Hello I Am Hung Over Let's Yell About US Soccer Comment Count

Brian

trinidad_and_tobago_us_wcup_soccer_24673057-1-1

DESOLATION

Hungover? Whatever. Hello, folks. Instead of doing my job last night I had some alcohol and devised a series of mostly-humane traps that can be used against Sunil Gulati and everyone else associated with US Soccer. I plan on 3-D printing these traps and leaving them wherever incompetent executives gather: airline lounges, Sur La Table, the White House, Toys R Us, Starbucks, that kind of thing.

If you will permit me a moment: US soccer is the only sporting thing outside of Michigan I care about these days and it's right up there. Many of my friends I know because of it. A World Cup every four years is a cornerstone of the sporting experience for me, and now it's gone. I expect someone will yell at me for not having an MSU UFR today, and I would like to pre-emptively tell this person to go to hell. Go to hell, jerk. Your silver lining is that I won't be writing about soccer for a month next summer. Instead I will be telling myself that strong men also cry.

Anyway. Defeat has a thousand mothers and everyone is flogging their pet theory. I accept all persons as targets of blame. Yes, Arena. Yes, Klinsmann. Yes, Gulati. Gulati, finally and most of all.

Have we stopped to ask why president of US Soccer, an enterprise that has a nine-digit pile of cash it's sitting on, is a side hustle for an economics professor who looks like a melted pez dispenser?

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Or why that guy hasn't been challenged in the last two elections? The most recent came well after it was clear Klinsmann was a bit of a dunce, and nobody even stepped up to the plate. Like all national federations, US Soccer is insulated from consequences and mostly set up to gather cash and dispense it to Chuck Blazer's cats.

Any self-respecting melted pez dispenser would have a wakizashi in his chest this morning, but this guy is talking about "two inches" like not even making the playoff over ten games in a group featuring Honduras, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Panama was a matter of some rotten luck.

It's not. Obviously. In addition to failing to make the World Cup, Gulati's ham-handed management has seen US soccer sued by its own players. Stadium selection has been focused exclusively on cash, with many many matches played on substandard turf. The women refused to play one match in Hawaii because it was so dangerous. The US has missed three of the last four Olympics, and hired a very special boy in Klinsmann. That dumbass left Landon Donovan, the all-time USA GOAT, off a World Cup roster in the same year he was MLS MVP in favor of a kid who can't get on the field in the Bundesliga 2 and an insurance salesman named Brad.

Klinsmann got dominated in three out of four matches, got out of the group because Portugal blew it, was saved the embarrassment of a 10-0 game against Belgium by Tim Howard, and kept his damn job. The US got outshot 15-6 by Haiti in a Gold Cup in which they got badly outplayed by everyone except Cuba, and Klinsmann kept his damn job. Only after Klinsmann had started the US down the path to destruction did Gulati pull the trigger on his very special boy. Klinsmann remains unemployed. It is unlikely he will ever manage another soccer team.

On its face replacing him with Arena was fine, but you can't make a soccer team or an offensive line in one year, and then Arena made a stunningly insane tactical decision to play the same 11 last night. That may be the only thing Gulati can't be blamed for. Finally, a thing Gulati didn't do wrong.

Unfortunately Gulati is accountable to almost nobody, as is usual. The only thing that will get him out is a decrease in the bottom line, and so I beg anyone inclined to go to a US game or buy merch to not do so until a total housecleaning takes place.

I guess now I get to go finish reviewing the MSU game. This week is fun!

Comments

robpollard

October 11th, 2017 at 12:52 PM ^

If a parent thinks their kid has "the goods" (e.g., a chance to play D1 sports, not to mention pro sports), they will absolutely move the kid (if not the family) far from their home to enable that dream (whose dream it is can be a matter of dispute, but that's for a different comment).

To take but one example, think of the IMG Academy. Kids from literally all over the US (and Canada) move there for football and basketball, but for tennis and golf, its not uncommon at all for people to come from all over the world.

