Roster Reset | Now With Added Trialists!

I'm adding a "Trialists" section for the guys getting a try-out as we begin pre-season. While it's also tempting to throw some of the fringe guys from last year into this section, I'll let them hang onto their current Senior/Developmental roster spots until we hear otherwise.

To the list!

Senior Roster
1.  Josh Wicks, GK - trade bait?
2.  Troy Perkins, GK
3.  (I) Julius James, D
4.  Lawson Vaughn, D
5.  Marc Burch, D
6.  (I) Dejan Jakovic, D
7.  Bryan Namoff, D - nursing the noggin
8.  Devon McTavish, D/M
9.  (I) Floribert N'Galula, D/M - how much are we paying him? this year's African washout?
10.  Rodney Wallace, D/M - don't forget, he counts against the cap now
11.  (I) Cristian Castillo, M
12.  Danny Szetela, M
13.  Clyde Simms, M
14.  (I) Tiyiselani Shipalane, M/F - can't see both he and Boyzzz making the cut
15.  (I) Christian Gomez, M/F - probably gone, but included until departure confirmed
16.  Chris Pontius, M/F
17.  Santino Quaranta, M/F
18.  (I) Thabiso Khumalo, M/F - see Shipalane, Tiyiselani
19.  Jaime Moreno, F
20.  (I) Danny Allsopp, F - Oi! Oi! Oi! or oy vey?

Developmental Roster
1.  (GA) Bill Hamid, GK
2.  (I) Milos Kocic, GK - under contract, but for Dev Dollars again?
3.  John DiRaimondo, M
4.  Brandon Barklage, M - fully recovered?
5.  Jordan Graye, D - we took a local kid so he could live at home on Dev Dollars, right?

Trialists
1. (I?) Lyle Adams, D - I'm assuming he'll want a senior spot, given last year. Also, he grew up in Florida, but does he have citizenship/green card?
2. Otto Loewy, D/M - don't know much save that he's really athletic, but has been on the shelf with injury; international status?
3. Daniel Wasson, M - washed out abroad, has MLS experience, eligible for Dev Dollars (25 or younger at start of season)
4. (I?) Two-Boys Gumede, M/F - an international if he won't settle for Dev Dollars; what fills first, our Boyzzz quotient or our South African one?

GA = Generation Adidas
I = requires international roster spot, maximum of 8 internationals on senior roster, internationals on developmental roster don't count against that total [UPDATE: Scratch that! The MLS Rules & Regulations page seems to have changed. We're back to 8 internationals allowed on the total roster. Imagine that...]

Considering the fact that we're still shopping abroad, we've got a lot of internationals either on board, on the bubble, or trying to break in. Has that extra international spot reverted to its orginal owner yet or are we stuck with the league-mandated 8?

The common thread that the FO seems to be plucking at is physical tools. It looks like we're going to be faster and a bit stronger/tougher this year, if nothing else, and that's a good thing. But...I have to refer back to Kevin Payne's style-mandate from the fall. Doesn't this seem like the type of roster-building you'd be doing if you're looking to play some high-tempo, direct counterattacking Brit-ball? So what was all that bluster about pretty possession attacking flair?

Very strange...

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I'm keeping a running tally that I'll be using to fuel the Roster Reset posts over at the Facebook fan-site. If you have any comments/additions/info/etc. you can either leave them here or under the "notes" tab over there.

DCU|FM Challenge, Part XII - Aftermath & Autopsy

So what went wrong?

Not terribly much if you consider my expectations going in. I made a bunch of pre-season changes and expected that it would take awhile for them to bed in. I fully expected to suffer the first third of the season, start to play well through the summer, get clothes-lined by the Champions' League congestion, and make a decent playoff run.

Mission accomplished?

It took us a while to get going, but we did better than I expected early on. When it all came together in the late summer, I was shocked at how well we were playing. The defense suddenly tightened up, we couldn't stop scoring, and the wins just kept coming, regardless of the opposition. My expectations were raised, perhaps fatally.

We peaked too soon and hit the roadblock at precisely the wrong time. If that stretch of five games in twelve days comes a little earlier, then I think we have time to recover before the playoffs. Unfortunately, I think that stretch stole the form from a couple of key players. That, combined with being too dependent on a streaky lone striker, hurt us in the post-season.

Our best team?



Over the last stretch Sosa was starting to settle and displaced Szetela, and Habarugira only came into his own in the late summer, with Wallace being the left back for most of the season. The supporters' best XI was as listed above, but with Wallace at left back. They picked Boswell as their player of the year, and I'd be tempted to agree, though Camara, Simms, Vavá, and Rogers would be strong rivals in my mind.

For those interested, the tactics I used were basically my adaptation of a Dutch-style 4-3-3 with a few tweaks. I started with the basic 4-2-3-1 Deep provided by the game, tweaked the passing to be more direct and the pressing to be higher. I used the "rigid" philosophy as I didn't want players wandering aimlessly about. We were more the clockwork Ajax of the 90's than free-flowing total footballers of the 70's, letting the ball, rather than individual flair, do the damage.

The defenders and goalkeepers were generally on their default orders, though one or both of my centerbacks were designated "ball-playing" types when I expected to control possession and my opponents to sit deep. The holding pair were also usually on default orders, though sometimes I gave Szetela "deep-lying playmaker" orders and Simms an "anchor man" role if the opposition featured a deadly playmaker. The wingers were given "winger" orders to keep them on the touchline and pressuring fullbacks, save for when were were counterattacking, when they became "defensive wingers". The middle two attackers were usually on their defaults, allowing them to interchange, the striker often dropping deep as the attacking mid rushed into space.

In-game, I usually started by telling the guys to maintain possession and work the ball into the box. At home, we generally took an attacking strategy if we were favored. If were were heavily favored, I went with control, and if the odds were even or in the opponent's favor, I played standard until I got a feel for how the game was progressing. On the road, we started standard if slightly favored or on even odds. If we were underdogs, I went with the counter, and if were were heavy favorites, I usually attacked from the start to try and rock them back before settling into the counter.

Our corner routines were nothing special, just one center back on the keeper, the other attacking the near post, the striker attacking far post, and the defensive holding mid attacking from deep. The fullbacks and the supporting holding mid stayed back, while the two attacking mids who weren't taking corners (one of them usually was) were lurking outside the box looking for scraps.

In the final reckoning, our leaders were:

Appearances: Boswell, Rogers, and Camara all appeared in 38 matches, though Boswell started all but two of his to rack up the most minutes played.

Goals: Camara had 23 in all competitions, Vavá 9, Moreno 9, Boswell 7, Rogers 5, and Quaranta 5. All others had below 5, though Pontius gets a shout for his 4.

Assists: Rogers led the way in assists with 12, while Vavá racked up 9 in a half-season, Quaranta and Camara both chipped in with 9 as well, and Habarugira, despite only making 21 appearances, mostly as a defender, laid on 6.

Man of the Match: Camara took home MotM honors 7 times, while Boswell won 4, and Quaranta 3.


Passing Accuracy: Simms connected on 84% of his passes (and no, they weren't all backwards or lateral, he did have three assists).

Tackles: Simms led the way at 2.45, with Sosa at 2.33 the only close competition.

Dribbles: Rogers strolled with 4.35, with Quaranta at 3.50 and Pontius at 3.20 in distant second and third.

Shots on Target: Camara led the way at 53%, though Boswell and (shocker!) Fred were close seconds at 52%.

Yellow Cards: Namoff led the dubious way with 6, while Szetela amassed 5, and Simms and Quaranta both had 4. (We finished third in the fair play standings behind Dallas and the Crew.)

Red Cards: Sosa and Olsen each had one. That's it.

Average Rating: Boswell led the way at 7.26, Vavá a close second at 7.23, and the surprising Habarugira third on 7.16.


Conclusions

I'm disappointed that the only thing we have to show for the season is the Supporters' Shield, even if I didn't expect it when I started this journey. We got about as far as I would have expected in the playoffs, though it feels disappointing to have had such a dominating season, only to go home before the big dance, sort of like Columbus did this past year. On the positive side, the only expectations Payne set for me were qualification for the quarterfinals of the Champions' League, and we achieved that. He expected a mid-table finish in the league as well, and I certainly delivered more. Of course, he then tried to lowball me by extending my current contract at the same dollar figure. I, naturally, laughed in his face and demanded a raise. When he regretfully said he couldn't, I rejected the offer. I'm still locked up through 2010, and I do plan to continue this game, so we'll see if he can find some change in the sofa or petition Uncle Will or something.

Perhaps I'll post less-extensive updates as it goes, and we'll see what the next year brings for my DC United. Also, stay tuned next week as one of your own takes up the burden of the DCU|FM Challenge here on FBF...


Vamos (Virtual) United!

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...

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FBF on FB

You can already subscribe to the Fullback Files via RSS or email, and on occasion you can get updates and micro-posts on Twitter. Today I'm opening up a new channel for the amorphous soccer-blob that is FBF to flow through: Facebook.

Now, I'm not personally a huge user of Facebook. Nor am I enthusiastic about the idea of bifurcating the discussion/comments on my posts, which have been increasingly interesting of late. But having a Facebook fan page does provide an opportunity to build a little more community than we've had to this point and has the potential to spread my web to reach a few more folks.

