Six Nations 2013: Wales Wins It

Wales 30, England 3. I’ve no doubt that there are Welsh people, child and adult alike, who will never forget that score.

England were the pre-tournament favorites, and had won their first four games, though in decreasingly convincing fashion. Wales, meanwhile, came into the tournament as defending champions, but had lost every single game they’d played since winning the 2012 trophy. They played a terrible first half of the first game tournament, which led to a loss against Ireland, but had come back and won their next three.

Wales needed to win by seven points to win the Six Nations. They weren’t favored to do so; England was, at the beginning of the game, a 1/4 favorite to take the trophy.

But the Wales defense, so good for all but that first half, stifled England. And Leigh Halfpenny, the player of the tournament for me, kicked four more penalties. And in the second half Wales went on the counter-attack twice and Alex Cuthbert crashed across the line twice and the Millenium Stadium crowd went berserk with joy. 30-3; a dominant performance, and the tournament trophy was no less than they deserved.

And I bet this kid was thrilled.

What’s next: Every four years, the nations of the British Isles – England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland – get together a best-of-the-best team and tour a Southern Hemisphere country. This year, the British and Irish Lions tour Australia, beginning in June. I am not an expert, but judging from reaction, this is just about the highest honor for a British player. (For some reason, the Lions usually get killed by the international teams they face on these tours. In 2009, for example, they lost two of three games against South Africa.) I’m intrigued.

Weekend Links: Happy about NHL realignment

NOTE: As always, this appeared first at RandBall, your home for adding up the stats on the back of baseball cards.

Chip Scoggins wrote an NHL column in the paper this week, the upshot of which was, “Hey, the season is so short that the regular season actually matters this year, isn’t that great?” Left only partly mentioned, though, is that next year – assuming Gary Bettman and Jeremy Jacobs can control themselves – the regular season will go back to 82 dull, drab, ho-hum games.

This week, though, the NHL also approved a fairly dramatic realignment, one that puts Minnesota in a division with traditional rivals Chicago and St. Louis, geographic grudge match Winnipeg, and Norm-Green-sucks-Drew-Pearson-too Dallas. And best of all, the first two rounds of the playoffs will at long last again be a (mostly) intra-divisional affair.

This is wonderful because more than anything, the two things that create rivalries in sports are a) geographic proximity and b) playoff history. Part a is why college hockey is more exciting to watch than the NHL, a lot of the time; part b is why Todd Bertuzzi is, after all these years, still universally hated in Minnesota, and why the words “Dan Cloutier” still bring a smile to Minnesota hockey fans’ faces.

So yes, next year’s NHL regular season might be a little bit boring. And the next one after that could be, too. But I’m hoping that the Wild get a playoff series or two with the Jets during that time, or the Blackhawks, or the Avalanche, and pretty soon, more and more of those regular-season games will start to feel like Gopher-Badger showdowns or Gopher-North Dakota wars, and we’ll see columns in the paper about how the NHL, despite the 82-game schedule, still has pro sports’ best regular season. And hopefully, other sports will take a lesson from hockey, because I couldn’t be more excited about this setup.

*On with the links:

*Here’s a semi-heartbreaking story about former North Carolina coach Dean Smith, who has a disease that’s robbing him of the memories of everything he accomplished, and is making him unable to remember his old players – something that’s just as hard for the players themselves.

*Charlie Pierce writes about Providence College and the birth of the Big East, and the death of the Boston Phoenix, and really both of these articles are equally good and I can’t decide which one you should read first.

*And now, a reminder that umpire Angel Hernandez is just the worst.

*I’m not sure what my favorite part of this video of a double-fake shot in a squash tournament is: the shot itself, the British commentator failing to find the correct words to express enjoyment of the shot, or the fact that there is apparently a channel, somewhere in the world, called “Squash TV.”

*And finally: Watch a Greek player hit the post four times with a single attempt at goal.

SoccerCentric: A week’s worth of stories

NOTE: All of these posts appeared first at SoccerCentric.

Wednesday: An interview with forward Max Griffin, United’s only source of goals so far in the preseason.

In Pablo Campos and Etienne Barbara, Minnesota United signed the two biggest names at forward that it could find. Campos scored 20 goals last year. Campos and Barbara combined for 32 goals as teammates the previous year. But when reviewing the scoresheets for United’s first two preseason games, you’ll find another offseason signing alone in the goal column – striker Max Griffin.