Most kids just get "sent" there to go to the boarding school, but certainly there are cases where the family moves as well.
https://www.imgacademy.com/other-programs/pro-training

There's a reason their website is in English, Spanish, Japanese and Chinese.

Ziff72

October 11th, 2017 at 1:05 PM ^

I coach my kids so I certainly get a good look at the insanity youth sports has become.    I'm just not as worldly as some, moving from the USA to Europe seems like a much bigger step than moving from Michigan to Florida.   For other people it may not seem that big of a deal.  

I'll stand by my comment that it's stupid to do, but yes it's way more common than I gave it credit for and plenty of people would think my stance is stupid as well. 

BursleyBaitsBus

October 11th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

The culture change traveling excuse doesn’t hold water when South/Latin Americans, Asians and Africans are moving all over the world to accommodate their kids and get em into European academies once they’ve hit the limit in their respective countries

mgobaran

October 12th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

You get signed by a European club and then move. Pulisic was able to at a younger age because he was technically a dual citizen with Croatia (grandparent from there) and had an EU passport/visa whatever. Others like Josh Sargent get signed by Warder Bremen and have to wait until their 18th birthday year to join the team and 18th birthday to play for the team.

Moving to Europe because your 8 year old is showing promising signs of being a soccer player is dumb AF. Moving them there becuase they can star on Barcalona FC's youth squad is a great idea!

Yinka Double Dare

October 11th, 2017 at 12:48 PM ^

Dempsey's actually sort of the exception that proves the rule. He did, in fact, go the typical US development route. His decidedly not well off at all family (the dude literally grew up in a trailer park) made tons of sacrifices to get him to a pay-to-play club team in Dallas, hours from his home. He went to a college team, then MLS, who sold him to Fulham after a couple of solid years. 

But most kids from circustances like Dempsey never have a chance, because their family couldn't get thim into a club team in the first place. There's been some progress in this area (MLS teams having academies that aren't pay-to-play) but there's still a lot of work to be done.

 

The Mad Hatter

October 11th, 2017 at 1:31 PM ^

I signed up my son for the first time this fall.  He's 5, almost 6.  So far they've had more games than practices and none of the kids know what the fuck they're doing.  Some of that is expected at that age, but how the hell are they supposed to learn if they never practice?

I don't think I'm going to sign him up again after this season is over.  Maybe it's time to try basketball or flag football.

The Mad Hatter

October 11th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

so he can get some exercise and hang out with his buddies.  But he's really competitive and he hasn't scored a goal yet (execpt for the other team).  I'm not saying they should be run into the ground or anything, but at least teach them the basic rules.

Watching him try to use "The Force" to move the soccer ball in his first game was pretty damn funny though.

jabberwock

October 11th, 2017 at 2:19 PM ^

My 12yr daughter has been playing soccer since age 4, my 6 yr olds also since 4.

Practice is very important for multiple reasons:

First of all, it helps them learn the game, with out the pressure of actually being IN a game (as you said, theyre kids).  The coaches are more relaxed, theres no pressure, lots of different fun games can be used to teach body control, tecnique, and strategy.

2ndly (and this also related to yoiur comment) some of my daughter's (and My Wife & I) best friends have been made because of the sports they play but particularly the practices.  Kids talk, bond, have fun and can socialize more at practice (as can parents).

My kids have a lot more fun at practice than they do at games, not that they don't have fun at games as well.  But there is a more serious tone with games that scorekeeping and parental cheering make very obvious.

I will say that if your kids aren't having fun and asking to go to practice, either you or your coach are doing it wrong.

jabberwock

October 11th, 2017 at 2:07 PM ^

but there may be other programs around with more of an in-depth coaching/ teaching system.  Worth looking into.

My problem with 3 kids is that every second of every day after school is filled with practice.

