Walking Dead Dynamo – Houston Dynamo at Seattle Sounders FC

22 03 2012

Head bandaged Zombies, 40,000 screaming rave green fans , and NBC Sports Network.

Ingredients for a new NBC soccer-thriller-zombie-drama?  No.  This is a usual bloody, head-bash clash between Houston Dynamo and Seattle Sounders.  The difference this time, NBC Sports Network will bring a growing thrill seeking audience to this Major League Soccer version of “The Hunger Games”.

See the trees through the Bandages

Coach, Sigi Schmid calls them “trees”.  The tall, physical Houston Dynamo travel to CenturyLink Field, Friday, 7pm PST.  This match marks NBC Sports Network’s first match with Sounders FC. It’s already Prime-Time viewing when these two MLS power-clubs meet, but NBC will expose it to a larger blood-thirsty audience.

“Zombie Jaqua”

Nate "Zombie" Jaqua - Houston vs Sounders 2009 MLS Playoffs

Not once, but twice during the Sounders 2009 inaugural season, both clubs met and a Sounder ended up wearing a head-bandage.  Former Sounder, Nate Jacqua has twice been the head bitten victim.  Most notably during the 2009 MLS Playoffs.  Nate’s contract was declined by Seattle during the offseason.  Fan and player memories of those scarred Dynamo matches still haunts.

Houston Dynamo have more diverse talents than causing bloody head wounds.  But there are a few rules to follow, and faces to be aware of.

“Rule number one:  Cardio”.  The survival rule that worked in “Zombieland works the same here.  Houston is tall and physical and can turn any game on a single Brad Davis dead ball set piece. Sigi says about Houston “they’ve got probably the best server of a dead ball in the league, in Brad Davis”.  So, run.  Run and wear ‘em down.  Possess, pass quick, move, and make the dynamo chase the game.

Rule number two:  Beware the Trees. With a tall lineup of players, like 6′ 3″ Geoff Cameron the Dynamo are always a free kick or corner kick away from a slicing fast goal.  So playing level at 0-0 or even holding a marginal 1-0 lead is nothing Houston fears.  In fact, it only make ‘em hungrier.

That same forest height also haunts opponents when Houston are on the defensive side of the ball.  The Dynamo banged in a 1-0 lead against the Sounders in Seattle last year.  Seattle pelted Houston’s goal with 26 shots.  Steve Zakuani salvaged a late 80th minute equalizing goal.

A late escape this time is not the position the Sounders want to be in.  Last year was a lucky draw.  The fate would likely be worse this time.

David Estrada opened the Sounders season with a St Patrick’s Hat-trick vs Toronto.  He may not be able to duplicate, but what will be critical is his ability to make similar runs in behind Houston’s defense.  Like Toronto, frustrating Houston’s defense and pulling them out of position, creating offensive gaps for Alvaro “Flaco” Fernadez, and Frdy Montero will be a valuable part of Estrada’s development and Sounders success.  Possession and creativity up top in attack will force Houston to chase the game and not allow their physical presence and height to dominate the match.  Bandages will remain resting in first-aid kits.

Match Notes and Injury Update:

Media note:  Arlo White, the Sounders commentator for the past two seasons will be calling his first match back in Seattle since being selected by NBC Sports Network as their primary soccer play-by-play announcer.  I imagine a warm welcome, as Arlo has been such an exciting part of Sounders soccer since coming from BBC-5.  His warm baritone and creative calls make him a clear selection for NBC.  Here are some calls you may know, “Loitering with intent”, “Champagne soccer”, and a classic “Shambolics”

Injury note:  Mauro Rosales received a knock to his knee from Toronto.  He will miss Houston and may miss the next two weeks.  ”Flaco” may move from left to right.  Burch, Levesque, and Sivebæk are thought to possibly be options to fill in as well.

You can also see my work posted here

 © 2012 Sales on Sounders by Ryan J Sales





The Heat Is On – Sounders FC at Houston Dynamo

30 07 2011
Seattle Sketcher, Gabi Campanario

Sales on Sounders by Gabi Campanario - 8/5/09 @ Barca Friendly

With Manchester in the Rave Green rear view mirror, and a vital CONCACAF Champions League match coming up quickly, Wednesday’s second-leg CONCACAF qualifier against San Francisco, from Panama, Sounders FC rejoins regular season Major League Soccer play tonight in heavy-heat Houston against the Dynamo.  Where their strong mid-season run will be hotly tested.

Over the last nine league matches, Seattle has looked among the best of MLS. In terms of developing form for the fall playoffs, Sounders FC have looked the best early prospect. The positive run of form includes a team personal best nine game undefeated streak. (6-wins to 3-draws). Houston and heat may pose the toughest challenge in the last 10 matches. A win would secure Seattle’s confident run of form. It would also press them closer to LA for the league’s top record. A draw would be happily acceptable. A loss would pose tough questions for a recently shaky defense.

During their strong midseason run, Seattle has scored an outstanding 17 goals. They have also conceded an unacceptable 11 goals. The defensive lapses have gone largely overlooked because of beautiful free kicks, amazing comebacks, and fanatic goal celebrations. The winning entertainment has rained more than Seattle precipitation. So few have noticed the potential mudslide. Seattle needs to dry its slippery defensive goal rush in the hot Houston heat.

Whenever Houston Dynamo and Sounders FC meet, it feels like a long distance rivalry. Only the Sounders third season in Major League Soccer and memories lay out like entries in a log book:

Season one, Seattle:  Patrick Ianni’s winning bicycle kick.  Or, as Assistant coach Brian Schmetzer said, “If you would have told me before the game that we were going to win on a bicycle kick and ask me which player would kick it, he would have been about No. 9″.
Season one, Houston:  Nate Jaqua hits 70th minute equalizer, for late 1-1 draw.
Season one, Playoffs, first-leg, Seattle:  Pat Onstad hit Montero’s head in the penalty box for what appeared to be a red card. Montero was shown yellow for faking injury.
Season one, Playoffs, second-leg, Houston:  Brian Ching scores heart breaking winner in overtime.
Season one, Seattle:  Steven Waibel bouncing a ball on Ljungberg’s head.
Season two, Seattle:  Keller earns clean sheet, and an assist.  In the 64th minute, Keller found Montero for a long punt, which Montero controlled, turned the defender around, and blasted home.
Season two, Houston:  Zakuani, on a breakaway last year was tripped up by Houston’s rookie Keeper, Tyler Deric, for what appeared to be a sure penalty-kick. Instead Zakuani was shown yellow for simulation (diving). The last laugh was the surprised look on Deric’s face that Zakuani was carded and not him.
Season three, Seattle:  In March Seattle hosted the Dynamo ans served up 26 shots. In the end Seattle only converted one of its many chances to come from behind and salvage a draw.

