doorstep to give Indy Eleven its first win of the Tim Hankinson era.Indy Eleven will enjoy its Spring Season bye week next weekend before getting back to action on Saturday, April 30, when “Indiana’s Team” will travel to Oklahoma for its first meeting with Rayo OKC (8:00 p.m. ET, live on beIN Sports). The squad will return home to Carroll Stadium on Saturday, May 7, to take on FC Edmonton; tickets for the match are available starting at $11 in the Brickyard Battalion and East Goal Top sections atwww.IndyEleven.com or over the phone at 317-685-1100 (Mon.-Fri., 9:00a.m.-5:00 p.m.).
NASL Spring Season
Indy Eleven  2 : 1  New York Cosmos
Saturday, April 16, 2016  Michael A. Carroll Stadium – Indianapolis, IN   Attendance: 9,037

Indy Eleven: 
Spring Season: 1W-2D-0L (5 pts.)

New York Cosmos:
Spring Season: 2W-0D-1L (6 pts.)

Scoring Summary:
NYC – Nico Kranjcar (penalty kick) 51’
IND – Eamon Zayed (penalty kick) 90’
IND – Eamon Zayed (unassisted) 90+5’

Discipline Summary:
IND – Nemanja Vuković (caution) 50’
IND – Justin Braun (caution) 57’
IND – Greg Janicki (caution) 65’
IND – Hunter Freeman (caution) 89’
IND – Brad Ring (caution) 90+5’

OPTA STATS: See the full array of statistics available at the Opta MatchCenter

Indy Eleven line-up (4-4-2, L–>R):  Jon Busch; Nemanja Vuković (Marco Franco 73’), Greg Janicki, Colin Falvey (capt), Lovel Palmer; Duke Lacroix (Don Smart 63’), Nicki Paterson (Nicki Paterson 76’), Brad Ring, Dylan Mares; Justin Braun, Eamon Zayed

Eleven bench: Keith Cardona (GK), Cory Miller, Neil Shaffer, Daniel Keller

New York Cosmos (4-2-3-1):  Kyle Zobeck; Ayoze, Carlos Mendes (capt) (Gabriel Farfan 86’), Jimmy Ockford, Hunter Freeman; Michael Lahoud, Adam Moffat; Niko Kranjcar (Andres Flores 70’), Juan Arango, Sebastian Guenzatti; Jairo Arrieta (Lucky Mkosana 81’)

Cosmos bench: Brian Holt (GK), David Ochieng, Yohandry Orozco, David Diosa

Talking Tactics: Indy Eleven v New York Cosmos

Let’s get this out of the way right off the bat: This is a tactics blog on a fan site. The writing, in spite of the writer’s personal affinity for a particular team, aims to be objective and even handed. The numbers are the numbers and they don’t change even if the writer is pulling for a certain team. To indulge in an over used and tired phrase, it is what it is. That said, Saturday’s match against the Cosmos was something to behold. Has Indy ever earned a more delicious three points? It’s a rhetorical question, but the answer is no.Now that that is out of the way…

Credit the Tims

Making a philosophical shift in the way your team approaches a match is a tough thing to do if you’re a coach and said shifts usually only happen after a series of dire results. With only two matches out of the way in the spring season and a point to show in each match prior to the Cosmos tilt, an unchanged approach would have been understandable. Tim Hankinson took the reigns of the Eleven committed to a 4-2-3-1 formation and assembled a squad with that shape in mind.Tim Regan, in his time as the head coach, most often deployed a 4-4-2 with a midfield diamond, but he didn’t have the players available to him that Hankinson does. I don’t know what the conversations were between the Tims following the Ottawa match, but it was clearly not lost on them that the Eleven looked better, more dangerous, and more composed with two forwards in advance of the midfield. With arguably the best team in the NASL coming to town in only your third match of the season, it takes a little sand to scrap the formation you’ve sold to the club owner and fans as the best way forward and go with something completely different, but that’s exactly what they did and Eleven supporters will be basking in the wisdom of that decision through next week’s bye.

A Closer Look

Following Saturday’s dramatic 2-1 win, Éamon Zayed said he had many more touches in a two front system than he’d had in the previous two matches as a lone striker. However, looking at the numbers, Zayed had 23, 21, and 28 touches against Tampa Bay, Ottawa, and New York, respectively. Yes, he had more touches, but not that many more. Why then did Indy look so much more dynamic and dangerous against the Cosmos than they did against Tampa Bay and most of the match against Ottawa?

The answer lies in where those touches were had. Consider the heat maps below. In each of the previous two matches as the lone focal point of the Eleven attack, Zayed was often starved for service and, when he did receive the ball, he had no one with whom to connect.

Zayed against Tampa Bay.

Against Tampa Bay, Zayed was forced to drop deep to receive the ball at his feet, but struggled to find anyone with whom to combine. the result was that the focal point of the Eleven attack had difficulty doing anything of substance in the final third.

Zayed against Ottawa.

Zayed found better balance against Ottawa and had more of a presence in the final third, but remember that a significant portion of the second half was played with two strikers in a 4-4-2 and then a 3-5-2. Now look at the heat map for Zayed and Braun in a two front system.

Zayed and Braun versus New York Cosmos.

It may seem like apples to oranges including two players instead of just one, but it isn’t given that those two players served as joint targets for the Eleven moving forward when in the previous matches there was just Zayed – we’re comparing attack to attack. Zayed’s passing statistics reflect the improvement. Against Tampa Bay, Zayed was 6/12 passing. Against Ottawa, he was 7/12 passing. Against New York, Zayed was 13/17 passing. His ability to receive the ball in more dangerous areas and then combine with another Eleven player, more than anything, led to the Eleven’s increased dynamism in attack.As a whole, the team received the ball and combined in more advanced areas. In both the Tampa Bay and Ottawa matches, Indy’s top passing combinations all originated with a defender and often times ended with a defender. Against Tampa Bay, the top combinations were Colin Falvey to Lovel Palmer, Colin Falvey to Nicki Paterson, and Nemanja Vukovic to Greg Janicki. Against Ottawa, they were Janicki to Vukovic, Ring to Janicki, and Falvey to Janicki. However, against New York, with two front runners stretching the field vertically and creating space, the combinations were created in more advanced areas – Mares to Ring, Paterson to Palmer, and Ring to Vukovic. This may seem like a small distinction, but receiving and creating combinations in the middle third rather than the defensive third has huge consequences with concern to a team’s ability to create chances and get forward.Comparing the two matches in which Indy played exclusively in a 4-2-3-1 and exclusively in a two front system (against Tampa Bay and New York, respectively) Indy had 7shots to 13 shots; 1 on target to 4 on target; 4 inside the box to 9 inside the box. Long story short, they were on the ball more in more dangerous positions with two front runners as compared to a lone striker.To beat a dead horse, check out the two images below comparing attacking play in the New York and Tampa Bay matches. Attempted crosses from open play, both successful and unsuccessful, key passes, shots, and successful dribbles are included.

Attacking play versus New York.

 

Ditto Tampa Bay:

Attacking play versus Tampa Bay.

The takeaway here is not so much in the end result as it is in where passes, shots, and crosses originated and the volume of said actions.

Chemistry

Lastly, I think it’s worth touching briefly on the intangibles of a team’s performance. There aren’t numbers to back up these kinds of observations, but in a flow based sport like soccer the intangibles can sometimes provide the small percentages between getting a result and failing. When the Indy players celebrated Zayed’s first goal on the sideline with Jair Reinoso’s jersey I think everyone got a sense of the team ethos with which this iteration of the Eleven plays.Having been lucky enough to spend some time around the team last season, I can say it isn’t that the team in the last two seasons was dysfunctional or that they didn’t fight for one another, but that they were a team starving for the majority veteran influence that dictates what professionalism and “playing for the shirt” looks like. That sounds sappy and those sorts of observations will not be the norm for the tactics blog, but after a signature win like that which occurred on Saturday night, I think it’s worth noting. There is a significant amount of young talent still on the Eleven – Wojcik, Mares, Lacroix, Cardona, Franco, Miller, Smart (not young, but a young pro) – and having veterans like Falvey, Janicki, Ring, Zayed, Busch, Paterson, Palmer, Ubiparipović, and Larrea to guide the team will pay dividends for them moving forward.

Amid complex times and growth, U.S. Soccer faces perception problem

Tension between USMNT, USWNT reaches highest level in long time

SI senior writer Grant Wahl looks at how the rising tension within US Soccer could affect the women’s national team’s wage discrimination complaint.

BY BRIAN STRAUSADD FAVORITETwitter EmailPosted: Wed Apr. 6, 2016Updated: Fri Apr. 8, 2016

Get all of Brian Straus’s columns as soon as they’re published. Download the new Sports Illustrated app (iOS or Android) and personalize your experience by following your favorite teams and SI writers.

Anyone wondering whether all publicity really is good publicity might want to check in on the folks at the U.S. Soccer Federation. They administer and govern a sport that doesn’t hit the pop culture mainstream too frequently, and they’d normally be thrilled with hearing their name and seeing their new logo on a program like The Daily Show. Tuesday’s segment, however, was meant to skewer rather than celebrate. And host Trevor Noah dispensed with the nuance and went for the jugular.  “Even those children that make iPhones are like, ‘Wow, that’s unfair,’” Noah said while discussing the wage discrimination complaint filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission by the U.S. women’s national team. “Not only have the U.S. women’s soccer team proven that they’re the best in the world, they’ve made America feel like they’re the best in the world. I know you can’t put a price on winning and national pride, but maybe you should try.”The federation and its all-conquering women already were engaged in a legal battle over the existence and duration of their collective bargaining agreement. And they’d jousted over equal treatment and field conditions, culminating in the team’s refusal to play a scheduled December friendly on a substandard surface in Honolulu. Then came the EEOC complaint, which pitted the talented and telegenic world champions against their corporate overlords. “I don’t want to use the word ‘deserve’ in any of this,” U.S. Soccer president and Columbia University economics lecturer Sunil Galati said about the women’s national team’s pursuit of equal pay. “I’d reverse the question. Do you think revenue should matter at all in determination of compensation in a market economy? If we look at the track record of teams, a lot of different things go into the compensation for the players. Part of it is based on revenue. Part of it is based on revenues that accrue from international competitions. Part of it is based on incentives and the performance of the teams.”  PODCAST: U.S. men’s mixed World Cup, Olympic qualifiers

Well, that sounded pretty corporate. And whether it’s correct or fair or not, the public doesn’t want to hear about “compensation in a market economy” when it comes to treatment of their heroes. Spreadsheets are boring. What we know is that the men just lost to Guatemala while the women earned a ticker tape parade and still get a per diem that’s somehow 20% less. And that makes it easy for The Daily Show to compare U.S. Soccer with the managers of a Chinese sweatshop, even if the federation spends more on the women’s game than anyone else in the world.But Noah let the federation off lightly compared to Paul Gardner, the Soccer America curmudgeon-in-residence who’s the country’s longest serving active soccer writer. On Monday, he penned a shocking column comparing U.S. Soccer’s tagline, “One Nation. One Team,” with a popular slogan that emerged in 1930s Germany: “Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer”.Gardner called for a change and wrote, “I have total faith in the slogan-makers ability to quickly conjure up alternative banalities.”But should he? While there’s no chance that anyone affiliated with the USSF or Nike intended to link American soccer to 20th-century fascists, the derivative slogan does fail to reflect the fractured state of the domestic game. In 2016, it’s anything but harmonious.How did U.S. Soccer, a non-profit organization established to grow and govern the game in the 50 states, reach the point where it’s being mentioned—even in lazy and absurd satire—alongside child laborers and Nazis?The answer certainly may lie between a misstep or two, but it’s more likely simply an uncomfortable symptom of soccer’s growth.For so many decades it was a foreign game, popular only in specific regions or ethnic enclaves located a million miles from the mainstream. But its rise over the past quarter century has been meteoric, fueled by the youth soccer boom, globalization, cable and satellite TV, video games, viable and expanding professional leagues, a men’s national team that’s been to seven straight World Cups and a women’s juggernaut that’s won three.There’s now money to be made in soccer, and money made inevitably leads to competing claims. American soccer’s fiefdoms, especially at the youth level, no longer have the autonomy they once enjoyed. Well-funded by TV networks and sponsors, the USSF has become more professionalized while bringing an increasing number of facets of the sport under its control.When there’s growth, and that growth rubs up against old boundaries and spheres of influence, friction inevitably ensues. On one level, those are good problems to have. Being an American soccer fan, player, administrator or coach (or journalist) is far more fruitful today than it was 30 years ago. But with prosperity comes increased visibility, higher stakes and deeper scrutiny. More people are interested and more people want a say. Accelerated growth can be painfully awkward. Anyone who knows a middle schooler can tell you that.So, pick your controversy or source of frustration. We can start with the women. They may have a strong case for more compensation and better working conditions, but they’ve made a few unflattering headlines as well. Goalkeeper Hope Solo’s legal issues are well documented. Recently retired forward Abby Wambach, the national team’s all-time leading scorer, was arrested for DUII in Oregon last weekend and admitted in court documents to using cocaine and marijuana earlier in her career. One of her sponsors, Mini USA, has pulled ads featuring the former star.Meanwhile, the men have struggled recently. Jurgen Klinsmann is being paid more than $3 million per year and was promoted to technical director in 2013, but his team has failed to demonstrate much progress.The senior squad finished fourth at the 2015 Gold Cup, it’s worst showing in 15 years, then lost to Mexico in a match that sent the winner to the 2017 Confederations Cup. Last week, it faced a do-or-die World Cup qualifier against Guatemala, its fate hanging in the balance more than two years before the tournament kicks off. But while Klinsmann’s team was trouncingLos Chapines, the U-23 side was losing its Olympic qualifying playoff to Colombia.The American men will miss the Olympics for a second straight time. And neither the U-23, U-20 nor U-17 team even reached the final of its most recent CONCACAF championship.Once considered a savior, or at least a breath of fresh air, Klinsmann now is the subject of frequent analysis and criticism. He’s blamed his own players, referees or MLS for some of the national team’s misfortunes and has questioned U.S. fans’ soccer knowledge—none of which went over well. His methods remain confusing and opaque, and perception of the team hasn’t been good.Friction between the national team coach and the country’s most prominent league may not be ideal, but the relationship between his employer and MLS on a corporate level also rubs many the wrong way. SUM, which is MLS’s marketing and promotions arm, works closely with the federation and handles many of its sponsorship, promotional and broadcast rights.

The league and federation are intertwined, and that gives Gulati, who’s run unopposed in the two most recent USSF presidential elections, and MLS commissioner Don Garber an enormous amount of influence. They’ve grown the game considerably, but that sort of concentration of power makes some uncomfortable. The second-tier NASL, for example, has threatened legal action over the possible implementation of rising league standards that would make it harder to achieve first-division sanctioning. The perception that the USSF is protecting MLS from competition because of their financial relationship is not the best look.All of that leads to the scandals and indictments that have wracked FIFA and CONCACAF over the past year. While the USSF remains unblemished, its relationship with indicted and convicted executives like Chuck Blazer is unfortunate. The scandals drew the interest of the U.S. Senate, which, like The Daily Show, doesn’t typically pay attention to soccer. It held a hearing last summer that touched on corruption, the Qatar World Cup and pay inequity, among other troubles facing the sport.USSF CEO Dan Flynn testified and admitted to a “level of discomfort” when working with some of soccer’s more unsavory characters. Meanwhile, Gulati has been successfully swimming with sharks. He’s emerged as a key player in FIFA politics—look no further than his effective work lobbying for eventual winner Gianni Infantino in last month’s presidential election. Naturally, Infantino wound up defending himself this week when he was linked to contracts signed by UEFA and indicted Argentine promoters.The grass roots are just as volatile. The USSF’s effort to improve player development naturally has ruffled feathers throughout the youth soccer community. Whether it’s varying standards across the Development Academy and its prohibition of high school soccer, controversial new age and birth-year mandates, issues over heading and concussions or more potential legal action over U.S. Soccer/MLS’s withholding of solidarity payments and training compensation to youth clubs that produce pros, there’s plenty of drama and disagreement that might be further from the headlines but still is vital to the future of the sport. It all may be necessary, but that doesn’t make it comfortable.Shortly after news of Wambach’s arrest broke, U.S. midfielder Alejandro Bedoya and forward Jozy Altidore took to Twitter. They did not offer their support. But wait, aren’t they One Nation, One Team? Bedoya, the son of Colombian immigrants, didn’t think so. He referenced comments Wambach made in December, when she called for Klinsmann’s dismissal and said, “The way that he has brought in a bunch of these foreign guys is not something I believe in wholeheartedly … It seems to me there are too many egos in our men’s program right now, and the bigger ego of all of them is the one who is leading the charge.”Altidore, the son of Haitian immigrants, responded with a joke about the incident in January 2015 when Solo’s husband was arrested for DUI while driving a USSF van during a women’s national team camp. The goalie, who was a passenger, was suspended.Perhaps those tweets reveal something akin to sibling rivalry. Or perhaps it’s time for a new slogan.At the 2014 World Cup, Nike sold T-shirts in Brazil’s yellow and green reading “One Nation. One Soul. One Team.” During last year’s Rugby World Cup, the #OneNationOneTeam hashtag was used by Namibia. Apparently the Toronto Blue Jays think they’re Canada’s de facto national baseball team. You can buy “One Nation. One Team. TOgether” apparel at MLB’s official shop.  Gardner was right about one thing. U.S. Soccer is trying to put its best foot forward by relying relentlessly on a “fatuous catchphrase.” It’s marketing speak conjured by MBAs and not something that accurately reflects this juncture of American soccer history. The U.S. is comprised of many soccer nations, many teams and many interests, and those entities are coming into conflict.The USSF, along with MLS and the other pro leagues, should be proud of its trajectory. American soccer is unrecognizable compared to what it was just a few years ago, and that’s exciting, compelling and fun. It can’t be easy to manage, and there’s nothing wrong with benefit of the doubt. After all, if there’s fighting over money, that means there’s money to fight over. That’s preferable to the alternative.But recent months illustrate the dark side of prosperity. If “One Nation. One Team,” isn’t an authentic representation of the current state of affairs, maybe it’s an ideal—a goal. And if that’s the case, then there’s a lot of work still to do.

Christian Pulisic scores first goal for Dortmund in win vs. Hamburg

MF Christian Pulisic, 9 — Pulisic introduced the “Dab” dance to the Bundesliga after scoring his very first goal for the club, making him the fourth youngest goalscorer in Germany’s top flight (and Youngest Non-German) — the category is still led by teammatei Sahin. It was Pulisic’s first home start and the first time he played the full 90 minutes. But his cracking goal, that served as a can opener for his team, wasn’t the only highlight of his performance, as he was a handful for Hamburg’s defense all game long.

Borussia Dortmund played themselves into a better place for Wednesday’s cup semifinal against Hertha BSC in a dominant 3-0 home win over their bogey side HSV Hamburg following Thursday’s devastating loss to Liverpool.As has been the case in recent weeks, Thomas Tuchel rotated heavily, making eight changes from Thursday’s Europa League starting XI. Both 17-year-old youngsters Christian Pulisic and Felix Passlack were awarded a start, while Marco Reus and Henrikh Mkhitaryan didn’t even make the squad.Yet, Tuchel’s lineup was still far from being experimental. Both Pulisic and Passlack proved that they were rightfully picked by their coach, turning in mature and reliable performances.The match started out as a stale affair, with Dortmund not asking many questions of Hamburg’s defence. It was newly minted United States international Pulisic who paved the way for an easy victory by scoring the opener in the 38th minute.There is no doubt that the Americany will see more playing time under Jurgen Klinsmann in the national team very soon.Hamburg’s goalkeeper Rene Adler got sent off on 51 minutes for bringing down Shinji Kagawa on the outside of the box. A debatable call, as there were still two HSV defenders in range to stop the Japanese from scoring, but it meant that the guests had no measures to put BVB under pressure from that moment on.Hamburg were forced to finish the final 12 minutes with only nine players on the pitch as Albin Ekdal picked up an injury after HSV coach Bruno Labbadia had already made three substitutions.In the end, the comfortable win was just what the doctor ordered after Thursday’s collapse at Anfield.

U.S. Hot List: Christian Pulisic, Jordan Morris lead the way; Gonzalez down

Listen to what Christian Pulisic and others have to say about what makes Borussia Dortmund’s ‘Yellow Wall’ one of the most unique fan bases in football.Don’t look now, but the striker competition within the United States national team is beginning to get interesting. Assuming coach Jurgen Klinsmann selects the usual four forwards to the 23-man roster he’ll name next month ahead of June’s Copa America Centenario, two of the following players — Jozy Altidore, Clint Dempsey, Jordan Morris, Bobby Wood, Chris Wondolowski and Gyasi Zardes — won’t be on the squad.Granted, one should never assume anything when it comes to Klinsmann, even if Altidore, Dempsey and Wood look like no-brainers. After all, the unconventional coach picked five frontrunners — all of the above except Morris — for last month’s World Cup qualifying home-and-home against Guatemala. He’s also used Zardes, who was listed as a forward in March, on the wings more often than not.Still, it’s hard to see all six surviving Klinsmann’s final cut. That could leave ballyhooed MLS rookie Morris battling against domestic league lifer Wondolowski for the final spot over the next four weeks, an intriguing competition to be sure.Both players are coming off notable games last weekend. They aren’t alone. Youngster Christian Pulisic continues to make headlines in Germany, with his stature growing by the day. And a number of U.S. regulars returned to action last weekend after significant layoffs. Others, meanwhile, are down on their luck at the worst possible time. The biggest movers on either side of the divide make up our latest Hot List.

Warming up

John Brooks, D, Hertha Berlin (Germany)

Why he’s here: The sore knee that sidelined him last month healed enough for the 23-year-old to start and go 90 minutes in Friday’s 2-1 loss to Hoffenheim, Brooks’ first match since Mar. 19. What this means: Provided he’s healthy — injuries have cost Brooks caps on several other occasions, too — the imposing German-American is a first choice center back for Klinsmann.

Alejandro Bedoya, Nantes (France)

Why he’s here: The U.S. vet had been out since sustaining an ankle injury in Guatemala City last month, but Bedoya returned to action for his Ligue 1 club in Sunday’s 2-0 loss to Montpellier.What this means: It’s the second time the 28-year-old’s career season has been interrupted after returning from international duty (an illness forced him to miss all of October), but that actually could benefit the U.S. if the hard-running Bedoya’s legs are fresher than normal heading into the summer.

Matt Besler, D, Sporting Kansas City (MLS)

Why he’s here: The concussion he sustained just before the first of last month’s two qualifiers forced Besler to miss both matches and the first three games in April for his club. But the 29-year-old was back in the heart of SKC’s defense for Sunday’s 2-1 loss at FC Dallas.

What this means: Recovering from a concussion can be tricky, so seeing Besler — a 2014 World Cup starter who is slated to back up Brooks this June — on the field again is a big relief for the U.S.

Jermaine Jones, M, Colorado Rapids (MLS)

Why he’s here: In his first game back following a six-match suspension for shoving an official during last year’s MLS playoffs, when he was a member of the New England Revolution, Jones led the Rapids to a 2-1 win over the New York Red Bulls in his debut for the club.

What this means: Now that he’s playing again, there is no reason to think that Jones, now 34, won’t man his usual central midfield spot for the U.S. during the tournament.

Jordan Morris, F, Seattle Sounders (MLS)

Why he’s here: The highly-touted rookie scored his first professional goal in his sixth MLS game (eight in all competitions) in Saturday’s 2-1 victory over the Philadelphia Union.What this means: Morris remains in a dogfight to make the Copa roster and probably needs to add to his tally to stay in the hunt. That said, the 21-year-old should be more relaxed in front of goal after opening his account in Seattle.Jordan Morris’ goal vs. Philadelphia helped Seattle extend their unbeaten streak to three games.

Christian Pulisic, M, Borussia Dortmund (Germany)

Why he’s here: The 17-year-old made his second consecutive Bundesliga start and became the fourth-youngest scorer in the history of Germany’s top flight when he got BVB off the mark in Sunday’s 3-0 over Hamburg.What this means: With 10 appearances in all competitions since making his pro debut Jan. 30, Pulisic has gone from Copa America roster long shot to possible U.S. starter — IF he keeps playing for Dortmund. Now that the club is eliminated from the Europa League, it will be interesting to see if Pulisic keeps his place for Wednesday’s DFB Cup semifinal versus Hertha.

Tim Ream, D, Fulham (England)

Why he’s here: The slick-passing lefty, who lost his place with the Cottagers following the late December arrival of new manager Slavisa Jokanovic, has gone the distance in each of Fulham’s past four league games.

What this means: Fulham were routed 5-0 by Brighton in Ream’s most recent start, and the American was involved in two of the goals against. But if Ream keeps his lineup spot in West London, he could still warrant a first-hand look from Klinsmann before the May 20 roster deadline.

Chris Wondolowski, F, San Jose Earthquakes (MLS)

Why he’s here: Wondolowski has started yet another MLS season on fire, with a league-topping six goals from his first seven games in 2016.

What this means: The 33-year-old is making a serious case for inclusion, and Klinsmann adores his attitude and work ethic. Bet against Wondo at your peril.

Cooling down

Timmy Chandler, D, Eintracht Frankfurt (Germany)

Why he’s here: With U.S. technical advisor Berti Vogts watching from the stands, Chandler had a rough outing in Eintracht’s 3-0 defeat at Bayer Leverkusen, picking up a second-half yellow card and getting beaten on two of the host’s goals.

What this means: Poor form hasn’t kept Klinsmann from calling in Chandler and others before, so don’t be surprised if the 26-year-old gets an in-person audition when the European-based players report to Miami the week before the coach’s final cut.

 Omar Gonzalez, D, Pachuca (Mexico)

Why he’s here: The 27-year-old sustained an undisclosed injury and was substituted in the second half of Saturday’s 1-0 win versus Morelia.

What this means: The former L.A .Galaxy star has been terrific in Liga MX since joining the Tuzos in January, but Gonzalez’s international future is unclear after he marked his U.S. return with a subpar showing in Guatemala. Getting hurt now won’t help.

Omar Gonzalez has enjoyed a stellar first season in Liga MX, but an injury sustained over the weekend could complicate his national team summer.

 Alfredo Morales, M, Ingolstadt (Germany)

Why he’s here: Morales was ever present for the Bundesliga club until he lost his place in early February, and then got hurt. He’s now gone more than two months since his last start for Ingolstadt, and hasn’t come off the bench since mid-March.

What this means: Playing in one of the world’s elite leagues was supposed to make Morales into a U.S. regular, but it hasn’t worked out that way. “We’re still waiting for Alfredo,” Klinsmann said recently. Unless things change soon, the wait figures to continue.

 Danny Williams, M, Reading (England)

Why he’s here: Williams was already out of favor with Klinsmann, who left the German-American defensive midfielder off of his past two full-strength rosters dating to last November. Now Williams is serving a three-match ban for scuffling with a teammate during last week’s loss to Middlesbrough.What this means: With mainstays Jones and Kyle Beckerman aging but still serviceable, the odds of Williams making the Copa squad were slim to begin with. Now they’ve slimmer, even if Williams will be available for the Royals’ last two games of 2015-16.ESPNFC’s Tom Marshall contributed reporting.Doug McIntyre is a staff writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @DougMacESPN.

 Fulham’s Emerson Hyndman praised after American scores winner

Fulham manager Slavisa Jokanovic said Emerson Hyndman is worthy of more playing time after the U.S. international scored a late winner on his birthday against Cardiff on Saturday.Deep into stoppage time, Cardiff failed to clear the ball following a corner kick and Hyndman finished off a scramble in the visitors’ penalty area as Fulham won 2-1.The goal was Hyndman’s first of the season in just his seventh start, and Jokanovic said he regretted not getting Hyndman into more games.”Today is his birthday. It’s a great present for himself and for all of us in the last moment of the game,” the manager said of the American.”He’s probably one of the more talented players. I am little bit disappointed with myself that I haven’t found more minutes for him this season.”He probably needs to be a little bit stronger for the Championship. But he’s a young guy and he will be a very good footballer for us.”Hyndman, who turned 20 on Saturday, was the U.S. captain at the Under-20 World Cup last year and also featured for the under-23 team that failed to qualify for the Olympics last month.He made his only appearance for the U.S. senior team in 2014.

Barcelona’s slide has opened Spain’s title race for Atletico, Real Madrid

ESPN FC’s And so it comes to this: three teams, three and a half weeks and a five-match dash for the finish line. Barcelona, Atletico, Madrid. “The team that wins the league will be the best over 38 games, not five,” Barcelona manager Luis Enrique insisted on Tuesday, but that’s not really true anymore. Whatever happened then happened; what matters is what happens next, and it all starts in A Coruña on Wednesday night.They line up alongside each other, no tactics, no doubts: flat out to the finish, no room for error, a single slip and it’s over; five games to play, five games to win.The obstacles they face are uneven and the start is staggered, sure, but barely: The gaps between them now are so small that they’re only really there as tiebreakers. Barcelona have 76 points, Atlético 76 and Madrid 75. When it comes to head-to-head, Atletico beat Madrid, and Barcelona beat them both. Asked whether his team would have to win every match to take the title and whether they could do exactly that, Enrique answered, “yes and yes.”None of them ever truly expected to be in this position. At the end of Week 29, just four matchdays ago, Barcelona had a 12-point lead over Real Madrid and an eight-point lead over Atletico. Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane had already admitted it was over after defeat in the Madrid derby. When Gerard Pique headed the opening goal in the clasico in Week 31, it put Barcelona 13 points ahead of Madrid and nine above Atletico. But Madrid came back. They both did. Barcelona allowed them to, picking up just one of the last 12 points on offer. So now, here they are.How it happened has occupied everyone’s thoughts: How did Barcelona invite their rivals to run? Maybe one of the reasons it’s not over is precisely because they thought it was over; maybe they didn’t win because, deep down, they knew they didn’t have to. Maybe they should ignore advice from The Jackson Five and blame it on the good times? Or maybe it’s the inability to step up again afterward. If you conserve energy, do you lose the ability to draw upon it?Maybe it’s simpler, maybe it’s fatigue; just don’t tell Enrique that. “What’s your surname?” he asked of the last journalist to ask. “Malo [Bad],” came the reply. “Correct, next question,” he said.Maybe it’s psychological: Valencia manager Pako Ayestaran talked of Barcelona’s “anxiety” on Sunday. Maybe it’s the short squad and the lack of variety: Against Valencia, Luis Enrique didn’t even send anyone out to warm up. There was no point. Maybe it’s the calendar: The timing hasn’t been on Barcelona’s side, and these small details perhaps make a big difference. Maybe it’s trans-Atlantic travel before the clasico. Maybe it’s tactical: Atletico manager Diego Simeone admitted earlier in the season that “we tried to annoy [Sergio] Busquets” — now they’re all doing it. Maybe it’s bad luck, bad finishing, bad football.”It’s incredible that the stars have aligned against us like this,” Pique said. And if anyone in football believes in the stars, it is Simeone, the manager who admits he checks the zodiac before signing a player. His team have a chance now. So do Zidane’s.Maybe it’s all of that or none of it. Maybe. But how they got here doesn’t matter much now; what matters is how they’re going to get there, and what condition they’re in to run. Given how they got here, Barcelona’s obligation is everyone else’s opportunity, but this new situation, and this sprint that is about to begin, may have turned that back into an opportunity again.Enrique says that he is convinced that they will win the league “or else I wouldn’t be sitting here,” he said at the pre-match news conference. It’s a familiar phrase; it’s also false, of course, and it is impossible for there not to be doubts.Neymar’s form has dropped. Luis Suarez is missing chances. Lionel Messi just scored his 500th career goal, but getting there took longer than anyone imagined. They have racked up no wins in four league games and just one win in six in all competitions — an ultimately worthless one, at that. Meanwhile, Real Madrid have won seven in a row in La Liga, Atletico seven of the last eight. Madrid look fit and are gathering momentum, resurrected.Atletico are not just winning, either; they are dominating. They’re scoring goals and lots of them. Fernando Torres has not been in scoring form this good since he was Liverpool’s No. 9. Enrique made no changes at the weekend; against Eibar, Madrid made eight and still hammered them while against Getafe, their “subs” James and Isco both scored. No one has gotten as many goals off the bench as Atlético.It’s in Barcelona’s hands, but that hasn’t been a great place to be of late. And if it is said that not playing in Europe could help them, thereby giving them seven days to prepare for each game, that’s not actually true.The sprint starts in midweek, three days on from their latest defeat; for Barcelona, it would be the second of three games in six days. There will be only two league games that they can prepare with a week’s work when Atletico and Madrid cannot: away at Betis and at home to Espanyol. And besides, Madrid are in a five-match run of games in the city, not needing to travel.Barcelona open Week 34 at Deportivo. Then they face Sporting (H), Betis (A), Espanyol (H) and Granada (H). Atletico go to Athletic and then play Malaga (H), (Bayern), Rayo (H), (Bayern), Levante (A) and Celta. Madrid are up against Villarreal at the Bernabeu, then they go to Rayo (A) before playing Manchester City, Real Sociedad (A), (City), Valencia (H) and Deportivo (A).Not so long ago, Barcelona’s official Twitter account said that it appeared that they had the “easiest” run in. Quite apart from being a rather daft thing to say, or a red rag to temptation, it’s not so easy to judge. Not least because of injuries, morale and shifting objectives. A team that’s safe is not the same as one that’s fighting for survival; a team with European ambitions is not the same as one without them. And that changes as weeks pass.

There may be something in that Camp Nou hope, though: Barcelona’s five opponents are 18th, 17th, 15th, 14th and 13th in the table, respectively. Yet one of them is a local rival, while Sporting and Granada are fighting for their lives. Real Madrid face fourth, 10th, 12th, 13th and 16th. Atletico go to fifth tomorrow and also face sixth, eighth, 16th and 19th. Celta and Athletic are competing for fourth and Levante are battling relegation but may not be by then. Atletico do, though, have more home games than the other two.

According to Sport, if the remaining fixtures went the way they did in the first half of the season (where all the home games were away and the away games home), Atletico would finish at the top. If they went the way they did last season, Barcelona would win the league. And if they went the way they have historically, Barcelona would win the league, too. But only just.

Only just. Whatever happens, it is likely to be only just. “We will have to fight until the last minute,” Zidane said. And that might not even be enough: Zidane added that he can see both Atletico and Barcelona winning all five games. Simeone, by contrast, said that it is “in our hands … we depend on ourselves,” suggesting perhaps that he thinks Barcelona will slip up and that his players will be given the chance to climb above them.

And so the race starts with what may be the most interesting Jornada of them all, the one round of games when all three teams have potentially difficult games, the one where change appears the most likely and which may, a priori, end with someone else on top for the first time in 11 weeks. Barcelona (without Pique) at Depor, Atlético at Athletic and Madrid against Villarreal. But if this season has taught anybody anything it is that you never know; nothing is done until it’s done, even when it appears done. Especially when it appears done.”Who is the favourite?” Zidane was asked. “No one,” he said. All those weeks, all those games and it’s come to this. All those certainties have gone to leave just one certainty. No one expected it, but that’s how it is. For all the combinations, permutations, figures and fears, the ambiguity has been stripped away to leave something seemingly simple. Beautifully, dramatically simple: a start line, a finish line and three teams with no second chances, just a single, shared objective: win every game or it’s over. And if they all do? Well, then, for two of them it will be over anyway.”It’s extremely difficult, but I am such a d— that I like adversity. I’m from Gijon; I love this dance,” Enrique said. “And if we win every game, we’re going to throw some party …”And if not? “If not, we’ll congratulate the champion.”Sid Lowe is a Spain-based columnist and journalist who writes for ESPN FC, the Guardian, FourFourTwo and World Soccer

How Mauricio Pochettino transformed Tottenham into true title contenders

ottenham Hotspur’s 4-0 thrashing of Stoke City on Monday evening was among the most overwhelmingly one-sided Premier League games of the season. It was a victory so comfortable that Tottenham managed to hit the bar and miss an open goal, yet still triumph easily.Identifying a single man of the match was difficult: there were simply too many options. You could say something similar about Spurs’ Player of the Year, too: as many as five players could deservedly take that award. In situations like this, it’s obvious that the man who deserves most praise is, in fact, the manager.Tottenham’s success has been built not upon individual brilliance (although Harry Kane provided some last night) but upon collective organisation from a truly excellent young coach. Mauricio Pochettino’s organisation has been impressive all season, but there’s been a positive shift in recent weeks. Spurs are improving, mainly in an attacking sense.This season, Pochettino’s players have primarily impressed with their efficiency in regaining possession, pressing intensely and cohesiveness. Opponents haven’t been allowed to settle into a possession thanks to a combination of Spurs’ limitless energy and solid structure.In some matches, Spurs’ dominance of midfield has been truly remarkable — their first-half performance in the 1-1 draw at Arsenal in October showcased organisation that would be the envy of any club in Europe. But they tired and Arsenal eventually equalised. On that occasion, Spurs’ weakness was arguably their attacking play: they’d dominated with their ball-winning, but hadn’t created enough to finish the contest.In recent weeks, Spurs have created more. Two months ago they had the Premier League’s best defence but only its third-best attack; now Pochettino has created the best side in both respects and again, it’s been about organisation.heir individuals have been performing the same jobs: Kane banging in the goals, Dele Alli showing tremendous intelligence and technical quality, Christian Eriksen drifting inside dangerously and Erik Lamela pressing quickly and passing efficiently. But their combination play has improved dramatically, particularly in terms of movement, with Stoke City ripped apart continually by a succession of relatively simple passes that were ony possible because Spurs were dragging opponents out of position and creating space so consistently.The movement started from the defence. Eric Dier has spent most of the season dropping back between Spurs’ centre-backs but on occasion at the Britannia, his midfield colleague Mousa Dembele followed suit: the duo both dropped back when Spurs had goal kicks. This meant Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld could push even wider, the full-backs could advance higher and the central midfielders moved inside.Central midfielders at centre-back, full-backs in wide midfield and wide midfielders in central midfield. Tottenham were using their starting system, simply with three pairs of players in entirely different roles, and that’s a perfect demonstration of movement: retaining your shape despite everyone being on the move. It’s trickier than it sounds, and it’s unusual to see a side implement this so successfully. The Villarreal team of 2010-11 did something similar; it’s not unreasonable to think that Pochettino, then managing Espanyol, was inspired by his La Liga rivals.Pochettino’s integrated movement works so effectively in part because so many of his players are accustomed to playing different roles. This is particularly evident along the spine: Dier is comfortable in defence because he’s played frequently at centre-back, Alli plays as a No. 10 but has also been deployed deeper, Kane can come short because he’s a natural No. 10 rather than a number nine. They all like coming short, with the full-backs providing reverse movement by bombing forward. Even by their standards, Danny Rose and Kyle Walker were terrifyingly direct last night.The ease with which Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld can play in wide positions helps Tottenham’s organisation.Pochettino is also lucky that Belgium have regularly fielded Toby Alderweireld and Jan Vertonghen in wider roles over recent years owing to their lack of natural full-backs, something that helps Tottenham “split” their centre-backs comfortably. No other Premier League side has two centre-backs so comfortable outside the width of the penalty box or so comfortable in possession.With the centre-backs wide, the full-backs playing as wingers and Kane continually making runs into the channels on the outside of the centre-backs, Pochettino’s “real” wide players had license to drift inside. As a result, the three attacking midfielders in Spurs’ 4-2-3-1 system combine regularly to put Tottenham into goalscoring positions.This is a proper 4-2-3-1 system featuring three attacking midfielders buzzing around behind a lone striker. Pretty much everything is termed a 4-2-3-1 these days even if it’s essentially a 4-4-2, albeit with one deep-lying striker. But Eriksen, Alli and Lamela rotate and combine effectively, playing as a unit rather than three individuals.On Monday night, three of Tottenham’s most penetrative passing moves featured those three exchanging passes, usually when located close to one another. In the first half, Lamela’s neat through-ball found Alli just outside the box and his backheeled pass to Eriksen prompted the Dane to smash the ball against the crossbar. The trio weren’t filling more than 10 metres of width but with Kane wide on the right and Rose charging down the left, there was no danger of being too narrow.Tottenham’s second goal again featured those three: Lamela gained possession of the ball, an attempted back-heel broke loose to Eriksen and he immediately chipped over the Stoke defence for Alli, who strode onto the ball and dinked it past Shay Given. Their third goal featured Eriksen in a deep position feeding Alli, who transferred the ball onto Lamela: two forward passes in the inside-left channel. Once through on goal, Lamela selflessly squared it for Kane, who converted into an empty net.Spurs were attacking with great purpose, and in great numbers, for the majority of the campaign, but this level of cohesion in possession is a relatively recent development. It owes much to natural progression as Pochettino works with his team on the training ground more, but it’s also about the Tottenham coach being able to name a consistent starting XI.The fluent movement and free-roaming roles of Erik Lamela, Dele Alli and Harry Kane also help Spurs overwhelm opponents.Pochettino has managed to creative an impressive defensive unit despite being forced to rotate regularly while Spurs were battling for the Europa League. But now that he’s capable of fielding his best side every week and the players are fresher as a result, the attacking quality is at another level.Over the past six games, Pochettino has deviated only from his favoured starting XI in two ways: first when Kevin Wimmer performed admirably in place of the injured Vertonghen, and second when Son Heung-min played at Anfield to allow Lamela a rest. Otherwise, the XI has been almost as consistent as Leicester City’s. From these six matches, Spurs have recorded four victories, each of them convincing, with two draws in impressive performances against Arsenal and Liverpool.Everything has slowly come together in brilliant fashion over the course of the season. We started to see partnerships in “natural” positions: Alderweireld and Vertonghen, Dier and Dembele. Then we saw less obvious partnerships: Alderweireld and Alli, Kane and Alli, Lamela and Eriksen. Now players have productive relationships with multiple teammates, and there are effective trios and a settled back four, maximising individual ability and making Spurs better with each passing match.Maybe the best is yet to come: Pochettino should be around for a while, and the age of Spurs’ key players suggests they’ll improve too. But the last six performances have been superb, and that level of defensive solidity and attacking ruthlessness should, over the course of a whole season, be enough to win the Premier League.Michael Cox is the editor of Zonal Marking and a contributor to ESPN FC. Follow him on

MLS not a retirement league – U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard

United States goalkeeper Tim Howard told NBC Sports that he expects to play in a much-improved league when he leaves Everton and returns to Major League Soccer on July 8 after 13 years in the Premier League.Howard, 37, who was under contract with the Toffees until 2018, was cleared by Everton to move to Colorado for a transfer fee of about $600,000,sources told ESPN.He began his career in 1998 with the MetroStars — now the New York Red Bulls — and on Monday was part of an NBC sideline analysis team for Tottenham’s 4-0 win over Stoke City at the Britannia Stadium.Howard is already shifting his focus to Denver, where he will make his home after representing his country in the Copa America Centenario, and insisted that the MLS is no place for old men.I think the quality of play has gotten better. The fan-base has grown and is more knowledgeable,” Howard told NBC Sports. “Some of the players that have gone back over, this ain’t a retirement league. Now you have players going over like [Sebastian] Giovinco, he is incredible.”Giovani dos Santos, probably one of the top Mexican players of all time who is playing there in his prime. That’s exciting because for me, when I was a 21-year-old in MLS, that wasn’t the case.”Howard last played in MLS in 2003 before moving to Manchester United. He started at Old Trafford until the club bought Edwin van der Sar in 2005, and United loaned him to Everton the following year.He completed a permanent deal to Everton in 2007 and started there for nearly a decade until this February, when a brief knee injury allowed Joel Robles to replace him. And he acknowledged that the summer will be busy.”It is one thing after another,” he said. “I finish here, then go to training camp with the national team and obviously we have a huge tournament which is important for us. When that finishes I will go out to Denver and start life.”The Americans, one of four seeded teams as host of the June competition that marks the 100th anniversary of South America’s championship — the world’s oldest international football tournament — will open the event with their first Group A match against Colombia on June 3 in Santa Clara, California. (Argentina, Brazil and Mexico are the other seeds.)Jurgen Klinsmann’s squad then travels to Chicago to face CONCACAF rival Costa Rica on June 7, before concluding its first-round slate June 11 against Paraguay in Philadelphia.

