
I wasn't very good. Middle of the pack speed, rudimentary ball skills, not willing to take a header. But that's the way it went, a Larchmont halfback in 1st grade, then 2nd, and on up. By 3rd or 4th grade I was markedly better, owing simply to playing season after season, and by sixth grade I was starting at forward. In my last game that year, I scored four goals in an 8-0 rout of league rival Ghent. Soccer was my sport, every autumn.
But then, well, our school offered junior-junior varsity football to grades 7 and up, so that's the way I went. I trotted off the soccer pitch at age 12 and never looked back. There was simply more allure with football, more American street cred and more potential for glory. For me, the move -- coupled with my growing to 6'4" by the time I was 16 -- led to a high school career littered with dozens, nay several touchdowns, some paltry Virginian-Pilot coverage, and a hearty sex life of backseat handjobs from one of the prettier cheerleaders. The gilded days, as they say.
Save for a pair of left-footed fluke goals in one of our Lumpless Gravy B-side soccer matches in college, my futbol playing days largely ended with my fellow 6th graders. (Oh, there was also an indoor match in which Mr. Truck and I played a man down and lost 15-1 after an own goal put us up 1-0.) But my interest in the sport was never fully extinguished, not by years of dedication

In 1992, our comrade Cliffy and I, both in our bonus year at W&M, enrolled in Principles of Coaching, a Kinesiology class that reeked of "gut" more than a Mangino waistband. (We were scouring the curriculum for such classes by that point.) As part of the class, we coached the Comets, a 1st grade squad whose saga I won't bother relating but was filled with comedy, drama, and an uplifting final chapter worthy of an ABC Afterschool Special. Plus, we got A's, which I desperately needed. And the sport got its hooks in me once again.
Here we are, 18 years later (yikes), and my two daughters are both seasoned veterans in the community soccer league in the same town where I donned the Larchmont kelly green so many years ago. And now, with the United States poised to make some noise in the most watched tournament in the world (I need the YES network to spruce up that hyperbole), the sport has infected me like that itch I picked up in New Orleans. I'm still that same first-grade spazzy mcgee flailing about out there, but now I'm in a bar watching my countrymen excel.
So here's to this sport soccer, and here's to an American generation that has played and coached it now watching intently and hoping for national success.


I've never been nervous for a soccer match before... but here we are.
ReplyDeleteIgor--really with those photos? You're messing with a streak...could you find even a small Donovan image?
ReplyDeletemy kids really aren't sure why they had to leave the beach in the middle of a perfectly beautiful day
ReplyDeleteoh for fuck's sake. just abysmal defending.
ReplyDeletethe fuck was jay demerit doing?
ReplyDelete'no, mick, i never fucked a dude'.
ReplyDeleteThis keeps getting worse.
ReplyDeletedogshit is too kind a description
ReplyDeleteyea, so ricardo, phone call in the bathroom
ReplyDeletemore sloppy touches by the u.s. in this first half than igor in his prime
ReplyDeletecan we petition for extra substitutes?
ReplyDeleteFuck. This.
ReplyDeletealtidore's a step slow mentally and physically today
ReplyDeleteIts a thousand degrees in this bar. Everyone is drunk, anrgy and chanting USA. When we score, there will def be violence--like the LA riots
ReplyDeleteThe chances are piling up.
ReplyDeletefeilhaber has made a difference every time he's entered a game. more of him please.
ReplyDeletelandycakes!!!
ReplyDeleteI love him.
ReplyDeleteSomeone tell Mick he's British.
ReplyDeleteDempsey's been great. Ghana's defenders can't take the ball from him. Altidore, on the other hand, has displayed a stone mason's touch.
ReplyDeleteWe always leave ourselves vulnerable to the counter-attack. Our Achilles' heel.
ReplyDeleteAnd the subs were great, but I wish we had more than one left. Do we get extra subs if it goes to added time?
no, but we do get a 30-second timeout
ReplyDeleteanytime you boys feel like playing again would be fine
ReplyDeletelovely set piece that
ReplyDeleteClint Dempsey: "You like me, you really like me!"
ReplyDelete...and then, "Screw the fancy play, I'm just going to try to kick it through them.".
the ghanaian forecheck is strong all of a sudden
ReplyDeleteNervous Pervis here at Baileys...
ReplyDelete"We're not Ghana Take It...no, we ain't ghana take it..."
Tim Howard's wife is a little bit of alright.
ReplyDeletegomez for altidore. innnnteresting. paging messrs dempsey and donovan - we'll need you to do our scoring
ReplyDeleteYUCK
ReplyDeleteFuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck
ReplyDeletethis is getting tiresome
ReplyDeleteThat's a brutal way to give up a goal in extra time. Beautiful strike.
ReplyDeleteI've had enough of your rooting for Ghana, Mark.
ReplyDeleteFuck. Ghana.
ReplyDeleteTHAT WAS A DIVE
ReplyDeleteFAKERS
ReplyDeleteGhana pussies
ReplyDeletesave for the first 20 minutes of the second half, we got outplayed all over the field. we got the result we deserve.
ReplyDeleteThis feels like the last 30 mins of Wedding Crashers. Such potential, but this is painful.
ReplyDeleteit'll be annoying to hear all the 'now back to not caring about soccer' crap, but this was a fun few weeks.
ReplyDeleteYeah, none of us will bemoan this as much as the heads of ABC. But that sucks, anticlimactic as hell.
ReplyDeleteWicked pisser.
ReplyDeleteWe got worked by Ghana. Plain and simple. I don't need to be an expert futbol fan to know those guys got to spots on the field/balls almost at will today. Sucks to lose when we had very good looks, but I'll see you in four years USMNT.
ReplyDeleteghana scored world cup quality goals.
ReplyDeletemy friend's home-made beer eased my pre-game nerves and i think i suffered the loss with great aplomb.
go chile?
unlike igor, i prefer to forget that man down catastrophe in indoor and instead remember when we whipped KA 5-0(i had four goals in that one-- it's odd how memory works-- i remember that game much better).
ReplyDeletei also LOVE remembering the long field goal i kicked at the end of the half to help us win in inter-mural football.
ReplyDeletebut i HATE remembering the guy that burned me numerous times for touchdowns after i did squats and then ate at wendy's superbar just before kick-off.
did i ever mention the pk i saved to win an intramural a-side playoff game?
ReplyDeletei remember it!
ReplyDeletesigned
place kicking champion 1992
didn't dave win the intramural golf tournament?
ReplyDeleteYou did a whole post on it, Rob.
ReplyDeletei was hoping someone would get the joke - well done, mark
ReplyDeletedustin pedroia broke his foot yesterday when he fouled a ball of it. today, clay buchholz strained a hamstring running the bases. you and your interleague baseball can fuck right off, mr. selig.
ReplyDelete