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Hope Solo had save after save
Photo
by Hoang Din Nam -AFP-Getty
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and Carli Lloyd had the gamewinner
Photo
by Daniel Garcia
-AFP-Getty
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Never did a coach in ANYTHING have it
so wrong. Former U.S.
soccer Coach Greg Ryan
last year removed the goalie who got them to the 2007 World Cup
semifinal and
replaced her for some ridiculous technical reason with Briana Scurry, a
good
player too, but one who had pretty much rode the pines throughout the
entire U.S.
run.
<>Of course, Scurry gave up four goals and the
U.S. lost their World Cup semifinal to
Brazil,
but
that was the least of the damage.
The
decision ultimately resulted in bad feelings all around for the team as
Solo understandably
voiced her strong opinion that she would have stopped those goals.
Virtually the entire team turned
against Solo. Only a few stayed in Solo’s
corner, one of
whom was the woman who scored the winning goal in overtime against Brazil
in the Olympic gold medal matchup. She
is none other than New Jersey’s
own Carli Lloyd from Delran.
<>The score was 1-0.
That it went
that far and that long was due almost
entirely to Hope
Solo, whose save after save after save turned back the athletic
Brazilians.
After the match, even the
Brazilian soccer
coach lauded Ms. Solo.
And her
U.S.
teammates finally relented in their sworn enmity to her as they all
celebrated
their gold medal.
I’ve read that Solo’s fine performance
was her
redemption. I don’t think so.
Was it her vindication? Yes. Absolutely. But
she
needed no
redemption in my eyes. She had always
been the hero of the melodrama, she and the young women like Carli
Lloyd who
stayed with her.
<>If one had said it was the
U.S. soccer team’s
redemption, I could
have gone along with that, if only it hadn’t taken them so long to see
the
light.
Too many of them, in siding with
a coach, initially no doubt to save their own skins, and then staying
with
their petty convictions all the way to the Olympics final, earned my
total
disrespect, and their victory really does very little towards earning
my
understanding, never mind forgiveness.
In
a way, they didn’t deserve such a positive result.
But I am extremely happy for Hope Solo
and her compatriot,
Carli Lloyd. They both came up big when
they had to. And although the rest of
them obviously played a large part in that great U.S.
victory, I can’t help feeling
that some of them just went along for the ride. Most
of them just did what was easiest.
<>Too much is made of team unity, especially in the light
of
ridiculously harsh circumstances.
A
young woman who had just lost her father and who had to give up her
conviction
to win one for her homeless Dad, had to watch hopelessly as her
replacement
allowed ball after ball into the net.
How
many of us in those same shoes could have held
their tongues?
There should have been some glimmer of
understanding for
Hope Solo, the best goalkeeper in the world. And
the people who run the Olympic programs should
have some recourse in
the event that a coach seems to lose all perspective.
<>Sometimes a coach loses the forest for the trees.
In a sport such as soccer in which every game
means so much, there should be the ability for the Olympic organizers
to
rescind an awful decision before it can impact the big game.
Ryan’s hopelessly misguided decision impacted
the entire women’s soccer program for a full year.
One coach with a surprisingly good
grasp of the forest is
Jerry Manuel. Mr. Manuel proved that
again Thursday night with his handling of Pedro Martinez.
Pedro had pitched well for 5 full innings
before getting knocked around a bit in the 6th.
But Manuel had Pedro pitch the 7th
as well, and Pedro obligingly retired the three batters he faced.
<>And in the 8
th, Manuel had Pedro face the
first
batter with the intention of replacing him whether or not Pedro retired
that
hitter.
Done to eliminate any need to
have to play the righty, lefty game with relievers down the stretch, it
is the
kind of thing Manuel has done over and over since he took the reins
from Willie
Randolph.
It’s the simplest of things yet proves
to the players that
the manager’s head is always in the game; that it has a very good
chance to win
as long as that guy is at the helm. It’s
the kind of thing Willie seemingly never thought of, or perhaps the
kind of
thing he thought would have been over-managing a situation.
<>Willie always seemed to think his guys would win the
game,
that all things considered, in the end, the best players would prevail,
and he
had the best players.
Such a strategy
may have worked for those strong Yankees teams of yesteryear but it
never
seemed to suit these Mets, either the 2007 or 2008 variety at any rate.
And, after the game, Jerry went out of
his way to praise the
efforts of David Wright, for his great plays in the field, not just his
formidable bat. And, rather than harp on
the mistake David made on the basepaths, Manuel just joked that he had
been in no-man’s
land; that he wanted so badly to score.
<>Coaches and managers mean so much in sports.
And not just for their tactical moves
either.
It’s way more than that.
Every player has to believe in the manager’s
concern for the outcome, his ability to make it so, and for his genuine
humanity.
So kudos this evening for the 2008 U.S.
soccer coach, who had the
foresight to convince his team that Hope Solo should be one of them. His name is Pia Sundhage.
Don’t ask me to pronounce it.
And the same for Jerry Manuel, who
makes all the right moves,
or most of them anyway. (Just today I
heard John Heymann say that Manuel wasn’t a LaRussa or a Scoscia. Maybe it’ll take a World Series to change his
mind).