Griffin, 25, was the club’s last free-agent signing off the off-season, with his signature only official partway into the first week of practice – but it wasn’t for lack of trying on the club’s part. The team has had its eye on Griffin for years, dating back to 2010, when United team executive Djorn Buchholz had a similar role with the expansion Austin Aztex. Griffin was the league Rookie of the Year that season, scoring ten goals for Austin – but as it turns out, he wasn’t even the first Griffin that the Aztex had in mind.

Says Buchholz, “In 2010, we had signed Leonard Griffin as a left back, and he said, ‘Hey, I think you guys should take a look at my little brother.’ So we brought him into preseason, and he was the last guy to make the roster – he earned his spot. And he ended up being Rookie of the Year in the entire league.”

Since then, the team has had to wait for Griffin to be out of contract. The forward followed Austin when the team moved to Orlando, and did loan spells with both San Jose in MLS and with the Los Angeles Blues in USL Pro. After trial spells in the offseason this year with several clubs, Griffin heard from his agent that United was interested, and so jumped at his chance.

“I feel like they’re one of the best teams in the NASL,” says Griffin, “and so as a player it gives me more room to grow – and that’s what I came here to do, get better as a soccer player.”

Griffin made it to camp just in time to be a part of a few practices before the team took off for a training trip to Kansas City. Two games later, he’d scored both of the team’s goals, one in each game, and head coach Manny Lagos was raving about his professionalism in showing up so ready to go. “He got thrown to the wolves, and he’s done great,” says Lagos.

Despite his size – 6’1″, plenty big for a forward – the scouting report on Griffin is that he’s a guy who likes to run at people, and control the ball. “He always seems to be in the right place at the right time, and that’s how he scored a lot of his goals in Austin,” says Buchholz.

For his part, Griffin credits his work off the ball for being in the right spot at the right time. “I feel like my workrate is one of my biggest assets,” he says. “It makes everything so much harder for defenders if you’re just running all game. That’s the reason why during the offseason I try to get my fitness level up as much as I can, so I don’t get as tired running around.”

This might explain why Griffin slotted so easily into the United lineup this early in the preseason. As for the elephant in the room – the Campos-Babara partnership that’s likely to start the season up front – Griffin’s just trying to put his head down and keep working. “I’m just trying to focus on myself and to work as hard as I can to get some playing time this year,” he says.

Says Lagos, “We think this is a great stop for Max to grow and become a better player.”

Says Buchholz, “He’s a really great guy, and whether he’s out there or not, he’s going to push everyone that’s in front of him.”

Says Griffin, “Hopefully I can just get some goals for the team.”

Says us: two games into the preseason, he’s the only one who has.

Thursday: A look at United’s Friday opponent, Bridges FC, who are a unique club.

March in Minnesota does not lend itself to soccer matches. Minnesota United’s only home match of the preseaon is Friday, when they play a 10am match over at Augsburg against Bridges FC – a team from Chicago that may well be unique in American soccer.

You won’t find Bridges FC in any league directory, and if you’re like me, you’d never heard of the club before, but some of the best players in America have played for the team. Midfielder Michael Bradley, perhaps the key cog for the US Men’s National Team, is an alumnus. Jay Demerit and Jonathan Spector, both national team defenders, have played for the club, as well. Former Stars midfielders Neil Hlavaty and Gei Moura got a leg up from Bridges FC, as did current United midfielder Kentaro Takada.

“We’re called ‘Bridges FC,’ but another way you could term it is ‘Bridge to the Pros,'” says club assistant coach / general manager Jeff Roy. The team’s mission is to take players that haven’t made it – whether pro, amateur, or college – and try to prepare them for careers in pro soccer. This involves training the players as hard as possible – once or twice a day, five or six days a week – and taking a select group of trainees and playing them against the best competition that can be found, both in the United States and Europe.

200 players may come through the Chicago area to train with the team during the winter, including up to 70 at a time, but by the spring that group will be winnowed down to 22 players. That group plays exibitions against American teams at United’s level and below, before embarking on a summer European tour, one that includes games against clubs in Sweden, Denmark, Holland, and Germany. The tour is both a development tour and a showcase tour – giving players a chance to get better by playing against good competition, but also giving them a chance to be seen by scouts or clubs in Europe, and possibly hook on to a club over there.