Houston Dynamo 2006-2007 MLS Cup Champiions

Heat will play a factor. Overstated, it will be an advantage for Houston.  With all of Seattle’s recent success, it is only mid-season.  Including tonight’s match, Seattle has 12 league matches, 1 CONCACAF, and 1 US Open Cup match to go.  With both CONCACAF and the US Open Cup matches will hopefully be added as they win and advance in those competitions. Packed with many scheduled challenges, Sounders FC also face the potential for an equal amount of reward for overcoming those obstacles.  In all, Seattle has the potential to win a Manchester United sized trunk of trophies. Five in all. A take home, Sir Alex Ferguson, would be proud of.

I’ll leave you with one last log. The potential booty the Sounders could plunder.

Cascadia Cup:  Beat Vancouver in Vancouver and take it home.
US Open Cup:  Defeat FC Dallas at Starfiere in Tukwila on August 30th and play for third consecutive US Open Cup.
CONCACAF Champions League:  Defeat San Francisco this Wednesday in Seattle and advance to the CONCACAF group stages.  Advance from group stages and laying ahead would be a possible first ever MLS team CONCACAF Champion.
Supporters Shield:  Keep winning.  Team with best record in MLS regular season play earns top spot in league and takes the Shield.
2011 MLS Cup:  Make the playoffs in top six positions, earn bye for first week and go on a late season ride to earn a first ever title.

© 2011 Sales on Sounders by Ryan Sales





Rave Green – Kings of the US Open Cup – Sounders FC vs Kitsap Pumas

28 06 2011

Kitsap Pumas - Coach Pete Fewing, Sounders FC Broadcaster - Club founded 2008

Boise State Broncos rose through conference play and inexplicable BCS algorithm to appear in the 2007 NCAA Fiesta Bowl.  They were paired with College Football giants Oklahoma Sooners.  Las Vegas odds were outwitted by tongue-in-cheek play-calling (see statue of liberty).  The mighty Sooners fell 43 – 42. Sometimes fun match-ups like that happen in college sports.  It happens every year in the US Open Cup. Tomorrow, raise a toast to sporting Underdogs.  Ah, Soccer.  The one lush place where the wide world of David and Goliath meet.  No draws.  One lives.  One dies.  Annual, not occasional sports classics.  Eight MLS teams face lower league teams in US Open Cup play. For the Rave Green Sounders, David is a Puma from Bremerton, Washington.  Seattle Sounders FC face the Kitsap Pumas.

Kitsap Pumas formed in 2008.  One year before Seattle was promoted from USL to MLS. Their home is Bremerton, Washington.  Most Seattle area fans traveling to Bremerton for Pumas matches, or Bremerton fans traveling to Sounders match-day include a ferry ride.  Kitsap Pumas are an amateur team playing in the Premier Development League (PDL).  Part of the larger United Soccer League (USL).  USL is the league all Cascadia rivals emerged from.  (Vancouver Whitecaps, Portland Timbers, & Seattle Sounders FC)

Pete Fewing, Kitsap Pumas coach, has been a coach at Seattle University, and has direct ties to Sounders FC as a Broadcaster.  He led his men through preliminary US Open Cup stages to reach the first round.  Only to face two-time defending champions, and the regions most populated soccer franchise, Sounders FC.  This is David vs Goliath. This will certainly be the Puma’s most historic match.

For Sounders FC this match becomes their fourth in ten days.  It must be mid-season. They have amazingly won their last three regular season matches in eight days.  A significant statement in their 2011 Major League Soccer playoff quest.  Now comes their first effort to defend their two consecutive US Open Cup titles.  With every starter and most reserves seeing significant playing time in the 8-day, 3-match affair many regulars will be sitting.  No forgiveness.  It is Cup play to the death.  Is Kitsap tasting Rave Green blood?

US Open Cup

Tuesday’s US Open Cup will be held at intimate Starfire Stadium.  Starfire is the Sounders training facility in Tukwilla, WA.  US Open Cup matches are not new for Sounders and Starfire. One memorable US Open Cup, and Sounders FC match happened in 2009 in a semi-final match with Houston Dynamo.  Sounders FC won on an overtime goal by Nate Jaqua.  Whose head was wrapped in a wide white bandage from an earlier foul.  Not long after he was given the name “Zombie Jaqua”.  His game winning goal helped guide the Sounders to their first US Open Cup.

I believe the US Open Cup is the reason to love Soccer.  It began in 1914.  You can not find a competitive format like it in any US team sport. A competitive match between amateur, semi-pro, or top-level professional teams. Teams from every US region and every backyard. If you have read, Sales on Sounders before you will remember Real Madrid recently collapsed to lower a level Spanish team. Agrupación Deportiva Alcorcón defeated Real Madrid 4-nil in Spain’s, Copa del Rey. Similar to our US Open Cup.  There is not only domestic precedent for David’s soccer upsets, but the beautiful game has a precedent of more global David’s than any other team sport.

Before the Sounders went MLS, they were that same David.  Crushing teams like Chivas-USA and knocking out Kansas City on penalty kicks.

I will wear Rave Green, but my heart beats to David’s drum.  Being 42, this is the first time I’ve been a true Goliath.  It does feel like being a king in giants clothing.  Easy to trip.  Sounders sage, and Assistant Coach, Brian Schmetzer summed up how a top tier team prepares for a lower tier team.  ”it’s tough guy Tuesday.  Tough guys persevere.  Tough times don’t last, tough people do”.

The following is an excerpt from a recent conversation I participated in on a social network group, “Sounders FC vs Portland Timbers Rivalry”.

US Open Cup '09 & '10

Ryan:  I will make my US Open Cup pitch for the 100th time, and I’m probably not done yet. It is competitive soccer!!! IF, teams are expansion, or going through a rebuilding phase, the US Open Cup should be a massive priority from Front Office to reserves. I think John Spencer & the Timbers need to put it high on their off-season priority list. I guarantee, even making it to Quarter-finals will make the Timbers better. Guaranteed!!! Too many people, and I mean MLS owners, coaches, and players do not get what this competition does that NO regular season match could EVER do. Until that realization is league wide, mid-season play like yesterday (Timber 4-nil loss to FC Dallas) will be an ongoing norm for new/rebuilding teams.  It is 3rd kit, crazy field locations, bizzaro world match-ups, and no-draws allowed. That factor, makes players earn victory vs get lucky.  It forces them to not play park-the-bus-defense.  Yes, I’m talking to you FC Dallas.  Just because Mourinho has done it, doesn’t make it good for MLS.  LA, you can also hear me sing!!!  To put my bold point on this, I’d rather fall to the Kitsap Pumas, than the San Jose Earthquakes.  It makes players play better.  Our late season run last year was in no small part due to CONCACAF and US Open Cup play.  Now forget us, that could be, and should be said of more, if not every MLS squad.  Now I will shut up . . . until next time.

