"Freedom is nothing else but a chance to be better" --Albert Camus

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Hold Your Noses And Qualify For Brazil 2014

See, that's the thing about stink bombs. They taint everybody and everything around them, guilty and innocent alike. Intended or not, the whole place ends up reeking. Brian Straus of The Sporting News lit a match and handed it to a dozen, mostly anonymous, disgruntled players in the United States Men's National Team pool. Then the shit blew up. Damage done. I wonder if US Soccer even saw it coming.

Jurgen Klinsmann, courtesy Nathan Forget (flickr)
Now, with two monumental World Cup Qualifiers looming, somebody has to wade through the carnage and set the ship back on course for Brazil 2014. According to the Sporting News piece, Jurgen Klinsmann has practically lost the U.S. locker room thanks to a lack of communication and perceived tactical naivety. He arrived on the scene after the 2011 Gold Cup Final debacle promising change, though never insinuating it would be quick or easy. “Barcelona was not born in the last couple of years. It took 20 years,” he told the New York Times. But, nearly two years later, the project is nowhere near complete. Has enough (or any) progress been shown? That's debatable. Anybody who has watched the Americans under Klinsi undoubtedly has an opinion on these matters.

2011 Gold Cup Final, Pasadena
Of course, reasons and excuses abound. Often, it can be difficult to distinguish between the two. Injuries don't help, of course. But there are other issues that have arisen: club concerns (Bocanegra, Edu, Onyewu,) blooding young or inexperienced players (Cameron, Gonzalez, Shea,) and a certain existential quest for enlightenment. All this, and I'm not even going to touch the allegations about the cliques and preference afforded German-born Americans in the piece. That is for another day. Still, even if we can agree that failures exist, who must shoulder the blame? Ultimately, should the United States fail to qualify for the 2014 World Cup, the brunt will fall on the mantles of Jurgen Klinsmann and the man who hired him, U.S. Soccer President Sunil Gulati. Klinsmann will lose his job, though Gulati has the air of a survivor. He's teflon and, not unlike the proverbial cockroach after a nuclear holocaust, he'll likely live on, wounded, amidst the fallout.

Last seen near Cambodia, courtesy Jarrett Campbell (flickr)
But what about the players? Lately, Klinsmann seems to relish challenging them publicly, even calling out some of the most accomplished players.. While often lauded in Europe for their toughness, American players are occasionally viewed domestically as a bit soft, having emerged from the cushy suburban environs of the youth soccer landscape instead of the hardscrabble streets of Rio or Accra or Naples. Klinsmann's message to the entire player pool seems to be: remove yourselves from your comfort zones or you will never improve. “They all want the safety net. They want to always feel comfortable, but if you want to elevate the program to another level, you need to go to a phase of being uncomfortable out there and then deal with that,” he told Brian Straus. Even some of the criticisms relayed in The Sporting News piece are better understood through this prism. Fair enough. There is a time and a place for this type of experimentation and mind game. That time was the preceding two years. And that place was probably not the cauldron of San Pedro Sula, Honduras in World Cup Qualifying.

Still, it's all to play for. Qualification for Brazil 2014 remains in their sights, not too far off in the distance and almost tangible. The grand project can live and thrive anew. For this week at least, though, it's probably best for Klinsmann and players alike to shelve the bigger picture and broader philosophies. Take a shower, scrub off the stench, and look in the mirror. Then get a couple of damn results.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

"I don't know if it'll make any change, but I figure it's time for me to start blogging again."

It's been a hot minute. Surprised, petulant monkey is just trying to figure out how this stuff works again. You've been warned.

Monday, November 7, 2011

The Civil Wars - 'Billie Jean' at Luna Music

The afternoon before I flew back to LA after Matty's memorial, I was browsing twitter during a break from cleaning the house. At 5:22 PM, I read that The Civil Wars were playing a 5:30 in-store at Luna Music. Luckily, that's only about 3 blocks away. So, off I went.

This was the last of 4 tunes, a threadbare cover of MJ's "Billie Jean." I wish several things: that I recorded one of their original songs, that the sunlight wasn't so bright through the window behind them, and that I was capable of holding a small object still for a relatively short period of time. Still, the sound was decent and they were amazing. You should check out their record "Barton Hollow."


Sunday, October 2, 2011

A Rare Sighting Of Actual Journalism

“Does the Administration not see at all how a President asserting that he has the right to kill an American citizen without due process, and that he’s not going to even explain why he thinks he has that right, is troublesome to some people?” Kudos to ABC's Jake Tapper for practicing actual journalism.

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Sunday, August 14, 2011

Tragic Rain In The Summertime

"And then I run 'til the breath tears my throat
'Til the pain hits my side
As if I run fast enough
I can leave all the pain and the sadness behind
I love to feel the rain in the summertime
I love to feel the rain on my face"

In 1988, I saw The Alarm open for Bob Dylan at The Indiana State Fairgrounds. Tonight, the chorus to "Rain In The Summertime" keeps playing hauntingly, over and over, in my head. I'll never listen to it again without thinking about this horrible, horrible event. I suppose accidents happen all over the world, everyday. But, when they hit so close to home, the sadness resonates. Thoughts and wishes to those involved and their families. Just awful.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Alfonzo 'Lonnie' Johnson - Got the Blues for Murder Only (1930)

Just a suggestion for Klinsi's playlist prior to his debut against Mexico next week in Philly. (h/t Brian Phillips from Run Of Play)



Wednesday, August 3, 2011

3 Billy Goats Gruff- Debt Ceiling Analogy from The Colbert Report

Last thing, hopefully, on the Debt Ceiling Capitulation. Colbert nails the fairy tale turned nightmare comparison at the end of this clip. So funny, I could cry. If I wasn't already so angry...