Tuesday, July 9, 2024

At Least There Was Drama

Though goals and real moments of quality were still in short supply, the Euro Quarterfinals at least delivered some drama.  Three of four matches went to extra time and two went to a penalty shoot out.  

Spain - Germany featured some crunching tackles, including one that knocked Pedri out of the match.  Germany leveled the match in the 89th minute but Spain got the game winner at 119 minutes.  The big flap though was the non-call against Marc Cucurella (see below) in extra time.   Netherlands rallied from an 0-1 deficit to take a 2-1 win after scoring at 70 and 76 minutes.  The game winner was an own goal, giving Ogee 10 for the tournament.  

England - Switzerland did not exactly sizzle but it was a tight contest.  The English have provided about three minutes of quality football so far but there they are in the semis after beating the Swiss on PKs.  One of those quality minutes is Saka's goal from the right side of the box that leveled the match in the 80th minute.  The quality and context make this week's YouTubeableMoment.  After a scoreless (and drab?) extra 30 minutes, England were clinical in the shootout, with five well-taken penalties.

Then we have France, who do not have a goal from the run of play by anyone on their roster (a PK and two own goals).  This time they dueled Portugal to a 0-0 draw over 120 minutes.  Les Bleus were also a perfect 5 of 5 in the shootout and they advanced to the semis.  Portugal were shut out for the third straight match; without factoring in injury time, they went the last 364 minutes of the tournament without scoring.  Probably a good thing that France and England don't face each other in the semis.


Handling Again

Where is he supposed to put his arm?
So German fans are up in arms (pun intended) because Anthony Taylor declined to call Marc Cucurella for handling in extra time of the 1-2 loss to Spain. Surprisingly I couldn't find good video of the play but here are some visuals to help.  Real time I did not think it was a handball.  Neither did Anthony Taylor or his VAR Stuart Atwell.  Neither did Mark Clattenburg who provided his opinion on the Fox telecast.  Further, pre-tournament advice given to the referees specifically referenced this type of play:

In his pre-tournament briefing, Roberto Rosetti, UEFA's head of referees, gave specific examples of handball penalties -- for and against. Rosetti showed a clip of the ball hitting a defender's arm from a shot on goal. The arm was in a vertical position, close to the body.

Rosetti said: "Not every touch of arm, hand is a penalty. We want to consider the movement of the players. Biomechanical movements. You know, this is a clear situation. This is never a penalty."

Yes, his arm is not glued to his side.  But he had been shuffling laterally to get to that spot.  Plus he was moving his arm back, away from the shot.  And, you have the proximity issue.  My last point on this is that Alexi Lalas asked how was that not a handball?  I rest my case.


Not A Coin Flip But Easier Than A Free Throw

Speaking of Lalas, in the interlude between extra time and penalty kicks, he never fails to remind us that this is not a coin flip and penalty kicks are a skill that players prepare for.  He has a point but I wonder what he would say if the NBA played five extra minutes of overtime, then went to free throws to decide the game.  Well, there is the defensive part of it.  True, but the NBA average for free throw shooting last season was 78.4% while the EPL converted PKs at a 89.6% rate.  That was a really high number so I looked at the four year average, which was 81.9%,


Conversation That Could Have Taken Place and Did

Dennis: Why is the Swiss coach leaving Xhaka in for the penalty shootout?

Steve: Because no one would dare take a PK for Granit


Conversation That Could Have Taken Place But Didn't

Michael B: Who's got more support - England or Switzerland?

Steve: Well, you know the neutrals will be for Switzerland


Signs of Life at Subaru Park

Though not much.  There were about 20 minutes in each half where the Union found some ideas on offense and generated decent chances.  These were matched with periods in which the defense played like this was their first match together.  The excuses about injuries and personnel shortages fall flat when the problem is the back line of Wagner, Lowe, Elliott, Glesnes and Harriel, which has been together for several years now.  It's like they're not sure who's supposed to do what so we end up with uncovered runs and dangerous scoring chances.