It's pretty lonely over there at this point, so I look forward to seeing some of you in the near future...

DCU|FM Challenge, Part XI - Eastern Conference Final

The Western Conference final takes place on Thursday, with LA beating Seattle 1-0 at home to advance. The league disciplinary committee reviews Sosa's red and comes back with a further two game suspension, so he'll be out if we make it to the final. Which brings us to...

[Eastern Conference Final] Chicago:

I'm going to stick with the lineup from last match, with the exception of the enforced change of Jacobson for Sosa in light of Sosa's suspension. I'm sorely tempted to go with Camara up top, but I'll stick with Lopez and try Camara as an impact sub.

Both sides have half-chances early, but wily old veterans McBride and Lopez fail to connect. I start to push the attack more after we seem to be sitting too deep, inviting pressure from their staggered 4-4-2/4-2-4 hybrid that places two deep-lying d-mids in front of the back four and lines up two advanced wingers playing off the strikers. They pretty much mirror us, save for the fact that they play two up top while we tuck a central attacking mid beneath a lone striker.

Segares almost maims Tino in the 14th minute. I watch him hobble around for a bit, hoping he'll recover, but he's clearly a liability. I could play it safe with Olsen, but I want to keep the pressure on, so I bring on Camara earlier than I intended and put him on the right. I also push the holding mids forward into the gaping hole in midfield that the Fire's deep-lying central mids are leaving.

It's a tight first half, with not many chances. Ward gets yellow for holding back Rogers in the 28th. I'm considering a position swap up top, but I'll give the current arrangement a couple more minutes. Jacobson sees yellow for a sliding challenge in the 30th minute. On the ensuing free kick, Pause sees a yellow of his own for leaping unfairly with Rogers. Time for the change. Camara goes up top, Rogers on the right, Lopez on the left.

A weaving run by Rogers in the 33rd sets up Simms from the edge of the area, but his shot is a lame roller that Busch handles easily. Two minutes later, another dangerous Rogers run down the right sets up a corner. Chicago are playing some nice stuff as well. They fully merited finishing second behind us this year; they play a nice, quick passing game like we do.

On 42 minutes, Camara gets his first big chance, racing onto a Vavá flick-on header. He gets to the ball at the same time as Busch and manages to slip it under him, but Conde recovers to cut him off and clear the danger. The end of the half sees chances for both teams. Ours is the better; Simms lobs one to the left flank that Lopez volleys back across the face of goal. Vavá rushes in but directs his header right at Busch.

0-0 at the break.

At the half, I let the guys know that I have confidence they can pull this one out. Then I tell them go out and attack with all guns blazing. It backfires immediately. Rolfe turning Jakovic in the box and drilling home a near-post finish. We nearly respond immediately, but the flag is raised on Camara. Then Simms gets yellow for dragging down Rolfe. Vavá has been struggling for space with their two holding mids clogging the area in front of the center backs, so on the hour mark I push him up top next to Camara, mirroring the Fire's formation.

66 minutes and I'm going 4-4-2 to try and find a way around this block of six Chicago are sticking in defense. Olsen on for Jacobson. I put him wide right, shifting Vavá into a central midfield role to let him do a little prompting with Camara and Lopez up top. Vavá starts pulling strings, and Pause is forced to drag him down on 69 minutes. Second yellow = red. Twenty minutes to save the season, and we're up a man.

77 minutes. Final roll of the dice. I'm putting Moreno on for the disappointing Camara. Desperation time. I'm throwing everything forward in a 4-2-4...

Nothing.

Silence at RFK as we bow out 1-0 to the old nemesis in the Eastern Conference final. The season is over. Chicago hammer LA 3-0 in the final to win MLS Cup 2009. I destroyed the league in the regular season, but all I have to show for it is a slightly tarnished Supporters' Shield.

Post-season awards:

Our own Henri Camara won the League MVP despite being a complete and utter failure down the stretch. McBride finished second, Ljungburg third.

Angel won the Golden Boot with 22 goals. Chad Barrett finished second with 20, and Camara finished third with 18.

Omar Gonzalez was rookie of the year, with Zakuani second, and Wallace third. Wallace has been having major trouble dealing with media expectations though, so I worry about his long-term future as a top-flight professional.

LA's Ricketts took goalkeeper of the year. Cannon was second, Keller third.

Gonzalez doubled his pleasure by also claiming defender of the year, with our boy Boswell second, and Ramiro Corrales third.

Denis Hamlett won coach of the year, with me second, and Warzycha third (for missing the playoffs but winning the Open Cup? surely Soehn should have won last year, right ;-) ?)

Autopsy forthcoming.

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...

It's Monday, and the Pings They are Random

* Group C not looking quite so tasty now, is it? The goals are below, but it's worth doing a little digging to find the full highlights of the match, including the remarkable sequence that sent the Cup of Nations quarterfinal to extra time. Keita's goal really did deserve to be a match winner, but when you can't mark up at the far stick against floated crosses, you get your just desserts...




* From one quarterfinal to another... Good luck to DCUMD's Shatz and Next Coach Cup quarterfinalist Chest Rockwell as they launch the good ship Black and Red United. My bookmarks and feed readers are updated. Are yours?

* When is a Bunker Bob not a Bunker Bob? Apparently, when he's a goal and a man down with 70 minutes still on the clock. When you look up a picture of tactical naivete in the dictionary... If refer you to the rest of my match reaction, in case you missed it.

* It's the eyebrows isn't it? The hair doesn't help either...


Next! | a USA Match Reaction

This was supposed to be an audition, right? A chance for the domestic crew and the Scandinavian brigade to make their claim that they should still be in the discussion for spots in Bob's 23. Well... NEXT!

Now, I understand that the guys haven't played competitively for a while. And I know Bob's Big Book of Tactics is missing a few pages (more on that later), but there was an almighty stench of awfulness coming from more than a few players. So let's dish some blame...

To the talking points!

* Away date? It's not so bad to drop a 3-1 result when we're playing in Central America, right? We always struggle down there. Oh... yeah. Well, I guess the big positive you take from playing an away game in your backyard is that you get the added bonus of an audition in hostile circumstances. So, how do you play in that situation? Get the ball down, slow the play, take the crowd out of it, then start to impose your game. But there's a few problems with that approach if you've already maimed yourself prior to the start of play...

* Bob's Big Book of Tactics, Part I. Okay, let's review. If you're going to play direct to the forwards (and there were precious few out there who know anything else--ahem, Marvell Wynne), you need at least one forward capable of settling a ball with his back to goal and holding long enough for the midfield to advance or his strike partner to run off him. In lieu of that, you need one of them dropping deep to turn and run at defenders. So why did Bob put out two burners looking to play on the shoulder of the last defender?

* Kljestan. Useless at just about everything but knocking our own guys over. Had two great opportunities in the first half to play guys in and knocked both of them out of play. Terrible. Must be nice to be one of Bob's guys so you can keep piling up the caps, regardless of how much suck you bring to the table. Speaking of Bob's pets...

* Bob's Big Book of Tactics, Part II. In the modern international game, at least when it's played at a relatively high level, the players that inevitably end up with the most time and space are the fullbacks. So it's imperitive that you possess guys in those spots who can play with the ball at their feet and are smart and positive in possession. Does that sound like Ironfoot Wynne and his 40-yard balls of doom? Does that sound like Johnny "look at all that space in front of me, better cut it back and play inside" Bornstein? Sigh.

* Jimmy Conrad's last cap. You think? Dude was struggling to keep up at times in MLS last year, so about the only thing he's got going for him now are his veteran smarts, which, apparently, somehow got left at the baggage claim or in his hotel room or something. I'm sure we'll hear some hue and cry about that ball being out of play, and how you can't, just can't call a PK in that case, and blah, blah, blah. You're on a freakin' yellow! You don't do crap like that. Congratulations, Clarence Goodson. Even if your elbow cleaned out the Honduran keeper and your goal probably wouldn't have stood 7 times out of 10 (save in England or northern Europe), you've now leapfrogged Conrad on the center back depth chart. Of course, even going down to 10 wouldn't have been so bad if not for...

* Bob's Big Book of Tactics, Part III. Now let me get this straight. First, you fail to slow things down and build your way into the game when the crowd is against you, your opponents are flying, and you can't connect a pass to save your life. Then you go down a man and a goal with over three-quarters of the match to go, but have a raft of subs available since this is a friendly. Do you (A) leave one up top, slow things way down, and look to settle your nerves and keep things tight until you can work your way back into the game, conserving energy for the 70 minutes ahead all the while? Or do you (B) leave two up top, neither of whom can hold the ball, while continuing to fly about the field like you need to get the goal back IMMEDIATELY or the world will come to a shuddering halt? We should have been down four at the break for that level of tactical naivete.

* Next! But what about those guys who looked like they had been making a case for themselves to sneak into the 23? Rogers? Tried too damn hard, though that bomb early in the second half would have been worth the price of admission and more had it gone in. He was hampered by the fact that he pretty much had to control the entire left flank on his own after Conrad saw red, but even before that, he wasn't getting the job done. Beckerman? Looked out-of-season more than most with tentative, slow passes. Findley and/or Cunningham? Shallow-ass forward pool, ain't it?