Carli Lloyd: ‘I think we’ve proven our worth over the years’

Updated: APRIL 13, 2016 by Jonathan Tannenwald, STAFF WRITER  @thegoalkeeper

If you were driving on Route 70 on your way into work Wednesday morning, you wouldn’t have known that Carli Lloyd was working out just down the road.While South Jersey’s highways were a cacophony of noise, the Marlton Memorial Park was quiet and still. You might not even have known that Lloyd was on the property if you were walking your dog on the sun-splashed playground nearby.But if you happened to be near the indoor recreation center when the side door opened, you would have heard the rhythmic thumping of a soccer ball repeatedly hitting a foot, then a hard floor, then a foot again, then the floor again…And if you took a moment to look at the roof of the building, and the doors, and the color of the paint on the inside walls, you’d have no doubt about where you were.Lots of people in South Jersey know about the famed “Blue Barn,” of course especially within the local soccer community. There’s a banner above one of the three basketball courts under the giant vaulted roof that reads: “Carli Lloyd Court / 2015 World Champion.”But if you’re an outsider, you might be surprised at just how simple the building is that Lloyd so often credits as the place where it all started.(And if you, like me, spend most of your life on the other side of the Delaware River, you’re an outsider. My colleague Kate Harman could probably drive to the place off muscle memory; I almost missed a few turns after crossing the Ben Franklin Bridge, even though my phone gave me step-by-step instructions.)I got there just after 8 a.m., and was one of five people in the building. Lloyd and Galanis were joined by Wayne Coffey, a former New York Daily News sportswriter who’s ghostwriting Lloyd’s forthcoming autobiography; and his daughter Samantha.That was the entire crowd for most of the morning, until a janitor showed up to clean the other courts that weren’t in use. I wouldn’t have seen him had if not for his bright yellow vest. Otherwise, the place was vacant.Samantha’s presence wasn’t just a matter of personal courtesy. She’s a serious soccer prospect in her own right, and was just invited to join the U.S. under-18 girls’ national team at an upcoming training camp in southern California.The drills were low-key, and understandably so. Lloyd was fresh off playing two games for the U.S. women’s national team, and was soon to leave for Houston to begin the National Women’s Soccer League Season with the Dash.So there was some dribbling, some shooting, some practicing of first-touch passes and harder hits at targets. Everything that Lloyd did, Coffey did too. Not always as precisely, but Galanis’ point was clear: the fine-tuning you need to do in order to become an elite soccer player is mental as much as it is physical.And even though none of the drills was out of the ordinary, you could tell when the person performing them was the reigning FIFA Women’s Player of the Year.You may have heard that Lloyd’s autobiography will be called “When Nobody Is Watching.” That title wasn’t chosen only because it sounds catchy.At one point, Lloyd embarked on a drill of dribbling the ball up and down the court in a zig-zag form. Her eyes were constantly focused on the ball. Something in that look caused my mind to flash back to that epic night in Montréal last summer when Lloyd stared at the Olympic Stadium penalty spot for almost a full minute before scoring thegoal that put the U.S. ahead of Germany.Later, Galanis ran a routine where he played low, rolling passes for Lloyd and Coffey to hit first time into a retractable curtain that separated this court from the next one over.When Galanis started to deliver the ball, Lloyd crouched slightly in anticipation. I watched her laser-focused eyes again. It was as if she was trying to use the Force to compel the ball to move according to her will.As far as I know, Lloyd isn’t related to Daisy Ridley, Mark Hamill or Sir Alec Guinness. But I’ve seen Lloyd (and some of her teammates) do things on soccer fields that resemble Jedi mind tricks. So I’m not ruling anything out.The training session wrapped up after about two hours of work. Lloyd and Galanis had a short conversation at mid-court, then Galanis pulled Coffey aside to offer a few points of advice.Once everyone had cooled down and all the equipment was packed up, I got to chat with Lloyd for a while.For once, there were no minders, agents, PR flacks or other people around to hang over anyone’s shoulders. Getting that kind of access to U.S. women’s national team stars is increasingly harder to do – and for good reason, because they’ve become just as high-profile as professional athletes in other sports.(Though not as well-paid for their labor, and we’ll get to that in a minute.)But so many players on the national team, even its biggest names, remain the same down-to-earth people they were before they became famous. That includes Lloyd, Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe and so many others.You could have come to the rec center just like anyone else on Wednesday, because it’s a publicly-owned facility. Of course, Lloyd and Galanis knew that 8 a.m. was the only time they could get the place to themselves, but there weren’t any gates or security guards keeping people out.And if you were outside the Blue Barn just after 10 a.m., you’d have seen Lloyd carry the bag of practice balls out to the adjacent parking lot herself.When she came back inside, she was ready to talk for a while. Our conversation covered a wide range of subjects on and off the field. Here’s a transcript, lightly edited for clarity.

So the reigning FIFA Women’s Player of the Year carries the bag of balls to her own car at the end of a practice session?

Ha. I shag balls, I carry the balls, I do it all. Yeah. It’s part of the job, part of the responsibility. Nobody is going to come here and do it. We arrive here on the side of the Barn and walk to the front, open the door, and then open the side door. That’s just really what it’s about.

What does it mean to you to be able to come back here still, and be able to train in some amount of anonymity?

It’s honestly priceless to be home. People may not realize and really grasp the full effect of why I need to be home, but when I’m home, James makes adjustments. If I’m not shooting properly, he makes one minor adjustment in training and then it’s fixed.

It’s where I get my reps, it’s where I get my touches, where I get my confidence. It’s really everything. It’s a huge part of my game. When I’m here training on a daily basis – then I go away, I’m sharp, fit, and I’m ready to go. But it’s just so important to put in the work behind the scenes.

When you look up on the wall in here and there’s that banner with your name on it, what’s that like for you?

This Barn has been really special to me. This journey that James and I have been a part of. It’s been a livesaver here, with the surface, getting the right touches, using the walls. James is able to design so many different things that we can use, whether it’s knocking the ball off the wall and practicing side volleys, shooting, we just basically do it all in here. It’s really helped my touch and my game so much.

You’re heading down to Houston on Thursday to get the NWSL season started with the Dash. What are your expectations for the league as it begins its historic fourth year?

I think it’s going to be good. The league is definitely growing. With the national team and the whole equal pay [discussion], everything is really at the forefront right now. I’m curious to see how ticket sales are going to be this year. I’m wondering if they’re going to be any better. Hopefully they are.

But overall, I’m looking forward to the season kicking off. I know we’ll probably be around for nine or 10 game [before the Olympics], and we’ll have four more games with the national team. That’s 14 games before Rio, and every game is very important.

After the Olympics end, people are going to start looking at the league to see which other players could be worthy of national team consideration for the 2019 World Cup.

The Dash have a few players who could make that leap: Kealia Ohai, a 24-year-old forward who was a star on the U.S. under-20 team that won the 2012 World U-20 World Cup; and Amber Brooks, a 25-year-old midfielder whose lone career cap to date came in 2013. What do you think of them as prospects?

Kealia is the type of player who is raw. You don’t know what she’s going to do. She’s got really great pace up top. She’s done well, and I think the more that she can focus and keep on doing what she needs to do, the more goals she’s going to score. I know that’s her goal this year. She’s definitely a threat up there. We have a good front six going on right now. We’ve got Amber Brooks coming in, Morgan Brian is there, myself, [Brazilian midfielder] Andressa…

With Amber, we’ll see how it goes. The tricky thing is, can these players do it consistently? That’s the biggest thing, I think, when you get in the national team. And I think that’s the biggest thing that people don’t realize. They see some of these players in the league doing well. Maybe they come in for a national team camp or two, do well, but the overall consistency of being able to grind it out, day in and day out, that’s where people don’t quite understand that’s what it takes.

Even now, it seems that Jill Ellis has worked to expand the senior women’s national team player pool. And I say that knowing there are collective bargaining ramifications to the ways in which players get called in to the national team, because of the salaries and benefits that the U.S. Soccer Federation pays, and that can restrict the size of the pool. Maybe that changes in the new CBA. But for the moment, as I said, it does seem that Ellis has become more flexible with who she calls in.

Yeah. I think it’s great. When Jill took over after Tom [Sermanni], she had a short window to get everybody ready [for the 2015 World Cup]. We hadn’t won a World Cup in 16 years. It would have been very tough for her to just start all of a sudden ripping the team to shreds and experimenting. It would have been really tough.

I give her a lot of credit, because she knew what this team was about for so many years, and she made do with what she had. And we won, and we did well. With players retiring, now there’s a new influx and wave of players, and that’s the most important thing: preparing for 2019.

You brought up the equal pay thing before I could. Let’s get into that. Obviously, the public relations aspect of the campaign has been a huge boost to you and your fellow players, starting with the big announcement on the Today Show when the Equal Opportunity Commission complaint was filed. But did you think it would catch fire to as much of a degree as it has?

It was a pretty historic moment. It all kind of happened very quickly. We were in Orlando, and we had a few discussions with our attorney, Rich Nichols. Getting up really early for the Today Show – what was it going to be like? And it just was absolutely huge. With Equal Pay Day being [Tuesday], and everything.

The amount of support that we have received has been just unbelievable. That’s why, in my New York Times essay as well, there were some things that needed to be clarified. Because this isn’t a lawsuit, this is a complaint, and this isn’t beef with the men’s national team – we respect them. And I think people need to understand that yes, we did do our CBA –

A long time ago, though.

Yes. But I even felt back then that it wasn’t good enough. It’s hard to kind of change things when your whole team is not united, and this was the right timing for everything. So it was good.

Did Jeffrey Kessler, the high-powered sports attorney who’s now part of your campaign, come to you? Or did you go to him?

When Rich Nicholls came on board, he sought out a team. He’s good friends with Jeff, and we’ve got a bunch of great attorneys on our side working for us.

I don’t want to make you betray too many private conversations, but it seemed from afar that you all felt like it was time to take things from a different direction than the one that your previous union attorney – Philadelphia-based John Langel of Ballard Spahr – had gone in.

Absolutely. I think Rich isn’t here to be buddy-buddy with Sunil [Gulati, U.S. Soccer’s president] or Dan [Flynn, U.S. Soccer’s CEO], or anybody at U.S. Soccer. He’s here to do a job, and that’s to get the best CBA that we can for us players. He’s working for us very diligently. He’s very smart, concise with what we deserve to get.

That’s what it’s really all about. I think our team has finally realized the disparity between the men’s and the women’s contracts, and it’s gut-wrenching to see that. We didn’t get a hold of their contract and the figures five or six years ago. We had no idea. So when you have nothing to compare it to, and you don’t know, I think it really opened up a lot of people’s eyes – especially on our team. And I think our team finally realizes that we can fight for a lot more.

There have been some notable incidents in the last few weeks of men’s and women’s national team players getting into public disagreements with each other. Do you think the men’s player’s union is on your side in your quest for better pay?

I think the overall support is great. We respect the men’s team, I respect the men’s team and what they’re doing. They’ve been bringing in revenue. They’ve been really helping us as well. I think it’s a “One nation, one team” kind of a thing, and I think we’ve proven our worth over the years. We’ve won championships, multiple championships. It’s just only fitting to keep fighting for the next step.

This question stems, admittedly, from my own perspective having covered the various people involved in the wage dispute for a while. I find it a bit hard to believe that anyone at U.S. Soccer sat there and said that the federation would intentionally pay the women less because they are women.

Instead, there’s a kind of unintentional sexism that leads to what we see in other industries where men are more likely to consider men for higher salaries, bonuses, promotions and so forth – and they just don’t see the ramifications of the bigger picture until someone calls them out on it. Is that fair to say in this case, or do you see things differently?

Hmm. Well, it’s tricky. Where we started [compared to the men’s national team] is totally different. In 2005, when I first came on to the team, there were no health benefits, which are provided by the U.S. Olympic Committee. There were no salaries. [Players] were basically getting paid per-game.

The women then fought to have guaranteed salaries, so they could not have to rely on anything else [for income], because some years there weren’t many games being played by the national team. I thought that was a great step. Each CBA, we just increased it a little bit more.

But there’s no marketing deal. The CBA has never been signed by a [player] representative. There are so many missing parts to this contract.

So you’re saying that John Langel signed that 2005 through 2012 CBA on the players’ behalf, but no players put their signatures on it? Or do you mean the memorandum of understanding that was meant to cover 2013 through 2016?

The CBA has not been signed by any representative on our team… I believe you need a representative from the team as well.

[At the time of the posting of this story, I was not able to independently verify either Lloyd’s claim about a lack of player signatures, nor whether such signatures are required. A copy of the 2005-12 CBA was included in documents filed in the lawsuit over whether that CBA is still valid. Some pages contained the signatures of Langel and Flynn; others contained no signatures, which traditionally means they are not scanned copies of the original documents. Lloyd may be right, but I feel a need to put this disclaimer out there,]

They’ve said that the MOU – that’s when Langel went and said in his deposition that the MOU is valid. But as far as the CBA goes, it’s really not a CBA. It’s really not signed. There’s no marketing deal. There’s so many things that are just left out on the table. I don’t know if they purposely did it, but I just think that we didn’t have somebody like Rich who was going for the throat.

Let’s get back to on-field matters. Do you think Megan Rapinoe will be back on the field in time for the Olympics?

I’ve talked to her. She said she’s doing well. She’s running. It’s a tough one. You just don’t know. I really am a big believer that injuries take a year for you to be fully, fully back from. With an 18-player roster, it’s a tough call. I’m not sure.

What has it been like integrating Lindsey Horan into the midfield triangle alongside yourself and Morgan Brian, who you know so well from playing together both for the national team and the Dash?

Lindsey has done well. I really enjoy playing with three in the midfield. I thought it was effective. I felt like I was involved, on the ball. I think the next step, though, is being able to split passes, being able to not always play the ball backwards, get somewhere with a purpose. If we can split lines and move the ball, I think that’s where we’re going to be effective. Lindsey has come on, she’s done well.

Allie Long showed well. I enjoy playing with her. I think Sam Mewis has been doing well too. So it’s going to be an interesting battle. Obviously, not all of us can be part of the Olympics. Jill’s going to have to make some decisions. I like what I see with Lindsey, I’ve enjoyed playing with her, and I think that she can continue to get better.

It sounded from Jill Ellis’ various remarks this past weekend that when the national team gathers for the two June friendlies against Japan, she’ll start turning the focus towards honing the lineup for the Olympics instead of trying the new things. Do you also get that impression?

Yeah. I think that Jill has done a great job of managing everybody so far. She has tried to give equal playing time – I’ve come off, Becky [Sauerbrunn] has come off, Hope [Solo] hasn’t played in a game [specifically, this past Sunday against Colombia in Chester]. So I think she’s doing a really good job of managing everybody, and putting players in positions where it’s time for them to shine, time for them to show what they can bring.

But I would agree, as we get closer and closer to those two Japan games, and then we’ve got two more. So there’s really not a whole lot of time to prepare for the Olympics. Those games would be a perfect point to start focusing on that.

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4/15 Indy 11 host NY Cosmos, UCL Final 4, TV Games of Wk, #bebraveBrooks event


So as the Travel and Rec Soccer Season’s Kick into full gear – its time to bring you up to date on happens around the World of Soccer. After some exhilarating games last week we are down to the Final 4 – the Semi-Finals of the best Club teams in the world.  Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Athletico Madrid and Manchester City (yes that’s not a misprint there is an EPL team in the final 4 and for the 1st time ever its Man City.  Of course last season’s Champion Barcelona were eliminated by fellow La Liga side Athletico on a controversial no hand call in the box in the last 5 minutes of play.  (Man I wish they could figure out Re-Play in Soccer somehow – I’m still hoping MLS tests that soon).  Anyway the final pairings have Man City facing Real Madrid (Hat Trick Man Renaldo) and Athletico hosting Bayern Munich to start the first legs Apr 26/2, the Final is May 28 in Milan, Italy. Europa Cup action had Liverpool fans jumping as they scored 3 huge goals in the last 15 minutes to upset Dortmund and advance to the Semi-Finals.

The Leagues In Europe are wrapping up their seasons with PSG and Juventus running away with the French League 1, and Italian Serie A respectively. Bayern Munich holds a 7 pt lead on Dortmund in the German Bundesliga.  It’s the EPL and Spain’s La Liga where things are heating up- Barcelona’s lead has slipped to just 1 game and 3 pts over Athletico and 4 over Real Madrid.  Meanwhile, the GREATEST UPSET IN SPORTS IN THE LAST 50 YEARS Maybe – In the English Premier League – little Leicester City holds a 7 pt (that’s over 2 games) lead over Tottenham, Arsenal (59), Man City (57) hold a slim lead over Man United (53), West Ham (52), Southhampton (50) and Liverpool (48) for Champions League (top 4) and Europa League (top 6) spots.

Closer to home MLS, is just a few weeks in, and of course our Indy 11 are on to week 3 of the season and haven’t lost a game yet.  The 1-1 tie on the road at Tampa Bay was followed by a last second goal saving tie 1-1 last weekend in the home opener.  We should know more about this Indy 11 team after Saturday night’s battle with NASL defending champs NY Cosmos.  I plan to be on hand in the BYB section making noise – tickets still available.  Speaking of Indy 11 don’t forget Carmel FC night on May 7, 7:30 pm for Indy 11 vs Edmonton –ask your manager about group discount tickets in the special Carmel FC Section.

CFC_bebravebrooks

A great night to be part of Carmel FC soccer club as Coach Mark Stumpf helped set up a ‪#‎bebraveBrooks Fundraiser to help raise money for Brooks Blackmore, a 6 yr old Carmel boy who is fighting for his life right now against cancer!!  The U 11 and U12 Girls players, coaches, and families came out in support of the event -8 teams & 4 games = Total amount raised: $1826.04!!!!  Special thanks to Dynamo FC, for putting in a team – Coach Tom’s U11 Girls -They not only helped us get a 4th game in, but also raised $251 on their own!!  Special thanks to Mark, the parents who helped volunteer, Lisa Martin for setting things up on the U12 side and all the parents and kids who donated.   ‪#‎bebraveBrooks   https://www.facebook.com/BeBraveBrooks/?fref=nf

 Buy One/Get One Free This Saturday at Chipotle Mexican Grills Nationwide – Just wear your Soccer Uniform in Sat, Apr 16 (Kids 14 and Younger only)

GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV                                                                                                                 Sat, Apr 16

7:30 am NBCSN            Norwich vs Sunderland

9:30 am Fox Sp 2        Leverkusen vs Frankfurt

10:00 a.m., NBCSN     Manchester United vs. Aston Villa
10:00 a.m., USA            Everton vs. Southampton
10:00 a.m., Live Extra: Newcastle United vs. Swansea City, West Bromwich Albion vs. Watford
12:30 p.m., NBC          Chelsea vs. Manchester City (Arlo White/Robbie Mustoe)

12:30 pm Fox                Bayern Munich vs Schalke 04

7:30 pm  YES                  Columbus Crew vs NYCFC

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos

Sun, Apr 17

8:30 a.m., NBCSN       Leicester City vs. West Ham United (Arlo White and Robbie Earle)
8:30 a.m Live Extra:  Bournemouth vs. Liverpool

9:30 am fox Sp 1         Dortmund vs Hamburg
11:00 a.m., NBCSN    Arsenal vs. Crystal Palace
3:30 pm ESPN               Orlando City vs. New England Revolution

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 FC Dallas vs. Sporting Kansas City

Mon, Apr 18

3 pm NBCSN                   Stoke City vs Tottenham

Tues, Apr 19

2:45 pm NBCSN            Newcastle vs Man City

Wed , Apr 20

2:45 pm NBCSN            Liverpool vs Everton

3 pm NBCSN Extra      Man U vs Crystal Palace 

Thur, Apr 21

2:45 pm NBCSN            Arsenal vs West Brom

MLS TV Schedule ‘

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

COPA AMERICA 100 –GAMES IN CHICAGO

INDY 11

Matchday Preview vs NY Cosmos

Indy Star Preview

Indy 11 BYB- Indy 11 – Talking Tactics with Carmel FC Coach Josh Mason

Indy 11 Ads Jamaican Striker

This 89th minute goal Salvages Tie for Indy 11 in home opener

11 Survive the Cold in Home Opener for Tie vs Last Season runner Up-Bloody Shambles

Indy 11 Salvage Point from Home Opener Indy sports Report

3 Take Aways Ottawa vs Indy 11 – home Opener – Midfield Press

Indy 11 Draw 1-1 in Season Opener – Kevin Johnston Indystar

Indy 11 Recap 1-1

Kicking it With the BYB from Indy Star Sat

Indy 11 to train at Grand Park

Wine and Cheese Night, Bring a Used Soccer Ball to donate to Sat Night Game

Champions League + Europa

Champ League Predictions

Man City offer Discount on UCL tickets after backlash

Man Cities Road to 1st ever Semi Finals

DeBruynes tally leads Man City to Victory

Renaldo Hat Trick Leads to Real Comeback Win

Zidane claims Renaldo is the Best in the World

Athletico knock out Barcelona espn fc

Barcelona Season Might End Incomplete

Athletico knocks out Champs

Greizmann leads Athletico

Bayern Munich tie Benefica to squeek thru to Semis on Aggregate

Bayern Advances

Renaldo Dah Wins Player of the Week

Around the World in Soccer –

Liverpools Miracle at Anfield

Crowd Carriers Reds Thru

Liverpools draws Seinna

CR 7 is Magistarial in Hat Trick Magical Win + Advance to Semi’s

Pretty Cool Trailer before the game

EPL

Leicester City Claudio Renieri First hand account of Season of Dreams – ThePlayersTribune.com

How Tottenham could spoil Leicester’s Quest SI

Man City must bring focus back to EPL Spot

Weekend EPL News

Everton in Peril

Leicester City the Dream Continues =- Grant Wahl

MLS

Vicious Nigel DeJong Tackle may put US and Portland Midfielder out for months?

Darlington Nagbe Injury and its impact on MLS

Kaka Player of the Week

MLS Power Rankings, De Jong Suspension – SI

Columbus Crew host NYCFC on YES Sat 7:30 pm

USA

Wood’s Scores, Pulisic Starts for Dortmund

What is Klinsmann thinking – US Soccer Players

Playing the Attendance Game with Pro Soccer in the USA

Kickin’ It With The BYB: Eleven, Cosmos quite the draw

 IndyStar Sports, sports@indystar.com1:12 p.m. EDT April 15, 2016

Two games into the season, and the Indy Eleven have two draws in the ledger.f history is any indicator, expect a draw again Saturday when the Eleven welcome the New York Cosmos to Carroll Stadium at 7:30 p.m. New York and Indy have faced off six times. And all six games have ended in a draw.The Cosmos are atop the North American Soccer League standings with two wins in two games. Scorers of five goals already, New York will test Indy’s newly-steeled defense. Here are three things to know courtesy of the Eleven’s supporters group, The Brickyard Battalion:

COSMOS STILL HAVE NAME RECOGNITION.

The Cosmos are one of the most historic teams not only in the NASL, but all of North America. While the current version of the Cosmos is a far cry from the 1970s club that featured soccer royalty Pele, Franz Beckenbauer and Giorgio Chinaglia, the Cosmos still trot out some of the league’s most recognizable names.”The talent on this team is always top notch, accented by Nico Kranjcar and Jairo Arrieta,” said BYB president Joshua Mason. “But the man to watch based on current form is Juan Arango. Already with two goals and one assist in the first two games, the former Venezuelan national team captain, who also played in Spain and Mexico’s top leagues, still knows how to find the back of the net at 35 years old.”

WHAT’S NEW?

How about some defense?During the Eleven’s inaugural 2014 season, a leaky D allowed 46 goals in 27 regular season matches. In 2015, the club gave up 48 goals in 30 games.So far, through two matches under new manager Tim Hankinson, the Eleven have only conceded once. Not bad for a team with basically an entirely revamped starting lineup.”Generally we defend pretty well,” Hankinson said. “That’s going to keep us in games in most cases.”Last week, midfielder Sinisa Ubiparipovic limped off with a hamstring injury midway through the second half and was replaced by former Indiana University standout Dylan Mares. Mares will likely slide into Ubiparipovic’s attacking midfield role in Saturday’s starting lineup.”Dylan held his own last week really pressing forward, and is not new to starting for the Eleven,” Mason said. “It also demonstrates how much deeper this bench is versus previous years, as coach wants a strong, healthy level of competition.”Mares, a Zionsville grad who led the Eleven with five goals a season ago, is one of only three players remaining from Indy’s 2014 opening day roster.Earlier this week, the Eleven, in search of more offensive firepower, added Jamaican forward Omar Gordon on loan from Montego Bay United in Jamaica. The 24-year-old led the Jamaican Red Stripe Premier League in scoring a season ago with 18 goals.

THE WEATHER WILL BE FANTASTIC. 

Despite 30-degree temperatures and flirting with snow, the Eleven drew more than 9,000 fans to last week’s home opener. With Saturday’s forecast of mid-70s temperatures, The BYB expects a sell out and people lining the roof of the parking garage across the street. To those who arrive early to tailgate, The BYB will introduce a new game to the masses: Futpong. What is Futpong? Imagine ping pong and soccer, played with a size one ball and hitting it over a small net.”This week you really have no excuse not to fill the stands, and its wine and cheese night,” Mason said. “So go get your finest red and blue ascot, smoking jacket, and GET TO THE GAME!”

CHARITY PARTICIPATION:  Slaughterhouse-19, one of the BYB affiliate groups will be collecting gently used purses and toiletries for a non-profit called “Project Purse.” These purses are then filled with toiletries and are given to women in need. These will be collected at the BYB tailgate area.IndyStar correspondent Kevin Johnston contributed to this story.For more on The Brickyard Battalion visit the group’s website and follow them on Twitter: @The_BYB.

 

GAMEDAY PREVIEW: #INDVNYC

Indy Eleven Gameday & Match Preview  Indy Eleven vs. New York Cosmos
Saturday, April 16, 2016 – 7:30 p.m. ET  Michael A. Carroll Stadium – Indy Eleven

MEDIA GAME NOTES:

TICKETS:

  • Seats as low as $11 still available – CLICK HERE
  • $22 Wine & Cheese package, featuring ISU Networking Night – CLICK HERE

WATCH LIVE:

  • Local TV: WISH-TV 8
  • National TV: ONE World Sports
  • Online: www.ONEWorldSports.com
  • Watch Parties: Union Jack Pub, Chatham Tap, St. Joseph’s Brewery

LISTEN LIVE:

“Death. Taxes. Draw the Cosmos.”

As Monday’s tax deadline and Saturday’s first meeting of 2016 between Indy Eleven and New York approaches, that phrase adopted by the Indy faithful couldn’t be any timelier. The two sides have vast differences in many metrics, but when it comes to the results on the field it’s been split right down the middle every time, with all six prior meetings ending in ties, including a trio of 1-1 affairs last season.Both teams will look to break that mold when the first of their three match-ups in 2016 occurs at “The Mike” on Saturday. While there are no “must-win” games in Week 3 of a season, if Indy Eleven is to seriously contend for the Spring Season title at will at the very least need another draw against the front-running Cosmos. However, a breakthrough win would not only keep “Indiana’s Team” within distance of New York and the co-leading Carolina RailHawks – both on a maximum six points from their first two games – but it would also count as a “statement win” the side has long been looking for.
Last Time Out – Indy 1 : 1 Ottawa

In their first home match of the season, the “Boys in Blue” fought out to a draw with Ottawa Fury FC in chilly conditions at Carroll Stadium. After a scoreless opening first 45 minutes, the second half saw both goals as Fury FC found the back of the net first. Just over ten minutes in from the break, the deadlock was broken by Israeli striker Idan Vered.  The Red Star Belgrade signing broke through the center of the defense to get on the end of a great service from Jonny Steele on the heels of a counter-attack to put the visitors one-up. As the pressure mounted on Ottawa’s goal, the Eleven maintained their press and pushed the Fury defense further and further into their own territory. In the 89th minute, left back Nemanja Vuković found his way towards the near post and stuck a foot on the end of a bouncing ball, which came about when Ottawa ‘keeper Romuald Peiser’s made a low save of Greg Janicki’s header inside the six.
Continuity in Question

Through two games this season, Indy Eleven has allowed just a single goal with the same eleven on the pitch to start both matches. However, against Fury FC, Sinisa Ubiparipovic limped off with a hamstring injury, making it likely there will be at least one fresh face in the first XI to kick things off when the league leaders visit the Circle City on Saturday.
Defense Rules the Day

What remains constant is the effort from the Indy Eleven back five, including ‘keeper Jon Busch, as they are one of just four teams to have let in a goal or less in the opening 180 minutes. The resulting 0.50 goals allowed clip is tied with Tampa Bay for second in the NASL through Week 2 – behind only this weekend’s opposition, with the Cosmos posting clean sheets in each of their first two affairs. Indy’s defensive moxie will be put to the test against the high-flying Cosmos, whose attack led by Jairo Arrieta has put up a league-best five goals through two rounds.
Who to Watch, Indy Eleven edition: FW Eamon Zayed

In Indy Eleven’s first two games, Zayed has gone hungry up top, getting just 23 and 21 touches against Tampa Bay and Ottawa, respectively. There is no one culprit on the “Boys in Blue” responsible for feeding the big Irishman at the point of the team’s 4-2-3-1 attack – only one player (Justin Braun in the opener) has completed more than one pass to Zayed in a match – so it will take a collective effort to get the job done. It will be interesting to see, should the trend continue early on, if he’ll drop deeper and deeper to get into the game or if he’ll remain higher up the field to keep the Cosmos center backs honest.
Who to Watch, New York Cosmos edition: MF Juan Arango

While names like Nico Kranjcar and Jairo Arrieta might be more familiar to American fans of the beautiful game, perhaps the biggest threat among the Cosmos newcomers this offseason is Arango. Boasting two goals and one assist in two games, the former Venezuelan National Team captain and performer with Spanish La Liga side Mallorca and Liga MX’s Xolos de Tijuana still very clearly packs a punch at 35 years of age.A true attacking threat, Arango is known more for his ability to get forward than his distribution but has the ability to produce a peach of a pass at the drop of a hat. His two goals have him level for second in the league with teammate Adam Moffat and just behind Railhawks midfielder Austin da Luz, who leads the league with three.Look for Arango to try and exploit the space in front of the Eleven defense, leaving the task of marking him to midfielders Brad Ring and Nicki Paterson, who have impressed in their own right so far.
Match-up to Mark: Indy GK Jon Busch v. New York Attackers

Jon Busch arrived in Indianapolis just ahead of the 2016 season after 14 years in MLS, but had just one thing on his mind – winning a trophy. So far, Busch has been huge for “Indiana’s Team,” making three saves and numerous other massive plays on the ball in the season opener against Tampa Bay and doing his part in last week’s home opener against Ottawa.Now stands his biggest NASL test so far – facing the attack-laden lineup of Cosmos looking to continue their scoring ways. Speaking highly of the defense in front of him this week, Busch knows that he’ll get a good amount of help – but even the best defense can’t totally clamp down on New York for 90 minutes, so he’ll need to come up big on some occasions keep Indy Eleven’s stout defensive numbers intact for another week.
2015 Overview vs. New York Cosmos: 0W-3D-0L

IND 1 : 1 NYC – April 11, 2015 – Indy Eleven opened up the 2015 home slate at Carroll Stadium against the New York Cosmos in the first of three one-all stalemates that year. After drawing even with the Atlanta Silverbacks a week prior, the focus shifted to securing three points at home – and things looked bright early. Brian Brown opened the scoring in the 12th minute when Cosmos ‘keeper Jimmy Maurer took one too many steps away from home while clearing his lines, and the ball found its way to the feet of the Jamaican, who took a touch before lobbing an effort inside the right post from 30 yards out. However, in the 65th minute, the legend known as “Raúl” fired home a header from close range to bring the tally to 1-1. A brief chance in the 78th minute came towards striker Charlie Rugg, but his contested effort sailed over the crossbar and the match ended even. Theme continued.

NYC 1 : 1 IND – July 5, 2015 – An early July encounter on Long Island to open the Fall Season, the Cosmos and “Boys in Blue” again couldn’t find a winner in the fifth tie in as many meetings. Again “Indiana’s Team” went ahead first as Wojciech Wojcik put a stronghold on the match after collecting a forced clearance and flushing on a volley from 12 yards out. The unwritten rule of a one-goal limit was nearly broken by the Eleven just a few minutes later when midfielder Dylan Mares popped a free kick across to the far post, but Duke Lacroix could only force a fantastic save out of netminder Jimmy Maurer, who forced the effort over the top of the bar.The Cosmos’ equalizer would come from Walter Restrepo in the 78th minute when he absorbed a through pass on the right side of the pitch to rifle an effort at Nicht. The big German would get a strong hand on it, but the rebound ricocheted back off Restrepo’s head and into the back of the net to level the score. Then came New York’s opportunity to break the deadlock in the 88th minute when Sebastián Guenzatti stuck out a leg to finish a cross from Marcos Senna, but after consulting the linesman the head official called the goal back and ruled Guenzatti as offside. After a tense five minutes of stoppage – played without the late-ejected Indy interim skipper Tim Regan on the bench – the full-time whistle blew and the pair once again settled for a point apiece. Wash. Rinse. Repeat.

IND 1 : 1 NYC – July 25, 2015 – It was less than three weeks later that the two would meet, this time back in the Hoosier State at Michael A. Carroll Stadium. As over 10K packed into “The Mike” once more, a set of two goals separated by a couple minutes of first half stoppage time would settle the match. The Cosmos capitalized first as Raul played through Walter Restrepo, and the Colombian picked up his second goal of the year against “Indiana’s Team” having placed an effort between Nicht and the far post. On the ensuing kickoff, momentum would swing back in favor of the “Boys in Blue” when Dylan Mares took a streamlined pass from Dragan Stojkov down in the area and fired low into the right side netting with his left boot. Both sides would have chances in the second half that did not come to fruition. The final 45 minutes weren’t without excitement though as both Erick Norales and Sebastian Guenzatti saw red for trading blows, and the 1-1 score that held at full-time would be the third of the 2015 season. Same old, same old … a familiar result.

Talking Tactics: Indy Eleven v Ottawa Fury FC

Doug Starnes dissects Saturday’s draw against Ottawa Fury FC. As always, you can follow Doug and/or shake your fist at him on Twitter at @GrassInTheSky1.

If you braved the weather Saturday to support Indy Eleven at The Mike, good on you. I’m sure a win would have warmed your bones a little more than did the draw, but imagine how cold you would have felt had Nemanja Vukovic not smashed home that equalizer? Hoth cold, that’s how cold.The match was interesting in that it forced Indy to chase a goal by changing their formation and tactics. In so doing, Hankinson may have discovered some useful alternatives to the way the team has thus far been set up to begin matches. I’m not suggesting that the 4-2-3-1 will suddenly be scrapped in favor of a more attacking formation, but their were a number of adjustments to the side in the second half Saturday – in role, personnel, and formation – that jump started the Eleven’s attack and led to the late goal.

4-2-3-1 Status Report

I imagine not a small number of Eleven supporters are unconvinced that this formation is the best way forward (pun intended). Through two-and-a-half matches, the 4-2-3-1 (with an unchanged lineup) has not produced much of substance in attack. It’s been difficult for the team to combine with Éamon Zayed and much of the team’s attacking play has centered around playing Duke Lacroix in down the flank and then trying to catch up. With Brad Ring and Nicki Paterson playing as dual pivots, the numbers getting into the attacking third in a timely manner are somewhat limited. On Saturday, Paterson seemed to have a little more license to get forward – he was even the Eleven player closest to the goal in the 18th minute when Braun’s header led to a half chance inside the Ottawa six-yard box – but that amount of box-to-box running is tough to maintain and can lead to dangerous counterattacking moments if your team is not especially adept at maintaining possession in transition.The real problem for Indy in the current 4-2-3-1 is that they cannot bring their front four players into the match in any meaningful or consistent way. With limited options going forward, opponents can sit in their defensive shape and let Indy give them back the ball with forced passes or long balls.

Long story short, I’d expect the 4-2-3-1, or at least its current iteration, to be on a fairly short leash.

Ottawa Goal

Expanding on my previous point regarding Nicki Paterson getting forward more in Saturday’s match, it’s a bit of a double-edged sword. In the Tampa Bay match, with Paterson and Ring sitting behind the front four as dedicated numbers six, it’s much easier for the two of them to balance one another and keep the game in front of them. With Paterson playing more like a number eight on Saturday, Ring had a more complicated job with concern to balancing Paterson, especially in transition moments.On Ottawa’s goal, as Julian de Guzman switched fields from Indy’s right to left with a square pass to Rafael Alves, Ring made a bending run through the center circle from right to left as he started to follow the next ball from Alves to Idan Vered. In the Tampa Bay match, with Ring and Paterson playing as dual sixes, one could reasonably expect Paterson to be sitting behind Ring in a more central position. On Saturday, as Ring started to make his recovery run, he realized too late that Paterson was in fact just as high as he was and well to the Indy’s left. Because of this, Vered was able to play Gerardo Bruna, who had ghosted into the space behind Ring and Paterson, with the killer pass of the move.

Pardon my weak Photoshop game, but bear with me. The arrow line marks Rings recovery run and the “X” represents Paterson.

So far, the 4-2-3-1 has been tough to break down, but if the answer is to allow Paterson license to play box-to-box, Indy will be perhaps more prone to exposure in transition moments than they might otherwise be with a tweak of formation or the roles of the front four players.

Dylan Mares? Or Two Strikers?

Ubiparipović’s completed passes and key passes.

It’s unfortunate that Siniša Ubiparipović picked up a hamstring injury and had to leave the match at the beginning of the second half, but Dylan Mares stepped in and arguably became the most influential player in the match. If you compare Ubiparipović’s statistics to those of Mares, the difference is interesting.

Ubiparipović:

51 minutes played

22 touches

9/11 passing

1 Chance created

Pass direction – 18.2% forward, 36.4% left, 36.4% right, 9.1% backwards

Mares:

Mares’s completed passes and key passes.

39 minutes played

28 touches

14/18 passing

1 chance created

Pass direction – 38.9% forward, 11.1% left, 22.2% right, 27.8 backwards

I’ve bolded what I believe to be the really important statistic here, but there are others that are certainly worth noting. The fact that Mares had more touches and was on the ball more than Ubiparipović in fairly significantly fewer minutes is interesting.Before you get all “Team Ubi” or “Team Mares” on me, let’s talk about what those statistics actually reflect. I don’t believe it’s that Mares is a more dynamic attacking player than is Ubiparipović. They’re both good, but they bring different skills and abilities to the match.If you look closely at Mares’s statistics, he didn’t really start to catch fire until around the 70th minute. Prior to that, Mares was a straight swap for Ubiparipović in the 4-2-3-1 and he didn’t do much. In the 63rd minute, Jair Reinoso came on for Justin Braun and things started to get interesting. This, however, was not a straight swap. Indy shifted their formation to accommodate Reinoso as a second striker and moved into a 4-4-2 with Mares playing on the right side of a midfield diamond that included Brad Ring at the base, Nicki Paterson at the point, and Duke Lacroix on the left. Suddenly there were options forward and Indy started to look more dangerous.In the 74th minute, Don Smart came on for Duke Lacroix and another formation shift followed. Vukovic and Smart became left and right wing backs, respectively, and Mares was moved to a number ten role behind Reinoso and Zayed. In this role, he staked a legitimate claim to player of the game. I think Ubiparipović would have as well.

Average starting positions for Indy Eleven prior to any change.

Average starting positions of the substitutes compared to the starting Eleven.

The shift worth noting – and I think what Hankinson will be mulling over moving forward – was the addition of a second striker. Whether in a 4-4-2 or a 3-5-2, a second threat playing off of Zayed opened up many more options in advance of the midfield that simply were not there in the Tampa Bay match and much of the game versus Ottawa.

Takeaways

This is a work in progress, but I’m sure Hankinson took some valuable lessons from Saturday’s match with concern to Indy’s attacking play. It’s likely too early in the season to completely scrap some form of the 4-2-3-1, but the danger Indy presented once they shifted to a two forward system cannot be denied. If the team continues to struggle to create chances in the 4-2-3-1 with which they’ve started the first two matches of the season, the systems deployed at the end of Saturday’s match will likely inform any changes that are made.

Eleven survive, don’t thrive, on cold night against Ottawa. Indy Eleven V Ottawa Fury Review (4/09/16)

By: Caleb Ramp – Bloody Shambles

“Not the three points we were after, but it’s good to see our team not [lie] down and keep the fight to the end.”
Coach Hankinson’s post-game comments epitomize the mixed emotion of Saturday’s 1-1 draw with Ottawa Fury. The opportunity for a statement victory may not have been realized, but a statement was still made: a statement that this team, while still a work in progress, is resilient.2014 and 2015 Indy Eleven don’t draw that game. When Ottawa — who were kept in relative check by Indy’s stout defense — open the scoring in the second half, previous iterations of this squad crumble.his team didn’t.
That Nemanja Vukovic — the man who lost his mark at the back post on Ottawa’s goal (and admitted as much after the game) — was the same who brought the Eleven level, is a poetic microcosm of the side’s ability to overcome adversity: an important trait if they’re to make a legitimate playoff push.Among the positive takeaways, Jair Reinoso continues to impress. His technical proficiency and comfort on the ball were evident again after coming on for a less-than-impressive Justin Braun in the 63rd minute. Once fully fit, it’s hard to imagine the Colombian isn’t a staple starter.
Dylan Mares also stepped in admirably for Indy maestro Sinisa Ubiparipovic. Indy’s #10 exited in the 51st minute with a hamstring injury, and will be evaluated during the week to determine his availability for this week’s match against the Cosmos. I was critical of Dylan during the preseason: he was taking too many touches and ignoring the easy pass. He would dribble into opponents and summarily be dispossessed. Saturday he showed flashes of the player which led the team in assists in 2015. He needed a few minutes to get settled (earning a deserved yellow card almost instantly), but Vukovic’s equalizer wouldn’t have been possible without an intelligent pass which split two defenders and put Don Smart in a position to swing the deciding ball into the box.
Consistent possession continues to be a struggle, however. “Players are standing and not taking good care of the ball,” Hankinson said after the game. “When you do that, you’re going to give the ball away often enough where all you can do is defend.”Indy finished with less than 50% of possession for the second time in as many games.

Random Thoughts and Opinions:

 

  • Miscommunication continued on crosses and angled balls into the box. There were multiple occasions when an excellent ball was played toward the back post, but the attacking player had made an ill-advised cut to the inside (into traffic).
  • Width is still an issue. Zayed was left on an island several times and was forced to take the ball outside himself and attempt  to put a dangerous ball in the box.  He should be on the end of these, not trying to generate them. Statistically, he finished with three crosses, while starting outside attacking midfielders Justin Braun and Duke LaCroix both finished without even one.

 

James Cormack’s Take:

We seem to be having a real problem with transition between defense and attack. We are still defending very well indeed, but even more so this week the ball is not coming out of the back well.

We are sitting way to deep for long periods in the game, Hankinson likes players to drop back and cover rather than chase and get tired, but I think on evidence of the first two games we are now perhaps over indulging in this tactic.Towards the end of the first half we are defending corners with 11 players. Zayed is having to try and make a break from 15 to 20 yards inside our own half with nobody in front of him. Ubiparipović again is way too far back to help build a meaningful attack.The 4-2-3-1 is good in theory, but our players don’t seem to be understanding it so far, we are not using the corners or getting crosses in nor are we stretching the other team with this formation so far. We get very few crosses in and when we do there are not enough players on the end to make a difference. All I see from this setup and the way we are playing it so far is we don’t let a lot of goals in. That’s it.As most people know, the longer you go without scoring the higher the chance is the other team will score first. We have to be that team that scores first and not put ourselves in a position to require two goals for a win. We gave Ottawa too much respect, they were okay but not fantastic, we made them look better.We pulled it back, this will be a huge point looking back on it. It should not have come to that but it would have been very disappointing to lose this game. It is early enough in the season where we can recover from things like this. The most positive thing for me in the game was Coach Hankinson’s willingness to change the tactics and formation not once but twice during the game. Switching to a 4-4-2 and then moving to a back three and pushing Vukovic forward showed both he and the team would not give up. This is something we have completely lacked in previous years. Historically we have never had a clue how to adapt during a game, this is very encouraging to me. Hankinson is also highly active during games and very animated, I also like that!Very impressed with our defense again, Falvey and Janicki were superb. We seem to have that part of our game under control. I admired Lacroix for probably being the most aggressive player in the first half and Mares and Reinoso for showing the same aggression in the second. Reinoso looks like a real handful, I think he will be starting games real soon.Keep up to date with all things Shambles at BloodyShambles.Com, you can follow us on twitter@Bloody_Shambles

 

INDY ELEVEN TAKE A POINT FROM HOME OPENER

Mark D. Anderson | April 10, 2016 | Indy Eleven | No Comments

INDIANAPOLIS- The “Boys in Blue” played a thriller in front of over 9,000 fans at Michael A. Carroll stadium on a brisk Saturday night.  Ottawa Fury scored in the 56′ off an Idan Vered run.  Thirty more minutes of tense play with numerous opportunities for the Eleven finally sawNemanja Vuković net Indy’s first goal of the year.  The draw gives Indy two points out of two games.  Their next game is also at home next Saturday to the dreaded New York Cosmos.

Vuković Giveth and Vuković Taketh Away
Nemanja has had an eventful season with the Eleven so far.  He was second only to central midfielder Nicki Paterson in touches against Ottawa with 59.  His strong, physical presence has augmented Indy’s back four, making their defense one of the best in the league to date.  Vered scored for Ottawa while Vuković was caught ballwatching and beaten on the backside, but Vuković’s perseverance forward and dedication to following the play helped the team build pressure and resulted in a dramatic goal in the 89′ after a cross from super-sub Don Smart.

Eamon on an Island
Indy played a 4-2-3-1 with Eamon Zayed the lone striker.  Zayed does well in his movement and played in a dangerous cross nearly resulting in a Duke LaCroix goal on a back-post run early in the first half, but often he looks to be alone up top.  Either he needs to be stronger in holding up the ball, more decisive on when to attack, or the midfield needs to be more patient in distributing to him when he’s in need of support.

Captain Falvey and Unstoppable Paterson
Colin Falvey wore the captain’s band for the Eleven on Saturday; a well-deserved honor for the center back.  Nicki Paterson showed his work-ethic being seemingly everywhere on the field.  He led the team with 64 touches on the ball and nearly equalized with a shot in the second half.

Noteworthy
Jair Reinoso came on in the 63′ minute and provided positive minutes for the second straight game.  The Colombian striker, signed last week, has shown more poise in the final third than anyone on the team.  Coach Hankinson will need to weigh whether the offensive capabilities of Reinoso are valued over the defensive and aerial abilities of Justin Braun.

