Saturday, January 4, 2014

The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)

The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)
Landon Donovan celebrates his goal against Mexico that sealed a fourth straight World Cup qualifying Dos-A-Cero result in Columbus. (Jay LaPrete/AP)

*Editor’s note: This is Part 1. The second half can be found here.*

What soccer moments and stories will you remember most from 2013?
In our small (but growing) world of soccer in the United States, SI’s Brian Straus and I have a thing we try to keep as a guidepost: Write stories that people will remember. You can’t do it every day, of course, and in today’s media landscape of multiple platforms and 24-hour news cycles, you have to try and hit singles and doubles in addition to the occasional home run.
And sometimes the home run comes out of nowhere as part of the 24-hour news cycle.
The soccer person I’ll remember most from 2013 is a 41-year-old guy from Los Angeles named Abel Rodríguez, an A-Rod everyone can love, someone who reminded us that you can be ordinary and extraordinary at the same time. After working as an unpaid runner for superstar coach José Mourinho during his teams’ preseason camps in L.A. over the years, Rodríguez showed up unannounced in Madrid in February hoping to see the Real Madrid-Barcelona game.
The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)
Prior to returning to Chelsea, then-Real Madrid manager Jose Mourinho made fan Abel Rodriguez’s dream come true by bringing him along for an adventure of a lifetime with the Spanish powerhouse. (Sang Tan/AP)

Rodríguez waited in the cold at Real Madrid’s training ground, got spotted by Mourinho (“a miracle,” Rodríguez said) and then embarked on the adventure of a lifetime, joining the Madrid squad behind the scenes for the Barcelona game and the Champions League elimination game at Manchester United.
WAHL: Jose Mourinho makes a fan’s dream come true
Rodríguez never sought publicity for his remarkable story — my SI.com piece didn’t come out until more than a month after his trip happened, and only then after I got a casual tip from a Mourinho confidante. But Rodríguez’s tale was a human one that showed the highest levels of the game aren’t just a cold, hard business all the time.
What soccer moments and stories will I remember most from 2013? My look back at those datelines and favorite tales is a personal one and hardly comprehensive, but it’s safe to say that 2013 was a remarkable year, both for U.S. soccer and for the journalism that produced so many memorable stories by talented journalists.


The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)
Landon Donovan was one of the many U.S. Soccer and MLS dignitaries on hand for Soccer Night in Newtown, an event organized by Houston Dynamo president Chris Canetti in the wake of the tragic Newtown school shootings. (Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

JANUARY

NEWTOWN, Conn., Jan. 7 — One of the great things about the U.S. soccer community is that it can come together and do some truly special things as a group. Just three weeks after the Newtown school shooting tragedy, more than 50 current and former players gather from around the country to do something fun for the Newtown community. It’s impossible to be there and not be moved by the experience.

TORREÓN, Mexico, Jan. 8 — Less than 12 hours after Newtown, I land in the dusty town of Torreón, home of Santos Laguna and U.S. national team forward Hérculez Gómez. Never before has an SI magazine story subject picked me up at the airport, but that’s exactly what Gómez does, a perfect example of an Everyman player who has overachieved without forgetting where he came from. Injuries will limit Gómez’s time with the national team as the year went on, but I wouldn’t write him off heading into a World Cup year.
Other January stories that I’ll remember:
Jorge Arangure wrote a terrific piece on Tijuana, San Diego and the cross-border appeal of Club Tijuana.
Matt Futterman sat down with Jurgen Klinsmann and got some eye-opening quotes from the U.S. coach.
Steven Goff wrote a nice feature on U.S. prospect Joe Gyau.
Brian Phillips is tremendously talented, and here he is on the criticism leveled at MLS by FIFA president Sepp Blatter.
Robert Andrew Powell wrote a fantastic book on soccer in Ciudad Juárez, “This Love Is Not for Cowards,” and he goes back to Mexico for his own profile on Herc Gómez.


The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)
Robbie Rogers, right, made waves when releasing a blog post announcing his sexual orientation and retirement. After overwhelming support, he returned to the field months later with the LA Galaxy. (Chris Carlson/AP)


FEBRUARY

SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras, Feb. 6 — The U.S. will end up qualifying for World Cup 2014 with ease, a sharp contrast with the near-crisis that ensues after losing the Hexagonal opener.

HARRISON, N.J., Feb. 11 — On one of my favorite days of 2013, I sit down for 10 minutes with nearly 20 MLS players, gave them anonymity (for their candor) and asked them a series of questions about the league. One reason I enjoy covering MLS is the smarts of the guys in the league.