Look, when all is said and done, better this happen in a friendly than the real deal. And very few of these players will be ones we're going to be relying on come June. We've known for some time now that our Euro-brigade takes this party to a whole other level, and we're just not the same team without a certain Landon Donovan in the lineup.

But (and isn't there always a but?)... my faith in Bob's tactical accumen and player selection is approaching an all-time low. Guillotined poutry attack? Pressing for an equalizer with 10 men and 70 minutes to go? Marvell Wynne? Kljestan? This was an audition for the players, not the coach, but he managed to fail as badly as they did.

Next!

Roster Reset | Punching Cards, Having Doubts

Your pardon while I feed a couple of punchcards into the Reset Machine...
  1. John & Habarugira OUT
  2. Floribert N'Galula IN
I can understand jettisoning John (well past his sell-by date), but I wonder about the reasons for ditching Habarugira. Not that he was setting the world on fire last year, but... at the moment, we have one good fullback on the roster, though there are still questions about the status of his battered noggin, and a fistful of question marks (Wallace? Burch? Vaughn? Graye? McTavish?).

Habarugira showed little besides a fiery attitude and little respect for staying home as a defender in the few minutes he logged last year, but wouldn't you want to have depth in question marks going into the pre-season camp in hopes that one or more of them resolves into something resembling an answer? Maybe he wasn't willing to compete for a spot? Maybe he wanted to go back across the pond? Maybe he really was just awful (kinda begs the question of why we signed him in the first place)? Maybe we're clearing international spots for more signings? Maybe, maybe, maybe.

But a 31-year old striker who appears to have hit his talent ceiling at the English 3rd flight? A 22 year old brought up at one of the biggest clubs in the world, but who can't seem to break out of the reserves at lesser clubs and was recently looking to catch the bottom rungs of the professional leagues in England?

Castillo looks an impressive capture, and Perkins is as close as you're going to get to a guaranteed good one, but there's still a decided amount of what looks like floundering coming out of the United FO. Time will tell, I suppose, but their recent record in transfers in from abroad does little to calm any worries.

Update the list!

Senior Roster
1.  Josh Wicks, GK - trade bait?
2.  Troy Perkins, GK
3.  (I) Julius James, D
4.  Lawson Vaughn, D
5.  Marc Burch, D
6.  (I) Dejan Jakovic, D
7.  Bryan Namoff, D - nursing the noggin
8.  Devon McTavish, D/M
9.  (I) Floribert N'Galula, D/M - how much are we paying him? this year's African washout?
10.  Rodney Wallace, D/M - don't forget, he counts against the cap now
11.  (I) Cristian Castillo, M - on loan, but does anybody know for how long? [UPDATE: One year, option to buy--credit to Josh in the comments.]
12.  Danny Szetela, M
13.  Clyde Simms, M
14.  (I) Tiyiselani Shipalane, M/F - can't see both he and Boyzzz making the cut
15.  (I) Christian Gomez, M/F - probably gone, but included until departure confirmed
16.  Chris Pontius, M/F
17.  Santino Quaranta, M/F
18.  (I) Thabiso Khumalo, M/F - see Shipalane, Tiyiselani
19.  Jaime Moreno, F
20.  (I) Danny Allsopp, F - Oi! Oi! Oi! or oy vey?

Developmental Roster
1.  (GA) Bill Hamid, GK
2.  (I) Milos Kocic, GK - under contract, but is it for Dev Dollars again?

3.  John DiRaimondo, M
4.  Brandon Barklage, M - fully recovered?
5.  Jordan Graye, D - we took a local kid so he could live at home on Dev Dollars, right?

GA = Generation Adidas
I = requires international roster spot, maximum of 8 internationals on senior roster, internationals on developmental roster don't count against that total

Looks like we're back to even on the international spots (unless we're still carrying an extra one?) and the senior roster is filled... for now. Onalfo is apparently still shopping the Sudamericano supermarket (or does that become SuperMarket in MLS-speak?), but we'll have to shed some of the current crop to make room, both when it comes to international spots and roster spots, if we're to make any acquisitions.

Any thoughts, netizens? You've been awfully quiet of late...

DCU|FM Challenge, Part X - Eastern Conference Semifinal

And here we are at long last in the playoffs. I managed to claim the Supporters' Shield and to get through to the knockout stages of the Champions' League, but at what cost? Sadly, it looks like the team peaked too damn early, and we're in danger of suffering that most Soehn-esque of finishes to the season: the meek bow-out. Nevertheless, there are games to be played, and one positive result could turn things around for us.

Eastern Conference Semifinals, First Leg: @Kansas City Wizards
I'm not making any tactical concessions yet with my attacking style. The 4-2-3-1 remains in play. Gonzalez is in net with the backline that became standard in the second half of the season: Habarugira-Jakovic-Boswell-Namoff from left to right. I'm going for strength and power in the holding roles rather than guile, so Sosa and Simms get the nod. My normal attacking trident of Rogers-Vavá-Quaranta plays behind Moreno, who gets the start over my other struggling veterans, Lopez and Camara, who are both still dangerous enough to merit places on the bench. Gomez and Emilio are both in KC's starting lineup, and I'm sure they're ready to hurt me for trading them away...

Instead, it's Gomez who gets hurt early, subbing off in the 7th minute. The opening half hour is predictably tense and brutal; it's the playoffs after all. The match is fairly even. They're getting more chances on goal with direct wide play, while we're controlling possession and getting fewer, but better chances. Quaranta has the biggest on 25 minutes, but gets stoned when facing Hartman one-on-one in the box. They are fouling the crap out of my playmaker, Vavá, but no cards have been issued yet. The only two incidents of note in the last fifteen minutes of the half are that Rogers picks up a knock and has to be replaced by Lopez, and Sosa has a good chance from the edge of the box that Hartman saves comfortably.

I'm encouraging at the half, telling the guys they can win and asking Quaranta to really prove a point (his first half was pretty disappointing). We come out with a sustained period of possession, but nobody seems to want to shoot. Vavá and Moreno both pass up good chances near the edge of the box to lay the ball off. Finally, Simms takes charge on 50 minutes. Jakovic wins a clearance near midfield, takes a touch forward and then threads a ball on the ground to the charging Simms. Three defenders converge, but he unleashes a Clydewinder Missile from the edge of the "D" that finds the corner past the despairing Hartman. Halleluja, the goal drought is over! Now, can we keep the lead?

Moreno isn't playing very well, but I don't want to make a sub yet. Still, I'm concerned that his lack of mobility is hurting our attack. Usually, Camara is running all over the place and dragging defenders out of position, allowing the attacking mid trident to exploit the space. With Rogers off injured and Camara still bench-bound with his terrible form, I decide to gamble and switch things up. I push Moreno to the right wing, Quaranta to the left, and put the mobile and active Lopez up top to occupy their defenders.

Almost immediately, KC gets a chance through Emilio, but Boswell takes the sting out of the shot. Gonzalez tosses quickly to Simms, who plays wide to Moreno. An early cross from the veteran causes all kinds of confusion, and they knock it out for a corner (nearly an own goal). The corner bounces around the box before getting knocked clear. Moreno settles the clearance and darts along the right side of the box. Then he pauses, drags it back, and rolls a pass toward the spot. The box is packed, but Moreno goes all Charlton Heston, and the bodies part. The rolling ball finds the onrushing Sosa in space, and he drives it home at the far post. "4 minute double salvo!" says the FM announcer (clearly not Bretos, who would have gone with "Yyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeessss!").

They're going to come hard now, particularly at home, but it's too early to sit back. Eight minutes later, Vavá drives in a corner and Jakovic rises, unmarked, to head past Hartman. My team is back! 3-0 down, they're liable to throw the kitchen sink at us, so I roll the dice on Camara, putting him on for the tiring Moreno. Lopez goes back on the left, Quaranta on the right. Time to see if we can get another on the counter before they break the door down.

Nope. Boswell tackles Emilio, the ball bounces clear, and Arnaud one-times it from 25 yards to get them back in the match on 75 minutes. Now might be the time to start sitting back. KC switch to a Mourinho-style 4-5-1/4-3-3. With my last change, I bring on Olsen for Quaranta to see out the last 10 minutes. I also pull back my wingers and push up the holding mids to go 4-4-1-1, trying to negate their wing threat by closing down the space on the flanks. Emilio goes close with the last kick of the game, but can't quite get his drive under the bar. (W 3-1)

Jakovic wins October player of the month. And we have a whole week without a match. What am I going to do with all of this time?

Eastern Conference Semifinals, Second Leg: Kansas City Wizards @RFK
We're carrying a two-goal lead into the second leg, and I don't make many changes. I'm going to start with Lopez in place of Moreno, and play things a little cautious to start. Almost immediately, disaster strikes, and all of the positive feelings turn to ash. Sosa goes in hard for a challenge and sees red in the 8th minute. I swap Jacobson on for Lopez, and put Vava up top, leaving the central prong of the attacking midfield trio empty. If we start to struggle, I'll probably go 4-3-2 before too long, but for now, I need to negate Arnaud in the hole behind the strikers.

