Bayern, Blues and Border Crossing – Bayern Munich vs Chelsea and Sounders vs Whitecaps

19 05 2012

Cascadia Rivals – Vancouver Whitecaps vs Seattle Sounders FC – Image by Kelly Dews from Cascadia Trifecta

Harmonica. Lederhosen. And a tour bus.

Driver wanted for greatest heist since Pink Panther. Objective:  Champions League, and Cascadia Cup trophies. From Vancouver to Munich. Cross Atlantic travel required, not optional.

Last time Seattle Sounders FC crossed the border to Vancouver, Canada the trip included a memorable 3-1 win over the Vancouver Whitecaps. The stellar performance earned a priceless Cascadia trophy for the Rave Green faithful to take home.  So dramatic, the loss caused the Whitecaps to close their home pitch.  Forever.

The Major League Soccer era for the Cascadia Cup began in 2011. The first year with all three Cascadia rivals in Major League Soccer. Seattle joined MLS in 2009, with Portland and Vancouver launching in 2011. Seattle won the first MLS edition of the Cascadia Cup. Including two thrilling draws at home followed by highlight worthy wins from both road matches in Portland and Vancouver.

The first Cascadia Cup winner came down to the match with Vancouver. Their final appearance at historic Empire Field. The Sounders pulled together a stellar 3-1 performance against the Whitecaps. The win was enough for the Sounders to go undefeated throughout the Cascadia Cup. It was also the last match for the Whitecaps at Empire field before moving to their current home at BC Place. Which they opened a week later in a 1-nil loss to Portland.

All rivalries are fun. Some are epic. Dedicated Timbers Army supporters drove the Cascadia Cup from Pottland to a match their club wasn’t even participating in. Sounders fans showed how exciting and passionate all three clubs are in traveling to away matches as much as being at home matches. Emerad City Supporters voices were loud and easily heard in Vancouver

Vancouver and Seattle Cascadia ties have a French connection.

Le Toux and Nowak – City of Brotherly Love no more

Sounders FC’s first player signing was Seabastian Le Toux. Le Toux joined the Sounders in 2007 while the club still resided in the USL. Fans latched on to the Frenchman attempting to find an American soccer home. Philadelphia snatched him away in their 2010 Expansion Draft. Le Toux was left unprotected by the Sounders. Clubs can protect eleven players. The rest are available for expansion clubs. Philadelphia made no hesitation in grabbing Le Toux for his tenacious work rate. He immediately became a Union fan favorite. Helping the Union to a successful 2011 season. Making their first playoff appearance.

Union coach, Peter Nowak shocked the MLS nation. Trading their leading goal scorer Le Toux to the Whitecaps before the season. The trade was not popular in Philadelphia but has worked well in Vancouver. Now paired with fellow Frenchman, Eric Hassli, they make up one of the more dangerous tandems in the league. Likely the most difficult attacking assignment the Sounders steady-7 defenders have faced all season.

The French tandem  haven’t connected for much yet. But if Wednesday’s wonder-volley by Hassli is any sign of what the Sounders may face, a potential firestorm of French connected goals are on the way for the Whitecaps.

Hassli scored a pin-point volley against Toronto, in Wednesday’s first leg of the ACC (Amway Canadian Championships). The second leg of the Amway Canadian Championship final is next Wednesday. The score from the first leg is 1-1. The winner plays in the CONCACAF Champions League.

2012 Champions League Final – Chelsea (Premier League, England) vs Bayern Munich (Bundesliga, Germany)

Prior to Saturday’s first installment of the 2012 Cascadia Cup, and across the Atlantic, with a french step-over to Germany is the 11:45 am (PST) kickoff of the UEFA Champions League Final. The Bavarian region of Germany is the site of the largest football match in the world so far in 2012.  The UEFA Champions League Final features English Premier League power Chelsea against Bundesliqa juggernaut Bayern Munich. The match site is in Munich. Bayern’s home stadium, the Allianz Arena.

During the 2006 World Cup in Germany, I looked for a player I didn’t know.  One I had never heard about. I looked for a player to captivate my attention. During the Group Stages, I noticed the French kept deploying some guy out on the right-wing. Nothing fancy. Just hustle and finesse. The guy kept beating midfielders and defenders in 1-vs-1 challenges for no more apparent reason than he wanted it more than the other guy.

I found my man.  Franck Ribery.

I wasn’t alone in noticing Ribery. Bayern wasted no time in luring him from Southern France’s, Ligue-1 club, Olympique de Marseille. Ligue-1 is the top league in France.