My 12 yr old practicers soccer 3 nights a week, softball 2 nights, and private Music lessons on her off-sport night.  Multiple games on the weekend.

My two 6 yr olds have 2 soccer practices/week, but also have swimming lessons (12 yr old has learned already)

Now all 3 want skating lessons this winter, & oh wouldn't gymnastics be nice!

Kill me.

IowaBlue

October 11th, 2017 at 2:28 PM ^

That sounds like an AYSO set up here locally, play a bunch of games but have no clue what is going on because a parent coach is running the team and they just watched a 149 page powerpoint presentation on soccer but know nothing else.  Speaking on my own local experience here... I know this isn't a fact everywhere.

Please don't give up on soccer, just look for another option.  A club, with a developmental program for the youth/beginners.  Yes you are out there to have fun kid, but hey, this is how to do a thrown in, a goal kick, a kick off, etc.  Nothing wrong with learning the basics and rules, while also having fun with friends.

Good luck finding the right program, great sport... my kids really enjoy it, and have made some great friends through it.  Although, that is not mutually exclusive to soccer... any sport it better than no sport in my opinon.

Go Blue!

 

Eberwhite82

October 11th, 2017 at 3:46 PM ^

First, at that age, ALL SPORTS are bullshit. I've coached soccer for 15 years... 6-8 year olds are barely coachable. At that age, just relax and focus on them having fun... Around 8-9, time to start getting a little more serious. 10-11 you start the filtering process. By U12, the real shit starts going down if the kid is any good. 

You have, at a minimum, 3 more years of watching tadpoles follow a ball around a small sided field. 

Yeoman

October 11th, 2017 at 5:19 PM ^

He didn't bail out mid-career; he didn't come back to MLS until he was 30 and winding down.

All the focus on youth development, while justified, is missing something else. The US does pretty well at U20 level, getting out of the WC group stage more often than not. But suddenly the senior club isn't of the same quality. Something's going wrong with adult development. And what's changed is that so many of the best US players are sitting in MLS instead of pushing themselves against better competition.

20 of the 23 players on the 2010 WC squad were playing abroad. How many was it last night?

M-jed

October 11th, 2017 at 1:00 PM ^

This is more scalable than sending our kids offshore. My kids are in development academies and it’s clear the best coaches are the ones with international experience.
There are some really good players out there and I’m hopeful about the future of US soccer if we get our shit together. But the thought of sending my kid to Europe to make $30k in MLS doesn’t get me so excited.

MI Expat NY

October 11th, 2017 at 1:26 PM ^

I generally agree that until the U.S. academies are stocked with enough talent that domestic practices and games provide enough of a challenge to fulfill development potential, the best american teenagers shold take any opportunity to join a prominant european academy.  I do wonder, however, if the value placed on a college education in the U.S., especially in the socioeconomic brackets that produce most of our soccer players, restricts kids from taking that leap.  The end goal for many, if not the vast majority of, parents of highly skilled soccer players is for the players to get a college scholarship.  Going to an academy in Europe where they'll start playing professional games at 16-17 doesn't advance that goal. 

DoubleB

October 12th, 2017 at 12:13 AM ^

"The end goal for many, if not the vast majority of, parents of highly skilled soccer players is for the players to get a college scholarship."

Of all the things written about who is to blame for the 2018 USMNT debacle (coaches, Gulati, MLS, players, T&T's field, etc.), the issue is still virtually the same as it was when the US beat T&T in 1990 to go to it's first World Cup in 40 years--the development of players for professional team sports in the United States centers around college scholarships which is suboptimal to success at an international level. This is true for all our team sports including the ones in which we have high success. See the question to be asked isn't why can't a country of 325 million produce an elite level soccer team? The question is why can a country with shitty development systems in international team sports still have success in those sports? It's because we have 325 million people and a lot of money.

