DCHeather wrote:Perhaps it is a lost in translation thing. To me, pressure and defense are not different discussions. Pressure is one defensive tactic.
As far as whether Klinsmann will succeed in transforming the style of play to the style he has described publicly, I hope so but have my doubts. Not just because of him, and his staff, and the many grievances I think are too harshly outlined by some here, but because I fail to see the talent to play that style of soccer. Not now, and not in the next 4-5 years, at least.
I have mentioned this before, but I see a country's youth teams similar to a college football team's draft class. Elite programs re-load regularly with both quantity and high quality. The US has done neither in recent years.
Since I have watched, the the U17 and U20 teams have underwhelmed. US coaches, after assessing domestically developed talent, pin their hopes on a kid from Norway, or Mexico, or Germany. In my experience, this is not how elite countries build. The world's elite develop domestically.
What do Germany, France, and Spain, the favorites in this year's Euros, have in common? Years of intense domestic development focus. Mexico is better than the US now, and will widen the gap in the next 3-5 years to the point where I think the US will be hard-pressed to keep points at home. They too have focused on domestic development. Brasil in the middle of an intense review of its development practices. I expect them to regain their elite status.
The US is in its infancy of development overhaul, but it is moving too slowly to keep pace with the competition. The focus seems to be on organization, when it needs to be on coaching development and turnover.
The US could hire Bielsa, Mourinho, or any number of US coaches, and I think its current and near-future talent level would have it at about 25th-30th in the world overall. Good enough to make the World Cup. Lucky to do much more.
So no. I do not think Klinsmann will transform this team by 2014. I do not think Bradley would have, either. Or any other coach for that matter. The US is what it is, a workman-like team whose two more special players are on the wrong side of their careers. To its credit, the US's workers are getting better. But the game changers are not there, and I do not see any in the pipeline.
I truly hope I am dead wrong.
Stuff like this always cracks me up. I would like to know on what basis people say things like this. How are they such experts on what the US is doing differently from other countries. Are they journalists, US coaches, foreign coaches that have access to what is going on in programs around the world.
What do Germany, France, and Spain, the favorites in this year's Euros, have in common? Years of intense domestic development focus. Mexico is better than the US now, and will widen the gap in the next 3-5 years to the point where I think the US will be hard-pressed to keep points at home. They too have focused on domestic development. Brasil in the middle of an intense review of its development practices. I expect them to regain their elite status.
How is the US not focusing on domestic development? We started a pro league 16 yrs ago which is actually surviving and growing. The Bradenton academy was started. It was a success in developing players like Landon Donovan, Demarcus Beasley, Michael Bradley, etc. This academy has now been modeled and expanded to include 78 US Development academies across the country. US soccer has control over much of what these academies can and cant do. US Soccer regularly observes these academies, rates them biannually, and pushes them to improve. US Soccer and MLS started Project 40 and Generation Addidas to encourage promising players to enter the pros at a younger age. US Soccer standardized and published guidelines for youth soccer across the country. This and more has all happened in the last 16 yrs and I'd say that qualifies as pretty damn intense. Show me one national soccer federation who has done more. Maybe Japan or China, but certainly not Brazil or Mexico. Does 16 yrs and all of that qualify as us still being in our infancy of our development overhaul?
The US could hire Bielsa, Mourinho, or any number of US coaches, and I think its current and near-future talent level would have it at about 25th-30th in the world overall. Good enough to make the World Cup. Lucky to do much more.
This statement is a manifestation of how Klinsmann has successfully lowered so many's expectations. Look at our last three World Cups - 2002) reached the quarterfinals with the potential of the semis had the officiating been better 2006) Did not advance out of the group but drew with the eventual WC champion. Could have advanced had the officiating been better (Lorrionda is infamous in Uruguay for officiating irregularities, bogus penalty on Gooch) 2010) Won our group and perhaps wouldnt have lost to Ghana if the team was not so exhausted from overcoming bogus officiating and conceding early goals in the group stage. Can you look at these WC results, advanced out of group play 2 out of 3 times, and honestly say we were lucky to get those results? Because at the time, everyone thought we were unlucky to only get those results. I do agree that our talent level currently puts us around 25 - 30th in the world, but we were not lucky to get our last three WC results. We got them through good coaching and inspired play. Somehow, now that Klinsmann is our coach, who the coach is has suddenly become irrelevant, nothing can be done to overcome our lack of talent. Well, the rest of the world and all the best club teams across the globe dont think coaching is irrelevant, they think it is necessary to get the most out of what you've got.
I have mentioned this before, but I see a country's youth teams similar to a college football team's draft class. Elite programs re-load regularly with both quantity and high quality. The US has done neither in recent years.
This makes no sense. "Youth teams" by their very nature "re-load" regularly so we are at least doing that. And everyone seemed to agree the amount and quality of our talent was improving until the U23s failed to qualify for the olympics.
The real problem with our soccer is the 18 - 23 age. The best domestic option for most is still college. MLS has never had an adequate reserve league and frankly the Adu's, Agudelo's, Shea's and Salgado's have not shown the maturity that their college counterparts have developed. And NASL and USL are not in the business of developing youth talent; plus who is going to give up college to play for a second or third tier team that draws 500 fans. We also dont have a mega club like Barcelona, Ajax, or ManU that is going to attract children from around the world so your domestic players are training and competing reguarly with the best. Face it, the big clubs of the world are developing the world class players not the national football federations. These clubs put children in a professional environment often to the detriment of the 98% that never make it in the pros. The day the US starts doing this is the day I will no longer care.
If the US has done anything wrong recently it is moving away from Bradenton. You get the best results by concentrating all your talent. What we need is a Bradenton in every region of the country and academics has to come before soccer.