In short order, Ribery has gone from being a relatively unknown player to one of the top performers in Europe over the last 6 years.  All with Bayern Munich.

Everyone has a favorite player. Ribery is mine. Whether you are in Chelsea Blue, or Bavarian red-and-white gingham, Ribery is a player to watch. He plays more from Bayern’s left-wing than his French National Team right side. Watch for how positive his possession of the ball is. Always gliding forward. Leading teammates into attacking spaces. Sandwiched with as many as three opponents, don’t be surprised to see him work the ball free, or safely pass the ball out. Goals?  He is one of Bayern’s best goal getters. And still looks for the assist first. His goals, if he gets one, always have flare. The kind that launch every sporting viewer into the air. You may root for Chelsea, but you must watch Ribery.

The Sounders come off a tough loss at home to Real Salt Lake. They still bring fresh confidence. Their 1-nil loss to Real Salt Lake was preceded by a quick succession of 5 matches in 15 days. Over the previous six matches, the Sounders went 5-wins and 1-draw.

Coming into BC Place, Saturday’s 2pm (PST) match with Vancouver Whitecaps, the Sounders have a 7-W, 2-L, and 1-D record. Third in the west with 22-points. Vancouver is 5-W, 3-L, and 2-D.  Fourth in the West at 17-points.

The Western Conference is heating up.  Real Salt Lake and San Jose Earthquakes lead the way. With Seattle and Vancouver working close behind. Colorado Rapids, and FC Dallas chase steadily in the 4th and 5th spots respectively. Either is capable of moving higher in short order. The western table fills out with LA Galaxy, Chivas USA, and Portland Timbers. Defending champions, LA Galaxy, have yet to show a defense of their 2011 title. That is no doubt a dormant monster waiting to attack this Summer. Chivas USA made player acquisitions this past week to show they are working to improve as much as rebuild. Portland rests at the bottom. In my humble, and only slightly scientific opinion, they are a hibernating team. If their defense solidifies, shoring up leaks, as seen in the two previous draws, then combined with their offensive knack for early leads, they may become the 3-D creature that shocks the standings.

The unbalanced 2012 MLS schedule means Cascadia rivals will face off six times this year. Sounders travel to Portland and Vancouver twice each. Hosting both only once. A tough road to defend their inaugural MLS Cascadia Cup.

While Europe celebrates a new champion, Cascadia will feature two offenses heating up.  One distinctly French, and the other more South American. Don’t move your UEFA chair. Order another pint and take in the nervy and wild 2012 Cascadia Cup ride.

© 2012 Sales on Sounders by Ryan J Sales





Sounders on Champions Tour to Vancouver and Guatemala City – Sounders at CSD Comunicaciones

27 09 2011

Sounders '09-'10 US Open Cup Titles lead to '10-'11 Champions League

After an impressive start in Champions League with three consecutive wins, Herediano brought Sounders strong start to a halt in Seattle last Tuesday. Losing 1-nil the Sounders missed a chance to secure a spot in the quarter-finals.  The road to secure that spot in the last two Group Stage matches becomes more challenging.

New places and enemy faces.

Sounders travel Tuesday to Guatemala City, to face CSC Comunicaciones for the second time in Champions League this year. Comunicaciones are familiar faces to Sounders FC, after making easy work of them in a 4-1 trouncing in Seattle in their first Group Stage meeting. Facing them in Guatemala will prove a new challenge all together. Last year’s Champions League experience has helped the Sounders. But Comunicaciones will be on its home pitch with their fans. Playing at new stadiums, often with less than pristine pitches, always presents opportunities for unlucky ball bounces.

Sounders have done well on the road this year. Including the thrilling defeat over Monterrey in Mexico. Experience played a key roll in holding off Monterrey’s late charge. But unlike any Champions League team the Sounders face this year, Monterrey know the Sounders and they know Seattle.  They traveled to Seattle last year, and before Portland, they had the best and loudest away fan support the Sounders have dealt with at home. Monterrey defeated Seattle twice in Champions League last year, and went on to defeat Real Salt Lake to win the 2010 CONCACAF Champions League.

Club Social y Deportivo Comunicaciones

If Seattle fails to defeat, or at least draw with Comunicaciones on Tuesday, then they may as well buy lottery tickets. Leaving their chances of advancement in Champions League to a win over Monterrey in October, two weeks before MLS playoffs is about as likely as winning the lottery. Needing to defeat the defending Champions League cup holders here, there, or anywhere is as tough a professional club-level challenge as you could face in North American soccer.

