England-Algeria: An inept performance for the ages (by the Brits)

England 0 Algeria 0

i-5c4a60c54fbcd2c4ff31638006282e07-headscratcher.jpgFabio Capello: In Italian now – WTF (AP Photo).

Americans worried about the performance of their national team in the first half against the Slovenians can take comfort in the fact they didn’t SUCK AS BAD AS THE ENGLISH against Algeria for the entire game!

Sorry to get overly technical, but that 0-0 draw was horrible (and I say this as a native of England).

The English were just abysmal against Algeria with possibly their worst performance ever in any major competition. No imagination in midfield, no offensive cohesion, no player willing to take charge and be a leader. Has anyone seen Wayne Rooney?

These are EPL players. Really?

This is to take nothing away from the Algerians who were brighter, faster and generally more positive by any measure than the out of synch English.

Game story here.

Ugh. I need a shower.

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The worst referee at the World Cup

i-a5b6b34a4331d295c646de4f3bd650c1-kaman ld.jpgLandon Donovan reacts as referee Koman Coulibaly, of Mali, shows a yellow card and not a red one to a Slovenian player (AP Photo).

From the know thy enemy department: basic details about ref Koman Coulibaly who stole what should have been a heart-stopping 3-2 U.S. win today over Slovakia when he made (up?) a mystifying decision that disallowed Maurice Edu’s goal is here.

i-650ad411f6e9b339e6d8d81012948554-badref.jpgJozy Altidore and Herculez Gomez take their turns berating hapless referee Koman Coulibaly.

As a friend reminded me before today’s game: Players win games, coaches lose games, and referees ruin games.

He was talking about the Serbia-Germany officiating where the ref was handing out yellow cards like candy on Halloween, but it applies here, too.

i-9828a373e3da8376640a60b8370e4cdc-komanmichaelbradley.jpg Michael Bradley remonstrates with referee Koman Coulibaly of Mali during today’s draw against Slovenia.

Sounds like he’s been down this road before.

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Final: U.S.-Slovenia

U.S. 2 Slovenia 2

i-03d3b3bb112a71e21c7221f5a2f8e96b-protestsdeafears.jpgBlown call: Michael Bradley protests in vain after referee Koman Coulibaly disallowed what would have been a winning U.S. goal four minutes from the end of regulation time (AP Photos).

The U.S. was robbed of a dramatic victory after coming back from a two-goal deficit when the referee called a foul that erased an 86th minute goal by Maurice Edu; only the official knows why.

Match stats.

“Still don’t know why the goal was disallowed,” said U.S. Coach Bob Bradley to ESPN immediately after the final whistle.

i-3e5f2b6613a4ca3c2661fec29dd37db8-donovanblastslovenia.jpgLandon Donovan’s 48th minute blast ignited the American comeback.

“This team still understands how to fight for 90 minutes,” Bradley added. “We’ve seen that time and time again.”

Good thing, too, if they keep giving up early goals.

Updated:

“I’m proud of our guys I don’t know there’s many teams that would respond that way,” Landon Donovan told ESPN.

I’m a little gutted,” he added. “I’m not sure what the call was; (the referee) wouldn’t tell us what the foul was.”

Game story.

Final thoughts: The overall U.S. performance was still deficient, no matter the refereeing decision. The lack of speedy defenders – or even movement period – to shut down attackers quicker is severely lacking with Gooch in particular not looking anywhere near the quality of a Serie A central defender.

With Robbie Findley out of the game against Algeria because of suspension Edson Buddle should get an opportunity to start. Hopefully, England will be kindly disposed to the U.S. when they meet Slovenia in their final group game, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves. Next: England-Algeria.

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Halftime: U.S.-Slovenia

Match stats here.

A disaster is unfolding for the U.S., the immobility of the American defense and the inexperience of Robbie Findley combining to give Slovenia the breaks and space needed to go two up. The former Galaxy striker (the victim of a non-existent handball call that netted him a yellow card that will cause him to miss the final group game, by the way), has not demonstrated the vision and patience needed to combine up top with the likes of Landon Donovan.

Will Bob Bradley insert Edson Buddle at halftime? Should the ineffective Michael Bradley take a seat, too? Jose Torres gives the U.S. another dimension and almost scored from a free kick, but more needs to go through him offensively.

Giving up an early goal (yet again) to the defensive-minded Slovenians was bad enough, giving up two is a recipe for an early World Cup departure.

