The Sounders: Learning from Barcelona
After such elegance, what forgiveness? But the team recovers its balance, playing its bravest game of the year against its natural rival, Houston
The Sounders may still be hung over from their early August game against Barcelona. It was only an exhibit, but you cannot play the best and most elegant team in the world and not be jumbled some. The match came at a poor time. The Sounders were deep into the emotions of their own league, it was the belly of the season, with all the grumps and groans and grumbles thereto, and suddenly there was not a single team in the league that even looked easy to beat. No one needed dinner guests.
But the show goes on. Barcelona FC stayed at the new Four Seasons for two nights; you could drive by at any time and there were fans outside. Then 64,000 fans unloaded onto Sounder Stadium for the Wednesday night match — some simply to see Barca unveiled (it was the very start of their preseason), some for the stardom, and some with notions that the Sounders were indeed headed in this direction.
Once again, a grass field was imported for the evening, and perhaps it was even the very same field brought in for Chelsea, a couple weeks earlier. Whatever the case, this pitch had the speed of an overweight black lab and the coat to boot, and even after a heavy water spray, it was three times too thick.
The Sounders had learned from the Chelsea game that even if many in the crowd brought wild hopes of an upset, that is neither likely nor the point. The point is marketing but also soccer, and Barca plays a version that is so elegant and intricate, it is impossible to resist. As one Sounder said after, "no one who plays soccer would not want to play like that."
It was not the Mudhens vs the Yankees, not the Pony Express riding against the Argentinian Polo Club. Indeed the Sounders, with their wonderful new defender Leonardo Gonzalez, nearly scored first and should have. But this is Barcelona and no heart beats squarely playing against them and the Sounders played with nervous feet. Even Freddie Ljungberg, who knew well than to go full full speed, was stunned to find the ball handed directly to him goalside from the Barca keeper. So intent was he to save some energy for upcoming games, the surprised Ljungberg shanked his shot and could only laugh.
From then on, it was a ballet of Barcelona soccer. They are the gift that keeps on keeping, for they love the pass, they pass with the passion of a Spanish matador, the thrill of the pass, and it is not several of the players, it is every single one of them. When you watch Barcelona, you will yourself feel the elegance, for each pass is its own solo, and the pass they make, no matter how close, is often, remarkably, not to the person you had assumed. If there are four solos in the Nutcracker, one after another outdoing each other, then Barca may have 18 solos, as they bring the ball upfield.
The Barcelona keeper made not a single kick that traveled further than 10 yards, and often his delivery was a soft handout. They see no sense to the poor odds of a long goal keeper kick where the results are so uncertain. By halftime, they had 16 shots on Keller and Seattle had only three chances. Both teams fielded only reserves in the second half and it became a kind of pass tutorial.
The Sounders flew out the next day for Salt Lake City and a league match against Real at the lovely Rio Tinto Stadium. And that was the first sign of a Barcelona hangover. Some say the Seattle franchise has Barcelona as its role model, but the Sounders play an English/German kind of game, driving balls deep, relying on force and fury and physical play. Against Real, a very physical team they had beaten twice, they seemed almost disoriented. Ljungberg was Ljungberg but the rest of the team was somewhere else and it had Barcelona passes all over it. You do not become Barca overnight but who can blame them for the temptation to such elegance. Real scored the only goal late in the game and now the Sounders were feeling very human.
A week later, with no exhibit games en route, they had to deal with the LA Galaxy, with Landon Donovan and Beckham and LA at night and no Ljungberg, for the Swede had once again taken himself out of action with a headache. LA is the veteran, Seattle seemed the virgin and hardly smart money. But then, at the 17th minute, LA suffered a fatal stupidity. Beckham slid cleats first into a former teammate Pete Vagenas, a sort of bonehead Manchester United throwback move, and was red carded. Up a man, Seattle could indeed breathe, and pass, and for most of the game, they cruised along, scoring two lovely goals. The Galaxy are often not fun. For this game, they brought a kind of relentless ill humor and stayed right with it.
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Comments:
Posted Tue, Aug 25, 12:12 p.m. inappropriate
I believe Fredy Montero received 1 caution card during the Revolution match, his one game suspension resulted from caution card accumulation. Anyone besides me think the taunting and baiting by the Revolution GK is worthy of a caution card?