Siniša Ubiparipović went off with a hamstring injury in the 51′.  His injury will be re-evaluated Monday.  Eleven fans hope to see their most creative player back on the field soon.

Indy Eleven: 3 Take Aways from Ottawa

ByLogan David AyersonApril 10, 2016

On a fantastically cold spring night at the “Mike” The Indy Eleven took on 2015 NASL Fall Champions in week 2 of the NASL Spring Season.  The match was built up to be a closer one with the Eleven coming in off a 0-0 draw to the Tampa Bay Rowdies, and the Fury coming off a devastating loss to the Champions New York Cosmos away last week. The Eleven would improve with 2 points following the 1-1 draw setting them up for a fantastic show down with the New York Cosmos at Michael A. Carroll Stadium, under the lights next Saturday at 7:30 PM ET. Here are a few take aways from the match from our editors.

  1. The Brickyard Battalion’s tifo game is on point:

The Brickyard Battalion show cased an awesome tifo last night depicting the Indianapolis Flag with banners saying “Back Home Again” paying homage to the famous Hoosier Classic “Back Home Again in Indiana” composed by Ballard MacDonald and James F. Hanley. The song is most famously played at the Indianapolis 500 every year before the race. Jim Nabors made the song famous beginning in the 1970’s.  (Listen to Jim Nabors’ version of the song here)

  1. Possession Possession Possession 

Possession was key to the success in this match which made it go both sides in the first half alone there was 8 shots from both sides of the ball. In the 59th Minute Idan Vered scored for Ottawa assisted by Jonny Steele making the Eleven struggle until the final 20 minutes when Nemanja Vuković would equalize giving the Eleven the draw.

  1. Offsides killed the Eleven 

Multiple offsides calls were made against the Eleven in this match. Many times the Club would attack the flanks to get the ball into the box to attack on goal. This of course is a good strategy but it can hurt the team with offsides calls, giving the opposing team a chance to begin a new attack. Sometimes when the Club scores it can not be counted due to offsides calls. Of course if this was the case otherwise the Eleven would have won the match 2-1.

Contributor’s Thoughts: 

I believe the Eleven has done fairly well thus far in their 2016 Spring Season Campaign. The Club’s overhaul is definitely showing it’s worth and Tim Hankinson is definitely proving to be the figure the Eleven needs to be successful this season. When it comes to the last few matches it’s important to remember we are facing the 2015 “Big 3” with Tampa Bay, Ottawa (2015 NASL Runner Ups), and the New York Cosmos (2015 NASL Champions).  2 Draws is definitely a good start to the Club’s Campaign and a win against the Cosmos would be HUGE for the club. Tim Hankinson said in the post match press conference “In order to be the Champions we must beat the Champions” Which should add a little fuel to the fire as the Eleven prepares to host the New York Cosmos next week. At the end of it all the Fans also had a major victory last night with 9,000+ Fans in attendance along with a fantastic tifo presentation by the Brickyard Battalion it will only get better from here.

Match Notes: (Courtesy of Indy Eleven) 

Scoring Summary:
OTT – Idan Vered (Jonny Steele) 56’
IND – Nemanja Vuković (unassisted) 89’

Discipline Summary:
OTT – Jonny Steele (caution) 18’
IND – Dylan Mares (caution) 55’
IND – Nicki Paterson (caution) 66’
OTT – Gerardo Bruna (caution) 83’
OTT – Dennis Chin (caution) 84’
Line ups: (including substitutions) 

Indy Eleven line-up (4-2-3-1, L–>R):  Jon Busch; Nemanja Vuković, Greg Janicki, Colin Falvey (capt), Lovel Palmer; Nicki Paterson, Brad Ring; Duke Lacroix (Don Smart 74’), Sinisa Ubiparipovic (Dylan Mares 51’), Justin Braun (Jair Reinoso 63’); Eamon Zayed

Eleven Substitutes: Keith Cardona (GK), Marco Franco, Cory Miller, Gorka Larrea

Ottawa Fury FC line up (4-3-3): Romuald Peiser; Marcel de Jong, Timbo, Rafael Alves, Kyle Porter; Jonny Steele (Lance Rozeboom 79’), Julian de Guzman (capt) (Mauro Eustaquio 84’), James Bailey; Paulo Junior, Gerardo Bruna, Idan Vered (Dennis Chin 71’)

Ottawa Substitutes: Andrew MacRae (GK), Mozzi Gyorio, Carl Haworth, Bryan Olivera

Next week the Indy Eleven will take on defending NASL champion New York Cosmos at “The Mike” for a 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff (live on WISH-TV, ONE World Sports and http://www.ONEWorldSports.com).

Indy Eleven open home season with 1-1 draw

Kevin Johnston, IndyStar correspondent9:06 a.m. EDT April 10, 2016

The Indy Eleven opened their 2016 North American Soccer League home slate Saturday night with a 1-1 draw against Ottawa Fury FC on an unseasonably chilly evening at Michael A. Carroll Stadium.First-year manager Tim Hankinson trotted out the same starting 11 that he used in the season opener — in his trusted 4-2-3-1 formation. In the first half, the Fury got the better of the run of play, out-possessing Indy 63 percent to 37 percent, but the Eleven generated the more dangerous scoring opportunities. Hankinson’s characterization of the first half wasn’t exactly glowing.“It just seems like players are standing and not taking good care of the ball, and when you do that you’re going to give the ball away often enough that all you can do is defend,” he said. “And we found ourselves defending a lot in the last part of the first half.“Obviously the possession has got to be better. There was a period of about 20 minutes in the first half when (midfielder) Sinisa (Ubiparipovic) never saw the ball,” he added.Ottawa opened the scoring in the 56th minute when forward Idan Vered collected a pass from midfielder Jonny Steele and buried the ball in the bottom right corner past Eleven goalkeeper Jon Busch. Indy immediately cranked up the pressure in the attacking third and showed a sense of urgency to equalize.The hosts nearly did so in the 78th minute when midfielder Nicki Paterson fired a right-footed shot toward goal, but it sailed just over the crossbar. Finally, the Eleven tied the match 1-1 in the 89th minute when defender Nemanja Vukovic put away a rebound after a shot on goal by fellow defender Greg Janicki.The Eleven defense again turned in a sharp performance with 13 interceptions after producing a clean sheet and an NASL-leading 23 interceptions in the season opener against the Tampa Bay Rowdies. Indy defender and captain Colin Falvey, who played for Ottawa last season, described the importance of having cohesion on defense.“If you want to get clean sheets and be defensively solid, I think it comes from your shape and your structure, and the way that you’re going to play,” he said. “I think our system and some of the personnel that we have is going to help us be very, very competitive and very compact and making sure we’re in games.”On the injury front, Ubiparipovic was replaced by Dylan Mares in the 51st minute due to a hamstring injury. He will be re-evaluated by the club Monday. Hankinson confirmed that Mares is in contention to start in the central attacking midfield spot if Ubiparipovic is unable to go next weekend.“(Mares) did a good job tonight so he’ll be in strong consideration,” Hankinson said.Despite the less-than-ideal weather, the home opener produced a solid turnout with an announced attendance of 9,104. The Eleven will look to nab their first win when they return to Carroll Stadium on Saturday to host the defending NASL champion New York Cosmos.

Nemanja Vukovic’s Late Goal Gives Indy Eleven Draw with Ottawa

89th Minute Equalizer Brings “Class of ‘14” Reunion with Fury FC to 1-1 Conclusion in Home Opener  INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, April 9, 2016) – Ottawa Fury FC looked destined to spoil Indy Eleven’s home opener by taking the full three points out of IUPUI’s Carroll Stadium, but Indy defender Nemanja Vukovic’s 89th minute rebound goal forced a share of the spoils from a 1-1 draw in front of 9,104 fans in downtown Indianapolis. Ottawa forward Idan Vered opened his Fury FC account in the 56th minute to put the visitors ahead – and nearly for good, until Vukovic’s late tally evened the “Class of 2014” reunion.Indy Eleven would come out the aggressor in its home debut, pushing forward well in the opening 20 minutes. The best look for the “Boys in Blue” would come in the 19th minute when winger Justin Braun nodded Sinisa Ubiparipovic’s cross to the back post, the shot bouncing just wide left.Ottawa would work its way into attack as the half progressed, but the Canadian club’s shots would come mostly from distance and be blocked before they could challenge Indy goalkeeper Jon Busch. In fact, neither he nor his opposite number, Romuald Peiser, would be forced into a save on any of the teams’ eight combined shots in the first 45 minutes.The second half would open up with an early injury to Indy Eleven midfielder Sinisa Ubiparipovic, the #10 forced to leave due to a hamstring injury just six minutes into the stanza. Ottawa would go ahead in the 56thminute through Vered on a play that began with nice hold up work by Gerardo Bruna. His post up at the top of the area allowed Jonny Steele to streak into the left side of the area, accepting Bruna’s pass with a first time cross inside the six where Vered was able to redirect home to take the lead.Vuković pressed Peiser into action with a looping ball from the left that forced the Ottawa netminder into a safety-first tip over his bar in the 66th minute, which seemed to spark the Indy attack into life. Nicki Paterson made the home crowd gasp in the 78th minute, when he first-timed a laid off ball at the top of the area, his dipping shot skimming off the top of the crossbar.The pressure would mount on the home side until the release came in front of the Brickyard Battalion a minute from time. The scoring play started when Don Smart’s cross from the left was nodded down by defender Greg Janicki, forcing Peiser into a reaction save. The ball would fall straight to Vuković, who made no mistake with a shot from eight yards out that gave the Eleven their first goal of the season and a hard earned point.he result didn’t allow Indy Eleven (0W-2D-0L, 2 pts.) to notch its first home win against Ottawa (0W-1D-1L, 1 pt.)  in now its fourth try, but it did stop Indy’s three-game losing streak to its expansion mate, which spanned the 2015 season.Indy Eleven will stay in the Circle City for its Spring Season Week 3 affair next Saturday, April 16, when it welcomes the defending NASL champion New York Cosmos to“The Mike” for a 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff (live on WISH-TV, ONE World Sports and www.ONEWorldSports.com).

We Do Not Dream

CLAUDIO RANIERIMANAGER / LEICESTER CITY

I remember my first meeting with the chairman when I arrived at Leicester City this summer. He sat down with me and said, “Claudio, this is a very important year for the club. It is very important for us to stay in the Premier League. We have to stay safe.”My reply was, “Okay, sure. We’ll work hard on the training ground and try to achieve this.”Forty points. That was the goal. That was the total we needed to stay in the first division, to give our fans another season of Premier League football.Back then, I did not dream that I would open the paper on April 4 and see Leicester City at the top of the table with 69 points. Last year on this same day, the club was at the bottom of the table.Unbelievable.I am 64 years old, so I do not go out much. My wife has been with me for 40 years, so on my off days, I try to stay close to her. We go out to the lake by our house or maybe if we are feeling adventurous we watch a movie. But lately, I have indeed been hearing the noise from all over the world. It is impossible to ignore. I have heard we even have some new supporters in America following us.To you, I say: Welcome to the club. We are happy to have you. I want you to love the way we play football, and I want you to love my players, because their journey is unbelievable.Perhaps you have heard their names now. Players who were considered too small or too slow for other big clubs. N’Golo Kanté. Jamie Vardy. Wes Morgan. Danny Drinkwater. Riyad Mahrez. When I arrived my first day of training and I saw the quality of these players, I knew how good they could be.Well, I knew we had a chance to survive in the Premier League.This player Kanté, he was running so hard that I thought he must have a pack full of batteries hidden in his shorts. He never stopped running in training.I had to tell him, “Hey, N’Golo, slow down. Slow down. Don’t run after the ball every time, okay?”He says to me, “Yes, boss. Yes. Okay.”Ten seconds later, I look over and he’s running again.He’s unbelievable, but he is not the only key. There are too many keys to name in this incredible season.Jamie Vardy, for example. This is not a footballer. This is a fantastic horse. He has a need to be free out there on the pitch. I say to him, “You are free to move however you want, but you must help us when we lose the ball. That’s all I ask of you. If you start to press the opposition, all of your teammates will follow you.”Before we played our first match of the season, I told the players, “I want you to play for your teammates. We are a little team, so we have to fight with all our heart, with all our soul. I don’t care the name of the opponent. All I want is for you to fight. If they are better than us, Okay, congratulations. But they have to show us they are better.”There was a fantastic electricity in Leicester from the very first day. It starts from the chairman and goes to the players, the staff, the fans. It was unbelievable what I felt. In the King Power Stadium, there was a terrific energy.Do the fans sing only when we have the ball? Oh, no, no, no. When we are under pressure, the fans understand our pain and they sing their hearts out. They understand the complexity of the game, and when the players are suffering. They are very, very close to us. We started the season very well. But our goal, I repeat, was to save the club from relegation. The first nine games, we were winning, but we were giving up many goals. We had to score two or three goals to win every game. It concerned me very much.Before every game, I said, “Come on boys, come on. Clean sheet today.”No clean sheet. I tried every motivation.So finally, before the game against Crystal Palace, I said, “Come on boys, come on. I offer you a pizza if you get a clean sheet.”Of course, my players made a clean sheet against Crystal Palace. One-nil.So I stood by our deal and took my players to Peter Pizzeria in Leicester City Square. But I had a surprise for them when we got there. I said, “You have to work for everything. You work for your pizza, too. We will make our own.”So we went into the kitchen with the dough and the cheese and the sauce. We tossed our own pies. It was very good, too. I enjoyed many slices. What can I say? I’m an Italian man. I love my pizza and my pasta.Now, we make a lot of clean sheets. A dozen clean sheets after the pizza, in fact. I think this is no coincidence.We have six games remaining, and we must continue fighting with our heart and our soul. This is a small club that is showing the world what can be achieved through spirit and determination. Twenty-six players. Twenty-six different brains. But one heart.There was a fantastic electricity in Leicester from the very first day. It was unbelievable what I felt.Just a few years ago, many of my players were in the lower leagues. Vardy was working in a factory. Kanté was in the third tier of the French league. Mahrez was in the French fourth division.Now, we are fighting for a title. The Leicester fans I meet in the street tell me they are dreaming. But I say to them, “Okay, you dream for us. We do not dream. We simply work hard.”No matter what happens to end this season, I think our story is important for all football fans around the world. It gives hope to all the young players out there who have been told they are not good enough.RIFFITHS/GETTY IMAGES

They can say to themselves, “How do I arrive at the top level? If Vardy can do this, if Kanté can do this, maybe I can too.”What do you need to arrive?A big name? No.A big contract? No.You just need to keep an open mind, an open heart, a full battery, and run free.Who knows, maybe at the end of the season, we will have two pizza parties.

CLAUDIO RANIERI- Manager leicester city -CONTRIBUTOR

 

USMNT: What Klinsmann is thinking about… as far as we know

Posted on April 7, 2016 | By Charles Boehm

By Charles Boehm – WASHINGTON, DC (Apr 7, 2016) US Soccer Players – With disaster averted in last week’s World Cup qualifying home win over Guatemala, theUSMNT has returned to club duty until preparations for Copa America begin in late May.The USMNT news cycle, however, has effectively reached 24/7 status, or something close to it, with millions of fans thirsty for content to consume. So the next few weeks of coverage will be marked by running evaluations of the fitness and club form of next month’s most likely call-ups, and speculation about who’s on Jurgen Klinsmann‘s mind and in his plans.How do we know? Because he told us so.Dispensing with the media conference calls of past USMNT regimes (and occasionally, the current USWNT technical staff), US Soccer has made a custom of interviewing Klinsmann with their own list of questions and topics, then distributing the video clips to their media list via email.

Other than attributing the video to USSF’s in-house production company, outlets are free to use it. Writers and analysts can digest the substantial bank of quotes from the head coach as they formulate their columns and news articles. The clips normally end up on the federation’s website for fans to consume directly.This week’s edition of Klinsmann soundbites revolved around the recent performances of leading US soccer players:

  • Fabian Johnson’s return from injury: “It was great to see him being back in his club side … he had a very good game against Hertha Berlin”
  • John Brooks’ injury status: “He was still not 100 percent … hopefully we see him back next weekend”
  • Timmy Chandler has “a shot, maybe, at Copa America” thanks to his improved club form, while “we’re still waiting for” Alfredo Morales
  • Mexico-based players: “We’ve got to be patient” with those not getting regular playing time, though William Yarbrough “is doing really well at Club Leon”
  • Clint Dempsey’s strong displays for Seattle: “You want your players to stand out, to make their mark”
  • Jordan Morris’ rocky start at the professional level: “It’s important that we are patient … over time he will settle”
  • Brek Shea’s “up and downs” for Orlando vs Portland, as he scored “a beautiful goal” but also earned a yellow card for a brutal tackle that subsequently drew a one-game suspension
  • His England-based contingent: “It’s great to see Geoff Cameron starting for Stoke,” DeAndre Yedlin is “trying everything to keep Sunderland up” while Brad Guzan and relegation-bound Aston Villa are in “a very, very tough situation right now,” and Matt Miazga’s “huge milestone” in making his debut for “such a prestigious club as Chelsea” after Olympic playoff disappointment
  • His revelation that U-23 players like Miazga, Ethan Horvath, Kellyn Acosta, and Morris are “legitimate” candidates for his Copa America squad because of the failure to qualify for the Olympics

Like so many aspects of the federation’s current modus operandi, the wisdom of this approach is in the eye of the beholder. As you can see, Klinsmann is sharing timely information here. If we assume he’s speaking sincerely, the coach is dropping potentially significant hints about his future selections. It’s hard to beat the convenience this format offers for time-pressed, overworked journalists. And it’s certainly much better than nothing.This system also suits Klinsmann personally. He speaks often of the importance of educating US fans, but isn’t the type to slog through lengthy, inconvenient media availabilities – and that’s understandable, given some of the dreary and/or bewilderingly useless questions that have at times been posed to him in press conferences. He does also post regularly from his personal Twitter account, and takes time to connect with fans via Facebook Q&As with the help of the federation’s communications staff, both admirably progressive entries into social media.But something is missing in this formula. Even if the questions raised in Klinsmann’s distributed clips largely overlap with what reporters would ask him, the format removes any trace of surprise or spontaneity.The topics – and depth of their treatment – are pre-selected. Klinsmann is able to rehearse his answers if he so desires and the federation maintains full control of the proceedings at all times. No one intrudes with less-savory subjects. Nobody gets to ask about FIFA and CONCACAF corruption, or how the technical staff’s accountability for the program’s second consecutive failure to qualify for the Olympics. Though fuller access occasionally happens via roundtables or conference calls, usually only a tight group of veteran journalists representing a small number of media outlets receive an invite.Control: It’s been a recurring theme around the USSF lately. Consider the Women’s National Team’s increasingly bitter struggle for a collective-bargaining breakthrough. Or, the fed’s ongoing power play in the youth realm, where they have asserted their organizational and financial muscle with a my-way-or-the-highway approach to player development in recent years.On the latter front, frustrations have elevated to the point that in February a broad-based group of leading youth organizations took the unusual step of publicly calling USSF to task for its failure to connect, collaborate or even notify them in advance onseveral hugely important policy decisions. They requested a “formal, institutionalized communications process to ensure that an ongoing dialogue is established.”Control has been a priority for most of Klinsmann’s tenure, especially in the wake of the 2013 Sporting News article that highlighted the confusion and discontent behind the scenes during 2014 World Cup qualifying. Like most top-level coaches, he holds strong convictions and does not hesitate to take an active role in his players’ lives, whether it’s during USMNT camps or beyond. He’s committed to his methods and conclusions, and expects those around him to follow suit.That’s all quite understandable. Still, in rocky times like the present, the overall impression is of Klinsmann as a carefully guarded celebrity coach, not the change agent and beacon of reform. Remember what Klinsmann represented when he took the job.In the 1960s, political scientist Bernard Cohen helped build the theory of agenda-setting, noting that the media “may not be successful much of the time in telling people what to think, but it is stunningly successful in telling its readers what to think about.”His words prophesied the influence and ubiquity of modern journalism, and provide us with a fitting reminder at this juncture in Klinsmann’s tenure: The USMNT’s coach doesn’t expect everyone to agree with him, but he’s not interested in having a discussion on anyone else’s terms, either.Charles Boehm is a Washington, DC-based writer and the editor of The Soccer Wire. Contact him at:cboehm@thesoccerwire.com. Follow him on Twitter at:http://twitter.com/cboehm.

 

US Players – More goals for Bobby Wood and a start for Pulisic

Posted on April 11, 2016 | By US Soccer Players

We start the weekend roundup for USMNT players in Europe and Mexico with Bobby Wood scoring again in the 2.Bundesliga. At this point, it’s safe to assume that if Union Berlin is playing, Wood is probably scoring. He bagged two goals in the 4-0 win at Paderborn on Friday night, opening the scoring in the 7th minute and finding the back of the net again in the 13th. Damir Kreilach made it 3-0 in the 21st with Toni Leistner finishing off the scoring in the 36th. Union Berlin is 7th in the 2.Bundesliga table, tied on points with 8th-place Greuther Furth.

A league, up, Christian Pulisic started for Borussia Dortmund in their 2-2 draw with Schalke in the Revierderby on Sunday. For Americans not up on their German geography, which in fairness is most of us, Schalke’s home town of Gelsenkirchen and Dortmund are about half an hour from each other. Thus the local rivalry for a game where Dortmund took the lead through Shinji Kagawa in the 49th minute. Schalke equalized two minutes later. Matthias Ginter had Dortmund up in the 56th minute with Schalke equalizing from the penalty spot in the 66th. Pulisic subbed out in the 73rd minute. Here he is talking about the game courtesy of Bundesliga.com.

Also in the Bundesliga, Timmy Chandler and Eintracht lost 2-0 to Hoffenheim. Fabian Johnson subbed out in the 78th minute for Gladbach‘s 1-0 loss at Ingolstadt.

Moving to the Premier League, it was another loss for Aston Villa as relegation seems a foregone conclusion. Brad Guzan was in goal for the 2-1 loss to Bournemouth at Villa Park. Trailing 2-0 from the 74th minute, Jordan Ayew pulled a goal back for Villa in the 85th. Matt Miazga played the first-half for Chelsea in their 1-0 loss at Swansea City.DeAndre Yedlin and Sunderland lost 2-0 at home to Leicester City. After making it 1-1 with an equalizer form Bojan in the 22nd minute, Geoff Cameron and Stoke City lost 4-1 to Liverpool at Anfield.

In the Championship, Emerson Hyndman scored in Fulham’s 2-1 win over Cardiff City at Craven Cottage. Trailing from the 41st minute, Scott Parker equalized in the 46th. Hyndman won the game three minutes into stoppage time. Danny Williams and Reading lost 2-0 to Birmingham City. Cody Cropper was in goal for MK Dons’ 4-0 loss to Rotherham. On Monday, Eric Lichaj and Nottingham Forest lost 2-1 to Brighton. Dexter Blackstock equalized for Forest in the 50th minute but Brighton scored in stoppage time.

Perry Kitchen and Hearts beat Aberdeen 2-1 in the Scottish Premier League. Falling behind at home in the 4th minute, Juanma equalized for Hearts in the 33rd and won the game in the 61st. Hearts are 3rd in the table, nine points behind Aberdeen.

Liga MX, and Omar Gonzalez and Pachuca beat Tigres 2-1 at home after trailing from the 7th minute. Franco Jara equalized in the 74th and Gustavo Ramirez scored in the 86th minute. William Yarbrough was in goal for Leon’s 2-1 win at UNAM Pumas. Hernan Burbano put Leon up in the 10th minute and Maxi Morales scored in the 34th. Pumas pulled a goal back in the 44th minute.

Did Not Play: Alfredo Morales (Ingolstadt 1- Gladbach 0), Jerome Kiesewetter (Stuttgart II 1- Aalen 1), Tim Howard (Everton 1 – Watford 1), Jonathan Spector (Birmingham City 2 – Reading 0), Tim Ream (Fulham 2 – Cardiff City 1), Rubio Rubin (Utrecht 3 – NEC 1), Jose Torres (Tigres 1 – Pachuca 2), Michael Orozco and Greg Garza (Tijuana 1 – Club America 6), Miguel Ibarra (Leon 2 – Pumas 1), Edgar Castillo (Monterrey 6 – Chiapas 0), Jonathan Bornstein (Queretaro 0 – Toluca 0)

Injured: John Brooks (Hertha BSC 2 – Hannover 2), Aron Johannsson (Werder Bremen 1 – Augsburg 2), Alejandro Bedoya (Nantes 1 – Reims 2), Josh Gatt (Molde 1 – Start 1)

 

Playing the attendance game in American soccer

Posted on April 13, 2016 | By Jason Davis

By Jason Davis – WASHINGTON, DC (Apr 13, 2016) US Soccer Players – Simply stated, there are two easy ways to judge the interest in soccer in the United States of America, a country that spent more than a few decades sticking its fingers in its ears and pretending like the sport didn’t exist at all: attendance and TV ratings.Both are fraught with problems as decent measures of soccer’s engagement of a fickle sports-watching public. TV ratings have been notoriously unreliable for years, even before things like streaming and DVRs completely complicated viewing habits. When it comes to soccer, certain games prompt communal viewing, parties that help fans share in the experience of watching games on television from long distances away. Whether or not the TV ratings company can accurately gauge the audience for any given game is at the very least suspect.Attendance might be even stickier. At least with TV ratings, all of the interested parties (programming producers, networks, and advertisers) have agreed to accept the ratings despite their imperfections. There is one standard, no matter how poor that standard might possibly be. A shared acceptance of the numbers allows for something approaching a fair market for TV rights and ad time, pushing along an industry that is simultaneously wrestling with paradigm-shifting technology.That’s not the case for counting the people that show up to watch pro soccer. If we see people filling all the available seats, it’s easy. In others cases, reported attendance numbers are a complete a fabrication, as make-believe as King Friday and his subjects. Teams don’t typically report the number of human bodies through the turnstiles, but rather the number of tickets distributed. While that practice isn’t unique to soccer, it’s impact on how we view the popularity of the sport in America is immense.The key word when it comes to attendance numbers reported is “distributed”, which includes, but is not exclusive to, the number of tickets sold. Sports attendances defy the word “attendance” more often than not because they aren’t attendances at all. Instead, they represent the number of tickets sold, comped, or flat out given away. When perception of your club operations (and further, your league) can turn on attendance numbers reported the next day, there’s pressure to put people in the stands by whatever means necessary. In perfect world, every ticket sells at face value and every fan shows up to use his or her purchased tickets. In the real world, even “sell outs” come with caveats and all games feature no-shows.With that situation firmly in mind, the numbers already look promising for the lower divisions in North American soccer. Just this past weekend, Miami FC got over 10,000 for their home opener. San Antonio FC set a Toyota Field record by drawing 8400 in the team’s USL debut. FC Cincinnati, a first-year USL club in a town with no recent professional soccer history, attracted over 14k. Sacramento Republic has continued to be a lower division juggernaut, bringing in the usual (for them) crowd of over 11k.On the surface, those attendance numbers seem to indicate a robust American soccer scene, even at the third division level. They’re not MLS-caliber numbers, but neither are they the attendance numbers of old, when hitting mid-five figures was something of a coup for anyone outside of the top league. Attendance numbers that flirt with or fly past five figures make clubs look good, they make markets look good, and they signal to the mainstream soccer public that professional soccer’s future goes well beyond the biggest cities in the country.Attendance numbers like that are the surest sign of a market’s potential. Big crowds make the push for MLS easier. Big crowds help sell any league to new investors.Still, knowing what we do about reporting standards, how much stock to put in attendance numbers is it’s own question. The eyeball test says Miami FC and FC Cincinnati had large crowds, but without an excruciating and frankly impossible headcount, there’s no way to know if the crowds they disclosed were the crowds they got, or how many of the people who showed up actually paid something for their ticket. At some point the numbers don’t matter as much, but when the question is just how popular soccer is across the country, and whether the cities in question can support teams who don’t get on TV or attract big name stars, these sort of details matter.American soccer clubs, from USL all the way up to MLS, are fighting a war for respect. All is fair in love and war, so the need to be spot-on with reported attendance is secondary to putting forward a vision of strength.The odd thing is that there’s plenty of gray area between “soccer teams are exaggerating their attendances” and “wow, look at those huge crowds” as signals of what’s happening at various levels of American soccer. The game is growing in America, and more fans are (probably) attending games than ever before. But it’s also probably not as good as the numbers might indicate. When it comes to filling seats, the truth is in the eye of the beholder.Jason Davis is the founder of MatchFitUSA.com and the host of Soccer Morning. Contact him: matchfitusa@gmail.com. Follow him on

 

 

4/6/16 Indy 11 Home Opener Sat, Champ League, TV Games

Our Indy 11 embarks on season #3 with its first home game of the Spring Season this Sat, 7:30 pm at the Mike and on Ch 8 locally and ESPN3 Nationwide.  Lots of changes including more money spent on players and a new Head Coach in charge – Tim Hankinson.  It will be interesting to see if the changes lead to more wins, especially home wins, and perhaps a visit to the playoffs.  Also interesting to watch will be does attendance hold up if the team is not doing well?  On the surface it appears the Eleven have shored up the D a little, and picked up a proven striker in Eamon Zayed.  I will miss saying DAS BOOT – on goalkicks – but honestly I think we’ll see better play with Jon Busch between the posts overall this season.  The 11 kept most games close last season so anything they can do to find just 1 goal more per game could well make the difference between a playoff team and not.  I for one plan to be there in the BYB when I can – as the Flex Pack of 11 vouchers for games is too good to pass up.

So Champions League has had a twist here in the Round of 8 – as Wolfsburg shocked Real Madrid – 2-0 in Germany just days after Real beat Barcelona in El Classico 2-1 at Camp Nuo.  In Paris – Man City took it to the homeside PSG as Joe Hart saved a Zlatan PK to preserve a 2-2 draw scoring 2 huge away goals with a trip back home next Tuesday on Fox Sports 1 2:45 pm.  Bayern and Barca both won their games and return to play Wed at 2:45 with the semi-finals within reach.

Tickets on Sale for ICC Bayern vs AC Milan in Chicago & PSG vs Real in Columbus

INDY 11

Indy 11 Bring Back the Tie with Tampa Bay

Indy 11 Tie Rowdies on Road – Tampa Paper

Talking Tactics with BYB and Carmel FC coach -Josh Mason

Bi-Centenial Picnic Pack – Features ticket and Hooiser Picnic meal for the 1st home Game Sat for Just $20

Indy 11 – Free Popcorn – when you download the Indy 11 App

Indy 11 – 11 game Ticket Pack – way to go!

Indy 11 player named to NASL Team of the Week

New Look Indy 11 Raises Expectations –Indy Star

Indy 11 Full Roster

NASL Preview Show – Bloody Shambles  True Indy 11 Fans will love this site!

Wish TV to cover more Games this Season

After the Whistle Week 1 NASL

Players to Watch this season in NASL

BYB Site

Ready For NASL Prime Time ON TV : The first of 34 NASL matches – Fort Lauderdale vs. Miami FC – was carried by beIN SPORTS on Saturday, marking a new era and new opportunity as the league embarks on its sixth season. The beIN partnership is only one of the spokes in the NASL’s TV strategy that now encompasses ESPN3.com, ONE World Sports (which does a “Game of the Week” and weekly highlight show), the Fall Season debut of the league on CBS Sports Network and the myriad local deals of each team. In fact, Miami FC matches will be carried in more than 100 countries. Whether it is via cable TV or streaming to a tablet or smartphone, all NASL games are ready for prime time.

Champions League

PSG leaves too many chances at home in 2-2 tie with Man City

Real Madrid collapses at Wolfsburg Stunned 2-0

Suarez leads Barca to 2-1 win over Athletico

Vidal lifts Bayern over Pesky Benefica 1-0 at home

Joe Hart saves PK vs Zlatan – turns tide for City

EPL and World

US 20 yr old Matt Miazga starts for Chelsea

History says Spurs and Gunners still have a chance

Leicester goes 7 clear in title race

Clásico: How Real Madrid beat Barcelona

GAMES of the Week

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund – Will Anfield help vs German Powerhouse?

Sat, Apr 9

7:30 am NBCSN            West Ham vs Arsenal  -West Ham looks to break into the top 4

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs Ottawa (Home Opener) –make plans now to get out to the Jake

Sun, Apr 10

7:30 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs Leciester City – Can Leciester continue magical run at a team fighting relegation?

11 am NCBCN                Tottenham vs Man United –  Can Spurs keep pressure on Leciester and knock Man U out of top 4? 

11 am Extra                    Liverpool vs Stoke City – 2 teams locked In battle for Europa League Top 6 finish

2 pm ESPN                      US Women vs Columbia

4:00 p.m ESPN              Houston Dynamo vs. Seattle Sounders Can Seattle stop 0-3 Start?

9:30 pm Fox Sports 1 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Portland Timbers –Playoff Contenders in Early battle

Tues, Apr 12

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG

Wed, Apr 13

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

Sat, Apr 16

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos (H)

GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund

3:00 p.m., FS2?            Sevilla vs. Athletic Bilbao

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Braga

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Sparta Prague vs. Villarreal

Sat, Apr 9

7:30 am NBCSN            West Ham vs Arsenal

9:30 am Fox Sport 1 Schalke vs Dortmund

11:30 am                          FS2                Koln vs Bayer Leverkusen

12:30 pm NBC              Man City vs West Brom

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs Ottawa (Home Opener)

Sun, Apr 10

7:30 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs Leciester City

11 am NCBCN                Tottenham vs Man United

11 am Extra                    Liverpool vs Stoke City

2 pm ESPN                      US Women vs Columbia

4:00 p.m ESPN              Houston Dynamo vs. Seattle Sounders

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 New York City FC vs. Chicago Fire

9:30 pm Fox Sports 1 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Portland Timbers

Tues, Apr 12

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG

2:45 p.m., TV TBD:     Real Madrid vs. VfL Wolfsburg

Wed, Apr 13

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 pm, TV TBD:        Benfica vs. Bayern Munich

Thursday, April 14

UEFA Europa League (Quarterfinal second legs)

3:00 p.m., Fox Sports Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Sevilla vs. Athletic Bilbao
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Braga
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Sparta Prague vs. Villarreal

Sat, Apr 16

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos

Sun, Apr 17

3:30 pm ESPN                Orlando City vs. New England Revolution

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 FC Dallas vs. Sporting Kansas City

Mon, Apr 18

3 pm NBCSN                   Stoke City vs Tottenham

Tues, Apr 19

2:45 pm NBCSN            Newcastle vs Man City

Wed , Apr 20

2:45 pm NBCSN            Liverpool vs Everton

3 pm NBCSN Extra      Man U vs Crystal Palace

Thur, Apr 21

2:45 pm NBCSN            Arsenal vs West Brom

MLS TV Schedule ‘

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

COPA AMERICA 100 –GAMES IN CHICAGO

Sun -June 5 4 pm Jamaica vs Venezuela, Tues June 7 – 7 pm (USA vs Costa Rica), Friday, June 10 Argentina vs Panama 8:30 pm.

Wed, June 22  Semi Finals – 7 pm – Argentina vs Brazil maybe? 

Soldier Field  Chicago Venue Passes – If interested in planning a trip over – reach out to me (shanebestsoccer@gmail.com)

RECAP – TAMPA BAY 0 : 0 INDY ELEVEN

Busch’s three saves, stout defending help Indy to road point in season openerApr 2, 2016

Indy Eleven Earn Gritty Road Point in Season Opening Stalemate at Tampa Bay

Goalkeeper Jon Busch’s Three Saves, Steady Defensive Effort Help “Boys in Blue” to 0-0 Draw, Clean Sheet to Open 2016 Season

  1. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, April 2, 2016) –For the third season opener in as many years, Indy Eleven would earn a point from its NASL season opener, this time securing a road point from a 0-0 draw with the Tampa Bay Rowdies at Al Lang Stadium. The new look Eleven squad featured ten “Boys in Blue” making their Indy debut, including goalkeeper Jon Busch, who made three saves in securing the clean sheet.“There’s no question that defensively we’re a very solid unit. I feel like in all games this year we’ll be able to defense well and stay in games until the very end certainly,” said Indy Eleven head coach Tim Hankinson. “Certainly the possession tonight was a lot better than we’ve seen in our preseason games, so I’m pleased with that, and the patience we showed was very solid. That’s the way you have to play on the road, so the point tonight was a very well taken point.”The first half was dominated by the defenses as just one of the teams’ five combined shots would force a save, Busch doing the deed five minutes in with an easy grab of Tamika Mkandawire’s header 10 yards straight out from goal. That’s not to say Busch wasn’t active, as he darted off his line on several occasions to frustrate the Rowdies attack, most notably sliding in to thwart a couple of through balls intended for runs by new Tampa Bay striker Tommy Heinemann.The sides finally traded solid chances early in the second half, Busch going low to stop Heinemann’s shot from space in the 52ndminute and Indy midfielder Sinisa Ubiparipovic seeing his dipping effort from 25 yards miss just high four minutes later.The visitors looked more and more content to secure their road point as the half continued, but a flurry in the 78th minute would almost see the Eleven sneak into the lead. However, Rowdies goalkeeper Matt Pickens came up big, first steering aside a corner kick that somehow got through traffic in the six yard box before making his only save of the night on Indy forward Eamon Zayed’s volley from the right side of the area.The physicality of the Eleven defense would pay off time after time, as solid challenges and timely slide tackles throughout the evening helped keep Tampa off the board. However, Busch was called into service one last time in the 92nd minute when Eric Avila’s sidewinding shot from outside the area was hit with pace, but right at the Indy netminder in the center of goal.Indy Eleven (0W-1D-0L, 1 pt.) will take the road point back to the Hoosier State and prepare for its home opener next Saturday, April 9, against Ottawa Fury FC (0-0-0). Kickoff from Michael A. Carroll Stadium is set for 7:30 p.m. ET, and tickets remain available for Bicentennial Celebration night at “The Mike” starting at just $11 at www.IndyEleven.com. In addition, a $20 Bicentennial Picnic Pack featuring a ticket to the match and a meal full of Indiana favorites are on sale at bicentennial.indyeleven.com.

NASL Spring Season
Tampa Bay Rowdies  0 : 0  Indy Eleven
Saturday, April 2, 2016
Al Lang Stadium – St. Petersburg, FL
Attendance: 5,740

Indy Eleven: 
Spring Season: 0W-1D-0L (1 pt.)

Tampa Bay Rowdies:
Spring Season: 0W-1D-0L (1 pt.)

Scoring Summary:
None

Discipline Summary:
TBR – Neill Collins (caution) 40’
TBR – Darnell King (caution) 43’
IND – Brad Ring (caution) 53’
IND – Gorka Larrea (caution) 87’
TBR – Zac Portillos (caution) 87’
Indy Eleven line-up (4-2-3-1, L–>R):  Jon Busch; Nemanja Vukovic, Greg Janicki, Colin Falvey (capt), Lovel Palmer (Marco Franco 82’); Nicki Paterson (Gorka Larrea 63’), Brad Ring; Duke Lacroix (Jair Reinoso 73’), Sinisa Ubiparipovic, Justin Braun; Eamon Zayed  Eleven bench: Keith Cardona (GK), Cory Miller, Dylan Mares, Don Smart

Tampa Bay Rowdies (4-2-3-1): Matt Pickens; Zac Portillos, Neill Collins, Tamika Mkandawire (capt), Darnell King; Justin Chavez, Michael Nanchoff; Kalif Alhassan (Darwin Espinal 67’), Junior Burgos (Georgi Hristov 73’), Eric Avila; Tommy Heinemann  Rowdies bench: Michael Langer (GK), Jeremy Hall, Ben Sweat, Juan Guerra, Danny Mwanga

Rowdies open NASL season with 0-0 draw

  • By Darek Sharp, Times CorrespondentSaturday, April 2, 2016 10:38pm
  1. PETERSBURG — The Rowdies dominated possession the entire second half on Saturday but could not solve Indy Eleven, settling for a scoreless draw in their NASL season opener before 5,740 at Al Lang Stadium.Tampa Bay ended with a 12-6 shot advantage, nine coming in the second half.”Honestly, the last pass killed us,” midfielder Eric Avila said of Tampa Bay’s inability to finish after steady buildups.The last pass was actually perfect in the 52nd minute but Indy’s goalkeeper, Jon Busch, was there to stop the Rowdies’ most dangerous chance. Kalif Alhassan’s feed to Tommy Heinemann was perfectly crafted but Busch dove to stop it. Alhassan continued to serve as main creator along with Avila, and had another in-close setup for Junior Burgos six minutes later.All four are new to the roster. Avila posed a threat several times in the second half, but Indy’s defense proved sturdy. He had a shot from 20 yards in stoppage time but it went right to Busch.”Frustrated we didn’t get three points. We didn’t turn our dominance into goals,” Rowdies coach Stuart Campbell said.Several players more familiar to Rowdies fans either came on late, like Georgi Hristov in the final 20 minutes, or didn’t even make the list of eligible subs — namely Freddy Adu and defender Stefan Antonijevic, who started every game on defense when not injured last season.Indy’s best threat came in the 78th minute on a corner kick but Rowdies captain Tam Mkandawire came up with a necessary clearance.”We didn’t give up a lot of chances … we’ll take that. Of course you want to win every game but in reality that’s not going to happen,” Rowdies keeper Matt Pckens said.There was one shot on target combined in the first half and that was five minutes in. Mkandawire’s header off Michael Nanchoff’s corner kick was saved.In the 39th minute Heinemann one-timed a pass from Alhassan but it was blocked away.”We were a little nervous, little jittery early on,” Avila said.The field was in excellent condition despite heavy rain early in the day, the new tarp at Al Lang coming in quite handy.

New faces, same challenge

With many unfamiliar faces on the 2016 roster, “Indiana’s Team” takes on a fresh look under new head coach Tim Hankinson. Aware of the challenges ahead, Hankinson & Co. feel that the team they have assembled are more than capable of challenging for a place in the NASL’s four-team postseason tournament.Under the leadership of players brought from all realms of North American soccer – from MLS to the NASL to the USL – this year’s squad faces high expectations under Hankinson, who won the NASL’s regular season title with the San Antonio Scorpions during their 2012 expansion season. Bottom line, Hankinson knows how to get things going, and quickly, and nothing less will be expected.

Preseason difficulties stay in the preseason

After battling what seemed to be an abundance of preseason injuries, the Eleven are almost completely healed of their wounds from February and March.Going 2W-4D-3L during their nine game preseason slate, Coach Hankinson emphasized that the concepts sinking into his players’ brains take more time than just a month or two to settle, and that with an entire new group comes a gelling period that isn’t easily put on a timetable. Momentum is on their side, however, after a 1-0 win over Butler University compounded a 0-0 draw with the University of Louisville to cap off a defensively staunch early era. If the need is to grind out results until the goals come, the fact that the “Boys in Blue” let in more than a goal just once in those nine preseason exhibitions is a great sign.

Who to Watch, Indy Eleven edition: MF Nicki Paterson

Paterson comes to the Circle City as one of three to convert from expansion mate Ottawa Fury FC to the Eleven in the offseason. A human metronome, Paterson will bring a stability to the center of the park that will be necessary in the possession style Hankinson wants his charges to evolve towards.Though Paterson was one of many fighting a nagging injury, the now fully healthy Scotsman is relishing the opportunity to fight in Indianapolis and to earn a consistent place in Hankinson’s starting XI. Starting seven of nine games for the Fury while tacking on two goals, Paterson’s 2015 was brought to an early end by a knee injury. Now the true No. 8 has the perfect chance to prove why all his rehabilitation to return was worth it. While his possession game is key, it might be his tenacity on the defensive side of the ball against a dangerous Rowdies midfield that will be more important on Saturday night.

Match-up to Mark: Indy F Eamon Zayed

Indy’s new target man and true No. 9, Eamon Zayed’s early reputation has been as much about the Irish accent as it has the goal scoring, though there has been plenty of both. Zayed poked home three goals during the preseason slate to back up his reputation as a true goalscorer, and Coach Hankinson is ecstatic about the possibilities for the Irishman as he embarks on his 2016 campaign. With an eye for goal and ability in space, Zayed is a tough task to mark when in and around the area.

Talking Tactics: Tampa Bay Rowdies v Indy Eleven

by  Joshua Mason  Updated: April 6, 2016  http://brickyardbattalion.com/talking-tactics

Doug Starnes will be popping in this season for a weekly tactical discussion of the weekend’s match. You may recognize him from his previous work at Eleventh Heaven. Doug is an assistant coach with DePauw Women’s Soccer, Goalkeeper Coordinator for the Indiana Olympic Development Program, and volunteered his time scouting NASL opposition for the Indy Eleven coaching staff last season. You can follow Doug on Twitter at @GrassInTheSky1. Welcome, Doug!

New look Indy Eleven now have a match in the books under Tim Hankinson, and while the 0-0 draw may not have set the world on fire, it does give us a very good look at how this side will be set up and where Hankinson will likely be focusing his efforts to further develop what the team did well Saturday night while also improving in areas that fell a bit flat.

