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***Official Soccer Discussion Thread*** (3 Viewers)

'El Floppo said:
Gotta say, I was astonished at the coins flying onto the field prior to Rio's injury, particularly one corner that Rooney was taking- he stopped and picked up a coin, showing it to the ref (amidst a volley of other coins landing near him).
Unruly behavior from fans of a noveau riche club owned by someone with a funny name and which injured a Man United player. That's pretty much the perfect storm. I'm thinking the FA will channel its inner Marcellus Wallace on this one.
 
'The Gator said:
Solid finish to our U12 season. Won our last tourny(after 1st in the league and a second and third in others) while not allowing a goal in four games. Now a break until Futsal in late January :excited:
Bunch of goons, imo.
 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
Interesting. I give the nod to UCLA myself when going position by positionFriedel over Meola at keeper

Boca/Frankie/Cal significantly over Agoos/Pollard at defense

Harkes/Reyna/Martino significantly over Henderson at midfield

Joe Max/Cobi/Razov significantly over Elecko/Albright

 
Apparently some of you haven't heard Freidel talk, because there's no way he went to UCLA. Guy was obviously born and raised in England.

 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
Interesting. I give the nod to UCLA myself when going position by positionFriedel over Meola at keeper

Boca/Frankie/Cal significantly over Agoos/Pollard at defense

Harkes/Reyna/Martino significantly over Henderson at midfield

Joe Max/Cobi/Razov significantly over Elecko/Albright
I'm a MF. :shrug: ... and it's not even close.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
OK scouser.
Just making a fair comparison of Reds and Blues.League titles -Liverpool (18)/Everton (9)ManU (19)/Man City (3)But yeah, ESPN is completely on track with those ads. No point in comparing United and Liverpool or Liverpool and Everton when City has such a longstanding history of success.
 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
Interesting. I give the nod to UCLA myself when going position by positionFriedel over Meola at keeper

Boca/Frankie/Cal significantly over Agoos/Pollard at defense

Harkes/Reyna/Martino significantly over Henderson at midfield

Joe Max/Cobi/Razov significantly over Elecko/Albright
I'm a MF. :shrug: ... and it's not even close.
UCLA has the best player (Friedel) and more depth. Don't see how its VA.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
But ESPN's targeting that ad to Americans who don't have long-standing Euro soccer affiliations. American Man U fans and American City fans (I actually do know a guy who's my age and is a City fan since the 90's, but he's also a huge anglophile) are already on board. This ad is selling soccer to the type of person who reads the FBG, but doesn't post in this thread.That there are a lot of bandwagon City fans is somewhat beside the point. Almost all American soccer fans who follow a Euro team could be called bandwagon jumpers. We didn't grow up with it, we picked a team based for any number of reasons. But almost always, one of those reasons is that the team is pretty good to begin with.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
OK scouser.
Just making a fair comparison of Reds and Blues.League titles -Liverpool (18)/Everton (9)ManU (19)/Man City (3)But yeah, ESPN is completely on track with those ads. No point in comparing United and Liverpool or Liverpool and Everton when City has such a longstanding history of success.
So the Manchester derby has only been relevant since City got bought.... and of course theyve only had their fans since then too.
 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
Interesting. I give the nod to UCLA myself when going position by positionFriedel over Meola at keeper

Boca/Frankie/Cal significantly over Agoos/Pollard at defense

Harkes/Reyna/Martino significantly over Henderson at midfield

Joe Max/Cobi/Razov significantly over Elecko/Albright
I'm a MF. :shrug: ... and it's not even close.
UCLA has the best player (Friedel) and more depth. Don't see how its VA.
Im a formwr MF. And Reyna is the best player in that group.

