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November 25, 2008 at 12:03 AM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #309022November 25, 2008 at 12:03 AM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #309040
sdduuuude
ParticipantVinatieri’s field goal lifts Colts past Chargers
By BERNIE WILSON
AP Sports WriterAP Photo
Indianapolis Colts kicker Adam Vinatieri, right, kicks a 51-yard game-winning field goal as Hunter Smith, left, holds during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the San Diego Chargers on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2008, in San Diego. The field goal gave the Colts a 23-20 win.SAN DIEGO This time, Adam Vinatieri was right on from a lot farther out. Vinatieri, one of the most clutch kickers in NFL history, made a 51-yard field goal as time expired to lift Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts to a heart-stopping 23-20 win over the San Diego Chargers on Sunday night.
He was kicking toward the same goal posts where just more than a year ago he pushed a 29-yard field-goal attempt wide right with 1:31 left, allowing the Chargers to hold on for a 23-21 win.
Manning threw two touchdown passes for the Colts (7-4), who won their fourth straight game to remain in wild-card contention.
The Chargers (4-7) remain desperate. The two-time defending AFC West champions have lost four of five and remain two games behind division leader Denver, which was upset 31-10 by the Oakland Raiders.
Manning kept the winning drive alive with a 14-yard pass to Marvin Harrison on fourth-and-inches from the Chargers’ 48-yard line following a long officials’ review over the spot of the ball following the previous play.
It was Vinatieri’s 22nd career game-winning field goal in the final minute of the fourth quarter or overtime. Included on that list are two last-second kicks that won Super Bowls for the New England Patriots.
It was Manning’s 35th career game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime.
Manning seemed determined not to take a fourth straight loss to the Chargers. It was the Chargers who ended the Colts’ 2007 season with a 28-24 upset in a divisional-round playoff game.
It wasn’t easy, though.
The Colts went ahead 20-10 on Vinatieri’s 38-yard field goal with 11:48 left. That kick capped a drive kept alive by pass interference calls against defensive backs Antonio Cromartie and Clinton Hart, both on third downs.
The Chargers scored 10 straight to tie it.
Philip Rivers threw a 1-yard scoring pass to rookie running back Jacob Hester and Nate Kaeding kicked a 47-yard field goal with 1:30 left.
Manning turned a turnover by Philip Rivers into a 17-10 lead, throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass to Dominic Rhodes on fourth-and-goal with 38 seconds left in the third quarter.
Rhodes burned linebacker Stephen Cooper for the TD catch after he was stopped on three straight runs after the Colts had a first-and-goal at the 1.
The drive was set up by Rivers’ fumble.
Rivers was scrambling when Robert Mathis came in from behind and batted the ball out of his hand. Raheem Brock scooped it up and returned it to the Colts’ 34.
Earlier, Manning rebounded from his own costly interception to throw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Gonzalez with 38 seconds left before halftime to pull the Colts into a 10-10 tie.
On Indianapolis’ previous possession, Manning was intercepted by Quentin Jammer at the Chargers 11.
The Chargers turned it into a 10-3 lead when Rivers hit Vincent Jackson on a 39-yard touchdown pass to cap the 89-yard, nine-play drive. Jackson made the catch behind two defenders before falling into the end zone. It was just the third TD pass allowed by the Colts this year.
The Colts had gone three games without a turnover and the Chargers had gone four games without a takeaway.
Vinatieri kicked a 23-yard field goal and San Diego’s Nate Kaeding kicked a 35-yarder, both in the first half.
Manning completed 32 of 44 passes for 255 yards. Rivers was 24-of-31 for 288 yards.
November 25, 2008 at 12:03 AM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #309061sdduuuude
ParticipantVinatieri’s field goal lifts Colts past Chargers
By BERNIE WILSON
AP Sports WriterAP Photo
Indianapolis Colts kicker Adam Vinatieri, right, kicks a 51-yard game-winning field goal as Hunter Smith, left, holds during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the San Diego Chargers on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2008, in San Diego. The field goal gave the Colts a 23-20 win.SAN DIEGO This time, Adam Vinatieri was right on from a lot farther out. Vinatieri, one of the most clutch kickers in NFL history, made a 51-yard field goal as time expired to lift Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts to a heart-stopping 23-20 win over the San Diego Chargers on Sunday night.
He was kicking toward the same goal posts where just more than a year ago he pushed a 29-yard field-goal attempt wide right with 1:31 left, allowing the Chargers to hold on for a 23-21 win.
Manning threw two touchdown passes for the Colts (7-4), who won their fourth straight game to remain in wild-card contention.
The Chargers (4-7) remain desperate. The two-time defending AFC West champions have lost four of five and remain two games behind division leader Denver, which was upset 31-10 by the Oakland Raiders.
Manning kept the winning drive alive with a 14-yard pass to Marvin Harrison on fourth-and-inches from the Chargers’ 48-yard line following a long officials’ review over the spot of the ball following the previous play.