At least they salvaged a point in the 0-0 with the Red Bulls but with the defensive breakdowns, they could have easily lost this one 2-0.  NY had the better xG at 2.8 - 2.5 but it felt much more lopsided in favor of the visitors; they had some wide open chances that they failed to put on frame and Union keeper Rick came up with some critical saves.  They remain in 14th place, though a playoff spot is only three points away.  Very interested in what happens in the upcoming transfer window.


An Exercise In Shithousery

When BFS Goalkeeping Expert Graham R picked me up for the Union match, he did point out that we could avoid the 90+ degree heat and high humidity at Subaru Park and watch some Copa American action.  Tempting but you gotta support the team.  I was interested enough in Brazil - Uruguay to dvr it for Sunday morning.  Should have known better.  Between the 41 fouls (26 for Uruguary), four yellows and one red, if there was any actual football, I missed it.  What a joke that was.  Uruguay won the penalty shoot out after a 0-0 draw and will take on Colombia in the semis.  Argentina and Canada, who also both advanced on penalties, is the other semi.


Football Widow

BFS Artistic Director Laura O has noted that between the Euros and Copa America, it has been hard to get my attention.  She sends this video along to show exactly how tough it has been.


So we have Spain - France at 3 pm Tuesday and England - Netherlands at 3 pm Wednesday.  After the last experience I have my doubts about Copa America but they have Argentina - Canada at 8 pm Tuesday and Uruguay - Colombia at 8 pm on Wednesday.  

EPL kicks off in a little more than five weeks.


Thursday, July 4, 2024

Eesh

Mediocrity finally cost a few teams their chance to win the Euros, though some (many?) continue on despite pedestrian performances.  Mediocrity would be a big step up for the USMNT and the Union.


Quality Dispensed With An Eye Dropper

The Round of 16 did not, in the main, bring out the best in most of the teams.  Three sides - France, England and Portugal - were less than impressive in advancing.  England putzed around against Slovakia until five minutes into stoppage time and only Bellingham's bicycle kick (this week's YouTubeableMoment) got them to extra time.  Another brief moment of quality early in extra time (Toney to Kane) was enough for England to advance.  Southgate appears reluctant to tinker too much with the line up but how long can they keep playing like this?

Thanks to our AirBnB hostess allowing for a late check-out time and the 1 pm flight out of Eugene for BFS Track and Field Correspondent Jack W, I did get to see Belgium - France.  I say that like it's a good thing but given the quality of the match, maybe not.  Neither side showed very much.  Verthonghen's own goal in the 85th minute is the reason France move on. Hard to feel sorry for Belgium as they showed nothing in this tournament.

Portugal?  They went 0-0 with Slovenia for 120 minutes and advanced on PKs.  Ronaldo could have won it extra time but Obiak saved his PK.

Not Natural Enough; Andersen called for handling
Even Germany's win wasn't all that impressive. Joachim Andersen scored for Denmark in the 50th minute but the goal was ruled out by VAR, correctly, for offside.  Minutes later Andersen got called for handling in the box, again with VAR's assistance, and Havertz dispatched the PK.  Initially I thought the call was harsh but upon further review, think that Michael Oliver got it right.  The key for me is which arm is extended.  If you are running and your right leg is leading, it's natural for your left arm to be outstretched.  On the other hand, if you are merely turning your body, then having the right arm up and extended is making yourself bigger. There's more on the call below.  Germany did add another so probably not fair to denigrate their win too much.

Was Switzerland's 2-0 win over Italy the result of Italian indifference or Swiss brilliance?  Sometimes it's both.


Advancing on Merit?

A few others did win decisively.  Netherlands finally found their game and pasted Romania 3-0.  Spain scored five goals in their 4-1 win over Georgia.  After surrendering an early own goal, they had little trouble dispatching the surprise entrant in the knockout phase.  And Austria-Turkiye was a treat as both sides put up better efforts than several of the other countries that are advancing.  Turkiye came away with a hard fought 2-1 win.