Calling tomorrow’s match a must win, or must draw, is an understatement. A win means Sounders don’t have to play with mood-swinging lineup changes and desperation when Monterrey visits Seattle for the second year in a row in October.

Lineup changes and rested players.

Sounder’s Coach, Sigi Schmid will be tested the rest of the way. With Champions League, US Open Cup Final, and MLS Playoff-significant matches crammed into a compact schedule, players will have to be shuffled each match. Injuries to Mauro Rosales on top of others add to that challenge.

Seattle Sketcher, Gabi Campanario

Sales on Sounders by Gabi Campanario - 8/5/09 at Barcelona Friendly

Carrying momentum over from being crowned Champions of Cascadia after the weekend’s 3-1 victory over Vancouver, may prove for the Sounders their best chance of advancing in Champions League against Comunicaciones tomorrow. Vancouver is not as challenging an away destination as Guatemala City, but it shows experienced development of a young team when it finds success on the road.  The Sounders are an outstanding 7-wins, 3-losses, and 5-draws on the road in MLS this season. They are a young team that plays like veterans. Their experience gained from added US Open Cup and Champions League matches over their first three seasons is showing. Tuesday is a chance to put that acquired experience on display to the broader footballing world.

© 2011 Sales on Sounders by Ryan Sales





MLS Playoffs Wait for Cascadia Cup – Sounders FC vs Vancouver Whitecaps

24 09 2011

The season of the rivalry has come to this.  A Sounders victory in Vancouver and the Cascadia Cup goes to Seattle.  A draw or loss, and Sounders leave Cascadia Cup celebrations to hope.  Which, is like dry timber surviving a lightning storm, a small craft in soaring winds, sailing in high swells, or a happy school of salmon avoiding trawlers nets.  Cascadia worries aside, the Sounders would secure the cup and further improve their playoff position.

MLS Breaking News

Sounders make MLS playoffs for third consecutive year.  Last night’s match, (Friday 9/23), between Philadelphia Union and Sporting Kansas City ended in a 1-1 draw.  The draw secured Seattle’s third consecutive playoff appearance.  With playoff acquisition behind them, the match with Vancouver remains critical. Finishing above Real Salt Lake and Colorado secures home field advantage in the first round of the MLS Playoffs.

Side note. Philadelphia’s lone goal was scored by beloved former Sounder, Sebastian Le Toux.  A gift from one Sounder to another.

Now back to our regularly scheduled, but ir-regularly minded Cascadia Cup Clash.

Vancouver Whitecaps - NASL logo - Soccer Bowl '79 NASL Champions

A Major League Soccer moment in history was marked in their first meeting, June 11th at Qwest Field. Eric Hassli converted a first half penalty and Vancouver led 1-nil through the 80th minute. With a major upset only 10 minutes away, Tyson Wahl crossed a ball into the box from the left-flank, where Nate Jacqua brilliantly flicked on to Mauro Rosales for a finely finished volley.

The Sounders could have easily settled for happy-relief with the 81st minute equalizing draw. Instead, Osvaldo Alonso stole the ball outside the box in the 84th minute, slotting a shot inside the near post. With Seattle now holding a late 2-1 lead, it appeared they had stolen another exciting, nail-biting victory.

Eric Hassli decided to make history. (see video) Osvaldo Alonso, the hero, doesn’t make many mistakes. Receiving a pass at the right corner of the Sounders penalty box for a simple clearance, he misplayed the ball. Hasli immediately picked up the loose ball, flicked it up to himself, and from above the right corner of the penalty area, volleyed a shot that not only hit net, but has earned nearly 5,000,000 YouTube hits worldwide.

Many call this the “Goal of the Year”. Some now call it the best in MLS history. Either way, the goal is so outstanding, Qwest Field was renamed CenturyLink.

Video – Eric Hassli’s goal to remember

The good, the bad, the ugly of Eric Hassli. Even ugly, he is as entertaining a soccer player as Major League Soccer has ever had. He wears the passion for the game on his arm. He’s hot on the ball and hot-headed. Everything a striker needs to be. First season in MLS and he’s accumulated 10 goals, 6 yellow-cards, and 3 red-card ejections. It’s quite likely, if not certain, as seen in their first meeting, the Sounders will see Hassli add to those stats.

