Sunday, June 27, 2010

That Should Be It For Bob Bradley

I thought I could, after more than 12 hours and a few beers, sit down and talk about the Ghana-US game.  I find that I still can't, because I'm too angry about the decisions that were made.  I'm apparently not alone in that feeling, as my favorite soccer-only blog, That's On Point, has yet to post a summary of the game.


I will say that I've read a review or two of the game, and I can't find a writer  more off target than Yahoo's Dan Wetzel..  Wetzel backed the wrong horse a couple of days ago, by writing a column about how Bob Bradley is the Coach, without doubt, for the USA.  Wetzel called the last couple weeks of miracle recoveries, questionable starters, and odd substitutions, "the redemption of the doubted."  So I guess it isn't a surprise that Wetzel's summary of the USA's exit is that the team just isn't that good, not that Bradley made mistakes. 


That's bullshit--though to be fair, it should be noted that Wetzel doesn't know shit about soccer.  He's like Souhan and basketball


This is a team that, if it wanted to be, would be full of English Premiership, or at worst--French League quality players (where Asamoah Gyan plies his trade)--this wasn't some shitty MLS All-Star team we sent to South Africa.  This is a team made of players that the big leagues will be looking at, and in some cases, drooling over.  Jozy Altidore didn't score a goal, sure--but he hit post after a tough run at a defense; he assisted on a huge goal, and in general, gave defenses fits.  You don't think he's back in England next season based on what he did here?  The number of US players who have improved their stock abroad is impressive, in my mind.  This is a team, that when the right Eleven were on the pitch together, played really, really well. What kills me is how rarely that happened.


I've hammered Ricardo Clark as hard as anyone in the world has, but you know what?  His huge mistake isn't his fault.  He has shown, time and time again, that he isn't World Cup caliber.  More than a year ago, I wrote, "Rico Clark was, as he always is, super spazzy.  I don't know how else to categorize his game.  He runs around like crazy; he makes tackles, both good and bad, and takes shots that beggar description both in terms of their audacity and their stupidity.  He's not to be trusted in the center midfield, especially as a "defensive" or "holding" midfielder."


We all finally thought Bradley stopped seeing what he thought he saw when he benched Clark against Algeria.  But there he was to start the game against Ghana.  And of all the curious moves Bradley made (Findley starting, no Gooch) the Clark start was the one that raised my ire the most. It is not Clark's fault that he isn't as good as Maurice Edu or Benny Feilhaber.  It is Bradley's fault for not seeing what is so obviously true.  Even John Harkes, commenting as delicately as he could said, basically, "Maurice Edu and Benny Feilhaber deserve a start in front of Rico Clark."  He said that before Clark's massive fuck-up, which was a pretty narrow window.  When Benny Feilhaber finally got on the pitch, and helped orchestrate attack after attack, Ian Darke, the British commentator paired up with Harkes said, "Feilhaber is a gifted player--I won't guess as to why he wasn't starting."


There was a reason the US made a couple of great comebacks in this World Cup before finally being sent home, and it isn't because the team isn't that good, as Wetzel claimed--it was because we didn't start our best  Starting Eleven once in this tournament.  We got our Best Eleven in at halftime, and played better every time.  So why not start with that Eleven?


Bob Bradley may be a fine tactician; it is clear his players love him.  But if he can't evaluate talent better than me, and it is clear now that he can't, it is time for him to hit the bricks.  I don't care if Rico Clark brought a bird back to life on the practice pitch; he was obviously not ready for actual games at the World Cup, and might not ever be.  It is Bob Bradley's fault that he was out there; it is Bob Bradley's fault that the US used a sub in the 30th minute.  It is Bob Bradley's fault that Gooch wasn't used at all.  It is Bob Bradley's fault that we didn't have a late sub to use to bring in Stuart Holden, whose pace at the end of a game may have made all the difference. 


The US team didn't lose to a superior opponent; it wasn't Brazil or Argentina who done downed us.  It was a capable, good Ghanaian team that was given the gift of not having to face our best team at the starting whistle.  They took advantage of that gift--as England did; as Slovenia did; as Algeria almost did--our best team barely got to play, and that's on Bradley.  And now we are left to wonder what Ruud Gullit, or Jurgen Klinsmann could have done with a midfield of Donovan, Bradley, Edu and Feilhaber, and a strike team of Dempsey and Altidore.  We'll find out in four years, I guess, as there's no way that the US Soccer Federation does anything but fire Bradley and bring in a proven international coach.  

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Agree with your points but disagree with your conclusion. You underestimate the stupidity and stubbornness of USSoccer. A coach has to do much worse than getting out of the group to get fired. The job will be Bradley's unless he decides to go elsewhere.

Bradley's inability to see his own talent is legendary at this point. Jay DeMerit is only starting in this World Cup because he was forced into the starting lineup during the Confederations Cup last summer by Carlos Bocanegra's injury. DeMerit has played in England for 6 years but only has 27 USMNT caps. (Ricardo Clark, a mediocre MLS player, has 30).

So disappointing. Many are saying that we were beaten by a better team. You & I know better: we beat ourselves. Ouch.

江婷 said...
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Anonymous said...

Not only does Bradley not see his own talent he stifles it. He had a run in with Benny feilhaber in the past. Refused to give Torres enough qualifying time and exhibition time to adjust to the pace and finally is inhibiting the growth of his son. If for that reason alone I hope he walks away on his own as the Federation is closer to the United Federation of Planets than a developer of our National Team.

Big Blue Monkey 2: The Quickening said...

First Anonymous, you may be right about the conclusion. I hopeful we will finally see that in order to properly coach our young strikers and midfielders into greatness, we have to stop relying on the foreign coaching they get when they go abroad, and grab a foreign coach ourselves.

What might Charlie Davies learn from Jurgen Klinsmann?

That said--you are quite right that the US Soccer Federation doesn't move quickly or logically. (It would be nice if it did at least one of those things).

Greg Allbright said...

I saw an interview with Bradley on TV in which he basically says "I have to avoid over thinking my decisions." This was revealing to me b/c as a head coach that's the wrong attribute to have. I'd rather an assistant coach be the tactician and the head coach be the strategic one. Bradley suffers from not being able to see the forest through the trees. The worst sort of trait in a head coach.

To clarify your point though, are you suggesting Gooch should have been played? I saw nothing from him to make me think he was ready before the games and hated that he was played vs. England and Slovenia. So in that sense Bradley got the call right.

My biggest problem with lineups was Findley over Buddle. I thought Buddle came in with a much better feel for how Dempsey, Donovan, and even Bradley(son) worked the middle and would get him balls. Findley never meshed with them like Buddle did. Bradley never noticed that, and I think its why we aren't playing Uruguay in a few days.

Big Blue Monkey 2: The Quickening said...

Gregory--

I hear a lot of people talk about Buddle over Findley, or Gomez over Findley, and I think those are valid suggestions. But here's the thing--where were those guys in qualifying? Why were we relying on Brian Ching (and more horrifyingly, Kenny Cooper) if we were going to bring on strikers at the 11th hour, who hadn't played a minute of World Cup Qualifying?

If those guys deserve a look, we should get a look before our the Friendlies the week before the Cup.

It is a disservice to the players to have them come in last minute, not to mention a slap to the players who get left off that helped you qualify. Make no mistake, I'm not a great fan of Ching, but if he wasn't going to be on the team, I think it is fair to ask that we don't lean on him through 2 years of qualifying matches.

The final roster spots had a feeling of slapdash to them, and that, plus Rico Clark, plus, what can Bob Bradley Teach Jozy Altidore all says, "time to go." His contract ends in December. Here's hoping it is not extended.