Posted on 06/05/2014 10:44:51 PM PDT by nickcarraway
His son also mocked Donovan being off the team.
Isn't that cicular reasoning? Oh well, it is CBS, after all.
Good that the first game is Ghana. Beat them and the USA has a chance to advance. Lose and it’s all over. Tie against Ghana also probably means it’s all over.
Look, I completely understand that most FReepers don’t follow the USA national soccer team, and your comment shows it . . . .
thanks
Get the hell out. Get out of America... I repeat: Get the hell out.
No. My comment holds regardless of how much I or others here watch USA national soccer.
This is about where we stand, who we back, who we give aid and comfort to when it is our country on the line - in matters great and small.
Didn’t the United States lose to third-world Ghana when the games were in second-world South Africa in 2010?
Sorry, folks, I can’t take this sport seriously when a squad from a country best known for internet scamming beats the U.S. in some second-rate country.
Now they are playing in Brazil — a country so ill prepared to finish their venues that they are leaving design elements off. And let’s not even talk about the corruption that brought the 2022 games to Qatar — a country the size of frigging Connecticut.
Yes, and in the preceding world cup in 2006, as well!
He doesn’t live in America, he lives in Los Angeles.
Thirty-two teams made it through qualifying to this point. They are divided into eight groups of four each. Those groups play within their groups in a round-robin which will eliminate sixteen teams. Following that, the remaining sixteen teams play a single-elimination tournament to determine the champion. In 2010, the US team made it to the round-of-16 before being knocked out. Tougher this time around with having to play Germany (traditional European powerhouse) and Portugal (with Cristiano Renaldo, arguably best player in the world... certainly the prettiest) in the first round (not to mention Ghana).
Indeed! This actual grandmother really does have on a bikini, competing with others, also fine!! Look closely, VERrrrry closely!
What Wilbon is really po’ed about is that a German, a white man, had the unmitigated nerve to voice an oblique-at-best criticism of the almighty (almighty arrogant and ego-centric) Kobe Bryant. (BTW, Klinsman’s comment really reflected on Lakers’ management, not Bryant)
And she was probably not even the winner!
I used to share your attitude about soccer. Most of us like the games we grew up with, and I grew up with basketball, football, and baseball, in that order.
Now that I'm a grumpy old man, I am disgusted at how basketball and football have degraded themselves to chase television dollars. Basketball, the greatest game ever invented, is now almost unwatchable at the NBA and major college level. Football is also a pale shadow of what it used to be. Too many thugs, too many kids with dizzying amounts of money behaving badly, and the integrity of the game undermined by rules changes. I don't remember the last time I tried to watch a football game. I remember flipping the tv on, but I lost interest after the first 30 or 40 commercials. I think they slipped a down or two of football in there somewhere.
Soccer, at least, hasn't sold out to tv.
Then I had two daughters grow up playing youth soccer and I actually watched enough to develop some understanding and liking for the game. Soccer has its problems, as any sport does, but it's healthier than the NBA or NFL. U.S. women's soccer (I have two daughters who play, so we follow the women's national team) is among the best in the world. U.S. men's soccer is a respectable middle tier team, which for us is progress. The top male athletes will still gravitate towards the big money sports, and that will hold U.S. men's soccer back until players are much better paid. But looking at the poisonous effect of tv money on other U.S. sports, I'm not particularly eager for that to happen. If American tv ever gets its hands on soccer, we'll have commercial breaks on every throw in.
That’s the beauty of the game. You don’t have to be a huge, sports-minded powerhouse country to field a good soccer team.
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