It was Vinatieri’s 22nd career game-winning field goal in the final minute of the fourth quarter or overtime. Included on that list are two last-second kicks that won Super Bowls for the New England Patriots.
It was Manning’s 35th career game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime.
Manning seemed determined not to take a fourth straight loss to the Chargers. It was the Chargers who ended the Colts’ 2007 season with a 28-24 upset in a divisional-round playoff game.
It wasn’t easy, though.
The Colts went ahead 20-10 on Vinatieri’s 38-yard field goal with 11:48 left. That kick capped a drive kept alive by pass interference calls against defensive backs Antonio Cromartie and Clinton Hart, both on third downs.
The Chargers scored 10 straight to tie it.
Philip Rivers threw a 1-yard scoring pass to rookie running back Jacob Hester and Nate Kaeding kicked a 47-yard field goal with 1:30 left.
Manning turned a turnover by Philip Rivers into a 17-10 lead, throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass to Dominic Rhodes on fourth-and-goal with 38 seconds left in the third quarter.
Rhodes burned linebacker Stephen Cooper for the TD catch after he was stopped on three straight runs after the Colts had a first-and-goal at the 1.
The drive was set up by Rivers’ fumble.
Rivers was scrambling when Robert Mathis came in from behind and batted the ball out of his hand. Raheem Brock scooped it up and returned it to the Colts’ 34.
Earlier, Manning rebounded from his own costly interception to throw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Gonzalez with 38 seconds left before halftime to pull the Colts into a 10-10 tie.
On Indianapolis’ previous possession, Manning was intercepted by Quentin Jammer at the Chargers 11.
The Chargers turned it into a 10-3 lead when Rivers hit Vincent Jackson on a 39-yard touchdown pass to cap the 89-yard, nine-play drive. Jackson made the catch behind two defenders before falling into the end zone. It was just the third TD pass allowed by the Colts this year.
The Colts had gone three games without a turnover and the Chargers had gone four games without a takeaway.
Vinatieri kicked a 23-yard field goal and San Diego’s Nate Kaeding kicked a 35-yarder, both in the first half.
Manning completed 32 of 44 passes for 255 yards. Rivers was 24-of-31 for 288 yards.
November 25, 2008 at 12:03 AM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #309123sdduuuude
ParticipantVinatieri’s field goal lifts Colts past Chargers
By BERNIE WILSON
AP Sports WriterAP Photo
Indianapolis Colts kicker Adam Vinatieri, right, kicks a 51-yard game-winning field goal as Hunter Smith, left, holds during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the San Diego Chargers on Sunday, Nov. 23, 2008, in San Diego. The field goal gave the Colts a 23-20 win.SAN DIEGO This time, Adam Vinatieri was right on from a lot farther out. Vinatieri, one of the most clutch kickers in NFL history, made a 51-yard field goal as time expired to lift Peyton Manning and the Indianapolis Colts to a heart-stopping 23-20 win over the San Diego Chargers on Sunday night.
He was kicking toward the same goal posts where just more than a year ago he pushed a 29-yard field-goal attempt wide right with 1:31 left, allowing the Chargers to hold on for a 23-21 win.
Manning threw two touchdown passes for the Colts (7-4), who won their fourth straight game to remain in wild-card contention.
The Chargers (4-7) remain desperate. The two-time defending AFC West champions have lost four of five and remain two games behind division leader Denver, which was upset 31-10 by the Oakland Raiders.
Manning kept the winning drive alive with a 14-yard pass to Marvin Harrison on fourth-and-inches from the Chargers’ 48-yard line following a long officials’ review over the spot of the ball following the previous play.
It was Vinatieri’s 22nd career game-winning field goal in the final minute of the fourth quarter or overtime. Included on that list are two last-second kicks that won Super Bowls for the New England Patriots.
It was Manning’s 35th career game-winning drive in the fourth quarter or overtime.
Manning seemed determined not to take a fourth straight loss to the Chargers. It was the Chargers who ended the Colts’ 2007 season with a 28-24 upset in a divisional-round playoff game.
It wasn’t easy, though.
The Colts went ahead 20-10 on Vinatieri’s 38-yard field goal with 11:48 left. That kick capped a drive kept alive by pass interference calls against defensive backs Antonio Cromartie and Clinton Hart, both on third downs.
The Chargers scored 10 straight to tie it.
Philip Rivers threw a 1-yard scoring pass to rookie running back Jacob Hester and Nate Kaeding kicked a 47-yard field goal with 1:30 left.
Manning turned a turnover by Philip Rivers into a 17-10 lead, throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass to Dominic Rhodes on fourth-and-goal with 38 seconds left in the third quarter.
Rhodes burned linebacker Stephen Cooper for the TD catch after he was stopped on three straight runs after the Colts had a first-and-goal at the 1.
The drive was set up by Rivers’ fumble.
Rivers was scrambling when Robert Mathis came in from behind and batted the ball out of his hand. Raheem Brock scooped it up and returned it to the Colts’ 34.
Earlier, Manning rebounded from his own costly interception to throw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Gonzalez with 38 seconds left before halftime to pull the Colts into a 10-10 tie.