24 minutes in and the ref strikes again. Namoff goes up for a header in our box and gets whistled for a push. PK to them, which Jewsbury hammers home. Ugh. We've been dangerous on the counter, but I'm not comfortable with how much space and possession we're giving up in midfield. I go 4-3-2 with Quaranta and Rogers up top. Right away we create two good chances for Quaranta, but he has one saved and drags the other wide. Shortly thereafter we create a glorious chance on the break, but Rogers can only manage a tame header that barely tests Hartman. Seems like the finishing sickness is back. Perfect timing, eh?

After that brief flurry, KC recover, and it's all hands on deck in our box to keep them out, but we manage to make it to the break still ahead 3-2 on aggregate. At the very end of stoppage time, Rogers gets dragged down in the box, but the ref fails to make the call. Any guesses on the culprit with the whistle? Hey, guess what? It's my least favorite midget, Michael Kennedy. Sigh.

Quaranta took a knock at the end of the half, so I'm loath to make a change lest he need to come off, but Namoff has been downright terrible. So terrible, in fact, that I can't stomach the risk. I pull Namoff for Mendes and get rolling. Just after the restart, Jacobson gets hammered. No cards from the wonderful Mr. Kennedy, but I'm now playing down a man and with two guys, Quaranta and Jacobson, limping. We're in deep, deep trouble. I'd love to get one of those guys off, but we still might be facing extra time, and I've only got one sub remaining. Kennedy issues his third "stern warning" (second time for Arnaud) against KC, but still no cards for them. Did I mention that it's now pouring rain? This truly is hell.

Fifteen minutes left. One goal lead on aggregate. Man down. I need to make a change, but I've only got one sub, and both Quaranta and Jacobson are barely mobile. Midfield needs the legs more, so I take the chance and bring on Olsen for Jacobson. We're giving up height on set pieces, but I'm counting on Benny's heart and engine to make the difference yet again for DC United.

82nd minute and Kennedy finally busts out a yellow for KC after Hirsig barges over Vavá. Olsen commits three fouls in his first two minutes on the pitch, but it's Simms who gets yellow for us in the 87th minute after scything down Harrington. Simms has been all over the place, making tackles, playing balls through. Heroic performance. Hope it's not all for naught.

89th minute and now Mendes is limping off. He'll be able to return after treatment, but he's only got one functioning leg. We're now officially in the 4-4-1, 10-man stoppage-time bunker. Harrington crosses, but Cristman can only nod wide of the post. Four minutes of added time? For what? God damn Michael Kennedy, always looking for more ways to screw us. No more fingernails, but...

Final whistle! We're through to the Eastern Conference final, 3-2 on aggregate! The RFK faithful howl their approval in the rain, and all is right with the world. Simms in midfield and Gonzalez in net are the heroes.

In the other Eastern Conference semi, Chicago crushed the Red Bulls (another year without a trophy) 3-1 after a scoreless first leg in the Swamp. And in the West, Los Angeles beat TFC 1-0 at home to advance 3-1 on aggregate. They'll face Seattle, who dumped New England 4-1 on aggregate.

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...

Roster Reset | An A-League of Their Own

Well that was quick.

I guess we know what Payne was doing in the Middle East last month, because hot on the heels of the draft last Thursday, United announced the acquisition of Australian forward Danny Allsopp (lately of Al-Rayyan in Qatar). According to my list (and I'm still waiting for any confirmations/corrections on international status for some players), that officially puts us over the limit on internationals. Of course, if we assume John and Gomez are gone, we're back under... but barely, considering that much of our likely shopping is bound to be done abroad.

But what about the signing itself? I suppose it attempts to fill the Emilio-shaped void at a more attractive price-point. That said, it feels a bit like the Emilio signing as well: journeyman goalscorerer who probably would have been a more attractive prospect had the FO landed him when he first hit their radar, rather than a few years later, when the man in question was on the back end of his prime years (or probably past them, in this case).

From what I've read, Allsopp isn't completely dependent upon his speed, but his movement is no small part of his game, so you have to wonder how many years the FO expects to get out of him. The other curious aspect of this acquisition is the word that Allsopp is a poacher ideally suited for playing a high-energy counterattacking style and doesn't boast much in the way of touch.

Ignoring the obvious similarities to Emilio for a moment (poor first touch, poacher), doesn't he sound like the type of player who would take like a mallard in the wet stuff to precisely the type of game that Kevin Payne took, well... pains to disparage a couple of months ago? Strange. Though maybe the FO got confused when they heard the rumor that he's not all that good in the air and thought, "Hey, that fits the DC United style!"

To the list...

Senior Roster
1.  Josh Wicks, GK
2.  Troy Perkins, GK
3.  (I) Avery John, D - any word on a green card? hope it doesn't matter, but for the sake of completeness...
4.  (I) Julius James, D - still an international, right?
5.  (I) David Habarugira, D
6.  Lawson Vaughn, D
7.  Marc Burch, D
8.  (I) Dejan Jakovic, D
9.  Bryan Namoff, D
10.  Devon McTavish, D/M
11.  Rodney Wallace, D/M - graduated from Generation Adidas at the close of 2009
12.  (I) Cristian Castillo, M
13.  Danny Szetela, M
14.  Clyde Simms, M
15.  (I) Tiyiselani Shipalane, M/F
16.  (I) Christian Gomez, M/F - probably gone, but included until departure confirmed
17.  Chris Pontius, M/F
18.  Santino Quaranta, M/F
19.  (I) Thabiso Khumalo, M/F
20.  Jaime Moreno, F
21.  (I) Danny Allsopp, F

Developmental Roster
1.  (GA) Bill Hamid, GK
2.  (I) Milos Kocic, GK - any word on his contract? still eligible for Dev Dollars this year
3.  John DiRaimondo, M
4.  Brandon Barklage, M
5.  Jordan Graye, D - we took a local kid so he could live at home on Dev Dollars, right?

GA = Generation Adidas
I = requires international roster spot, maximum of 8 internationals on senior roster, internationals on developmental roster don't count against that total

So that puts us one over on the senior roster spots, one over on the international spots, and one over on the developmental spots. There are, of course, names on that list who likely won't be returning and others that will need to fight for their spots. We're a couple weeks out from the start of training camp (fingers crossed on the CBA negotiations!), so it's only healthy that the numbers continue to swell.

DCU|FM Challenge, Part IX - The Death March

Tino picked up an injury in training, just in time for the Death March to roll into town. He'll be touch and go to get back before we start kicking balls in anger again. Why do I get this sinking feeling that we're going to pick up a couple of key injuries in this massive fixture pileup, lose our form and confidence, and get spanked out of the playoffs early?

Pessimist, moi?

Camara got another cap for Sengal, and Boswell picked up another for the USA in their 1-1 draw with Costa Rica to close out World Cup Qualifying. The US finishes second in the Hex, 8 points behind Mexico, but 7 points clear of the play-in. El Salvador (!?!) grabbed the other automatic bid, while T&T will face off with Uruguay in the playoff. I'm still trying to figure out how a team as loaded as Honduras managed to finish bottom of the group.

Let the Death March begin!
SAT    Columbus
MON    @FC Dallas
WED    Toluca [NACL]
SAT    @Kansas City
WED    @Saprissa [NACL]

And I'm pretty sure the playoffs get started the following Saturday...

Since I've already clinched the Supporters' Shield and home-field advantage in the playoffs, the obvious play is to try and win the Champions' League group. Beating Toluca at home would do the trick since they wouldn't be able to catch us on the final day, being 4 points adrift. Easier said than done, though. And I don't want to ignore the league, as I'd like to be carrying some momentum going into the post-season.

So the game plan is going to be focused on the Toluca game, and having everybody fit and rested for the playoff game on the third Saturday (MLS wouldn't screw me over by sticking us with the Thursday game, would they?). I'm going with starters against the Crew & Toluca, a second team on the Monday game between those two matches, fit starters fleshed out with scrubs away to KC, and all scrubs at Saprissa unless we draw against Toluca, thus necessitating a result in that final Champions' League match. In that circumstance, I'll probably risk a few starters.

Deep breath.

Columbus: I ran out the normal first team with Olsen on the right wing in place of the injured Quaranta. Within two minutes we were down, Schelotto blasting away from well outside the box. At that point I figured I was in for a long evening. But we answered almost immediately, Olsen and Namoff combining well on the right before Olsen charged inside, dished to Szetela, who sprayed wide for Rogers. Rogers beat the hopeless Hejduk to cross for an unmarked Camara to tap in at the far post. Both sides exchanged blows after that. We had a series of nice buildups that came to nothing. They had a bunch of free kicks around the edge of the box that Brad Davis and Schelotto somehow conspired to fail utterly on. I had to bring on Lopez when Rogers went down clutching his knee (ruh-roh!), but Lopez was inspired... probably because he was up against Hejduk.