Vancouver whitecaps’ 4-win, 14-loss, 10-draw record, lowest seed in Major League Soccer, is no reflection of their talent on the field.  Hassli, Camilo, and Chiumiento have joined for 20 goals and 12 assists. Their offense is potent and earns its goals in the run of play as well as any club in Major League Soccer. Compared with the more successful, but set-piece oriented Portland Timbers, and you wonder what holds them back. Their defense and goal-keeping are their weakness. Attack minded clubs, like Seattle, expose those weaknesses. No doubt defense is the key to Vancouver’s improvement for next season.

Seattle Sounders - NASL 1974 - 1983

When rivals meet, season totals reset to zero. For tonight, Vancouver has one emotional stat in their favor. This rivalry dates to 1974, when both teams joined the NASL. Vancouver’s home field for much of their history has been at Empire Field, where tonight’s match takes place.

While Seattle is in the playoffs, Vancouver is out. Seattle has 14-wins to Vancouver’s 4. Sounders set a new club high-mark for season points, with 51 and climbing. Vancouver is at 22. But forget it all. Vancouver has an emotional weapon. Tonight is their last match at Empire Field. Their home for much of their 37 years of professional soccer. History has a way of adding emotional adrenaline to match-day adrenaline. Something the Sounders can best calm with early goals.

At 51 points, 46 goals, and 14 wins the Sounders excellence so far this season has them poised and fighting for home-filed playoff positioning.  Their stakes remain high, even with Philadelphia Union and Sporting Kansas City assisting their playoff certainty last night.

Mauro Rosales will not be available due to his MCL injury suffered in last week’s match with DC United. Pressure to fill his boots likely falls on Fernandez, Friberg and Neagle. Sigi Schmid has been resourceful juggling his clubs depth to fight off many injuries all season long. Each match has posed a new lineup challenge.  Schmid has succeeded at meeting those challenges throughout the season. Tonight will be another regular lineup challenge. The emotional crowd of Empire Field, desire to lift a rivalry trophy, and improve their playoff position will be anything but a regular challenge for both clubs. Normal for Cascadia.

Cascadia Cup Standings
Sounders:  1-W, O-L, 2-D = 5pts (one match remaining @ Vancouver)
Portland:  1-W, 1-L, 1-D = 4pts (one match remaining @ Vancouver)
Vancouver:  0-W, 1-D, 1-L = 1pt (two matches remaining vs Seattle, vs Portland)

© Sales on Sounders – 2011 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





Mid Season Playoffs – Sounders FC vs Toronto FC

18 06 2011
Seattle Sketcher, Gabi Campanario

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

Cascadia has been erupting with Canadian sporting-spirit over the last two weeks.  Vancouver’s Canucks have been hoped up on Stanley Cup hype.  While their Whitecaps brethren, and Southsiders Supporters traveled well to Seattle last week for as exciting a Major League Soccer match as has been played all season.  Capped by what may become the goal of the year from Eric Hassli.  A sublimely scored late equalizer.

Eric Hassli’s magic strike pegged Vancouver back on equal terms with Seattle, after what appeared to be a late Sounders lead by Osvaldo Alonso.  After a Penalty Kick goal in the first half from Whitecaps DP (Designated Player), and French striker, Eric Hassli, Vancouver went into halftime leading 1-nil.  Mauro Rosales earned his first goal of the year to equalize after putting back a ball from a long cross from the left-wing.  Mishandled by Vancouver’s central defense, the ball fell to Rosales near the right post.  Osvaldo Alonso, Sounders scrappy midfielder picked off a weak clearance pass by Vancouver’s defense, drifted to his left and ripped a shot from atop the penalty box.  Late, but in quick succession Sounders had earned a game-winning lead.  Until Hassli spoiled the excitement.  Sounders FC looked sure to win.  Disappointed, Hassli’s strike was undeniably enjoyable, even to Sounders fans.  He left everyone less than disappointed with fascination and wonderment over his brilliant goal.

This week the Sounders continue their mid-season National Hockey League tour, traveling to Toronto.  Toronto FC has struggled, but as Sounders fans have learned all too well in its first three years, this probably means Toronto are as poised and hungry as ever to taste victory.

It is mid-season, but teams are readying and playing for post-season.

The challenging mountain for Sounders FC to climb this year is playoff position.  No lower than sixth place.  Seventh through tenth places play one additional match.  Those teams effectively play a first week play-in match.  The two play-in winners then join the top six to round out the eight team playoff match-ups.  The extra match is something Sounders FC don’t want.  It should be time used for rest and preparation.  This years playoff format is more simplified.  But unlike the last few years, the play-in format will make it more challenging for a lower seed to advance.  Avoiding that playoff scenario is critically important for this Sounders team to realistically give themselves a chance to challenge for an MLS title. Mid-season matches, like this one vs Toronto FC, are matches the Sounders have to begin winning if that will happen.