 

mGrowOld

October 11th, 2017 at 1:10 PM ^

And it's such a nice house other people want to come see the inside of it.  So he leaves the front door open and lets people inside his house to visit and look around for free.  Some of the people like being inside this man's house so much they start conversations with other visitors that dont even involve the man who built the nice house but rather talk amoung themselves.

Well anyways the builder thought it would be nice if every week he served up some refreshments for his visitors...you know something he prepared on his own just for them to enjoy and again, at no cost to the visitors.  Monday was leftovers from Saturday's big meal, Tuesday's was sort of a pot-luck, Wednesdays was a nice desert and so on.  And the builder did this every week, without fail, during the autumn cause he knew that's when people liked visiting his house the best.

So this one day the builder was very sad because people he liked very much went on a trip and didnt play nicely with their hosts.   As a matter of fact these friends of the builder were sent home from the trip and told not to take anymore trips for at least four years and this made the builder very sad indeed.  So instead of a nice desert the sad builder said he would serve something else this one time to his visitors.  But this one particular visitor to the builder's house (we'll call him Tedbossman) didnt like the new treat the builder made and got very mad at the builder and said "HEY.  I COME TO YOUR HOUSE ON WEDNESDAY'S FOR THE NICE DESERT.  I DONT CARE IF YOU'RE SAD - MAKE ME A NICE DESERT!"  

The moral of the story (and the TL/DR)  Don't be an asshole.

 

GoBlueTal

October 11th, 2017 at 3:07 PM ^

If I have a bad day at work, my coworkers are willing to give me some slack.  If I whine that I stayed up too late watching soccer, and my team lost, and I have a hangover ... their patience will -ABSOLUTELY CORRECTLY- be less than if I said nothing at all and just had a bad day.  

This is Brian's job.  He gets paid based on our clicks.  And to continue your analogy - people come here for the desSerts, and he gets paid whether we get dessert or not.  There's no sign saying "no desserts today", people showed up, and got Brian's empty cans dirty laundry on the table where the dessert usually can be found.  That some people are put off is not unreasonable.  

bgoblue02

October 11th, 2017 at 5:00 PM ^

I suggest you take this up with the people paying him, his advertisers.  Whether you click or not is more their problem and then becomes his problem.  

The advertisers don't give an ef about michigan sports, they care about clicks, so in their mind he is doing a bang-up job today because this post got more comments than the UFR does, especially since people feel the need to re-post the UFR tidbits as their own on the board. 

 

GoBlueTal

October 12th, 2017 at 12:25 PM ^

Someone took issue - someone else took issue with that someone taking issue, and implied taking issue is inappropriate.  I'm defending the right to take issue.  People are not wrong for being pissed that Brian put up a whiny rant.  In fact, it is to Brian's benefit that they do so - if he ever forgets what people come to this site for, his site will lose readership much faster than they can be gained.  

I have no real skin in the fight, except to provide perspective.  I don't like when Brian is emotive, but then, very few people can write well emotively.  I didn't read the post, because I don't give a darn about what is Brian's opinion.    I poked the comments because well, I don't know, I usually ignore them.  Probably because I was looking for something to take my mind off work for a few minutes and there was no UFR.  

Eberwhite82

October 12th, 2017 at 12:49 PM ^

For many is that, like Brian, we DO have "skin in the fight." So when the I Don't Give A Damn About the Whole State of... Soccer crowd waddles in and essentially trolls... It pisses off an already extremely pissed off and gutted group.

The lack of understanding and empathy from this don't care/anit-soccer group is pretty stunning. I'll stop beating my head against the wall, but for one of the smarter commentariat on the Internet, this thread has been pretty frustrating. 

His Dudeness

October 11th, 2017 at 1:05 PM ^

I like soccer.

I appreciate Biff liking it too.

You MLive doodz really don't have a clue about this blog and how bad you've screwed it up for the rest of us, but by all means keep listeing to Valenti and  bang the fire Harbaugh drum and be weirdly racist (some of you) and mostly dumb as shit (most of you).