Whatever the case, it was Lopez that initiated the go-ahead goal on 40 minutes, cutting inside and picking out Vavá, who in turn touched a ball into space that Camara ran onto and buried. In the last minute of regulation before the half, Vavá called his own number, Lopez again setting the table for the Brazilian to fire home from the edge of the box on a quick counter. Szetela had had a decent half pulling the strings, but was already on a yellow and still committing fouls, so I replaced him at the break. Sosa slotted right in without missing a beat, and the second half consisted of bunches of crosses into our box that Jakovic and Boswell ate up and three or four great chances for Camara on the break. All were saved. Fortunately, we survived a late spell of pressure from them and had Jakovic nod in a Lopez corner with the last touch of the game. (W 4-1)

It looks like pulling Rogers early was the right move as he doesn't seem to be suffering any ill effects from his knock.

@FC Dallas: Dallas suck. Given that I only had one day of rest since the Columbus match and only one day between this match and the crucial Toluca tilt, I did a full-on swap, replacing every single member of my starting eleven except Rogers. Because he only played twenty minutes against the Crew, I decided to run him out here, resting the suddenly in-form Lopez for the Toluca match. Result? We dominated the first half against Hyndman's lame-ass 4-5-1 with a dedicated d-mid between two flat lines of four. They didn't trouble us offensively, and we weren't handing out any favors. Moreno hit the bar early before scoring on a curled effort from 20 yards. Rogers left Anthony Wallace looking for his jock after he torched him on the left, crossing for Moreno to attack in the six. Burse dove to deny Jaime, but Fred was crashing in behind him and buried the rebound in the 34th. Anthony Wallace was still looking for his jock ten minutes later as Rogers danced past him at the midfield stripe and raced down the left touchline, delivering a delightful driven cross that my boys were queuing up to finish. Moreno and Fred, already having found net, left it for Pontius, and the kid made no mistake with an easy tap-in on the stroke of halftime. The second half was a snooze-fest. Hyndman finally got up the guts to go 4-4-2, but it did his guys little good. In fact, we should have had at least one more, both Quaranta, on as a sub, and Moreno hitting one-on-ones directly into Burse's chest. (W 3-0)

[CCL Group A] Toluca:
Karma's a bitch. They did to us exactly what we did in their house. The first half was pretty even. We'd have chances, then they would. The deadlock was finally broken when they scored just before stoppage time in the first half. I pumped the guys up and came out looking to attack. It worked for a while. We created chance after chance, but Camara was having another of his miserable outings, so we were consistently denied. They had a couple chances on the counter, but nothing too dangerous. Then they got a breakaway in the 80th minute. My defenders closed down the guy on the ball. It squirted free. Namoff failed to get back. 2-0 to Toluca. I threw everything forward--only a draw was a realistic ambition at this point and would serve to keep our group-winning hopes alive. One arrived in stoppage time, but in the wrong net. Ugh. (L 0-3)

We're still through to the knockout stages of the Champions' League, but this one hurt. Time for some damage control.

Awards time is approaching! Henri Camara is on the short-list for the V-dub MVP with Ljungberg and McBride. Wallace made the Gatorade Rookie of the Year list opposite Zakuani and his old MD teammate, Omar Gonzalez. Cannon, Keller, and Ricketts are up for Panasonic GK of the Year, so no love for my boys there. And finally, Boswell and Jakovic are both on the VISA Defender of the Year list. That said, so is Jay freakin' Heaps. Ugh.

@Kansas City: Adam Cristman... superman! Remember that oh-so sick feeling I had about having peaked too early? Well, we did control large swaths of this match. And Sosa missed a glorious wide-open header. And Camara botched two clear chances. And I was playing with half of my starters resting. But still, Gonzalez needed to be a hero in net to deny a series of fine long-range drives from Cristman, one of which finally managed to sneak in at the close of the first half. Boswell and Camara both had shocking games after their awards announcements in midweek. I gave the whole team both barrels after the match. Time to try to build a little momentum against Saprissa ahead of the playoffs. (L 0-1)

...And we've gotten our confirmation as Supporters' Shield winners, along with the ticket to next year's Champions' League. Also, the playoff field is set and we get... Kansas City in the opening round. Fan-freakin'-tastic. I can just feel Gomez and Emilio itching for a bit of revenge. Well, two can play at that game. We want our mojo back after that last loss.

[CCL Group A] @Saprissa: Scrub time. The playoffs open on Saturday with this game being just three days before. It's the last game of five played in twelve days. We're already through to the next round, and Toluca aren't going to lose against Firpo at home, meaning the result is meaningless as far as group placement. But for all that, I need a result from my boys. The confidence of the team has been drained away over the last couple of matches, and we need a result to get a boost heading off to KC. Still... scrubs from the start. I do give Camara the start, hoping he'll bang one in to get the confidence going again, but knowing he wouldn't be starting in KC on his current miserable form anyway. Five minutes in, and we're down. McTavish whiffs a clearance, the ball bounces off Wallace, McTavish stands around scratching his ass as the Saprissa forward dashes past him to slam home from eight yards. Ugh. I pull back a little and play possession. We control things: 60% possession, doubling them up on shots. I yank the woeful McTavish and the slightly less woeful Camara at the half... but no positive change (shades of Soehn-desperation? at least I didn't yank them before the half!). I even try going 4-4-2 at the end, but we've gone completely off the boil. Perfect time of the season for that to happen, eh? (L 0-1)

So our meek finish to the Champions' League means a clean Mexico-USA, 1-2 sweep in the group stage, with us finishing behind Toluca, Houston behind Cruz Azul, Columbus trailing Pachuca, and the Red Bulls nipping in behind Pumas.

Final Group A standings...



And, before we hit the playoffs, a final chance to check the MLS league table...



Apparently, FM10 is in complete agreement with all the pundits in the 2009 pre-season who said the East was going to dominate. Witness: six playoff sides from the East, just two from the West. And the seventh side in the East, the Crew, finished ninth overall, meaning that the bottom six of the West finished on the bottom of the table. Shocking.

Chicago faded late, meaning our own power outage in the last few weeks didn't result in any close competition at the top of the table. Behind us and the Fire though, the rest of the playoff pack is demonstrating the powers of parity, packed into a three point window startlingly reminiscent of the "real-life" table.

I'm not at all confident heading into the playoffs. Three losses on the trot is the worst stretch of my reign by far. Very few of the players have high moral. The goals have completely dried up, and our go-to danger-man, Camara, is in awful form. Next time around, we'll see if I can plug the holes and right the sinking ship.

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...

Roster Reset | Firing up the Machine

Okay, since we had so much fun with this one last year, I figured we ought to fire up the Roster Reset machine again so we know how many spots we're working with. This first effort is really going to be more list than analysis, and, as ever, feel free to chirp in with corrections or clarifications. Of course, we're doing all of this without knowing if MLS HQ is going to be changing the roster rules yet again and what effect the CBA resolution/back-alley scrap may have... so caveat emptor and all that.

Senior Roster
1.  Josh Wicks, GK
2.  Troy Perkins, GK
3.  (I) Avery John, D - any word on a green card? hope it doesn't matter, but for the sake of completeness...
4.  (I) Julius James, D - still an international, right?
5.  (I) David Habarugira, D
6.  Lawson Vaughn, D
7.  Marc Burch, D
8.  (I) Dejan Jakovic, D
9.  Bryan Namoff, D
10.  Devon McTavish, D/M
11.  Rodney Wallace, D/M - graduated from Generation Adidas at the close of 2009
12.  (I) Cristian Castillo, M
13.  Danny Szetela, M
14.  Clyde Simms, M
15.  (I) Tiyiselani Shipalane, M/F
16.  (I) Christian Gomez, M/F - probably gone, but included until departure confirmed
17.  Chris Pontius, M/F
18.  Santino Quaranta, M/F
19.  (I) Thabiso Khumalo, M/F
20.  Jaime Moreno, F

Developmental Roster
1.  (GA) Bill Hamid, GK
2.  (I) Milos Kocic, GK - any word on his contract? still eligible for Dev Dollars this year
3.  John DiRaimondo, M
4.  Brandon Barklage, M
5.  Jordan Graye, D - we took a local kid so he could live at home on Dev Dollars, right?

GA = Generation Adidas
I = requires international roster spot, maximum of 8 internationals on senior roster, internationals on developmental roster don't count against that total (they must have "adjusted" that last bit midstream 2009 to accomodate somebody, as I don't remember it being there when we did this dance last time around)

A reminder that the total roster is limited to 24 spots, with a maximum of 20 senior roster players. Of course, we're a long way from being done with our acquisitions (I hope!), and a few of those guys probably won't even make it to camp, but it's enough to get the discussion started.

Your move, internet front office!

The Great Keeper Kerfuffle

After all the discussion (great comments, folks--thanks!) yesterday over whether we could make Nowak deal for Szetela + whatever, the FO turns around and makes a deal that I'm still trying to figure out who comes out ahead on: Fred + our first round pick in the draft (#7) + allocation money for Perkins.

Points for consideration...

* I know I'm in the minority, but I was really looking forward to seeing what Fred could do given the coach's trust, a role as an a-mid/withdrawn forward, and fewer emotional distractions off the field. In my feverish tactical imaginings, I had envisioned Fred dropping deep off Pontius up top with Quaranta and Castillo playing high on the flanks, leaving Moreno available to supersub on for Pontius or Fred. That said, given that we don't know how if Fred will be able to recover his first-season form and the fact that we desperately needed to fix the broken keeper situation, I can accept losing Fred to gain Perkins. Perkins is, after all, a proven MLS and mid-tier Euro-league keeper who is getting looks with a national team known for great keepers. We're ahead at this point.