Updated: midfielders Maurice Edu and Benny Feilhaber are in, Torres and Findley are out as the second half starts.

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World Cup: U.S.-Slovenia preview

i-8e5fc4bc175b1845dd85c8171041b84d-timhowardflex.jpgU.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard is banged up and bruised – will Slovenia take advantage? (AP Photo).

Kickoff is at 7 a.m. on ESPN:

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — They played 62 games over four years just to get ready for the World Cup, convinced obsessive preparation and attention to detail would turn around their fortunes after a quick exit in 2006.

But the stark reality is this: All that work will amount to nothing unless the United States
gets at least a tie against Slovenia on Friday.

“Obviously a loss would put us out. That’s something that’s going to be in the back of our
minds,” American captain Carlos Bocanegra said Thursday following a chilly workout at Ellis Park.

Following an opening 1-1 draw against favored England last weekend, the Americans need at least one point on a day when the English face Algeria in the late game at Cape Town. With a victory against the smallest of the 32 nations in the tournament, the U.S. would take a huge step toward reaching the knockout stage of the tournament for the first time since 2002.

Four years ago, the U.S. rebounded from an opening 3-0 loss to the Czech Republic and played to a rugged 1-1 tie with eventual champion Italy — only to then get eliminated with a sloppy 2-1 defeat to Ghana.

“What makes teams great is the teams that do it three, four, five, six, seven times in row,”
Landon Donovan said. “We haven’t proven we can do that yet. And that’s what we need to prove this time.”

An underdog against the English, the U.S. heads to this game a rare World Cup favorite in a match-up of nations at opposite ends of the size scale. At almost 310 million, the United States has the largest population among the 32 World Cup countries. At 2 million, Slovenia has the smallest.

“It’s a great match and it can solidify Slovenia on the global map of football,” said Slovenia
coach Matjaz Kek, whose team would reach the second round for the first time with a win.

Slovenia, which wears distinctive striped jerseys that resemble Charlie Brown’s shirts, pretty much views the United States the way the Americans look at soccer powers. At the World Cup for just the second time, the Slovenes are ranked 25th, 11 spots behind the U.S. Slovenia is seeking to follow its opening 1-0 win over Algeria with a victory that would be received here with cries of “Ayoba,” a South African expression used for surprising events.

Midfielder Andrej Komac doesn’t think a Slovene win would be so surprising. He boldly
predicted victory, prompting U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard to respond: “Talk is cheap.”

Howard expects to play, with a painkiller injection if necessary, after taking a boot from
Emile Heskey in the ribs last Saturday.

Exactly one month after training began in Princeton, N.J., Howard and the other American
players worked out under the pink-purple twilight at Ellis Park, many wearing navy ski caps gray sweat pants and gloves in the 46-degree cold. The clunky clothes made it seem more like a team preparing for a late autumn NCAA tournament game than the pride of the U.S.

The United States has played twice before at Ellis Park, a downtown stadium with a highly
raked upper deck that opened in 1928 and holds 55,686 for the World Cup. In November 2007, the Americans beat South Africa 1-0 on a Steve Cherundolo goal. Last June, the U.S. took a two-goal halftime lead against Brazil in the Confederations Cup final only to lose 3-2.

Players felt mixed emotions on returning.

“We’ve learned from moments where we’ve stuck together and pulled out important wins,” coach Bob Bradley said. “We’ve learned from days when we let a game get away from us.”

Eastern European nations have presented defenses against the U.S. that have amounted to an Iron Curtain. Since returning to the World Cup in 1990 following a 40-year absence, the Americans are 0-5 against Eastern European teams and have been outscored 13-2.

Against England, the U.S. fell behind on Steven Gerrard’s fourth-minute goal but tied it on
Clint Dempsey’s 25-yard, two-hop shot that went through the arms of goalkeeper Robert
Green.

Falling behind has been an American weakness. The U.S. conceded the first goal in six of 10 final-round qualifiers last year but rebounded to win three of those and tie two. Still, going all the way back to 1930, the Americans have never won a World Cup match in which they trailed.

Slovenia beat Algeria on Robert Koren’s 79th-minute shot that was misjudged by Fawzi Chaouchi and bounced off the goalkeeper’s arm. Outshot 11-6, Slovenia succeeded with its counterattacks, which could prompt Bradley to start Jose Torres in place of Ricardo Clark to try and increase possession.