Smart Balls

Just make sure the batteries are charged
Michael Oliver had two decisions to make in the handling case discussed above.  One of them, whether Andersen actually touched the ball, was made easier by the new technology incorporated into Fussballliebe, the Official Match Ball for UEFA EURO 2024.  As detailed here, the technology detects every touch of the ball.  In the picture above, you can see the graph that tells Oliver that Andersen had touched the ball.


Ojee A Lock to Win the Golden Boot

With nine own goals so far, no player is going to match that tally.  He may also lead France in scoring too.  They have a lone goal from Mbappe to go with the Wober own goal from Austria and Vertonghen's misfortune from Belgium.


Another Bite At the Cherry for Another Bite At the Cherry

We have always been confused by the British version of this metaphor.  How do you not finish the cherry in one bite?  Why is there a need for a second bite?  BFS Statistical Advisor Brenna C offers a possible explanation.  What if you missed completely in your first attempt?  Okay, that makes a little more sense.  Except how did you miss the whole thing in the first place?  I guess you might have dropped it or tried to toss it in your mouth and missed.  


Does Berhalter Survive?

With a 1-0 loss to Uruguay, the USMNT uncermoniously bowed out of Copa America.  Actually, even a draw wouldn't have been enough as Jamaica beat Bolivia. I saw very little of the action so I can't comment on how they played.  But clearly, not advancing out of group that included Uruguary, Jamaica (um, you mean Panama but the point is still the same) and Bolivia has to be viewed as a failure.  Is it the quality of players, the mix of players, the tactics?  I don't know.  Unfortunately, for national teams, there are no transfer windows to bolster or revamp the roster; you work with the players you have.  

Did Klopp really say he was all ears about the USMNT position?
Naturally, this means the focus turns to the manager and there are calls for Greg Berhalter to be sacked. Incredibly, as explained here, Jurgen Klopp might actually be a candidate for the job. That seems so farfetched but earlier this year Klopp did say the USMNT position is one that he would consider.

As for the rest of the tournament, quarterfinals are this weekend. Argentina got past Ecuador but only on PKs.  Maybe check out Uruguay - Brazil Saturday at 9 pm on FS1.  Semis are 7/9-10 and the final is Sunday 7/14.  Haven't had the bandwidth to follow Copa America too much given the Euros and the Olympic Trials but maybe have a chance now.


Maybe Apple Has Done Me A Favor

MLS Season Pass has meant that I have not watched the recent Union debacles live and only have to skim through the lowlights.  Wednesday's performance set a new low, as they coughed up a 3-1 lead.  And by "cough up" I don't mean they got a draw.  Nope, they surrendered three goals in 10 minutes, inclouding the game loser at 90+1 minutes, and got nothing from the match.  This is the first time in franchise history they have lost five straight and they now sit 14th in the table.

I haven't seen enough of these matches to have a sense of what's wrong.  Injuries and national team call-ups haven't helped, especially with respect to the bench and in-game changes.  You would think hope that the Union will be active when the MLS Secondary Transfer Window opens on 7/18 and runs to 8/14.  


Tantalizing Matchups - On Paper Anyway

Here's the line up for the Euro quarterfinals:

Spain vs Germany - Friday at noon
Portugal vs France - Friday at 3 pm
England vs Switzerland - Saturday at noon
Netherlands vs Turkiye - Saturday at 3 pm

All are on Fox.  They all look like great contests and maybe we'll see more quality as we get closer to the final.

The Union host the Harrison Pink Cows on Saturday at 7:30.  No tickets and MLS Season Pass mean I won't be able to see this one live.  Maybe this is a good thing?

Saturday, June 29, 2024

On To The Knockout Phase

Multitasking between track & field, the Euros, Copa America, golfing, taking in the Oregon coast and a little bit of work.  Yeah, it's a tough job but someone has to do it.  I did eventually get to see four of the final group stage matches.  