Toronto has struggled to a 2-win, 5-loss, 9 draw record.  They have allowed 25 goals. The most goals allowed this year by an MLS squad.  The Sounders scored 3 against them in Seattle on April 30th.  A 3-nil victory.  Toronto feels payback against Seattle is good way to let the league know they are not a team as low as their record.

One player for Toronto has added interest for pay-back.  Nathan Sturgis.  Seattle released him in the offseason while Toronto picked him up.  Combined with his teams desire to pay-back from the 3-nil loss in Seattle, will be his own desire to prove his former team wrong.  He will be a motivated and tough midfield challenge for Sounders FC to handle.

Reds

Toronto FC, "Reds"

Before Seattle’s Rave Green fan invasion into Major League Soccer, Toronto FC was the fan base the league raved about.  Continuing to miss playoffs and a poor showing while hosting last seasons MLS Cup, Toronto’s fans have something to prove.  Even a feeling of respect to be earned back.

Parity in MLS, meaning teams at the top are never far from the bottom, and teams at the bottom are always close to lifting the MLS Cup.  So, Toronto supporters have no reason to think this season can not be turned around on one great win against Seattle.  Yes, good sporting stat sense says that is ridiculous.  But MLS parity allows that ridiculousness to exist.  It is exciting, and it does mean every team is still in playoff pursuit.  As much as the Sounders would dread earning a seventh through tenth playoff spot, Toronto and its supporters would covet the opportunity.  Their fans would celebrate it.

The Sounders enter Toronto, looking to win 3-nil or 3-1.  Toronto envisions a 2-1 or 3-2 statement win.  If you enjoy unexplained hunches.  The Sounders may not finish today with eleven players on the field.  They will have to fight for this win.  That fighting desire may also land them a red card.  Which opens up the opportunity for revenge that Toronto is looking for.

It’s mid-season.  But everyone’s thinking post-season.

© 2011 by Ryan Sales, Sales on Sounders





Season of the Rivalry

7 02 2011

January 25th, 2011, One month after Christmas.

Most people think one month after Christmas is too late to open Christmas presents, and far too early for next Christmas.  This Sounders FC fan celebrated Rave Green Christmas 2011 on January 25th.  Obama’s State of the Union speech, given the same evening, was a warm and jolly occasion, but nowhere near the kind of historical, all American present that soccer in the Pacific Northwest gave the same evening.  January 25th twas Christmas in the Pacific Northwest.  All three Pacific Northwest Major Soccer League clubs practiced.  Unwrapping the long-awaited Cascadia Rivalry to the sporting nation of the United States and greater footballing world.  A rivalry between Portland Timbers, Vancouver Whitecaps, and Seattle Sounders FC.  A rivalry over 35 years old, but dormant from top flight major league status for over two decades.  Not since Michael Jackson moonwalked us into a Billie Jean dance fever have these three clubs been together in a top-flight level professional league.  That was the NASL, which folded in 1984.  This is the much improved and growing Major League Soccer.  Santa has made his world tour delivering Christmas in January.  The big present under the tree?  Training camp has broken for all three clubs.  There is easily more love for the beautiful game in the Pacific Northwest, than in any other US region.  So delivery of the Cascadia Cup to Major League Soccer and a national spotlight is everything this sporting region has wanted and been waiting for.  There is no denying, this is the year of the rivalry.

Not to overshadow Obama’s State of the Union speech, I thought I’d incorporate some of his key points and put them in a more easily understandable soccer supporter chant translation.  If Obama had consulted the Timbers Army, or Emerald City Supporters, the State of the Union speech would have had a much different tone.  Leaning over the podium, Obama’s “smoked salmon” one-liner would have generated a cooler chill of fear than laughter.  The 2011 Cascadia version of his speech may have gone something like this:

“Who are ya?  Who are ya?  Who are ya?
I scorn, at a congress of no finance reform.
I take no pity for fear of tackling social security.
I burn a flare for every vote against healthcare.
I accept no excuses for indignation, when all I want to hear are solutions for education.”