Todd:  Preach it, brother!

Christopher:  I long for the day where every club who participates in the US Open Cup makes it a high priority to win that hardware. That’s our national championship at the club level, people. It’s a really big deal. Professional clubs, especially, should be trying to win the cup every year. I am tired of watching the B squad vying for such an important trophy.

Todd:  Win the USOC, get to CONCACAF, get exposed to international teams and get better. ‘Nuff said, right?

Christopher:  In a nutshell, North American soccer has come a long way…..but we have a long way to go

Contributions:  My social network friends and rivals from the Sounders FC vs Portland Timbers Rivalry page.
Please visit thecup.us, for the most thorough coverage of the US Open Cup.
Thank you to Josh Hakala for his tireless work on the site, knowledge of the cup, and dedication to grow its recognition and tell its story.  And for introducing me to its growing exposure.

© 2011 by Ryan Sales – Sales on Sounders





Thierry Henry & the Designated Players – Sounders vs New York Red Bulls

23 06 2011
Seattle Sketcher, Gabi Campanario

Sales on Sounders by Gabi Campanario - 8/5/09 @ Barca Friendly

Dramatic matches.  Dramatic endings.  Sounders FC are born from the dramatic cloth of Rave-Green inception.  The short turnaround to Thursday’s home match at Qwest Field, means the next chance for Sounders faithful to support their club to the next level of dramatic inception is only a work-night away.

Intriguing home stadium changes will take place Thursday.  Same place, different name.  Qwest Field will officially be announced as CenturyLink Field.  How this name change will be written is up for debate.  I see C-Link.  Which gives upset traveling fans or disappointed home fans an easy ”clink” opportunity.  A non issue really, unless Timbers fans are ever handed three points from some sort of Buddle-Juninho-Hassli-esque miracle shot.  Sideline whisper:  How many more “wonder-strikes” do we give up before these magic goals are renamed Sounder-normal?  Back to the blog:  Using “clink” against the Sounders will make for an easy cheese-wiz first layer dis, but nothing that sticks too long.

Thursday marks the Sounders Front Office first attempt at opening up the entire stadium.  All upper-level seats will be uncovered for an enticing $15.00.  It should prove a good first test to see how fans long-awaited “more seats” request works with short notice.

Speaking of wonder strikes.  Ranking high among the Sounders growing list of dramatic finishes, is last Saturday’s 90th minute stoppage-time thriller against Toronto FC, by Fredy Montero.  Mauro Rosales, fouled at the top right side of Toronto’s penalty box gave way to the free kick.  Freddy Montero stepped up with strong intent and purpose.  His strike curled over Toronto’s wall and into the left corner of Stefan Frei‘s goal.  Barely out of reach of Frei’s diving fingers.  It was another winner for what is becoming standard Sounders fare.  Late match heroes making late match drama.

Reds

Toronto FC, "Reds"

One expected fan-thrill, and another Sounders first for Thursday’s match is already certain not to happen.  Thierry Henry, the former French National Team, and Arsenal superstar, playing for the Red Bulls of New York, was issued a red card in the 90th minute of his match against the Portland Timbers last Sunday.  Any attending fans disappointed by his absence, will likely be thrilled by the Sounders desire to play for no fewer than all three points for the win.  New York will be ready to irritate and frustrate Seattle’s attempt to score early and often.  Star power aside, the importance of the match wont be lost on the Sounders players.

Eric Hassli, proved Seattle is a good place for aging French strikers to score dramatic goals.  With Henry out, a pair of french-kissed strikes are completely out of the question.  That is unless Sebastian LeToux is holding an ace in his pocket for when Philadelphia comes to clink one in on Sounders at C-Link later on in colder October.

The Sounders victorious match last week with Toronto FC completed the first half of this 34 match season with a decent 6-win, 4-loss, 7-draw record.  The 25 points have the Sounders sitting third in the Western Conference.  With most teams close behind and holding games in hand, a string of wins could launch Sounders FC into a successful second half season playoff push.  This Sunday is another short home match turn around to face visiting New England Revolution.

The Sounders continue to make lineup adjustments searching for a better winning touch.  Fredy Montero, was given an active “Free-Roam” role last week.  Which could prove valuable against New York.  Michael Fucito, hitting post last week, and being close to striking net so often all season, means he is due to taste joy. Montero, regaining confidence with his dramatic free kick also means he will be a marked man.  That is a good thing for Sounders FC.  With Fredy heavily marked again, Fucito’s speed combined with Mauro Rosales’s crosses and technical ability to get into dangerous positions, as well as create space for other players to get into dangerous positions, means opportunities for either Fucito speed, or Montero poise are likely elements to ignite 40,000 plus into celebration.

New York Red Bulls

Thierry Henry can come to Seattle riding the Red Bull bench, but he can’t come to Seattle without at least a little DP (Designated Player) conversation.  Should your Major League Soccer team have one?  If so, how much should your club spend?  (See Derek Ciapala’s piece on AS Roma’s Francesco Totti possibly coming to the LA Galaxy this season).  The NASL filled itself with aging, and overpaid stars and eventually folded.  Major League Soccer’s slow expansion of Designated Players has proven safer and smarter.  Some teams do not yet have a Designated Player.

Would Seattle have sold out their first season without Freddie Ljungberg?  Possibly not.  On the other hand, interest has seen a ground swell beyond famous players.  Passion and participation in soccer is common and longstanding throughout the Northwest.  Seattle was Broadway for US Soccer before US Soccer had found Broadway.  This Thursday’s stadium-wide opening would have happened on its own.

As fun as Ljungberg was at the start, his easy irritability was not easily adaptable for fans.  Halfway into his second season was a good time for team and player to part ways.  Management brought in Blaise Nkufo, fresh from his Swiss National team appearance in the 2010 World Cup.  It was a good half season and he delivered a solid playoff boost for the club.  But being a punchbag to absorb Montero’s physical punishment was not a role he desired.  So one hour before this 2011 season started he and the club also parted ways.

During the off-season, Montero was promoted to DP status.  Like any athlete or team making the cover of Sports Illustrated, it has not helped Montero’s productivity.  Before his free-kick game-winner last weekend, Montero had scored only two goals.  Some might call that unproductive, and question the Front Office spending.  Yet any team with a DP has a list of curiosities with its stars no different from the Sounders.  In LA’s case, Beckham has arguably a longer list.