No Premium For Mediocrity

With the expanded format, teams were generally not punished for mediocrity in the Group Stage.  Looking at you Netherlands as the prime example.  They needed a late goal from Wout to edge Poland 2-1, drew 0-0 with France and then surrendered a late goal to lose to Austria 2-3.  But, 3rd in their group with four points was enough to get them to the knockout rounds.  France didn't turn anyone's head with a 1-0 win over Austria, then draws with Netherlands and Poland but they moved on.  

England sleepwalked their way to the knockout rounds with an uninspiring win over Serbia, then draws with Denmark and Slovenia.  Speaking of those two, they both failed to win a group stage match but advanced with three draws.  Belgium looked toothless and likely lead the tournament in goals ruled out by VAR but also made it.

Modric as the Man of Sorrows
Sent along by BFS Art Director Laura O.
Two exceptions to that story line are Croatia and Scotland.  Perennial contenders Croatia put themselves in a hole with an opening 0-3 loss to Spain and made it even deeper when they dropped two points surrendering a late equalizing goal with Albania.  Somewhat incrediby, they were still in position to advance, carrying a 1-0 lead over Italy into stoppage time.  A 90+8 minute goal off a corner gave Italy a 1-1 draw and sent the Croatians packing.  The sad note there is that might have been the major international appearance for Luka Modric.  His goal in the 55th minute, this week's YouTubeableMoment, scored shortly after missing a PK, had given Croatia the lead.

As for Scotland, the opening day loss to Germany was only surprising in its magnitude (5-1).  The 1-1 draw with Switzerland had seemingly set them up for advancement with only Hungary to go.  Alas, they could not muster a goal in that contest and eventually lost 0-1.  Clearly a disappointing effort.

On the positive side, Georgia's 2-0 upset of Portugal was fun to watch, especially since neither Dennis or I are big fans of the Portuguese side.  With the74th ranked team knocking off the 6th rated side, this was the biggest upset in European Championship history.  

Germany and Spain were the only sides that looked close to pre-tournament expectations.  Not that it necessarily means anything for the knockout phase but at least they were businesslike in getting through the group stage.


Can You Get a Red Card In A Debate?

Fortunately, I missed the two ugliest contests of the week - the Presidential debate and Czechia vs Turkiye.  The latter featured 25 fouls, 16 yellow cards and two red cards.  Had those sanctions been available for the debate, we probably would have seen a number of them applied there as well.


Poised For Disappointment

After a solid opener against Bolivia, the USMNT faltered against Panama.  Down a man after Weah got sent off at 18 minutes, they did take the lead but that only lasted for four minutes.  Panama got the game winner in the 88th minute.  Though they sit in 2nd right now, level on points with Panama and a better goal differential, the outlook is not great.  Panama get a weak Bolivian side for their last group stage match while the US must face Uruguay.  Those matches are Monday evening.


You Cannot Lose If You Do Not Play (apologies to Steve Forbert)

Speaking of disappointment, the Union did not do so this week but they also didn't play. They face Montreal on Saturday night on the road. 


Viewing Challenges

As we head to the final two days of the Olympic Trials plus a travel day on Monday, keeping tabs on everything is going to be difficult.  The Euro Championship bracket can be seen here.  Will probably get to see Saturday and Sunday matches either live (they are at 9 and 12 out here) or on DVR.

Busy time to be away.





Sunday, June 23, 2024

Scenarios

Quickly adapted to west coast time here in Eugene.  I think it suits my internal clock.

Some of the early heats at the Olympic Trials are "interesting" in that they often have 7-8 athletes and the first six advance to the next round.  Yes, preliminary races that eliminate one or two athletes.  I raise that because the Euro Champs have a similar feel.  With the expanded format there are 24 teams in the group stage and 16 advance to the knockout rounds.  The first two in each group make it plus four out of the six third place sides.  So, 36 matches to eliminate eight teams.

