Thursday, September 20, 2012

Whoosh!! HMHS Girls Breeze Through For Dinner.

SEPT. 20, 2012 -- tonight we learned how team bonding 2012 style works, which is very quickly. 
Last summer Debbie and I had volunteered to host a team dinner and this was the night.  It was over in a flash.  I had forgotten that so many girls could eat so much so quickly. But

I had not hosted a high school event since 1995 when Kirsten was a junior and the team did breakfasts on the morning of game days.  Those were rush affairs as well, but they had to get off to school.  Now the girls do dinner. 

Debbie did an awesome job putting it all together with good food, red and black balloons and soccer ball plates.  The girls began arriving promptly at 6, still in game jerseys after two wins over Gateway, 2-0 by the varsity and 4-0 by JV.  In minutes our house was filled with hungry soccer players for the first time in years, and soon every chair on the deck and patio was taken as pasta and salad were quickly consumed.

Then in the blink of an eyelash it was over.  Thirty-nine minutes after they arrived it was time to go - off to see Heights play Township under the lights.  By 7 p.m. we had the deck to ourselves.

If the girls had as much fun as we did, the evening was a success.

  Tables just waiting to be filled

    Long line for the food.

 
 The deck was filled with hungry and happy soccer players

           And so was the patio.

Friday, September 14, 2012

HMHS defense

   SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 -- Good story in yesterday's Inquirer about The Haddonfield girls soccer team defense.  Although the angle was freshman keeper Taylor Sehdev, the story recognized the contributions of Mary Clair, Bridget Yako, Olivia Blaber and Gretchen Kiep.

   Defense was certainly paramount in Monday's 1-0 win at archrival West Deptford.  It was a typical HMHS-West Deptford contest: big crowd, physical, intense, down to the wire.  Haddonfield scored in the first half when the Eagles's keeper couldn't hold on to the ball and the defense did the rest.  If Sehdev was nervous playing only her second varsity game and her first under the lights, she sure didn't show it.  She made all the plays she had to, including an extended well-timed reach to grab a ball headed for the far upper corner in the first half.

  

Monday, September 3, 2012

If You Can Sing the WNT May Need You

As most fans know by now, Pia Sundhage has decided to take her song and dance routine to her native Sweden.  Sundhage resigned Saturday as coach of the U.S. Women's National Team Saturday to take the same post in  Sweden.  I never met Sundhage, but the reviews have been positive, and it seems she was an improvement over predecessor Greg Ryan. And anyone who sang Bob Dylan and Simon & Garfunkle to the media couldn't be all bad.

During Sundhage's tenure, which began just a few months after the 2007 World Cup disaster, the U.S. won two Olympic gold medals and a second place at the World Cup.

Not surprisingly, the best story of Sundhage's resignation comes from Jere Longman in today's New York Times.  Note that he refers to the "diva behavior" of keeper Hope Solo.  According to Longman, potential successors include the under-23 women’s national coach Randy Waldrum; the U-20 women’s national coach Steve Swanson; Tony DiCicco, who coached the WNT before; Australia’s national coach, Tom Sermanni; and Jillian Ellis, the director of development for the United States women’s national teams.

He does not say if any of them can sing.

Saturday, September 1, 2012

"She Said Yes, Praise the Lord, Glory Hallelujah!" Congrats to Scott & Stevie

I was in the men's room at P.J. Whelihan's Pub in Haddonfield a week ago Friday when my cellphone rang.  It was my favorite male former soccer player and author of the second best blog on the Web, who happens to be my son, Scott, calling to tell me he and girlfriend Stevie Neale, had gotten engaged down in Florida.

Scott was looking for a song to announce the engagement on Facebook, so he came up with a pretty good one: "She Said Yes," by a British folk rock group known as The Wedding Band, a/k/a Mumford and Sons & Friends.  Read the announcement on Scott's blog.

We celebrated the happy occasion in Ocean City a few nights ago, where sister Kirsten welcomed Stevie to the family.  Looking forward to the wedding in early 2013.

Monday, August 13, 2012

The Old Firm Not So Firm


August 13, 2012 -- The Old Firm ain’t what it used to be.  As reported in the New York Times last week, the bankruptcy of one half of the Firm, Glasgow Rangers, has forced that storied club into Scotland’s Third Division and stripped its rivalry with the other half, Glasgow Celtic, of much of its glamor.  Some are worried that the entire Premier League may be threatened.