Scoring goals is an expensive habit.  Sporting diamonds.  24 carat strikes, like Eric Hassli’s are worth a lifetime to some player reputations.  That goal will be a goal of the year candidate.  (See it here on my recent post)  Spending spectacular Designated Player money is sometimes necessary to acquire a player like Hassli.

Seattle Sounders FC

Seattle Sounders FC - 2009 & 2010 US Open Cup Champions

Is it more important for teams to find players to entertain, put butts-in-seats, and make us deliriously but joyfully buy their kit?  No single right answer exists.  In a perfect world, Roger Levesque would posses Ruud Van Nistelrooy goal poaching skill, and a one club career as long as Paul Scholes, of Manchester United.  Reality is, we have to learn to cheer on Nate Jaqua.  Starter or sub, lifting his spirit to put the ball into the net this Thursday is our job as fans.

Money can’t buy everything, but it does get good entertainment.  Entertainment doesn’t last a lifetime.  Building fan reputation and players that believe in that reputation, costs nothing and lasts forever.  At the end of the day, Sounders General Manager, Adrian Hanaueer is looking for the next soccer guy to sing “Spectacular, Spectacular”.  He is also looking for Ruud Van Levesque.  He has an unenviable task, but also has a knack for finding players, like Osvaldo Alonso, John Kennedy Hurtado, Leo Gonzalez, Alvaro Fernandez, and Mauro Rosales.

I believe as fans we set the precedent. We build the reputations and passionate spirit. The Front Office finds the role pieces to fulfill the object of our passion.  Occasionally a star will fit.  But if the money to bring talent is too high or the talent is too high above the club, then there are always ways of developing success outside of Designated Players.

© 2011 by Ryan Sales – Sales on Sounders

Contributions:  Fans Look:  Could AS Roma striker sign with the Los Angeles Galaxy?  By, Derek Ciapala, June 17, 2011





Cascadia Clash – When Rose City Meets Rave Green

13 05 2011

The Portland Timbers come to Seattle.  The Cascadia Rivalry comes to America.  The rumble you feel is not Mt Hood, or Mt Rainier ready to blow, like St Helens.  That is the sound of Timbers coming to Qwest Field, for a nationally televised match with Sounders FC.  When Rose City meets Rave Green this Saturday, it’s no ordinary Spring Garden Show.

Calling out for national attention, this clash between Portland and Seattle is hosted by Major League Soccer.  For a show stopping spectacle, look past the match on the pitch to the supporters in the stands.  Both clubs colorfully fervent supporters promise displays not common to any usual American sport.  If you own an H-D with 3-D, ultra intense vibration, surround sound-mega-TV, then this match is custom made for your home viewing pleasure.  Either that, or be there.

The Cascadia Rivalry

Cascadia Rivalry: Timbers Army, Seattle Sounders, Vancouver Whitecaps

Commercial

Hey, you like our coffee.  You use our technology at work and home, even on the go. You order our wine.  You enjoy our diverse taste in food.  You download our music. And now you love our TV show, Portlandia.  A second season is on its way.  Now come try our soccer.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled blogging.

The History

NASL

North American Soccer League - 1968-1985

Saturday night’s match introduces the three-way Pacific Northwest rivalry to America’s growing Major League Soccer television audience.  Portland Timbers, Vancouver Whitecaps, and Seattle Sounders form a rivalry brewing since Seattle and Vancouver formed in 1974, with Portland a year later.  Neighborly soccer ended in only the fourth match between Portland and Seattle on August 12, 1975.  In a playoff match in Portland, with 31,523 soccer passionate fans a taste of everything to come spilled onto the pitch.  Tied 1-1, the teams went to overtime.  Portland earned a corner that Seattle defended but couldn’t clear.  Portland worked the ball out to the left flank, where it was crossed into the top of the penalty box meeting a leaping Timber, who arched it in for a game winning header.  Announcers barely had time to call the winning goal when fans began spilling onto the field in celebration.  Thirty-six years later the passion is not only still brewing, it’s about to start a new chapter in US Soccer History.  Anticipation for this weekends match has become national attention more for the passion spilled into the stands as the play on the pitch.

The Pacific Northwest regional rivalry was named, Cascadia Cup in 2004.  The history of the rivalry itself dates to the clubs first meeting, May 2nd, 1975.  What makes the rivalry unique?  Large, consistent numbers of passionate supporters.  Seattle’s attendance averaged 16,830 in 1975 while the entire 2010 MLS average was 16,675.

All three teams originally formed in the NASL (North American Soccer League).  It was not structured and ran as well as Major League Soccer, but it had many big-time names.  The most notable player in NASL history was one of the most notable in soccer history.  Pele.

Less Pele and more Levesque.

The NASL folded in 1984, but Pacific Northwest soccer continued.  Sometimes from comedic creativity.  Club names like Stars and Seadogs played in various types of leagues from indoor to speed soccer.  Yet Timbers and Sounders never faded away.

In 1994 the Sounders were on the doorstep of joining the inaugural Major League Soccer season.  One issue preventing that was the perceived conflict of having two teams named “Sounders” playing in both an A-League and MLS status.  Many people talked about the relationship like a “farm club”.  The idea was rejected.  Interesting note:  MLS added a Reserve League for 2011.  From 1994 to 2008, Seattle played in A-League/USL-1 soccer leagues winning 4 championships.  Brian Ching and Marcus Hahnemann are two notable players during that era.  Yet one name stands above all for assisting in the growing intensity of Saturday’s match.  Levesque.

Roger Levesque.

Roger Levesque

At the end of the 2007 season with Seattle in process to move to Major League Soccer, Roger took a short exhibition stint with Vancouver and Portland.  His one game with Portland brimmed with animosity.  Fans “booed” him every time he touched the ball.  Sending the message to Timbers owner, Merritt Paulson that he was not a real Timber. “True Fans Hate Levesque” read the banner hanging over the rail of the Timbers Army.

Strong words for a player known as one of the hardest working players in MLS today. Did he intentionally kick a fallen Timbers keeper in the face in 2003?  Did he kick warm-up shots into the stands where Timbers Army supporters stood?  I asked Timber fans.  I have yet to have two similar answers.  What I know for certain, Levesque scores goals against Timbers.  Most notable is his 2009 US Open Cup goal scored in the first minute.  After scoring on Portland, Levesque ran to Sounders teammate Nate Jaqua, who proceeded to chop him down and fall to ground.  A third Sounder joined the choreographed celebration and along with Jaqua carried Roger away like cut lumber.  Timbers supporters haven’t forgotten the celebration on their home pitch. How does that one song go?  ”R-E-S-P-E-C-T”?  Or, is it R-E-V-E-N-G-E?