NEW YORK CITY, Feb. 15 — Out of nowhere, Robbie Rogers releases a heartfelt blog post in which he comes out as gay and steps away from the game. Once again, the U.S. soccer community rallies in support, which will eventually cause Rogers to do a 180 and return to the game.

TUCSON, Ariz., Feb. 19 — By turns insightful and prickly (what else is new?), Thierry Henry sits down with me for an SI magazine MLS preview story on the New York Red Bulls, who end up winning their first competitive trophy in the Supporters’ Shield.
Other February stories that I’ll remember:
Roger Bennett, part of the consistently excellent “Men In Blazers” show with Michael Davies, checks in with a good piece on Klinsmann’s coaching influences.
Brian Phillips on match-fixing.

The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)
The SnowClasico became one of the most memorable games in U.S. Soccer history, with the Americans topping Costa Rica 1-0 in a Colorado blizzard. (Jack Dempsey/AP)

MARCH

COMMERCE CITY, Colo., March 22 — The SnowClásico enters the pantheon of one of the most memorable games in the history of U.S. Soccer, and it’s the turning point in World Cup qualifying for Klinsmann’s U.S. team. It is also the occasion of my favorite selfie from 2013.

MEXICO CITY, March 26 — The U.S. bags a historic World Cup qualifying point at the Azteca in Omar González’s coming of age. Mexico’s troubles are only just beginning.
Other March stories that I’ll remember:
Brian Straus with the most talked-about U.S. soccer story of the year, in which a host of U.S. players anonymously question Klinsmann’s methods. If you ask me, the story ended up helping the U.S. team confront some issues it needed to face.
Noah Davis wrote a nice historical piece on a tide-changing U.S.-Mexico game in 1980.
Sam Borden moved from the NFL beat to the soccer beat for the New York Times, and his excellent stories included this one on Robbie Rogers.
Jeff Carlisle with a really nice piece on L.A. Galaxy braintrust Bruce Arena and Dave Sarachan.


The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)


Bayern Munich’s Champions League hero Arjen Robben celebrates after the final whistle in London, sealing his club’s triumph over Borussia Dortmund in the UCL final. (Matt Dunham/AP)


APRIL

SEATTLE, April 23 — As part of my SI magazine feature on emerging U.S. women’s national team superstar Alex Morgan, we watch the first leg of the Barcelona-Bayern Munich Champions League semifinal at the house of her boyfriend (now fiancé), MLS player Servando Carrasco. Bayern destroys Morgan’s beloved Barça, ensuring she’ll never watch a game with this bad-luck charm again, but it’s a nice window into the way Morgan sees the game and talks about it.
Other April stories that I’ll remember:
James Montague is the Indiana Jones of soccer journalism, turning up in fascinating spots around the world, and his story on Zahir Belounis, a French player trapped in Qatar, is eye-opening (and months ahead of the rest of the world media).
In the 100th year of U.S. Soccer, Graham Parker had a good take on the centennial.
Joshua Robinson with a nice piece on a winning team of American seminarians in Rome.
Gwendolyn Oxenham had a terrific story on pickup soccer in the U.S.
Sam Borden visits U.S. women’s national team star Megan Rapinoe in France.
Nick Firchau went in-depth on Portland owner Merritt Paulson.

MAY

LONDON, May 25 — In a celebration of German soccer, Bayern beats Borussia Dortmund in an electrifying Champions League final at Wembley Stadium on a late goal by Arjen Robben. My piece in SI magazine that week focuses on the rise of German soccer and gives a nod to the classic “Soccer Made in Germany.”

CLEVELAND, May 29 — A summer odyssey following the USMNT begins with a less-than-impressive 4-2 friendly loss to Belgium. Little does anyone realize that the U.S. is about to start a record 12-game winning streak with a 4-3 win against Germany a few days later. In Ohio, I sit down with Klinsmann to talk about his decision to name Clint Dempsey the U.S. captain as part of a story on the past and present of the captaincy.
Other May stories that I’ll remember:
Sam Borden on the Chivas USA discrimination lawsuit.
Donald McRae wrote a tremendous feature on Dortmund manager Jurgen Klopp.
Borden on the Champions League anthem.
Charles Boehm on the rise of artificial turf.
The Oregonian on Portland’s memorable day with young Atticus Lane-Dupre.



The Soccer Year in Datelines and Recommended Reading (Part 1)

 Abby Wambach gets a Gatorade bath from teammates after breaking Mia Hamm’s all-time women’s international goals record in June. (Julio Cortez/AP)


JUNE

KINGSTON, Jamaica, June 7 — With Michael Bradley showing he’s the U.S.’s most indispensable player, the Americans get a late game-winning goal from Brad Evans, of all people, to set up what will be a perfect nine-point June in World Cup qualifying. Bonus points: I had an impromptu talk at my hotel with Jamaican FA president Captain Horace Burrell, who flew off in his helicopter afterward.