* But giving up the first round pick? I can understand that in isolation: we're not guaranteed to get a solid contriubutor at #7, despite our success in and around that position last year. The concensus seems to be that this year's draft pool is shallower than last and that the can't-miss talent will be gone by the #4 pick. So I get that that the #7 maybe wasn't as valuable as it would have been last year. But couldn't we have exchanged our first and third rounders for Philly's second rounder? As it stands, we'll have just two picks: one in each of the third and fourth rounds. At this point, I think we're just about even on the trade.

* Plus allocation money? See this is where I get a little confused. Dealing the first-round pick says to me that we're going shopping. The FO cleared a lot of cap space this off-season and also freed up some senior roster and international slots. United's default position has usually been to treat the draft with a bit of disdain, looking abroad for acquisitions that can make an immediate difference, rather than gambling on college kids. I guess we're going to the bargain bin, and that leaves me thinking that Nowak, who never needed a keeper in the first place, came out ahead on this one.

Overall though, I'm pretty pleased to have solved what I though was one of the biggest issues with the lineup last year. We traded two unknowns (Fred as meaningful contributor + whatever a highly-rated college kid could bring in his first pro season) for a proven commodity in an area we needed to upgrade. Even if we might have overpaid, the deal does make the team better, at least in the short-term. Now the question becomes: how do the rest of the keepers shake out?

Perkins is the starter. We'll take that as a given. But behind him, we've now got Hamid, Kocic, and Wicks on the books. Assume we're carrying three keepers. Who gets left by the wayside?

Hamid: I think we can all agree that Hamid is a no-brainer to keep. He's Generation Adidas, so he doesn't count against the cap, and a highly rated youngster to boot. To most minds, that makes him the automatic #3. But I'm going to just throw something out there. I wonder if American soccer is too much in lock-step with the Brits when it comes to not trusting young keepers. Buffon won his starting spot in Serie A at 17. Casillas won the starting job at one of the biggest clubs in the world (Real Madrid) around 18-19. Sure, I understand that those are two of the most talented keepers in the world, but we've produced some pretty damned good ones in this country as well. Who's to say Hamid shouldn't be getting some significant minutes at 19 just because that's not the way they do things in Ol' Blighty?

Kocic: I'm still not sure I'm seeing what the FO is seeing in Kocic. He's a decent shot-stopper, but his decision making, communication, and command of the box are questionable to say the least. Maybe with a sane veteran to mentor him, he turns into a reasonable backup, but that's a big "if" should Perkins go down and he be the man tasked with the job of replacing him. We saw last year the lack of trust in his ability when we went shopping for Cronin on loan when Wicks went down. Also, I wonder what his contract status is. Did he re-up for Dev Dollars or is he too old for a developmental contract now? Additionally, if we're going shopping overseas, does Kocic's foreign nationality make him a liability?

Wicks: It should come as no surprise that I'm not a big fan of Wicks as the starter. But as a backup? He's cheap and brings reasonable quality, so I wouldn't be averse to him returning. I just wonder if his ego takes a battering if he gets demoted? Also, he does have more trade value than Kocic would. If Kocic is now on the senior roster, I'd lean towards letting the slight difference in their salaries eat into our cap space and keep Wicks. If Kocic is still on Dev Dollars? Then things get a little more interesting.

I think my first inclination would be to part ways with Kocic and go with Perkins, Wicks, and Hamid. But I wouldn't be averse to dangling Wicks as trade bait to see who might be interested in a nibble.

Thoughts?

What Do You Give Up?

The word from the Goffblog is that Troy Perkins is on his way back stateside. Seeing as how DC United are currently carrying a giant man-child, a wishful-thinking 2nd round draft pick, and an injured loonball as our competitors for goalkeeping spots, one would leap to the immediate conclusion that there has to be some interest from the FO (since confirmed by the tireless Goff), in a proven commodity. The question is: what are you willing to give up?

I should first get it out there that I wasn't a huge fan of Perkins... until he left. Given the disasters we've had since then, the seeming lack of viable alternatives, and the fact that Perkins is fighting for one of the three keeper spots in Bradley's 23 for South Africa, I'd be extremely interested in him now. But Perkins goes into the allocation mill, where we have a higher than usual pick, but we'll definitely need to trade up in order to grab him before some other desperate suitor does.

Once again: what are you willing to give up?

I'm just going to ignore the sort of dreaming that inspires the "we'll send them Gomez!" or "Wicks plus a third-rounder!" crowd. Not going to happen. Perkins is a hot property, and we're going to have to make a sacrifice to land him. And it won't be a Fred-shaped sacrifice either, unless his potential has suddenly blossomed in the eyes of other MLS FO's.

I think all eyes should be resting with vague curiosity on Danny Szetela. Was last year an abberation or the fault of a conflict with the coach? Does he have something more to give this team? If so, where does he slot in? Does he play in the middle next to Simms or wide on the right, freeing Quaranta to play up top with Pontius or between a lone striker and a holding pair? Szetela's age and demonstrated ability with the youth national teams would seem to indicate that his potential has yet to be reached, but do you bank on potential, or do you sacrifice that potential for what you really need now--a steady presence in the net?

Given the links between Szetela and Nowak, the fact that Nowak has two young keepers without much professional experience, and the relative lack of warm bodies on the playing roster in Philadelphia, I wonder if the Union would be interested in trading away that allocation spot for a Szetela + Wicks package deal. Is that even enough to tempt them, or does Nowak hold pat, waiting for a bigger prize to drop into his lap in the summer?

Thoughts?

DCU|FM Challenge, Part VIII - Prelude to the Death March

We open with the continuation of the Hex, where Boswell got a shock start alongside Gooch in the USA's 3-1 home victory over El Salvador vaulting them into second in the standings, three points clear of the play-in spot. A 2-0 road win over T&T then saw the USA clinch at least the play-in spot, though neither Boswell nor Olsen made Bradley's game-day 18.

September is going to start slowly, but the five week stretch starting home to LA Firpo on 9/23 is going to see us play 10 games in 36 days, with the most awful stretch, hereafter referred to as "the Death March," seeing us play Saturday home to Columbus, Monday away to Dallas, Wednesday home to Toluca, Saturday away to Kansas City, and Wednesday away to Saprissa. That's five games in twelve days! Deep breath everybody... here we go...

Seattle: We looked pretty rusty after the international break. Seattle controlled much of the opening half, limiting us to five shots, with none on frame. In our house? I don't think so! I laid into the guys in the locker room and they came out flying, putting three shots on frame in the first five minutes. But the breakthrough didn't come until I swapped out the underperforming Pontius for the struggling Camara. Camara drew two yellows and scored within 10 minutes of being put on. He had another couple of looks but couldn't sneak a second past Keller, and a nervous three minutes of stoppage time saw us run out deserved winners with Vavá taking home yet another match ball after laying on the winning assist and generally directing traffic from his #10 slot. Fingers crossed that Camara has found his way out of his summer slump. (W 1-0)

The domestic transfer deadline is in the books, meaning I'm stuck with the roster I've assembled thus far. Let's hope we're deep enough to survive the coming months...

[CCL Group A] @Toluca: After the first 20 minutes, I was shocked that we weren't down by at least two. They were making us look silly, and we didn't have an attack of note until nearly the half-hour mark. That one chance, fashioned completely by Vavá, who then spurned it himself, was followed by another moment of Vavá magic that was thwarted by their keeper. Then Simms slipped one in to the man of the moment, and he finally got one in the net. Two minutes later, we were up 2-0 after a Jakovic header was saved, but deflected in off a Toluca defender. With the lead, we settled and really started bossing the game. They had loads of corners and set pieces, but rarely troubled us, and our counters were growing increasingly dangerous, though Camara's current run of rotten luck meant he missed or had four or five breakaways saved.

With 15 minutes left, they threw the proverbial kitchen sink at us, but Simms volleyed home from a corner with 10 minutes left to make it 3-0. I was going to yank Camara because he was playing so poorly, but his relative fitness compared to my flagging midfield meant I stuck with him, and he rewarded me with the fourth two minutes after Simms' goal, nodding home a chipped Rogers cross to make it 4-0. Oh how I relished the sparse group of supporters dancing in their tiny little corner of Toluca's house. They grabbed a consolation on a 25 yard rocket with a couple of minutes remaining, but by that point, I was beyond caring. Simms took Man of the Match honors, but Vavá and Jakovic were instrumental as well. Great start to the Champions' League campaign would be an understatement. (W 4-1)

With Simms being in such fine form, I decided to see if he was ready to negotiate a more realistic contract extension (when last we sat down, he wanted Moreno money). This time around, he wanted to continue on similar wages, so I gave him a little bump, and he jumped at the offer, locking him up with us until 2013...