 
'El Floppo said:
Here is a fun link. This lists every player in history who has been named as a college soccer All American. It is fun looking though this for the colleges you went to or played against etc

The talent that UCLA and Virginia have produced over the years is amazing.

http://www.nscaa.com/uploads/All-Time%20Men%20All-America%20(12%20Almanac.pdf)..pdf
The links not working. I'd be interested in seeing my alma mater.... I know we had one while I was there and a Herman winner a couple years beforee.
Try thisAll Time All American List
:thumbup: thanks. interesting- turns out there were 3 guys who all-americans while I was there... had no idea. also discovered one guy just prior to me was a 4-time all-american- impressive.
Which college do you think produced the best talent?Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

Chris Albright

Jeff Causey

Elecko Escandarian

John Harkes

Kyle Martino

Tony Meola

Ben Olsen

Brandon Pollard

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Chris Henderson

Cobi Jones

Mike Lapper

Joe Max Moore

Ante Razov

Nick Rimando

Sascha Victorine

Marvel Wynne

Not coincidentally, the two programs also help produce two of the best coaches in US soccer history in fat Sigi and Arena.
Virginia, without a doubt.
Interesting. I give the nod to UCLA myself when going position by positionFriedel over Meola at keeper

Boca/Frankie/Cal significantly over Agoos/Pollard at defense

Harkes/Reyna/Martino significantly over Henderson at midfield

Joe Max/Cobi/Razov significantly over Elecko/Albright
I'm a MF. :shrug: ... and it's not even close.
UCLA has the best player (Friedel) and more depth. Don't see how its VA.
Im a formwr MF. And Reyna is the best player in that group.
Peak? Maybe. But you can't just discount durability/longevity. And Friedel has that in spades, even for a goalie.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
Is "irony" the right word here? I never know, but I think that would describe an American Liverpool fan calling out City fans as "bandwagon jumpers".
 
Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

John Harkes

Tony Meola

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Cobi Jones

Joe Max Moore
Cutting it down to the best players on each side... IMO UCLA has more, but UVA has better.Reyna (UVA)

Friedel (UCLA)

Harkes (UVA)

Meola (UVA)

Bocanegra (UCLA)

Cobi (UCLA)

Hejduk (UCLA)

JMM (UCLA)

Caliguiri (UCLA)

Agoos (UVA)

 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
Is "irony" the right word here? I never know, but I think that would describe an American Liverpool fan calling out City fans as "bandwagon jumpers".
It was a weird critique, as the ad portrayed Mancunian fans anyway. I suppose the ad could have been done with Liverpool and Everton, but I don't understand why ESPN would use two clubs who haven't won a championship since ESPN started carrying the EPL (and in fact have never won a Premiere League championship at all) as opposed to two teams that have won recently.The critique does amuse me because former FFA HOFer Scorchy recently asked me if it was OK for him to adopt Man City as his team without being a bandwagon jumper. He claims it was out of solidarity with the Gallagher boys and Johnny Marr, but I suspect it was just because his son likes saying "Yaya."
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
Is "irony" the right word here? I never know, but I think that would describe an American Liverpool fan calling out City fans as "bandwagon jumpers".
You're painting with a mighty wide brush there. I'm assuming that you were a Chelsea fan before they became Chel$ki? Then a) why would you assume that American Liverpool fans would have to be bandwagon jumpers, and b) why would being a Liverpool fan even be jumping on a bandwagon? It's not like they've had great success recently. Are you insinuating that everyone hopped on board after that massive Carling Cup win last year?
 
Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

John Harkes

Tony Meola

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Cobi Jones

Joe Max Moore
Cutting it down to the best players on each side... IMO UCLA has more, but UVA has better.Reyna (UVA)

Friedel (UCLA)

Harkes (UVA)

Meola (UVA)

Bocanegra (UCLA)

Cobi (UCLA)

Hejduk (UCLA)

JMM (UCLA)

Caliguiri (UCLA)

Agoos (UVA)
I agree with almost all of this. The only small quibble I have would be to flip Boca and Meola.

