Wednesday, July 15, 2020

MLS is Back

MLS is Back Tournament - Wikipedia

Humor me for a minute and set aside the trouble Major League Soccer had establishing their bubble down in Orlando; I realize that's a big ask. The concept--which I was critical of--is turning out to be a rather good formula for the league. Daily action, the early morning and late at night time slots, wild finishes, and the usual MLS tomfoolery have lead to something of a qualified success.
No small amount of this is due to the lack of other American sports options (though global soccer options have never been so numerous) but I think even in non-pandemic times, MLS would be wise to replicate #MLSisBack on an annual basis.  My guy Sanjiv (aka @USMNTvideos) floated the idea of simply replacing the first six regular season games with the tournament. I think that could work.

I also think it'd be worth considering playing the tournament during the dog days of summer; when in normal times trips to Dallas, Houston, Orlando, Miami, and soon to add Nashville, Charlotte and Sacramento will mean playing in heat and/or humidity that largely keeps fans at home during the daytime hours.

Obviously this would mean playing in Northern locale; perhaps the PNW or Toronto or Montreal as opposed to a warm weather resort (I suppose if they really wanted to get audacious they could hold this sucker down in Mexico); and we probably don't need the CCL tie-in going forward, but I could be convinced it makes the games more important and is therefore worth keeping, either way a tournament is a good idea.

Even if by accident it seems like Don Garber & Co. have stumbled into something worth doing here.
In future years we'd have league's biggest stars at the tournament, and even more importantly we'd have fans at the games. One of MLS' strongest attributes is it's fan culture and the dedication of its travelling supporters groups. I can hardly think of a better idea than a MLS fan festival with meaningful games to boot.

Don't get me wrong, there's still plenty to criticize and I've made my objections clear on my twitter timeline, but we are entering the stage where the games are getting fun and we're seeing the potential of a non-pandemic tournament in MLS.

Here's hoping this isn't a one-off! 

Friday, November 8, 2019

Berhalter should Stay?

There's so much garbage on the internet. Even more so on twitter dot com. But maybe the most is within a subset of twitter dot com obsessed with the United States Men's National Team. It's particularly vitriolic and full of the internet argument greatest hits:  ad hominem, whataboutism, confirmation bias.

Why am I saying this? 

Because even within that context it's possible and, frankly, necessary to thoughtfully criticize much (most?) of what's going on within U.S. Soccer and specifically with the MNT. And while I'm just a guy #onhere, I'd like to think I can move those of us who are both fans and advocates for American soccer into a better version of this conversation. 

So, here we go.

Gregg Berhalter was one of the two best realistic options to take over the MNT after Dave Sarachan's caretaker tenure. We can debate Jesse Marsch vs Berhalter, especially given Marsch's early success in Europe but let's not act like because Gregg's brother Jay is a top U.S. Soccer executive, he wasn't qualified then or now. So set the process concerns aside for the moment (Those are for another post).

What clearly isn't working is Gregg's ability to transfer what made him a successful club coach--remember we're talking about the first American to manage a professional team in Europe--to the international level.

What's confusing to me is why can't he do it (yet)?

By the end of his time at Columbus Crew, Berhalter's teams played with--perhaps--the clearest sense of identity in MLS. Highly respected coaches, like Tata Martino, Patrick Vieira, and the aforementioned Jesse Marsch are all on-record complimenting both the style of play, and the execution of those Columbus teams as some of the best they'd encountered. Point being: it's not as if Gregg doesn't know what he's doing. 

So what are some possible explanations? I think there are versions of three possible answers:

  1. His preferred methods of playing and coaching need to change. 
  2. The players aren't good enough. 
  3. It will just take time.
Let's take those one at a time.

