Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Soccer


WASHINGTON – Georgetown (19-3-2) made history on Saturday keeping alive the best season in program history. In front of a sellout crowd at North Kehoe Field, the Blue & Gray defeated the San Diego Toreros (14-9-0) 3-1 in the quarterfinals of the NCAA tournament to advance to the first NCAA College Cup in program history.
“This feeling is just awesome,” said Georgetown head coach Brian Wiese. “This postseason has been really interesting for this team since we were expected to get there, being the three seed, but we’ve never done it before. How you manage that dual mentality is really interesting and I’m so proud of them.”
After a quiet first half, the game started at a frantic pace for both sides.
The Toreros got on the board first off of a corner kick in the 49th minute. USD leading scorer Dan Delgado took the kick to the far post and Julian Ringhof got over the rest of the crowd to head it into the top left corner of the net to make it 1-0.
The lead didn’t last long as a foul 45-yards out gave junior forward Steve Neumann a chance at a free kick. He served it high into the box and as a crowd went up for it, the ball was flicked backwards by a San Diego defender and headed into the top right corner of the net for the unlikely equalizer.
The game began to open up after the goals with Georgetown having two huge chances. Freshman forward Brandon Allen crossed it, trying to ricochet into the far right post in the 52nd minute which went just wide and senior forward Andy Riemer had a great chance on the right side that was saved by San Diego keeper Drew Ilijevski.
In the 65th minute the Toreros began to possess. James Cohn took a long shot that went just left, off of a corner kick. GU keeper Tomas Gomez was forced to come up with a huge save on the right side and Connor Brandt had another go wide as the defense was on its heels.
The game changed in the 72nd minute with the lead coming from an unlikely source. Riemer drew a foul a few yards outside of the right corner of the box and Neumann took the restart. He served it perfectly to the far corner and freshman midfielder Melvin Snoh came sliding in from the left side and got a foot on it to send it to the corner of the net to give GU the 2-1 lead as the crowd went wild.
“It was nice to get my first goal in this atmosphere and in front of this crowd,” Snoh said.
USD had two quick chances following the goal, but the Hoyas stayed strong on defense and countered on offense looking for goal number three.
It looked as if that would come in the 85th minute when Neumann had an open net, but the shot went left and the Toreros countered still looking dangerous.
The third goal did come late in the contest as junior forward Gabe Padilla got it started by forcing a USD turnover. He passed it to Neumann at the top of the box who calmly one-touched to Riemer on the left. The senior shot to the left post but the ball ricocheted off. Fortunately, it went back to the foot of Riemer who finished to the middle making the score 3-1 and sealing the victory for the Blue & Gray.
San Diego had the first big chance of the contest in the 22nd minute as Delgado took a free kick from 40-yards out and skimmed the top of the crossbar just going high.
Late in the half, Georgetown began to attack as Riemer had a look at the net as well as one more shot off of a restart that was mishandled by Ilijevski.
The best look came from sophomore midfielder Tom Skelly who had a chance at a poke but went just right.
These chances set the stage for the explosive second half and the 3-1 final.
Georgetown outshot San Diego 12-8, and both squads took five corner kicks. Gomez was awarded the win in the net with two saves, while Ilijevski had three stops on the afternoon.
The Hoyas’ 19 wins this season is also a new program record breaking the previous mark set in 1994.
“We’re just proud to be Hoyas,” said Riemer. “We’re proud to make history and to carry this streak into the [College Cup].”