The 4-2-3-1

Hankinson made no secret of the fact that he wanted to play in a 4-2-3-1 system as soon as he arrived in Indianapolis and he proved true to his word when Indy took the field against Tampa Bay Saturday night. Brad Ring and Nicki Paterson were named to the two holding midfield berths (or double pivot or double six…semantics) with Duke Lacroix playing left midfield, Sinša Ubiparivović filling the number ten role underneath Éamon Zayed, and Justin Braun set up as a right-sided midfielder.What you need to know about this system if you’re not terribly familiar with it is that it provides lots of protection for the back four and, ideally, makes it difficult for the opposition to find space centrally in attack. The two sixes provide a shield in front of the back four that limits penetrating passes and space between the midfield and back line. It can, however, be exploited by teams with pacey and creative wide players (coincidentally, not unlike Tampa Bay) and it can sputter a touch in transition moments from defense to attack as the two holding midfielders are often unable to join the attack quickly enough.Interestingly, Tampa Bay countered Indy’s 4-2-3-1 with nearly the same system. Kalif Alhassan and Eric Avila , left and right midfielders respectively, were forced to take up positions significantly narrower than perhaps they – or at least Alhassan- would have liked. With Avila narrow, Darnell King had space to run in to, but he also had to worry about Lacroix’s pace behind him and the two somewhat canceled one another out. The end result of all of this was a match with limited opportunities for both sides and a very crowded midfield third.

Note the six players all with an average starting position inside the center circle. #Crowded

A Blunt Spear

As the match developed, it became increasingly clear that both teams were going to have issues transitioning to meaningful attacking moments. For much of the first half, Indy possessed the ball in the back, built forward, stalled, and then won the ball back immediately after Tampa Bay cleared their lines. The positive to take from this is that the Eleven looked more composed, organized, and confident across the back line than they have since the club became a club. The acquisition of veteran leaders like Colin Falvey and Jon Busch undoubtedly has much to do with this. As Chris Anderson and David Sally point out in their book The Numbers Game, when it comes down to it – at least statistically speaking – the goals you don’t concede are worth much more at the end of the season than the goals you score. But no one’s heart bursts for 0-0 draws either, and building meaningful attacks is something Hankinson will likely be working on in the coming weeks.

The real issue Saturday is that the two sides’ systems of play mostly canceled one another out and the crowded midfield made it difficult for Indy to find passes to their attacking players. As the match wore on, this situation was exacerbated by Braun moving centrally and Ubiparipović dropping deeper to get on the ball. There were moments in the match when Ubiparipović was picking up the ball from the back four behind both Ring and Paterson. You can’t blame your number ten for wanting to get on the ball, but once he was on it, his options forward were too far away and too isolated to create much of substance. Even Zayed started to drop further to get on the ball as he became more and more isolated.

Consider this, for the whole match Ubiparipović combined with Zayed, ostensibly the focal point of the Eleven attack, only four times. Of those four times, only one started and was completed in the Tampa Bay half. Braun combined with Zayed only once and Lacroix didn’t combine with him at all. To show how isolated Zayed was during the match, he had only 20 touches on the ball in 90 minutes. The next lowest total belongs to Duke Lacroix, but he was subbed in the 74th minute for Jair Reinoso. Indy mustered only one shot on target on six total shots.

This heat map shows all Indy Eleven players with the team attacking right to left. No threat high enough centrally, either due to denied service or starting position, to connect with and very little flank play in the attacking third.Conversely, Indy’s top passing combinations were Falvey to Palmer, Falvey to Janicki, Vukovic to Janicki, and Janicki to Vukovic. Notice anything?The sky isn’t falling. Scoring goals is the hardest thing to do in the game, especially when only three of the starters on the field Saturday night were returning players, but Hankinson will be disappointed the team didn’t create more chances and maybe a little uneasy knowing that the lack of goal scoring has carried over from the preseason.

Round Plugs, Square Holes

It may have slipped under the radar for some Eleven supporters considering he never played an official match for the team, but the release of Stephen DeRoux was a pretty big deal. DeRoux played last season for San Antonio Scorpions as a very useful attacking left back. He was no Justin Davis, but he would have provided Indy with a legitimate attacking threat from the left side. As it is now, Nemanja Vukovic has been enlisted to fill the void, but one gets the sense that he’s really a center back playing on the left side with a defense first and last approach. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it certainly limits the number of potential opportunities going forward.

Another player seemingly playing out of his preferred position Saturday night was Justin Braun. His natural inclination was to move inside to find the ball and he clearly still has the pace to run the channels. He seemed less comfortable trying to find space wide and then attack inside or make runs down the flank to provide service. It would have been interesting to see what Don Smart could have done toward the end of the match if Zayed had made way and Braun had been moved centrally.

Takeaway

Firstly, this was the first match of a long, hard season. Rarely does a team look at this stage how they will look at the end of the season.Secondly, Indy’s composure defensively and ability to limit Tampa Bay’s chances was actually pretty awesome to watch. Tampa Bay spent big in the offseason and acquired three of the best attacking players in the league in Tom Heinemann, Junior Burgos, and Kalif Alhassan. All three of those guys gave Indy fits last season when they were with their old teams, so limiting their chances when they were playing together at home is something to put in the bank.Lastly, the veteran leadership Indy acquired in the offseason was much needed and will pay dividends as the season unfolds. It may have seemed like a little thing, or perhaps went totally unnoticed by many supporters watching the match, but late in the second half Colin Falvey absolutely lit in to Tom Heinemann when he dribbled the ball out of bounds rather than passing it back to Jon Busch after Indy had been in possession and played the ball out in order for a player to receive treatment for an injury. It was a suspect thing for Heinemann to do, although not strictly wrong. These guys were teammates just a few months ago, but Falvey didn’t hesitate to let him know exactly what he thought of the play. There weren’t a lot of guys on the team last season who had the professional confidence and/or willingness to make demands and give direction to their teammates let alone players wearing a different shirt. The thing about that kind of leadership is that it empowers younger pros to do the same things and creates a clear standard. You can build on that.

Indy Eleven overhauls lineup, raise expectations

Tom Moor, IndyStar correspondent7:59 p.m. EDT April 1, 2016

WESTFIELD – A lot has changed since the Indy Eleven last took the field in a regular-season game Oct. 30.The Eleven have a new training facility at Westfield’s Grand Park, new president, new coach and 11 newcomers on the roster.Yes, the Indy Eleven certainly have a new look this season — and raised expectations.Coach Tim Hankinson is hoping an overhauled lineup will lead to a better product on the field. Despite leading the North American Soccer League in attendance their first two years in the league, the Eleven haven’t produced the on-field results they’ve been seeking. But that could soon change.Hankinson essentially gutted the team. The result is the Eleven — who open their season Saturday at the Tampa Bay Rowdies — have their most veteran and experienced team since debuting in Indianapolis in 2014. It’s a product Hankinson hopes will make the Eleven faithful proud.“Everywhere in soccer, there’s a lot of buzz about the Indy Eleven,” said Hankinson, a 36-year coaching veteran whose most recent stops include San Antonio and Jamaica. “We’re excited to come here and fight for a championship. There is great fan support here and an owner that is committed to winning.“Fans know the game and make it a great atmosphere. It’s great to have fans that truly love this.”The Eleven’s lineup features 11 new players, as well as 10 holdovers from last year’s team that finished 8-13-9 over the fall and spring seasons. Several of those players have Major League Soccer experience, and about five or six have served as captains on previous teams.The most notable, perhaps, is the signing of 39-year-old goalie Jon Busch, who spent 14 years in the MLS and was Goalkeeper of the Year in 2008.“The way things went last year with it being up and down, I think we brought in some stability and veteran leaders that will be good for the team,” said defender Greg Janicki, a returnee from last year’s squad. “Last year was my first year with the club, and I didn’t know what to expect. We had such a young team. We have more veteran leaders now, and we brought back a great group from last year.”Of the 21 players on the roster, 15 are at least 27 years old and several players are in their 30s — giving the Eleven a wealth of experience.Of the 11 newcomers, as many as eight could start Saturday. Hankinson has publicly stated that many of the holdovers would come off the bench because the quality of play last year wasn’t starting caliber.“I thought the first two years, the win column wasn’t strong enough for the fans who supported this team,” Hankinson said. “In many ways, I came in to replace the starting lineup with a better starting lineup.”Eleven public relations director John Koluder said the experience on this year’s team starts with players such as Busch, defender Lovel Palmer, midfielder Sinisa Ubiparipovic and forward Justin Braun — all of whom have considerable MLS experience. Players such as defender Colin Falvey, midfielder Gorka Larrea and forwards Eamon Zayed and Jair Reinoso have played for teams around the world.Many of the players also have the ability to play multiple positions, which gives the Eleven versatility.“The first two years (the Eleven) didn’t finish in the top four, but we expect to be in the top four this year, which means we’re a playoff team,” Hankinson said. “That can put yourself in position for the Cup. We really don’t have excuses. We’re not a developing team.”The Eleven received a setback when they lost defender Stephen DeRoux with a broken leg in a preseason game. That injury and inclement weather, Klouder said, may have played a role in finishing just 2-3-4 in the preseason.“The players are getting to know each other and their nuances,” Hankinson said. “They’ll get that figured out.”The Eleven host the Ottawa Fury FC in their home opener April 9 at Carroll Stadium at IUPUI.

INDY ELEVEN 2016 ROSTER
NUMBER NAME POS AGE PREVIOUS CLUB
1 KEITH CARDONA GK 23 FC LEIFERING (AUSTRIA)
2 Neil Shaffer D 27 Harrisburg (USL)
4 Brad Ring M 28 Portland (MLS)
5 Lovel Palmer D 31 Chicago (MLS)
6 Dylan Mares M 24 Indiana (NCAA)
7 Don Smart M 28 RVA FC (NPSL)
8 Nicki Paterson M 31 Ottawa (NASL)
9 Eamon Zayed F 32 Sabah FA (Malaysia)
10 Sinisa Ubiparipovic M 32 Ottawa (NASL)
12 Greg Janicki D 31 San Antonio (NASL)
14 Duke Lacroix F 22 Penn (NCAA)
15 Daniel Keller M 24 Chicago U-23 (PDL)
16 Cory Miller D 27 Orange County (USL)
18 Jon Busch GK 39 Chicago (MLS)
19 Wojciech Wojcik F 23 Ilves-Kissat (Finland)
20 Justin Braun F 29 Sacramento (USL)
23 Marco Franco D 24 Chicago (MLS)
24 Jair Reinoso F 30 Zhejiang Yiteng FC (China)
32 Colin Falvey D 30 Ottawa (NASL)
33 Gorka Larrea M 31 Montreal (MLS)
82 Nemanja Vukovic D 31 Sacramento (USL)

AFTER THE WHISTLE | WEEK 1 MOMENTS

A quick look back at some of the high points from last weekend’s action in the NASL’s 2016 Spring Season.Jack Bell (@JackBell} | Apr 4, 2016

Cosmos Hit The Ground Scoring: Same place. Same teams (with different players, of course). Way different result from The Championship Final last November.

New York, using a new cast of characters after the retirements of Spanish stars Raúl and Marcos Senna, plus other changes, played like a seven-time NASL Champion. A couple of early key saves by goalkeeper Jimmy Maurer led to some uncharacteristic miscues in the Ottawa end in New York’s convincing 3-0 victory in the final game of Week 1. Veteran midfielder Juan Arango, the career goalscoring leader for Venezuela’s national team, tallied first-half goals two minutes apart and the substitute Adam Moffat added one from distance (with Romuald Peiser way off his line).  With a solid back four and Niko Kranjčar coming off the bench for 13 classy minutes, the Cosmos served noticed that they have a deep squad that may be even better than the one that went unbeaten in the 2015 Spring Season, finished first in the Combined Standings and hoisted the Soccer Bowl Trophy.

Fast Times: Last year, Jemal Johnson scored 12 seconds

into expansion Jacksonville’s inaugural match, setting a Modern Era NASL record.

A forward for another expansion team – Dario Cvitanich of Miami FC – came close to matching Johnson’s feat when he came within inches of scoring only seconds into the club’s South Florida Derby match at Fort Lauderdale. The double debut – the first NASL game on the beIN SPORTS and the first league match in Miami FC history – ended in a 1-1 draw and Cvitanich will still go down as the first goalscorer in club history after he converted a penalty kick in the 12th minute.

There were also early fireworks in Cary, N.C., in the season’s curtain-raising game between the Carolina RailHawks and Minnesota United. Inside the first minute, Carolina’s Kareem Moses lofted a cross into the penalty area that was headed wide by Austin da Luz. Seconds later, the Loons’ Christian Ramirez scored a highlight-reel goal (that was No. 3 on the list of ESPN’s Top 10) on his first touch of the season.

Oklahoma Is OK: The stars seemed to be aligned during Rayo OKC’s debut in the NASL against visiting FC Edmonton on Saturday night.

A new, pristine playing surface at Miller Stadium in Yukon, Okla., with a packed house of more than 6,000 fans. Rayo OKC had a man advantage for 60 minutes, nearly 70 percent of possession and an astonishing 620 passes completed, but no goals to show for their efforts. Goalkeeper Matt VanOekel kept the Eddies in the match, saving a point late in the game when the substitute Georgios Samaras, Greek international, had his point-blank shot stopped.

Ready For Prime Time: The first of 34 NASL matches – Fort Lauderdale vs. Miami FC – was carried by beIN SPORTS on Saturday, marking a new era and new opportunity as the league embarks on its sixth season. The beIN partnership is only one of the spokes in the NASL’s TV strategy that now encompasses ESPN3.com, ONE World Sports (which does a “Game of the Week” and weekly highlight show), the Fall Season debut of the league on CBS Sports Network and the myriad local deals of each team. In fact, Miami FC matches will be carried in more than 100 countries. Whether it is via cable TV or streaming to a tablet or smartphone, all NASL games are ready for prime time.

We Got The Stats Right Here: Soccer has not been particularly known as a stat-heavy or dependent sport, unlike a slew of North American sports. After all, soccer is the simplest game. Opta has been out to change that and now with its new partnership with the NASL, the statmen cometh. Available on clicking on the match center tab for each match, the graphical representations and deep dive into the info enriches our understanding of games and is great fodder for discussion.

Chelsea: Guus Hiddink heaps praise on Matt Miazga following debut performance

By Arunava RayApril 4, 2016 14:58 BST

Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink is impressed with the way January signing Matt Miazga has carried himself against Aston Villa this weekend and believes that the 20-year-old will get a lot of opportunities to prove himself until the end of the season, with John Terry and Gary Cahill out through injury. The Blues signed Miazga in January from MLS franchisee New York Red Bulls andHiddink believes that he still has to attune himself to the rigours of the Premier League.

“To be honest this wasn’t the toughest game,” Hiddink said, as quoted by ESPN. “You have to consider also when a real good war is going on how you cope with that, but it’s a good first step up for him.”He’s coming from a league that is a bit naive compared to the Premier League, and he has to get used to a little more freedom given to the attackers by the referees, which I like. He has to cope with a little bit of a shuffle, of a push that in other leagues the referee would give free kicks for. That’s the naivety he has to leave as soon as possible but I didn’t see much of that [against Aston Villa].”The defending Champions made easy work of Aston Villa, beating them 4-0 with goals from Ruben Loftus-Cheek, Alexandre Pato and a second-half brace from Pedro Rodriguez to close the gap on Liverpool, who drew against Tottenham. A top four finish looks off the table, with the Blues now 10 points behind fourth placed Manchester City, with only seven games left in the season. However, Hiddink believes it is a great time for him to bring in a few youngsters to the squad and experiment with them for next season, especially with their fate all but decided in the league.”This club has brilliant players — world-class, experienced players and also young and up-and-coming players like Ruben [Loftus-Cheek] and Jake [Clarke-Salter] that train with the first team,” Hiddink said. “The club’s in good hands so we’ve just got to work hard on the training pitch, focus on ourselves and contribute in any way we can.”I just control what I can control, which is to work hard in training and hopefully give the manager a decision to make. If I get chances, I’ll take them,” he added.

4/2/16 US Gets Must Win, Champion League back, Full TV Game Schedule

Champions League

Tuesday’s previews: Bayern v Benfica, Barcelona v Atlético
Wednesday’s fixtures: Paris v Manchester City, Wolfsburg v Real Madrid
Tuesday’s team news:
 Who is in, who is out and who is a doubt?
Clásico: How Real Madrid beat Barcelona

GAMES of the Week

Tues, Apr 5

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid – Classic Spanish Showdown

Wed, Apr 6

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG – Can City use Home Field to sneak up on Ibra and PSG?

7 pm Fox Sports 1      US Women vs Columbia – US ladies continue home Olympics Prep

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund – Will Anfield help vs German Powerhouse?

Sat, Apr 9

7:30 am NBCSN            West Ham vs Arsenal  -West Ham looks to break into the top 4

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs Ottawa (Home Opener) –make plans now to get out to the Jake

Sun, Apr 10

7:30 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs Leciester City – Can Leciester continue magical run at a team fighting relegation?

11 am NCBCN                Tottenham vs Man United –  Can Spurs keep pressure on Leciester and knock Man U out of top 4? 

11 am Extra                    Liverpool vs Stoke City – 2 teams locked In battle for Europa League Top 6 finish

2 pm ESPN                      US Women vs Columbia

4:00 p.m ESPN              Houston Dynamo vs. Seattle Sounders Can Seattle stop 0-3 Start?

9:30 pm Fox Sports 1 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Portland Timbers –Playoff Contenders in Early battle

Tues, Apr 12

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG

Wed, Apr 13

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

Sat, Apr 16

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos (H)

GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV

Tues, Apr 5

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport 2 Bayern Munich vs. Benfica

Wed, Apr 6

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG

2:45 pm Fox Sport2  Real Madrid vs VFL Wolfsburg

7 pm Fox Sports 1      US Women vs Columbia

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund

3:00 p.m., FS2?            Sevilla vs. Athletic Bilbao

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Braga

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Sparta Prague vs. Villarreal

Sat, Apr 9

7:30 am NBCSN            West Ham vs Arsenal

9:30 am Fox Sport 1 Schalke vs Dortmund

11:30 am                          FS2                Koln vs Bayer Leverkusen

12:30 pm NBC              Man City vs West Brom

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs Ottawa (Home Opener)

Sun, Apr 10

7:30 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs Leciester City

11 am NCBCN                Tottenham vs Man United

11 am Extra                    Liverpool vs Stoke City

2 pm ESPN                      US Women vs Columbia

4:00 p.m ESPN              Houston Dynamo vs. Seattle Sounders

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 New York City FC vs. Chicago Fire

9:30 pm Fox Sports 1 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Portland Timbers

Tues, Apr 12

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m FoxSport1  Man City vs PSG

2:45 p.m., TV TBD:     Real Madrid vs. VfL Wolfsburg

Wed, Apr 13

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 pm, TV TBD:        Benfica vs. Bayern Munich

Thursday, April 14

UEFA Europa League (Quarterfinal second legs)

3:00 p.m., Fox Sports Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Sevilla vs. Athletic Bilbao
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Braga
3:00 p.m., TV TBD: Sparta Prague vs. Villarreal

Sat, Apr 16

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs NY Cosmos

Sun, Apr 17

3:30 pm ESPN                Orlando City vs. New England Revolution

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 FC Dallas vs. Sporting Kansas City

Mon, Apr 18

3 pm NBCSN                   Stoke City vs Tottenham

Tues, Apr 19

2:45 pm NBCSN            Newcastle vs Man City

Wed , Apr 20

2:45 pm NBCSN            Liverpool vs Everton

3 pm NBCSN Extra      Man U vs Crystal Palace

Thur, Apr 21

2:45 pm NBCSN            Arsenal vs West Brom

MLS TV Schedule ‘

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

COPA AMERICA 100 –GAMES IN CHICAGO

Sun -June 5 4 pm Jamaica vs Venezuela, Tues June 7 – 7 pm (USA vs Costa Rica), Friday, June 10 Argentina vs Panama 8:30 pm.

Wed, June 22  Semi Finals – 7 pm – Argentina vs Brazil maybe? 

Soldier Field  Chicago Venue Passes – If interested in planning a trip over – reach out to me (shanebestsoccer@gmail.com)

1410 S. Museum Campus Drive, Chicago, IL 60605   Seating charts reflect the general layout for the venue at this time these are general prizes based on the full venue packages – I’m sure they will be a little more but this gives you an idea. 

Level 1 seats – only things left are  front row $300+

Level 2 seats –   $115/game  upper corners Endzones, Level 2 sidelines – 

Level 2 sidelines– $200 each

Level 4 sidelines –  $115/game

 USA

US Is In Now – MLS.com

5 Issues Facing Klinnsmann ESPN FC McIntyer

US – Intangibles Won the Game – SI

US Veterans Come Thru – McIntyre ESPNFC

Consistency Not a Reality Klinsy says –

17 Year Old Christian Pulisic has Dream Debute

US Ladies Battle the Federation

US Ladies File Counter Suit vs US Soccer over lack of Pay –Grant Wahl SI

These U23s Didn’t Hurt their Reputations

US 23s Loss a Failure We Have Seen too many Times – ESPN FC

World Soccer

El Classico – Why BBC Trio is Curse for Madrid vs Barca

Messi vs Ronaldo – ESPNFC

Ronaldo Extends Lead over Messi

Iniesta Key to El Classico

Barca to Wear Special Badge to honor Dutch Legend Johan Cryuff

Spurs Fed up with Leicester FairyTail

 Indy 11

Indy 11 Coach -Versatility is Key for NASL Team

Indy 11 tie Louisvill 0-0 on last Preseason Road Game

Indy 11 beat Butler 1-0

MLS

Goals of Week

MLS Power Rankings

Early Table Glance

Ronaldino to MLS?

Seattle Will Figure it Out after 0-3 Start

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo: The fans’ view of the two star men

While the latest edition of El Clasico might not have direct title implications in La Liga, given Barcelona’s 10-point lead over Real Madrid, Saturday’s Camp Nou showdown does see Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo face each other once again.

Francesc Tomas (Barcelona) and Rob Train (Real Madrid) discuss their club’s star ahead of the latest meeting.

 

How have Messi and Ronaldo played this season?

Francesc Tomas: Messi has been Barca’s spiritual leader for the better part of the past decade, but his importance after the departure of Xavi and the arrival of Luis Suarez has reached new heights. No longer a promising youngster but an undisputed, inspirational leader, the No. 10 has an impressive 22 goals and 10 assists in his 25 appearances in La Liga this season. Most importantly, his increased maturity and generosity have played a vital role in the outcomes of others, particularly Suarez (already on 26 goals in the league) and Neymar (21).

Rob Train: The bulk of Ronaldo’s 28 league goals have been scored against second and third-tier sides: He has eight against Espanyol alone. When facing the more illustrious sides, though, he has been mostly anonymous. He disappeared in games against Atletico Madrid and Villarreal and managed just two shots in the last Clasico, against a season average of 6.3 per game. But talk of Ronaldo as a flat-track bully is inaccurate. He has done it in big games… just not recently.

What is the view of them among their own fans?

FT: Messi is Barca, it’s as simple as that. Whether you pop into a local market or sit down for a quick drink surrounded by tourists, the No. 10’s presence is never too far away. Cules‘ love for their world-class star is such that Messi shirts, figurines, sweets, bedding, bottle openers, scarves and even crisps are constantly flying off the shelves. Despite having enjoyed the brilliance of Ronaldinho, Johan Cruyff and even Diego Maradona at the peak of their careers, Catalans rightfully consider La Pulga the club’s best-ever player. He represents the essence of what La Masia and Barca’s philosophy is all about: talent, perseverance, endless creativity and winning.

RT: Ronaldo is a tricky one to pigeonhole. For all the “look-at-me” stuff, his off-pitch reputation is a lot better than some of his teammates, and he comes across as being generous with his time and his money. But the fans are divided, more so than with any other player. If he has a bad game, the whistles rain down. If he scores four, adulation pours. Recent commentsabout his teammates, whether misinterpreted or not, hardly helped his cause, and he will never be held in the collective heart like a Raul or Roberto Carlos. However, there is no doubt the majority of fans would rather have Ronaldo in their team than lining up against them.

What do Barca fans think of Ronaldo and Madrid of Messi?

FT: The Camp Nou faithful love to hate Ronaldo. His haughty attitude, tendency to prioritise individual to collective success and, perhaps more importantly, undeniable status as one of the world’s best-ever goal scorers make him the perfect target for Cules‘ jeering. The clear antithesis of Messi, the Portuguese’s attitude could not be further from what Catalans consider the model professional. Ronaldo’s insistence on shutting up the crowd whenever he scores a goal in the Catalan capital is a clear indication that the love between both sides is mutual, which comes as no surprise.

 

RT: Real fans can be exceptionally harsh toward their own but surprisingly gracious toward opposing players. Ronaldinho received an ovation at the Bernabeu in 2005, 22 years after Diego Maradona had the stadium on its feet. Andres Iniesta had a mixed reception in Barca’s 4-0 November victory. Will Messi ever be afforded the same affection? Probably, but only when he’s playing his last match at the Bernabeu. Until then, he’s too much of a thorn in the side to be lauded from the stands.

How have they played in past Clasicos?

FT: Having found Real Madrid’s net on 21 occasions, including a record two hat tricks, Messi is the all-time leading scorer of El Clasico. Having also contributed a remarkable 13 assists in his 31 appearances to date, it would be fair to say the pint-sized Argentine has been terrible news for Los Blancos for more than a decade. Since making his professional debut, Messi has won 15, drawn seven and lost only nine of the 31 matches he has played against Real.

RT: Since Ronaldo’s 2009 arrival at the Bernabeu, Real have won three, drawn two and lost six in the league against Barcelona. In the Copa del Rey since then, Real have won three, drawn two, lost one. Taking into consideration everything Barcelona have achieved in that time, the record isn’t too grim. Ronaldo has bagged 15 Clasico goals in all competitions, which is level with Raul. Only Messi (21) and Alfredo Di Stefano (18) have scored more.

What was their best Clasico moment?

FT: Fortunately, there have been many highlights to chose from, but one memory stands head and shoulders above the rest: 19-year-old Messi putting three goals past Iker Casillas in the 2007 Clasico. Messi’s passionate, magical hat trick will forever hold a special place in Barcelona hearts. It was the moment he stepped ahead of mentors Ronaldinho and Samuel Eto’o to take centre-stage in the biggest game in world football.

RT: Probably his towering header to win the 2011 Copa del Rey final, which was his first trophy success at Madrid. Ronaldo also scored the winner in an April 2012 game at Camp Nou, which was Real’s first victory at Barcelona in almost five years. The sides’ next meeting, in October of the same year, was arguably the only one that has yet lived up to the Ronaldo vs. Messi hype, as both players scored twice in a 2-2 draw.

Aside from Messi and Ronaldo, name one player who will be especially important on Saturday.

FT: Luis Suarez. Always ready for the physical battle and known to raise his level when under pressure, the Uruguayan will be relishing the chance to cause mayhem within Real Madrid’s backline. His relentless energy, dynamism and ability to connect with either Messi or Neymar, even when in tight spaces, could be the decisive factor to tip the balance in the Catalans’ favour. Having already found the net on 26 occasions in the league this season despite taking only 3.8 shots per game, Barca’s No. 9 will keep goalkeeper Keylor Navas busy.

RT: Keylor Navas. It is next to impossible to stop Barcelona from peppering your goal with shots. Villarreal tried it in a 2-2 draw recently, playing with two banks of four when not in possession. They made 20 tackles, racked up 17 fouls and incurred eight yellow cards, yet Barca still had 15 shots. Navas has been in excellent form this season and will need to be at the peak of his powers on Saturday.

What is your prediction for Saturday’s result?

FT: 3-0 to Barcelona.

RT: 2-1 to Barcelona.

Jurgen Klinsmann still has U.S. issues despite win over Guatemala

The U.S. men’s national team can breathe easier now.A World Cup qualifying campaign that was threatening to veer off course is now back on track, thanks to a 4-0 walloping of Guatemala. In fact, a U.S. win against St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Sept. 2 combined with a home win by Trinidad & Tobago over Guatemala could see the Americans wrap up progression to the Hexagonal with a game to spare.Such was the level of the Americans’ dominance on Tuesday that it’s a wonder just how they managed to lose to Los Chapines on Friday. But if these past two games have revealed anything about the U.S. it’s that there are still questions to be answered.This summer’s Copa America — with a minimum of three games against Colombia, Costa Rica and Paraguay — should provide some opportunity to resolve some of these issues, as will the last two World Cup qualifiers.Here are five pressing issues Klinsmann needs to sort out in the coming months.

  1. Identify and expand the core

With Klinsmann coming under fire for changing his lineups (80 different incarnations in 82 games, according to U.S. Soccer), the coach went on something of a counteroffensive following Tuesday’s match. It was pointed out that predecessor Bob Bradley used 77 different lineups in 80 games, with Bruce Arena utilizing 129 in 130 before that.The numbers obscure a deeper issue, however. It’s perhaps telling that Bradley’s core group, the players who were the backbone of his side, can be recalled without too much difficulty. Tim Howard, Carlos Bocanegra, Oguchi Onyewu, Steve Cherundolo, Michael Bradley, Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey were constants during the 2010 cycle. Some combination of Brian Ching, Charlie Davies and Jozy Altidore logged considerable minutes up top.Klinsmann’s core group looks and feels much thinner. You have Bradley, Dempsey and now Geoff Cameron in the mainstay category, but caveats are attached to others. Fabian Johnson can be considered for membership, that is when he’s not injured or in Klinsmann’s doghouse. Jermaine Jones also qualifies, though his advancing age raises the question of for how much longer. Altidore has struggled to shake the injury bug as well. Gyasi Zardes has logged plenty of minutes, but still doesn’t seem like a long-term answer in midfield.Changes to the lineup are inevitable due to suspension, health and form. But the cohesiveness needed on the field requires a reliance on a group of players deemed essential to success.Klinsmann needs to accelerate the formation of that group.

  1. Find a consistent center-back pairing

Tuesday’s central duo of Cameron and Steve Birnbaum acquitted itself well. Both players were commanding in the back and efficient with their passing. But the match was also witness to a rather eyebrow-raising stat. Birnbaum is the fifth center-back that Klinsmann has used so far in just four World Cup qualifiers. He used three — Bocanegra, Clarence Goodson and Cameron — during the entire semifinal round four years ago.Granted, some of this is injury induced with Matt Besler being ruled out for both Guatemala games because of a concussion. But John Brooks, another injured center-back who Klinsmann said last week is his No. 1 choice at the position, has yet to make an appearance during this qualifying round, so injuries don’t entirely explain the turnover in the center of defense.On days when a team struggles, especially during road qualifiers, chemistry in the back can go a long way toward allowing a team to accumulate points when it otherwise shouldn’t. But Klinsmann seems a ways away from achieving that. If Brooks, when healthy, is filling one spot, who takes the other? Cameron would seem the logical choice, but the amount of time they’ve spent playing together seems minimal. It’s something Klinsmann should aim to rectify this summer.

  1. The midfield configuration

The U.S. once again benefited from having Kyle Beckerman in the lineup as a dedicated holding midfielder. He broke up plays, initiated attacks and generally provided a security blanket for both Bradley and Graham Zusi to push forward and press the Guatemalan midfielders.But what Klinsmann will do going forward in terms of his midfield alignment is anybody’s guess. Jones’ ongoing suspension will be well over by the time the Copa America comes around. He is a Klinsmann favorite so he could easily slide into Zusi’s spot.But against the better teams in CONCACAF and elsewhere, the U.S. has tended to play better with a two-forward system. What then? Earlier in qualifying, Bradley and Jones occupied the middle, but the question of which player occupies Beckerman’s role comes to the forefront in that neither player — Jones in particular — seems inclined to take it up.Klinsmann could play all three in a 4-4-2 as he did at the 2014 World Cup. Another mild wrinkle is Bradley’s upcoming suspension for the game against St. Vincent because of yellow card accumulation. But Klinsmann will need to at least identify a Plan A for how he wants his midfielders to be deployed.

  1. Maintain the aggressive mentality

The Guatemala game was noteworthy for the way the U.S. imposed itself from the outset, pressing the opponent high up the field and forcing a slew of wayward passes. It raises the question of why it took a backs-to-the-wall type of scenario to play with urgency and aggression.Granted, against the kind of highly skilled teams the U.S. will face this summer at the Copa America, it’s important to pick spots in terms of where and when to press. But the mentality that was evident on Tuesday needs to be present on a more consistent basis. It’s when the U.S. team plays its best. You would hope that will be the case when World Cup qualifying resumes in September.

  1. Resolve the goalkeeping situation

For the same reason that Klinsmann needs to settle on his center-back options, he needs to do the same with his goalkeeper. It helps develop familiarity in a critical part of the field.In terms of the competition between Howard and Brad Guzan, the latter came out of these two games in better shape, though to be fair, the U.S. played far better on Tuesday than it did in front of Howard on Friday. And with Guzan a far more likely bet than Howard to get playing time down the stretch at club level, it stands to reason he would take the lead in the race to be the starting goalkeeper.

Yet Klinsmann seems to have a greater amount of faith in Howard. Perhaps Howard’s exploits during the previous cycle and at the World Cup weigh heavier. So far in this round of qualifying, it is Howard who has been handed the tougher road assignments while Guzan has played in both home matches. Club form hasn’t seemed to matter.That could change, of course. Howard is practically guaranteed to get playing time when he completes his move to the Colorado Rapids, while Aston Villa’s looming relegation from the Premier League makes it unclear what lies in store for Guzan. Either way, the sooner Klinsmann makes a decision, the sooner some cohesion can be developed.Jeff Carlisle covers MLS and the U.S. national team for ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreyCarlisle.

 Jurgen Klinsmann says consistency not a reality for United States team

United States manager Jurgen Klinsmann has said he would love to have all his players at his disposal at all times, but added, “unfortunately, it’s not the reality.”Responding in part to questions about his propensity for tinkering — the U.S. has started 80 different lineups in 82 games under Klinsmann — the manager said injuries, form and availability makes consistency unrealistic.The U.S. coach spoke following his team’s crucial 4-0 CONCACAF World Cup qualifying win vs. Guatemala in Columbus, Ohio, on Tuesday.Klinsmann brought 2014 World Cup veterans Graham Zusi and Kyle Beckerman back into the starting XI for the win, while playing Geoff Cameron in the center-back position alongside Steve Birnbaum. Brad Guzan started in goal over Tim Howard, a move that was planned in advance.The moves worked to perfection for the most part, as the U.S. defense kept a clean sheet and the team earned a necessary three points following adisappointing 2-0 loss last Friday in Guatemala City.

“Every coach’s wish is always to be consistent with his players being available, everybody at your disposal,” Klinsmann said. “Unfortunately it’s not reality. Reality is we lost Matt Besler and John Brooks and Fabian Johnson in the days prior to the game in Guatemala.”Reality is [on Tuesday] Ale [Bedoya] couldn’t make it. So the reality is with the group of players that we have, we’re going to work things out. Here and there, things don’t work out the way you wanted.”The U.S. was on the front foot from the outset in Columbus, with Clint Dempsey putting the Americans ahead just 12 minutes into the match and Geoff Cameron doubling the lead from a set piece at the 35-minute mark.That was all part of the plan, according to Klinsmann.”Obviously, the clear message was we have to attack,” he said. “We have to go forward. We have to score goals and get the three points.”It’s important that we really found partnerships in that 4-3-3 formation. We knew they were going to clog the box in front of their goal, that’s what happened. So you need to find ways to come over the wings. We trained that way.”Klinsmann has been under fire in recent weeks and months for the performances of the U.S. team, especially the loss in Guatemala, a team the U.S. hadn’t lost to in World Cup qualifying since 1988.The criticisms, said the coach, are part of the job, but he did admit sometimes it can go a little too far.”I let people say whatever they would like to say. That’s all right with me,” Klinsmann said. “Here and there you wish maybe some comments would be a little bit more respectful. But it is what it is.”It’s an emotional game. As a coach you have to live with that. But I think this result tonight makes it clear. Now we can really plan for hopefully a very, very exciting Copa America.”The U.S. starts its Copa America Centenario campaign on June 3, against Colombia at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. The team’s next World Cup qualifying match is Sept. 2, away to St. Vincent and the Grenadines.ESPN FC writer Doug McIntyre contributed to this story.

USA believes that intangibles, not tactics, fuel win over Guatemala

United States routs Guatemala in World Cup qualifier

The U.S. men’s national team relieved pressure and got its 2018 FIFA World Cup campaign back on track by defeating Guatemala 4-0 on Tuesday.

BY BRIAN STRAUS

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Posted: Wed Mar. 30, 2016

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — Asked to explain why the U.S. national team has been so dominant in Columbus, captain Michael Bradley paused and simply said, “There’s certain things that are hard to put a finger on.”

The meticulous midfielder then gave it a try, of course, and referenced the pro-U.S. support and the size of Mapfre Stadium, among other possibilities. But in the end, the reason for the Americans’ 8–0–3 record here—the reason they’ve secured the result they needed in so many must-win games—probably can’t be quantified. In soccer, where the margins are so small, intangibles can make a significant difference.

PLANET FUTBOL

Video

USA eases World Cup qualifying pressure as veterans come through

by Brian Straus

Coach Jurgen Klinsmann and the U.S. faced the unthinkable on Tuesday night. A loss to Guatemala would leave them all but eliminated from the 2018 World Cup more than two years before the quadrennial tournament kicks off in Russia. An ugly loss to Los Chapines on Friday in Guatemala City left the Americans at 1–1–1 in their four-team semifinal group. Defeat in Columbus would result in a practically insurmountable five-point deficit with only two matches left.

The World Cup, along with everything Klinsmann has been trying to build during his five-year tenure, was at stake.

“If you’re not qualifying for the World Cup, that’s a major step backwards,” Clint Dempsey said. “You’ve got to look within yourself, man—how bad you want it? How bad do you want to go to the World Cup? How bad do you want to continue progressing the game in the States? You’ve got to put that on your shoulders. You’ve got to represent your country with pride and I thought the boys did that tonight.”

PLANET FUTBOL

Video

2002 U.S. World Cup stars weigh in on state of Klinsmann, USMNT

by Grant Wahl

Dempsey’s “boys” ran over and through Guatemala, taking a lead on his eighth-minute goal, doubling it with a Geoff Cameron header about 20 minutes later and rolling to a 4–0 win that puts them on the threshold of the Hexagonal, the final round of CONCACAF’s World Cup qualifying competition. The performance and outcome made Friday’s 2–0 loss appear all the more vexing. Guatemala was a team that had won only three of 16 games last year. It was shut out by lightweights like Cuba and Antigua. It was ranked 95th in the world for a reason. Yet the U.S. deserved that defeat. The Americans’ focus was poor, their structure was wrong and their finishing was awful. On Tuesday, however, it all improved. Guatemala was put in its place, on the back foot and bunkering.

Klinsmann called it, “A very clear message that we are on top of the game and we are in the driver’s seat again.”

How did the U.S. get there? From the stands and the press box, it seemed obvious. Cameron, arguably the team’s top defender, returned to his preferred spot at center back and played a mistake-free game. He also contributed a goal and an assist. DeAndre Yedlin returned to right back, which he plays primarily at Sunderland, and was solid defensively while threatening the visitors on the flank. Kyle Beckerman, who remained on the bench in Guatemala, was an anchor in center midfield, plugging holes when the outside backs roamed forward and giving Bradley and Graham Zusi room to create. Gyasi Zardes and Bobby Wood stretched the Guatemalan defense and Dempsey, Zusi, Cameron and Jozy Altidore finished the chances that were missed on Friday.

Photo: Jamie Sabau/Getty Images

The lineup was practical, balanced and put several key players in position to do what they do best, something for which many fans have been clamoring. But when asked to assess the reasons for their win, the players pointed not to the stat sheet or the tactics, but to the intangibles. And Klinsmann, who’s been under pressure for fielding a variety of lineups in a variety of formations, said that sort of flux was inevitable for a national team coach. It was the approach, not the specifics, that define his team.

“Every coach’s vision is always to be kind of consistent with his players being available and having everybody at your disposal and keeping them playing in the same direction,” Klinsmann said. “But unfortunately, it’s not reality. Reality is we lost Matt Besler and John Brooks and Fabian Johnson in the days prior to the game in Guatemala. Reality is tonight, Alejandro Bedoya couldn’t make it. So for us reality is, with the group of players that we have, we are going to work things out. I think we are doing a very decent job doing that. Here and there, things don’t work out the way you want it, like it happened there in the first 20 minutes in Guatemala City. I think it’s important that we all know that it’s difficult to go through those qualifiers to be on top of things.”

PLANET FUTBOL

Promises fall flat as USA U-23s miss out on Olympics again

by Liviu Bird

U.S. Soccer said that Klinsmann has used 80 different lineups in his 82 games in charge. That seems like a lot, until you look at the rest of the list. Bob Bradley used 77 lineups in 80 games and Bruce Arena employed 129 in 130 games, according to the federation. Form, injuries, consistency, club issues and travel all conspire to force a national team coach to get creative as he goes. Zusi, for example, was called in from Kansas City only Sunday. He then started Tuesday and scored.

“What I think you saw tonight is our MO,” Zusi said. “That’s the kind of soccer we like to play—aggressive mentality, always on the forefront, put them under enormous amounts of pressure and scoring goals.”

That doesn’t spring from a formation, Bradley said. It comes from some place deeper.

“It didn’t take much explaining to realize what was at stake,” he said. “I talked yesterday about the need for every guy to understand that at different times throughout these cycles you’re going to play a game where everything’s on the line—where if you lose you’re done. And that can’t scare you. You’ve got to have guys who embrace that challenge, who know when those moments come that’s what it’s all about. For tonight we dealt with it well. We had guys respond in a big way. Who knows, there might be another one soon.”

Dempsey concurred, saying, “You’ve just seen the heart everybody showed—the fight, the aggressiveness, the tackles, the second balls and the quality in front of goal. … Tonight we came out and showed our real quality, so I’m proud of the boys.”

Repeating his pre-game stand, Klinsmann said once again on Tuesday that he has “never put anybody out of his position.” He also said, “We really kind of found partnerships in the 4–3–3 formation.” But are those repeatable? Is Klinsmann’s group finally on its way to finding some of sort of predictable tactical structure that can withstand a national team’s revolving door? Recently, the U.S. has appeared to be a squad that’s constantly reinvented. But Klinsmann’s comments imply that such upheaval is par for the course. Players with different strengths will come and go. Opponents and scenarios will change. On Tuesday, with its World Cup hopes in the balance, the U.S. needed an emphatic response.

According to Klinsmann, they delivered.

“What the guys did tonight was outstanding,” he said. “A perfect way basically to respond to that disappointment a couple of days ago. It’s been a long couple of days, because of obviously analyzing it and correcting it. But a huge compliment to every one of them.” 

According to Beckerman, they delivered.

“We needed a big reaction and think everybody had that same mindset of a big reaction,” he said. “Aggressive, high intensity, get the ball moving fast, and I think that aggression led to everything else that went good for us.”

And that, Bradley said, is what was repeatable going forward toward this summer’s Copa América Centenario, the final semifinal round qualifiers in September and then the Hexagonal.

“What’s repeatable is the commitment, the mentality, the willingness of every guy who steps on the field, from the 11 starters to the three subs, to spill their guts on the field,” Bradley said. “That’s repeatable.”

Borussia Dortmund’s Christian Pulisic happy after U.S. senior team debut

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Christian Pulisic, the 17-year-old Borussia Dortmund midfielder, became the youngest American ever to appear in a World Cup qualifier when he came off the bench in the second half of Tuesday’s 4-0 U.S. win over Guatemala.Pulisic was supposed to join the American squad last week, but an illness delayed his arrival. The playmaker has made six appearances since January for the Bundesliga’s second-place team. He’s the eighth-youngest player ever to appear in Germany’s top-flight.”It’s been a dream of mine to play for the U.S. national team,” said the Hershey, Pennsylvania product, who was also eligible to play for Croatia but became cap-tied to the U.S. for the remainder of his career the second he entered the field. “It finally came true, so I’m thankful.”He said he was welcomed into the U.S. squad with open arms.”It’s amazing just to meet all these guys,” he said. “They took me in right away, and it felt good to be part of the team and to get on the field.”Pulisic also tweeted to his fans afterward.Pulisic played the final nine minutes Tuesday after replacing Graham Zusi. It was enough time to impress his teammates.”I thought he was great,” midfielder Kyle Beckerman said. “He was really comfortable already, especially for a 17-year-old. It’s pretty impressive. It seems like he has a really good head on his shoulders. He’s in a great place to keep learning and as you saw tonight, it looks like he’s been in a bunch of times.””He’s a great player,” added Clint Dempsey, who surpassed Landon Donovan on the all-time qualifying goals list when he scored the Americans’ opener Tuesday. “He showed his confidence getting on the ball tonight.”Pulisic said he spoke to U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann about potentially joining the U.S. U-23 squad for Tuesday’s ultimately unsuccessful Olympic qualifying match against Colombia.”We talked about it,” Pulisic said. “But we felt that it was the best time to come in with the men’s national team, and we decided to do it. It worked out.”Klinsmann tried to take the pressure off the youngster before inserting him.”We prepared Christian to do it just the way he does it in his club team: don’t over-think,” Klinsmann said. “He was very calm, he was very balanced. I told him just do it like you do at Dortmund, have the same approach. And that’s what he did.”Still, U.S. defender Geoff Cameron is among the many preaching patience despite Pulisic’s obviously ability.”He’s a young kid, so you guys don’t over-blow him up,” the Premier League veteran joked with reporters. “Just let him do what he does, and he’ll be a great talent for us.”

Which MLS players escaped U.S. Olympic failure with reputation intact?

This past year has been something of a chastening year for U.S. Soccer within its own geographic region. There were the Gold Cup losses to Jamaica and Panama, the CONCACAF Cup loss to Mexico and the MLS teams being uniformly eliminated by Mexican opposition in the quarterfinals of the CONCACAF Champions League.And this last weekend offered further evidence that the U.S. in general still has a lot of work to do. Tuesday’s emphatic victory over Guatemala in Columbus might have suggested normal service being resumed, but the debacle in Guatemala City that preceded it will probably hold a more indelible place in the memory of U.S. fans increasingly less indulgent of Jurgen Klinsmann’s penchant for unfamiliar lineups.