Those four third place spots make the scenario analysis incredibly byzantine.  ESPN offers a comprehensive summary, including all the tiebreaking procedures, here.  We will not offer a thorough review but rather will simply suggest which of the Matchday 3 contests look the most interesting to us, remembering that the final group stage matches within each group are played concurrently.


Group A - Scotland vs Hungary

Either must win to have a chance to advance and even that might not be enough for Hungary.  Germany are already in.


Group B - Croatia vs Italy

Croatia must win to have a chance to advance.  Spain are already in.


Group C - Denmark vs Serbia

Denmark are in with a win but even have a slight chance with a draw, if Slovenia lose to England.


Group D - Netherlands vs Austria

The caped crusader for France
(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
Either are in for sure with a win and both likely advance with a draw.  That could lead to a boring match but since Poland are out, their match with France doesn't look all that appealing unless you want to see if Mbappe plays with his tricolor mask to protect the broken nose he suffered in the first game.  He did not appear in their second match and you wonder if they would risk him if advancement looks solid.


Group E - Belgium vs Ukraine on TV while watching Romania vs Slovakia on your computer

All four teams have three points with Romania and Belgium tied with a goal differential of +1, Slovakia in 3rd with 0 and Ukraine at -1.  It is possible both could be blowouts by the higher ranked Belgium and Romania but this group has seen much chaos so hard to say.  We will likely go with Belgium-Ukraine, mostly to see if Lukaku has any more goals ruled out.


Group F - Czechia vs Turkiye

Czechia have to win to advance whereas a draw is probably enough for Turkiye.  Portugal are in.


Offside Again

We've missed enough matches but it seems like the most controversial play so far was the Netherlands potential game winner being ruled out for offside.  You can see the play here.  No doubt Dumfries is in an offside position.  Does he prevent keeper Maignan from making a play on the goal?  Maybe.  Did Maignan have a prayer of getting to the ball? No.  But the Offside Law only references preventing an opponent from playing the ball, not whether he could actually get to it.  Since the on-field call was offside, this really shouldn't have taken long to resolve.  What would have been really interesting is what would have happened if the call on the field had been a good goal.


Ogee Leading Goal Scorer (or How Do You Say F*** in Turkish?)

With six already, Ogee is in the lead for the Golden Boot.  The most egregious of the own goals so far can be seen here.  The Turkish defender sends the ball back to where he thought his keeper was positioned only to realize he wasn't there.  Probably didn't affect the result but it was a howler.


I Don't Know Who U Are Anymore

Two more losses for the Union, which I guess gratefully I did not see.  In Wednesday's 4-3 loss at Cincinnati they got the equalizer at 90+1 minutes only to surrender the game loser at 90+10.  On Saturday at home to Charlotte, they fell 0-2.  Lots of shots on goal although at 1.0, xG suggests maybe they weren't all that dangerous.  The results drop the Union to 11th place, which would not be good enough to make the playoffs, even though the format generously allows nine teams to make it.  Yeah, kind of like preliminary heats where six of the seven finishers advance.


Hopefully set up here to see the third matchday group stage contests, either live or by DVR.




Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Through Matchday One

Random observations through Match Day 1 of European Championship Group stage:


Good to see Syzygy Szczesny still playing for Poland

Watch the kids who come out with the players for the national anthems.  They are singing with more gusto than the players

In case you didn't see it, check out Christian Eriksen's goal here.  When you think about where he was three years ago, this is amazing.  I wiped away a tear watching it.

This is not your father's Belgian side.  They fell 0-1 to Slovakia in the biggest upset ever in European Championship history.  Hard luck Lukaku had two goals wiped out, correctly, by VAR.  

England and France were underwhelming enough in their 1-0 wins but they got their three points.