Soccer


HOOVER, Ala. — Heading into Friday’s national semifinal, Georgetown junior Steve Neumann had seven goals, the lowest season total for him in his three years with the Hoyas.
It’s safe to say he’s back to himself.
Neumann scored three times – including twice in 89 seconds – as Georgetown advanced to Sunday’s national championship match 4-3 on penalty kicks. The Hoyas and Maryland finished tied at four after two overtimes. Neumann also scored one of Georgetown’s penalty-kick goals.
“I had never had a hat trick in college,” Neumann said. “It was a pretty good time to get one, I guess.”
Neumann’s first goal came at 32:11 after a header to center it from Ian Christianson. That tied the game at one. The second, at 33:40 was a long-distance goal which bounced off the post and in from 28 yards out to give the Hoyas a 2-1 advantage, which they held until halftime. The third looked like something out of a video game, as Andy Riemer sprinted from the left side and centered the ball beautifully for Neumann, who slid it to the back of the net to make it 4-2 Hoyas.
It was the first hat trick in the men’s College Cup since Virginia’s Nate Friends did it in 1993 in a 3-1 victory against Princeton.
“You always dream about having big games like that on big stages like this,” Neumann said. “I’m just fortunate enough to have it at this point in the season.”
Neumann’s head coach, Brian Wiese, differed with his player just a little bit.
“He’s not fortunate, he’s good,” Wiese said.
Wiese also admitted to a bit of foreshadowing, although it may have been just a tad off-center.
“He had an unbelievable week of training before the [national quarterfinals] against San Diego,” Wiese said. “I had actually told him the day before [that game] that I thought he may have a hat trick, that he was due for a hat trick.
“He ended up getting two assists and he actually assisted on the own goal, so he actually had three assists,” Wiese said. “So we got that wrong. He actually got the hat trick [Friday].”
For Neumann, who was voted team MVP by his peers last year, the regular season was not a downtime, production-wise. He did have 13 assists heading into Friday’s game, but it was more like something was missing.
“Things just weren’t falling for me early in the year,” Neumann said. “I think I had like two goals in the first 12 games, or something like that. I had a bunch of assists, but I just had to stay with it and then I have a game like this where every shot I take seems to go in.”
But in the end, hat tricks not withstanding, Neumann prefers to think of himself as an offense-starter more than an offensive force.
“As a youth player, I always kind of thought of myself as a playmaker,” Neumann said. “I’ve been setting up [freshman forward] Brandon Allen for a few goals this year,” Neumann said with a smile.
Still, Friday is a night Neumann is not likely to forget.
“I can’t explain the feeling, three goals in the College Cup” Neumann said. “We just came out here to play a game and I guess we gave everyone a show.”

Monday, May 13, 2013

soccer


The United States men's national team ventured into their rivals’ fortress and emerged unscathed, standing firm and earning a 0-0 draw against Mexico, but failing to break the Mexican defense on Tuesday night.
In six previous World Cup qualifiers at the Estadio Azteca, the US had managed to claim just one tie for its efforts. On Tuesday, it earned a second one, worth an invaluable point in the final round of qualifying for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
In this most heated of rivalries, brimming with slights to avenge, the US showed up stout of heart, battling and grinding their way to an unlikely draw.
“We’re very pleased,” said head coach Jurgen Klinsmann. “We had a lot of challenges over the last ten days with injuries and players being unavailable team effort. They put us under a lot of pressure but we managed to take everything they had.”
It was their second nervy result in five days, and a shock after the team had appeared to have reached its nadir after a Sporting News expose revealed a sizable part of the team disliked its coach, the experimental Jurgen Klinsmann. Instead, the Americans took the report as an occasion to rally, and followed up a snowbound 1-0 win over Costa Rica in Denver with a defense-first showing south of the border.
I’m so proud of the boys today because I don’t think people realize how hard a place this is to play,” said forward Herculez Gomez. “A hundred thousand people who would love nothing more than to see you get beat down. We came in and we showed that team unity in spite of what’s happened in the last week.”
The Americans did so in the most daunting of environments. A deafening hum of horns and the screech of whistles rained down from 100,000 Mexican fans, mostly drowning out the 500 brazen Americans who had traveled. That, aligned with the altitude and the knowledge that the US has never won a competitive game in this stadium, conspired to break the American spirit. So prone are the Mexico fans in the lower bowl – who reportedly paid a princely $150 to sit there – to throw all kinds of liquids and projectiles at the hated gringos, that a line of riot police and their shields had to protect the Americans from bodily harm.
The Americans had vowed to take the game to Mexico all the same. The US delivered a clear statement of intent by refusing to relinquish the ball for the first three and a half minutes of the game. They weren’t going to just sit back, as they often have. But Mexico’s superior craftsmanship soon became apparent, as El Tri found acres of space behind the American midfield on the counter-attack. American defenders DaMarcus Beasley and Matt Besler were then forced to upend these attacks outside the laws of the game, earning them early yellow cards.
Mexico crafted a pair of good chances for Javier Hernandez and a wide-open header for Jesus Zavala. But wave after wave of Mexican attacks were stranded on this unorthodox American beach-head, composed of defenders who were either inexperienced, playing out of position and a backup goalkeeper in Brad Guzan. Yet however tenuous its grip, it withstood, thanks in part to some shoddy Mexican work in putting the finishing touch on their attack.
Towards the end of the half, the emboldened Americans started to find some room to push forward of their own, deftly combining through the middle, where previously only long balls and the occasional corner had gotten them into Mexico’s half, to little effect. This yielded no significant shots though, as their sloppiness on the ball persisted.
The US put no more pressure on Guillermo Ochoa’s goal in the second half. But its defense settled down, keeping the box clean for long stretches. It slowly grew apparent from Mexico’s mounting frustration that there was a result to be had here, in this blood-thirsty cauldron.
The US slowed the game down where it could, trying to keep the ball in its own half and venturing out only when the occasional chance for a quick breakaway presented itself. If this ploy lacked ambition, that was okay. It neutralized Mexico’s inherent technical advantage, which can rip a team apart if left unfettered.
n the 75th minute, when Javier Aquino crashed to earth in the box, Mexico desperately pleaded with the referee for a penalty as detritus rained down on the field from the stands. But the US survived that scare too and continued its gritty, determined slog towards the liberation and point the final whistle promised.
“We tried to keep everything in front of us tonight,” said defender Geoff Cameron. “I think we did a fantastic job and it was a collective effort.”
As the final minutes ticked down, Mexico’s manager Jose Manuel de La Torre – who was already under fire from the Mexican media before this game kicked off– made his desperation apparent, gesticulating wildly on the sideline. It did him and his charges no good, as a late barrage yielded no winner. 0-0 it ended. Beer and boos rained down in equal measure.
“This is still a team that when big moments come and the spotlight comes on brightest that’s something that we relish,” said midfielder Michael Bradley. “There’s a lot to be proud of.”
The American performance may have been lacking aesthetically, but to take any more risks than they did against such ball virtuosos would have been foolhardy. They played it right and got the spoils as their reward.
Because at the Azteca, a draw is as good as a win.



Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Soccer


PANAMA CITY, Panama (April 14, 2013) – The U.S. U-17 Men’s National Team lost 3-1 to Honduras in the quarterfinals of the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship on Sunday. The loss eliminated the USA from qualifying for the FIFA U-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates.
The U-17 MNT nearly took the lead in the third minute on a corner kick from midfielder Joel Soñora. Defender Shaquell Moore rose above everybody and his downward header was on target, but cleared off the line by a Honduras defender.
The USA fashioned another superb chance in the 13th minute, with Soñora dancing into the area after a flowing move. He sidestepped his man before trying to poke a shot past onrushing goalkeeper Christian Hernandez, who did well to block the effort.
Honduras grew into the game and generated their first dangerous chance in the 26th minute. Brayan Velazquez latched onto a ball over the top, holding off defender John Requejo, Jr. to get into the area. U.S. goalkeeper Jeff Caldwell came up big with a brave and vital save, springing off his line to smother the shot.
In the 42nd minute, Honduras took the lead. Alvaro Romero collected the ball from a throw in before squaring it for Christopher Alegria, who wound up a full 30 yards from goal to hit a sizzling drive that Caldwell got a hand to, but failed to keep out of the net.
The USA's response was instant, however, with Soñora grabbing the equalizer. Fed by midfielder Christopher Lema, Soñora dribbled and cut in from the left, where he let fly with a shot that flew past Hernandez to tie the score at 1-1 heading into the break.
Honduras reclaimed the lead early in the second half as goalscorer Velazquez turned provider, threading a beautiful pass that deceived the U.S. defense. Alberto Elis timed his run to perfection at the far post to latch on to the ball and poke it past a stranded Caldwell from five yards out in the 57th minute.
Eleven minutes later Honduras doubled their lead off a free kick. Kevin Alvarez struck his shot perfectly, curling the ball over the wall from 23 yards and past Caldwell who was helpless to keep out the world-class effort.
The USA tried to get back into the match, and generated a few chances against an increasingly defensive Honduras side but was unable to pull one back.
The best effort came in the 86th minute when Moore put a shot just wide after a goalmouth scramble. In extra time, Conor Donovan rolled his shot wide of the mark as well.