 
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I'll limit this to EPL. While I grew up watching German soccer on PBS and following the NASL (my family had Diplomats and "Team America" season tickets), I stopped following soccer other than the World Cup. I went to England shortly before the 1994 World Cup and I decided I wanted to try to follow a team. I narrowed it down to two teams. Newcastle (because I liked the beer) and Tottenham Hotspur (because I like Henry IV Pt. 1). I mostly settled on Newcastle, who at that time were an entertaining team that couldn't quite get over the hump against Man U. I also continued to watch Spurs as Klinsmann had signed with them. But the following was kind of hit or miss, because it was impossible to see games. When I could see games, I was constantly seeing Arsenal as time went on. If I bought a FIFA game, Arsenal was absurdly fun to play with with Henry, Bergkamp, Pires, and Viera. I got back into the sport through Fox Soccer and started following Newcastle. But it was hard because they were pretty drab. Hard to get excited about Charles N'Zogbia. When they were relegated, I embraced sports bigamy and switched allegiances to Arsenal. This was well after Arsenal had stopped winning anything, but they still played an attractive style and were in no danger of being relegated.I think it's silly to wonder why Americans support any European team. I assume people support Barcelona because Barcelona are awesome. People support Man U because it's easy to get to know and love Man U. The same with Man City now.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
Is "irony" the right word here? I never know, but I think that would describe an American Liverpool fan calling out City fans as "bandwagon jumpers".
You're painting with a mighty wide brush there. I'm assuming that you were a Chelsea fan before they became Chel$ki? Then a) why would you assume that American Liverpool fans would have to be bandwagon jumpers, and b) why would being a Liverpool fan even be jumping on a bandwagon? It's not like they've had great success recently. Are you insinuating that everyone hopped on board after that massive Carling Cup win last year?
I'm not calling anyone a bandwagon jumper. That's not at all what I was suggesting. I just think its funny that a fan of one of the most successful, biggest clubs in European football history would take that position. If we were to compile a list of the most successful clubs in world history, Liverpool would be in everyone's top ten, neck/neck with ManU as the biggest club in English history. City would not be anywhere near the discussion, nor would Chelsea.
 
Just saw a great Espn ad with mirrored Manchester city/united fans
Here's the extended versionhttp://m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfrGaTV217g
That's a great ad for the seven or eight City fans that aren't bandwagon jumpers based upon their very recent success and piles of cash.
Is "irony" the right word here? I never know, but I think that would describe an American Liverpool fan calling out City fans as "bandwagon jumpers".
You're painting with a mighty wide brush there. I'm assuming that you were a Chelsea fan before they became Chel$ki? Then a) why would you assume that American Liverpool fans would have to be bandwagon jumpers, and b) why would being a Liverpool fan even be jumping on a bandwagon? It's not like they've had great success recently. Are you insinuating that everyone hopped on board after that massive Carling Cup win last year?
I'm not calling anyone a bandwagon jumper. That's not at all what I was suggesting. I just think its funny that a fan of one of the most successful, biggest clubs in European football history would take that position. If we were to compile a list of the most successful clubs in world history, Liverpool would be in everyone's top ten, neck/neck with ManU as the biggest club in English history. City would not be anywhere near the discussion, nor would Chelsea.
Okay. That makes more sense. :thumbup:
 
'El Floppo said:
Gotta say, I was astonished at the coins flying onto the field prior to Rio's injury, particularly one corner that Rooney was taking- he stopped and picked up a coin, showing it to the ref (amidst a volley of other coins landing near him).
I don't like Rooney, but he certainly wasn't doing anything to deserve that. Ferdinand ran up to the opposing fans and started taunting them. It's hard to feel bad for him.
 
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Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I'll limit this to EPL. While I grew up watching German soccer on PBS and following the NASL (my family had Diplomats and "Team America" season tickets), I stopped following soccer other than the World Cup. I went to England shortly before the 1994 World Cup and I decided I wanted to try to follow a team. I narrowed it down to two teams. Newcastle (because I liked the beer) and Tottenham Hotspur (because I like Henry IV Pt. 1). I mostly settled on Newcastle, who at that time were an entertaining team that couldn't quite get over the hump against Man U. I also continued to watch Spurs as Klinsmann had signed with them. But the following was kind of hit or miss, because it was impossible to see games. When I could see games, I was constantly seeing Arsenal as time went on. If I bought a FIFA game, Arsenal was absurdly fun to play with with Henry, Bergkamp, Pires, and Viera. I got back into the sport through Fox Soccer and started following Newcastle. But it was hard because they were pretty drab. Hard to get excited about Charles N'Zogbia. When they were relegated, I embraced sports bigamy and switched allegiances to Arsenal. This was well after Arsenal had stopped winning anything, but they still played an attractive style and were in no danger of being relegated.I think it's silly to wonder why Americans support any European team. I assume people support Barcelona because Barcelona are awesome. People support Man U because it's easy to get to know and love Man U. The same with Man City now.
I have a similar story. I grew up in a small town in Tennessee that had no youth soccer. I do remember watching and liking the 84 World Cup, but my exposure to the sport was next to nil. I grew up playing football (American), and was going to play in college, when the summer before my freshman year, I injured a kidney pretty badly and couldn't play anymore.I needed something to channel my competitiveness into, and I started playing soccer with a club team. It was around that time (96) when I started watching the BPL, although the offerings would usually be one game at weird times. Having no knowledge of what players or teams were good, I started watching as a blank slate. I too tried to settle on Newcastle, mainly because of my affinity for their beer, but aside from Alan Shearer, they were a pain to watch.I've also been a close to lifelong Pink Floyd fan, and always thought the soccer fans singing in the background of the song "Fearless" was beautiful. The first time I saw Liverpool play and heard "You'll Never Walk Alone", all the hair on my arms stood up, and I knew I had found my team.ETA - If you've never heard the song "Fearless", it has Liverpool fans singing YNWA piped in throughout the song. Upon rereading my post, I realized I wrote that kinda cryptically. It sounded like I was just saying it had random fans singing a random song. Carry on.
 