[CCL Group A] LA Firpo: Henri Camara signaled his return to form by nodding home a Quaranta cross from point-blank range to open the scoring on 8 minutes. 10 minutes later, Boswell took advantage of our height advantage to thump home a corner to make it 2-0. I wanted to keep the pressure on and get a third to bury the game, but Gonzalez managed to flap at a hopeless cross and send it into his own net, leaving us with a slender 2-1 halftime lead. It stayed that way until Vavá took a free kick touched into his path by Szetela and rammed a 35-yard screamer past the Firpo keeper. Vamos! Game, set, and match, we settled in and enjoyed a couple more chances before Camara added the bookend, slamming a shot home from the edge of the box after a sweet move that swept from side to side before being touched into Camara's path for the finish. (W 4-1)

The next set of games is one of those where you see the balance of the season being decided. Home on Sunday to the Quakes in the league and home on Wednesday to Saprissa in the Champion's League. With only two days rest, I'm likely to have to make extreme changes, so which game gets precedence? Beating the Quakes keeps the unbeaten run alive, confidence high, and the Supporters' Shield firmly in our grasp. Beating Saprissa would make our passage to the knockout stages of the Champions' League pretty likely, meaning we could focus on the remainder of the league fixtures. What's a manager to do?

San Jose: I decided to do a little mixing and matching, making six changes to my normal lineup, keeping some of the really important guys fresh for Wednesday's match with Saprissa. I expected to struggle a bit from the off, but we were up almost immediately, Pontius taking a corner kick rebound at the edge of the box and driving it through a mass of bodies. Within three minutes Rogers blew past two defenders on the left and crossed. The deflection fell kindly to Sosa, who picked out the corner of the net to double our lead. Three minutes after that Vavá touched Moreno into space, and the Godfather of Goals delivered. 3-0 and only ten minutes played! You've seen this scenario before right?

We dominated the play for about the next fifteen minutes before San Jose started recovering from their shell-shock. A silly foul by Wallace on the edge of the box allowed Alvarez to get one back for them in first half stoppage time. The beginning of the second half was fingernail-biting time as the Quakes prodded and probed, but couldn't find a way through. I swapped out Vavá (as I'd always planned to do) early and replaced Olsen when he started to run down. Almost immediately, the new legs in midfield (Fred and Jacobson) saw us recover our poise. I switched to a direct counter game and put on Lopez for the glacial Moreno, reaping further rewards as Rogers and Lopez were running onto some precise balls from Sosa and Jakovic. Sadly, despite three or four good chances, we could never find the fourth. Happily, they rarely looked a threat in the final half-hour. (W 3-1)

Oh, I'd forgotten... the San Jose match was our "fan day," and Kevin Payne, et al are rather pleased that I treated the crowd to an early goal glut. Attendance is expected to blossom. We're on a thirteen match unbeaten run and the win sees us grab a playoff berth with four games remaining on our league schedule, though Chicago is going to make the Supporters' Shield race pretty interesting.

[CCL Group A] Saprissa: The first half was worrying. We had a lot of tired legs out there and it showed. Saprissa had all the early chances, and it took us until twenty minutes to generate anything of interest in the attacking end. When we did, it was Boswell, once again feasting on aerial-challenged Central American defenses, heading home another corner kick goal to put us up. The balance of the half was fairly even and pretty dull, so I lit a fire at halftime. The response was good. A couple of early chances went begging, but when Rogers got mauled in the box, Vavá was delighted to slot home the PK. A mad scramble on a corner two minutes later came off both of my center backs before dropping on the line for Camara to race in and smack home. After that, I took off some of the guys who'd been racking up major miles and played possession. RFK was roaring as we strung together long passing sequences and killed the game. Both the Burundi and Canadian bosses were in the house, looking at Habarugira and Jakovic respectively. Great. Given the fixture pileup that's rapidly approaching, call ups are all I need. (W 3-0)

Can you say "hot streak"?


Halfway through the group stage, we're on 9, Toluca is on 6, and Saprissa and Firpo are joint bottom with a point apiece. The other MLS entrants? Houston is tied atop Group B with Cruz Azul on 7 points, Columbus sits second in Group C behind Pachuca, and the Red Bulls are joint second with Guatemala's Municipal on 4 points in Group D, 5 points back of leaders Pumas.

The USA U-20's managed to replicate the feat of their real-life brethren, bombing out in the group stages of the U-20 World Cup, finishing last in their group. In fact, all four of CONCACAF's participants managed to finish rock bottom in their respective groups. Way to fly the regional flag with pride, fellas!

Chivas USA: The Death March is rapidly approaching, so I'm getting prepared by giving most of the scrubs a match and resting my big guns. Only the center back pairing and the keeper were normal starters, and it showed in the first half. We were at home and controlling possession, but they had as many good chances as we did (though not many went either way). Fortunately, Galindo choked on his chances as the Goats' lone striker, while Lopez managed to bury one of his to give us the 1-0 halftime lead.

Looking for breathing room, I went for broke to start the second and pressed hard for the insurance goal, which duly arrived within five minutes when Fred floated a free kick into the box that Boswell had time to take on his chest, spin, and slot through a wall of bodies on the line. After that, we sat back, clogged the midfield, and looked to hit them on the counter. I suppose, given their 4-1-4-1 formation, that that had been their plan all along as well, so the rest of the match was pretty bland, with lots of balls booted around a midfield saturated with bodies. This being Chivas, they managed to thug it up, sending Moreno and Wallace off with knocks and leaving Fred limping around with a gashed leg at the final whistle. (W 2-0)

I'm starting to get suspicious of this streak we're on. It reeks of "...and then the wheels fell off" time, doesn't it?

Camara and Boswell get their respective calls from national team bosses and will be heading off after our Champions' League date with LA Firpo.

[CCL Group A] @LA Firpo: Hugely disappointing. Of our remaining Champions' League fixtures, this was the most winnable, and I want to win the group. The draw leaves us just a point clear of Toluca, though it does get us through to the knockout stages, taking some of the pressure off the two matches that will be packed into the upcoming Death March. We dominated, as you'd expect, and had three penalty claims waved off. Nonetheless, we really should have tested their keeper more, and Camara was shockingly bad. (D 0-0)

And on that note, we'll enter the next international break. The Champions' League group looks like this with two games to go (Home to Toluca, Away to Saprissa)...


And the MLS table, if my math is correct (and it is) shows us that DC United are your 2009 Supporters' Shield winners! You'll note that the Bruce, deprived of Donovan and Beckham before a ball was ever kicked, has managed not only to make the playoffs, but may do so as the Western Conference champs. Somehow, New York and Houston have swapped bodies...


Next time I post, we will enter the dreaded 5 matches in 12 days...the Death March!

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...

I'm Easily Amused

Oh, Red Bulls, you never cease to amuse me! In case you're not plugged into your Goff-IV drip today, Hans Backe has been installed at the Bulls' new boss. That's the same Hans Backe who was Sven's assistant with Mexico and quit the shambling distaster that is Notts County less than a month ago. I've got dibs on "Backe leaps from train wreck into fire!" as a headline if the Bulls crash and burn again. Or "Backe Off!" if he quits NY after 9 games...

DCU|FM Challenge, Part VII - Dog Days of Summer

It's the All Star Break, but the MLS action is hardly slowing. A few of the MLS players with Euro passports look to be on their way in the transfer window including Holden, Carl Robinson, and Andy Iro. The Red Bulls finally put a dent in the Galaxy, spanking them 3-0 to jump ahead of us (temporarily) on the leader board. Sadly for NY though, they've just accepted an offer from Galatasary for Angel, who is pretty much the be-all and end-all of their team...

The All Star game was a disaster for MLS, Angel bagged two, one on either side of Stuttgart's opener, but then the Germans put in three without reply to win 4-2. Camara (my United's only rep in the All Star game despite going into the break at the top of the Eastern Conference) had a miserable time, earning the worst rating (by far) on the day and getting yanked at half-time. They better not have killed his confidence.

Colorado: (W 3-2) I wanted to stamp our authority all over this one early and give the Rapids no chance of recovery, and it was all going so swimmingly for the first fifteen minutes. Then Casey nodded home a free kick. We pushed hard for the equalizer, but they scored again, this time from a direct free kick. I pulled back the troops and started to play a more controlled possession game and was rewarded by one, then another Boswell goal, both from close range on corner kicks. Only then did we hit halftime...phew! Turns out the new d-mid, Sosa, was at fault for the first goal and had been having a terrible half. Yanked him, turned to the generally reliable, if unspectacular, Simms, and went into the second with renewed purpose. Within two minutes, Quaranta floated a cross for Rogers at the back post to slot home and we were up. From there it was a lot of possession, a handful of long rangers blazed into the crowd from Lopez (I was resting Camara after the All Star Game just two days before), and a couple of nervous moments at the end, but we took all three points.

Simms picked up a thigh strain, joining Benny on the short-term injury list. With Sosa sucking mightily in the last match and Jacobson still out with a long-term injury, we have a mini-crisis in the holding midfield slots...just as the big "top of the East" Atlantic Cup grudge match with New York approaches in midweek...

New York: (W 1-0) Galatasaray backed out of their deal for Angel, which sucks for me and for the rest of MLS. Fortunately, Boswell put the shackles on him for this match, which was characterized not just by the typical midfield battles (pretty much every midfielder who started the game ended it either injured or on a yellow) but by strong possession play from both teams. We had by far the better and more numerous chances, but Camara was stoned on three clear looks (7 shots, 5 on frame for him alone). Vavá had his first really good game for us, spraying passes and looking lively. Boswell was the man of the match again though, nodding home yet another corner with 15 minutes left to continue his recent scoring run. Clean sheet!