No one seems sure how the Celtic-Ranger relationship became known as the Old Firm, but the competition dates back to 1888 and the two clubs have played nearly 400 times since then.  For many years the games took on sectarian overtones with the Rangers being the Protestant club and Celtic the Catholic side.  In the ‘60s, when Celtic fans took to chanting, “Cel-tic, cha, cha cha,” Rangers supporters were known to respond, “Curse the Pope.  Cha, cha, cha.”  Sports Illustrated reported in January 1963 that a local joke held that Rangers had more fans because it was easier to say, “Curse the Pope,” than “Curse the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.”

Violence was an unfortunate by-product of the intensity of the teams’ fans.  In 1980 opposing fans fought on the field after Celtic won a 1-0 Cup final.

On Saturday Debbie and I saw half of the Old Firm – Celtic – play in a lackluster friendly against Real Madrid at the Linc in Philadelphia.  Real won, 2-0, but neither team's play was inspiring and the match had all the intensity of the NHL all-star game.  Fans would have rioted had Cristiano Ronaldo not played at all, but he seemed to go through the motions for the 58 or so minutes he was on the field.

The crowd was reported at 34,018 but seemed less.  Marc Narducci reported for The Inquirer and told me he thought “some of these friendlies have run their course.”  You can’t blame the teams.  Just as the MLB teams do in spring training, they are concerned with tuning up for their upcoming season by getting some fitness under match conditions for some players, trying out some new players and just getting some touches on the ball for others.

Real led 1-0 at the half on a goal by Jose Maria Callejon and I asked a Celtic fan if he thought his team had played awful in the first half.  He assured me they were a second half club, but they were only marginally better in the last 45 minutes.  But in fairness to Celtic, they had just played in Sweden three nights earlier and six key players did not make the trip across the ocean, giving an idea of how unimportant the game was to them

There was a scary moment in the 72nd minute when young Dylan McGeouch collided hard with Madrid’s Nuri Sahin and lay motionless on the field for five minutes before being carried off on a stretcher and taken to a hospital.  It was reported on the team’s website Sunday that he suffered a broken jaw but would travel back to Scotland with the team.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

With the Gold At Stake, Who Else But Carli Lloyd?


   It's now been eight years since someone not named Carli Lloyd scored for the United States in the women's Olympic gold medal game.  After notching the lone goal in the 1-0 overtime win against Brazil in 2008, Lloyd today accounted for all the American scoring in a tense 2-1 victory over Japan.

   The match was played before 80,203 at the hallowed Wembley Stadium in London.  It was the fourth gold for the United States in five tournaments.

   Lloyd got the U.S. off to a quick start by heading in a ball in the 8th minute.  Former U.S. men's coach Bob Bradley gave this analysis in the New York Times.  The U.S. dodged a bullet in the 27th minute when Tobin Heath appeared to handle the ball in the box.  But the referee declined to call he penalty.

   Nine minutes into the second half Lloyd scored what proved to be the game winner from 20 yards.  Fer her efforts she was named the Bud Light woman of the match.  After not starting the opener against France Lloyd came off the bench when Shannon Boxx was injured and scored the ultimate game winner, then tallied another goal against Columbia before her heroics today. 

   I was at work and followed the game on both the U.S. Soccer and the Times website.  While the Times does an excellent job covering soccer, it had some trouble with Lloyd''s first goal.  First it reported that Abby Wambach scored it, then said it was Boxx before finally naming Lloyd as the scorer.  But who else would score for the U.S. in the gold medal game?

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Olympics - Off to a Good Start

Nice to see Carli Lloyd on the front page of the Inquirer and the New York Times.  And why not?  All she did yesterday was come off the bench in the 17th minute (due to an injury to Shannon Boxx) and put the U.S. up for good against France, breaking a 2-2 deadlock with a goal in the 56th minute.  The last time Lloyd played in an Olympic match, she scored the game winner against Brazil in the 2008 gold medal match.

Yesterday, the Americans got off to a sluggish start and found themselves down, 2-0, just 14 minutes in.  But Abby Wambach headed in a Megan Rapinoe corner kick and Alex Morgan and Alex Morgan took a long punt from Hope Solo in the 31st minute and equalized.  Morgan also added an insurance goal in the 66th minute.

One note pointed out in the Times:  Lloyd started all 19 game sin which she played in 2011 but only 13 of 16 this year and was on the bench when yesterday's Olympic opener began.  Only the injury to Boxx brought her onto the field relatively early.  Sam Borden in the Times quotes Lloyd as saying she is still getting used to not starting but that she is "at peace" with that role.  Apparently no one has asked coach Pia Sundhage what brought about the change in Lloyd's status.

Next up for the women: Colombia, Saturday at noon, Eastern.