The Fans

There were no Timbers Army or ECS (Emerald City Supporters) in 1975.  But there were large volumes of fans.  Fans, like yours truly, ready to promote this unique American rivalry into a third generation.

There may be no recipe for making soccer fans out of sports fans, but there is a recipe for being a soccer fan.  Start with a pint of any preference.  A simple recipe includes drums, rhythmic clapping, a hint of sulfur infused smoke, sparkling flares layered with a guttural wash of continuous chanting.  Add *tifo and the scene is complete.

1974 - 1983

The Rivalry

The first Super Bowl I paid attention to was Super Bow XIII, in 1979 between the Dallas Cowboys and Pittsburgh Steelers.  I watched sitting next to my Granddad in his TV room.  He was a huge Cowboys fan.  He had to be.  He was a rancher boy from Texas.

Growing up, when the Oakland Raiders and Seattle Seahawks played everything stopped.  All you could do was make plans with friends and family to see the game. Climbing Mt Hood or Mt Rainier were the only alternative activities.   Every game was close.  Never a clear favorite.  Season records never mattered when the Seahawks faced the Raiders.  Intensity and national ratings were always high.  It’s how a rivalry should be.  It’s only about one game.  It’s “all in”.  Chips only come in two values.  Complete exhilaration or pure disappointment.

Rivalry passion is at the core of every sports fan.  You can love whatever game it is, with whomever is playing all you want, and feel neutral for your passion towards every great player and every exciting team.  That is, until your Granddad, spouse, friend. local grocery clerk, bar tender, boss, or guy on the bus asks you the one hardest question.  ”Who’s your team?”  There is no New York Red Sox, or Boston Yankees.  You ultimately pick one.  And your answer defines you.  Pick the right team and the grocery clerk says, “the ice-cream is on me”.  You receive hugs and high-fives.  Pick the other team, and find the nearest exit.

This is jargon you’ve read a thousand times before with teams from New York, LA, Dallas, Boston/New England and many more.  So, isn’t it time to try something new.  Add a new rivalry to the collection of great American sports rivalries.

Classic Greek Theatre

Are you Rave Green, or are you Rose City?  Whose chorus do you belong?

Portland Timbers old logo

Portland Timbers old logo

Yes, this answer defines you forever.  Like a marriage proposal to the gods, it doesn’t force your hand to become a sports fan, if that’s not your thing, but it evokes a curious nuance of life that lifts the soul, and lets you experience an event with the greatest commitment of spirit.  For 90 minutes there is no recession, no Afghanistan, no hedge fund scammers, and no terrorist insurgents.  The decision will lift your soul to something bigger than sport.  Your living and dying on every shot transcends normal behavior.  Your vaulted, vocal prayers and spirited hand waving burns calories and energizes your hopeful team to defeat the evil others.  Then, when the match is over, depending on the result, you boast your mighty brilliance or muse the conspiracies of ridiculous and underserved defeat.  Then you go home.  A few Sunday chores and your mind turns to the workweek ahead.

The beautiful thing about a rivalry, you don’t have to wait too long until it comes back again.

* * * * *

Terms & Notes

*Tifo - Tifo is a simple Italian term for banners or flags hung or waved by supporters at designated stadium sections, specific to sporting events.
*ECS – Emerald City Supporters.  Largest Sounders FC official Supporters Group.  Additional Note:  I joined in 2010.  For the 2009 inaugural season I was independent of any supporters group choosing an individual team identity and relationship before joining.
*Timbers Army – aka TA, is official Supporters Group of the Portland Timbers.

© 2011 by Ryan J Sales





Dear Santa, It’s a Sounders Christmas Wish

1 09 2010

Imagine it is Christmas Day.  Then imagine you are 7 years old, or 5, maybe 6, even 4 will do.  Your “Dear Santa”, Christmas wish letter, written in crayon scribbled clarity surely reached the North Pole by now?  You ache for Christmas morning.  Despite a short dream of marshmallows, candy canes, mom singing Christmas carols, ninja reindeer, and a rocket bobsled.  It was a sleepless night.  Your aching for morning reaches climax.  You explode from your bed into spirals of clothes.  In a single thrust and splat you are downstairs.  Is there proof he came?  The cookie you left him?  Oh yes, it is gone alright.  The sprinkled crumbs over a short scribbled note written on the napkin you left him, are absolute proof.  ”Ho, Ho, Ho, Merry Christmas”.  Presents are stacked, wrapped in sparkle, flicker, and bows all around the tree.  Definite absolute proof.  He was here.  Now that his presence delivering presents has been proved, it is only about one present.  The one you cast your wish for.  The one you took time to specifically write him for.  The one you wish for above all others.  Did he get your letter?  Did it get to the North Pole in time?  Was it lost in a blizzard?  You lost sleep over this one.  Over everything else, you want this one.  Concept of space and time is useless.  You feel swirled and stuck, captured in still life with Christmas tree and aching desire.  Then comes the joyful misery of outrageous and extensive morning ceremony.  You die a little with each firework-flashbulb-snapshot of pleasantry.  Nothing.  Your letter was lost.  Your letter didn’t matter.  Santa never even read it.  It is over as quickly as it came.  Your wish got lost up the chimney.  Then, through the blur of misery and spectacle a voice says, “did you see the one in the corner?”  Nothing was missed.  This thought confuses you.  Is this ridicule?  With your cosmic accurate radar, ultra powered precision laser beam, and brain inserted sonar present detector there is no possible way you missed, “the one in the corner”.  Like a police officer on duty, you oblige the voice, turn to the corner and walk toward it like a cowboy in a sundown showdown.  There will be no ridicule here.  A child’s lost wish is on the line.  Bundles of bows and torn sparkle paper from the other, mostly fun presents, are pushed aside.  Static electricity, hair standing, you are frightened by the impossibility there is one left in the corner.  You surge forward, “could this really, truly be the one”?  You muse the possibility, for an instant.  Shreds of ribbon and paper fly.  In thrill and delight you reveal, a box.  A box?  Death by ridicule.  You faint.  You have lost all desire to ever, ever wish for anything ever, ever again.  Again the voice.  ”Well, aren’t you curious what’s inside”?  No decorations and lots of heavy tape.  The plainness disappoints you.  The words “Dining Room Dishes” in thick black marker confuses you, especially in a morning of super fantastic spectacular.  In certain defeat you stare down the box.  You poke and pick at the tape with one finger.  Then two. three, both hands join in the sudden scratch and tear of fury from lost hope.  The last shred of tape torn away.  The flaps of the box pulled back.  Christmas tree lights shine inside the box like hundreds of flashlights pointing the way in a dark cave.  Peering inside, doubt and icecap like disappointment slowly melt away.  Something larger than love swells all around you.  It is come true.  This is your Christmas wish.