SEATTLE, June 11 — The U.S. disposes of Panama 2-0 in front of the most-raucous pro-U.S. crowd I’ve ever seen. This will also be remembered as the trip Clint Dempsey fell in love with Seattle, sparking a move to the Sounders in August.

SANDY, Utah, June 18 — The U.S. has a harder time than expected against Honduras but bags the win anyway, thanks in part to Jozy Altidore’s fourth straight game with a goal.

HARRISON, N.J., June 20 — Abby Wambach makes history, scoring four times against South Korea to break Mia Hamm’s all-time international goal-scoring record (she now has 163 international goals, and counting). Hamm, not surprisingly, is classy in her congratulations.
Other June stories that I’ll remember:
Wright Thompson is amazing in basically everything he writes, and his epic piece on Italian soccer racism is one of the stories of the year.
Robert Andrew Powell on the tragic journey of Richard Swanson, who died trying to dribble a soccer ball from Seattle to the World Cup in Brazil.
Gabriele Marcotti with a great story from Brazil on São Cristóvão, the club that gave Ronaldo his start.
S.L. Price on the protests in Brazil during Confederations Cup.
Roger Bennett on a soccer-playing barber in Recife.
Bonnie D. Ford on the specter of artificial turf field for the 2015 Women’s World Cup.
We’re just now starting to get detailed tactical breakdowns in U.S. soccer journalism, and Liviu Bird does a terrific job with it.
Nick Zaccardi on the wild story of finding Bayern Munich defender Jerome Boateng’s Champions League winner’s medal and returning it to him.


MLS Expansion Update: Miami Making Progress Despite Deadline, Minneapolis In Play MLS Expansion

MLS Expansion Update: Miami Making Progress Despite Deadline, Minneapolis In Play MLS Expansion




David Beckham is spearheading a group that’s trying to bring MLS soccer to MIami. (ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)


It appears that New Year’s Eve will come and go without an MLS expansion announcement from David Beckham, but missing the league’s Dec. 31 “deadline” almost surely won’t have any tangible impact on his push for a Miami stadium deal.
Securing land and funding for a new facility in time to meet the original terms of Beckham’s $25 million expansion option was always going to be a tall order for the former midfielder, who retired only seven months ago. Beckham has been working with Bolivian telecommunications mogul Marcelo Claure and continues to make progress with local authorities, sources tell SI.com.
Two weeks ago, Miami-Dade County commissioners unanimously authorized mayor Carlos Gimenez to negotiate with Beckham and potential contractors, and by all accounts those talks are going well. There’s confidence at the league level that the details will be worked out.
STRAUS: The top 13 stories from American soccer’s unforgettable 2013
Perhaps Beckham was overly optimistic in late November, when he told Sky Sports, “Hopefully there will be an announcement before the new year.” But he certainly wasn’t desperate. MLS has no plans to cut Beckham loose on Wednesday and start from scratch in South Florida. In fact, commissioner Don Garber and deputy commissioner and president Mark Abbott are on vacation, not waiting by the phone to hear if the ex-player and the mayor have broken ground.
Beckham’s cut-rate entry fee might rise next month, but MLS remains committed to bringing Miami aboard once a stadium plan takes shape.
“We are very excited about the opportunity of David putting together an ownership group and finalizing a stadium site in downtown Miami so that we could end up having what we hope would be our 22nd team in a city that’s one of the largest in the country and has a strong and passionate soccer fan base. But there’s a lot of work that needs to happen,” Garber said this month.
“We can’t go to Miami without the right stadium solution,” he added. “David understands that. The city understands that. That is an indisputable fact. We can’t have different rules for Miami than we’d have for any other city.”
Miami and Atlanta are expected to be the league’s 22nd and 23rd clubs. Falcons owner Arthur Blank, who hopes to field an MLS team in a new retractable-roof stadium scheduled to open in 2017, has been in talks with the league for years. Falcons executive VP and chief marketing officer Jim Smith, formerly the president and GM of the Columbus Crew, attended the MLS Cup final.
Also in Kansas City for the league title game was a group that might be interested in bringing MLS to Minneapolis — and it wasn’t the Vikings. While Beckham’s Miami entry appears to be a matter of “when” and not “if”, there’s an intriguing contest taking shape in the Twin Cities, where the construction of a new soccer-ready NFL stadium may have lit a fire under the owners of local NASL club Minnesota United.
The Vikings expect to open their $1 billion palace in 2016, and the organization claimed last week that “Conversations regarding securing a soccer team for this market have heated up between the Vikings and MLS representatives.” A team spokesperson stood by that characterization when contacted by SI.com on Monday afternoon.
According to multiple sources, however, MLS officials have spent more time with United than the Vikings over the past several weeks. The second-tier club, which won the NASL championship in 2011, is owned by Bill McGuire, a physician and the former CEO of UnitedHealth Group. United plays at the National Sports Center in Blaine, some 14 miles north of downtown Minneapolis, but has acknowledged “preliminary” interest in pursuing an urban, soccer-specific stadium. Representatives were in K.C. to take a look at Sporting Park.
United’s long-term viability might depend on beating the Vikings to the MLS punch, one source said, and it seems McGuire has found an ally in the Minnesota Twins. The baseball team’s president, Dave St. Peter, joined the United contingent and the head of the Minnesota Ballpark Authority three weeks ago in Kansas City.
Owned by investor Jim Pohlad, the Twins are part of a consortium called 2020 Partners aiming to spur development in the area around Target Field, Target Center (the NBA arena) and the Minneapolis Farmers Market. It certainly wouldn’t be cheap to build there, but Pohlad’s resources and relationships might make the difference for McGuire and United. Twins ownership has been interested in MLS for a while, a source told SI.com.
In September, 2020 Partners issued a statement “encourag[ing]” United to “explore the Farmers Market site for a soccer stadium as the potential anchor for development of a multi-use complex.”
The Twin Cities has had a team playing at the lower levels of the U.S. pyramid since 1994 — two years before MLS kicked off. After two decades, it seems a race to the top has begun.