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Soccer



MEXICO CITY (March 26, 2013) – For just the second time in U.S. Men’s National Team’s World Cup Qualifying history, the USA earned a point at Estadio Azteca with a 0-0 draw against Mexico in front of a massive crowd.
Goalkeeper Brad Guzan made three saves to record his second-straight clean sheet, and the young center back duo of Omar Gonzalez and Matt Besler showed tremendous poise and grit in helping the USA earn a historic result. The only other World Cup Qualifying point earned by the USA in Azteca came during another scoreless draw on Nov. 2, 1997.
The draw in the USA’s third of 10 matches in the Final Round of 2014 FIFA World Cup Qualifying moved the Americans to 1-1-1 (4 points) in the Hexagonal and into a three-way tie for second place with Honduras and Costa Rica behind Panama (1-0-2, 5 points) at the top of the table. Mexico (0-0-3, 3 points) is in fifth place, and Jamaica (0-1-2, 2 points) sits in sixth. The top three finishers qualify directly to the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.
In other results tonight Panama blanked Honduras 2-0 at Estadio Rommel Fernandez in Panama City and Costa Rica moved up from last place with a 2-0 victory against Jamaica at Estadio Nacional in San Jose, Costa Rica.
The U.S. will resume World Cup Qualifying on June 7 when it faces Jamaica at National Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica (beIN SPORT, time TBA). The USA’s next home game in World Cup qualifying will be June 11 against Panama at CenturyLink Field in Seattle, Washington. The match kicks off at 6:30 p.m. PT and will be broadcast on ESPN, WatchESPN and Univision.  Fans can also follow the game online via ussoccer.com’s MatchTracker and on Twitter @ussoccer.
Guzan made two saves in the first half, stopping a Giovani dos Santos shot in the 21st minute and turning away a Jesus Zavala header in the 28th minute as the Mexican forward slipped unmarked behind the U.S. defense on a free kick.
The USA’s best buildup of the first half came in the 39th minute with some quick passing between Michael Bradley, Jozy Altidore and Clint Dempsey. Bradley momentarily flashed free in the penalty area, but the play was broken up by Mexico’s Jorge Torres Nilo.
Mexico players pleaded with referee Walter Lopez for a penalty in the 76th minute after U.S. midfielder Maurice Edu bundled into Javier Aquino from behind in the box, but Lopez signaled for a corner kick instead.
Guzan’s biggest save came during a wild last few minutes of the match in which Mexico pushed hard for a game-winner and earned a series of corner kicks.
In the third minute of stoppage time, Guzan dove to his right to bat away Angel Reyna’s strike from distance that looked bound for the left corner. Guzan and the U.S. defense repelled every Mexican cross at the end of the game and kept the hosts off the board despite Mexico’s 15-2 advantage in corner kicks.
- See more at: http://www.ussoccer.com/news/mens-national-team/2013/03/mnt-secures-draw-at-estadio-azteca.aspx#sthash.1OTVm4MD.dpuf

soccer

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (April 9, 2013) – The U.S. Women’s National Team earned a comprehensive 3-1 win against the Netherlands as midfielder Tobin Heath opened the scoring in the 36th minute before Christen Press, who started at forward, nabbed goals in the 45th and 60th minutes to seal the victory. 

The U.S.-based players will now return to their National Women’s Soccer League clubs to prepare for the opening weekend of the new league. The Portland Thorns travel to FC Kansas City on April 13 for the inaugural match of the NWSL. 

The next match for the U.S. Women’s National Team is June 2, when they travel to Toronto to face Canada at BMO Field. The rematch of the thrilling 2012 Olympics semifinal at Old Trafford, can be seen live on ESPNews at 4:30 p.m. ET. Fans can also follow the game on ussoccer.com’s MatchTracker and on Twitter @ussoccer_wnt 

“There were a lot of positives from the game,” said U.S. head coach Tom Sermanni. “I thought tactically we did exactly what we tried to do. For much of the game, we pinned Holland in their own half which was our aim. We created a considerable number of chances and probably should have made the score line a little more decisive, but there was some spirited defending from Holland as we expect from these teams. But when you consider we made 10 changes from the team that played against Germany, I was very pleased with the performance.” 

Sermanni made 10 changes to the lineup that faced Germany on April 5, with right midfielder Heather O’Reilly the only holdover from that entertaining 3-3 tie last Friday. 

The USA out-shot the Dutch 25-9 for the match and had a series of chances in the early going, with midfielder Yael Averbuch and Press testing the Dutch goalkeeper Loes Geurts in the opening 20 minutes. 