@San Jose: (D 0-0) You know the match. Middle of the summer. Two tired teams. Heavy legs. Heavier passing. We had the majority of the chances, but only a couple of clear-cut ones, and Cannon came up big for them on those. I had to back off my normal high-pressure game because I only have three fit central midfielders and all of them were hovering around 90% fitness when we kicked off. I also had to swap out half of the eleven that started against New York because of the short rest. Regardless, another clean sheet, and we now have a week to get the legs back and heal up. Moreno picked up a groin strain late on and will be out for a few weeks.

Boswell wins Player of the Month for July!

The Board Confidence update brings me these two unsurprising nuggets...


@Houston: (W 4-0) Marched into Houston and massacred them. The score was a bit flattering as the play was more even than a 4-0 would indicate, but they didn't really have any clear chances, all of their shots coming from distance or challenged headers. Our wings got us started, with Tino diving onto a Rogers cross, and Rogers tucking home from a tight angle after being played through by Vavá. The playmaker called his own number next after a Camara shot pinged back off the upright. 3-0 at the half. The second stanza was pretty boring stuff. Them lumping balls long. Us dominating midfield and launching counters. A couple of tough offsides calls against our guys. And Jakovic completing his return to form by heading home a corner in the dying minutes. Szetela and Boswell picked up knocks in the match, but neither appears to be serious. Three clean sheets in a row? Goals from corners? Who is this team?

Looks like Claudio Lopez is going to be leaving us in the offseason. His contract was running out and he didn't want to re-up. Instead, he's signed for Elche of the Spanish second division.

Player of the Week sweep! Rogers won, with Vavá in second, and Jakovic third.

Columbus beats out RSL to make it to the Open Cup final, while Chicago downs New York in the other semifinal...apparently, no trophies are allowed for Metrobull, even in FM.

Camara is going through a pretty barren spell at the moment (damn All Star game seems to have killed his form), though his morale is still high. If Jaime were healthy, I'm not sure Henri would automatically be starting every game.

Kansas City: (W 3-1) Baldomero Toledo hates us. Proof? How about five yellow cards in the first half for us versus none for them, despite the fact that they committed more fouls? Whatever. We started poorly, Emilio (he's a Wizard now, remember?) crossing into a crowded box. Wolff ran over our keeper, the ball popped free, and Arnaud buried it. All within the first two minutes. By minute 10 we were exerting our normal possession stranglehold, but couldn't seem to make any good chances. No matter. Hartman provided the RFK faithful with some chuckles by trying to tip over a lofted Boswell free kick from the midfield stripe. Unfortunately for him, despite nobody else being in the box, he managed to push the ball into his own net. Shortly thereafter, Rogers ate up turf on the left, beat his man and crossed for Vavá to prod home. With Camara suddenly goal-shy, Moreno still dinged, and Lopez pissing me off by signing with somebody else in midweek, I gave the start to Pontius up top. He rewarded my faith by burying a "fierce shot" from well outside the box just after the second half kickoff. Despite a few scares down the stretch, we kept them out to post our second consecutive victory despite not completely dominating the match.

Ouch! Mexico smashed the USA 4-0 in the Azteca, though the match stats were more even than the score would suggest. The USA is still three points clear in the third auto-qualifying spot with four games to go. Strange how the fictional world works though, here's the Hex after six games: Mexico (16), El Salvador (11), USA (10), T&T (7), Honduras (4) Costa Rica (3). Even weirder? Looking over the USA's extended roster, there's not a single player that I doubt should be there... save one. For some reason, Dasan Robinson is good enough for Nats duty despite having been released by Chicago way back in April. And he was on the bench at the Azteca. Odd. Hmmm. Noticed another, though Thorrington actually has been capped... and is apparently a Premier League player in England now, with Burnley. Weird.

@Toronto: (D 1-1) Barrett put them up after 30 seconds, and they were all over us for the first 10 minutes. Overconfidence by my boys? Perhaps. But there's a reason we're confident. After a quarter of an hour, we were level, Quaranta beating Brennan on the dribble and drilling a cross that the onrushing Vavá headed in from inside the six. The rest of the match was a series of decent chances for both sides. I didn't push the attack as much as I might because I was nervous about Guevara delivering for their ultra-dangerous wingers to pounce on the counter. Still, we had a huge chance to win it in stoppage time. Olsen chipped in Tino, who was one on one with Frei. The angle was maybe a little sharper than would have been ideal, but I still would have banked on Tino to finish the chance. Sadly, he barfed on it, though he was still awarded man of the match. Gonzalez in net seems to have recovered from his early struggles and has been pulling off some excellent saves of late.

The international transfer window slams shut, and with it any chance of Fred returning to Brazil before the season's end...

In the buildup to the "Top of the East vs. Top of the West" match, the Bruce says hello...


Los Angeles: (W 2-0) Came out to dominate from the open. LA have a good record, but they're doing it through being compact defensively and hitting on set pieces and counters. I told my boys to play it aggressive and up-tempo (their defenders aren't the quickest), getting the ball wide, but to keep numbers back and play possession. We were all over them from the opening whistle though we went to halftime only up 1-0 courtesy of first Rogers then Vavá dancing around the edge of the box before feeding Camara for the finish (finally!). Started the second by playing a higher line and looking to keep the ball in their end. Within 30 seconds we were up 2-0; Namoff played in Tino, who cut inside before reversing a ball back into Vavá's path. The Brazilian made no mistake with the near post finish. LA then proceeded to test us from three dead ball opportunities in quick succession leading to my eventual reining in of the horses to kill things off. Fred, on as a late sub, fashioned a glorious chance for himself in stoppage time, weaving past three defenders before bouncing his shot off Ricketts in the LA net.

[CCL] @Sugar Boys Juventus: (W 1-0) With the brutal summer coming to a close and going in as heavy favorites, I ran out a completely changed eleven save for Camara up top. He's been in pretty miserable form of late, so I figured I'd try to get him a goal or two to boost the confidence as we get ready for the home stretch. He answered the bell early to put us up, but then we misfired the rest of the match, only managing to put two of our many, many shots on target. A comfortable victory to have in hand going into the second leg in RFK, but I've little doubt that the supporters won't be impressed with the 1-0 edge. Neither am I.

@Chicago: (D 1-1) Hard fought draw. We dominated possession in their house, but both sides managed to create a half-dozen good chances. Quaranta gave us the lead from the spot after being fouled by Woolard in the box in first half stoppage time, but Blanco equalized for them off a Mapp cross with 15 minutes left. Camara is still in rotten form, a shadow of his former self. The question becomes: who do I turn to for the goals now? The aging and slowing but precise Moreno? The young and hungry but often wayward Pontius? Or the classy Lopez, who's never really produced and will be on his way at the close of the season? A word of note about Habarugira. He's taken his chance with the fixture congestion and solidified his place at left back ahead of Myers and Wallace. Maybe I'll try to use Rogers' quickness up top and play Wallace as my left-sided attacker?

[CCL] Sugar Boys Juventus: (W 5-0) Even with a few of my starters rested, this was never a contest. Vavá opened our account on twelve minutes after Pontius, auditioning for the role of striker in place of Camara, failed to hit the net with three golden chances. Of course, then he snatched at a Quaranta cross and first-timed a volley into the upper 90 from 25 yards to double our lead. We managed 25 shots, with 12 on target, to 2 shots, none on target for them. Our possession was close to 70%. Still, it took three late goals, a long-rang rocket from Szetela and close range headers from Moreno and Rogers, make the result more emphatic. I'm still not sure what to do about the mini-crisis at striker. Pontius scored a fantastic goal, but choked on about five great chances (the kinds that Camara had previously been burying) in a hour of action up top. Lopez did squat in his 15 minute trial, and Moreno didn't do much but connect on a Pontius cross inside the six.

The international break sees us sending three players away for national team duty. Camara, now that his form has turned, finally gets a call from Senegal (go figure), while Boswell and Olsen get called in by Bob Bradley. Boswell deserves the call, he's been the rock around which our new defensive solidity is built. But Olsen? He can barely get into my team at the moment and is coming off a string of injuries that have severely limited his minutes. Odd.

Here's the tale of the table on the back end of the summer...


With a handful of games remaining on our regular season schedule, we're in the driver's seat for the Supporters' Shield. Now that we're finally starting to pitch some shut-outs, our defense is starting to rival the best in the league (note that Arena's LA have finally come back to earth in that department), while our offense, though sputtering a bit of late, is easily the class of MLS. Of course, there's always that worry about Camara losing form, and the next couple of months will be busy, busy, busy, with October looking particularly hectic as the Champions' League group stage gets rolling. The draw has been made, and (lucky us!) we're in the Group of Death alongside Toluca, Saprissa, and LA Firpo. We start away to Toluca. Fun, fun, fun!

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Think I'm making a mess of this? Grab a copy of Football Manager 2010and have a go yourself. Then write it up and post it to your own blog or send me a copy and I might post it here on FBF...