More Hardware for Sportif Allentown

Champions again; Dennis is sixth from right in back row
Dennis's over 30 team won their league again.  Dennis appears twice on the stat sheet, once for a goal and once for a yellow card.  You can see the goal here (it should start at about 1:46).  See the throw-in, then the pass back, then a ball into corner, a bouncing cross and that's Dennis outleaping the keeper for the header goal.  Just like I taught him.



Still Messy Without Lionel

Checked in occasionally on my phone to see how the match was progressing.  Great that they finally scored an even strength goal when at 3 minutes, Glesnes sprung Uhre with a great pass and Mikael made a great run and finish.  The lead made it through the half but not far into the second half.  Miami had a player sent off at 69 minutes so I was thinking we'll at least get a draw.  Not.  They gave up a goal in stoppage time for a 1-2 loss.  Only when I watched the highlights did I realize how bad this was.  Miami had another player sent off in the 88th minute so the game loser came with the Union up two men.  

Oh, and Carranza is leaving for Feyenoord in the summer and Wagner was the lastest player to call out management for lack of investing in the team.  Otherwise, things are going great.



Big match for Scotland today versus Switzerland at 3 pm.  Thursday has Denmark-England at 12 and Spain -Italy at 3.  Tough day to be traveling. Friday, another travel day, has France - Netherlands at 3 pm.  Belgium are pretty close to a must win situation against Romania on Saturday at 3.  Olympic Trials start Friday so not sure how much I'll get to see.




Thursday, June 13, 2024

Euros!

Hope your DVR machines are clear and ready to record the group stage matches that start today with Germany v Scotland.  Then we have 12 straight days of two to four matches per day, running through Wednesday June 26.  Matches look to be either on Fox or FS1.


Are You Kidding Me?

Lloyd Kelly: The Callum Wilson of Defenders?
Newcastle have made their first summer signing - defender Lloyd Kelly from Bournemouth on a free transfer.  People are talking it up but I'm perplexed.  According to whoscored.com, he's never averaged higher than a 6.83 rating for a season.  But way more distressingly, check out his injury record here; he's missed an average of 16.2 matches a year over the last five seasons.  He has missed time due to ankle, hip, calf, and hamstring injuries plus unidentified muscle and ligament problems.  Coming off a season defined by how many key players were absent due to injury, this seems like an incredibly irresponsible signing.  We are big fans of Callum Wilson but would be even bigger fans if he stayed healthy.  Kelly may be cut from the same cloth.


Speaking of Injuries

BFS Track and Field Correspondent Jack W sends along this report of Usain Bolt rupturing his achilles in a charity soccer event.  He cites this as proof that soccer is more "physically damaging" than track.


Taking Their Ball and Going Home

BFS Artistic Director Laura O sends along this clip from Portsmouth in which the ball going into the net generates a huge cheer, just not for the reason you expect.  They were also less than happy with the ball's eventual fate.


Gimmicky Gimmicks

Mostly by accident, we happened to tune in for the final of The Soccer Tournament, an eight-team women's 7 v 7 tournament.  Details are here.  No doubt there was talent all over the place.  And the money was great - the winning team split 1 million dollars evenly across 25 members.  But the format of the final was the gimmickiest thing you could find - very close to last goal wins.  At the end of regulation they went into "target time."  The "target" was the number of goals the team in the lead had at the end of regulation plus one.  To win the match you had to be the first team to reach the target.  For example, if the score was 4-3 at the end of regulation, the winner was the first team to five.  But wait, did we mention that after three minutes, each team had to take a player off the field?  Then another at six minutes, and again at nine minutes and so on.  Mackenzie could only sputter "that's not soccer."  This is why we can't have nice things.  Sure somebody put the money up but then turned it into some goofy spectacle that only had drama because of the money.  


No Messi No Fuss?

The Union have a tough home match, facing Miami at 7:30 on Saturday night at Subaru Park.  No word on whether fans will get refunds when they find out Messi will not be playing as he is away on international duty.  They're also missing a few other key players while the Union may have Julian Carranza back in the line up.  Seems like our best chance to knock these guys off.  


