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To: kevkrom

I’ve been thinking about that ball from Ronaldo. If that ball is six inches off in any direction, odds are that goal doesn’t happen, that’s how perfect that feed was. It was a one in a hundred shot.

Still had the US had better situational awareness, it never should have come down to that.


27 posted on 06/23/2014 6:53:25 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator

Saw a stat after the game that USA was something like 0 for 15 on crosses, and that b*****d was 1 for 1.

Great pass, but he should never have been allowed to have the ball and that kind of space. USA needs to do a much better job killing clock when protecting a lead.


28 posted on 06/23/2014 7:03:04 AM PDT by kevkrom (I'm not an unreasonable man... well, actually, I am. But hear me out anyway.)
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To: dfwgator

There’s A Scenario Where A Coin Flip Would Decide If The US Advances In The World Cup
clint dempsey world cup usmnt

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
Of all the possible scenarios for how the United States men’s national team could qualify for the knockout round of the World Cup, the most absurd is what happens if the U.S. and Portugal finish with the same number of points, the same goal difference, and the same number of goals scored.

There would be a coin flip to decide which team finishes second in the group. A horrible, horrible coin flip.

Here’s what would have to happen:

Portugal beats Ghana
U.S. loses to Germany
Portugal makes up exactly five goals in goal difference with the U.S.
Portugal scores exactly two more goals than the U.S. does

If all of those things happen, the U.S. and Portugal would be dead even on every metric. Here’s how the tiebreakers work:

If Portugal wins and the U.S. loses, the two teams would be tied on 4 points. The first tiebreaker is goal difference (which the U.S. currently leads by five goals). If the teams are tied on goal difference, the second tiebreaker is goals scored (which the U.S. currently leads by two goals). If the teams are tied on goal difference and goals scored, the third tiebreaker is head-to-head results. Since the U.S. and Portugal tied 2-2, we’d move to the final tiebreaker ... the drawing of lots, a.k.a. a coin flip.

Here are the six results that would lead to a coin flip:

U.S. loses 3-0, Portugal wins 2-0
U.S. loses 3-1, Portugal wins 3-0
U.S. loses 3-2, Portugal wins 4-0
U.S. loses 4-0, Portugal wins 2-1
U.S. loses 4-1, Portugal wins 3-1
U.S. loses 4-2, Portugal wins 4-1

It’d take an unlikely combination of wacky results, but it’s possible.


34 posted on 06/23/2014 7:49:12 AM PDT by Wyatt's Torch
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