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Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I was in London for a couple weeks late 80s, knew next to nothing about English soccer and ended up at Stamford Bridge because I couldn't afford tickets at the Highbury. I had a great time, but have no idea who I saw playing that day. I lived in Germany at the time and was a Schalke04 fan, but found it next to impossible to follow a (then) 2nd Bundesliga team when I returned to the US, pre-internet. Chelsea was relegated a year later and played one or two seasons in the second division. They had some success in the 90s under Ruud Guillit and were a decent team when Abramovich bought the club in 03. The last time I was at Stamford Bridge was with my wife in 2002. Chelsea beat Sunderland 4-0. Gudjohnsen scored, Claudio Reyna didn't play due to injury.
 
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I'll limit this to EPL. While I grew up watching German soccer on PBS and following the NASL (my family had Diplomats and "Team America" season tickets), I stopped following soccer other than the World Cup. I went to England shortly before the 1994 World Cup and I decided I wanted to try to follow a team. I narrowed it down to two teams. Newcastle (because I liked the beer) and Tottenham Hotspur (because I like Henry IV Pt. 1). I mostly settled on Newcastle, who at that time were an entertaining team that couldn't quite get over the hump against Man U. I also continued to watch Spurs as Klinsmann had signed with them. But the following was kind of hit or miss, because it was impossible to see games. When I could see games, I was constantly seeing Arsenal as time went on. If I bought a FIFA game, Arsenal was absurdly fun to play with with Henry, Bergkamp, Pires, and Viera. I got back into the sport through Fox Soccer and started following Newcastle. But it was hard because they were pretty drab. Hard to get excited about Charles N'Zogbia. When they were relegated, I embraced sports bigamy and switched allegiances to Arsenal. This was well after Arsenal had stopped winning anything, but they still played an attractive style and were in no danger of being relegated.I think it's silly to wonder why Americans support any European team. I assume people support Barcelona because Barcelona are awesome. People support Man U because it's easy to get to know and love Man U. The same with Man City now.
I have a similar story. I grew up in a small town in Tennessee that had no youth soccer. I do remember watching and liking the 84 World Cup, but my exposure to the sport was next to nil.
Did you mean 84 Olympics or 82/86 World Cup?
 
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
The old fashioned way. They play 18 minutes from my house. Local team.
I should add to this for older farts like Floppo and myself, when we were in our prime "looking for a team to support" years, there were no local teams and not enough on tv to develop a real following for a club team abroad, so we latched on to the US National team as our club team and I think it still remains "our" local team till today. Once the US players started breaking into Europe, we followed those teams with US players on it and still do to today.
 