Then tifo would be raised.  Flags waiving all around.  Colorful smoke engulfing the air with sparkling flares shining through haze.  Ah yes, Christmas in January.  Fortunately, Obama’s State of the Union speech focused on our core values of Healthcare, Education, and mining all our nations cumulative efforts and resources to fuel our country’s greatest potential for returning to diversified prosperity.  Nonetheless, my native grunge for first blood of Cascadia Rivalry is so excited, I happily drifted during his speech to the one I imagined above.  My fellow Americans, passionate Cascadians, and all Major League Soccer supporters, this finest day in the year of our beautiful game, 2011 is the beginning of the Season of the Rivalry.  So, bare your colours, waive your tifo, ignite the flares, light the smoke, drink a pint, and for the love of sport, cry out from your gut . . .

“Take ‘em all, watch ‘em fall,
Put ‘em up against a wall
and shoot ‘em.
Short-n-tall, watch ‘em fall,
Come on Boys take ‘em all.”

Major League Soccer has come to a crossroads never imagined by its 1996 founders.  The previous attempt at professional soccer in the US was the NASL (North American Soccer League), which lasted from 1968-1985.  Like Major League Soccer today, most of the NASL teams never passed 15,000 in average season attendance.  Not a problem for our Cascadia fellows.  The NASL Sounders often topped 20,000.  My

NASL

North American Soccer League - 1968-1985

first professional soccer match was in the Kingdome in 1983.  The Sounders hosted rival Vancouver with an attendance over 21,000.  Not much influence from the NASL remains with our regions teams or soccer in America today.  Only a few team names and use of a penalty shootout to decide certain matches has survived.  Decline from over expansion, 24 teams at its height, was a major contributing problem.  Worse was the complete under valued use of domestic college draftees and overpaid international veterans nearing retirement.  Whereas Major League Soccer after starting in 1996 remained cautious and protective in expanding.  The double expansion of Portland and Vancouver in 2011 is a big step for the league which has pushed expansion annually since 2006.  What is different this time?  Major League Soccer has taken a big step in requiring domestic or “homegrown” players.  International or high-priced “Designated Players” are limited to 3.  The league owns all player contracts and uses a salary cap.  What separates the league more now is an increased effort to develop relationships with advertisers and sport broadcasting networks.  Especially local/Regional TV/Radio stations.  Major League Soccer has also become one of the more popular sport attractions on all social networks.  All that said, with 18 clubs, the league still has many teams consistently below an average attendance of 15,000.  Solution?  The league needs an intense colorful rivalry with all matches sold-out.   How about a threesome?  This seasons Cascadia couldn’t come at a better time for Major League Soccer.  Portland and Seattle began their derbys in 1975, so the matches wont feel like they are new or made for TV.  They will be the authentic real deal.  An example for all existing and future MLS franchises to see what American Soccer Derbys look like.  The success of the Cascadia Cup could be the open door to the leagues bright future.

 

The Cascadia Rivalry

Preseason Cascadia Summit, March 4-6 2011.

In case anyone needed proof of the intensity of this 3-way rivalry, the offseason has supplied plenty.  Kasey Keller joined the Sounders in 2009, signing a 2 year contract.  Before playing a single match for Sounders FC he said he wanted to add a third season before retiring to take part in the Cascadia Rivalry.  Sounders FC ownership made that priority one this off season.  At the end of last season Portland Timbers supporters purchased ad space on a Seattle billboard advertising their teams expansion.  The most significant evidence of multi-team rivalry intensity and influence on Major League Soccer was from supporter negotiations for away match ticket allotment to traveling supporter groups.  Initially the allotment was set at 150.  Supporter groups for all 3 clubs joined forces and pushed up the allotment to 500.  Even with that increase, most supporters wont be satisfied until that number is likely increased to 1,000 next year.  All the blogs, forums, tweets and social network posts must have caught the attention of the league.  This preseason, from March 4-6, the three Cascadia Rivals face off in a weekend Cascadia Summit.  Tickets went on sale 2/1/2011 and sold-out the same day.  Preseason!  In addition to each team facing the other, there is a Coaches and Supporters meeting on the last day of the summit.  I believe this is one of the more intriguing preseason sport spectacles I’ve heard of.  It is also an opportunity for the league to figure out how to feature fully sold-out matches with 90 minute pint drinking, and loud chanting supporters.  Welcome to soccer in America.  Welcome to Cascadia, the season of the rivalry.

Tifo

2010 prematch tifo vs LA Galaxy with Emerald City Supporters.