Bayern Striker Mandzukic On Arsenal’s Radar

Bayern Striker Mandzukic On Arsenal’s Radar





Nicklas Bendtner’s injury has thrown further into sharp focus Arsenal’s lack of depth in the striker department, so much so that the Gunners have been linked with three forwards in this morning’s UK press. Speculation has surrounded Diego Costa and Alvaro Morata before, but a new name is on the list - Bayern Munich’s Mario Mandzukic.
We’ve also got a very interesting rumor on Chelsea midfielder Eden Hazard.


Maradona Really Wants You To Know That His Toned Down Physique Is Not Photoshopped



When Diego Maradona’s daughter, Dalma, posted a photo of her dad to Twitter last month showing off his fit new body, some people questioned if the Argentine legend had really slimmed down that much, or if he’d had a little Photoshop magic to help him out:




Well, it turns out that Maradona was really not pleased by the allegations. So he recorded this gem:




"To all of you, there’s no Photoshop. There’s no Photoshop!" exclaimed the former World Cup winner in the short video clip posted on his official Facebook page. "For those who want to keep talking bulls**t, they can suck it.
Alright Diego, we believe. Pinky promise. And please, no more stripping. Think of the children.

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

FA Cup: Third round action images

Manchester City held to draw by Blackburn in FA Cup

Manchester City held to draw by Blackburn in FA Cup
James Milner (right) and Manchester City were held to a 1-1 draw by Blackburn in the FA Cup's third round.

LONDON (AP) - Goalkeeper Costel Pantilimon gifted Blackburn an equalizer as 10-man Manchester City was held to a 1-1 draw in the third round of the FA Cup on Saturday.
City broke the second-tier side's resistance just before halftime when Alvaro Negredo put last season's runners-up in front.
But Blackburn earned a replay by leveling 10 minutes into the second half after Pantilimon fumbled Rudy Gestede's header before Scott Dann rushed in to sweep the ball into the net from close range.
City was left hanging on after Dedryck Boyata was sent off in the 85th minute when a foul on D.J. Campbell earned him a second yellow card.
In the standout fixture of the third round, Arsenal hosts neighbor Tottenham later Saturday.

Arsenal overpowers Tottenham 2-0 in FA Cup third round

Arsenal overpowers Tottenham 2-0 in FA Cup third round
Thomas Rosicky scored Arsenal's second goal on a breakaway in a 2-0 win over Tottenham in the FA Cup.

LONDON (AP) - Arsenal overpowered north London rival Tottenham 2-0 to reach the fourth round of the FA Cup on Saturday, a significant scalp in the quest to end a nine-year trophy drought.
Santi Cazorla swept in Arsenal's opener in the 31st minute as Tottenham was run ragged at the home of it fiercest rival.
Arsenal's derby supremacy wasn't reflected in the scoreline, with Tomas Rosicky taking until the 62nd to score the second, charging forward from the halfway line after Tottenham gave the ball away before lifting it into the net.
The victory maintained Arsenal's bright start to 2014, a year when Arsene Wenger will hope to produce the team's first trophy since the 2005 FA Cup.
The Gunners are also top of the Premier League.

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