Slim's billions make Marquez deal possibleby Paul Kennedy, December 10th, 2012 10:29PM [MLS SPOTLIGHT] Could the New York Red Bulls' long nightmare be over? If Rafael Marquez is headed to Mexico, it can thank Carlos Slim, the world's richest man, for making the deal possible.Arturo Elias Ayub, Slim's son-in-law, told the Mexican sports daily Record, that Leon has been working on finalizing an agreement and it hopes to conclude a deal early this week for the former Mexico national team captain.Slim's America Movil bought interests in promoted Leon and Pachuca this summer with the hope of breaking the hold of Televisa and TV Azteca on lucrative Mexican soccer television rights.Marquez has been a bust in his two and a half seasons with the Red Bulls, but he is still a marketable player, especially to a club with an agenda like Leon.Besides Marquez, who played just 15 games for the Red Bulls in 2012, Leon has signed another former Mexican international who was a bust in MLS.A deal to move Nery Castillo, who played for the Chicago Fire, from Pachuca to Leon was announced on Monday.
 
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I'll limit this to EPL. While I grew up watching German soccer on PBS and following the NASL (my family had Diplomats and "Team America" season tickets), I stopped following soccer other than the World Cup. I went to England shortly before the 1994 World Cup and I decided I wanted to try to follow a team. I narrowed it down to two teams. Newcastle (because I liked the beer) and Tottenham Hotspur (because I like Henry IV Pt. 1). I mostly settled on Newcastle, who at that time were an entertaining team that couldn't quite get over the hump against Man U. I also continued to watch Spurs as Klinsmann had signed with them. But the following was kind of hit or miss, because it was impossible to see games. When I could see games, I was constantly seeing Arsenal as time went on. If I bought a FIFA game, Arsenal was absurdly fun to play with with Henry, Bergkamp, Pires, and Viera. I got back into the sport through Fox Soccer and started following Newcastle. But it was hard because they were pretty drab. Hard to get excited about Charles N'Zogbia. When they were relegated, I embraced sports bigamy and switched allegiances to Arsenal. This was well after Arsenal had stopped winning anything, but they still played an attractive style and were in no danger of being relegated.I think it's silly to wonder why Americans support any European team. I assume people support Barcelona because Barcelona are awesome. People support Man U because it's easy to get to know and love Man U. The same with Man City now.
I have a similar story. I grew up in a small town in Tennessee that had no youth soccer. I do remember watching and liking the 84 World Cup, but my exposure to the sport was next to nil.
Did you mean 84 Olympics or 82/86 World Cup?
Good point. 86 World Cup.
 
I also recently started following Newcastle because of the beer. Should I just go ahead and jump ship now?
They actually did really well last season. But, the owner is a bit of a moron, and they have fallen back to Earth this season. They'll find a way to stay up, I'm sure, but I foresee at least Ba leaving. Maybe Cisse, as well.
 
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
I'll limit this to EPL. While I grew up watching German soccer on PBS and following the NASL (my family had Diplomats and "Team America" season tickets), I stopped following soccer other than the World Cup. I went to England shortly before the 1994 World Cup and I decided I wanted to try to follow a team. I narrowed it down to two teams. Newcastle (because I liked the beer) and Tottenham Hotspur (because I like Henry IV Pt. 1). I mostly settled on Newcastle, who at that time were an entertaining team that couldn't quite get over the hump against Man U. I also continued to watch Spurs as Klinsmann had signed with them. But the following was kind of hit or miss, because it was impossible to see games. When I could see games, I was constantly seeing Arsenal as time went on. If I bought a FIFA game, Arsenal was absurdly fun to play with with Henry, Bergkamp, Pires, and Viera. I got back into the sport through Fox Soccer and started following Newcastle. But it was hard because they were pretty drab. Hard to get excited about Charles N'Zogbia. When they were relegated, I embraced sports bigamy and switched allegiances to Arsenal. This was well after Arsenal had stopped winning anything, but they still played an attractive style and were in no danger of being relegated.I think it's silly to wonder why Americans support any European team. I assume people support Barcelona because Barcelona are awesome. People support Man U because it's easy to get to know and love Man U. The same with Man City now.
I have a similar story. I grew up in a small town in Tennessee that had no youth soccer. I do remember watching and liking the 84 World Cup, but my exposure to the sport was next to nil.
Did you mean 84 Olympics or 82/86 World Cup?
Good point. 86 World Cup.
Even though that tournament had little tv coverage it did receive a decent amount of media coverage in the US thanks to Maradona. In fact Diego even got the cover of SI back when that meant a tonhttp://www.thedenimkit.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/sports-illustrated.png
 
I also recently started following Newcastle because of the beer. Should I just go ahead and jump ship now?
It also made it easier that the beer was no longer the sponsor. I don't know any big Northern Rock fans. And even that is better than Virgin Money (and, next year, Wonga). They might as well be sponsored by the J.J. Wentworth and have the fans sing the "877 CASH NOW" song.EDIT: FWIW, I also think it's criminal that Liverpool is now sponsored by Standard Chartered. I don't mind kit sponsorship, but have some continuity. And choose cool products/companies. No banks.
 