The soccer is one thing, but according to Roy, it’s the mental side of the game that Bridges is really focusing on. “Our coach, Bret Hall, played professionally for 15 years, so he has a keen understanding of what it takes to be a professional as a career instead of just being on a team for a year or two – and a lot of that has to do with mental toughness,” says Roy. “I’d say that’s a big piece of it, and why so many of our players have had success. Being able to have that winning mentality is what makes two players separate, two players that have equal talent.”

That holistic approach extends off the field as well. “We’re trying to teach people what it means to be part of a team, what it means to solve problems instead of creating them,” says Roy. Bridges takes in players who are coming from all points of life – some from around the world, some from the Chicago area, many with very different backgrounds, and the club tries to give them life lessons, as well. And while Roy is sure to mention that Bridges is in no way a missionary team, and the spiritual side is not mandatory or a requirement, the team also offers bible studies and church on the weekends. “All of us on staff are Christians,” says Roy, “so we take that in to what we do. The bible studies and church are completely optional stuff, but it’s a a chance to discuss things of a deeper nature with other guys, of what they’re going through.”

As for Friday’s game, it’s preseason for Bridges, too, as they’re trying to find their squad for their marquee summer European tour. “It’s a good chance to take a look at a few guys this week,” says Hall – very much the same thing we hear from Manny Lagos, this time of year.

Preseason friendlies are always a little tough to follow, but we’ll keep an eye on anyone from the Bridges squad who looks promising. There’s a chance we’ll be hearing a lot more about them in the coming years.

Friday: A review of United’s Friday performance against Bridges – a performance that showed they still have a long way to go.

Minnesota United took to the turf at the Augsburg Dome on Friday, playing Chicago’s Bridges FC (about which more here) in a pair of 70-minute practice matches. The team’s second string won its match 3-0, but the first team – which drew 0-0 and only created a few chances – showed that United still isn’t quite ready for the season to begin.

This was the first chance for United’s vaunted free-agent forward attack to play together in the preseason, but both Pablo Campos and Etienne Barbara looked far too static. Campos did get the ball in the net in the first half, though he was offside, and Barbara forced a save from the keeper in the first half, but otherwise neither really threatened the defense at all. Barbara in particular looked as if his fitness is way off the mark – he appeared to be nowhere near ready to play 90 minutes at NASL speeds.

Head coach Manny Lagos used the term “sluggish” to describe the first team’s play, especially in the opening 35 minutes. “It maybe wasn’t as sharp as I would have expected at this point of the preseason, in terms of finishing and taking advantage,” said Lagos. “I thought as a group, it was just okay. I don’t think there was anyone who’d walk off the field in the first scrimmage and say, ‘I had a really really good day.’ I wouldn’t say anyone stood out, but I don’t think there were a lot of negatives either.”

Connor Tobin and Ernest Tchoupe started in central defense, and made their share of errors. At the moment, central defense might be the team’s weakest area, as the back line struggles to rebuild without mainstay Kyle Altman – which is to be expected, given that the guys at that position simply haven’t had that much time together. That said, goalkeeper Daryl Sattler, making his first appearance for United, might have been the team’s best player in the scrimmage, standing tall to stop a couple of shots from Bridges FC.

As for the team’s fitness, Lagos said he was happy overall, but did say that there were a couple of individuals who had work to do. “This sport’s a crazy sport,” he said. “You just have one guy who isn’t quite as fit he needs to be, and you can’t quite move as much as you want.”

The second unit provoked far more enthusiasm from the head coach. Luis Heitor-Piffer, Anthony “Sausage” Salciccia, and Travis Wall scored for the second unit in a 3-0 win. “I thought the entire group really came on and played some fun soccer,” said Lagos. “You could see they were working hard for each other. It was fun to see.”

Kevin Venegas at right back was particularly impressive, and I also was impressed with triallist Brent Kallman, who played 70 minutes at center back. Michael Reed in midfield, and Wall, up front, played quite well, too.

Ultimately, a day like this might be necessary as part of the preseason. It’ll serve as a signpost for United – showing them just how far they have left to go.