Yeah, not much this week but we were shortstaffed.  Not sure about the schedule for the next two weeks.  Thursday and Friday involve travel.  My best shot may be to check in after the second round of group stage matches to see what the advancement scenarios look like.  That would put me on target for a post a week from Sunday.  








Thursday, June 6, 2024

Get Real

Ho-hum, another Champions League title for Real Madrid.  And what exactly was that mess at Subaru Park?


Real-ly?

Veni, vidi, Vinicius: I came, I saw, I scored
Dortmund pretty much owned the Champions League Final for the first 70 minutes.  The problem was that they failed to put anything into the goal. You kinda knew that Real Madrid would find a way to win it and they did.  Not a bad game, other than the final score, 2-0 favor RM.

This championship has been very much the domain of Real Madrid.  They've won 15 of the 69 competitions (European Cup or Champions League), five of the last nine, and six of the last 11.  The strange part is that how it often looks like they're not going win, either looking like dead meat in the early knockout stages or unimpressive in the final.  This year they relied on two late goals from Newcastle washout Joselu to even make the final.  Oh, and they just added Kilian Mbappe to the roster.


Burnley and Vincent Part Company

After two straight years of double digit in-season sacks, 2023-24 was a quiet one, with only three managerial changes during the season.  Before and after the season?  Well that's a different matter.  One was sacked before the season began.  And there were five more announced after the season ended.  

Here's the table for in-season sacks:


All three sides showed improvement and two of three met their post-sacking goal.  This is much better than the success rates of 50% in 21-22 and 36% in 22-23.  The five gone post-season include Pochettino (Man United?), Klopp (villa in Majorca), Moyes (job at TalkSport), DeZerbi (Chelsea? Man United?) and Kompany (Bayern Munich).  


Laws of the Game Under A Microscope: Part II - Blue Cards


IFAB has approved trials for a "sin bin" concept in which referees could send players off for 10 minutes for cynical fouls or dissent.  The idea is explained here.  This won't be coming to a Premier League near you just yet but it is getting air time at lower levels.  Note this is not replacement for red cards but an additional sanction in the referee's pocket.  

At first I was agin' it but I'm coming around.  Key for me is that it's an addition, not a replacement.  Further, it is focused on my least favorite part of the game - shithousery.  In fact, they could just shorten the whole thing to "he got a blue card for shithousery."  Referees are pretty good about showing yellows for tactical fouls and this ups the ante for committing one.  On the other hand, referees tolerate far too much dissent for my tastes.  If they are not showing yellows now, will they show blue cards, for which the sanction is even greater?

And what of the impact?  To get a sense of what it might to do goal scoring, I looked at every match with a red card this season.   There were 54 occasions when a team was shorthanded due to a red card.  In 29 of those cases, the team with the advantage scored at least once.  However, on three of those, the only goal was the result of the PK associated with the red card, so I don't count that as a goal based on the man advantage.  So we have goals in 26 of 54 shorthanded situations, or 48%.

But, to assess the impact of blue cards though, we must narrow the focus to goals scored within 10 minutes of the sending off.  In 18 of the shorthanded situations, a goal was in fact scored within 10 minutes.  However, seven of those were a PK resulting from the sending off, so we don't count them.  Thus, we have goals within 10 minutes 11 out of 54 times, or 20% of the time.  This is actually higher than I was expecting, and basically the same as the NHL average power play percentage too.  Sure, we're talking about a longer "power play" (10 minutes versus 2) but I would not have guessed it would be that close.

Will teams play differently knowing the man advantage is limited to 10 minutes?  That could apply to both offense and defense.  Many times the shorthanded side will make a substitution to cover the hole left by the sending off.  That might not be a good strategy if the disadvantage is only going to last 10 minutes but it could mean a higher percentage of goals.  Will the offense attack more intensely, again knowing they only have 10 minutes?