I have not had the glorious pleasure of celebrating the passing of that moment to a son or daughter.  Challenges in having children has been a dark life challenge.  Yet, in this 41-year-old frame, I’ve found my child’s age in my own unique sports franchise.  No imagining or wishing. It is real, and I am part of it.  I didn’t inherit an existing team.  One entrenched in the local community for generations.  Instead, I’ve been part of starting one.  In Seattle, there is a long settled belief that we are a likely candidate for Soccer Capitol of America.  Our fan base was tops when the Sounders joined the NASL in 1974, and the entire league was crumbling in certain decline when we left a decade later in 1984.  We have been ready and waiting ever since.  Waiting for our Christmas wish to have a “top flight” club.  No “A-League”, no “USL“.  We have wanted only what we felt was the right kind of soccer.  ”Top Flight”, “Premiership”, “Major League”.

2010 US Open Cup

Finally, unwrapped in confetti and fireworks in March 2009, the Sounders jumped out of a plain box sports league, Major League Soccer.  From the start Sounders FC leapt in with international expectations never sought by any US team from any US sport.  Success in Seattle is a self-imposed demand stated above even the most hopeful wishes other franchises have started with.  Winning an MLS Cup league title is not good enough.  Sounders want to be number one in the world.  The first US team to win a FIFA Club World Cup.

As the Sounders battled through the 2009 US Open Cup, every owner and supporter sweated with grasped scarves and crossed fingers.  Would we have winning action to support our wishful words?  In the Sounders final two USL seasons leading up to MLS expansion they made their presence felt in the US Open Cup.  Reaching the semi-final in both 2007 and 2008.  Knocking out a handful of MLS teams in the process.  Then came the start of the 2009 inaugural Major League Soccer season.  Sounders FC started league play going 3-0 and were swept up in a whirlwind of Rave Green hysteria.  Quietly, they began US Open Cup Play-In qualification rounds.  With none of the same excitement and press as the inaugural matches the Sounders qualified for the 2009 US Open Cup.  The matches were played at 5,000 seat Starfire in Tukwila.  The matches sold out but didn’t have the same newsworthiness.  Plus the team was really copying its previous USL achievements.  They pushed all the way to a third straight semi final.  The opponent was the powerful Houston Dynamo.  It appeared a pat on the back was all that was in store for our young MLS franchisee.  Late in stoppage-time, tied 1-1, his head wrapped like a wounded soldier, Nate Jaqua scored the winning goal.  ESPN did not show Nate’s dazzling winning goal on Sports Center.  It should have.  Because forget that it is soccer, forget it was in Tukwila, forget it is only the US Open Cup, it was one of the more entertaining and exciting highlight worthy sports finishes.  After heated debate over where the final would be played, a slighted Sounders FC ownership had to bow to the whims of Major League Soccer’s lovechild DC United.  They would fly to RFK stadium to face the leagues most beloved and storied franchise on its home pitch.  Seattle went on to win 2-1.  Two hundred Sounders fans flew to DC and nearly out roared United’s 20,000.  Winning the 2009 US Open Cup trophy in our inaugural season sent a message to the league that Sounders is more than talk.

With the 2009 US Open Cup victory, Sounders FC gained its first opportunity at international glory.  A 2010 CONCACAF Champions League Play-In match vs Isidro Metapan.  A decent stepping stone for a franchise entering only its second season.  Sounders defeated Isidro Metapan in a 2-leg play-in series for CONCACAF Champions League qualification.  Winning at home 1-0, and drawing away 1-1.  The Sounders won on aggregate goals 2-1.  This placed Seattle into the CONCACAF Champions League group stages.  The Sounders drew Group C with Saprissa, Marathon, and mighty Monterrey of Mexico.  Easily the “group of death” of the 2010 Champions League.   How delicious.  How wishful.  Only season two, and the Sounders play their first meaningful international matches.  The US Open Cup may be as plain-box a tournament as we have in the US.  Little exposure, and “dining room dishes” written on top of the box.  Yet, if you have an ounce of competitive passion in you and believe you know what love for sport is, then this tournament is the best American Christmas wish US Soccer has to offer.

The US Open Cup started in 1914.  One of the oldest tournaments of its type in the world of soccer.  However until Major League Soccer started in 1996, when DC United won the US Open Cup, no team you or I ever heard of had won the tournament.  It allows professional and amateur teams to compete.  Since 1996 when MLS joined, only one non MLS club has won.   The Rochester Raging Rhinos won in 1999.  The Sounders were close in 2007 and 2008.  No other professional American team sport has a competitive tournament like this.  Tournaments where, let’s say, Durham could potentially face the Yankees.  In soccer it happens each year in the US Open Cup.

I wished for this.  An imagination gift.  A plain box club in a plain box league.  Add a Rave Green shirt, a few fireworks and confetti to the sheer magic of 35,000 + fans.  It became everything I wished for.  That one hidden gift in the corner.

In November 2007 I paid $100.00 to become approximately the 670th supporter to reserve 2 seats to a team with no name.  No colors, no players, and not even a completed ownership group.  Drew Carey, while not the primary owner, brought a spark of personal touch rarely seen.  The “Scarf Seattle” campaign turned the concept of a brown box start-up franchise inside out.  Even when Beckham plays, no MLS attendance reaches 30,000.  With the second season completed, the Sounders are closer to an average attendance of 40,000 than most MLS teams are to 25,000.  The Sounders are closer to 40,000 than the LA Galaxy are to 30,000.  The Galaxy even have Landon Donovan and David Beckham.  Yet this Sounders team grows on something bigger than love.  It is connected from city to owner to player to supporter, and anyone who has waited on an unopened wish.  The team loves its fans back.

(Below section was written prior to the the Sounders 2nd US Open Cup Final appearance in as many years against the Columbus Crew.)

Tomorrow, the Sounders have a chance no team in American sports history has ever had.  The chance to open that surprise, wished for package in the corner.  The Yankees have not opened anything like it.  The Cowboys never even looked to see if such a wish was there.  The Steelers have long since had their heads down counting rings.  The Red Wings, all too often thawing octopus.  The Blackhawks still dazed and confused by the end of their Stanley Cup drought.  The Giants are more excited about a possible future Super Bowl in winter in New York, and Red Sox folk are all still writing and publishing stories about how bad things were before they got so great.  Even Jordan never found this plain brown package in the corner.  Tomorrow, Seattle Sounders FC, in year two make their fourth straight US Open Cup semi-final appearance against Chivas USA.  A win for Seattle not only gives them a chance to defend their 2009 title, but to do it playing in front of 36,000 Rave Green supporters at Quest Field.  An additional match not on the schedule at the start of the season.  This could be the cake match.  The wished for gift that only seems to appear as a child.  A childish franchise, the Sounders have an opportunity to play for Everything any team could ever hope for.  Wednesday, September 1st 2010, could be the day.  Why?  A second US Open Cup is a second ticket to international competition in Champions League 2011.  Reach the Knock-Out stages after Group play and the sky is the limit.  World supremacy could be achieved.

