Boiler Room Comment Count

Brian

6/22/2014 – USA 2, Portugal 2 – 1-0-1, Group G

Jermaine-Jones-of-the-United-States-celebrates-scoring-his-teams-first-goal[1]

I had an internship in Austin when I was in college, and fell in with some guys who played roller hockey in the parking lot. We were a motley crew; I was near but not quite at the bottom in terms of skill. This is always my critical point: I have to be obviously not the worst guy. I was at least fourth from the bottom here, which marks my personal athletic best.

We would take breaks because it was summer in Texas. During those breaks we would discuss how close we were to dying at that very moment, because we were engineers playing roller hockey in summer in Texas. But there was this guy. He had a ponytail and did not look like an engineer. He was not skilled either. When we took our breaks to pound water in our faces and discuss how narrowly we had avoided catastrophic death, this guy would be flying around the parking lot at top speed. He did nothing except take laps.

We looked at him like he was out of his mind. He kept skating. Endurance is rarely spectacular, but when it is, it really is.

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Jermaine Jones probably doesn't know what hockey is, let alone the variety that comes on fake ice skates. He is nonetheless that guy, running and running and running even after he should fall over and expire. This has always been more or less true, but now that he's been well and truly released by the presence of Beckerman, he is something to marvel at. He's probably taking laps at halftime.

And then this gets into what it is to America. I read one of the pile of articles about how Klinsmann was or was not making American soccer more or less American and got irritated at various assertions but particularly this one…

"Largely due to an influx of continental players, the U.S. team has options now and is reaching beyond its previous identity, the way a toddler goes from a crawl to a walk. "

…because it just couldn't be more incorrect. The Influx Of Continental Players is basically Fabian Johnson and Jermaine Jones and the occasional substitute appearance, hardly unusual world-wide. Spain (Spain!) started a recently naturalized Brazilian striker. The US lost Giuseppe Rossi and Neven Subotic to Italy and Serbia, respectively. Meanwhile, the United States has long been on the lookout for anyone technically American, no matter how vague the connection. Having the son of a soldier stationed overseas on the team dates back to at least Earnie Stewart. The teams that won't poach a dubiously authentic Insert Nationality Here if given the opportunity start and end with Brazil.

But anyway I bristled at this assertion that the USA's surging fortunes were due to some unprecedented wave of educated foreigners to the point that I left a snotty comment, which was this:

There are all of two dual-nationals who are projected to start, and one of them is the most stereotypically American player in the 11: Jermaine Jones, a physical and endurance marvel who's about as creative as a brick.

And he is! You could not carve a more American defensive midfielder out of apple pie. He may as well be running around the field in a stovepipe hat, all industry and impossible running 80 minutes into a game played in a convection oven.

It's not often that you can see a guy playing sports and go "whoah" just because he's running in a straight line faster than the other guys around him. Those moments are usually reserved for the Denard Robinsons and Usain Bolts of the world. Even next to the indefatigable Bradley, though, Jones makes you marvel. When US shirts had descended into sheer, soaked clingfilm, Jones was still roaring around.

The US got their grip on the game, and this time it was Portugal dropping out exhausted as the US kept coming on. I said after the Ghana game that I had seen this before, and it does remain a real thing about this team: they will never stop coming.

Then friggin' Ronaldo had to go and do his Ronaldo thing—actually his un-Ronaldo thing—to spoil the party. If you had given me any odds that Ronaldo was going to doodle around and then fire in a shot from a bad angle that was still scary I would have taken it. Ronaldo doesn't cross. Are we rubbing off on people? I certainly hope not.

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After it was over I collapsed on a stool, wrung out. I had not been there, but my legs, stomach, and assorted other vaguely aching bits would disagree with this assertion. Jones had fired in a piledriver of a goal that felt like it was coming as he and Bradley took turns calibrating their rifles in the first half; I had done a series of involuntary squats at chances squandered on both sides.

Thirty seconds from freedom; instead another lap. Okay. We have legs yet.

Bullets

Highlights.

It happens. Stray into a comments section today and you'll get some dude screaming about how Bradley should be deported for overall suck, and I'm just like… no. Bradley managed to put a ball from two yards on to a defender's knee, sure. Here is The Best Player In The World afforded a chance from not quite the same range but not much further:

it-happens

juuuuuust a bit outside

The number one rule of soccer is that it is hard and you mostly look dumb trying to do it.