Something Old, Something New:  A few NASL notes:

When Sounders FC joined Major League Soccer in 2009 a new competition started.  The Heritage Cup.  No new matches were added.  Regular season results are used.  The Heritage Cup is played by former NASL teams.  For 2009 and 2010 the two competing teams were the San Jose Earthquakes and Sounders FC.  San Jose won in 2009, and Seattle in 2010.  Starting this year the Heritage Cup will be between all four former NASL teams, Portland Timbers, San Jose Earthquakes, Vancouver Whitecaps, and Sounders FC.  The Heritage Cup will gain a little more attention this year, but nowhere near the media spotlight of the Cascadia Cup.  San Jose already participates in the California Classico with LA Galaxy.  As I write this, rumor has it the most famous NASL team, which featured Pele, the New York Cosmos are making a bid to become the 20th MLS team.





Preseason: Portland Timbers v Sounders FC

11 03 2010

Still preseason?

Kasey Keller and Freddie Ljungberg have both referred to this preseason as longer than most in their careers. At Arsenal, Ljungberg said they would often prepare for the season in three weeks. For a second year franchise in the MLS the decision may prove to be good. For some of the veterans it may become a more grueling hull than in past seasons in their careers. For me I’m going Rave Green silly in the head and “shiver with antici . . . pation.” Portland is in town tomorrow for a preseason match, but my racing heart says as a supporter it is anything but a preseason match.

Now for something completely bloggingly different.

Just to assure you that the above quote, “shiver with antici . . . pation” was an intended velveeta cheese blog moment, let me take this to a whole new level. Name the character and movie that quote comes from and I will draw a name on March 25th, the Sounders FC opening season match v Philadelphia Union. One attempt per person, and I’ll draw one name from all the correct answers. I’ll send something in the festive Rave Green of Sounders FC. Better than “Bluest Skies in Seattle” lyrics, I promise.

Now back to our regularly unscheduled blog . . .

The NFL has a glorious phrase “any given Sunday”. It is rock solid truth and captures everything you could imagine or expect to see from an NFL game every time you turn one on. So perfect is the catch phrase that a good football movie was made with the phrase as the title. I have yet to find a soccer specific quote that encapsulates how impossibly intense and wildly fun a soccer match is. Until I find that gem to promote the game the way the NFL does, I am relegated to the use of examples. I have one such recent example. On March 10th, 2010, Olympique Lyonais (Lyon) of France visited Real Madrid, “Galacticos” of Spain. Real Madrid’s nick name is “Galacticos” for their over 200 million spent in last summers transfer window. The galactic spending spree was to acquire the kind of players that crush teams like Lyon 3-0. On March 10th, the two teams met for the second leg of a home-home round of 16, aggregate goal match. Leg one, won by Lyon at home 1-0 was not too amazing, because Lyon play well at home in European matches. The second leg in Madrid at the Bernabeu, well no way. That would be like the Seahawks winning an NFC championship game in Texas at the Cowboy’s new stadium during a season where the cowboys have 10 pro bowlers, league MVP, rookie of the year, and every imaginable Los Vegas pick to win the Superbowl. Is that clear enough? The bottom line, Lyon is out and Madrid moves on. The last time the French visited Spain and took home something that rightfully belonged to the Spanish, America was an even younger country. It’s not so much “any given Sunday” as it is “excuse me, but no you don’t.” As expected, the “Galacticos” poster boy, international stand out, model, and simply one of the best, Cristiano Ronaldo scored in the 6th minute to even the aggregate score 1-1. Madrid’s plan: Get the early equalizer, then add one more before half, two more after the break, and boom-zop Madrid celebrate crushing Lyon 4-1. Soccer is desperately more insane than that. Gonzalo Higuain, another brilliant Madrid striker and Argentine national had the open net to grab that 2nd first half goal I mentioned. He is an exquisitely brilliant striker, not unlike the kind of player Reggie Miller was for the Indiana Pacers in the NBA. The pace on the ball as he struck for net when the ball left his foot was perfect, but the ridiculously imperfect roundness of the ball and painful aggravation of the perfect game rolled the ball just wide of the post. Madrid’s easy crush of Lyon at home in the Bernabeu would never again look so wide open. So, the wrenching hold of soccer gods took hold of the game clock, and after Cristiano’s expected 6 minute equalizer . . . nothing really happened at all.

