Thursday, December 2, 2010
Oh the outrage! Or not...
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
I might not be the worst soccer fan in America anymore
Sunday night after the kids were in bed I fired up the TV for my weekly ritual of ironing shirts and watching sports. In the fall this means NBC’s “Football Night in America” more often than not.
However this past Sunday, despite the fact that my favorite NFL team, the Pittsburgh Steelers, was playing, I went for the MLS and the “real” Western Conference championship game (as opposed to the “Eastern” game featuring two teams from the West).
Well the Los Angeles David Beckham’s lost 3-0 to FC Dallas in an enjoyable match-up and I get some points towards earning my MLS soccer cred back after watching a record low number of games this season.
As far as the final, I don’t have a horse in the race, but I will likely pull for Colorado as it would be nice to see Pablo Mastroeni to win a title. The guy has been a great competitor for the US team for a decade, ill-timed tackles on Italians non-withstanding.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
USA - Poland
Sunday, August 22, 2010
I may be getting too old for this
The DVR is your friend.....unless....
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
EPL Week 1

We are now in the middle of August which brings us to the start of that nine month marathon of soccer viewing ecstasy known as the EPL. A great start that saw me catch three full games and parts of two others, a rarity now that we have two little ones roaming the house.
Thursday, August 5, 2010
On reading....
Reading this one was a weird experience for me. First off Kuper is an excellent writer and the stories he tells are very compelling. I enjoyed his writing here every bit as much as I enjoyed it in Soccernomics.What kept throwing me was that I read this book about 15 years too late. Many of the people, places, and events that Kuper details are very much "of the time". That being the early 90's, the fall of the eastern bloc, the break-up of the Soviet Union, the recent end of apartheid in South Africa, and the infancy of the recent explosion of soccer in America. I can only imagine the stories would have resonated more if I had read them in the early to mid 90's.As it is (as Kuper himself details in new parts of the book), many of the countries have gone through several cycles of change since his original journey through the soccer world.Still, I have to recommend it if you are interested in the intersection of sports, culture, politics, and crime in the modern world.