And then there was the U-23s.

A credible draw in Colombia on Friday had briefly raised hopes that October’s CONCACAF Olympic qualifying loss to Honduras, on the day the senior team lost to Mexico in the CONCACAF Cup, might not prove fatal after all. But on Tuesday, the team barely hung in with a rampant Colombian side, ending the game with nine men and much more comprehensively beaten than the 2-1 scoreline suggested.The U.S. looked outclassed all over the field, and now must endure both a postmortem on their collective performance and some hard individual assessments from Klinsmann and his coaches, as he considers who to salvage from the wreckage for future development and incorporation into the senior team between now and (hopefully) Russia 2018.But let’s focus in particular on the MLS contingent, the types of players for whom the Olympics would have represented a real chance to make a case for their future senior team roles, without pinning all their hopes on the lottery of a January team camp slot. Who did well? Who didn’t? And who (this may sound familiar) was not set up to succeed?

Good: Tim Parker | Center-back | Vancouver Whitecaps

Parker has been one of the pleasant surprises of the past year, as he has emerged as a central defensive starter for Vancouver Whitecaps, and now as a solid international prospect.Probably the most consistent presence for the U.S. over two legs, Parker was kept busy by the intricate approach play of the Colombians but stood his ground robustly. A little too robustly at times; he was perhaps lucky not to see red instead of yellow in the second leg after what looked like a clear stamp.That would perhaps have been an unduly harsh end to his personal Olympic campaign, however. Defensive partner Matt Miazga did see red, and the Chelsea player often looked every inch the benchwarmer he currently is, as he struggled to find the rhythm, timing and positioning that comes with match sharpness. There were times when a sprawling Miazga was grateful for the no-nonsense physical presence of Parker beside him.He’ll return to a steadying Vancouver Whitecaps team who actually secured their first clean sheet of the season without him last weekend, but who will doubtless continue to lean on the 6-foot-2 Long Islander as he builds on last year’s promising rookie season.

Indifferent: Jordan Morris | Forward | Seattle Sounders

The Seattle Sounders player started the year electing to remain in MLS to grow with his hometown team rather than take a professional contract with Werder Bremen in the Bundesliga. The learning curve in Seattle got steeper straight away, with the departure of Obafemi Martins putting an instant weight of expectation upon Morris’ shoulders.He’s started as slowly as you’d expect any new young professional to do, and while other young U.S. players who might have helped the U-23s — such as John Brooks and DeAndre Yedlin — were deemed too important to the senior team to feature in the Olympic playoff roster, Morris was not called up to face Guatemala and instead helped lead the line against Colombia.He did OK. There was enough there to suggest that the intelligent running off the ball he’s been celebrated for could become a significant weapon for future U.S. teams, but there were also unfavorable comparisons to be made to some of his Colombian counterparts as a creative outlet.There was one moment in the first leg, where an instinctive first-time shot with the outside of Morris’ boot arced off the Colombian crossbar. Had it dropped, and had the U.S. had a bigger away-goals cushion, perhaps they could have organized to keep Colombia at bay in the second half and his contribution would have been the centerpiece of a famous victory.That’s a big perhaps, and perhaps, too, that would have obscured a sober analysis of Morris’ strengths and weaknesses. If he is to grow into the type of player his club and country hope he’s going to become, some sober analysis of his current ability is not the worst thing.

Bad: Kellyn Acosta | Left-back/midfielder | FC Dallas

This was a rough series for Acosta, though, let’s be very clear and very fair: the Dallas player fell short of a very high benchmark. More usually a defensive midfielder in an exciting young FC Dallas team, Acosta has been caught up in Klinsmann’s ongoing talent competition in which he searches for a viable long-term left-back amid a dearth of credible options.Thrown in to play as a full-back for the senior team during the January camp, Acosta was willing but predictably suspect on positioning at the international level, and the Colombia series represented a further schooling for him.The first leg in Barranquilla was particularly torrid for Acosta, who had already been turned several times before his most significant contribution of conceding the penalty that tied that game. To give credit to the player, by the end of the second leg he was adjusting to a difficult role, although once again he drew attention to himself for the wrong reasons when he headed wide of an open net late on.So yes, in falling short of international standard at an unfamiliar position, it was not a good series for Acosta. If it’s any consolation to him, there are more than a few players in the senior roster who know exactly how he feels.Perhaps there’s more good news for Acosta: If he can improve in the position Klinsmann and Andi Herzog seem to want him to grow into, he’ll be at the front of a virtually non-existent line, compared to the ones faced by some of his peers who did better in more-contested positions.Graham Parker writes for ESPN FC, Grantland, The Guardian US and Howler. He covers MLS and the U.S. national teams. Follow him on Twitter @KidWeil.

U.S. U-23s Olympic qualifying loss a failure seen too many times before

FRISCO, Texas — In 2012, the United States under-23 team failed to qualify for the London Olympics after a speculative, long-range effort from El Salvador’s Jaime Alas found its way past goalkeeper Sean Johnson in the 94th minute. The tally forced a 3-3 draw, giving the Americans a tepid third-place showing in their group.Four years later, Andi Herzog’s side couldn’t beat Colombia in a two-game playoff, and the U.S. will miss the Olympics for the second-straight time, an “accomplishment” it hasn’t achieved in 48 years. It’s another blow to the program under head coach and technical director Jurgen Klinsmann, another box on the checklist unchecked.It’s also a two-game series that followed the distressingly familiar pattern of other signature losses. Colombia outshot the Americans 41 to 10, and the U.S. scored two goals despite managing a single shot on goal across the 180 minutes. Los Cafeteros out-possessed the red, white and blue 66-34 while attempting nearly twice the number of passes and completing 83 percent to the U.S.’s 65.”The problem was that we weren’t able to create chances,” a dejected Herzog said in a postgame news conference. “We have to make quicker combinations on the ground but we just kick the ball in the air. That is not our style of game.”Kellyn Acosta, who struggled in an unfamiliar full-back role in both matches, agreed. “We need to match their intensity,” he said. “We came out kind of flat-footed, kind of slow. They kind of took the game to us. We need to battle. It was life or death, really. I think it shows. They outplayed us throughout the entire game.” That’s an honest, if brutal, assessment of the proceedings. It’s also something we hear too often. The U.S. comes out flat. It runs into trouble against physical opponents, whether it’s Colombia in Barranquilla and Frisco, Honduras during Olympic qualifying in October or even the senior side against Guatemala on Friday.The coaches talk a good game about possession, patience and passing, but the words fail to manifest themselves into action and reality on the field. The American team fails to be more than the sum of its parts.And now we have another generation of U.S. players missing the Olympics. Let’s be clear: it’s not the complete and utter disaster that failing to reach the World Cup would be. The soccer tournament at the Summer Games is a strange animal, a mostly under-23 event with three overage players designed to give the planet a fix of the up-and-coming stars of the world’s game but not compete with FIFA’s monopoly. Due to this summer’s Copa America Centenario, the field will be watered down even further.But the Olympics do represent a serious opportunity for younger players to experience high-quality matches in pressure situations. For a team like the U.S., which has a relatively easy road to World Cup qualification and whose continental championship lacks the rigors of the European Championship, three games or more at the Olympics create an excellent chance for players to develop and thrive. Consider how members of the 2008 team like Benny Feilhaber, Stuart Holden, Michael Bradley and Jozy Altidore used the tournament as a springboard to the 2010 World Cup roster.The flipside is that missing the Olympics has a negative effect on the players’ future. The 2012 squad that didn’t go to London hasn’t lived up to its potential. Of the 20 men on the roster, only Mix Diskerud can be considered a regular on the senior team. Bill Hamid and Sean Johnson can’t find consistency. Neither can Juan Agudelo, Brek Shea, Joe Corona or Teal Bunbury. Terrence Boyd and Joe Gyau can’t stay healthy. And those are the successful members of that group. hile failing to qualify for the Olympics isn’t the sole reason that group didn’t progress as Klinsmann and his staff hoped, it’s a factor. When asked what the Americans could do differently to qualify, Acosta had a simple answer. “[It’s the] little details, really, that can make everyone from good to great,” he said. Players have to learn how to take care of those little details, and the U.S. youth teams — and, to a lesser extent, the senior team as well — have largely been unsuccessful at doing so during the past half decade.It’s a self-perpetuating cycle: the team lacks the toughness and intensity to get a result in adverse situations, so it doesn’t qualify and it doesn’t get more opportunities to gain experience in adverse situations. It’s on the players to produce and the coaches to prepare them. For two Olympic cycles, we’ve seen nothing but failure.Life and soccer, of course, go on. Herzog, despite still processing the defeat, offered that three or four starters should come out of every four-year group. He didn’t think the last team hit that number, that very few were making an impact. “With this group, we’ll see,” he said of his disappointed team that was still changing in the Toyota Stadium dressing room.Starting center-back Matt Miazga should be one of those players. He already has one senior team cap to his name, a headline-grabbing transfer from the New York Red Bulls to Chelsea and limitless potential. He showed poorly against Colombia, misjudging balls and looking to be a quarter-step slow. A straight red card he picked up in the closing moments of the second match served as a fitting end for his effort and put a cap on the Americans’ performance. But he’s only 20 years old and he’ll play another day. So will his teammates.”A lot of the guys are really talented,” he said when asked about the future during a brief stop before being one of the last players to board the team bus. “Hopefully, we continue on the full national team.”Noah Davis is a Brooklyn-based correspondent for ESPN FC and deputy editor at American Soccer Now. Twitter: @Noahedavis.

USWNT stars accuse U.S. Soccer of wage discrimination in EEOC filing

SI senior writer Grant Wahl explains why the U.S. women’s national team has a strong argument in its wage discrimination case against U.S. Soccer.BY GRANT WAHLADD FAVORITETwitter EmailPosted: Thu Mar. 31, 2016

Get all of Grant Wahl’s columns as soon as they’re published. Download the new Sports Illustrated app (iOS or Android) and personalize your experience by following your favorite teams and SI writers.In the latest labor salvo between the World Cup-winning U.S. women’s national team players and the U.S. Soccer Federation, the five most prominent members of the USWNT have filed an action with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (a government agency) accusing U.S. Soccer of wage discrimination in relation to the money the federation pays to the U.S. men’s national team.In a press release announced Thursday morning, lawyers for the five U.S. players—Carli Lloyd, Alex Morgan, Hope Solo, Megan Rapinoe and Becky Sauerbrunn—argue that the USWNT is paid almost four times less than the USMNT, despite producing nearly $20 million in revenues for U.S. Soccer in 2015 (per U.S. Soccer’s recently released annual financial report).The U.S. Soccer pay figures for the men and women (numbers from documents obtained by SI.com are presented in the table below) were agreed to by the players as part of separate collective bargaining agreements, but the U.S. women’s team argues that its CBA has expired.

USWNT, USMNT pay gap

Payment situation USWNT
(2013-present)
USMNT
(2015-18)
Friendlies (per player, vs. teams not in FIFA’s top 25, excluding Mexico) $1,350 for a win $9,375 for a win;
$6,250 for a tie;
$5,000 for a loss 
Friendlies (per player, vs. teams ranked 11-25, excluding Mexico) $1,350 for a win $12,500 for a win;
$6,250 for a tie;
$5,000 for a loss
Friendlies (per player, vs. teams ranked 1-10 and Mexico) $1,350 for a win $17,625 for a win;
$8,125 for a tie;
$5,000 for a loss
World Cup roster bonus $15,000 per player WCQ match bonus;
$15,000 per player WC roster bonus
$68,750 per player
World Cup qualifiers N/A $12,500 per player per win; $6,000 per player per draw; $4,000 per player per loss
World Cup qualification N/A $2,500,000 split among team player pool
World Cup per game payment N/A $6,875 per player, regardless of result
World Cup first round points bonus N/A $218,750 to team player pool per point earned
World Cup second round advancement bonus N/A $4,500,000 split among team player pool
World Cup fourth place bonus $10,000/player N/A
World Cup third place bonus $20,000/player $1,250,000 to team player pool
World Cup second place bonus $32,500/player $6,250,000 to team player pool
World Cup champion bonus $75,000/player $9,375,000 to team player pool
Player in World Cup training camp, not game roster N/A $2,500
Per Diem $50/domestic venue; $60/international  $62.50 domestic;
$75 international
Sponsor appearance fee $3,000/appearance $3,750/appearance
Attendance ticket revenue bonus $1.20/ticket $1.50/ticket
Post-World Cup victory tour (number of games dependent on WC outcome; tour dependent on WC finish) $1.8M for team player pool for finishing first in World Cup;
$6,750 per player for finishing second;
$6,250 per player for finishing third
N/A

U.S. Soccer, for its part, has maintained that the CBA with the U.S. women’s players is still in effect through the end of 2016 due to a memorandum of understanding signed by the two sides in 2013. In an effort to get a court to decide if the CBA is still in place, U.S. Soccer filed its own separate action in February in Chicago. Discovery for that case was set to be completed on Thursday, with oral arguments on the motions set to take place before the Chicago court on May 25.The USWNT players are being represented by Jeffrey Kessler, one of the nation’s most prominent sports lawyers, who represented Tom Brady in his recent case against the NFL. Kessler told SI.com that the new players action had nothing to do with the Chicago case filed by U.S. Soccer.PODCAST: SI legal analyst McCann on USWNT vs. USSF“The reason the players have filed is because the USSF has made it clear that they will not consider equal pay [with the U.S. men] in the negotiations for a new agreement,” said Kessler. “So whether or not there’s an existing agreement, they won’t ever agree to make a change to give us the right salary. And the players have been very patient and have concluded now they have to bring a case.”U.S. Soccer responded Thursday morning with the following statement: “We understand the Women’s National Team Players Association is filing a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against U.S. Soccer. While we have not seen this complaint and can’t comment on the specifics of it, we are disappointed about this action. We have been a world leader in women’s soccer and are proud of the commitment we have made to building the women’s game in the United States over the past 30 years.”The federation then added the following: 

One topic at issue is whether the U.S. women could initiate a work stoppage before the Olympics in August, which would give them much more leverage in negotiations for a new CBA.“I’m not going to make any comment about those issues right now,” Kessler said.In the press release, Kessler notes that the U.S. women’s players want “equal pay for equal work,” while Morgan adds that the team wants treatment equal to the U.S. men on playing surfaces and travel accommodations.The U.S. players say their goal is for the EEOC to conduct an independent investigation, issue its findings and seek relief on behalf of the players on the U.S. team.MORE: USWNT players livid after personal info published in documents

“These athletes have probably the strongest case for pay discrimination against women that I have ever seen,” Kessler argued. “Because you have a situation where not only are their work requirements identical to the men’s requirements—the same number of minimum friendlies they have to play, the same requirements to prepare for their World Cups—but they have outperformed the men both economically and on the playing field in every possible way the last two years. So this isn’t a case where someone can come in and say the reason the men are paid more is because they are more economically successful or the men outperform the women or they’re not comparable in the same way.”WAHL: USWNT eyes unprecedented World Cup/Olympics doubleThe U.S. women’s team is currently in camp ahead of friendlies on April 6 and 10 against Colombia. The Olympic women’s soccer tournament is set to begin on August 3.

Indy 11 VERSATILITY ON DISPLAY

“Coach Hank” on importance of roster rotation for 2016 season Mar 29, 2016

 It’s a word head coach Tim Hankinson knows well and uses often, particularly when discussing the 2016 edition of the “Boys in Blue” as their quest for an NASL championship begins on Saturday at the Tampa Bay Rowdies.In January, Hankinson spoke with IndyEleven.com about the squad coming into focus, and with the preseason coming to a close last weekend that focus is sharpening from top to bottom.

 GOALKEEPERS/DEFENSE

Beginning in goal, Jon Busch arrived in January from Chicago Fire SC as the most experienced goalkeeper currently plying his trade in the American game and with more clean sheets than your local laundryman. The 39-year-old Busch had “Coach Hank” singing praises of his work rate, determination, and his role in Keith Cardona’s growth.“I think Jon is going to be, and prove to be, the top ‘keeper in the league. He can see the situation and make corrections within the game,” said Hankinson. “That’s also for someone like Colin [Falvey], who is a very experienced defender and has a voice on the park. He helps us make corrections and communicate with the others. In a way there’s a communication strength in that partnership that I didn’t feel we had last year.”Defensively, the Eleven have returned a core of Greg Janicki, Cory Miller, and Marco Franco, while adding the afore-mentioned ex-Ottawa Fury FC centerback Falvey, as well as Lovel Palmer from the Fire, Nemanja Vuković from Sacramento Republic FC, and Neil Shaffer from the Harrisburg City Islanders.Hankinson wasn’t coy on his back four either, complimenting the experience of the group and their ability to gel together in a short period of time.“I feel defensively our back four can be one of the best in the league, and with their organizational skills it means we don’t have to wait until halftime to make corrections,” explained Hankinson. “They all have extensive experience in their respective spots and are versatile enough to play in a number of positions within that line.”

 MIDFIELDERS

Moving into the center of the park, Nicki Paterson, Gorka Larrea, and Siniša Ubiparipović are amongst the new names you will see accompanied by last year’s contingent of Brad Ring, Dylan Mares, and Daniel Keller. These sets of trios each bring their own strengths to the proposed three-man setup Hankinson will deploy up the spine of the team.“A triangle is interesting because you have players like Nicki and Brad, who are starting caliber, that kind of play more box-to-box – joining the attack, but then getting back defensively. Then you have players like Gorka and Keller, who are more sit-in, stay in front of the defense type holding midfielders, and Siniša and Dylan, who are more attacking and can create scoring chances.“You can play two holding (mids) and, one at the point, you can rotate it and play two attacking and one holding, or sometimes you play with one attacking, one holding, and one player who is free to build and possess to play where the ball is. I think the players we have give us all of those choices. Again, those are things that you can adjust in the game depending on the situation at hand. All of these guys are also versatile in their own manner.”

 FORWARDS/WINGERS

At the apex of the attack, wingers Duke Lacroix and Don Smart return alongside forward Wojciech Wojcik, while Justin Braun, Eamon Zayed and late addition Jair Reinoso are the new boys in town. To Hankinson, having the versatility to play goalscorers both on the wings and in the forward position can make a world of difference.“On the wing, I have selected players this year that also bring versatility in terms of goalscoring and where each player can play. Justin can play outside left or outside right even though he’s a natural right-footed player. The same goes with Duke where he can come from the right side.”Focusing on interchanging, the idea is to have the attack be free-flowing in order to find pockets of space on slanted runs. This will make it difficult for the defense to know exactly what is coming at them.“What an opposing defender wants is for the striker to stand right in front of him. So when a striker is mobile and interchanging positions, it forces defenders to make decisions – sometimes those decisions are right, sometimes they aren’t. We’re looking for ways to force defenders into making the wrong ones,” said Hankinson.Saturday’s season-opener for the Eleven is about all of these pieces joining together to form one solidified team with one goal in mind – getting three points at a time.

 Indy Eleven’s opener at the Rowdies on Saturday evening is scheduled for a 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff. The game will air nationwide on ONE World Sports and will be viewable for free on its website, OneWorldSports.com(unlike last season, no subscription/log-in will necessary to view the online stream). Fans are also encouraged to watch the game at one of several official Watch Parties being held across Central Indiana and beyond.

ELEVEN ADDS ATTACKER JAIR REINOSO

Roster transactions also see releases of Stojkov, DeRoux & Williams Mar 29, 2016

Club Releases Defender Stephen DeRoux, Midfielder Dragan Stojkov & Forward Dino Williams as Saturday’s Season Opener Approaches

With its third season in the North American Soccer League just days away, Indy Eleven made an addition to its attacking corps today with the signing of Colombian forward Jair Reinoso. Per club policy, contract details will not be released.Reinoso will be available for selection for “Indiana’s Team” pending receipt of his international transfer certificate (ITC), which is expected to come in advance of the team’s NASL Spring Season opener this Saturday, April 2, at the Tampa Bay Rowdies. Reinoso possesses a United States Green Card and will therefore not occupy one of the roster’s seven allotted international player spots.Indy Eleven today also announced the release of three players – defender Stephen DeRoux, midfielder Dragan Stojkov and forward Dino Williams. Today’s transactions puts Indy Eleven’s roster at 21 players in advance of Saturday’s season opener.“We are pleased to add a player of this caliber this close to the start of the season. Jair will add a new dimension to the squad, providing another attacking option that is stylistically quite different from what we currently have,” said Indy Eleven head coach Tim Hankinson. “His track record is that of a proper goal scorer who can isolate a defender one-on-one and use his technical ability to beat players and go to goal.”

Born in Cali, Colombia, Reinoso would begin his soccer tutelage in the youth system of his hometown team and then-powerhouse side America de Cali in the mid-90s before moving to Florida as a teenager. He would head back to South America to start his professional career, cutting his teeth in the reserve system of three Argentine clubs, including standout side River Plate, before making his first team debut with the most successful team in Bolivian soccer, Club Bolivar, in 2008.Since then, the 30-year-old striker has scored 79 goals in 185 games while representing clubs in South America and Asia, including another legendary Bolivian team, The Strongest; Colombian first division regulars Once Caldas and Cucuta Deportivo; and, most recently, Chinese League One squad Zhejiang Yiteng. Reinoso has contributed to a pair of title-winning sides, helping Club Bolivar and The Strongest to Apertura (Opening) Season victories in 2009 and 2013, respectively, and also tallied five times in 14 games during play in the prestigious Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana international competitions.Stojkov was the only player of the three released today that suited up for Indy Eleven, notching two assists while starting 18 of his 21 appearances in NASL regular season play in 2015. DeRoux and Williams were both signed in February, but the former players at previous stops under Hankinson suffered injuries that will sideline both for significant time, putting their 2016 seasons in jeopardy“A roster is always a work in progress until you feel you have all the pieces that you need to win games, and parting ways with good players and teammates like Dragan Stojkov, Stephen DeRoux and Dino Williams is a part of that process,” Hankinson said. “Stephen and Dino were the unfortunate recipients of long-term injuries, forcing us to search for different options at their positions. In Dragan’s case, he’s a very solid professional that carries a lot of good attributes, but he also occupies an international slot. Having the flexibility to pick up an international player to improve the roster is crucial as we get into the season, and unfortunately it was Dragan that had to be sacrificed in this instance.Head  o www.IndyEleven.com/roster for the full 21-man roster that currently comprises the 2016 edition of the “Boys in Blue,” and visit the team’s social media channels and www.IndyEleven.com/preseason  to keep up to date on all things Indy Eleven heading into the team’s third NASL campaign.Indy Eleven begins its 2016 season on the road Saturday evening at the Tampa Bay Rowdies (7:30 p.m. ET, live on ONE World Sports & www.ONEWorldSports.com). “Indiana’s Team” then kicks off its home schedule at IUPUI’s Michael A. Carroll Stadium on Saturday, April 9, against the rival Ottawa Fury FC, followed a week later by a visit from the defending NASL Champion New York Cosmos. Fans looking for details on season ticket packages and other available seating options can visit the “Tickets” section of www.IndyEleven.com, call 317-685-1100 during regular business hours (9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. weekdays) or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

ECAP – ELEVEN 0 : 0 U OF L

“Boys in Blue” step up defensively to shutout Cardinals in preseason finale

Mar 25, 2016

Goalkeeper Keith Cardona Steps up with Three Saves to Post Clean Sheet in Finale

 LOUISVILLE (Friday, March 25, 2016) – Indy Eleven dueled the University of Louisville to a 0-0 draw in the squad’s 2016 preseason finale this evening at Cardinal Park on the UofL campus. Eleven goalkeeper Keith Cardona made three saves and other critical interventions to help the visitors post the clean sheet.While play would flow back and forth throughout the early stages, the game’s first real dangerous chance wouldn’t come until the 36th minute, when Indy Eleven guest player Aaron Horton’s run down the right flank was cut down by a Cardinal defender to set up a free kick. Midfielder Nicki Paterson swung a nice ball in towards the penalty spot where forward Wojciech Wojcik rose to meet it, but his header bounced down off the crossbar and was cleared from the area.Louisville had some good looks of their own in the final five minutes, but Cardona came up huge. The second year netminder first came off his line strong and went low to block away a 1-v-1 opportunity in the right side of the area in the 40th minute, followed by a back-peddling leap to stop a chipped effort from distance destined for the upper left corner that ended the first half.The home side had a couple of looks in the 54th minute when several Cards flooded Indy’s six-yard box, but a couple of pokes failed to make their way through heavy traffic at the left post and the danger was eventually cleared.The chances would dry up from there on out, but Louisville would ratchet up the pressure in the 82nd minute when an attacker cut inside from the right flank and unleashed a low shot from 20 yards out that forced Cardona into a smothering stop. Indy would push some numbers into the Cardinals area for some good-looking set piece opportunities of its own in the final two minutes, but Wojcik and defender Cory Miller saw their headed efforts deflected out for corners, keeping the match scoreless to the final whistle.Indy Eleven head coach Tim Hankinson elected to leave the bulk of the “Boys in Blue” that played most or all of Wednesday’s match against Butler back in Indianapolis, giving five guest players the opportunity to see considerable minutes against the Cards. Three of those players – Vinnie Mitchell, Nago Mbengue and Thomas Schmitt – were earlier this week named to the roster that will compete for the Indy Eleven NPSL side beginning in May.With the six-week preseason now in the rearview mirror, Indy Eleven can turn its focus fully to its NASL season opener next Saturday, April 2, at the Tampa Bay Rowdies. Fans can watch the 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff from Al Lang Stadium live on ONE World Sports and online at ONEWorldSports.com, and can also follow live updates via the @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed and additional Indy Eleven social media outlets.  Indy Eleven kicks off its home slate at IUPUI’s Carroll Stadium a week later on Saturday, April 9, against 2015 NASL Championship finalist Ottawa Fury FC. Season, single game and group tickets for the 7:30 p.m. ET kickoff at “The Mike” can be purchased at IndyEleven.com or by phone at 317-685-1100 (Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ET).


Scoring Summary: None


Indy Eleven XI (4-2-3-1, L -> R): Keith Cardona; *Jeff McClure, Neil Shaffer, Cory Miller, Don Smart; Nicki Paterson (*Nago Mbengue 38’) (Marco Franco 75’), Brad Ring (*Thomas Schmitt 38’); Duke Lacroix (Aaron Horton 87’), Dylan Mares, *Vinnie Mitchell (^Aaron Horton 32’) (Vinnie Mitchell 67’); Wojciech Wojcik  * Indy Eleven NPSL player  ^ Guest player

RECAP – ELEVEN 1 : 0 BUTLER

Zayed’s third tally of preseason, stout defense help gain momentum in final preseason push

Mar 23, 2016

Forward Eamon Zayed’s 18th Minute Tally Stands Tall in Victory at Grand Park

 WESTFIELD (Wednesday, March 23, 2016) – Indy Eleven gained some momentum to start the final push of its 2016 preseason tonight against Butler University, using a goal from forward Eamon Zayed in the first half and a stout defensive effort throughout to post a 1-0 victory at Grand Park.The Bulldogs came out and stood toe-to-toe with Indy Eleven for about the first 10 minutes, including a pair of decent looks in the eighth minute that put the pro side on guard, before ceding the bulk of the possession and quality chances to the “Boys in Blue.”It was Zayed putting Indy on top in the 18th minute, the play starting with midfielder Sinisa Ubiparipovic’s through ball that split the Butler center backs. The Irish striker took it from there, pushing a low shot from 20 yards inside the left post to put the Eleven up early. Less than a minute, later trialist Jair Reinoso almost doubled the advantage after the ball worked its way around to him in the left side of the area, but the Bulldogs goalkeeper alertly cut down the angle early and blocked the Colombian’s shot out for a corner.Indy Eleven ‘keeper Jon Busch had some work of his own to do a little after the half-hour mark, first coming off his line in the 33rd minute to get a piece of a near-angle shot that defender Nemanja Vuković swept over to clear out of the six-yard box. Three minutes later, Busch shuffled over to his left post and leapt to grab a shot from distance that threatened his frame. In between, Vuković had a couple of chances himself, but both a free kick and shot from open play, each from roughly 30 yards out, were saved.Both teams were limited to shots from distance and half chances through the start of the second half, the first real look of any danger coming from Indy winger Justin Braun’s near-post effort from the left side of the area in the 71st minute.Substitute midfielder Duke Lacroix injected some life into the Indy Eleven attack across the final 15 minutes with a handful of lengthy forays into the final third, but he’d find his shots saved or passes for runners inside the area cleared away. Zayed had one last chance to find a second in stoppage time after again being slipped into space by Ubiparipović, and while his far post effort beat the goalkeeper it couldn’t stay inside the right post.A main area of focus for Indy Eleven, now 11 days out from its NASL Spring Season opener on April 2 at the Tampa Bay Rowdies, was getting players 90 minutes fit. Head coach Tim Hankinson was able to get the bulk of his charges just that, as eight of the 11 starters would go the distance on the windy evening in Westfield.Indy Eleven’s final preseason exhibition match comes in just two days’ time on Friday evening, when “Indiana’s Team” will head down I-65 and cross into Kentucky to square off against the University of Louisville Cardinals. Kickoff from Cardinal Park on the UofL campus is set for 7:30 p.m. ET, and fans can follow live updates as they happen via the @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed and additional Indy Eleven social media outlets.Visit www.IndyEleven.com/preseason for the full details on Indy Eleven’s preseason itinerary leading up to the team’s third season of NASL play, beginning next weekend in the Sunshine State against the Rowdies (7:30 p.m. ET, live on ONE World Sports & ONEWorldSports.com). Indy Eleven kicks off its home slate at IUPUI’s Carroll Stadium a week later on Saturday, April 9, against 2015 NASL Championship finalist Ottawa Fury FC. Season, single game and group tickets for the 7:30 p.m. kickoff at “The Mike” can be purchased atIndyEleven.com or by phone at 317-685-1100 (Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. ET).

Scoring Summary: IND – Eamon Zayed (Siniša Ubiparipović) 18’

Indy Eleven XI (4-2-3-1, L -> R): Jon Busch; Marco Franco, Greg Janicki (Brad Ring 25’), Colin Falvey, Lovel Palmer; Nicki Paterson (Dylan Mares 73’), Nemanja Vuković; Justin Braun, Siniša Ubiparipović, Jair Reinoso (Duke Lacroix 58’); Eamon Zayed

Idle Sporting Kansas City remains at top of MLS Power Rankings over international break

There were just three games on the schedule last weekend, causing just a little movement in this week’s MLS Power Rankings.

  1. Sporting Kansas City(no change)

A week off means another week to get Benny Feilhaber back to fitness. The 2015 MVP finalist has yet to play in 2016, but his club still has nine points from three games.

  1. Portland Timbers(no change)

Like a host of teams across the league, Portland will spend the next two days hoping its internationals — there were six of them called up for this window — return completely healthy come Wednesday.

  1. FC Dallas(+2)

D.C.’s defense made it easy, but credit FC Dallas for putting the sword to United on the road in the first half-hour on the way to a 3-0 win. Michael Barrios is sometimes the forgotten man, but he showed his abilities on Saturday.

  1. Montreal Impact(-1)

The Impact go back to life without Didier Drogba when they head to Seattle to face the Sounders next weekend. Considering they lost the only game he has played in, it’s not really a problem.

  1. Toronto FC(-1)

The biggest issue facing Toronto FC heading into next weekend in Colorado is the psychological well-being of their American internationals, Michael Bradley and Jozy Altidore, after Friday night’s stunning defeat to Guatemala.

  1. New York Red Bulls(no change)

How much progress has Jesse Marsch made on fixing the Red Bulls’ disastrous defensive problems during the week off? Maybe just as importantly, are Gideon Baah and Ronald Zubar on track to play in New England on Friday?

  1. LA Galaxy(no change)

The Galaxy’s quiet week off mostly involved rumors about Steven Gerrard(par for the course), but one can’t help but wonder what Bruce Arena was thinking, watching the U.S. fall in Central America.

  1. Philadelphia Union(no change)

If anyoSg for their healthy return.

3/28/16-US must win Tues 7 pm ESPN2, U23s can qualify for Olympics with win

Wow not quite sure what to say about the German (US Men’s National team coach Jurgen Klinsmann) now – but unlike either of his predecessors Coaches Bob Bradley or Bruce Arena – for the 2nd straight time – the USMNT sits at the edge of World Cup Non-Qualification?  That’s right lose on Tuesday night at home in Columbus (7 pm on ESPN 2) and the US will all but be eliminated from Qualifying for the 2018 World Cup.  It would be the first time since 1986 by the way.  Sound familiar – yes this is just where the US was 4 some odd years ago when it took a 1-0 controversial win over Costa Rica in the Snow in Denver to advance on to the Hex.  Now the German would have you believe its just dumb luck or the teams in CONCACAF are somehow better now – which is total crap by the way.  The only truth here is the US under the German’s leadership is Failing Miserably.  He has no idea where to play his players.  No fewer than 6 players started in positions they don’t play for their Professional Club teams.  Our left mid BEDOYA is a right mid, our right mid YEDLIN a right back, our right back CAMERON a de mid or central defender, our left inside D ORAZCO a right back, our attacking mid BRADLEY a Defensive mid or Holding/D Mid MIX a right winger –  And 2 of them – haven’t played a minute for their clubs in close to 3 months (Orazco and GK Howard).  Listen I know the team had injuries and Brooks and Bez would have I hope started normally.  But when desperate late in the game – the move of Cameron to the middle, the removal of Orazco (who honestly should no longer be in the player pool) and the move of Yedlin to right back – settled things down for the remainder of the game.  Seriously this guy thinks he’s smarter than every professional team coach in Europe who puts these players where they play.  I understand 1 or maybe worst case 2 switches but 6 of the 11?  Its that uncertainty and chaos that has wrecked this defense for years now under the German.   While I honestly lost my faith in the German during the Gold Cup /then Mexico Playoff Debacle –its become more evident that this “forward thinking”, tactically inept, shake things up for no real reason coach in charge of our national team has simply lost it.  Listen I am AMERICAN soccer fan, a American Outlaw Member, a card carrying member of Sam’s Army for over 20 years – and my son and I will be there on Tuesday night in Columbus wearing red, white and blue – flag waiving trying to root our national team boys on to victory.  But I am done and over the Klinsmann experiment.  DONE & OVER.

PS – congrats to the U23s – a hard fought albeit completely hang on for dear life – counter attack only effort the American’s have employed for years.  The 1-1 tie over a superior Columbia team sets up the US only needing a 1-0 win at home Tuesday at 9:30 pm on ESPN 2 to advance to the Olympics.

USA  (new stories today) 

US Finds itself in Familiar Location – Must Win in Columbus – ESPN fC

What to Expect tonite – SI

How to Show you Aren’t Happy with Klinsmann Don’t Buy Tickets

Klinsmann’s top 5 Positional Mistakes of Many – Stars and Stripes

Guatemala’s Ruiz is Cleared to Come to US for Qualifier Tonite

7 Managers who Could Replace Klinsmann – my vote would be an emergency return to Bruce Arena for Qualifying only.

Klinsmann puts Home Up for Sale?

US U23s ready to Qualify for Olympics with Win tonite

U 23’s ready for Columbia at home ESPNFC

OLD Stories

The Player Pool isn’t the Problem – Its Klinsmann-SB Nation

Klinsmann should be Fired if they Lose to Guatemala at home – Leander Schaerlaeckens

Klinsmann experiment has failed – Stars and Stripes

The Klinsmann Catastrophe

After Loss – Margin for Error is Slim –SI Grant Wahl

US Regressing – Klinsy must Find Stability in Line-Up –  Jeff Carlisle EPSNFC

Patch Work Defense Dooms US Chances on Road –ESPN FC

Despite Embarrassment – A US Win Tues Clears things Up –NBC Pro Soccer Talk

Klinsmann’s Bizarre Roster Selection leads to 2-0 loss

US Player Ratings – ESPN FC – Jason Davis

US Players Ratings in 0-2 Loss

3 Things from Shockingly Easy win by Guatamala –NBCSN

Klinnsy Adds Zusi, Pulisic and Removes Fabian Johnson and Belser due to injuries

What has Happened to the US Keeper Pipeline?

Suarez gets Equalizer in 2-2 Draw with Brazil

US – U23s

USA Hangs on for 1-1 Draw at Columbia – In Position to Qualify at Home Tues

GAMES of the Week

Tuesday, March 29:

3:30 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs Italy                                

4 pm  fox Sport1         England vs Netherlands

4:30 pm beIN Sport   Columbia vs Ecudor  WCQ           Columbia in MUST Win at Home!

7 pm (ESPN2) United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH  USA MUST win at Home

7:30 pm beIN Sport   Argentina vs Bolivia  WCQ      must win at home for Argentina

9:30 pm ESPN2  US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff Texas  US Must win to Go to Olympics

Sat, Apr 2

12:30 pm                         NBC               Liverpool vs Tottenham

2:30 pm bein Sport EL CLASSICO – Barcelona vs Real Madrid –SPORTS BAR

7:30 pm ESPN3             Indy 11 @ Tampa Bay Rowdies

Sun, Apr 3

8:00 p.m Fox Sports1 Orlando City vs. Portland Timbers

Tues, Apr 5

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport 2 Bayern Munich vs. Benfica

Wed, Apr 6

2:45 p.m FoxSport1                          Man City vs PSG

2:45 pm Fox Sport2                          Real Madrid vs VFL Wolfsburg

7 pm Fox Sports 1      US Women vs Columbia

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund

The Klinsmann Experiment has Failed

By BlakeBullock11  @Blake_Bullock11 on Mar 26, 2016, 10:09p 2                                   TWEET  SHARE (56) PIN 

The Klinsmann experiment as Technical Director and Manager has failed. Last night, the USMNT was defeated for the first time ever in Guatemala City. It was one of the worst defeats in the recent downfall of US soccer and one of the worst defeats ever. The blame for this match does not rest solely on Klinsmann though, as many players including Mix Diskerud, did not play to their full ability, but Klinsmann has to know how to pick a starting lineup. One of Klinsmann’s most disliked tendencies is his unwillingness to reward club form, and that he always seems to put players out of position. Deandre Yedlin has locked down a starting right back spot for a Premier League team, and started at outside midfield. Geoff Cameron has excelled at center back for Stoke, and was played at outside defender. Mix Diskerud is not a holding midfielder, and under Michael Bradley he can’t showcase his skills. You could also argue that he hasn’t even shown enough to be considered to start, with players like Ethan Finlay and Darlington Nagbe majorly outperforming Mix for their clubs. Maybe he could be retained as Technical Director, but even in that responsibility he has failed, with the U-23s fighting for their Olympic lives against Columbia, even though they should have easily qualified earlier. Even through all this, Sunil Gulati seems to be out of touch with the fans. There hasn’t been even a hint of pressure on Klinsmann, even after last years epic failure in the Gold Cup and the Confederations Cup playoff. These results cannot become common for a United States team that was seemingly on the rise after comeback defeats against the Netherlands and world-champion Germany, but those wins seem years ago now.

Jurgen Klinsmann should be fired if USMNT loses to Guatemala again

Leander Schaerlaeckens,FC Yahoo 9 hours ago

A year and half ago, Jurgen Klinsmann was unequivocal. The objective for the 2018 World Cup in Russia was for his United States men’s national team to reach the semifinals, matching the Yanks’ best-ever performance from the 1930 World Cup, when just 13 countries participated, absent some world powers.”This is our goal going towards Russia, not to stop at the round of 16, maybe not to stop at the quarterfinal,” the German head coach said. “To say clearly, listen, we have four years to prepare this cycle. Our goal is going into a semifinal in a World Cup.”Read that statement now, with the new World Cup qualifying cycle in full swing, and you’re more likely to stifle a chuckle than to think that it’s even remotely plausible. After Friday’s debacle in Guatemala, where the U.S. lost 2-0 to put its campaign to even reach Russia in some peril, any notions of the Americans breaking into the top four of the world presently seem fanciful and altogether farfetched.What follows is not some hair-trigger reaction. Nor is it an undercooked take from a single game, or even a few games. It’s the manifestation of almost five years of questions gone unanswered and stated ambitions left unmet.It’s come time to ask what it will take for Klinsmann to be fired.And it’s come time to acknowledge that if the U.S. loses to Guatemala again on Tuesday, in its Columbus, Ohio stronghold, that is probably what it should take for Klinsmann to be fired.U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati, the guardian of the sport’s long-term health, says he remains committed to the manager he spent years pursuing and then handed a contract that dwarfed any of his predecessors’. Gulati implicitly staked his own legacy to Klinsmann’s, and when your boss’s reputation is on the line, there isn’t a whole lot that will get you fired. But if the U.S. loses again on Tuesday and faces a situation where it must win its final two games – at Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and against Trinidad and Tobago at home – and require help from others in the group just to advance, that should surely set off some emergency protocol. The Americans currently sit outside of the two places in Group C that will advance the holders to the fifth and final round – the hexagonal. Certainly, you could point to the fact that in the last qualifying cycle the U.S. began this stage with a 1-1-1 record as well and qualified comfortably. But that just borrows from past mediocrity to justify more mediocrity. There just isn’t anything redeeming Klinsmann to justify the risk of missing the World Cup for the first time since 1986. In almost half a decade in charge, his much-hyped appointment – remember all the talk about him taking the team “to the next level”? – has brought only regression. Bob Bradley left behind a team that was often unexciting and seemed to have grown a tad stale, but it was tactically sound and could be relied on to deliver a baseline performance. Now, the senior U.S. team is arguably in a worse state than it has been in almost a decade. And at the 2006 World Cup, where the Americans finished last in their group, at least there was a foundation for the future, a core that would show well in South Africa four years later. There isn’t even that now. The Klinsmann bubble is bursting. The novelty has worn off. All the promise was hollow and the doctrine void. An intellectually honest assessment of what he has accomplished turns up an off-year Gold Cup triumph in 2013 and a round-of-16 finish at the 2014 World Cup, where the U.S. survived the deathly group with Germany, Portugal and Ghana .But Klinsmann didn’t get the U.S. out of that Group of Death. Luck did. The Americans were utterly dominated in three of their four games. They were outshot by an average of 11.5 times. They scored 1.15 goals per 90 minutes and conceded 1.38. They ranked 19th out of 32 teams in expected goals and 29th in expected goals against, according to StatHunting.com. Yet somehow they reached the last 16. The results flattered the performances. And it should probably be noted that Ghana imploded amid infighting and Portugal sleepwalked through the tournament.Yes, Klinsmann did well in another job, laying the groundwork for a future World Cup victory with Germany from 2004 to 2006. But plainly, his accomplishments with Die Mannschaft – with the sizable help from right-hand man Jogi Loew – aren’t relevant here. He has already been U.S. head coach almost two-and-a-half times as long as he was Germany’s and the results are hardly the same.The list of things Klinsmann has not accomplished runs far longer. The improved playing style is nowhere to be seen. The U.S. is capable of competing with the bigger soccer countries only when there is nothing at stake in friendlies. The promised integration with the youth national teams has taken place but yielded little, as they too are mostly in a sorry state. The promised confidence to go head-to-head with the global powers hasn’t materialized. The high pressure and passing game were quickly abandoned. There exists no evidence that even Klinsmann himself knows what his best lineup is. Even the vow of improved fitness withered. Meanwhile, there’s been a steadfast erosion of the U.S.’s unity, battling identity and defensive organization. Klinsmann’s atavistic tactics and insistence on playing half his team out of position, as if to make some point about his soccer smarts, have not helped things any.And there is no credible indication that, given more time, Klinsmann will do better. That some long-game play is beginning to take root.If Klinsmann, who styled himself a reformer, has left a legacy at all, it’s one of chaos for its own sake and a systematic alienation of the fan base – as underscored by the vast swaths of empty seats at recent home games. His studied new-age vibe isn’t intriguing anymore. His fixation on innovation produced a team suspended somewhere between the present and the future, but incapable of winning the important games in either.Yet he has had at his disposal more money, resources, power and freedom than anyone in the job before him. Maybe even more talent, although there’s little sense in comparing generations. But for all this, he has delivered no more than words – mostly substantively inert, train-of-thought ramblings that promise to arrive at a point but never get there.What’s worse, he seems to have come untethered from reality. To hear Klinsmann speak, things are more or less going according to some plan he drew up. He is a lovely and magnetic man – truly a very pleasant person – but it’s becoming increasingly hard to take his utterances on his work seriously.To be fair, he has achieved some significant things on a developmental level in his dual role as technical director that may yield dividends when future national teams take the field. But that isn’t part of his remit as senior team head coach. And so we circle back once again to the idea that Klinsmann would make a better full-time technical director than he has ever been a coach.If, come Tuesday, World Cup participation is in genuine danger – to say nothing of the potential humiliation at this summer’s stacked Copa America Centenario, the biggest stateside soccer event in 22 years – it’s time to move on. If Klinsmann can’t, maybe somebody else will turn things around. Somebody who can scrape out a place in the hexagonal round of qualifying and avoid three straight losses in June.A pragmatist, who knows the players. Maybe Bradley’s predecessor, Bruce Arena, can be summoned to this emergency call. Or the steady Dominic Kinnear. Maybe elder statesman Sigi Schmid. Call the successor’s position what you want. Maybe even keep Klinsmann around as the big-picture guy. It was a worthwhile experiment. A grand vision. But either the idea was wrong or the man was. But since they are essentially one and the same, the moment will have come to try something else. To try someone else.  Leander Schaerlaeckens is a soccer columnist 

Klinsmann’s Bizarre roster selection leads to 2-0 loss to Guatemala

By Rjstarner  @CEOotYearReagan on Mar 25, 2016, 9:03p 3 

Tonight can be summed up in 140 characters. We had a RB playing RM because a Def Mid was playing RB because we had an attacking mid playing defensive mid. This is the state of the USMNT under Jurgen Klinsmann. Players are constantly asked to play out of position in favor of formations. Yedlin has started the last 5 games for Sunderland at RB. He lined up at RM tonight. Geoff cameron has played every game for Stoke this year at Defensive Mid. He started at RB tonight. Michael Orozco hasn’t started for Tijuana in a Liga MX game this season…he started at CB tonight for the USMNT. Mix Diskerud plays as an attack midfielder for NYCFC. He started at defensive Mid tonight. Tim Howard hasn’t started since January for Everton…why not let’s start him for world cup qualifying. It’s so ridiculous that even FIFA16 doesn’t recommend you playing these players at these positions. The USMNT hadn’t lost to Guatemala since 1988. They I was 2 years old. They allowed 2 goals in the first 15 minutes of the match. Unfortunately the new kits were the best looking thing on the field for the USMNT in the first half of the match. The USMNT is 1-1-1 in WC qualifying and sit in 3rd place behind International stalwarts like Trinidad and Tobago and Guatemala. With more WC qualifying and Copa America Centenario around the corner Jurgen Klinsmann really needs to take a look at his roster, and put his team in a position to succeed.