NOTES

  • Goalkeeper Mitch Hildebrant broke the fifth metatarsal in his foot last week, and had surgery yesterday. He’ll miss 6-8 weeks.
  • Keeper Matt Van Oekel was also limping around in a walking boot, dealing with what Lagos termed “ankle tendinitis.” With goalkeepers dropping fast, Sattler played the entire first scrimmage, plus the first 25 minutes of the second scrimmage; triallist Peter McKeown, a local product, played the rest of the way.
  • Midfielder Bryan Arguez won’t be available until Monday, as he’s dealing with a knee issue.
  • Simone Bracalello was in uniform but was also limping a bit, and didn’t play; he has an injured quadriceps.
  • Sounds like the Portland Timbers could make a decision on Altman as soon as this weekend. Should they choose to release him, the question would become whether he’d want to make a return to Minnesota, or take his chance to head to medical school.
  • The team announced yesterday that Admiral will make the jerseys for 2013. The club was slightly worried that its jersey designs would prove un-manufacturable, but the designs shown in the linked article will apparently be the real deal by the time the Fall season kicks off.
  • Brian Kallman took the captain’s armband for the first team, which was not a surprise. Kevin Friedland captained the second unit for a half, then handed the armband over to Reed for the second half.

Six Nations Round 4: All shaping up nicely

A wrap-up of round 4 of the 2013 Six Nations (just one more round to go!):

Wales 28, Scotland 18: In round 3, Scotland beat Ireland with a very simple strategy: trying to actually hold onto the ball as little as possible. Scotland is not very good at gaining ground by carrying the ball, so they just punt it back to the other team as often as possible. Surprisingly, this leads to a fair number of penalty attempts for the Scots. Despite not coming anywhere near scoring a try since round 2, Scotland got one win and darn near had another in this round.

This match set a record for the number of penalties (field goals, for we Americans) attempted, with 18 between the teams. Wales made seven. Scotland made six. This was as boring as it sounded.

England 18, Italy 11: This match was played in England. It was kind of cold. England played badly, only scraping by a bad Italian team. The fans were silent throughout, except to boo at the end, and every time the camera cut to the crowd, it showed either A) Italians dressed up in ironic, stereotypically Italian costumes (think Chef Boyardee, or a politician paying to visit a prostitute), or B) English people looking in every way entirely miserable.

Nevertheless, those two results did set up an England-Wales championship match next week, though Wales would need to win by 15 to clinch the title.

Ireland 13, France 13 – France finally didn’t lose. Ireland still have played exactly one good half in the entire competition. Both appear to want this tournament over as fast as possible.

 

 

SoccerCentric: United loses 2-1 to UMKC, plus some other Loon links

NOTE: This appeared first at at SoccerCentric.

You know the preseason is officially underway once the team heads out on the road for a few exhibition matches, and United FC is on the first trip of its spring training, a five-day jaunt to Kansas City. The trip kicked off Wednesday, as Minnesota lost to Major League Soccer side Sporting Kansas City, 2-1, in a practice, no-fans match.

The Loons – still getting used to typing that – played a first eleven for 60 minutes, then substituted an entire second eleven for the final half-hour, and it was the second 11 that got the goal. New signing Max Griffin combined with fellow new signing Etienne Barbara for a 75th minute strike, but Griffin’s goal came after United had already fallen behind 2-0 to goals from Soony Saad and Yaan Songo’o.

Goals from guys with clearly fake names aside, a couple of notes on the game yesterday:

  • I talked to head coach Manny Lagos, and he cautioned that there’s not too much to be read into the lineups from yesterday. His three main goals? “Get out there and compete, on a full field – since we don’t have access to one in Minnesota – and just get to know each other a little bit.”
  • With Cristiano Dias still playing indoor soccer, Ernest Tchoupe started in central defense, alongside Connor Tobin. Tchoupe, Dias, and Tobin are likely to be the three guys in the mix for the center back slots.
  • Similarly, Kevin Venegas – previously mostly a midfielder – is set to provide some cover for outside backs Justin Davis and Brian Kallman. Venegas came on with the second group in defense.
  • Nate Polak started on the wing, where he’s not a natural fit – he’s much more a target-forward type. Lagos says he’s definitely more of a center forward, but he’s got the workrate to get in on the wing and “put in a shift” out there.
  • Lagos singled out Luis Heitor-Piffer as the most impressive of the triallists. “We had him play left back, and he showed great versatility there, playing against some real quality players in the lineup for Sporting,” said Lagos. The coach also mentioned Griffin, the goalscorer, as a guy who’s been very impressive so far in the preseason.

United is next in action Friday, when they will play an exhibition against the University of Missouri – Kansas City. They’ll return home early Saturday.

The Loons will also make a trip to Omaha in the third week of March, where they will play exhibitions against Creighton and Hastings College, and a final trip at the end of the month for another practice match against MLS’s Chicago Fire.