You’ve heard of Cristiano Ronaldo. You’ve at least seen highlights of him, and seen his handsome pictures dressed in exquisite European suits advertising hollywood swag. You’ve seen highlights of Higuain, because you’ve heard of Real Madrid, and he’s a fixture there. But unless you are an Olympique Lyonais supporter you have not heard of Miralem Pjanic. I am a fan of Lyon and when Juninho and Fred were there I could name the starting eleven. I think I could only do 4 now. I have not heard of Miralem Pjanic, but I know that in Lyon he is eating free at all the restaurants and toasted as their hero. In the 75th minute, he shot a dagger through the heart of every Madridista. The game ended 1-1, but the two-leg aggregate score was 2-1 Lyon. The draw for Madrid was a loss. The European Championship game is in their home at their Bernabeu, but neither team will belong there.

Senecca Wallace, (I know he’s in Cleveland now) gets brought on in the 4th quarter to replace an injured Hasselbeck in my imaginary Seahawks v Cowboys NFC Championship. He throws a touchdown in the back of the endzone with 8 minutes left to play. Somehow the defense holds on. You’d barely believe that possible, but you’ve seen New England, New York (Jets & Giants), St Louis, and even Pittsburgh against Dallas win those type of Superbowls. So, occasionally in your calm but overheated heart, you know, “any given Sunday” your team can win this game, because hey, it has happened before. Soccer is a little more manic. It is amazing how often teams that are so much better only win 1-0 or worse, they draw 1-1. But the soccer seasons are longer. So, there are more underdog upsets, but there is also little movement year in and year out of who the top 3 or 4 teams are in each European league.

Tomorrow when the Sounders FC face the Portland Timbers in the first ever preseason Community Shield match it will feel intensely like an any given Thursday match. The proceeds of the match go to charity, but the recognition ceremony and photo session for the winning team to hold up the shield at end of the match adds a little edginess. It’s only a preseason match, I know, I keep stating it a lot. The thing is in this little soccer hot bed corner of the US, and slowly getting recognized in the world of soccer, the Sounders FC are trying to be Young Madrid. While Portland is joining MLS next year, so tomorrow they would be fantastically thrilled to be Young Lyon.

That is why I’m up late, heart racing, more nervous and excited for any preseason game for any sport that I can remember. “I’m Sounders ’til I die”. I just hope not tomorrow.





Nothing Really Matters, In Preseason.

12 02 2010

It’s the start of preseason, so goals don’t matter because games don’t count. That is one opening line for this first preseason game against regional rival Vancouver Whitecaps. Another opening would be, this is possibly the greatest preseason comeback victory in Sounders FC short MLS history. Sounders dropped behind two goals in the first half. They outran and outplayed Vancouver for 30 minutes, then drifted defensively for the rest of the half giving up both goals. Sounders players and coaches were telling themselves, “eh, this is just a scrimmage”. Then the second half lineup came on. It was game on. The Sounders grabbed an early second half corner and Lamar Neagle made it count heading the ball in off the set piece. Then Sanna Nyassi showed his development by making a nice run down the right side of the box on the next possession. He found enough fitness at the end of his run to slot the ball past the keeper and equalize.

These are preseason goals, they don’t count. Wait. Do you remember our first season? Remember the word ‘draw”? After the Sounders first three wins in 2009, it seemed like Chivas was the only team that tried to attack. The rest chose to play a dense, physical midfield, where defending and tackling were more important than passing and attacking. Give credit where credit is due, because the strategy worked. Eleven draws keeps you out of the basement, but it also keeps you from reaching the ceiling. The Sounders attacks outnumbered opponents on a regular basis but the attacks were predictable, and opponents physical midfield took the threat of speed out of Sounders attacks. Near the end of last season the Sounders started to create ways to counter this against teams like Columbus, Kansas City, and FC Dallas, but the draws had already built up enough that a playoff pairing with a physical team like Houston was a sure thing.

So, this preseason score, which doesn’t even count, seemed to settle at . . . you guessed it, a 2-2 draw. It’s never easy to come back from two goals down in soccer and earn a draw. A preseason, I mean scrimage, comeback draw is a hard fought respectable result. A comeback win is simply out of the question. An obsessively determined effort that does not happen in preseason games or scrimmages. So, it’s nothing short of a little preseason magic that the 88th minute winner from Sanna Nyassi, his second of the match off a great move by Nathan Sturgis to enter the left side of the box, and find Nyassi for the one timer, was an early season reward for this team. Whose 2010 attitude is to add speed and determination to their attacking style. If this good for nothing preseason game winner is an indicator of anything to come this season, it is that this team is a faster more determined team ready to fight out a win from every game, even a meaningless preseason game on February 11th, in Casa Grande, Arizona.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 750 other followers

%d bloggers like this: