Freddy Adu Not Going To Chivas


The Philadelphia Union have reached an agreement with the playmaker. I’m not sure how well that will go. Carlos Ruiz is no longer with the team and he was the kind of predatory striker who might have fed well on having a possession oriented #10 behind him. And Adu will be reunited with coach Piotr Nowak.

He was the young man’s coach with DC United, as well, but their relationship was famously contentious and you never felt like Nowak thought much of Adu. If that hasn’t changed, something’s going to break up in the city of brotherly love.

Freddy Adu Coming Back To America?


One of the rumors flying around is that Chivas USA will grab Freddy Adu before the European transfer window closes in August.

He’s currently ‘playing’ on for the Portuguese powerhouse Benfica. I say ‘playing’ because he’s hardly played for them at all. He’s ridden the pine and been loaned out, but he’s hardly played for them at all over the last few years. The only reason any is really talking about him again is because he went on loan to a second division team in the Turkish league, put in the work and made a real difference for them. Then, he got called up to play for the national team in the Gold Cup and when he was finally given his favored trequartista role, excelled in holding onto possession and played some excellent passes to open opposing defenses.

But he still looks unlikely to get any playing time for Benfica.

If he came back to Major Leage Soccer, Chivas would be my first choice for him. My hometown team right now is DC United, but his time here was only moderately successful and think maybe we should say that the moment for him here has come and gone.

I also lived in Los Angeles and Chivas USA was my team during that time (I’m not just a leaf on the wind – my true team were the Tampa Mutiny, but they are gone forever, I fear; everyone else is just a substitute for my true love). They could use some sparkle and pizzazz. If Adu were really given a chance to shine and given a central playmaking role with little defensive responsibilities (either in a 4-2-3-1 or at the top of a midfield diamond), then he could really make that team – known more for hard work and grit, than flair – shine.

That said, I’d like to see him stay in Europe. Portugal would, in theory, be perfect for him: a league heavy on offense with frankly weak and not very physical defenses. But that train has left the station. A mid-table team in the Netherlands looking for a possession oriented quarterback or even a team in France’s second division would suit him to a tee, but the transfer window is almost over and getting on the field for Chivas USA is better than sitting on a bench for Benfica.

Boskovic Out for the Season


Branco Boskovic, after finally starting to round into form, is out – almost certainly for the season – with a left ACL tear. That’s a minimum of six months out.

Though he was starting to earn his keep, I wouldn’t be surprised if the Montenegrin was on his way back to the Balkans next season. He just wasn’t producing enough to justify his salary.

But this still leaves the question of where the creativity will come from.

Fortunately, Coach Olsen is no longer pushing Dax McCarty forward into the playmaker role, which is a plus. And left midfielder Chris Pontius is really starting to show his stuff. His off the ball movement (what one does without the ball is as important as what one does with it; it’s when you don’t have the ball that you slip into dangerous positions to receive the ball and force opposing players to take their eye off the ball to keep an eye on you) is looking very good. On the opposite wing, teenager Andy Najar has reclaimed his spot on the right side of midfield from Quaranta (who is playing more centrally now).

There’s nothing wrong with a traditional 4-4-2, where most of the chance creation comes from the work of the players on the wings – as long as you have the players to pull it off. For now, it looks like DC United might.

Of course, their record is still mediocre, at best (3 wins, 4 draws, 3 losses), but if they’re finally finding their best offense shape and players, that’s a start.

Now if we could only fix the defense…

Marco Rubio


Couldn’t help but notice that the twitter account @DraftMarcoRubio has a solid 6,633 followers.

At the same time, a bunch of Republican donors from Iowa went all the way out to New Jersey to beg Governor Chris Christie to run for president.

Folks are just not that into the Republicans running for president. More importantly, they are visibly undermining the current field by courting (currently) uninterested politicians like Rubio and Christie.

Despite actions like these, the nominee is still likely to come from the current field (which includes folks who haven’t actually filed, like Huntsman and even Daniels), which means that it will be widely known that whoever wins that poisoned fruit was not anyone’s first choice or favorite.

To use a soccer metaphor, winning the ’12 Republican presidential nomination will be like winning the World Cup in a year when Italy, Brazil, Argentina, France, and Germany all decided to skip out and wait four more years to participate.

Yeah, sure you’re the GOP nominee, but no one actually thinks you deserve to be standing up on that stage at the convention.

Branko Boskovic Gets His Shot


Though he recently hobbled off the field with an injury, as I had hoped, has been getting more and more minutes and he has managed to strut his stuff. Most obviously, he’s provided a much better option than Dax McCarty on set pieces. But he’s also given the team those flashes of unpredictably and creativity.

The players most able to change a game, in terms of the offense, have a tendency to disappear in games. Zinedine Zidane, who could sometimes be omnipresent in a game, but who could also be utterly useless for 89 minutes and then, in a single flash of inspiration, make the most utterly transcendent pass that split the opposition’s defenders in absolute futility, leaving a teammate freely able to bury the ball in the back of the net. Similarly, the great Brasileno striker Ronaldo could be lazy and ineffectual for almost an entire game, leaving his team with effectively only ten players, instead of eleven; then suddenly he would peel off the shoulder of his marker, flip the ball over another defender and chip the ball over the goalkeeper with shameless cheek to win the game.