A few other notes:

  • Goalkeeper Daryl Sattler didn’t play Wednesday due to a hamstring issue, and it’s likely he won’t be training or playing on this Kansas City trip.
  • Brian Kallman’s brother Brent, who played four years at Creighton, has joined up with the team as a triallist. He’ll play Friday night against UMKC, according to Lagos.
  • The team is headed off tonight to watch Dias and midfielder Lucas Rodriguez play for the Missouri Comets in the Major Indoor Soccer League playoffs. Dias and Rodriguez were at the match Wednesday, and now the rest of the team will return the favor tonight. I’m sure there will be no heckling whatsoever.
  • Former Minnesota center back Kyle Altman is still training with the Portland Timbers in MLS, and there might be an opening. Mikael Silvestre, who played for years with Manchester United, made his Portland debut at center back last weekend – and had an absolutely terrible game, with his mistakes leading to a pair of goals against. Timbers blog Stumptown Footy referred to Silvestre as “not ready for MLS”, and Altman – who was in the NASL Best XI last year – might have him beat there.
  • Local marketing company Zeus Jones put up a blog post about the process they went through to create the new United logo and look.

Weekend Links: It’s too early to get worried about Hicks’ contract

NOTE: This appeared first at RandBall, your home for playing two.

Aaron Hicks hit three home runs on Thursday, but even before that performance, I got the sense that the discussion about Hicks had shifted. No longer was it about whether he could make the Opening Day roster, or whether he could be successful in the majors; people were already talking about whether the Twins should make an effort to delay his ascension to the major leagues, thus keeping his contract cheap for an additional season down the road.

I’m excited about Hicks too, but this discussion seems completely ludicrous to me. Hicks has never had a single at-bat in Triple-A, never mind the big leagues, and already people’s excitement is so fevered that there is a genuine worry that the front office will have difficulty extracting the maximum value for his greatness. The same goes for Kyle Gibson, who has never pitched in the majors and has yet to lock up a roster spot, but has some people worried about putting him on an innings limit for this year. This discussion could even be applied to the Timberwolves – early this year, there were articles about the Wolves potentially having to “blow up the team” in a couple of years when Kevin Love and Ricky Rubio’s contracts expire, a conversation that ignores the fact that if the team wins 30 games this season, it’ll be the first time since 2007 they’ve pulled off the feat.

I can understand people’s excitement, but for goodness’ sake, let it just be excitement for the moment. Let Hicks wow us before we start worrying about his arbitration clock. Let Gibson strike out a batter before worrying about an innings limit. Let the Wolves get somewhere in the neighborhood of the playoffs before we start getting concerned about the 2015 free-agent market. We have enough things to be depressed about around here, sports-wise. Why are we getting pre-depressed about the only exciting things we have going?

*On with the links:

*Alex Kienholz at Twinkie Town reminds us that even if Scott Diamond weren’t coming off surgery, we should still lower our expectations for the lefty in this upcoming season.

*Kevin Love talks to Zach Lowe at Grandland, and covers his expectations for the rest of the year – plus the truth about Nikola Pekovic’s sense of fun.

*Also at Grantland, Sean McIndoe covers some of the great debacles in NHL history. Given that Gary Bettman is only mentioned in passing, I think it’s fair to say that this list could have been expanded.

*Sports Media Watch has come not to praise SportsCenter, but to bury it, declaring “The End of SportsCenter.”

*And finally: this article is a thousand words long, but should have been three words long. Here they are: Sure, why not?

Six Nations Round 3: Three matches, three questions

One question, from each of the matches in Round 3 of the Six Nations:

England 23, France 13: Why is France so French?

Wales 26, Italy 9: How did France ever lose to Italy?

Scotland 12, Ireland 8: How is it possible to win a rugby match without ever carrying the ball forward for more than one second at a time?

These games were two weeks ago, so the real question is, why am I so slow?

Anyway, if Wales can beat Scotland tomorrow by a pile, that’ll set up a true championship match between Wales and England in Cardiff, next Saturday. And that should be a lot of fun. Assuming England doesn’t conspire to lose to Italy, and even though Owen Farrell is out hurt, I don’t see how that can happen.

Also, I think you should know that my fantasy rugby team is 4th out of 87 in my league, which proves that just like fantasy football, knowledge is not a pre-requisite for fantasy rugby.