The late turnover is also a thing that happens; Bradley had a poor first touch, then set up to wall off the Portugal player who was trying to get the ball off him. he found misfortune when that guy happened to be Eder, who is about 30 pounds heavier than anyone else on the field and made a play that was seemingly way out of his wheelhouse by deftly stripping the ball without fouling.

It still took three subsequent major errors and a perfect cross for anything to come of it.

If the above still had been the goal instead of the sad thing that transpired in the 95th minute people would be bitching about Dempsey and Beckerman, who conspired to turn it over and create a break. When you complain about something that happened after six more touches, none of which had anything to do with the initial turnover, you are just venting irrationally.

Bradley was much, much better in this game than against Ghana, opening up the Portugal defense with accurately placed balls down the wing and harrassing Moutino into a performance that lacked impact. A turnover well on the Portugal side of the field is just that: a turnover. Which happens.

The real question. What is even the point of Omar Gonzalez? Specifically brought in to deal with crosses late, Gonzalez ends up higher up the field than four other American players on the fatal break.

image

Gonzalez dead center, higher than Jones

If he is even with Besler in the center of a three-man back line he cuts that cross out well before it gets anywhere near Varela and everyone goes home happy. Instead he's somehow gotten dragged into the midfield. When Bradley loses the ball he is literally at the halfway stripe!

I don't get it. It makes sense to bring the guy in to clog up the box with about three minutes left. So why isn't he doing it?

Tactical shift, quicktime. The official lineup released by the US had Zusi on the left and Bedoya on the right, presumably because Bedoya's higher work rate and defensive ability would come in handy against Ronaldo. The fifth minute goal seemed to change that:

imageimage

Bedoya left, Zusi right, after 5 minutes. Before that they were flipped.

After the US went down Zusi moved over to a spot where his right foot was better situated to have an impact. Note Zusi's tendency to stay tucked in so Fabian Johnson could bomb down the right, exploiting the space that Ronaldo refuses to track back on. For 94 minutes he was a liability.

Zusi then flipped back to the left when Yedlin came on, which is where the assist on Dempsey's goal came from, a sweetly hit short cross from his left foot.

Immense. Matt Besler just turned in one of the finest performances I've seen from a US center back in… ever? Possibly ever. Oguchi Onyewu has to get a mention here for battering out approximately a mole of crosses from Spain in the Confed Cup (oh man now I just thought about having Gooch in this game instead of Gonzalez and now sadness reins).

Other than that, Besler's high up there. Besler's positioning and instincts were impeccable here. The high point was probably the break he snuffed out at midfield just as everyone was getting their Ronaldo panic on. He was near flawless.

Immensely variable. Cameron, Besler's partner, had a major hand in shutting down Ronaldo all night. He also scuffed a clearance right to Nani for the opener and got beaten in the last minute. I don't know, man. Obviously both those things are very bad. But outside of those very bad things Cameron has been consistently good for the US, anywhere you put him. I think he'll put an admittedly game-wrecking performance behind him.

I mean, there's a poor clearance and there's a poor clearance that happens to be the absolute perfect ball to Nani. As with Bradley, I'm trying to chalk up Cameron's error on what it was instead of the result.

Are you five-foot-eight and fast as a guy with flaming pants? If so, stop playing basketball. Stop playing football unless you are Dennis Norfleet. You aren't making it big in either of those sports. Best-case scenario, the one in 300 million scenario, is that you are a role-playing freak show for a few years. It's not bad if you can get it, but you probably can't.

Soccer, though: DaMarcus Beasley is 5'8". DeAndre Yedlin is 5'8". All those terrifying buggers like Christian Atsu and various other Ghana midges are 5'8". Brazil brings on a 5'5" guy(!).If you can run all day and change directions quickly but tend to disintegrate on contact because you are a wee thing, get thee to the soccer field. For America.

Group Situation

The US wins the group with a win over Germany and finishes second with a tie. The prospect of a wink-wink draw with the Germans is there, as it would guarantee both teams advance and Germany would avoid (presumably) Belgium in the first knockout round. At the very least expect both teams to play defensively.