It is sport after all.  So from this plain brown box gift in the corner there could just as easily be a broken Christmas day child’s toy.  Or it could also be proof that as adults sometimes something bigger than love, or common understanding exists and springs true from the most unlikely places.  Tomorrow, I ask you to believe.  Even if it is for Chivas USA.  They are 5 years old, and they’ve never won anything.  Believe in this game tomorrow.  It is our country’s cup.  Our US Open Cup.  This is our history and be part of opening it up.  My 5 year-old nephew started Kindergarten today.  I want him to live his dreams.  Maybe I can set an example for him tomorrow in the most unexpected place.  The brown box sport in the corner marked in thick, dark marker, “Soccer”.

March to the Match with US Open Cup

2009 US Open Cup presented to supporters by owners in march to regular season match

This picture is from the Sounders 2009 US Open Cup.  Not an AP photo or from the Getty archive.  This is a photo from my Sounders photo album.  Our owners let us have it to march with in celebration of our 2009 Open Cup victory.  I think of it as Christmas Day 2009.  An average Rave Green match-day with a bunch of usual Sounder FC supporters, marching to an ordinary plain box regular season soccer match.

Love,
Sales on Sounders elf





Disruptors & Distractors

30 05 2010

Round 11 vs Colorado Rapids

Colorado Rapids

Like San Jose, Colorado is another of the original MLS teams.  Twice appearing in the MLS Cup final but coming up short both times.  They also sport a US Open Cup in their trophy case, but it’s a bit dustier than the Sounders, as it came in 1999.  Two interesting historical points link the Sounders and Rapids.  The first is a personal side note, and US Mens National Team back up Goaltender, Marcus Hahnemann.  Hahnemann helped the A-League Sounders to back-to-back titles in ’95 and ’96.  Directly after their second championship in ’96 against the Rochester Rhinos, I met Hahnemann.  Actually it was more like the Mean Joe Greene, Coca-Cola add from the ’80′s.  He threw me his sweaty water bottle.  Yes, I did take a swig, and kept it as a proud souvenir.  The second connection is Sounders current Technical Director, Chris Henderson who is still the Rapids all time assists leader with 53.

Seattle Sounders – circa 1996

The Rapids are a team of two faces.  Always as good as any team in the league, but not always in form.  Sounds a little familiar.  The bad face, is their two main goal producers, Conor Casey, and Omar Cummings, who can light up the score board with the best, but have not been in top production form.  Meaning they could be due for a break-out game.  The good face, is a brilliant face.  Conor Casey was left off the US Mens National Team World Cup squad, barely.  Some say he should be there.  He was the 2nd leading scorer in MLS last year and has struggled this year.  Showing how quickly a player goes from being in form to out of form.  Edson Buddle, for LA Galaxy is amazingly in form this year, so he’s on the plane to South Africa while Casey stays home.  Is that fair?  To be continued . . .   My World Cup posts are coming soon.
Now back to the main event.  Those two, Casey and Cummings have not been in form but both are strong, quick and able to score in multiple ways all around the attacking end.  They are backed up in midfield by US World Cup 2006 standout Pablo Mastreoni.  Their defense is also strengthened by another US standout, Marvel Wynne, who played well for the US in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.  The Rapids have the skill and intensity to be a MLS Cup contender, but they have not yet found that playoff bound groove.

Sounder 'til I die

Seattle comes to the Rapids home pitch in Commerce City, Colorado at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park.  They bring baggage of similar sounding issues to Colorado.  Difficult time finishing up front, great potential, but struggling to find their form.  So the game presents a perfect test for one team to rise above the other and attempt to gain mid-season momentum.  Seattle’s electric defeat of the Boca Juniors 3-0 in their mid-week friendly, hopefully sparked the team into preparation for Colorado’s physical toughness.

What the Sounders need to do is play with intensity from the start.  Rather than sit back as they did against San Jose.  Push the ball wide, create passing lanes in the Rapids defense, and get their chances on net.  Make the Rapids Keeper have to work.  If we keep him busy, good things will happen.  If we let the Rapids dictate the pace and possess the ball, it could be another frustrating night for Sounders FC.  This is not a “must win” game, but it is a “should not lose” game.  A draw tonight would be well received.

One player on the Sounders who could step up tonight to help the Sounders cause is Fredy Montero.  He may not be a pure goal “finisher” as some have stated about him.  His new role could be possibly more beneficial.  During the Boca Juniors match, he did not score, but he was a disruptor.  Tonight in the game against the Rapids his disruptor role could change the game.  It would force defenders to play him more tightly, but leave more Sounders unmarked.  It would also leave the Rapids defense unsure where Seattle’s attack will come from.  That could also help give the little extra moment for Zakuani, or Ljungberg to come in on goal or set up an assist.  Montero’s disruptor role could become defined for him tonight.  No pressure for him to finish, just put pressure on the other team all night long.

Post Match

“I don’t think we’ve walked off the field being an outplayed team.  We’ve got to keep working and keep our belief in ourselves, and the team spirit has to remain there”.
Sigi Schmid, after round 11”s 1-nil loss to the Colorado Rapids.

LA Galaxy being the exception.  The Sounders have played on the pitch as eloquently as Sigi speaks after a tough loss.  Falling to 3-5-3 is not how anyone saw this team.  It is a deep hole.  The Sounders are responsible for digging that hole.  Goals are all that could fill the empty void players, coaches and fans are feeling.  Because the on-field play is good enough to deserve a better record.  Sigi is right.  If the players keep their belief up, the way they are playing will earn better results.

Two players on their way to Sounders FC may help gain those results.  One is coming back from injury.  The other is new to join Sounders FC.  Nate Jaqua will rejoin Sounders FC in a week or two after recovering from a pre-season injury.  He provides a tall target up front.  A focus up top that will free Montero from his current do everything role.