Boskovic is neither a Zidane nor a Ronaldo. But the best teams need that player who cannot be counted out because he will try the most surprising and unexpected plays without warning to break down a formerly stubbornly impenetrable offense.

Myself, I will always remember my  hometown Tampa Mutiny and the great Carlos “El Pibe” Valderrama, the best player to have ever graced Major League Soccer. Valderrama was a difficult player, in many ways. You had to build the team’s style entirely around him or else watch everything fall apart. And sometimes, he just wouldn’t show up, figuratively speaking. But then other times, he would work magic.

I don’t even say that Boskovic is Valderrama (in truth, he was unique – the only player that compares to him in style is the Argentina’s Juan Roman Riquelme). But I will enjoy watching United so much more if they have that ability to startle, which right now only the striker Charlie Davies’ brings – and he needs a good midfield creator to serve up those chances to him (did I mention that Zidane and Ronaldo played together in Madrid?).

DC United


In addition to my love of poetry, bookstores, and politics, I am also a soccer fan. A couple of things happened this weekend. Firstly, the Tampa Bay Rowdies were reborn after more than twenty years in abeyance. They also chalked up a win against Montreal. When I was in junior high, my soccer team’s assistant coach played for the old Rowdies (this was back in the late eighties) and my mother generously took me across the causeway to Tampa for some games.

The other thing that occurred is not so much a single occurrence as an ongoing concern. And that is the failure of DC United to score in open play. In their home opener, they defeated the Columbus Crew 3-1, scoring two goals from open play and one from a penalty kick. Since then, they have depended on the ability of some of their attackers to make solo runs and draw fouls in the box to score from penalties. Needless to say, this is not a long term strategy for success.

The consensus seems to be that DC is lacking that killer, final ball – the creative player who can play that that defense splitting pass that the team’s speedy (at least over short distances) strikers can take advantage of.

Over the offseason, former DC United playing legend and current head coach, Ben Olsen acquired central midfielder Dax McCarty from FC Dallas. It was a good pick up and, except for salary cap space, it came at no cost to DC. Olsen made it known that he was giving McCarty to keys to the midfield and handed him the #10 jersey (the number ten is typically worn by a central attacking midfielder, a team’s creative fulcrum; the classic #10 is called a treqaurtista in Italian because he tends to roam the space between the opponent’s midfield and defense, looking to create opportunities for his strikers).

McCarty is a very good midfielder who has been forcing himself onto the U.S. National Team on the basis of his club performances. But he is not a classic #10. He’s a midfielder organizer or general. Adept at winning the ball from the opposition, keeping possession for his team, and starting attacks, but not the man whose primary job is to play to final pass that directly leads to a goal. Rather a Kaka or Zinedine Zidane, he is closer to a Claudio Reyna or Michael Ballack. Capable of creating the assist, or surging forward and scoring goals, but whose main job is in a deeper midfield role. This is what he did in Dallas, where the #10 role was played David Ferreira and McCarty’s job was to support him and play off him.

What I have seen happen is that McCarty tends to push up and attempt these deft flicks and tricks that don’t come off that well. He has also been given set piece duty and I haven’t been convinced by his delivery. When he has dropped deeper and played the role of the organizer (which I am distinguishing from an offensive playmaker), he has been the player we had hoped for when DC United acquired his services.

But…

There’s always a “but.” DC’s version of the 4-4-2 formation depends on the outside midfielders (usually Chris Pontius on the left and Santino Quaranta/Andy Najar on the right) generating the offense and linking the midfield and attack and delivering that final ball I’ve been talking about. They’ve done a good job, but haven’t provided the solution we the fans have been looking for.

What boggles the mind is that frequently left on the bench is DC’s highest paid player, the thirty year old Montenegrin international, Branko Boskovic. Able (in theory) to play in a free role on the left (meaning that he will tend to roam inside and switch wings frequently, as opposed to playing the traditional outside midfielder’s role of taking the ball to the touchline and crossing it into the box for the strikers) or to play just behind two strikers at the top of a midfield diamond or in a free role behind a lone striker with four midfielders behind him. In these scenarios, Dax McCarty can play like he did in Dallas, passing the ball to Boskovic (playing in a more advance role than McCarty) and making timed runs from a deep position into the opponent’s box to either receive the ball back from Boskovic or to pull defenders out of position to create space for others (which is basically how his highly successful partnership with Ferreira worked).

If Boskovic is not capable of taking on this critical role, it begs the question: what are we paying him for? And if he can’t, Olsen needs to start scouting players to pick up when the transfer window opens in the summer.

New York might be willing to part with Mehdi Ballouchy (though he failed to impress for them playing at the top of a midfield diamond) or – and this is a bit of fantasy fulfillment – AC Milan looks not to be signing the thirty-five Clarence Seedorf to a new contract when his current one expires at the beginning of June. He has long wanted to be given that role behind two strikers and still has the skills to pull it off at the MLS level, if he is willing to close out his career in our nation’s capital.

In the meantime, if Olsen is unwilling to hand the keys to the team’s offense to Boskovic or if he proves incapable of pulling it off, then one of our outside midfielders need to step it up and take responsibility for the attack (probably Pontius; Najar is supremely talented, else he would not have supplanted the veteran Quaranta, but too young; Pontius is comfortable cutting inside and his experience as a striker means that he should also be able to pose a strong enough goal threat to keep defenders honest).

Ok. Back to either poetry or politics soon, I promise.