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Lukas
Podolski was just one of many German heroes vs Argentina
........... But the
same could be said for Mets Alex Cora & RubenTejada
Photo by Clive Mason-
Getty
Photo -Greg
Flume - Getty |
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Germans were
everywhere! Especially early, the black
shirts were
everywhere around the ball and they had also managed to get off the
best
shot. That had come with just 3 minutes
elapsed in the match as a beautiful pass into the box was headed easily
into
the net. But at the 45-minute mark, the
Germans seemed to be getting the best of the action.
Good soccer, that’s the overriding
impression I get from
watching these last few matches. These
teams all know how to play soccer (called football in the rest of the
world). These top teams also all seem to
have at least one, and usually several players who are stars in their
own
right, players who demand attention and put continual pressure on the
defense,
pressure that usually results in an eventual goal.
Smart soccer, that’s quite evident too. The smartest play of all was that handball
that
Suarez of Uruguay used to put away the Ghanaians, a prime example of a
player
knowing the rules and using them to his best advantage with the game on
the
line. Suarez stopped
a sure goal at the expense of his team
having to stop the ensuing penalty kick, which they managed just barely
as
Ghana’s free kick hit the crossbar.
Somewhat less serious than that, Suarez will also
miss the next
game. Uruguay will certainly miss him
but for Uruguay there will be a next game.
Dumb soccer, we’ve seen some of that
too. Melo of Brazil was surely not
thinking when
he stomped on an orange arm to earn himself a red card and his team the
prospect of playing a man down for the rest of the match.
Even excusing Melo for the own goal charged
to him (he was instrumental in scoring Brazil’s first goal), his
ill-advised
abuse of a player on the ground sealed the win for the Netherlands.
Team soccer too, we’ve seen a lot of
that in these
quarterfinals, the importance of playing as a team that much more
evident with
each successive round. I’m not even a
student of the game, but I can detect a team that eschews the long (and
usually
fruitless) shot for the pass to a teammate making a run into the box.
Unselfish team soccer…Germany once
again scored in the 67th
minute on a beautiful cross and little chip-in, achieved only because
the
runner streaking down the field had the perspicacity to wait and cross
rather
than fire on goal. That goal almost certainly sealed Argentina’s fate, to
join Brazil on the sidelines of this 2010 World Cup.
And Germany
did it
again! Exhibiting what could only be
called remarkable composure and teamwork, Germany scored again in the 73rd
minute, making the game seem easy and pouring it on against a seemingly
overmatched Argentina. Those black
shirts came again in a rush in the 77th minute that
Argentina this
time stopped.
There was an Argentine flopping in the
box, another
unfortunate characteristic of this game that enthralls the world
everywhere but
here in the U.S. If
there is anything that will surely turn
most Americans against the game, it is the continual flopping and the
bad officiating
that too often rewards the flopping.
Germany scored once again in the 88th
minute and
Argentina was being thoroughly embarrassed.
It now appears that the final four will be Uruguay,
Netherlands, Germany
and probably Spain, although Paraguay could still surprise.
In any event though, it’ll be European
teams and South
American teams in the final four. And if
that’s an expected result, it doesn’t make it any less satisfying for
me. Why shouldn’t it be thus for the two
continents for which the game absolutely dominates their everyday lives. And, while it’s true that Nigeria suspended
its team for its performance and only God knows what may befall the North Koreans for their failure to advance
further, the grand game is primarily theirs, Europe’s and South
America’s.
Let’s face it, either by natural
preference or some grand
conspiratorial design, soccer is just an afterthought in the U.S. The best athletes here play either baseball,
basketball or American football, depending on a player’s regard for his
own
well-being. Following the money, it is
very unlikely that the situation will change in the near future.
But should the situation change? Soccer fans here would surely say yes. Others would say we already have diversions
enough in a country that hasn’t been distinguishing itself for anything
but
sports and movies in the last twenty to thirty years.
I’d certainly welcome a popularization
of soccer in our
country. Of the three dominating
American sports, two of them, football and basketball, can be played at
the
highest levels only by behemoths and giants.
Only in baseball, to me the only truly great
American game, can a Freddy
Patek or Phil Rizzuto distinguish himself as a great one.
For today, a Mets fan might want to
add Alex Cora to the
list. Cora’s triple was the big hit last
night as the Mets continued to play good baseball in our nation’s
capital. But Cora wasn’t the only heroic
little man to
distinguish himself in last night’s win.
Good pitching from Jonathan Niese had
kept the Nats off the
board for much of the night but the victory was much in doubt in that
ninth inning
as Mets relievers Elmer Dessens and then the great K-Rod faltered,
putting the
victory much in doubt.
It was Ruben Tejada, the Mets
diminutive backup shortstop,
who really wrapped up the Mets win last night.
Noticing liberties
being taken by
the Nats Bernadina off second base, the
youngster signaled to K-Rod, who alertly and accurately threw that man
out to
end the game.
I could
foresee
soccer overtaking both football and basketball in popularity here in
America
but not baseball, whose inning breaks even offer a chance to relax. While basketball and
football can be dominated by a few
gargantuan superstars,
baseball, much like soccer, can be played by virtually anyone.
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