Assessing the troubled USMNT: Win Tuesday and everything’s still kinda okay

Leave a commentBy Nicholas MendolaMar 26, 2016, 9:16 AM EDT bcn

Yes, the United States men’s national team played one of its worst meaningful matches of the last two decades on Friday, but how much trouble are they really in when it comes to qualifying for the 2018 World Cup (at least on a micro level)?On the macro level, a lot. Friday’s performance would’ve seen the Yanks concede about 8 goals at Azteca or Estadio Nacional. Even given injuries, Jurgen Klinsmann’s awful lineup choices hampered the team en route to a 2-0 loss.On a micro level, it’s certainly not the end of the world (though it’ll be close to it if the Yanks fail to beat Guatemala in Columbus on Tuesday, a failure that would make Friday’s defeat look like a walk in the park).The good news is that the USMNT has played its two trickiest road matches, while Guatemala still has plenty to do despite its second-place spot in Group C. And while many would’ve accepted four points from Guatemala, three points wouldn’t be the end of the world at all.

Let’s check the table quick.

2018 qualification through three games

Trinidad & Tobago — 7 points, +2 goal diff
Guatemala — 6 points, +5 goal diff
USMNT — 4 points, +3 goal diff
St. Vincent and the Grenadines — 0 points, -10 goal diff

Remember, the Yanks were in a very similar place at this exact point in 2014 World Cup qualification. Klinsmann’s crew won at Antigua & Barbuda, drew in Guatemala and lost in Jamaica. The table looked like this:

2014 qualification through three games

Jamaica — 7 points, +2 goal diff
USMNT — 4 points, +1 goal diff
Guatemala — 4 points, +1 goal diff
Antigua & Barbuda — 1 point, -4 goal diff

The glaring difference is that A&B was able to pick up a point from Jamaica, and the Yanks snared a point in Guatemala. But the positioning was nearly as precarious for Klinsmann.

So where are the States now?

First and foremost, the Yanks have blown their chance to play two meaningless qualifiers in September. T&T will likely have 10 points after Tuesday’s return visit from Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Guatemala will be at-worst a point behind the U.S.That said, the U.S. still hosts Guatemala on Tuesday and T&T on Sept. 6 (one would imagine that game will be held somewhere quite unseasonable for the visitors). Their lone road game remaining is at Saint Vincent, who they bashed 6-1 in November.However, the U.S. does finish with T&T while Guatemala ends its group stage with a visit from Saint Vincent. They more or less need 10 points heading into that game to feel decent at all.The main point is that a loss on Tuesday all-but-mathematically eliminates the U.S. from qualification to the 2018 World Cup while a win puts them firmly in the driver’s seat for the Hex. T&T and Guatemala can’t both take three points from each other during the Yanks’ Sept. 2 visit to Saint Vincent.So, basically, you’re both a USMNT and T&T fan for the next two match days. If both take six points, the table would look like this:

T&T — 13 points
USMNT — 10 points
Guatemala — 6 points
Saint Vincent & the Grenadines — 0 points

That leaves the Yanks and T&T in the Hex before they square off in the U.S. on Sept. 6. Anti-climactic, yes, but wouldn’t that be nice?

U.S. regressing and Jurgen Klinsmann must find stability in his lineup

GUATEMALA CITY — From the moment that Jurgen Klinsmann took over the U.S. men’s national team in 2011, it seemed as if there has been a battle raging from within.

Sometimes it seemed to be a conflict between Klinsmann and the players in how best to move the program forward. It has manifested itself in baffling lineup choices, confusing tactics and even more puzzling decisions on how best to usher out the old and bring in the new. Current form mattered … until it didn’t. Then there have been moments where Klinsmann seemed at war with himself. Should he go pragmatic, or idealistic? A man in conflict.There have been moments when Klinsmann has achieved a sort of equilibrium, such as during the latter stages of qualifying for the 2014 World Cup, and even at the tournament itself. But at present, what is evident is a U.S. national team that is currently thrashing about, unsure of what it is or where it’s heading. This was never more evident than in Friday’s 2-0 defeat to Guatemala in a World Cup qualifier. Assignments were blown, individual battles were lost, and perhaps most damning of all, tentative, passive mistakes were made.When Michael Bradley was asked what the U.S. needed to do better in Tuesday’s return encounter against Guatemala, he said: “Everything.”In these moments, the question gets raised: Is it the fault of the coach or the players? The answer is both, though Klinsmann doesn’t help himself during such examinations. His impulse is to blame the players first, and himself second — that is when he does the latter at all. When asked about the two very preventable goals his team conceded inside the game’s first 15 minutes, Klinsmann said they were down to “a lack of focus, concentration and wrong decisions.”  And why was this? One would expect “focus” to be at its highest level at the start of a game.”That’s a good question for the players,” said Klinsmann, before adding that Guatemala didn’t do much after going up 2-0, which ignored the fact that the home side didn’t need to.It wasn’t until later, when queried directly about if he questions his own decisions, that Klinsmann became more introspective, and even then he wasn’t entirely convincing.”You question [decisions] every time, no matter if you win or lose, you question everything that happens during a game,” he said. “Then you question yourself. ‘Was this the right lineup? Was this the right substitutions? Was this the right way to approach it? Should we have done something differently, and better?’  “Absolutely you question that, and you figure out how you can fix this, this and this. At the end of the day, these two mistakes led to goals. You just have to swallow it, because those are individual mistakes that you cannot do at this level. That’s what happened tonight so we’ll take the blame. I take the blame. There’s no problem if you want to hear that.”  Klinsmann isn’t wrong per se. Individual mistakes were indeed made, but some came from his decision-making. When the U.S. lineup came out on Friday, it was clear that the injury-induced absences of Fabian Johnson, John Brooks and Matt Besler tied Klinsmann’s hands to a degree. But Geoff Cameron and Michael Orozco seemed as though they should have swapped positions, with Cameron playing centrally instead of at right-back, and Orozco moving out wide.The opening exchanges witnessed the U.S. backline looking shaky indeed and both Omar Gonzalez and Orozco were caught flat-footed by Carlos Ruiz for the second Guatemala goal.With Jermaine Jones suspended, Mix Diskerud seemed ill suited to a match where graft was going to be prized, especially with a player like Kyle Beckerman available. It was no accident that Diskerud was victimized for the first goal when Rafael Morales out-jumped him to nod home a corner. os Ruiz celebrates his goal for Guatemala.

Afterward, Klinsmann indicated he chose Diskerud for his ability to move the ball — the idealist emerging again — before criticizing both Diskerud and Michael Bradley for not supporting the forwards enough. A more contrite approach from Klinsmann just might score more points in the locker room and in public, but blame assignment only gets a coach — or player — so far, and obscures the bigger question. How do you fix this team?For some, that will be firing the coach, but Klinsmann’s position still seems solid. USSF president Sunil Gulati said he wasn’t concerned about the team’s direction. “It’s not game-to-game like that,” he said. “We get a good result on Tuesday, which we expect, then things are back on track.”But the fault lines in this U.S. team seem too deep to be cured by one victory over a Guatemala side ranked 95th in the world by FIFA. Such fissures have been visible previously, only for both the team and Klinsmann to work together to find some cohesion. Now those rifts seem to be emerging again. When added to the context of last summer’s disappointing performances in the Gold Cup, the team is regressing.The way forward is that Klinsmann must find some stability in his lineup choices, both at the back, and in the spine of the team. Decide on a goalkeeper; narrow down a center-back pairing.; find a partner for Bradley; decide where DeAndre Yedlin best fits into this team and leave him there.This process can best be accomplished at this summer’s Copa America Centenario, though some of it can begin against Guatemala on Tuesday. To that end, Klinsmann needs to veer back toward the pragmatic. The U.S. now desperately needs a victory. If it doesn’t get one, a very different kind of battle — World Cup qualification itself — will hang in the balance.

U.S. patchwork defense doesn’t get it done in 2-0 loss to Guatemala

GUATEMALA CITY — The U.S. men’s national team now finds itself in a World Cup qualification dogfight.The U.S. lost 2-0 to Guatemala at the Estadio Nacional Mateo Flores — its first loss to Los Chapines in 21 games — thanks to goals from Rafael Morales and Carlos Ruiz. The U.S. now lies in third place in its qualifying group on four points, three behind Trinidad and Tobago and two behind Guatemala. Only the top two teams will progress to the final round Hexagonal.

  1. If this isn’t the worst loss of the Klinsmann era, it’s close

The U.S. has had its share of low moments during Jurgen Klinsmann’s tenure. It has even managed to lose to CONCACAF opponents on home soil on multiple occasions, so on the surface, losing a World Cup qualifier on the road wouldn’t seem to be all that surprising. The conditions are always difficult and the crowds hostile. Games often bear a closer resemblance to a street fight, so both the U.S. and Klinsmann should have known what to expect.Yet the U.S. looked as if it had no idea what it was in for. The team looked nervous, the touches were suspect and so were the passes.Then there were the defensive lapses. Morales simply skied over Mix Diskerud to nod home a corner in the seventh minute, allowing a crowd that was already well into the game to ratchet up its intensity, giving the home side a huge boost of confidence. The U.S. team’s misery was increased only eight minutes later from the most basic of plays. Goalkeeper Paulo Motta launched a goal kick upfield, and with center backs Omar Gonzalez and Michael Orozco way too far apart, the ball bounced to Ruiz, who ran through for a clear breakaway and deposited his shot past Tim Howard for a 2-0 lead.At minimum, it was the worst half of Klinsmann’s tenure.The U.S. found more of the game thereafter, but found Motta in inspired form. He did well to stop a shot from Alejandro Bedoya in the 23rd minute, and then produced two superb saves on Clint Dempsey and Bedoya within seconds of each other seven minutes into the second half. He stymied Dempsey again five minutes later, albeit on a shot that was well within his range. Motta later pushed aside a shot from substitute Jozy Altidore, too.Give Guatemala its due. It has been rejuvenated under new manager Walter Claveri, and came out with a plan to play direct while also mixing in some bits of possession as well. Its back line defended resolutely. But this loss will only serve to once again raise questions about the team’s direction under Klinsmann. At the moment, it’s not positive.

  1. Patchwork defense doesn’t get it done

When it came to Klinsmann’s lineup choices, he produced more than a few surprises, though some of them were forced on the U.S. manager. A left knee contusion ruled out center back John Brooks not only for this match but Tuesday’s encounter against this same Guatemala team as well. Klinsmann’s options were lessened further when Matt Besler sustained a concussion in Thursday’s training session.But even with the options remaining, Klinsmann still left himself open to second guessing, opting to deploy Orozco as a center back and Geoff Cameron at right back. Klinsmann’s choice of Diskerud alongside Michael Bradley was also something of a surprise. Given the game’s expected rugged nature, Kyle Beckerman seemed a more natural fit, especially on the defensive end. Diskerud failed to impress on either side of the ball and was subbed at halftime for Darlington Nagbe. Orozco was pulled in the 59th minute for Gyasi Zardes with DeAndre Yedlin sliding to right back.Back in November, the U.S. defense seemed to be stabilizing through Cameron and Besler. Yes, injuries played a part in the changes, but there also seems to be too much chopping and changing when it isn’t necessary, and that falls on Klinsmann.

  1. Tuesday’s game is now a must win

Before Friday’s game, the talk in the U.S. camp was about getting six points in these two games, locking up qualification to the final round Hexagonal and using the last two qualifiers in September to experiment with personnel. Now the complexion of this round has changed completely. A draw on Tuesday will leave the U.S. still in third place behind both Guatemala and Trinidad and Tobago. Even a win will leave the U.S. ahead of Guatemala by only a single point, so there is no margin for error.Can the U.S. get the job done? It actually has a bit of experience in this regard. Four years ago, the U.S. fell to Jamaica 2-1 on the road and had to regroup to play the Reggae Boyz again four days later. The U.S. ended up prevailing 1-0, and the road to qualification was back on track.The U.S. will also benefit from the fact that Ruiz will not be able to play in the match because of a legal dispute that will prevent him from traveling to the U.S. Another player, Hamilton Lopez, will also not travel because of visa issues. Whether the U.S. can take advantage of such good fortune remains to be seen. At minimum, the pressure is increasing with the U.S. psyche requiring some repair work.Jeff Carlisle covers MLS and the U.S. national team for ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreyCarlisle. 

After USA’s loss to Guatemala, margin for error is slim

After losing to Guatemala 2-0 Friday night, the U.S. now sits at third in Group C standings with three matches remaining.

BY GRANT WAHL SI ADD FAVORITETwitter EmailPosted: Sat Mar. 26, 2016

GUATEMALA CITY — The chants started more than two hours before kickoff, a stadium full of Guatemalans singing as one: “SÍ SE PUEDE! SÍ SE PUEDE!” (YES WE CAN! YES WE CAN!) But by the end of a stunning 90 minutes, after Guatemala had scored two goals and exposed the U.S.’s early lack of focus, the chants had changed ever so slightly.Now that Guatemala was sealing a historic 2–0 World Cup qualifying victory—it’s first win in 21 games against the U.S. going back to 1988—the wall of sound made the verb tense clear: “SÍ SE PUDO! SÍ SE PUDO!” (YES WE COULD!) In the past 18 months, as the U.S. men’s World Cup 2014 hangover has extended into a full-blown program malaise, coach Jurgen Klinsmann’s team has given new belief to a number of CONCACAF teams.In 2015 alone, these things happened: Jamaica won a competitive game against the U.S. on American soil for the first time in 10 tries. Panama did the same for the second time in 11 tries. And Mexico beat the U.S. for the first time in seven tries overall since Klinsmann took over in 2011.Let’s be honest: Guatemala is not nearly as good as any of those CONCACAF teams. The Chapines, ranked No. 95 in the world by FIFA, barely got past lightweights Bermuda and Antigua & Barbuda just to reach this semifinal round of qualifying—and then promptly lost their home opener to Trinidad & Tobago last November. Compared to the other two semifinal-round groups in CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, the U.S. got a sweetheart of a draw with T&T, Guatemala and St. Vincent & the Grenadines.And yet so far in three games the U.S. has only managed one victory against overmatched St. Vincent and has yet to score in the other two games away against T&T and Guatemala. The first 15 minutes here on Friday were a disaster for the U.S., which saw elementary defensive breakdowns give the hosts a shocking 2–0 early lead.“It was a lack of focus, concentration and wrong decisions,” said Klinsmann afterward. “On the first goal [off a corner kick] … nobody covered the first post. And we can write everything on the whiteboard—it’s in the locker room—if they have that kind of moment where they are not kind of remembering where their position is, then things like that can happen. But on this level obviously you get punished, and it shouldn’t happen that way. “The second goal [in which Carlos Ruiz pounced on a goal kick straight up the middle to score] was a sequence of mistakes,” Klinsmann continued, “from Michael [Bradley] not heading the ball to the centerbacks thinking that Michael has it, and one thinking the other has it. The ball goes through, and that’s what Carlos Ruiz is famous for.”When pressed on why the U.S. had such a lack of concentration in the first 15 minutes, when you would think the focus would be at its highest, Klinsmann said: “Maybe that’s a question for the players.”Over to you, then, Michael Bradley.“We didn’t start the game well. I don’t think it takes a genius to see that,” said the captain. “Why? I don’t have a good answer for you. Obviously, the goal is always to start well, to start in a positive way, to play the game in the other team’s end. There’s nights when you succeed in a good way, and there’s other nights when you don’t. Obviously, tonight wasn’t a good start, and you can still on some nights deal with things and play your way into it. And tonight we weren’t able to in any way.”Bradley wasn’t as sharp in this game as he often is, but give him credit for raising his hand on the second Guatemalan goal.“The goalkeeper kicks the ball and it comes quick and knuckling, and I saw it a bit late,” Bradley said. “And rather than try to jump and flick it in a weird way, I thought it was going to be best for our defenders if they were able to see it and attack it from there. And obviously it wasn’t the case. So certainly from my end I could have done better. When you play these types of games, all these little plays add up in big ways.”As for the other goal, and the man on the post who Klinsmann said should have been there, goalkeeper Tim Howard said he thought a Guatemalan player pulled Edgar Castillo off the post.“In an ideal world, you’d like to have ever post marked up,” said Howard. “But part of marking on set-pieces, what we do is we try and snuff out the danger before it gets to having a guy on the post. Nowadays you need to put guys in good spots, get everyone marked up and sometimes you sacrifice the man on the post. Of course, when the ball goes in just inside the post you go back to the old argument: Should you have a guy on the post?”When Klinsmann was asked why he chose to start Mix Diskerud in the central midfield (instead of Kyle Beckerman, Geoff Cameron, Lee Nguyen or Darlington Nagbe), he said he thought Diskerud could move the ball and create a midfield passing rhythm. But the coach took Diskerud off after 45 minutes for Nagbe because he felt like Diskerud and Bradley dropped too far back to link up with forwards Clint Dempsey and Bobby Wood.It’s also worth noting that Klinsmann didn’t just direct blame at others for the brutal result. “No matter if you win or lose, you question everything that happens during a game and you question yourself: ‘O.K., was this the right lineup? Was this the right substitutions? Was this the right way to approach it? What should we have done differently? Better?’” Klinsmann said. “Absolutely, you question that and you kind of think how can we fix this and this?”“At the end of the day, with the two mistakes that we did, with those two goals, you just have to swallow it. Because those are individual mistakes that you cannot do on that level. That’s what happened tonight. So we’ll take the blame. I’ll take the blame, if you want to hear that.“There’s absolute trust in the players because you’ve got to move on. You know, s— happens, but you’ve got to move on and that’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to go back to Columbus and we correct those mistakes, and there’s an absolute belief in these players.”And so the pressure mounts ahead of Tuesday’s rematch against Guatemala in Ohio. It’s not 100% a must-win game, but it is a nearly must-win, and it’s most definitely a do-not-lose game. A loss would put qualifying for World Cup 2018 in serious jeopardy.Klinsmann’s boss, U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati, knows the history, knows the U.S. has taken it to the last game of the semifinal round twice (in 2000 and ’12) before clinching passage to the Hexagonal. “If we get a good result on Tuesday like we expect, then things are back on track,” Gulati said on Friday.He’s right. But getting that good result on Tuesday looms large now. The margin for error is getting awfully slim.

Think the USMNT player pool is a bigger problem than Jurgen Klinsmann? Here’s why that isn’t true.

By Kevin McCauley  @kevinmccauley on Mar 26, 2016, 5:59p 12 

On Friday night, the United States men’s national team turned in an awful performance, losing 2-0 away to Guatemala. It was their first loss to the Guatemalans in any match since 1988 and their first loss to the Blue and Whites in World Cup qualifying ever. Naturally, fans are looking for answers.There’s a theory going around that the USMNT’s struggles are more down to a player pool that is thin and lacking in quality than the decisions of head coach Jurgen Klinsmann. Here’s a simple counter-argument.Presented below is an incomplete, curated list of some interesting players who received10 or more national team caps during the Bruce Arena and Bob Bradley eras.

Kenny Cooper
Edson Buddle
Robbie Findley
Jeff Cunningham
Richard Mulrooney
Santino Quaranta
Freddy Adu
Conor Casey
Kerry Zavagnin
Chris Klein
Chris Albright
David Regis
Ante Razov
Pat Noonan

While he’s outside of the parameters I’ve set for this discussion, we should mention 15-cap winner Zak Ibsen, who got caps in 1996 while playing indoor soccer.

Here are some guys who got 30 or more caps.

Jonathan Bornstein
Heath Pearce
Ricardo Clark

40-plus.

Clarence Goodson
Benny Feilhaber
Sacha Kljestan

50-plus.

Josh Wolff!

All of the above-listed players had very good professional careers and at least one great game for the USMNT. This post isn’t meant to be disrespectful to any of them. But of the above-listed players, which ones would crack the current USMNT at their best? Any of them? Feilhaber, Kljestan, Bornstein and Clark are arguably playing better for their clubs now than they did when they were regulars under Bradley. The United States men’s national team does not have a player pool problem. It has a player selection and utilization problem.

USMNT player ratings from a shameful, history-making loss in Guatemala

Leave a commentBy Nicholas MendolaMar 26, 2016, 12:09 AM EDT

No, it’s not just a bunch of zeroes…The United States men’s national team sacrificed a 21-year winning streak against Guatemala and again put its 2018 World Cup hopes in jeopardy with a clunker in Guatemala City, losing 2-0 on Friday.How bad was it? Let us count the ways the Yanks’ first loss to Guatemala in 21 years let us down:

  1. Poor defending
  2. Poor passing
  3. Poor possession
  4. Poor shooting
  5. Extremely poor tactics

But, hey, Tim Howard was back. Onto the ratings:

Starting XI

Tim Howard — 4 — Wasn’t much he was going to do on either Guatemala goal, but those were also the only times he was really challenged. Would’ve loved to see Superman steal a point, but even one fantastic save wouldn’t have been enough for this impotent attack.

Edgar Castillo — 5 — Some good tackling, but not a lot going forward. Something to build on.

Omar Gonzalez (Off 66′) — 4 — Poor. Just not as poor as his CB mate.

Michael Orozco (Off 59′) — 2 — After totally losing Ruiz on the second Guatemala goal, Gonzalez glanced over at Orozco while chasing the striker as if to say, “Center back… you’ve played it recently?” Awful night. He’s not even playing for his club team, but Jurgen Klinsmann apparently thinks Matt Hedges is the singer of an indie band.

Geoff Cameron — 6 — Penny for his thoughts as he found himself at right back with a CAM in his preferred CDM role and two monumental disappointments at CB. Whoops. Funny how it all tightened up once he moved central.

Mix Diskerud (Off at HT) — 3 — If this were little league, Mix would get credit for working super hard (and probably a popsicle). This, however, is a World Cup qualifier. Out-of-position or not, Diskerud was poor.

Michael Bradley — 4 — Really struggled with his distribution, and his touch was off all night. Not a good night for the States’ best player.

Alejandro Bedoya — 6 — One of the lone bright spots for the first 70 minutes, he has to wonder where the form of, well, every one of his teammates went.

DeAndre Yedlin — 4 — Playing in an advanced position, Yedlin was essentially invisible. Slotted back at RB later in the contest, he was a bit more comfortable.

Bobby Wood — 5 — The only service he received was long balls. Hard to fault the Hawaii islander.

Clint Dempsey — 4 — Created a couple strong scoring chances, but you knew this wasn’t a vintage Clint night when he hit a beautiful chance to pull the Yanks within one right at Motta. Looked disinterested at times, but managed to inject some life into his match in the final 20 minutes

Substitutes

Darlington Nagbe (On at HT) — 5 — Started a very good bit of play that should’ve led to a Dempsey goal but failed to gain momentum and disappeared as the match dragged to its conclusion.

Gyasi Zardes (On 59′) — 5 — Lively enough. Given the garbage casserole around him, he made his case to start on Tuesday.

Jozy Altidore (On 67′) — 5 — Wish he was 90 minutes strong, but also wish he would’ve beaten Motta for that late goal. Great save, but still.

Gonzalez and Orozco have a night to forget in U.S. loss to Guatemala

A trip to Guatemala City turned into a nightmare for Jurgen Klinsmann’s team inside of 15 minutes, when the Americans dug themselves a 2-0 hole. Chasing the game for the balance, the U.S. never found the bit of magic they needed to pull themselves back into the game.A handful of players put in decent performances, but as might be expected, the rest of the side had nights to forget.\

GK Tim Howard, 4 — Lack of playing time showed when the only two times he was tested resulted in Guatemalan goals. He was extremely slow to react on the first, when the ball deflected off of Mix Diskerud.

DF Geoff Cameron, 5 — Competent for most of the night and provided an additional outlet up the field, particularly when the Americans needed to push after going behind. It says something that he remained on the field while Omar Gonzalez and Michael Orozco were pulled.

DF Omar Gonzalez, 3 — A night to forget for the Pachuca man, to say the least. He was beaten down the middle by Carlos Ruiz for Guatemala’s second goal, and launched long ball after long ball that only served to end U.S. possession.

DF Michael Orozco, 4.5 — The better of the starting center-back pair, but only just. Never seemed in sync with his teammates, guilty of taking the easy route forward with his passing, too often lofting hopeless balls over the top.

DF Edgar Castillo, 3.5 — Made a poor back pass that led indirectly to the first Guatemalan goal, setting off the disastrous American night. He was rarely effective going forward and looked frustrated by attackers all night on the defensive side of the ball.

MF DeAndre Yedlin, 5.5 — Made his way up and down the wing to little effect for most of the evening, creating one real chance by using his speed to get to the end line, but was otherwise a nonfactor on the attacking end.

MF Michael Bradley, 5 — Just about as anonymous a night as he could have as the central figure in the American formation. He provided no special moments and delivered pedestrian service on set pieces. He lacked chemistry with Diskerud.

MF Mix Diskerud, 4 — Beaten on a corner for the first Guatemalan goal. He was unable to bring any creativity to the game, too often bullied off the ball in midfield. And he resorted to committing fouls to help slow things down when his subpar passing resulted in turnovers.

MF Alejandro Bedoya, 5 — He worked as hard as anyone on the field outside of Bobby Wood, without much to show for it. He had two good chances to score but put his shots directly at Guatemalan keeper Paulo Motta. He made some notable defensive contributions, but ran out of gas.

FW Clint Dempsey, 7 — Dempsey was the lone creative spark for the Americans, despite taking a beating from Guatemalan players looking to limit his impact. He created the best of the chances — chances his teammates failed to convert. He made an adjustment to drop deeper when the U.S. fell behind.

FW Bobby Wood, 6.5 — Wood fought hard all night, showing more passion than anyone wearing American colors. He suffered a number of fouls that didn’t draw a whistle and worked the channels well, but did not see enough of the ball.

Substitutes

MF Darlington Nagbe, 6.5 — Nagbe rought energy when he came out, running at defenders and pushing the attack. He combined well, and set up a late chance with a long run out of midfield.

MF Gyasi Zardes, 5 — He used his pace to stretch a fatigued Guatemalan defense, but failed to make his touches count when his control let him down.

FW Jozy Altidore, 5 — Brought on for Gonzalez as desperation set in with 25 minutes to go, Altidore did little more than serve as a target for long diagonal balls as the Americans chose basic tactics in a bid to find the goal that never came.Jason Davis 

Three things from Guatemala’s shockingly easy win over the USMNT

2 CommentsBy Nicholas MendolaMar 26, 2016, 12:27 AM EDT

I’ve gotta warn you, we’re going to be wading into snark-infested waters over the course of these “Three Things” after the United States struggled to string multiple attacking passes together in a woeful 2-0 loss to Guatemala on Friday.But we can wade together, right? You’ll come with me?Let’s wade…

W-T-J?!? (WHAT THE JURGEN)

What was he thinking? Even hamstrung by the injuries — see Thing No. 3 below — Klinsmann started a number of players in precarious positions.He also started Geoff Cameron (right) at right back. The Stoke City man is capable there, but DeAndre Yedlin actually plays that position for Sunderland.Yedlin couldn’t play there, though, because he was playing right wing. And Mix Diskerud couldn’t play on the wing, because he was playing as, essentially, a box-to-box midfielder.

[ OLYMPIC PLAYOFF: Match recap | 3 things ]

Here’s the worst part: He made substitutions that made the team not only more competitive, but more logical. Michael Orozco was terrible and hadn’t been playing for his team, and Gonzalez isn’t a natural partner for him.So Klinsmann moved Cameron central, dropped Yedlin to right back and moved Michael Bradley a bit further back in the midfield. He brought on Gyasi Zardes and Darlington Nagbe to open things up for Bobby Wood and Clint Dempsey. And it kinda worked (as much as it could in a horrific 2-0 loss).None of the above is good. Hamstrung by injuries or not — he was, this team has the depth of a kiddie pool — Klinsmann’s critics deserve the field days they will stretch through at least Tuesday. It bears asking: Is there a chance Klinsmann won’t make it to Columbus?

INJURIES (IT MUST BE SAID)

This is no way excuses Friday’s performance, but the U.S. is having a horrible run of luck. John Brooks has been thriving with Hertha Berlin, but was sent back to Germany after picking up a knock. Matt Besler was also hurt, and both Fabian Johnson and Jozy Altidorewere unfit to start.With the exception of Besler, those guys were major absences for a side already without Aron Johannsson and Terrence Boyd. Even Christian Pulisic, breaking through at Borussia Dortmund, got sick ahead of this one and only might be available for Tuesday’s return match in Ohio.The United States men’s national team does not have good depth on the whole, and we’re seeing that they will struggle when down to their second-choice unit.

MOTTA WAS GOOD, YANKS MADE HIM LOOK BETTER

Paulo Motta won’t have to buy a meal in Guatemala any time soon after he made some terrific saves on Friday, but it was certainly American-aided.Clint Dempsey should’ve pulled the Yanks to within one early in the second half after Darlington Nagbe and Bobby Wood combined to lay a ball right into the Clint Zone, but the American forward hit the ball right at Motta.And while Motta made a tremendous save on Jozy Altidore late, you do want you striker to find a way to put that ball home.That said, Motta was decisive and claimed seemingly every ball within his reach. He was vocal and, frankly, had me pumped up with his gesticulations. Sometimes, you’ve gotta tip your cap to the victor. I’m doing that now.

Furthering the fallout: More questions from USMNT’s loss to Guatemala

1 CommentBy Nicholas MendolaMar 26, 2016, 12:36 PM EDT

Unfortunately for USMNT coach Jurgen Klinsmann and the United States men’s national team, there aren’t European matches or even a full slate of MLS matches to take our minds off the carnage we witnessed last night Guatemala.So we write more.Disclosure: I love watching Major League Soccer and hope it continues its rise as a player in the world’s game. I also generally would prefer United States men’s national team members to be playing meaningful minutes at the highest level possible, and know that there are currently as many as 10 leagues in the world where that can occur — most of them in Europe — ahead of MLS.It’s also important to note that Klinsmann’s roster omissions are not strictly MLS based. Defenders Jonathan Spector, Eric Lichaj and Tim Ream have not been given good chances to regularly play under his watch, and they play in England’s Championship (As an aside, I’d love to see a tournament between MLS and the Championship to settle some things). Destroyer of sorts Perry Kitchen is with Scotland’s Hearts and could’ve done a job in last night’s miserable loss to Guatemala.And there’s a batch of MLS super fans, sometimes disguised as analysts, who dwell so heavily on which of their favorite domestic-based players aren’t being chosen by Klinsmann that it becomes near impossible to separate their legitimate gripes from the pathological features of their problems.Finally, there’s an argument to be made that Klinsmann’s sheer lunacy in Friday’s loss isn’t about player selection, rather where he put them (Michael Orozco aside. He doesn’t even start for his club).Consider that Klinsmann’s absurd choices to play several players out of position would’ve looked much better and likely performed significantly better if they had just been lined up, well, adequately.

How they started vs Guatemala

Howard

Cameron — Gonzalez — Orozco — Castillo

Diskerud

Yedlin — Bedoya

Bradley

Wood — Dempsey

Wouldn’t this have been better/more natural?

Howard

Yedlin — Gonzalez — Orozco — Castillo

Cameron

Bedoya — Bradley — Diskerud

Wood — Dempsey

Even if he needed to go 4-4-2 and play Bradley as a No. 10, that still would’ve been preferable to putting Diskerud on the left than using Bedoya on the flip of his preferred right.Now here’s the thing: there is absolutely no debating that MLS provides plenty of options at natural positions who could’ve been called up. Without delving too far into who I think is or isn’t good enough to cut muster, let’s assume Klinsmann wanted cover in a traditional 4-4-2. Which of these players wouldn’t have deserved a chance over playing a maximum of five players at their second-choice (at best) position?

Left backs (and Castillo was fine once he settled into Friday’s match)
DaMarcus Beasley, Justin Morrow, Chris Tierney, Robbie Rogers, Brek Shea.

Right backs
Michael Parkhurst, Sean Franklin, Tony Beltran, Raymond Gaddis, Chance Myers

Left mids
Brad Davis, Graham Zusi, Chris Rolfe, Sebastien Lletget, Lamar Neagle, Chris Pontius

Okay, so the right back ranks are extremely slim, but the point remains that bringing some of this crop would’ve helped supplement his team. Consider that of the players listed as defenders, five of the seven were center backs and Yedlin is clearly considered a winger.It’s also almost like he doesn’t want to give a true DCM a run while Jermaine Jones is suspended, almost as if to say, “Don’t get any ideas guys, he’s mine forever.” And we knowMatt Miazga and Tim Parker were with the U-23s and both John Brooks and Matt Besler picked up injuries, but what about Matt Hedges? Brad Evans? Chad Marshall? Either is preferable over Orozco, and it’s not like the Liga MX back is a spring chicken being prepped for the Copa America (He’s 30).Here’s Orozco’s blistering form for his club from Transfermarkt (I almost feel bad… it’s not like the defender is demanding to start for his country. Klinsmann just called him up and plugged him. Was he supposed to say no?).

Look, I’m well aware of my limitations as a soccer mind in comparison to someone of Jurgen Klinsmann’s experience. That’s not a potshot. I’m not going to tell you m word is gospel, but these aren’t exactly lofty theories that I proffer.What the heck is going on?

What happened to the United States’ goalkeeper pipeline?

By Conor Dowley  @c_dowley on Mar 25, 2016, 4:18p 5 

It wasn’t all that long ago that the United States was bragging about their goalkeeper depth. With Tim Howard wearing the No. 1 shirt and Brad Guzanwaiting in the wings — not to mention the USMNT’s long-established history of finding goalkeeping gems among their youth ranks — USMNT fans felt that, no matter what, one position in the national team could be relied on for a long time to come.Now, Howard is an aging shell of the player he once was. Guzan’s quality has fallen off a cliff this season. And that pipeline of young talent? It’s looking a little dry.The situation has come to such a head that Jurgen Klinsmann can’t decide which of Howard or Guzan should be the starter in goal anymore, and will instead platoon themin the United States’ upcoming friendlies. An optimist might think that Klinsmann can’t decide which goalkeeper is better, but someone who’s watched them with Everton and Aston Villa this season would realize that the question is more one of who could potentially hurt the USMNT less.That’s a decidedly less-than-ideal situation.The worst part is that there’s no obvious solution to the problem. Nick Rimando has served well, but is slowing with age himself. Among the younger ranks, there’s no clear successor right now — Bill Hamid’s development has been slowed by injuries, and he’s in the middle of a long spell on the sidelines now. Sean Johnson’s career has been a mixed bag of highs and some very low lows. William Yarbrough is as uninspiring an option as it gets. Anyone else is either too young, too inexperienced, too untalented or some combination of those three to be a real option to consider.Until and unless Hamid can stay consistently healthy and improve as is hoped, there’s no clear answer to the U.S. in goal. They’ll have to keep limping on with an aging Howard and a seemingly broken Guzan, instead of being able to call on one of three or four other talented goalkeepers as they’ve been able to in years past.Time was, top-shelf American goalkeepers used to struggle to get international appearances just because of how fierce the competition was — now, USMNT fans are wishing they could reach back in time and pluck just one of those netminders out of the shadows and into the current national team squad. Remember the 2002 World Cup squad? They had an embarrassment of riches in goal, boasting Brad Friedel and Kasey Keller in their primes, plus the venerable Tony Meolla as a “just in case” option.Just one of that trio would be a vast upgrade on the USMNT’s current woes, and the comparison makes the national team’s current dearth of quality options in goal all the more apparent. Whatever the cause of this weakness, the U.S. soccer player development system needs to figure it out and address it as soon as possible, before fans are left yearning for even today’s less-than-stellar options to guard the goal.

USA U23’s dodge Colombia’s attack, in position to qualify for Olympics

The United States under-23 team held on for a 1-1 draw against Colombia in the first leg of the Olympic qualifying playoff on Friday. The second leg kicks off Tuesday in Frisco Texas.

BY LIVIU BIRDADD FAVORITEEmailPosted: Fri Mar. 25, 2016

Get all of Liviu Bird’s columns as soon as they’re published. Download the new Sports Illustrated app (iOS or Android) and personalize your experience by following your favorite teams and SI writers.On a sweltering day in Barranquilla, with the mercury tickling the 90-degree mark, the United States took a step closer to qualifying for the Olympics with a 1-1 draw against Colombia. The U.S. came through well in a pressure-cooker first leg of the playoff for the final spot at Rio 2016’s under-23 competition.Luis Gil, spending his first season with Liga MX’s Querétaro, put the U.S. up an early goal in the fifth minute. He latched onto a pinpoint cutback cross from Mario Rodriguez streaking down the right, side-footing it past goalkeeper Cristian Bonilla.Colombia held the vast majority of possession but couldn’t break through a stifling U.S. back line in the first half. Forward Andrés Renteria looked the most dangerous of the bunch and certainly the most active in the Colombian attack, but his supporting cast faltered.The second half swung even farther in Los Cafeteros’ favor. The U.S. rarely got forward, and the Americans frequently defended with a baffling combination of desperation and luck that seemed likely to end at any second. The pressure finally culminated in Colombia winning a penalty in the 67th minute, as Kellyn Acosta pulled down substitute forward Rafael Borre.Colombia captain Juan Quintero stepped up to the spot and put his shot just out of goalkeeper Cody Cropper’s reach, low and to the left. The rest of the game passed similarly, with Colombia coming close to scoring and the U.S. somehow escaping. In the end, a draw with an away goal puts the Americans in a great position ahead of the return match on Tuesday in Frisco, Texas.Here are three thoughts on the first leg and the U.S.’s chances moving forward:

Prudent U.S. snags a vital away goal

It certainly wasn’t the start that most expected from the Americans, going up a goal in the first five minutes on the road. Prognostications before the match focused more on achieving a surmountable result for the second leg, not jumping into the lead from the very beginning.However, as fans of any league with a playoff system will attest, knockout matches have a strange way of making predictions look foolish. So perhaps it shouldn’t have been that surprising when Rodríguez drove down the right and found Gil in loads of space with the cutback between Colombia’s back and midfield lines.He took his chance well, and the U.S. had its dream start.rom there, it was a predictably defensive performance to try to escape Barranquilla with a slim lead, or at least a result that would make the away goal matter. The forwards held a deeper line of confrontation, starting near the top of the circle but receding more toward the halfway line and even deeper as the game went on. That allowed the U.S. to hold a firm line and swarm as Colombia tried to break through.Particularly after the second-half restart, Colombia’s attack threatened the U.S. goal with alarming regularity, but it only got the penalty past Cropper. The U.S. will call it a tactically disciplined effort, Colombia will call it immensely lucky—and the truth will be somewhere in between, though the U.S. deserves major credit for its courage.

Horvath injury puts more pressure on thin back line

First, it was center back Cameron Carter-Vickers picking up an injury just before the Olympic team got together for its playoff series. Then, senior coach Jurgen Klinsmann kept John Brooks for himself, leaving the position thin. Finally, stalwart Molde goalkeeper Ethan Horvath went out at the end of the first half on Friday with an apparent concussion, leaving the U.S. with even less of its first-choice defense at its disposal.Of course, Cropper is more than a capable deputy for Horvath. The MK Dons goalkeeper, who recently completed a move from Southampton in an attempt to get more playing time, has even been called into camp with Klinsmann’s team in the past. But Horvath’s form both in league play and for his country has been stellar in recent months.Defense was the biggest question mark heading into the series against Colombia, but the collective play from back to front in that regard surpassed all expectations on Friday, at least in terms of the final result. It started with the smart early shape from the forwards, holding a deeper line than usual, but Tim Parker held firm with Matt Miazga next to him, and Wil Trapp put in another mature performance as the midfield anchor.Now, it’s a matter of whether the back line can do more of the same in four days’ time, this time on home soil.

So you’re telling me…there’s a chance?

The U.S. has been through some adversity, much of it self-imposed, in its last couple of Olympic qualifying efforts. Undeniably, the Americans should have taken care of business this time in the CONCACAF tournament rather than waiting for its chance in the playoff, the shock defeat to Honduras still a stinging memory even as the Colombia series is half-over.Still, the team deserves some credit for its valiant effort to make do with that poor result.If youth national team tournaments are about gaining experience for the senior level and identifying potential players for that team, then a difficult qualifying campaign will have done just that.If the U.S. doesn’t get to the Olympics, it will still ultimately be a failure.Remarkably, though, it has a great chance in the second leg against Colombia on the back of its performance on Friday. Having to go through the process in this manner, that’s all coach Andi Herzog will have wanted out of a difficult first leg in South America

Suarez gets equalizer in 2-2 draw with Brazil in return

Leave a commentAssociated PressMar 26, 2016, 10:45 AM EDT

RECIFE, Brazil (AP) Luis Suarez scored a second-half equalizer in his first game back from a two-year international ban as Uruguay rallied to draw Brazil 2-2 Friday in a South American World Cup qualifier.Suarez, after few chances in the first half, scored in the 48th minute, beating Brazil keeper Alisson on a 10-meter (10-yard) left-footed shot as he broke in from the left side.Suarez almost scored the winner in the 86th but was stopped by Alisson from short-range.It was a perfect return for the Barcelona star after being banned from the international game for nearly two years for biting Italian defender Giorgio Chiellini in the 2014 World Cup.Uruguay has 10 points in five matches, three points behind leader Ecuador. Brazil moved level with Argentina and Paraguay in third position with eight points.Brazil took an early 2-0 lead, but Uruguay dominated the second half, bringing jeers from a sellout crowd in a stadium in northeastern Brazil built for the 2014 World Cup.Brazil took the lead after only 39 seconds on Douglas Costa’s goal on a pass from Willianon the right wing. Renato Augusto made it 2-0 in the 26th minute, scoring on a through-ball from Neymar.Uruguay then cut the lead to 2-1 in the 32nd when Edinson Cavani scored, knocking in a backward header from Carlos Sanchez.In the next series of matches Tuesday, it’s Colombia vs. Ecuador, Uruguay vs. Peru, Argentina vs. Bolivia, Venezuela vs. Chile and Paraguay vs. Brazil.

3/24/16 US vs Guat WCQ Fri/Tues, U 23s OlympicQ, Ger/Eng, Ger/Italy, Italy/Spain, Arg/Chile, Braz/Uruguay, Johan Cruyff dies, TV Games of Wk

So big games for the US Men’s National Team this weekend as they can all but Qualify for the next round of World Cup Qualifications vs Guatamala both home and away and perhaps just as importantly the US U-23s face Colombia in a 2 game playoff (Home and Away) to see which one will qualify for this summer’s Olympic Soccer tournament in Brazil.  Listen I won’t pretend to understand the German (read US men’s team coach Juergan Klinsmann) – why he would not send U23’s DeAndre Yedlin currently starting at Sunderland in the EPL and John Brooks starting in Germany along with the U23s in their desperate attempt to qualify for the Olympics – I just don’t understand.  Heck I would go 1 step further and say 17 year old -Christian Pulisic should be playing with them as well – hell he has started for Dortmund one of the top 15 clubs in the world – don’t you want him helping the US go to the Olympics – a tourney you would think he would feature in this summer?  I just don’t understand. Listen I know he might start Brooks and Yedlin at Guatamala – but don’t you think Gonzales and Cameron and maybe Beezler can hold down the fort while those guys help the US team qualify for the Olympics.  Seriously if the US doesn’t qualify this will be the 2nd straight cycle under the GERMAN’s Leadership where the US doesn’t qualify for the Olympics – 8 years would be the most in recent history that the US U23s would not qualify.  For a coach who continues to laud the importance of his younger players playing in the Olympics – he isn’t showing he cares with his actions.  Maybe he’s just looking to fire another scapegoat Coaching understudy after the US U23’s don’t qualify again!!  Either way huge games Friday night 10 pm US @ Guatamala on beIN Sports (soccer bars will have it), then Tuesday at home vs Guatamala again in Columbus, Ohio 7 pm on ESPN2.  Win both and the US will all but advance to the next round with 2 games left.  Even 1-1 is ok, which is again why I don’t understand not sending our best with the U-23s Friday night at Columbia at 5 pm on Fox Sports 1, and again on Tues night in Texas 9:30 pm on ESPN2.  Locally – huge congrats to Carmel Native Cameron Lindley for Captaining the U-20 US Men’s soccer team to a third place finish in the Dallas Cup this past weekend – the US Finished 1-1-1.