If the US loses things get into goal differential with the winner of the Ghana-Portugal game. Portugal would have to make up their 4-0 loss in the opener; Ghana just has to make up a one-goal loss. The US is out if they lose 1-0 and:

  • Ghana wins by two goals, or
  • Ghana wins by one in a goal blizzard (3-2 at least)
  • Portugal wins by five

So root for Portugal in the other game. Barring unlikely outcomes, the US enters the final match with a two-and-a-half goal cushion on Ghana and a five-and-a-half goal cushion on Portugal.

That's still a pretty good situation.

Germany Situation

The Germans are close to healthy. Right back Jerome Boateng was lifted at halftime of the Ghana game with a hip injury of some variety and may or may not be available. Thomas Muller took a nasty collision right at the end of the Ghana game but is not seriously damaged and should be fine for Thursday. Everyone else is good to go.

After a German walkover of Portugal, they struggled against Ghana. The 2-2 draw was closer to a Ghana win than vice-versa as the Germany D struggled to keep pace with Ghana on counters. Germany's outside backs were particularly poor at both ends, and not unexpectedly: both the starting right back, Benedikt Howedes, and Boateng's replacement, Shkodran Mustafi, are center backs at club level. Boateng is a bit more versatile but is still primarily a center back. (Germany's using  Phillip Lahm as a holding midfielder for some reason—really makes you wonder if Germany would have both Jones and Johnson on their roster if they had not switched to the US.)

It's the offense bit that's worrying. Germany has about a half-dozen world-class attackers, and even though one's out with a pre-World Cup injury they've still got a pile of dudes more talented than anyone the USA's got.

Knowing they only need a draw, The US is likely to reprise their 4-2-3-1 from the Germany game in an attempt to keep possession for long stretches and remain compact at the back.

Comments

ak47

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:03 PM ^

You can both say that bradley is incredibly important to the team, acknowledge that US plays its best when he plays well and still say he has been bad at the world cup so far.  We obviously can't bench him but the rest of our midfield has picked up the slack of Bradley playing poorly to this point.  He played better yesterday than he did against Ghana but he still didn't play well and that turnover wasn't just another turnover in a game.  His decision making would be like a team trying to run out the clock and the running back only putting one arm on the ball as he goes through the line.  It was just dumb.  

I also disagree with Brians optimism.  Yeah 4 points is where we wanted to be but Portugal look done.  Ronaldo is clearly not at 100% and they didn't even celebrate the goal yesterday that saved their world cup.  I don't see a situation where Ghana doesn't score at least 2 on that defense.  That means we have to tie germany or we are at.  I think there is like a 30% we go through, if Ghana scores first its like a 15% chance.

Ali G Bomaye

June 23rd, 2014 at 1:51 PM ^

I'm not a soccer expert, but it looked like Zusi turned the ball over every single time he touched it.  He hurt us more than anyone else out there.

On the other hand, aside from his missed goal opportunity and his unfortunately timed turnover, Bradley played a whale of a game.

kman23

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:20 PM ^

But 1) He's asked to make very hard long passes to Dempsey who's running forward and not holding up the ball (making the pass even harder) and often the pass has to beat 3-4 defenders to be successful. 2) He was told to stay tucked inside so Johnson could get more space on the flank meaning that he's in an even more compact area of the pitch and is going to be pressured instantly. 3) Portugal have a very good MF trio. Meireles and Veloso run about as much as Jones does and they know how to press opposite MFs quickly. The only time the US MFs had time on the ball was when they were in a deeper position where Meireles and Veloso didn't venture to come forward and press (and Moutinho is terrible at pressing and he plays that more advanced MF role).

LordGrantham

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:16 PM ^

I hate to be a pessimist, but I think we're going to need a draw against Germany.  I just don't see Ghana beating Portugal by fewer than 2 goals.

M-Dog

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:20 PM ^

I don't either.

But then again I didn't see the US scoring late against Ghana to win, or a Ghana tie with Germany, or the US giving up the latest regulation goal in WC history.

Or Spain.  Or Costa Rica.

You just never know. 

 

Gulogulo37

June 23rd, 2014 at 5:49 PM ^

I see Ghana winning as well, but I'm not that pessimistic. Yes it's Germany, but we just need a draw.  They'll still be dangerous but won't be super aggressive. Also, I doubt there will be any formal agreement, but I'm sure Low and the Germans would like Klinsmann to show well.

betheballdanny

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:17 PM ^

What a gut punch that was last night.  I was driving home trying to figure out when I last felt this way about a game.

