todd m. sweet

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Posts tagged with "soccer"

Jul 1

I love the Cup because it stripped away all the things about professional sports that I’ve come to despise. No sideline reporters. No JumboTron. No TV timeouts. No onslaught of replays after every half-decent play. No gimmicky team names like the “Heat” or the “Thunder.” (You know what the announcers call Germany? The Germans. I love this.) No announcers breathlessly overhyping everything or saying crazy things to get noticed. We don’t have to watch 82 mostly half-assed games to get to the playoffs. We don’t have 10 graphics on the screen at all times. We don’t have to sit there for four hours waiting for a winner because pitchers are taking 25 seconds to deliver a baseball. The World Cup just bangs it out: Two cool national anthems, two 45-minute halves, a few minutes of extra time and usually we’re done. Everything flies by. Everything means something. It’s the single best sporting event we have by these four measures: efficiency, significance, historical context and truly meaningful/memorable/exciting moments. You know … as long as you like soccer.

- Bill Simmons: World Cup’s 20 questions - ESPN

Jun 9
Bob Bradley leads U.S. men’s national team into World Cup with discipline, intelligence - ESPN Soccernet
Nice profile of US Team coach Bob Bradley. I’ll admit that I knew next to nothing about him before reading this article.

Bob Bradley leads U.S. men’s national team into World Cup with discipline, intelligence - ESPN Soccernet

Nice profile of US Team coach Bob Bradley. I’ll admit that I knew next to nothing about him before reading this article.

Jun 9
(via Preparing for the World Cup - The Big Picture - Boston.com)

(via Preparing for the World Cup - The Big Picture - Boston.com)

Jun 7

World Cup Roundup

Why I Love Soccer

I never played soccer growing up, but when I was in college I lived in Torino (a/k/a Turin), Italy for six months.  Turin is home to two professional “Series A” soccer clubs: Juventus (Forza Juve!) and Torino.  I went to a number of matches while I was there and fell in love with the sport.  I was luck enough to see AC Milan play Torino during Milan’s record-breaking unbeaten streak.

To say that the crowds and fans were insane would be a massive understatement.  Visiting fans had to group together for safety, and were often separated from the home fans by fences.  Road flares were a common celebratory item, and were often thrown on the field after a goal.

Since then I’ve played a bit of recreational soccer, but for the most part I’m an avid spectator.  I’ll be rooting for the US and Italian national teams during the World Cup.

Prediction:

Argentina, Brazil, Germany or Italy have been in every World Cup final, so the thought of picking an upset winner seems highly unlikely.  However, German captain Michael Ballack is out with an injury, so I might pick England to be in the mix as well.  Diego Maradona, who led Argentina to a World Cup win in 1986, will be coaching the national team.  On his squad is Lionel Messi, who is arguably the best player in the world right now.  With Maradona’s unpredictable behavior I wouldn’t be surprised to see them knocked out before the semi-final.  If that happens perhaps Spain or Portugal can finally make it to the later rounds.

Overall I would have to pick Brazil as the favorite.  As far as the US team, I think they will be able to advance out of group play due to a favorable draw, but I don’t see them advancing beyond the quarters.  I hope I’m wrong, however.

General Coverage:

Schedules:

Local Viewing:

Goodies:

Serious Analysis:

Video:

Embedded below is a video of the ten best World Cup goals from the 2006 tournament, which was won by my beloved Italy. Enjoy!

Jun 2

The World Cup and Economics 2010

An analysis by Goldman Sachs.