It’s an international break so the European and all major leagues (not MLS of course) are shutdown while their best players play in qualifiers (America’s, Asia, Africa) and the European’s play friendlies.  If you have beIN Sports – they are carrying a # of the must win South American games on Tuesday as Argentina, Chile and Columbia are on the edge of not qualifying for the World Cup.  ESPN 2 grabbed the Italy vs Spain game today 3:45 pm, Sat’s Germany vs England match at 3:45 and Tuesday’s 3:30 Germany vs Italy game.  Fox sport 1 has the England vs Netherlands Tues at 4 pm before hosting the big Portland vs Orlando game on Sunday at 8 pm.

We are down to the Final 8 – Quarterfinals in Champions League –  with 2 games each on Apr 5/6 + 12/13 with Barcelona vs Athletico and PSG vs Man City looking like the best match-ups on Fox Sports 1 & 2.  Also at the Quarters is Europa League on 4/7 as Liverpool hosts Dortmund at 3 pm on FS1.   And don’t forget the Indy 11 kick-off the season at Tampa Bay on 4/2 7:30 pm on ESPN 3 before returning home 4/9.  Single Game Copa America 100 Tickets – are available for all 4 games in Chicago in early June.  (See chart below TV games for pricing info)

Finally – a sad note as Dutch superstar Johan Cruyff died Wed at the age of 68.  This legendary player and coach at Ajax, Barcelona and the Dutch national team is considered by most to be one of the top 3 or 4 players of all time and his coaching methods of using small-sided futbol to train the Dutch players is widely used across the world today.

Dutch Star Johan Cruyff Dies at 68 

More Cruyff

Cruyff’s Legendary Moments

Alltime Top 20 Players – Cruyff #3

GAMES of the Week

Thur, Mar 24

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Italy vs Spain 2 of the top teams in world square off in friendly

Fri, Mar 25

5 pm Fox Sport1         US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff  Must Tie or not lose by more than 1 at Columbia

10 pm beIN Sport    Guatemala vs. United States men, WC qualifier  2 US Wins puts us thru to next round

Sat, Mar 26

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs England  –                     World Champs host England

Tuesday, March 29:

3:30 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs Italy                                

4 pm  fox Sport1         England vs Netherlands

4:30 pm beIN Sport    Columbia vs Ecudor  WCQ           Columbia in MUST Win at Home!

7 pm (ESPN2)       United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH Must win at Home

7:30 pm beIN Sport   Argentina vs Bolivia  WCQ      must win at home for Argentina

9:30 pm ESPN2            US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff Texas  US Must win to Go to Olympics

Sat, Apr 2

12:30 pm NBC               Liverpool vs Tottenham

12:30 pm Fox soccer     Dortmund vs Werder Bremen

2:30 pm bein?              EL CLASSICO – Barcelona vs Real Madrid –SPORTS BAR

7:30 pm ESPN3             Indy 11 @ Tampa Bay Rowdies

Sun, Apr 3

8:00 p.m Fox Sports1 Orlando City vs. Portland Timbers

Tues, Apr 5

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport 2 Bayern Munich vs. Benfica

Wed, Apr 6

2:45 p.m FoxSport1   Man City vs PSG

2:45 pm Fox Sport2     Real Madrid vs VFL Wolfsburg

7 pm Fox Sports 1      US Women vs Columbia

Thurs, Apr 7

Europa Cup 3:00 p.m., FS1?   Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund

USA

Litmus Test time for CONCACAF Qualifying

US vs Guatamala Preview Goal.com

US Roster Announced with Dempsey and Bedoya back on Board

US Team snubs and expectations

US Confident Altidore and Johnson will be Fit to Play

Gonzales Back in Form for US after move to Pachuca from LA

US Defender Beezler fears no Forward

Report Links US Forward Bobby Wood with Liverpool or a move up to Bundesliga

US Defender Matt Miazga Wants to Be the Best

US Back DeAndre Yedlin gains Experience starting for Sunderland

Scouting Guatemala

 Tim Howard Exits as good not great keeper from Everton

US U-17 goalie Will Pulisic (Christian’s brother) will join Dormund next Season

PODCAST: USMNT’s Bedoya on Nantes, USMNT, MLS, fatherhood

Grant Wahl SI talks Importance of Qualifiers this Weekend

US Ladies Roster Named for April Friendlies

US Ladies Domination

US looking for Rare WC/Olympic Double

US-U20s Draw Hoffenheim 3-3 in Dallas Cup

US National Team Budgets – Philly.com

US Men — The full senior team roster:

GOALKEEPERS (4): David Bingham (San Jose Earthquakes), Brad Guzan (Aston Villa), Tim Howard (Everton FC), William Yarbrough (Club Leon).

DEFENDERS (9): Ventura Alvarado (Club America), Matt Besler (Sporting Kansas City), Steve Birnbaum (D.C. United), John Brooks (Hertha Berlin), Geoff Cameron (Stoke City), Edgar Castillo (Monterrey), Omar Gonzalez (Pachuca), Michael Orozco (Club Tijuana), DeAndre Yedlin (Sunderland).

MIDFIELDERS (8): Kyle Beckerman (Real Salt Lake), Alejandro Bedoya (Nantes FC), Michael Bradley (Toronto FC), Mix Diskerud (New York City FC), Ethan Finlay (Columbus Crew SC), Fabian Johnson (Borussia Monchengladbach), Darlington Nagbe (Portland Timbers FC), Lee Nguyen (New England Revolution).

FORWARDS (5): Jozy Altidore (Toronto FC), Clint Dempsey (Seattle Sounders FC), Chris Wondolowski (San Jose Earthquakes), Bobby Wood (Union Berlin), Gyasi Zardes (Los Angeles Galaxy).

And the Under-23 roster :

GOALKEEPERS (3): Cody Cropper (Milton Keynes Dons), Ethan Horvath (Molde KJ), Zach Steffen (SC Freiburg).

DEFENDERS (8): Kellyn Acosta (FC Dallas), Matt Miazga (Chelsea FC), Eric Miller (Colorado Rapids), Tim Parker (Vancouver Whitecaps FC), Desevio Payne (FC Groningen), Shane O’Neill (Cambridge United), Brandon Vincent (Chicago Fire), Walker Zimmerman (FC Dallas).

MIDFIELDERS (9): Fatai Alashe (San Jose Earthquakes), Paul Arriola (Club Tijuana), Luis Gil (Queretaro), Julian Green (Bayern Munich), Emerson Hyndman (Fulham FC), Jerome Kiesewetter (VfB Stuttgart), Matt Polster (Chicago Fire), Dillon Serna (Colorado Rapids), Wil Trapp (Columbus Crew SC).

FORWARDS (3): Jordan Morris (Seattle Sounders FC), Mario Rodriguez (Borussia Monchengladbach), Khiry Shelton (New York City FC).

PrideU15_Nationals

Congrats to Indy’s FC Pride U15 Girls + Coach Matt Blackbourne heading to US Nationals in Texas
International Qualifiers and Friendlies 

What to Watch for This Weekend –ESPNFC

International Friendlies Schedule

What to Watch for Friendlies in Europe

Barcelona buddies will go at it for their countries this week

Teammates Suarez & Neymar bet Burger on Qualifier Matchup Friday

Messi Returns for Argentina in must win Qualifier at Chile Friday  

Boliva vs Colombia Preview – Must Wins

Chile vs Argentina Preview

Luis Suarez returns for Uruguay vs Brazil from 636 day ban for Biting

Columbia Changes Up Squad with crucial matches vs Bolivia and Ecudor

Belgium vs Portugal Moved to Portugal

Players Looking to Make a Statement in Friendlies

Could Euros Be Forced Indoors?

Euros Match Schedule

Italy lacks Creativity

Italy vs Spain Preview

 WORLD NEWS +_ EPL

Buffon Breaks Serie A Record with 973 minutes without a goal in 4-1 win over Turino

Buffon’s Magical Poem to His Goal

World News SI – Buffon, City Skid – Ben Lyttleton

Spurs Keep Heat on Leicester and Man U wins Darby  

Liverpool blows shot at Top 4 with loss to Southhampton

Leicester City adds Resiliance to its Virtues NY Times

As likely as Elvis Being Alive- Leicester defies odds in EPL Title Lead –Grant Wahl SI  

BIRD: How Ranieri transformed Leicester into a contender

Will Man City Miss Champions League Next Year

ICC – Announces Clubs coming to US this Summer

ICC – Real Madrid vs PSG in Columbus July 27 Tix on Sale Mar 29.

 MLS

Tim Howard ready for step back to MLS in his Career

Orlando City Signs Brazilian Julio Baptista former Real star Forward

Vote MLS Save of the Week

Power Rankings Week 3

 Indy 11

Coach Not Happy with Early Progress – Bloody Shambles

Indy 11 Loses to Louisville City at Home

 Indy 11 Kids Club – Mon- Mar 28th at Off the Wall Sports in Carmel 4:30 – 6:30 pm   

Tickets Just $11 per Game

Podcast with Cincy United Head Coach – Former USMNT Forward John Harkes

Freddy Adu settles in with Tampa Bay Rowdies

2016 Indy 11 Promo Nights

Spring Season
Saturday, April 9 vs. Ottawa – Bicentennial Celebration
Saturday, April 16 vs. New York Cosmos – Wine & Cheese Night
Saturday, May 7 vs. FC Edmonton – Furballs & Futbol Night

Saturday, May 21 vs. Minnesota United FC – IMS – Military Appreciation Night
Saturday, June 11 vs. Carolina RailHawks – Indy Pride Night

 GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV

Thur, Mar 24

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Italy vs Spain

Fri, Mar 25

5 pm Fox Sport1         US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff

7 pm beIn Sports        Haiti vs Panama

10 pm beIN Sport    Guatemala vs. United States men, WC qualifier,

Sat, Mar 26

10:30 am beIn Sport                        South Africa vs Cameroon

12 noon ESPN 3           Russia vs Lithuania

3 pm  YES                         NY City FC vs New England

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs England

5:30 pm  beIn sport  DC United vs Dallas

Sun, Mar 27

3:45 pm beIn Sport   Romania vs Spain

Tuesday, March 29:

2:45 pm ESPN3            Scotland vs Denmark

3:30 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs Italy

4 pm  fox Sport1         England vs Netherlands

4 pm ESPN 3                  France vs Russia

4:30 pm beIN Sport                          Columbia vs Ecudor  WCQ

7 pm (ESPN2)       United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH

7:30 pm beIN Sport                          Argentina vs Bolivia  WCQ

9:30 pm ESPN2            US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff Texas

Fri, Apr 1

3:30 p.m. Fox Sports 2 Schalke 04 vs. Borussia Mönchengladbach

Sat, Apr 2

7:45 am NBCSN            Aston Villa vs Chelsea

9:30 am Fox Sport2   Bayern Munich vs Frankfurt

10 am NBCSN                 Bournemouth vs Man City

10 am USA??                  Arsenal vs Watford

12:30 pm                         NBC               Liverpool vs Tottenham

12:30 pm Fox soccer                        Dortmund vs Werder Bremen

2:30 pm bein?              EL CLASSICO – Barcelona vs Real Madrid –SPORTS BAR

7:30 pm ESPN3             Indy 11 @ Tampa Bay Rowdies

Sun, Apr 3

8:30 am NBCSN            Leicester City vs Southhampton

11 am NBCSN                 Man U vs Everton

6 pm ESPN 3                  NY Cosmos vs Ottawa

8:00 p.m Fox Sports1 Orlando City vs. Portland Timbers

Tues, Apr 5

Champions League Elite 8

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport1 Barcelona vs. Atlético Madrid

2:45 p.m., Fox Sport 2 Bayern Munich vs. Benfica

Wed, Apr 6

2:45 p.m FoxSport1                          Man City vs PSG

2:45 pm Fox Sport2                          Real Madrid vs VFL Wolfsburg

7 pm Fox Sports 1      US Women vs Columbia

Thurs, Apr 7

3:00 p.m., FS1?            Liverpool vs. Borussia Dortmund

3:00 p.m., FS2?            Sevilla vs. Athletic Bilbao

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Braga

3:00 p.m., TV TBD:     Sparta Prague vs. Villarreal

Sat, Apr 9

7:30 am NBCSN            West Ham vs Arsenal

9:30 am Fox Sport 1 Schalke vs Dortmund

11:30 am                          FS2                Koln vs Bayer Leverkusen

12:30 pm NBC              Man City vs West Brom

7:30 pm ESPN3 +Ch8 Indy 11 vs Ottawa (Home Opener)

Sun, Apr 10

7:30 am NBCSN            Sunderland vs Leciester City

11 am NCBCN                Tottenham vs Man United

11 am Extra                    Liverpool vs Stoke City

2 pm ESPN                      US Women vs Columbia

4:00 p.m ESPN              Houston Dynamo vs. Seattle Sounders

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 New York City FC vs. Chicago Fire

9:30 pm Fox Sports 1 Los Angeles Galaxy vs. Portland Timbers

April 12/13. Champions League Quarter-finals:

 Sun, Apr 17

3:30 pm ESPN                Orlando City vs. New England Revolution

7:00 p.m Fox Sports1 FC Dallas vs. Sporting Kansas City,

 MLS TV Schedule ‘

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

COPA AMERICA 100 –GAMES IN CHICAGO

Sun -June 5 4 pm Jamaica vs Venezuela, Tues June 7 – 7 pm (USA vs Costa Rica), Friday, June 10 Argentina vs Panama 8:30 pm.

Wed, June 22  Semi Finals – 7 pm – Argentina vs Brazil maybe? 

Soldier Field  Chicago Venue Passes – If interested in planning a trip over – reach out to me (shanebestsoccer@gmail.com)

1410 S. Museum Campus Drive, Chicago, IL 60605   Seating charts reflect the general layout for the venue at this time these are general prizes based on the full venue packages – I’m sure they will be a little more but this gives you an idea.

Level 1 seats – only things left are  front row $300+

Level 2 seats –   $115/game  upper corners Endzones, Level 2 sidelines –

Level 2 sidelines– $200 each

Level 4 sidelines –  $115/game

Former Tottenham and Fulham attacker can become the all-time leading scorer in World Cup qualification for the USA w/a goal against the minnows on Fri

United States forward Clint Dempsey can make World Cup qualification history for his country when they face Guatemala in Group C on Friday.The 33-year-old attacker – recalled to Jurgen Klinsmann’s squad after missing USA’s first two matches in the fourth round – sits level with Landon Donovan on 13 World Cup qualifying goals.empsey insisted his mentality has never changed since making his debut in 2004 and has the chance to move to outright leader in that team category against Guatemala, although his overall goal tally of 48 remains well short of Donovan’s record mark of 57.”I have enjoyed my time with the national team and every time I have got called up to camp and played in games, I have had the same mentality,” Dempsey told US Soccer.”I have played my best, left everything out on the field and if you get opportunities to play, you continue in the same way.”I don’t think that just because you have a little time off that you would change. For me, I have always treated it the same, wanted to make the most of the games I was a part of and tried to make an impact.”SA and Guatemala are both in the running to finish in the top two group spots, which would seal a place in the final stage of Concacaf qualifying for Russia 2018. USA garnered four points from their first two games and are joint-top of the standings with Trinidad & Tobago, one clear of Guatemala in third as the two nations prepare to meet twice – on March 25 and 29 – with Klinsmann’s men away from home in the first fixture.”You really don’t know what things are going to be like until you are actually there [in Guatemala] and experience it for yourself,” added Dempsey ahead of the two games against a side sitting 65 places below them in the Fifa rankings.”It’s a passionate crowd, wanting their team to do well and sometimes dealing with difficult conditions, dealing with travel, that’s part of qualifying for the World Cup. “That’s why it’s so difficult, but it’s also so rewarding when you are able to qualify for a World Cup. It’s not going to be easy. It’s going to be a difficult game, but that’s part of the experience.”You want to be performing well going into Copa America [in June] because it’s a major tournament as well and it’s an opportunity to do something great on home soil.”USA have won their last three meetings – all at home – against Guatemala, including a 4-0 friendly win last July, but their last away trip was a 1-1 draw in 2012 and their visit prior to that resulted in a narrow 1-0 win in 2008.”Our goal definitely for the two Guatemala fixtures is six points,” said Klinsmann. “We badly want to get the job done before the Copa America Centenario if possible.”We know it’s going to be very difficult, especially the game in Guatemala City. It will be vital how we come out right away from the first second in Guatemala City and hopefully being able to get three points. That would make things a lot easier for the second game.”

Dempsey’s return highlights USMNT roster for World Cup qualifying

Leander Schaerlaeckens,FC Yahoo Sun, Mar 20 10:28 AM PDT

Over the next week and a half, the senior United States men’s national will seek to make firm strides toward an eighth consecutive World Cup appearance in Russia in 2018, while the Under-23 team attempts to qualify for this summer’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.The big team faces Guatemala twice, away on Guatemala City on Friday and then four days later in Columbus, Ohio. Win those two games and the U.S. is practically assured of a spot in the final round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifying that will begin in November. The prospects face off with Colombia in Baranquilla and Frisco, Texas, on the same days.On Sunday, U.S. head coach Jurgen Klinsmann announced a 26-man roster for the World Cup qualifiers – his under-23 counterpart Andy Herzog had already done so on Saturday, picking a promising team including nine players who have already made their senior team debuts.The confluence in qualifiers between the two highest age levels made for a unique situation in which Klinsmann and Herzog, who is also Klinsmann’s senior team assistant, had to coordinate carefully to address the needs of both teams. After all, Klinsmann is eager to win all six points available against Guatemala. But in his dual role as U.S. Soccer’s technical director, he’s also conscious of the enormous developmental value of his best prospects competing at the Olympics.As such, senior team striker Jordan Morris will drop down a level. So will some on the fringes of the big team, like defender Matt Miazga, winger Jerome Kiesewetter and midfielder Wil Trapp.But the senior team will see the return of former captain Clint Dempsey, who had not been a part of the last two camps.”Having Clint Dempsey back is very, very important for us,” Klinsmann said in a statement. “He’s a tremendous goal-scorer and when we play teams like Guatemala, you need to figure out ways to score just one or two goals that make the difference. Clint is a guy that can get that done.”Dempsey’s return will be welcomed after his strong season start with the Seattle Sounders. He is tied with the retired Landon Donovan for the most World Cup qualifying goals for a U.S. player with 13. And he has scored five times against Guatemala, also more than any countryman.lejandro Bedoya also made his first camp of the year. The midfielder has been in torrid form for Nantes in France. Defender John Brooks was called in for the first time since September. Edgar Castillo hadn’t been on the national team in two years. But their respective work with Hertha Berlin and Monterrey earned them looks.Striker Jozy Altidore and midfielder Fabian Castillo, however, enter camp with a hamstring and groin injuries, respectively.After a come-from-behind 6-1 win over Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and a 0-0 away tie with Trinidad and Tobago in November, the Americans are tied on points for the lead in Group C of qualifying with T&T – although the Yanks’ goal difference is better. Klinsmann hopes to lock up one of the top two places in these games, allowing this summer’s stateside Copa America Centenario to take center stage.”We badly want to get the job done before the Copa America if possible,” Klinsmann said. “We know it’s going to be very difficult, especially in Guatemala City, but it’s also going to be difficult in Columbus, but there we have a great crowd behind us. It will be vital how we come out right away from the first second in Guatemala City, and hopefully being able to get three points. That would make things a lot easier for the second game.”The Americans will take heart from their 15-4-6 all-time record against Los Chapines, and their ongoing 21-game unbeaten run against them. But then the U.S. has won just one of six World Cup qualifiers on Guatemalan soil and the opponents badly need points after dropping their home game against Trinidad and Tobago, their main rivals in the race to qualify along with the American favorites.Klinsmann called in 26 players for this camp, even though he’ll only be allowed to put 23 on his game-day rosters. While the stakes are considerable, he hopes the camp can double as a tryout of sorts for the prestigious Copa.”This is now the time where you have to show how good you are in terms of you want to make a statement to be in the roster for Copa America,” Klinsmann said. “So this is big. The competition will be intense. … The reason why we brought in a little bit of a bigger roster is because of the fact that it is the last time before we decide on the roster for the Copa America. We want to have the opportunity to see a couple more players.”Before the summer, however, two tricky games await. For the national team and its understudies.

Dempsey’s roles, sizing up the snubs and more thoughts on the U.S. roster

Goal.com 13 hours ago

Guatemala has never been a world beater, but Jurgen Klinsmann doesn’t care. As much as U.S. national team fans may want to overlook the Central Americans, and would prefer to see Klinsmann experiment with some new faces in this month’s World Cup qualifiers, Klinsmann isn’t ready to take that chance. More to the point, he isn’t going to waste the opportunity to call in as strong a U.S. team as possible, even if it lacks the sizzle that new names can sometimes provide.Rather than bring in fresh faces, Klinsmann turned to some familiar names we hadn’t heard in a while. Chief among them is Clint Dempsey, who hadn’t been with the team since struggling through the CONCACAF Cup loss to Mexico in October. As much as Klinsmann chalked up Dempsey’s recent absences from camp to simply wanting to look at some new faces, there was still a lingering sense of dread that the coach might be easing Dempsey out of the national team door the same way he abruptly ended Landon Donovan’s national team career almost two years ago.We have not seen the last of Dempsey in a U.S. uniform though, and his return for the March qualifiers suggests Klinsmann still has plans for him this summer, which has been Dempsey’s hope since the Copa America was finalized.Omar Gonzalez is also back after an extended absence since September, and his excellent run of form for Liga MX side Pachuca made him a difficult player to leave off the squad. Gonzalez will have a fight for a starting role though, with Geoff Cameron looking like a good bet to start on the right side of central defense.The tough thing about the group Klinsmann called in is the uncertainty about two key players. Fabian Johnson suffered a hamstring injury on Saturday, and while he’s on the U.S. camp roster, it doesn’t mean he will be healthy in time to play on Friday in Guatemala. Jozy Altidore made his return from injury on Sunday for Toronto FC, but he is likely facing a battle to regain the necessary fitness to be considered a possible starting option.With those potential key absences in mind, here is a look at the starting lineup we could see take the field in Guatemala on Friday, along with a look at five storylines from the U.S. roster announcement:

CONSIDERING DEMPSEY’S ROLE

If the CONCACAF Cup showed us anything, it’s that an Altidore-Dempsey forward tandem probably doesn’t have much of a future. Sure, the pairing could manage to score a few goals, and beat the likes of Guatemala, but it’s tough to see the duo producing enough dynamism up top to truly trouble tougher teams, like the ones the U.S. will see this summer.So if we consider that, and if Klinsmann is at all looking ahead to this summer, then we need to see Dempsey with a different strike partner, or in a different position. The argument could be moot if Altidore can’t regain his fitness in time to be a starting option. If he can’t, then a Dempsey-Bobby Wood tandem starts to look very attractive. Dempsey’s smart passing and movement, coupled with Wood’s speed and well-timed runs, could cause problems in the Copa America, and would certainly give Guatemala’s defense fits.And if Altidore is fit enough to start? Then an Altidore-Wood strike force makes sense, with Dempsey potentially occupying a role at the top of a diamond 4-4-2, or perhaps a role on the left wing, where he has spent time for the Seattle Sounders.Could Klinsmann leave Dempsey on the bench? It’s tough to see it, but if Klinsmann does plan on phasing him out, then that would certainly be one way to do it. Don’t bet it on it just yet, though.

STICKING WITH THE OLD GUARD IN DEFENSIVE MIDFIELD

If you were hoping to see some younger defensive midfield options get a nod in this camp given Jermaine Jones’ suspension, you were sorely disappointed. Kyle Beckerman was called in as expected, but Klinsmann didn’t call in any other defensive midfield types, choosing to pass on Danny Williams despite Williams’ excellent form for Reading FC. Yes, you could argue Mix Diskerud has been known to play a deeper central role under Klinsmann, and he is playing better for New York City FC, but it’s tough for anyone to see Diskerud as a long-term solution in a defensive midfield role.Calling on Beckerman as the lone defensive midfielder also appears to signal the likelihood that Klinsmann plans on riding Jones and Beckerman all the way through Copa America, which seems risky given their age, but understandable if he doesn’t really see any of the younger options (like Will Trapp or Perry Kitchen) being ready for such an important role this summer.Klinsmann might also be taking notice of Michael Bradley’s run in defensive midfield for Toronto FC, and considering a move U.S. fans have spent years clamoring for. Playing Bradley in a deeper role would make room for Dempsey in midfield, and could allow Klinsmann to move a step closer to fielding his strongest possible lineup this summer.

BACK IN THE DEFENSIVE MIX

Omar Gonzalez’s absence from the national team wasn’t nearly as eyebrow-raising as Dempsey’s was, mainly because his form last fall wasn’t good and he deserved to be dropped. Gonzalez responded by moving to Liga MX and grabbing a starting role on a strong Pachuca side. Whether Gonzalez needed a change of scenery after seven seasons with the LA Galaxy, or he was simply in a rut last year, there is no denying that he is currently in good form.John Brooks was in much the same boat last year, having failed to impress at last summer’s Gold Cup. He has since retaken a starting role at Hertha Berlin, and been an integral part of their impressive run to third place in the German Bundesliga.Steve Birnbaum’s call-up may have come as a bit of a surprise, but he clearly impressed in the January camp and played himself into a return engagement. Though he isn’t likely to play much, if at all, the young D.C. defender is potentially an option this summer if there are injuries, and if he can keep playing well for D.C. United.

THE HEAD SCRATCHERS

Edgar Castillo’s return had to surprise some, even though Klinsmann has mentioned him in the past as a player who has been on his radar for some time. Just last January, Klinsmann told Goal that Castillo was in the mix for a national team return. His deficiencies as a defender are well known, but he has been playing regularly for Liga MX leaders Monterrey, and he just might be passable enough defensively to due as a starting option against Guatemala.

Michael Orozco is an even bigger head-scratching selection than Castillo. At least Castillo starts for Monterrey. Orozco can’t even make the bench for Tijuana. So why call him in? Orozco is one of the few players Klinsmann feels comfortable with at right back, and he should be able to handle taking on Guatemala if he’s needed, though DeAndre Yedlin really should be the starting right back for the upcoming qualifiers.

THE SNUBS

There are always players who wind up missing out, but two stand out above the rest this time around. Jorge Villafana remains a no-show despite him playing very well for Santos Laguna this season. Ultimately, it appears Klinsmann preferred Castillo, who he knows well.The other snub that stood out was Williams, who appears to still be paying the price for his terrible showing against Costa Rica in October. He hasn’t been called in since, and after this latest snub, it is starting to look like he won’t be an option for Copa America despite his good club form.

soccer 3/18/16 – Copa Single Game Tix 3/22, TV Games of Week, Champ League Final 8, USMNT WCQ 3/25

Ok 1 soapbox moment for the Ole Ballcoach – Some of the best players in the World are coming to AMERICA this Summer to play in real games – the COPA AMERICA CENTARIO (yes the 100th edition of one of the world’s greatest tournaments is being held in the USA – in fact IN CHICAGO!!)  Argentina’s Lionel Messi, Angel Di Maria, Carlos Tevez, Sergio Aguero; Brazil’s Neymar, David Luis, Thiago Silva, Kaka, Oscar, Willian; Columbia’s James, Mexico’s Chichirito, Chile’s Alexis Sanchex or Arturo Vidal, Uraguay’s Suarez.  Like a World Cup this is a Once in a Lifetime Event COPA AMERICA 100 is coming to the USA and Chicago and you can go and take your family.  Single Game Tickets go on Sale this Tuesday, Mar 22.

Soldier Field  Chicago Venue Passes – If interested in planning a trip over – reach out to me (shanebestsoccer@gmail.com)

1410 S. Museum Campus Drive, Chicago, IL 60605   Seating charts reflect the general layout for the venue at this time these are general prizes based on the full venue packages – I’m sure they will be a little more but this gives you an idea.

GAMES IN CHICAGO

Sun -June 5 4 pm Jamaica vs Venezuela, Tues June 7 – 7 pm (USA vs Costa Rica), Friday, June 10 Argentina vs Panama 8:30 pm.

Wed, June 22  Semi Finals – 7 pm – Argentina vs Brazil maybe? 

Level 1 seats – 103  – $145/game

Level 2 seats –   $115/game

Level 2 in corner endzones – Sec 256 Row 7 $102/game

Level 2 mid endzones – Sec 252  Row 11 $91/game

Level 4 429 – row 11 8 tix $75/game

Wow – so we are down to the Quarter Finals (read Final 8) in Champions League after a scintillating couple of Sweet 16 matches this week.  Advancing for the first time ever are England’s sole representative Man City and Portugal’s Benefica.  They join Spanish giants Barcelona, Real Madrid, and Athletico Madrid, Germany’s Bayern Munich and Wolfsburg, and France’s PSG. It was heartbreak city for my Juventus as they failed to hold the 2 goal lead in the final 30 minutes at Bayern and allowed the German leaders to advance thru to the Quarters in extra time.  Buffon and Juve were spectacular for 45 minutes and should have had a 3 or 4 goal lead if not for some questionable reffing and a some fine saves by Bayern GK Manual Nuerer. Still with 89 minutes gone – they still held the 1 goal advantage until a Thomas Mueller header tied her up sending it to extra time. In ET – Pep’s subs smoked Allegre’s subs and scored 2 goals in the added 30 to secure the home win and advancement 6-4 on Aggregate.  Juve lost when Allegre subbed out superforward Morata and Juve lost their counterattacking threat allowing Bayern’s men to camp out in the Old Lady’s 18 until they found the equalizer.  Arsenal suffered a 3-1 loss at Barca as the 3 Headed MSN monster of Messi, Suarez, and Neymar all scored to secure a 5-1 aggregate win knocking the Gunners out for the 3rd straight year in the Round of 16.  After 210 minutes of scoreless play Athletico outshot Dutch champion PSV Eindhoven 8-7 in PKs to advance to their 3rd straight Quarterfinal.  The Final 8 will play Apr 5/6 + 12/13 with Barcelona vs Athletico and PSG vs Man City looking like the best games.

In World Play Juve Superstar Goalie Gigi Buffon goes for the Serie A record of 930 minutes of not giving up a goal in league play.  The EPL follows the incredible story of league leading Leciester City with a 5 pt (almost 2 game lead) over Tottenham and 11 in front of everyone else with just 8 games left.   They travel to Crystal Palace at 11 am this Sat on NBCSN, while Sunday the Manchester Darby takes center stage at 12 noon on NBC.  MLS has Sporting KC and their host of US players hosting Toronto FC Sun at 7 pm on Fox Sports 1.

The US men have huge games next Friday, Mar 25th  – as the Full USMNT travels to Guatamala and the US 23 men face Columbia.  The US Men return to World Cup Qualifying Friday, Mar 25 on the road at Guatamala @ 10 pm on beIn Sports and NBC Universal, while the U-23 Men start their 2 game playoff Friday with Columbia at 4:30 pm Fri on Fox Sports 1.  Don’t forget there are still tickets available to see the US Men Host Guatamala in Columbus, Ohio on Tues, Mar 29 7 pm.   Speaking of the US Team – Good luck to Carmel native Cameron Lindley playing on the US U-20 team this weekend in Dallas.  World Cup Qualifiers and Friendlies load the FIFA weekend from Mar 24-29th as Italy faces Spain Thurs 3:45 on ESPN 2, and Germany hosts England Sat, 3/26 at 3:45 pm ESPN2.  Remember ESPN will host the European Championships from France in June.

GAMES OF THE WEEK

Sat, March 19

11:00 a.m., NBCSN    Crystal Palace vs. Leicester City                      Can the Foxes of Leicester City hold on to their 5 pt lead with 8 wks left in the EPL season at Palace?
Sun, March 20

12:00 p.m., NBC          Manchester City vs. Manchester United   The Manchester Darby – with a top 4 or top 6 spot in the EPL still on the line for both.  Can City hold serve at home on NBC?
12:00 p.m., Extra        Tottenham Hotspur vs. Bournemouth       The 2nd place Spurs hope to make up ground on Leicester City with this home match.

7 pm Fox Sports 1      Sporting Kansas City vs. Toronto FC               KC will host a hot Toronto FC with Giovincho and Bradley

 Tues, Mar 22 –              COPA America – Chicago Venue Tickets Single Games on Sale

Thur, Mar 24

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Italy vs Spain      A juicy friendly between 2 of the top world powers as they prepare for the Euro’s this summer

Fri, Mar 25

4:30 pm ESPN               US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff The US Needs this Win at home vs Columbia to Qualify for the Olympics – Will US use Morris, Yedlin, Etc on U23s in this MUST WIN GAME?
10 pm beIN Sports    United States men @ Guatemala  WC qualifier.  – Can the US get needed win without their U 23 players?   

Sat, Mar 26

3:45 pm ESPN 2  Germany vs England  The World Champs host England in a pre Euro Warm-up.

 Tuesday, March 29:

7 pm (ESPN2)                United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH – This Game at Columbus – tickets still available for just $55 – come Join Tyler and I !

USA

Copa America Centerio Single Game Tickets for US Game in Chicago on Sale Mar 22

US Coach Q & A

US Players Hot List

New USA Jerseys

Injured Forward Jozy Altidore expected on roster for US

Uncertainty Surrounds U23s vs Columbia

Carmel’s Cameron Lindley (the NSCAA youth player of the Year) Named to US U-20 Squad

Champions League Final 8 Results

Highlights of Thrilling Bayern ET 4-2 win over Juve  

Bayern vs Juve Review ESPN FC

Juve Got too Conservative in last 30 minutes Moreno ESPNFC

Juve Players Ratings

Bayern Player Ratings

Pep threatened his team at the half down -0-2

Athletico advances in PKs

Look at Ter Stegan’s Saves Last Week Barcelona vs Arsenal

MSN send Barca to Quarters over the Gunners

Arsenal gave it their All but fall to Barca again

Man City’s Big 4 Lead way to Final 8 in UCL

WILSON: Man City makes history in UCL; Atletico through on PKs

England Holds onto 4 UCL Spots

No one Reason for EPL’s dismise in the UCL

Europa League Liverpool oust Man U

Man U Not Good enough vs Liverpool

EPL and World

5000 to 1 Odds Leicester City’s Chances of Winning the EPL title

Premier League Weekend Predictions

EPL Notes on the Weekend Ahead

Van Gaal must Go – Ian Darke EPSN FC

Underachievement continues for Wenger and Arsenal SI

WAHL: Despite disappointments, Wenger is safe at Arsenal SI

EPL Table

Should Liverpool cut losses and Sell Benteke ?

Who is Leicester City

Juve’s Gigi Buffon is just 4 minutes Away from Serie A Record of 930 minutes of Shutout Play

FIFA Admits to Bribes in World Cup Hosting for 1st Time – wants their $ Back?

Power Rankings Top World Squads – ESPN FC

MLS

Power Rankings Week 2

New NYCFC Coach Patrick  Vieira

Should Leagues Winless Teams be Worried after 2 Games

Indy 11

Indy 11 Kids Club Open House at Off the Wall Sports Mar 28 4:30 -6:30 pm

Indy 11 ties 1-1 with St. Louis

Delicate Balance for the 11

Single Game Tix just 11 and Promo Schedule

GAMES THIS WEEK ON TV

Fri, March 18

3:30 p.m. Fox Sports 2 Schalke 04 vs. Borussia Mönchengladbach

Sat, March 19

8:45 a.m., NBCSN       Everton vs. Arsenal
10:30 a.m. Fox Soccer Köln vs. Bayern Munich
11:00 a.m., NBCSN    Crystal Palace vs. Leicester City
11:00 a.m., USA           Chelsea vs. West Ham United
11:00 a.m., Extra Time Watford vs. Stoke City, West Bromwich vs.Norwich

12:30 p.m., Fox           Eintracht Frankfurt vs. Hannover 96
1:30 p.m., NBCSN:     Swansea City vs. Aston Villa

3:45 pm beIn Sport Roma vs Inter

 Sun, March 20

9:30 a.m., NBCSN       Newcastle United vs. Sunderland
9:30 a.m., Extra Time: Southampton vs. Liverpool

10:30 a.m.Fox Sports 1 VfB Stuttgart vs. Bayer Leverkusen

11 am  beIn Sports    Villarrreal vs Barcelona
12:00 p.m., NBC          Manchester City vs. Manchester United
12:00 p.m., Extra        Tottenham Hotspur vs. Bournemouth

5:00 p.m. (ESPN2,)     D.C. United vs. Colorado Rapids,

7 pm Fox Sports 1      Sporting Kansas City vs. Toronto FC

Thur, Mar 24

3:45 pm ESPN 2     Italy vs Spain

Fri, Mar 25

5 pm Fox Sport1         US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff

10 pm EST (beIN Sports,)  Guatemala vs. United States men, WC qualifier,

Sat, Mar 26

10:30 am beIn Sport                        South Africa vs Cameroon

12 noon ESPN 3           Russia vs Lithuania

3 pm  YES                         NY City FC vs New England

3:45 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs England

5:30 pm  beIn sport  DC United vs Dallas

 Sun, Mar 27

3:45 pm beIn Sport   Romania vs Spain

Tuesday, March 29:

3:30 pm ESPN 2           Germany vs Italy

4 pm  fox Sport1         England vs Netherlands

4 pm ESPN 3                  France vs Russia

5:30 pm beIN Sport                          Columbia vs Ecudor  WCQ

7 pm (ESPN2)                United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH

8:30 pm beIN Sport                          Argentina vs Bolivia  WCQ

Wednesday, March 30

9:30 pm ESPN2            US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff Texas

April 5/6 & April 12/13. Champions League Quarter-finals:

MLS TV Schedule ‘

European Championships This Summer on ESPN

Copa America Centario Schedule

http://carmeldadsclub2016.org/form.php?id=adbf00b7aad52e57e29e0f3264680998

U.S. Hot List: John Brooks in scorching form, Jozy Altidore still sidelined

John Brooks has been in superb form for Hertha Berlin and should be a lock to start vs. Guatemala.

The stakes are sky-high for members of the national team player pool these days, with less than a week to go until U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann names his roster for this month’s important World Cup qualifying home-and-home against Guatemala.Klinsmann is expected to name an experienced, mostly European-based squad for the two games which, it must be pointed out, might not be the formalities many expect them to be even if Los Chapines have regressed in recent years. But that’s not to say that several MLS veterans who have been overlooked recently won’t be recalled, as specific positional needs tend to trump other factors when it comes to selections.In-form players who man less thin spots, such as Sporting Kansas City’s Graham Zusi (who has been razor-sharp for SKC in the first two weeks of the new domestic season), might have to wait for another invite, however.The same goes for youngsters jockeying for spots with the U.S. U-23s. Former U.S. U-20 standouts like Paul Arriola, Russell Canouse and Marky Delgado all raised eyebrows last weekend with impressive displays for Hoffenheim, Club Tijuana and Toronto FC respectively. But none have been part of Andi Herzog’s plans in the lead-up to looming Olympic qualifying matches against Colombia and all of them might remain on the outside, although an injury to San Jose Earthquakes midfielder Fatai Alashe possibly opens up one spot.

Of course, this list focuses on the senior team first. With that in mind, here how a dozen candidates for the Guatemala series are faring as Klinsmann wrestles with his final decisions.

Warming up

John Brooks, DF, Hertha Berlin (Germany)

Why he’s here: The 23-year-old center back’s career season continues; the Berlin-born Brooks has made 17 consecutive starts for his hometown club-which still occupies a Champions League spot-and he ranks eighth the Bundesliga in clearances.

What this means: Barring injury, and despite the fact that he’s never played in a road qualifier, Brooks is a lock to start in Guatemala City.

 Kyle Beckerman, MF, Real Salt Lake (MLS)

Why he’s here: The dreadlocked destroyer turns 34 next month but Beckerman is off to a strong start in MLS and was terrific against Mexican club Tigres in CONCACAF Champions League play.

What this means: Jermaine Jones’ suspension makes the inclusion of Beckerman — a known quantity who has the coach’s undying trust — a no-brainer.

 Clint Dempsey, FW, Seattle Sounders (MLS)

Why he’s here: Dempsey is goalless through his first two MLS games but he scored twice (including on an all-world free kick) against Club America last month and appears poised to make his first U.S. appearance since October.

What this means: With Jozy Altidore still nursing a hamstring injury, now is the perfect time for Klinsmann to bring Dempsey — still the national team’s most dangerous offensive threat — back into the fold.

 

Brad Guzan, GK, Aston Villa (England)

Why he’s here: Villa keeps losing but Guzan has been playing regularly for the relegation-bound club. After losing his place in January, the 31-year-old has now started three consecutive Premier League games.

What this means: Guzan is the front-runner to man the U.S. nets vs. Guatemala. That said, don’t be surprised if Klinsmann sticks to his plan of rotating his top two keepers and giving Tim Howard the nod in second match at home.

 

Fabian Johnson, DF/MF, Borussia Monchengladbach (Germany)

Why he’s here: Johnson’s early season scoring binge has tailed off some but the German-American has still been the country’s best player at club level this season.

What this means: Where does the U.S. need the 28-year-old the most? That’s the big question facing Klinsmann. Although Johnson has been used mostly as a left winger this year for ‘Gladbach, an absence of other suitable options could see him line up at left back against Guatemala.

 

Nick Rimando, GK, Real Salt Lake (MLS)

Why he’s here: The popular longtime No. 3 keeper has RSL off to an undefeated start to the new MLS season.

What this means: He might be 36 but Rimando’s performances haven’t dropped off much, if at all. And his experience and team-first temperament still make him the ideal third-string behind Guzan and Howard in games that matter.

 

Danny Williams, MF, Reading (England)

Why he’s here: Williams has made 27 league starts for the second-tier Royals, scoring a career-best five goals this season.

What this means: The 27-year-old defensive midfielder fell out of favor with Klinsmann toward the end of 2015 but Jones’ absence, combined with Williams’ consistent play, could be enough to earn him a recall.

 

Bobby Wood, FW, Union Berlin (Germany)

Why he’s here: Wood’s scorching form for the 2. Bundesliga club continues, as his weekend goal from the penalty spot gave the 23-year-old six in his last five games.

What this means: Wood’s case to receive his first career World Cup qualifying start later this month is getting stronger every week.

Cooling down

Jozy Altidore, FW, Toronto FC (MLS)

Why he’s here: Altidore remains sidelined with a sore hamstring and failed to make TFC’s bench for the second consecutive game. He is questionable for next week’s match at Kansas City.

What this means: The 26-year-old target man seems increasingly likely to remain in Canada when the U.S. squad is announced.

 

Sean Johnson, GK, Chicago Fire (MLS)

Why he’s here: Johnson was added to Klinsmann’s January/February roster after D.C. United’s Bill Hamid (knee) withdrew, but he has since lost his starting job with the Fire to journeyman Matt Lampson.

What this means: Johnson must win back his place in Chicago to have any hope of eventually succeeding Rimando as Hamid, fellow MLS backstops David Bingham and Luis Robles and Mexico-based William Yarbrough all remain in the mix.

 

Alfredo Morales, MF, Ingolstadt (Germany)

Why he’s here: An adductor injury has kept Morales (16 Bundesliga starts this season) idle for the past month.

What this means: The timing is terrible for the 25-year-old, who is still on the fringes of the national team despite his growing profile at club level.

 

Jordan Morris, FW, Seattle Sounders (MLS)

Why he’s here: It’s not just that Morris is scoreless through his first four professional games (two in MLS, two in the CONCACAF Champions League). It’s also that he’s struggled with his decision-making and the pace of play at times, too.hat this means: Growing pains are normal, and those expecting Morris to immediately light up MLS upon his arrival in the domestic league weren’t being realistic. Still, few will be clamoring for the former Stanford University star to be with the senior team this month rather than the U-23s.Doug McIntyre is a staff writer for ESPN The Magazine and ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @DougMacESPN.

 

JK Q&A: “IT’S GOING TO BE A BIG, BIG 10 DAYS FOR US.”