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I also recently started following Newcastle because of the beer. Should I just go ahead and jump ship now?
They actually did really well last season. But, the owner is a bit of a moron, and they have fallen back to Earth this season. They'll find a way to stay up, I'm sure, but I foresee at least Ba leaving. Maybe Cisse, as well.
Ba is still a big injury risk and Cisse is putting up a really crappy year. Those two aren't going anywhere. I actually don't think anyone is going to leave in the next few years, but if someone does come calling it's going to be for Tiote or Cabaye.Newcastle is still a pretty big club. It's going to take a CL club paying a premium price to pry anyone away.
 
'jonessed said:
'SmoovySmoov said:
'CBusAlex said:
I also recently started following Newcastle because of the beer. Should I just go ahead and jump ship now?
They actually did really well last season. But, the owner is a bit of a moron, and they have fallen back to Earth this season. They'll find a way to stay up, I'm sure, but I foresee at least Ba leaving. Maybe Cisse, as well.
Ba is still a big injury risk and Cisse is putting up a really crappy year. Those two aren't going anywhere. I actually don't think anyone is going to leave in the next few years, but if someone does come calling it's going to be for Tiote or Cabaye.Newcastle is still a pretty big club. It's going to take a CL club paying a premium price to pry anyone away.
Fair point. I'd take Cabaye in a heartbeat.
 
'SmoovySmoov said:
I have a similar story. I grew up in a small town in Tennessee that had no youth soccer. I do remember watching and liking the 84 World Cup, but my exposure to the sport was next to nil. I grew up playing football (American), and was going to play in college, when the summer before my freshman year, I injured a kidney pretty badly and couldn't play anymore.I needed something to channel my competitiveness into, and I started playing soccer with a club team. It was around that time (96) when I started watching the BPL, although the offerings would usually be one game at weird times. Having no knowledge of what players or teams were good, I started watching as a blank slate. I too tried to settle on Newcastle, mainly because of my affinity for their beer, but aside from Alan Shearer, they were a pain to watch.I've also been a close to lifelong Pink Floyd fan, and always thought the soccer fans singing in the background of the song "Fearless" was beautiful. The first time I saw Liverpool play and heard "You'll Never Walk Alone", all the hair on my arms stood up, and I knew I had found my team.ETA - If you've never heard the song "Fearless", it has Liverpool fans singing YNWA piped in throughout the song. Upon rereading my post, I realized I wrote that kinda cryptically. It sounded like I was just saying it had random fans singing a random song. Carry on.
:hifive:I got into liverpool via Michael Owen. Playing video games early on and i always loved the soccer games. Played a lot of the Fifa WC games and gravitated towards England and then Owen. Then as games began to come out with club teams, I went and found Owen's team. Simple enough, i guess.
 
'The Gator said:
Could be a good topic for discussion; How did you come to follow your soccer team?
When I started watching in 2010 the race between Tottenham and City for 4th place really drew me in. I couldn't root for a team with all that money, it would be like rooting for the Yankees, so I chose Spurs.
 
'wdcrob said:
Virginia:

Jeff Agoos

John Harkes

Tony Meola

Claudio Reyna

UCLA:

Carlos Bocanegra

Paul Caliguiri

Brad Friedel

Frankie Hejduk

Cobi Jones

Joe Max Moore
Cutting it down to the best players on each side... IMO UCLA has more, but UVA has better.Reyna (UVA)

Friedel (UCLA)

Harkes (UVA)

Meola (UVA)

Bocanegra (UCLA)

Cobi (UCLA)

Hejduk (UCLA)

JMM (UCLA)

Caliguiri (UCLA)

Agoos (UVA)
Hejduk >>>> Goos? :flaWed:

But yeah, I agree with better players for UVA, more depth at UCLA.

 

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