In the 16th minute, Press was denied on back-to-back shots. The first came when Dutch defense closed down Tobin Heath at the top of the penalty area and after a deflection off a defender, Press found herself alone against Geurts, who did well cut down the angle and save the first shot. Press collected the rebound and sent it back toward goal from just a few yards out, but defender Daphne Koster recovered well to save it off the goal line. 

Heather O’Reilly came close in the 27th minute, pouncing on a loose ball and firing a shot that forward Sherida Spitse had to clear off the line. 

The U.S. finally opened the scoring in the 36th minute as forward Sydney Leroux beat her defender on the right flank. Leroux cut it back past Press, who let it roll past here to an onrushing Heath, who spun the ball into the left side of the net past a diving Geurts. 

Press doubled the score seconds before halftime in the 45th minute. With the defense converging on Leroux, she played a perfect ball that allowed Press a first touch that beat the Dutch back line. With a one-on-one chance, Press calmly picked her spot and sent the ball into the lower right side of the net as Guerts tried to come out and cut down space. 

The Stanford product nabbed her second of the game in the 60th minute and a nice individual dribbling effort. She weaved her way free into the right sight of the penalty area before firing a right-footed shot that caromed off the post and in from 14 yards out. 

U.S. goalkeeper Ashlyn Harris, who was making just the second start of her international career, did not have much to do but she was at her best in the 61st minute, springing to her left to keep out a bouncing header from Anouk Hoogendijk. 

Julie Johnston nearly added to the USA’s lead in the 73rd minute, but her goal was called back for offside. The 21-year-old midfielder, who was making her first career start in just her second cap, drifted into the area on a free kick and finished a textbook header, but the assistant referee’s flag prevented the former U-20 WNT captain from notching her first goal for the senior team. 

The Netherlands got on the board late in the match, with Manon Melis grabbing the consolation goal. Put through by Leonne Stentler into the left side of the U.S. penalty area, Melis chipped Harris with a beautiful first touch to the delight of the home crowd. It was the Netherland’s only shot on goal of the match. 

Friday, April 12, 2013

soccer


PANAMA CITY, Panama (April 11, 2013) ­ The U.S. Under-17 Men¹s National Team won Group C of the 2013 CONCACAF U-17 Championship after defeating Guatemala 1-0 at Estadio Rommel Fernández on Thursday. Midfielder Corey Baird scored the game's only goal off an assist from forward Rubio Rubin.
As the top seed from Group C, the USA heads into the all-important quarterfinal stage and will face the Group D runner-up, which will be either Mexico or Honduras, who play later tonight. Mexico entered that match needing a draw or win to take first place in Group D.
The U.S. U-17 MNT’s quarterfinal match kicks off at 6 p.m. ET on Sunday, April 14, at Estadio Rommel Fernández. The game will be broadcast live on FOX Soccer and Univision Deportes. Fans can also follow on ussoccer.com¹s MatchTracker and via Twitter @ussoccer_ynt .
Few chances were exchanged in the opening half hour, with both teams trying to find their way into the game. Guatemala generated their first real opportunity in the 26th minute, but defender Conor Donovan took up an excellent position to block a shot from 12 yards.
The USA's first major sniff at goal came in the 39th minute when Rubin tested the Guatemala goalkeeper Nicholas Hagen. The U.S. winger sidestepped his man in the area before unleashing a fierce shot that Hagen saved well, diving low to his left.
Moments later forward Ahinga Selemani tested the waters when he turned on the edge of the area and cracked a 20 yard drive, but Hagen was equal to the task. Just before halftime, Soñora drew another save out of Guatemala's ‘keeper, with a curling effort from 18 yards that Hagen tipped over the bar to ensure the match was scoreless at the break.
The USA took the lead in the 49th minute when Rubin skipped by his defender and then lifted a left-footed cross over Hagen to the far post. Baird was positioned perfectly to side foot the ball home on the full volley into the empty net and provide the USA a lead they would not relinquish.
Guatemala nearly got back into the match in the 62nd minute. Mario Hernandez was first to react to a cross at the far post but he headed his effort over the goal from a close angle.
In the 72nd minute Rubin, now out on the right, curled in another delightful cross to the far post that was just slightly too far for midfielder Junior Flores. Despite the effort, the midfielder failed to make good contact with his sliding, one-timed shot.
Guatemala had a quality chance for the equalizer in the 88th minute when Christopher Ortiz cut in on his left foot and unleashed a shot on goalkeeper Jeff Caldwell, but the U.S. ‘keeper was able to make the save – his only of the match