Mar 17, 2016With the pivotal World Cup Qualifiers against Guatemala on the horizon at the same time the U-23 MNT faces Colombia in the Olympic Qualifying Playoff, ussoccer.com sat down with Jurgen Klinsmann to discuss the status of the player pool and his expectations for the big 10 days ahead.

ussoccer.com: What were your takeaways from the weekend action?
Jurgen Klinsmann: “A lot is going on in all the different leagues. In the Bundesliga we have John Brooks doing really well at Hertha Berlin, Fabian Johnson doing well at Borussia Monchengladbach, and Bobby Wood scored another goal for Union Berlin in the 2. Bundesliga. Moving over to the Premier League, Geoff Cameron is getting his time on the field and also Brad Guzan being back in goal for Aston Villa is a  big message for us no doubt about it. We monitor all of them, and we’re pleased with how things are going for the majority of the players and hope that they all come into camp healthy and really sharp for Guatemala.”

ussoccer.com: With three points from their first two games – and already a loss at home – Guatemala is under pressure to get a result in the first game in Guatemala City. How do you expect them to approach this game? 
JK: “We expect both games to be challenge, starting obviously in Guatemala City which is a very difficult venue. Their team is already in camp, so they go in a week earlier than we do into preparation for that game, so we expect a very difficult game and a very hot-tempered game. But the goal is clear: the goal is we would like to beat them in Guatemala City and then beat them as well in Columbus in front of our fans. That will give us six points and will virtually qualify us already for the next round. This is the objective and we will do everything possible to get that done.”

ussoccer.com: What has the process been like in determining which age-eligible players will play for the Senior Team vs. the Olympic Team?
JK: “It’s going to be a big, big ten days for us. The senior team wants badly the six points in these two games, but also our Olympic team is playing in the playoffs for the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro with Colombia. What influence does it have for our rosters? At the end of the day, priority always is the senior team. Priority is World Cup Qualifying, so there are no compromises made like sending the players that are age-eligible for the Olympic team to the Olympic team already. We are convinced our Olympic team will do really well in Colombia and get a decent result there, and then we hope for big support in Dallas for the return game. We are convinced they will get the job done.”

ussoccer.com: Jozy Altidore has been out for the last few weeks for Toronto. How does that impact your thinking up front?
JK: “Jozy is coming back from a hamstring injury – he’s not 100 percent yet, but we’ll build him. He’s already almost getting on the field with Toronto, so we’ll take it from there and bring him with us and see every day in training how much he’s able to contribute. Injuries are always tricky when it gets towards a big competition. We have players that are injured a bit longer than we thought. We feel for them, but we are also waiting for them, players like Terrence Boyd, like Joe Gyau, like Josh Gatt, or even Aron Johannsson out for a couple months. These players are not forgotten. They play a wider role in building our group, our core, for 2018 in Russia. So hopefully they get back on track as quickly as possible. But in the short run, like a hamstring with Jozy, we will manage it, we will make the best out of it, but it has an effect on the roster. There’s no doubt about it.”

ussoccer.com: The defensive midfield role has been occupied in recent years by older players such as Jermaine Jones and Kyle Beckerman. With them coming towards the end of their careers, who do you see leading the next generation?
JK: “It’s a fascinating topic always between two World Cup cycles: which younger players will take over from the older players? If you look at our positions – if it’s a goalkeeper role, if it’s a defensive midfielder with Jermaine Jones or Kyle Beckerman, or even if it’s up front with Clint Dempsey, you always try to push that next younger one into those roles in order to take over sooner or later. Obviously they have to get better than the older ones. This is a fascinating process that we push from a coaching side. The experienced older guys, they hang in there, they defend their roles, and the younger ones they want to push off their spot. This will continue the next two years in the World Cup qualifiers with Guatemala, but it also will continue through Copa America and then toward Russia 2018. There’s a lot of competition going on in our squad, and that’s why we are happy to have a bigger roster available this time because we want to really have that fight going on in training as well as showing their strengths in the games.”

ussoccer.com: Considering the lineups in November’s qualifiers and Fabian Johnson’s success with ‘Gladbach this season, is it likely that he is a midfielder from here on out?
JK: “I think it’s definitely a good thing that we can talk and discuss specific players in specific roles, and Fabian Johnson is a very good example because in his club he’s playing right now the left midfield role, but they also move him to the right side and even at right back like where he played a tremendous World Cup in Brazil. This is a wonderful thing to have for us coaches because we can adjust other pieces in the team depending what happens. Fabian is good with any of those roles. We would like to just have him continue the good performances that he has with Borussia Monchengladbach right now with the National Team as well. That gives us a better chance to beat Guatemala.”

Over the next few dats, Jurgen Klinsmann will finalize player selections for the U.S. men’s national soccer team’s two World Cup qualifiers against Guatemala late this month.For the most part, it’s standard procedure: He will pick regulars from MLS, Mexico and Europe while taking into account injuries, playing time and quality of performance with their respective clubs. There is, however, a wrinkle in the player evaluation as Klinsmann and top assistant Andi Herzog must select two squads. Aside from the senior team, they have to assemble the under-23 national roster for a two-leg Olympic playoff against Colombia.The pair of qualifiers and playoff matches fall on the same days: March 25 and 29. While most players fit into one team or the other, a few crossover candidates will complicate the process. Both teams face important matches, but the Olympic pursuit has less room for error and might take priority with age-eligible players who have served regularly on the senior team, notably defender John Brooks and forward Jordan Morris.Under normal circumstances, Brooks, a 2014 World Cup scorer and full-time starter with German club Hertha Berlin, and Morris, a Seattle Sounders rookie, probably would join the senior squad. But at ages 23 and 21, respectively, they would best serve the U-23 campaign.The other senior players who could end up with Herzog’s U-23 team for one or both playoff games are English-based defender-midfielder DeAndre Yedlin, 22, and Matt Miazga, 20, who jumped to Chelsea from the New York Red Bulls this winter.Klinsmann is expected to invite about 23 players. Competition guidelines will restrict Herzog to 20, though he is permitted to make changes between the two playoff matches.The teams will train separately in the Miami area starting next Monday. Klinsmann will then take the senior squad to Guatemala City, while Herzog escorts the U-23s to Barranquilla, Colombia. Both will return home for the March 29 games: The senior team will reunite with Guatemala in Columbus, Ohio, and the Olympic hopefuls will do the same with Colombia in the Dallas suburb of Frisco.The competitions are at different stages. The senior team is in the middle of the semifinal round of qualifying for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, a schedule that involves six total games in a four-nation group that will send two teams to the final stage this fall. The Americans opened the campaign with a home victory against St. Vincent and the Grenadines and a draw at Trinidad and Tobago.The under-23 team was forced into a playoff after failing to secure one of the region’s two automatic berths in the Summer Games in Brazil. (Honduras and Mexico advanced.) Colombia finished second to Argentina in the South American qualifying tournament; as the Olympic host, Brazil received automatic qualification.Klinsmann has emphasized the importance of qualifying for the Olympics after the failure of four years ago. Although Olympic soccer pales in comparison to the World Cup, Klinsmann recognizes the need for young players to gain experience and exposure in international tournaments.Herzog’s unit is likely to include 20-year-old forward Julian Green — who, since scoring in the 2014 World Cup, has faded into obscurity with Bayern Munich’s junior team — and midfielder Gedion Zelalem, a 19-year-old Arsenal prospect on loan this season with Rangers in Scotland.Also high on the list is midfielder Christian Pulisic, 17, who is earning first-team call-ups for German power Borussia Dortmund.Klinsmann’s group will include many of the usual suspects: Tim Howard, Brad Guzan, Geoff Cameron, Matt Besler, Michael Bradley, Alejandro Bedoya and Fabian Johnson. (Jozy Altidore is battling hamstring problems.) He is also high on newcomers Darlington Nagbe (Portland Timbers) and Steve Birnbaum (D.C. United).The candidate in the best form at the moment is forward Bobby Wood. He has scored in five consecutive matches for Union Berlin in Germany’s second division and posted 13 goals in 24 league matches. Wood is 23, but missed the Jan. 1, 1993, cut-off for Olympic eligibility by seven weeks.One player Klinsmann cannot select is veteran Jermaine Jones. The World Cup midfielder is serving a six-game MLS suspension that also applies to international competition for assaulting a referee in last year’s playoffs.

 

Uncertainty surrounds the USA U-23’s Olympic playoff vs. Colombia

‘re just a week away from the United States U-23 national team embarking on their two biggest matches of the last four years and yet we know very little about the match-up with Colombia. Here’s what we do know: They’ll be playing the first match of their two-legged Olympic playoff in Barranquilla, Colombia next Friday. Followed by the return home leg in Frisco, Texas just three days later.We’ve already seen the Colombia roster released to the public. Andi Herzog will be releasing his any moment now. But, even the names of the Americans who will be called up remain uncertain due to the requirement of clubs having to agree to release them for these matches.The truth is, we don’t know much about this Colombia team. Most of their players play domestically, while a few are bandied about Europe in various countries. On paper it’s not a daunting list by any means. It’s likely that Herzog and the rest of the U-23 staff will have access to videos and advanced scouting reports to help them prepare, but we just don’t have those resources. All we have is the internet.

Here’s what we know about the Colombia U-23 team:

  • They clinched a spot in this Olympic playoff by finishing second in their group in the 2015 South American Youth Football Championship, a tournament for under-20 teams.
  • 17 of their 25 players have at least one cap for the U-23 national team
  • 3 of their players (DFHelibelton Palacios, MF Juan Fernando Quintero, and FW Andres Renteria) have received senior national team caps.
  • 4 of their players played on the U-20 team that lost to the USA in the 2015 U-20World CupRound of 16.
  • FW Roger Martinez has scored three goals and is the top scorer for the team
  • MF Juan Fernando Quintero is the only player on the roster who represented Colombia at the2014 World Cup.
  • He scored thisreally nice goal against Ivory Coast. They haven’t qualified for the Olympics since 1992.

It’s not much to go by to give any ‘expert analysis’ on. That’s probably why you haven’t seen many thinkpieces on how the USA can go about beating this Colombia side. They are very much an unknown quantity.We can say with 100 percent certainty that the Colombia U-23 national team do in fact play soccer and have 25 players that do so. Some of them are pretty good and some of them are really inexperienced. They don’t appear to have much consistency in playing matches together, but the majority play in the same league so they should be familiar with one another.Surely Andi Herzog will have much more information than we do about their playing style and personnel, but it’s unlikely they’ll be too informed on their opponent either. This will very much be an old fashioned “put your 11 vs. our 11 and see who’s better” scenario, much like all youth matches are.A youth coach’s main objective is to mold his team and players the best he can. Taking the opponent’s play style and talent into account is usually a very little part of the process. This will be a huge test in how Herzog has fared in doing that this Olympic cycle.Two teams will be vying for one spot in the 2016 Summer Olympics starting next week. Logic tells us that it will likely be the most talented team that will prevail, however in two-legged playoffs it’s often better to be lucky or fortunate than talented. For the sake of U.S. Soccer, let’s hope it’s the USA U-23’s who earn that spot in some way or another.

Barcelona and Bayern Munich remain first and second as PSG climb

Barcelona midfielder Ivan Rakitic says his team does not talk about their 38-game unbeaten streak and stresses that working hard is all they care about.

The top two both won twice — with varying degrees of comfort — while the French champions are on the up.

  1. Barcelona(no change)

The reigning Spanish and European champions extended their current unbeaten run to 38 games with a pair of comfortable wins last week, as Getafe were swept aside 6-0 in La Liga and Arsenal were dispatched 3-1 in the Champions League. Three of Barca’s goals came from Neymar, who had previously scored just two in nine games.

 Bayern Munich(no change)

Pep Guardiola’s side moved closer to the Bundesliga title with a 5-0 win over Werder Bremen but Bayern’s Champions League hopes were in danger when Juventus took a 2-0 lead at the Allianz Arena. However, the German giants roared back with four goals in 37 minutes — including one in stoppage time to force extra time — to claim a quarterfinal place.

  1. Paris Saint-Germain(+1)

Some clubs win league titles with nervy displays that betray the enormity of what they are about to achieve. And others are like PSG, who wrapped up Ligue 1 before the middle of March with a 9-0 — yes, 9-0! — thrashing of poor Troyes. All of which means that, French domestic cups aside, PSG’s primary focus will now be on the Champions League.

 Atletico Madrid

(+1)

It was perhaps slightly harder than many anticipated by Atletico managed to get by PSV Eindhoven on penalties and claim a place in the Champions League last eight. Few of the other remaining sides will want to draw Diego Simeone’s side, which have conceded just two goals in their last nine games, dating back to the start of February.

  1. Real Madrid(+1)

Los Blancos have won consecutive away games in La Liga for the first time since September but their latest victory, a 2-1 result at Las Palmas, was secured with a late goal from Casemiro following a disjointed display. With Gareth Bale back, though, and Karim Benzema not far away, Zinedine Zidane should have his star men for the rest of the season.

  1. Juventus(no change)

Oh, Juve, you were so, so close… For 70 minutes in Munich, Max Allegri’s game plan worked to perfection. Even after Bayern scored to make it 2-1, the Italians were still in position to go through. But then Thomas Muller sent the game to extra time and Bayern eventually won, leaving Juve to curse the chances they missed earlier in the game.

  1. Borussia Dortmund(no change)

BVB kept up the pressure on Bayern with a 2-0 win against Mainz, meaning Germany’s top two are separated by five points with eight games to go. On Thursday, Dortmund sealed a place in the Europa League quarterfinals by completing a 5-1 aggregate win over Tottenham. Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored twice.

  1. Leicester(no change)

My old club Newcastle gave them something of a fright but, in truth, Leicester were relatively comfortable in their 1-0 win. The winner came courtesy of a sensational overhead kick by Shinji Okazaki and was one of those goals that made you think that, maybe, this really is Leicester’s year. And who could begrudge them that glory if it comes their way?

  1. Benfica(no change)

Benfica remain two points clear in Portugal after a 4-1 win over Tondela, which featured two more goals from Jonas, who now has an incredible 28 in 26 league games this season. Since losing at home to Porto on Feb. 12, Benfica have bounced back with four consecutive league wins. And they’re still in the Champions League!

  1. PSV Eindhoven(no change)

It was a week in which PSV came back down to earth. First, they dropped two league points when they were held at home by Heerenveen, thus missing the chance to extend their lead over second-placed Ajax, who also drew. Then PSV went out of the Champions League, beaten in the cruelest way — on penalties — by Atletico Madrid.Dropping out: None.Shaka Hislop played for over 10 years in the Premier Leagu

ARSENAL COULD WENGER BE IN TROUBLE ?

BY JONATHAN WILSONTwitter

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Posted: Thu Mar. 17, 2016There was something very predictable about the second leg of Arsenal’s last-16 tie against Barcelona. Here was the familiar pattern, Arsenal, when the tie was lost, producing a spell of great promise that, briefly, looked as if it might unexpectedly trouble Barcelona. Ultimately, it came to nothing, but there were signs there of a brighter future. Or, at least, that’s how similar performances have been regarded in the past. Not any more.Patience is running out. Perhaps it has run out. This was the sixth season in a row in which Arsenal has been eliminated in the last 16 of the Champions League. After last Sunday’s FA Cup defeat to Watford, the league is all that is left for Arsenal to aim for. Supine defeats to Manchester United and Swansea City have left Arsenal 11 points behind the Premier League leader Leicester with a game in hand; a season in which a number of the usual challengers have faltered offered an opportunity, but Arsenal has failed to seize it.

A run of just four wins in the last 15 games has brought frustrations to a head. Dissent has been bubbling for a few years now, a sense that Arsenal as a club is content to finish in the top four, take the Champions League money, make a profit and plod on. Stan Kroenke, the club’s majority shareholder, didn’t exactly allay that suspicion when he spoke at the MIT Sloane Sports Analytics Conference last week. “If you want to win championships then you would never get involved,” he said.Occasionally that discontent among fans had bubbled over, most notably on the railway station platform at Stoke-on-Trent last season when Wenger was abused by Arsenal fans after a 3-2 defeat. But this feels different. For one thing, the discontent is more widespread now, the atmosphere at the Emirates increasingly sulphurous. And for another, this season has demonstrated what is possible without enormous resources.Twelve years ago, as Arsenal completed its unbeaten season with a 2-1 victory on the final day over relegated Leicester, who would then have believed that it might be the away side who would be the next of the two to win the league? That May afternoon, as Claudio Ranieri bade his tearful farewells to Stamford Bridge six miles to the southwest, who could have believed that he might win the league title before Wenger?Perhaps Leicester is a glorious freak, but Tottenham is six points above Arsenal with a notably young team, having made a profit in the transfer market in the two years since Mauricio Pochettino took charge. The economics of the Premier League changed radically when Roman Abramovich arrived in 2003 and there’s no doubt that Arsenal was disadvantaged by that as it paid off the debt on its new stadium, but however valid Wenger’s excuses may have been, Leicester and Tottenham have shown what is possible without an owner with an open wallet.And yet there is an irony here. Wenger’s mood after his side had lost the first leg of its Champions League last-16 tie against Barcelona was odd. Usually in such circumstances–and he’s had plenty of experience–he looks to take the positives, occasionally letting his disappointment show in irritation directed towards the questioner. That night was different. That night he was angry, not at journalists, but at his team. His players, he said, had been “naïve.”He was right. He has been criticized regularly–and not without justification–over the past decade for being too set in his ways, for not adapting sufficiently to the opposition, for refusing to modify his approach, but in Arsenal’s last three big games, the two legs against Barcelona and the North London derby against Tottenham, he has made tactical tweaks that have had a discernible positive impact on the game only to be undermined by player error.That, of course, is partly Wenger’s doing. He shaped the squad and one of his duties is to create an atmosphere in which they perform to their utmost, which means not making mistakes, being sharp, being confident, being fit. The complaint of fans that he has not used the money Arsenal has in the bank–there is an estimated £75 million available for transfers–is understandable, particularly given obvious shortfalls in the center of defense, at the back of midfield and at center forward, that that’s not the only problem.When Wenger first arrived in English football in 1996, his ideas on nutrition were revolutionary–at least in a Premier League context–and his contacts in France gave him a huge advantage in the transfer market. What was radical, then, though, is now standard practice. The game has caught up with Wenger.Not only that, but his teams of the turn of the millennium featured difficult, awkward personalities, a blend of the blend and the skillful. This present Arsenal seems a bit too nice; it lacks edge and spark. It’s as though Wenger, as Brian Clough did in his final decade at Nottingham Forest, has lost the energy to deal with bad boys. So good football, neat passing and neat hair, becomes an end in itself, a sense of moral superiority replacing the desire to battle for silverware.The chaos that has followed Sir Alex Ferguson’s departure from Manchester United perhaps serves as a warning of what can happen when a long-term manager departs, but at the same time this sense of drift cannot go on forever. Wenger’s tactical fiddling perhaps offers some hope that he is modifying his template, but at the moment it feels there is something stagnant in the culture of the club. Given his control over the football side, Wenger is responsible for that.If Arsenal can put a run together, if it can win, say, seven of its last nine games beginning at Everton on Saturday, perhaps it can still put pressure on a Leicester side that is beginning to look nervous. The league title is not wholly out of reach. But fruitless late rallies are an Arsenal meme; another one may not be enough to quell the mutinous voices.

Copa America Centario Tix in Chicago on sale 3/22

Some of the best players in the World are coming to AMERICA this Summer to play in real games – the COPA AMERICA CENTARIO (yes the 100th edition of one of the world’s greatest tournaments is being held in the USA – in fact IN CHICAGO!!)  Argentina’s Lionel Messi, Angel Di Maria, Carlos Tevez, Sergio Aguero; Brazil’s Neymar, David Luis, Thiago Silva, Kaka, Oscar, Willian; Columbia’s James, Mexico’s Chichirito, Chile’s Alexis Sanchex or Arturo Vidal, Uraguay’s Suarez.  Like a World Cup this is a Once in a Lifetime Event COPA AMERICA 100 is coming to the USA and Chicago and you can go and take your family.  Single Game Tickets go on Sale this Tuesday, Mar 22.

Soldier Field  Chicago Venue Passes – If interested in planning a trip over – reach out to me (shanebestsoccer@gmail.com)

1410 S. Museum Campus Drive, Chicago, IL 60605   Seating charts reflect the general layout for the venue at this time these are general prizes based on the full venue packages – I’m sure they will be a little more but this gives you an idea.

GAMES IN CHICAGO

Sun -June 5 4 pm Jamaica vs Venezuela, Tues June 7 – 7 pm (USA vs Costa Rica), Friday, June 10 Argentina vs Panama 8:30 pm.

Wed, June 22  Semi Finals – 7 pm – Argentina vs Brazil maybe? 

Level 1 seats – 103  – $145/game

Level 2 seats –   $115/game

Level 2 in corner endzones – Sec 256 Row 7 $102/game

Level 2 mid endzones – Sec 252  Row 11 $91/game

Level 4 429 – row 11 8 tix $75/game

Champ 3/15/16 -League Tues/Wed -City vs Kiev Tues, Bayern/Juve Wed 3:45

We have the 2nd leg of Champions League Sweet 16 action Tues/Wed as Man City and Barca should punch their tickets to the quarterfinals at home.  Arsenal is down 2-0 trying to stave off elimination at Barcelona on Wed, while Bayern Munich and Juventus battle in Germany tied at 2-2.  Both games on Fox Sports Wednesday at 3:45 pm.  Tues 3:45 on Fox Sports – Man City will look to move to their first ever Quarterfinals up 3-1 over Kiev, while Athletico Madrid host Dutch power PSV Eindhoven tied at 0-0.  Remember if you miss the games – they are usually played over on Fox Sports 2 and Fox Soccer all night with 30 minute highlight show on Fox Sports 1 between 12:30 and 2 am so set those DVRs.  Europa League Action saw Liverpool beat Man U at home, while Dortmund blasted Tottenham in Germany, return legs are Thursday on Fox Sports and ESPN3. Already advancing was Portugal’s Benefica to the Elite 8 for the first time ever, while Real Madrid advance and PSG and Zlatan Ibrahimovic outlasted Chelsea at home 2-0 to advance 4-2 on aggregate.  Speaking of Zlatan you have to view this Ode to Zlatan its great!

And speaking of Video’s so its been 10 years since US Forward Clint Dempsey Unleashed his Don’t Tread on Me Music Video – Happy 33rd Birthday to the US Goal Scoring Leader in Europe (57 goals) as he chases Donovan’s US goal scoring record this summer in COPA Centario.   The US men have huge games next Friday, Mar 25th  – as the Full USMNT travels to Guatamala and the US 23 men face Columbia.  The US Men return to World Cup Qualifying Friday, Mar 25 on the road at Guatamala @ 10 pm on beIn Sports and NBC Universal, while the U-23 Men start their 2 game playoff with Columbia at 4:30 pm Fri on Fox Sports 1.  No word on where young players like Diandre Yedlin and Jordon Morris will be – although they certainly should be with the U23s in my mind as qualifying for the Olympics this summer in Rio is more important than 1 away game Qualifier for the full team.

 Champions League

What to Look for Champions League Sweet 16 2nd Legs

Who has edge Bayern vs Juve tied at 2 going to Bayern.

Barca’s Iniesta pinpoints Arsenal’s Danger Man

Athletico vs PSV Preview

Man City vs Dynamo Kyiv Preview

Manchester City v Dynamo Kyiv, Tuesday

Atlético v PSV, Tuesday
Bayern v
 
Juventus, Wednesday

Barcelona v Arsenal, Wednesday

Europa League Wrap-up – Liverpool beat Man U and Dortmund Crushes Tottehnam

The Hazard Shirt Swap with Di Maria at Half Time?

Zlatan Provides Answers as PSG outlast Chelsea at home

Renaldo easier to guard than Messi – says Chiellini

Barca looking for Treble back to back

Ibra – Champions League is Special

Ibra Goal King of UCL-

Ibra to leave PSG – why would he say this now? 

Ibra Zlatan ODE SONG

Ibra cartoon

Real lacks consistency Admits Ronaldo

Could Premier League lose a Champ League spot to Italy?

Juve’s GK Buffon sets record for Shutout 836 minutes – 100 minutes to go to break Serie A record.

What to Look for Europa League Thurs

USA

Happy 33rd Birthday Clint Dempsey

Counting Down to US vs Guatemala – US Soccer Players

Klinsmann weighs Roster Options for WCQualifier –Wash Post

Insider Notes – USA to face Ecuador and Bolivia ahead of Copa America

Klinsmann talks Copa and answers fans questions

US Forward Bobby Wood on Fire in Germany

Announcer Ian Darke Signs on with ESPN thru 2020

GAMES THIS WEEK 

Tues, Mar 15  –Champions League

3:45 pm Fox Sport1    Man City vs Dynamo Kiev  3-1

3:45 pm Fox Sports 2  Athletico vs PSV Eindhoven 0-0

Wed, Mar 16  –Champions League

3:45 pm Fox Sport1    Barcelona vs Arsenal  2-0

3:45 pm Fox Sport1    Bayern Munich vs Juventus 2-2

Thurs, Mar 17 – UEFA Europa League (Rd of 16 2nd legs)

1:30 p.m., Fox Sports 1: Bayer Leverkusen vs. Villarreal
1:30 p.m., Fox Sports 2: Valencia vs. Athletic Bilbao

4 p.m., Fox Sports 1: Manchester United vs. Liverpool
4 p.m., Fox Sports 2: Tottenham Hotspur vs. Borussia Dortmund
4 p.m., ESPN 3 Lazio vs. Sparta Prague, Anderlecht vs. Shakhtar Donetsk, Sevilla vs. Basel, Braga vs. Fenerbahçe

 Fri, March 25: 

4:30 pm TBD          US U23 Men @ Columbia Olympic Qualify Playoff

time TBD (beIN Sports,)  Guatemala vs. United States men, WC qualifier,

Tuesday, March 29:

7 pm (ESPN2)        United States men vs. Guatemala, WC qualifier-Columbus, OH

What to watch out for in this week’s second legs

Published: Monday 14 March 2016, 10.07CET

Can Lionel Messi score his 500th career goal? Can Antoine Griezmann strike in a fifth successive Atlético game? Can Paulo Dybala rescue Juve? UEFA.com teases out the week’s sub-plots.

Can Griezmann make it five from five?
“I play with a lot of freedom – hopefully I can carry on in the same vein,” said Atlético Madrid’s Antoine Griezmann, who having scored in all four of his Liga outings since the 0-0 first-leg draw at PSV, can make it five from five in all competitions in the rematch. The Dutch side’s ten-game winning streak in the Eredivisie ended with Saturday’s 1-1 draw against Heerenveen, Jeroen Zoet conceding his first goal in 603 minutes in all competitions. “It is a nice detail but I would prefer to win a trophy,” the goalkeeper noted.  Atlético v PSV, Tuesday

Dynamo Kyiv 1-3 Man.City

Agüero chasing City history
Frustrated by Norwich City at the weekend, Sergio Agüero will face injury-sapped Dynamo Kyiv looking to claim his spot in the top ten of Manchester City’s all-time scorers. The 27-year-old has struck 128 times since joining in 2011 and is two goals shy of tenth-placed Frank Roberts, with Billy Gillespie and Fred Tilson on 132 goals in joint eighth. “It would be a major achievement,” said Agüero, whose team are 3-1 up from the away leg. “But I’d rather focus on my next goal rather than the ones I’ve scored and the ones I might score in the future.”
Manchester City v Dynamo Kyiv, Tuesday

Juventus 2-2 Bayern

Dybala giving Juve hope
After getting his first UEFA Champions League goal in the 2-2 first-leg draw with Bayern, Juventus forward Paulo Dybala registered a wonderful goal against Sassuolo on Friday – his 14th of the season in Serie A. “Nobody has shown such a mix of technique and personality at 22,” former Juve coach Fabio Capello told Gazzetta dello Sport. “In Italy he has already established himself as a top player – now he just needs to do it in Europe.” Can he make that mark against a Bayern side with a shrinking injury list, who could afford to rest Arjen Robben, Douglas Costa and Arturo Vidal at the weekend? 
Bayern v Juventus, Wednesday

Lionel Messi: Barcelona v Arsenal

Messi in hungry mood
Lionel Messi has netted 23 times in 18 appearances in 2016, and requires only three more to get to 500 for club and country. Though he missed a penalty in Saturday’s 6-0 mauling of Getafe, he made amends with a superb free-kick. It is not the sort of form that offers Arsenal much hope as they come to Camp Nou 2-0 down. “It’s 95% for them and 5% for us,” manager Arsène Wenger noted of his team’s chances, the Gunners travelling with heads bowed low, having been dumped out of the FA Cup by Watford on Sunday.
Barcelona v Arsenal, Wednesday

Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid have won four matches on the bounce following their goalless first-leg draw against their Dutch opponents

Atletico Madrid are full of confidence heading into their Champions League last-16 second leg against PSV Eindhoven at the Vicente Calderon on Tuesday, according to Saul Niguez.The first encounter in Eindhoven ended goalless and saw the hosts lose Gaston Pereiro to a second yellow card midway through the second half, setting up a finely poised clash in Madrid.Since then, Diego Simeone’s side have won four successive matches – the latest of which came in a 3-0 victory over Deportivo La Coruna on Saturday.Saul’s powerful header opened the scoring and was added to by Antoine Griezmann – converting for the fourth consecutive game – and Angel Correa seven minutes from time.The midfielder thinks the victory has primed Atletico to book a place in the quarter-finals at PSV’s expense.”The team has done a great job and achieved great results. Looking ahead to Tuesday, it gives us a boost,” said Saul.”We kept going until the end and the [late] goal gave us serenity. It was one of the best matches, very complete, without conceding a goal.”I think we played very well and after these three points we go into that key match very confident of winning.”Atletico prevailed on PSV’s only previous visit to the Vicente Calderon – a 2-1 triumph in the group stage of the 2008-09 Champions League – but have lost all four two-legged ties they have contested with Dutch opponents in European competition.PSV are still seeking a first victory in Spain after 12 failed attempts and head into the match having extended their unbeaten run in the Eredivisie to 21 matches in a 1-1 draw against Heerenveen on Saturday.Tuesday signals the start of what could be a pivotal period in the season for Phillip Cocu’s team, with a top-of-the-table clash against Ajax – who missed the chance to overtake PSV at the summit with a 2-2 draw against NEC Nijmegen on Sunday – and a trip to third-placed AZ following Tuesday’s meeting with Atletico.

Goalkeeper Jeroen Zoet’s heroics kept the Dutch side in the first leg, and they will be looking for another big performance from him if they are to reach the quarter-finals for the first time since 2006-07.

Stefan Savic (thigh) and Tiago (leg) are out for Atletico, while Fernando Torres (knee) is a doubt having sat out the victory over Deportivo at the weekend.

Cocu is able to select prolific striker Luuk de Jong, who returns having served a suspension in the first leg, but, along with Pereiro’s ban, there are concerns over the fitness of Andres Guardado (hamstring) and Maxime Lestienne (calf).

City midfielder has been a star performer and is keen to send the Ukrainians out of Champions League

Fernandinho has urged his Manchester City to grasp the opportunity of claiming a Champions League quarter-final place when they host Dynamo Kiev on Tuesday.Manuel Pellegrini’s men are strongly positioned to reach the last eight of the tournament for the first time following an impressive 3-1 first-leg triumph in the Ukrainian capital, where Sergio Aguero, David Silva and Yaya Toure were on target.Fernandinho’s midfield colleague Toure is a doubt for the match with a heel injury but, when set against the experience of nursing last-16 deficits before being knocked out by Barcelona in each of the past two seasons, the Brazil international knows Manuel Pellegrini’s team have been dealt a favourable hand.”Of course, this is the first time we have a chance to go forward to the quarter-finals,” he told City’s official website. “This is a big step for the club, for everyone here.”This should give us more motivation to play very well on Tuesday.”In contrast to previous European campaigns, where City have struggled to match strong domestic performances, their best displays this term have arguably come on the Champions League stage – most notably in wins at Sevilla and last time out in Kiev.Their bid to win a third Premier League win in five seasons has stalled badly alongside these highs, with Saturday’s dispiriting 0-0 draw at struggling Norwich City leaving Fernandinho to concede that the Champions League represents a more realistic chance of further silverware this term for the League Cup winners.”We will see what happens with other results but it is tough to drop points like we did,” he said.”We have nine [Premier League] games to play and even if you don’t have chance to fight for the title, the most important thing now is to fight for the top four.”

Kevin De Bruyne, Samir Nasri and Fabian Delph will all remain on the sidelines until after this month’s international break, although Pellegrini should still be confident of seeing off opponents who have failed to win in 13 competitive visits to England – losing 11 of those matches.

Speaking after Friday’s 2-1 Ukrainian Premier League win at Karpaty Lviv, a victory that helped send them three points clear at the top, Sergei Rebrov confirmed Mykola Morozyuk would remain on the sidelines for “a month or two” due to a “serious” knee injury.Dynamo defender Yevhen Khacheridi is keen to at least restore some of the pride lost on home turf against City.”We don’t want to make same mistakes we had in Kiev. It will be difficult to win, but we’ll try to do that,” Khacheridi told Komanda.

OPTA FACTS

  • Manchester City have reached the knockout stages of the Champions League for the third consecutive season. They have never made it past the Last 16 though, being knocked out by Barcelona in each of the last two campaigns.
  • Dynamo Kiev hadn’t reached the knockout stages of the Champions League since 1998/99. They were eliminated by Bayern Munich in the semi-finals.
  • Among the 16 teams left, Manchester City are the only side yet to register a clean sheet in the Champions League this season.

Counting down to USMNT vs Guatemala

Posted on March 12, 2016 | By Charles Boehm

By Charles Boehm – WASHINGTON, DC (Mar 12, 2016) US Soccer Players – TheUSMNT

returns to action two weeks from Friday with a World Cup qualifier at Guatemala on March 25. That means USMNT coach Jurgen Klinsmann’s next round of call-ups should come in barely a week’s time.As has so often been the case during his time in charge, there’s ample space for intrigue in this selection process. The absence of Jermaine Jones serving an MLS suspension that carries over into National Team duty, injury doubts in several positions, and Klinsmann himself noting that the timing of the MLS season influences his selections here adds up to a recipe for change. That leaves room for a surprise or two, in the roster as well as the lineups.Here’s a look at a few areas where the USMNT technical staff have to make tough decisions

Selection: Who’s a kid this month, and who isn’t?

On the same dates the senior squad play Guatemala, the US U-23s face Colombia in the home-and-home playoff series that will determine who earns the final spot in the Olympic soccer tournament in Rio this summer. With that in mind, underage players made up a substantial chunk of the January camp invites, an experiment that seems to have gone well.In some cases all this would lead to the obvious conclusion. Anyone in the USMNT player pool who’s age-eligible plays for the U-23s. Klinsmann picks from the rest, even for a World Cup qualifier.As always seems to be the case under Klinsmann, it’s not so simple.Klinsmann is quite fond of several of his youngsters, including Jordan Morris, DeAndre Yedlin, and to some extent even Jerome Kiesewetter. Will he consider them essential to the task of beating Guatemala? Is their time better spent salvaging Olympic qualifying, something all involved in US Soccer have stressed as a major priority for more than a year?

Central midfield

Klinsmann generally writes Jones’s name in ink when he’s available, so captain Michael Bradley will have an alternate partner – maybe even two – in the engine room for this month’s back-to-back clashes with Los Chapines.Reading standout Danny Williams might provide a reasonable facsimile, but a like-for-like replacement seems difficult here. There’s no one else quite like Jones in the player pool, in terms of personality, mentality and skillset. That fact might seem to nudge the coaches’ hands towards a five-man midfield where two players could assist Bradley instead of just one.Given Guatemala’s tendency to sit deep and defend stubbornly, often downright cynically, a creative attacking presence like Mix Diskerud or Lee Nguyen would be useful. However, with Klinsmann emphasizing experience in his recent remarks to the media, will he consider Nguyen ready for a start in the qualifying cauldron? You can say the same of Darlington Nagbe. Yet here we have an ideal opportunity for the coach to prove his trust, against a relatively manageable opponent, in players who’ve brought something different and useful to his squad.

Positioning a pure #6 to stand guard behind Bradley can sometimes have a liberating effect for the captain, and he’s quite familiar with Kyle Beckerman in that regard. At USMNT level, “KB5” has prospered against reactive opponents who allow him time to distribute the ball and dictate the tempo of the game, and his advancing years have only sharpened this intellect.

Fullback

Anyone can play left back, or so said Klinsmann in a lighthearted moment earlier in his tenure. Yet in practice, the search for an optimal option at this problematic spot hasn’t been so easy for him. He coaxed DaMarcus Beasley out of international retirement to keep the role filled last year, plugged Tim Ream in during the fall, and started young Kellyn Acosta there in both of this year’s friendlies. Ream isn’t normally a left back and Acosta plays in midfield at club level.Yedlin’s rapid rise would seem to have provided the US with a regular starter on the right defensive flank for years to come. Still, his National Team coaches seem persistently skeptical of his suitability as their right back, deploying him in a more advanced wing role more often than not. Fans may be accustomed to seeing a revolving door at left back, but stability was also fleeting on the starboard side last year. 2015 saw Birnbaum, Yedlin, Chandler, Evans, Orozco, Cameron, and Johnson filling the role.Fabian Johnson has spent lots of time on both sides of the USMNT defense. But his explosive attacking exploits for Borussia Monchengladbach this season have forced Klinsmann to admit that the versatility of “FabJo” has at times kept those creative traits from being exploited to the fullest for his country.”Obviously you like to kind of continue having a player play at the same role in the national team that he’s playing in his club team to just keep him consistent, keep him confident. But sometimes it’s not doable because of maybe problems in other positions,” Klinsmann said in a recent Q&A with ussoccer.com. “You know [Johnson] can play right back and left back as well, and on the wing in midfield both sides as well. That gives us a good feeling that we can switch over to that role.”Johnson played on the left side of midfield in the first two qualifiers of the current round. The time may have come to let him become a master of one trade rather than a jack of all.Charles Boehm is a Washington, DC-based writer and the editor of The Soccer Wire. Contact him at:cboehm@thesoccerwire.com. Fo

 

U.S. Hot List: Bobby Wood in scorching form; Tim Howard fading

With a new Major League Soccer season finally underway, we mark the return of the U.S. national team Hot List, which will become a weekly feature in this space right up until Jurgen Klinsmann names his squad for this summer’s Copa America Centenario in May.

While that high-profile tournament looms on the horizon, there are more pressing matters at hand (foot?) for the Americans. After a four-month break, the U.S. resumes its qualifying campaign for the 2018 World Cup in Russia later this month with an important home-and-home series against Guatemala.

A number of players have put themselves in position to merit strong consideration for minutes in those games alongside lineup shoo-ins like Alejandro Bedoya, Michael Bradley and Fabian Johnson, based on strong recent club performances. Others are struggling in their day jobs, which is significantly reducing their chances of seeing the field. With less than two weeks to go before Klinsmann picks his next roster, here’s a look at whose stock is rising and falling right now.

 

Warming up

Matt Besler, D, Sporting Kansas City (MLS)

Why he’s here: The 2014 World Cup starter helped Sporting KC keep a clean sheet on the road in Sunday’s 1-0 win over the 10-man Seattle Sounders.

What this means: Fellow left center back John Brooks remains ahead of Besler in the eyes of Klinsmann, who has suggested that with MLS players yet to hit full stride, he’ll go with a Euro-heavy lineup in Guatemala City. Still, Besler has crucial experience playing in away CONCACAF qualifiers, while Brooks, despite his Bundesliga pedigree, does not. That should not be overlooked by the coach.

 

Geoff Cameron, D/M, Stoke City (England)

Why he’s here: After missing almost two months with an ankle injury, the 30-year-old returned to Stoke’s lineup on Feb. 27 and has gone the distance in the Potters’ past three games — twice in central defense and once at right-back.

What this means: Cameron’s timing couldn’t be better from a national team perspective. Where exactly he’ll play isn’t clear, but expect the Massachusetts native to reclaim the starting U.S. job he won at the end of 2015 later this month against Guatemala.

 

Brad Guzan, G, Aston Villa (England)

Why he’s here: Guzan lost his starting job for relegation-bound Villa in early January but now appears to have won it back, playing in the last-place Premier League side’s two most recent games.

What this means: With Tim Howard riding the bench at Everton (more on Howard below), Guzan will have the inside track for the U.S. job when World Cup qualifying resumes, if he keeps getting games at club level.

 

Omar Gonzalez, D, Pachuca (Mexico)

Why he’s here: The big Texan has played all but 22 minutes of the nine games he’s appeared in since transferring from the LA Galaxy in late December, helping the Tuzos concede just nine goals — the fewest in Liga MX this season.

What this means: Gonzalez’s instant success south of the border has not gone unnoticed by Klinsmann, who could use the 27-year-old in central defense if he opts to deploy Cameron at right back or defensive midfielder against the Guatemalans.

 

Bobby Wood, F, Union Berlin (Germany)

Why he’s here: With seven goals in his past six 2.Bundesliga matches — including two against FSV Frankfurt on Saturday — no U.S. striker is hotter right now than Wood.

What this means: The 23-year-old Hawaiian could trade his super-sub role for a starting job against Guatemala if Jozy Altidore’s hamstring hasn’t recovered in time.

 

DeAndre Yedlin, D/M, Sunderland (England)

Why he’s here: The 22-year-old Seattle native has started Sunderland’s past four Premier League games at right-back, helping the Black Cats go 1-1-2 and climb out of the relegation zone during that span.

What this means: The trust that manager Sam Allardyce has shown in the Tottenham loanee has been rewarded, as Yedlin’s sometimes suspect defensive game has improved substantially in recent weeks. Will it be enough to convince Klinsmann to play the speedster on the back line rather than the wing later this month? Maybe.

 

Cooling down

Jozy Altidore, F, Toronto FC (MLS)

Why he’s here: Despite dropping weight and changing his training routine in an effort to avoid the hamstring injuries that have, uh, hamstrung him at three of the Americans’ past four major international tournaments, the 26-year-old missed TFC ‘s season opener with a recurrence of the ailment.

What this means: While Altidore — who scored in the national team’s first two games of 2016 — is expected to return to the Reds’ lineup before the Americans’ two qualifiers, the layoff is sure to cost him crucial match fitness ahead of the qualifiers.

 

Tim Howard, G, Everton (England)

Why he’s here: After a decade as the Toffees’ undisputed No. 1, Howard, who turned 37 on Sunday, lost his starting job to Spaniard Joel Robles last month.

What this means: Klinsmann had planned to rotate his keepers heading into this summer’s Copa America Centenario, but it’s hard to see Howard getting the nod for this month’s games ahead of Guzan if the latter keeps on playing in the Premier League.

 

Jermaine Jones, M, Colorado Rapids (MLS)

Why he’s here: Jones signed with the Rapids last week, officially beginning the six-game suspension that will rule him out of both March qualifiers.

What this means: While he won’t be available for the U.S. this month, the 34-year-old German-American remains one of Klinsmann’s most trusted veterans. As long as Jones can stay healthy and keep his hands off referees, he’ll be on the Copa squad (and likely on the field).

 

Christian Pulisic, M, Borussia Dortmund (Germany)

Why he’s here: The 17-year-old captured the imagination of American fans when he appeared in four consecutive Bundesliga games (one start) in January and February. But Klinsmann is wisely preaching patience with the youngster, who has since been returned to the German power’s under-19 squad.

What this means: Pulisic remains the brightest talent in the American youth ranks, but there’s no need to rush him into the senior team right now. However, Pulisic could well be with the U.S. U-23s for their two-leg Olympic playoff against Colombia later this month if coach Andi Herzog receives Dortmund’s blessing.

 

Tim Ream, D, Fulham (England)

Why he’s here: The former New York Red Bull’s run of 20 consecutive starts for Fulham ended in January. Since then, Ream has appeared in the Cottagers’ lineup just once.

What this means: Ream started the Americans’ final two matches of 2015 at left back, but it’s hard to see him reprising that role this month given his lack of recent playing time. Look for Johnson to get the nod there instead.

Ian Darke to remain ESPN’s lead soccer broadcaster through 2020

Ian Darke has signed on to stay with ESPN as its lead soccer broadcaster in the United States through 2020 as the rights for the World Cup shift to Fox. Hired by ESPN in 2010, Darke will remain as part of the network’s primary commentary team for U.S. men’s and women’s national team matches and for this year’s European Championship, which runs from June 10 to July 10.He has signed a multi-year contract, ESPN announced on Tuesday. “Ian is one of the finest English-language commentators in the world and his work has elevated our overall presentation of soccer since he joined ESPN,” ESPN’s senior coordinating producer Amy Rosenfeld said. “Ian has become a destination listen and has the proven ability to appeal to a wide audience. We are thrilled he will continue as an integral member of our team for years to come.”ESPN is also working to complete a deal for U.S. English-language rights to the 2020 Euros plus European qualifying matches for the 2018 World Cup, the 2020 Euros and the other international matches involving UEFA teams on FIFA dates.”I don’t see any point in moving,” Darke said last weekend in a production trailer outside blustery Upton Park in London, where he was preparing to call West Ham’s Premier League match against Sunderland for BT Sport. “I love covering the U.S. games. ESPN have been one of the best things that have happened in my career, really.”Darke gained prominence for his call of Landon Donovan’s injury-time goal against Algeria in 2010 that advanced the Americans to the World Cup knockout stage. ESPN made him its lead broadcaster three months later, and he announced weekly Premier League matches for ESPN through 2012-13. He switched his England base to BT when NBC took over Premier League rights. arke thinks switching back and forth from a European network to an American one is a seamless transition.”The audience is that much more sophisticated in the United States now. People know what they’re watching; they’re watching the European leagues every week,” he said. “I think it would be an insult to the audience to try to sort of tailor it in some kind of dumbed-down way. They appear to appreciate the way we do it, anyway. So absolutely no need to change.”He does enjoy the greater comfort of broadcast booths in U.S. stadiums.”Today I will have to sort of almost like vault over a sort of a little metal fence to get into our commentary position,” he said. “We’re always outdoors and there’s never luxurious desks. There’s never enough place to put your notes, and there’s wind and rain.  He will be back in the U.S. to call the Americans’ World Cup qualifier against Guatemala on March 29 at Columbus, Ohio. He gets up to speed before U.S. matches when ESPN meets with coach Jurgen Klinsmann.”I do think the team is in a bit of a difficult place,” Darke said. “I do think the qualifying will be harder than it’s been for some time because the young players who he is bringing through, not enough of them really so far have proved themselves up to performing at the kind of level that the team was used to when they had Donovan and [Clint] Dempsey and Tim Howard at his peak. They’re kind of looking to rebuild and find a new generation of stars.”While Fox has U.S. rights to the next three World Cups through 2026, ESPN is maintaining its hold on the Euros. The 2020 tournament will be played in 13 cities in 13 different UEFA members.”It’s going to be like a tour of European capitals,” he said. “We’re going to feel kind of like tourists.”