I think Outback 2013 is the last time I felt like this.  Similar last-second-other-team heroics, similar favorable-betting-odds wasted.

Yinka Double Dare

June 23rd, 2014 at 2:57 PM ^

And my every-four-year "wait, why the hell isn't head to head result the first tiebreaker for a two-team tie" complaint finally finds the US on the possible wrong end of it.  

The FannMan

June 23rd, 2014 at 4:02 PM ^

I am wondering if Bradley's shot can really be questioned.  Can players at that level really be expected to volley the ball out of the air, track a defender moving accors the net and adjust the volley so as to avoid the dude's knee?  If so, I be like dang.  

My reaction at the time (other than issuing a groan/scream that startled the dog) was that it was just bad luck, like a line drive staight at the CF with basesloaded and 2 outs.  Move it to either side by 1 degree and its a three run double.  Instead, the defender was in good position and you are screwed.

I know a bit about soccer (typical American "I played as a kid"), but I would appreciate the views/knowledge of someone who knows soccer more than I do.

MGoBender

June 23rd, 2014 at 4:54 PM ^

It was a much more difficult shot than it appeared.  9/10 times all you need to do is get that volley on frame and it's a goal.  It's not like he had time to get his head up and know a defender was flying.  Happened to hit it not just in his vicinity, but at a height that the defender could actually do something.  

C'est la vie.  Had it not been a volley, then I can understand getting on him for not finishing it.

The FannMan

June 23rd, 2014 at 5:45 PM ^

Looking at the replay it was harder that I recalled. Also, IIRC, the defender didn't really do anything other than have the ball hit him.  I don't think he had time to react and positioned his knee - the ball just hit him    Bradely did what he was supposed to do by getting it on frame - he just was unlucky.  Credit also to Costa (sp?) for getting into a position where he could factor into the play.

FWIW - This equals the Nani shot that hit the post.  If that goes in, we are all screaming for Howard's head today.

AnthonyThomas

June 23rd, 2014 at 9:30 PM ^

Anyone who is saying that shot being cleared was Bradley's fault has never played the game or watched it very closely. If you watch the replay, the cross jumped up to around the level of Bradley's shin. It isn't rare to see a player scuff such a shot altogether. You have to realize that judging the speed of the ball isn't the only thing, but also the spin of it. That effects how you need to hit it to minimize the chance of shanking it. The game is moving too fast for a player to pick a corner while simultaneously controlling his shot. Not in that situation. It was simply a great defensive play. The ball is shot by pure luck two inches higher and it grazes Costa's leg and goes in. 

Yinka Double Dare

June 24th, 2014 at 11:21 AM ^

I think even at the high level most guys are just trying to put it on goal, since that almost always results in a goal in that situation.  Get too cute with it and missing the net entirely is a far greater sin.  It was just bad luck that he ended up hitting it right into the defender on the goal line.

Jota09

June 23rd, 2014 at 5:03 PM ^

I didn't watch much of the game, family obligations, but I was unfortunate enough to see the last 5 minutes. Bradley had an easy ball that he made an awful first touch on and the compounded that mistake by trying to keep possession against multiple defenders. The smart play was either a pass back to an open man add he was facing that way or just kick it out of bounds and let his team get set. He did neither and you saw what happened. He Might have played well the rest of the game for all I know but that play cost us the win

gwkrlghl

June 23rd, 2014 at 5:59 PM ^

That shot of Grant Park going nuts is awesome. That is a lot of people.

Anyone know of estimate to how many people were there?

Edit: Found it. 12-15k. Looks like a lot more than that in that shot

UofM626

June 23rd, 2014 at 7:22 PM ^

I thought you were gonna talk about a actual Boiler Room!! Damn I was curious if anyone besides myself knew first hand about them. O well maybe another day.

AnthonyThomas

June 23rd, 2014 at 9:34 PM ^

Most of the US's players in the early days were dual nationals. I mean 1930s and 50s early. Gaetjens who scored to beat England in 50 was born in Haiti. That will always be the case in a melting pot like the US.

And I can't believe that Costa chose Spain. Because Brazil had just as good of a chance as Spain coming into this tournament, and look at the strikers Brazil fields. Fred and Jo. Those two wouldn't have sniffed some of the Brazilian line ups of the last 20 years, and are inferior to Costa. Maybe he really feels Spanish.