I'm trying to think through possible unintended consequences.  Probably missing something.  I'm willing to be persuaded here.



308 Minutes Without An Even Strength Goal

Finally: Union celebrate Uhre's (middle) goal; the 2-1 
lead didn't last though
But who's counting?  Okay, actually I am.  The Union's inability to score without being a man up continues.  The streak includes the final 43 minutes of the NYCFC match, 14 minutes of New England, 90 minutes each for Charlotte and Toronto and another 71 Saturday night versus Montreal (the opening 44 minutes before Lassiter got his red and the final 27 minutes after Elliott got his). 

The Union made things really difficult by allowing Montreal an early goal when three defenders failed to close down attackers.  Since Montreal had clearly come in with their "wasting time" slider pushed all the way to the max, this looked look a real problem.  They then proceeded to give the Union a lifeline when Lassiter was sent off just before the half.  Philadelphia took advantage early in the second half with a PK (Gazdag did not miss) and minutes later a goal from Uhre on a great pass from Sullivan.  Things were looking up, even if it they were goals with the extra man.

But things got strange.  Elliott failed to corral a pass from Semmle and in his attempt to recover the ball, made an ugly challenge on Edwards; two lapses of concentration in not settling the ball and then trying to compensate with a serious foul play.  You can see the play here (I read some complaints about the call; yes he did get the ball first but then plowed into Edwards with a straight leg at speed).  Montreal wasted no time, leveling the match on the ensuing free kick.  Some chances in the closing minutes but the final was 2-2, a result arguably worse than either of the 0-0 draws with Charlotte and Toronto.

For the class 1/2 1/20 full people at least it wasn't a loss and Uhre scored.  Otherwise, this was a car wreck at Subaru Park.  Dropping two points after being up a man to a team below them in the standings at home is no way to make the playoffs.


It's Mackle-henney (mild Wrexham spoiler)

What birthday present can you get for the man who has everything, including a soccer team?  A song to teach people how to say your name!  Ryan Reynolds did just that for his Wrexham co-owner Rob Maclenny Micklehanny Maclanenny McElhenney.  The video is here and aside from being a great tune (written by Justin Paul and Benj Pasek), it's a hoot, littered with cameos by people in Rob's life.  Don't miss the Jason Kelce appearance.   It was actually released last year but just showed up in this year's Welcome to Wrexham.  We get a glimpse of what Rob is going to do for Ryan's birthday but it would be too much of a spoiler to discuss that.


European Championships

So we are off to Eugene for the Olympic Trials in a few weeks.  That can mean only one thing.  It's time for the European Championships!  Okay, in fact it means more than one thing - great track and field action, hanging with Bucknell friends, enjoying the West coast of Oregon, etc.  However, the European Championships is a bonus.

There is plenty of stuff on line to look at.  Rosters are here.  Some predictions here.  Fixtures are here.  Some matches I'm already anticipating include:
Scotland - Hungary
Any Group B but especially Spain - Croatia, Spain-Italy and Croatia - Italy
Denmark - Serbia
Austria - Poland
Ukraine - Romania
Czechia - Turkiye (Czechoslovakia Turkey to those of us born before 1960)

Aside from the teams, I do enjoy seeing various players of interest to me.  This year my FM Forest Green side is represented by Angus Gunn and Scott McKenna for Scotland.  Newcastle have Martin Dubravka (Slovakia), Fabian Schar (Switzerland), Kieran Trippier (England) and Anthony Gordon (England).  The Philadelphia Union have Daniel Gazdag (Hungary).  Dennis gets to see some Aston Villa players, including Youri Tielemans (Belgium), Ezri Konsa (England), Ollie Watkins (England)  and John McGinn (Scotland).

Always a great tournament and will hope to catch as much as I can, even if it means getting up at 6 am in Eugene.

Not sure about a post next week.  If not, don't forget all the Euro stuff plus the Union host Miami on Saturday 6/15.