“In theory it seems like it’s easier because they don’t have a Rooney or a Lampard or a
Gerrard,” Donovan said, “but the reality is when you’ve got a team that plays well together,
it becomes very difficult to beat a team like that and it usually comes down to one or two
plays.”

The Slovenia media guide has a particularly apt message, considering the opponent: “Never judge greatness by size.”

Having gone 0-3 at its first World Cup appearance in 2002, Slovenia qualified for this year’s tournament by upsetting Russia in a playoff last November, a triumph that prompted Slovenia Prime Minister Borut Pahor to fulfill his promise to clean the players’ boots.

With Koren, goalkeeper Samir Handanovic, midfielder Valter Birsa and forwards Zlatko Dedic and Milivoje Novakovic, the Slovenes have several well-regarded players.

“We watch other leagues around the world and we’re familiar with the guys,” Bocanegra said. “We’re not going to go into it taking anybody lightly just because maybe the rest of the world doesn’t know their names.”

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Mexican World Cup fiesta gets out of hand in Huntington Park

i-65c4acd790a47c7328c5068820aa9920-mexfans celebrate.jpgSoccer fans react after Mexico scored their first goal against France while watching a televised broadcast of the game today at a restaurant in Huntington Park (AP Photo).

Calm down guys, you haven’t won the World Cup yet:

HUNTINGTON PARK (AP) — Fans celebrating Mexico’s 2-0 win over France in World Cup play spilled into streets Thursday and were ordered to disperse by police wary of a repeat of soccer-related disturbances in the small city of Huntington Park, southeast of downtown Los Angeles.

Police declared an unlawful assembly and arrested at least two people for refusing to
disperse, police Sgt. John Navarrette said.

“We had to give that order, the crowd was starting to become quite large, and it was becoming a little bit of a threat,” he said.

Fans waving flags poured onto Pacific Boulevard, which law enforcement had shut down as a precaution during the second half of the game. Officers in riot gear stood guard in case the crowd got unruly.

“We want people to celebrate, we have no problem with it whatsoever,” Navarrette said. “We just want them to do it responsibly and peacefully and not cause property damage.”

Huntington Park, home to a large Latino population, has a history of disturbances
after Mexico’s World Cup play.

In November 2001, unruly fans celebrating Mexico’s victory over Honduras in World Cup
qualifying tossed rocks and bottles and smashed windows after about 1,000 people streamed into the central business district. Officers fired stingballs to disperse the crowd.

In June 1998, throngs filled the streets, and more than 30 people were arrested for vandalism, assault and failure to disperse after Mexico tied Netherlands to advance. Days later, dozens more people were arrested after small groups of fans turned unruly following Mexico’s loss to Germany.

Huntington Park also endured an outbreak of violence and looting in 1994 when the
World Cup was held in nearby Pasadena.

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Gospel music show 1 World Cup soccer 0

Sadly, truth is stranger than fiction in this case:

JOHANNESBURG (AP) – Police say a South African man who wanted to watch a World Cup match instead of a religious program was beaten to death by his family in the northeastern part of the country.

David Makoeya, a 61-year-old man from the small village of Makweya, Limpopo province, fought with his wife and two children for the remote control on Sunday because he wanted to watch Germany play Australia in the World Cup. The others, however, wanted to watch a gospel show.

“He said, ‘No, I want to watch soccer,'” police spokesman Mothemane Malefo said Thursday. “That is when the argument came about. In that argument, they started assaulting him.”

Malefo said Makoeya got up to change the channel by hand after being refused the remote control and was attacked by his 68-year-old wife Francina and two children,
36-year-old son Collin and 23-year-old daughter Lebogang.

Malefo said he was not sure what the family used to kill Makoeya.

“It appears they banged his head against the wall,” Malefo said. “They phoned the
police only after he was badly injured, but by the time the police arrived the man was
already dead.”

All three were arrested Sunday night, but Lebogang was released on $200 bail Tuesday, Malefo said. The other two are still being held in custody. Malefo said the mother and son will reappear in the local Seshego Magistrates Court on July 27.

“He was always a happy man, never violent,” Makoeya’s nieces, Miriam and Anna, told the Daily Sun newspaper. “On Saturday, we saw him the last time at a funeral.”

Lovely story of domestic bliss, isn’t it? Guess the family that prays together, — oh, never mind.

If you need a good laugh after that, enjoy this revealing profile of Landon Donovan.

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