FC Twente - The Tukkers

After the World Cup, Blaise Nkufo, the Swiss National Team striker joins Sounders FC from his former club FC Twente.   Blaise Nkufo, /Blaze Koo-foe/ has banked 114 goals for FC Twente, which brings a lot of hope to Sounders FC’s late season form.  No one man on his own can win a title.  But he can provide a spark of hope and distraction from frustration.  Nkufo brings experience, and an excited spirit to the team.  He will be fresh from South Africa.  Every player asking him the same questions as press, “what was it like?”  To the delight of all involved he will offer a distraction to all the usual questions about a disappointing season.  He will be covered in microphones, while the rest of the team prepares.  That is just what this team needs.  Distraction from disappointment and consistent work on game preparation.  That will keep the team spirit up and allow for good results to come.  Blaise will likely give the same on field distraction as he does off field.  Defenders will swarm Nkufo, like press junkies, leaving Montero marked by one defender instead of 2 or 3.  Ljungberg will have a tall target to provide him more ground and air options.

There are no guarantees in sports.  There is hard work, which allows the selfish belief in hope for great results.  In that type of sweat and hungry spirit there often lives a spark that makes those great results come true.  Sports is about watching the impossible become real.  Soccer is the essence of that truth.  This young team knows how to win.  They play like a winner.  Following the advice of their coach and incorporating two difference makers gives credibility to Sigi’s post-match comments.  All the elements exist for this team to find itself on a championship course.  If the players continue to work hard and believe the results will come.





A Thursday Night Frisco Affair

22 04 2010

Round 5 vs FC Da llas

Sounder 'til I die

Before 2005 FC Dallas were the Dallas Burn.  Their home is Pizza Hut Park in Frisco, Texas.  Welcome back to Sales on Sounders for a rare mid-week work night clash of the Red Stripes and Rave Green.  The player to watch on Dallas is Jeff Cunningham.  He is probably the most likely player in MLS to score two goals a game.  The Sounders did a fantastic job keeping him under wraps last year.  That will be crucial again in this match.  Surprisingly, he has struggled at the start of this season.  Meaning he’s over due.  He tallied 17 goals in 2009, and has over 120 in his MLS career.  He’s still an outside consideration for Bob Bradley’s US World Cup squad in South Africa this summer.  However the Galaxy’s Edson Buddle is building a strong case for his consideration.  Either way, Sounders defenders will have their hands full.  Cunningham is a striker with that rare talent for consistently finding the back of net.  Another player to target is Atiba Harris.  Harris scored at X-Box pitch last year.  FC Dallas is good at putting on an offensive show.  But their defense struggles at times.  They are more likely to give up a couple of goals and win 3-2 than pull out a 92nd minute Fucito Finish.  This is a mid-week showcase match, so expect to see Dallas a steal of the Sounders limelight.

Keys to the Match

Hoops

Nicknames; Hoops, Red Stripes, Toros, Burn, The Branders, Dallas 96

Without Nate Jaqua, or any tall target up front, Seattle will have to create chances built from possession.  The best defense on the road is pass possession moving the ball deep into the attacking third of the opponents half.  The simple wrap on Dallas is that they have a team that likes to score.  If they get in a groove they are as likely an MLS team to knock in 3 or 4.  If frustrated, slowed, pressed, and challenged hard, they will cave.  They can be exposed, and if the Sounders own ball possession and press Dallas, then Sounders will get the better chances to finish.  In full stride, Dallas can control the pace and keep a steady attack.  With the Sounders pressing forward this aspect of Dallas’s game will go away.  Expect Sigi to bring Ljungberg back into the midfield.  He and Alonso can work to lengthen Dallas’s midfield by feeding long passes to Montero and Noonan who will likely take forward positions.  Montero will likely be asked to take the high position and Noonan, a more back-to-goal, possession type forward.  If Noonan is successful, he could help take pressure off Ljungberg for setting the table.  If Noonan can set up a few good central attacking chances, then Zakuani can widen the Dallas defense allowing him to cross in or work the ball in himself.  As much as speed is usually a Sounder strength, they have a second game on Sunday.  So expect the speedy runs to only last about 35-40 minutes.  That means those long passes forward from our midfielders need to be on target.  That will strengthen our counter attacking options and allow pass possession to be more valuable than speed.

Bold prediction:  Seattle puts on an ESPN Game of the Week 3-2 goal display.

Post Match

There are times when my personal support for this team will possibly blur my vision.  But know this about me first; I believe in the growth and development of soccer in America for men and women at a first class professional level, even more than I support the Sounders.  Country before club!  That said, is the topic of water-boarding still inappropriate?  Is Goldman Sachs short selling tactics something to shelve for future consideration?  Is Iceland affected by global warming, or just really, really upset that they are not invited as the 33rd country for this years FIFA World Cup in South Africa?  Did Jason Yeisley intentionally dive to gain the late game stoppage time penalty kick for Dallas?  You better believe your European, flight delaying, volcanic ice cloud he did.  Should the ref have used his side linesman?   You better believe your bank reform laws, he should have.  Penalty kick #1 was a rare John Kennedy Hurtado mistake.  A missed clearance and poor decision.  Penalty kick #2 was a ref that needs work.

Once again, Seattle is relegated to the MLS test lab.  It feels like we are sometimes punished for our technical playing style, and strong fan support.  The MLS needs to improve, and in order to improve they need current, relevent material to demonstrate the necessity for change.  Since most MLS clubs play a clustered, physical defensive style the league is short on samples.  So, when you get a tactical team that prefers constant pressure to build an attack over defending, like Seattle, the league almost appears to roll its sweaty hands together and say,
“Ah, here is our chance.  Prepare the lab gentlemen, we have a living Rave Green specimen”.
That is the life of sports right?
To make the playoffs the math is still in the Sounders favor.  With 5 rounds played, there are 25 to go.  At 3 points per win, that puts 75 points still up for grabs.  The minimum playoff target number is 45.  After 5 rounds, with a 2W-1L-2D record the Sounders are sporting a reasonable 8 points on the season.
Confession:  I wrote that last bit just to relieve my head of the Texas size penalty call by the Lone Star Ref.  To forget that this happened, this supporter and the team must lick their wounds quickly.  Toronto is next.  They are a road match looming ahead on Sunday!  A loss there could hurt.  A draw or win could make this stretch of stoppage time, Ref-alooza matches seem like an early season obstacle to reach towards a greater accomplishment.  What is beautiful about these last 3 matches going to stoppage time, is that there is no more exciting Club Soccer being played anywhere in America.  Put down your NBA playoff schedules, set aside your NHL Stanley Cup craziness, forget about the NFL draft, MLB is early, the Sounders are the real deal in American sports right now.  If you aren’t checking them out, then you are missing out.  The only other sport with games as intense as the Sounders is Congress.

Here is my first completely, honestly, totally, non bias poll.

And lastly, you make the call.  Here is a link to the clip of Jason Yeisley going down.  Was this a Yeisley dive?  Or did the Seattle defenders cause a reprimandable offense impeding Yeisley’s progress and making the refs PK call valid?

Yeisley goes down.

Post your comments and let me know what you think.








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