1. His preferred methods of playing and coaching need to change. Most international managers make the game as simple as possible (with a few notable exceptions). Berhalter isn't doing that. Given the extremely limited instructional time he has with his players, the often competing roles or expectations they have with their clubs, and the nature of tournament play he's simply asking too much of the "group." He's certainly tried to address this with extended camps, skype video sessions, etc. but players still exhibit role confusion on the field; lack game awareness; and, generally worse playing for the MNT than with their clubs. All of these things are evidence that the approach isn't effective.   
2. The players aren't good enough. Much as we like to blame Berhalter, there is something to this. Brian Sciaretta's excellent article, "The Missing Years: US Soccer's Development Gap" is essential reading on this point. The age cohort (25-30) who should be leading the MNT are MIA. This has placed Berhalter in a no-win situation. Young players and prospects don't win at the Senior International level. They just don't. And yet the u23's are, by far, our best players. He's clearly trying to integrate the young players with veterans in a way that doesn't ruin their long term advancement. One can argue with his methodology, clearly it's not getting great results, but to argue that rolling out a u23 roster for the next 18 months is his best option is a non-starter.    
3. It will just take time. Think of the Dutch or the Spanish national teams. They play with a signature system based on their aesthetic understanding of how the game should be played. (Brazil is in a bit of a different category for me, but I'd be fine if you included them in this group.) This is more-or-less what Berhalter has set out to accomplish. (i) It's is a very exclusive group who've achieved Sr. Team success playing in a very idealistic way. Notice, France, Portugal, Germany, England, et al aren't in this group. (ii) Success for these 'aesthetically idealistic" teams has been inextricably linked to generational talents more so than to the "system." (iii) It's taken decades of coherent, national, effort to create these identities and the structures to identify and train players to live into their country's soccer worldview. (iv) In each of these examples, overall national identity is deeply connected to the sport of soccer. None of this is impossible in the U.S. but even the most ardent supporters have to confess we're nowhere close on any of these things, and it's going to take a lot longer than the Berhalter era to get there.  

Something can be more than one thing, and I think all three of these explain Berhalter's struggles. That's not super satisfying, and I think it builds more of a case than I originally expected for keeping Berhalter regardless of the medium-term struggles: he needs to grow/adapt into the job, our best players simply need time to mature, and US Soccer needs to get its sh*t together. None of that will be accelerated by firing Gregg. 

I'll admit, I'd like there to be a fast-track through this era of U.S. Soccer that doesn't include the frustration of an incompetent federation and coach who needs to grow on the job, but I don't see a realistic path forward that avoids these realities.  


 

Monday, July 2, 2018

The Complicated Joy of Soccer


This is ostensibly a platform for me to write about American soccer -- MLS and USL, and that's what I've used it for. To frame this differently, I've intentionally boundaried this space from the other topics I often write about: politics and religion

It seems, though, like the time has come to take down those walls, if only for a little while, to acknowledge that while the soccer is center stage during the World Cup, the world's game is equal parts relief from an unending barrage of socio-political upheaval as it is deeply enmeshed in that very same turbulence. 

That's not breaking news to anyone reading this, but it does warrant saying out loud. 

I, like many others following this tournament, have chosen to use my social media platforms to comment almost exclusively on the games (matches) themselves. 

For me, this has been a very intentional choice –– opening the door, even just slightly ajar, to the abyss that is everything besides the games felt as though I'd never be able to watch with any joy at all. 

That was the wrong choice. 

The tournament itself has been perhaps the best World Cup in modern memory –– a hypothesis underscored by today's stunning Belgian counter attack for the ages. But while Lukaku was somehow in a state of mind to let a lifetime of glory roll between his legs (certainly the most glorious "dummy" I've ever seen), my mind was drifting to a world fraught with war, hunger, isolation and desolation. 

As Chadli formalized the most famous six touches in Belgian footballing history I  could only think: damn you, Vladimir. 

Not only is your side through to the quarterfinals amid doping rumors, you're playing host to an unimaginably good sporting event. One that will be remembered forever alongside your thuggery, murder, and hijacking of history. 

While this isn't the first World Cup to be played under the smoke of a burning world, it is the first one since 1934 that's been so intertwined with it –– FIFA's now exposed corruption fully welcomed in Putin's Moscow. 

It's all so inescapable. 

I've been challenged by the reporting of Clint Smith, Laurent Dubois, and Karim Zidan as well as few others during the course of this tournament to see the whole, complex, story unfolding before us. That while we enjoy the sport we can––and must––engage with the world that remains lest our temporary joy be the tyrant's permission.