Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Questionable calls, occasional errors, and an expatriate doom the U.S. against Italy

My running thoughts on the U.S.-Italy game, not exactly in diary form:

--- First 30 minutes looked dead even, with equal possession and maybe Italy blowing a couple chances they could have had.

--- The red card against Ricardo Clark still baffles me. That was Clark’s only poor challenge, it was unintentional, and Grosso only got a yellow after intentionally elbowing Donovan two minutes later. Hell, Chiellini didn’t get even a scolding on the penalty, and he was the last man! I honestly can’t see a single way this can be justified, and believe me, I’m trying. Horrendous decision.

--- There were plenty of reasons to be optimistic at halftime, but the 1-0 was misleading. The U.S. had been riding their luck before the first goal, notable examples being the early shanked header by Legrottaglie and lucky offsides on the Bornstein own-goal. Italy had the better run of play, and it showed in the second half.

--- Jozy Altidore is the best American chance at developing a world-class striker, but at moments like his early touchback to Donovan in the box, he shows that he’s got a ways to go. More than the missed touch, his choice to give up a goal-scoring chance shows a worrying reluctance to shoot. He’s only 19, but with his increasing national experience, age can’t be an excuse for much longer.

--- Ugh, JP Dellacamera: “Everybody remembers Zambrotta from the World Cup, with the Zidane incident.” Uh, no, that was Materazzi. Maybe I’m the only one who thinks the higher-ups should have their facts straight on one of the single biggest soccer news stories of this decade.

--- Wow, what a strike by Rossi. I have no problem with Rossi playing for Italy, even if I wish he had decided to play for us. If you can come in and score that first wondergoal for Italy in a major tournament, go right on ahead. God knows you have a better chance of winning major tournaments that way, so from a professional standpoint, more power to you.

--- When we’re down a goal in the 72nd minute, why in HELL are we taking off Feilhaber, both one of our best playmakers and defenders, for Beasley, who got totally emasculated against Costa Rica a couple weeks ago? I’d love to hear Bob Bradley’s explanation for that.

--- I give up. How is it not a penalty to jump on Donovan’s back as he’s going up for a header in the box? This decision infuriates me more than anything else, because there is no doubt in my mind that if that’s called correctly, we stop pressing forward and this ends 2-2. If this game doesn’t deserve to be looked at by FIFA, I don’t know what does.

--- I love Charlie Davies because I watched him in high school, but in that situation, Jozy puts that 90th minute header away. Unfortunate.

Despite some of my criticisms, the U.S. played a good game overall. Some terrible decisions went against us to kill off most of our chances, and we gave them a couple opportunities ourselves, but we did very well with 10 men for an hour. The main problem is our habit of making a couple of dumb mistakes per game, such as Onyewu’s indecision on the second goal. If we want to beat the best (and this shows that we can), these types of errors must stop, because the best teams will make you pay. The game against Brazil should show us how far we might progress towards that aim. 

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