On Indianapolis’ previous possession, Manning was intercepted by Quentin Jammer at the Chargers 11.
The Chargers turned it into a 10-3 lead when Rivers hit Vincent Jackson on a 39-yard touchdown pass to cap the 89-yard, nine-play drive. Jackson made the catch behind two defenders before falling into the end zone. It was just the third TD pass allowed by the Colts this year.
The Colts had gone three games without a turnover and the Chargers had gone four games without a takeaway.
Vinatieri kicked a 23-yard field goal and San Diego’s Nate Kaeding kicked a 35-yarder, both in the first half.
Manning completed 32 of 44 passes for 255 yards. Rivers was 24-of-31 for 288 yards.
November 24, 2008 at 7:13 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308532sdduuuude
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]CARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
[/quote]
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—The United States will open the final round of regional qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup at home against Mexico and finish its run against Costa Rica.
The other three teams in CONCACAF’S qualifying tournament, played between February and October, are El Salvador, Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago.
The top three advance to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the No. 4 team meets South America’s fifth-place nation in a home-and-home playoff for another berth.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley was upbeat after Saturday’s draw. The low-key event was conducted a few hours ahead of FIFA’s draw for next year’s Confederations Cup, widely seen as a warmup to the World Cup.
“The expectation is always that the last round will be very competitive and certainly when you look at this schedule, opening at home with Mexico and finishing at home with Costa Rica, it’s a good test.”
The United States and Costa Rica had easy passage to the final qualifying round. Mexico, guided by former England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, struggled on the road and gained its only points with a tie against lowly Canada.
“It’s just the proof that all around the world qualifying is competitive,” Bradley said. “Especially when you play games on the road, you take nothing for granted. We have a great deal of respect for Mexico. They have a very good team.”
For the Confederations Cup, the U.S. was drawn with World Cup champion Italy, Brazil and Egypt in one group. European champion Spain joins New Zealand, Iraq and South Africa in the other.
Host South Africa, the lowest-seeded entry in the easier group, avoids Brazil and one of the two European teams. South Africa opens the two-week tournament against Iraq on June 14.
Bradley welcomed the chance to play in South Africa ahead of the World Cup despite being drawn in a difficult group. The U.S. defeated Mexico to advance to the Confederations Cup.
“It’s a very strong group,” Bradley said. “We know we will be tested a great deal but we are excited abut the prospect of playing these great teams.”
The Iraqi team recently resumed training at home since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraq has not played a home game in nearly two decades because of wars and sanctions.
Since the invasion, the national squad has been training mostly in neighboring Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. But the team brought jubilation in the war-torn country by winning the Asian Cup last year.
“We now have to prove to all of you what we can do,” said Jorvan Viera, the country’s Brazilian coach.
South Africa will try to show its recent improvement is no fluke. After elimination from next year’s African Cup, it has won its four most recent games.
“It is true that at the beginning we did have some turbulence,” South Africa coach Joel Santana said. “But we believe we are on the right road.”
November 24, 2008 at 7:13 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308901sdduuuude
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]CARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
[/quote]
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—The United States will open the final round of regional qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup at home against Mexico and finish its run against Costa Rica.
The other three teams in CONCACAF’S qualifying tournament, played between February and October, are El Salvador, Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago.
The top three advance to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the No. 4 team meets South America’s fifth-place nation in a home-and-home playoff for another berth.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley was upbeat after Saturday’s draw. The low-key event was conducted a few hours ahead of FIFA’s draw for next year’s Confederations Cup, widely seen as a warmup to the World Cup.
“The expectation is always that the last round will be very competitive and certainly when you look at this schedule, opening at home with Mexico and finishing at home with Costa Rica, it’s a good test.”
The United States and Costa Rica had easy passage to the final qualifying round. Mexico, guided by former England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, struggled on the road and gained its only points with a tie against lowly Canada.
“It’s just the proof that all around the world qualifying is competitive,” Bradley said. “Especially when you play games on the road, you take nothing for granted. We have a great deal of respect for Mexico. They have a very good team.”
For the Confederations Cup, the U.S. was drawn with World Cup champion Italy, Brazil and Egypt in one group. European champion Spain joins New Zealand, Iraq and South Africa in the other.
Host South Africa, the lowest-seeded entry in the easier group, avoids Brazil and one of the two European teams. South Africa opens the two-week tournament against Iraq on June 14.
Bradley welcomed the chance to play in South Africa ahead of the World Cup despite being drawn in a difficult group. The U.S. defeated Mexico to advance to the Confederations Cup.
“It’s a very strong group,” Bradley said. “We know we will be tested a great deal but we are excited abut the prospect of playing these great teams.”
The Iraqi team recently resumed training at home since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraq has not played a home game in nearly two decades because of wars and sanctions.
Since the invasion, the national squad has been training mostly in neighboring Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. But the team brought jubilation in the war-torn country by winning the Asian Cup last year.
“We now have to prove to all of you what we can do,” said Jorvan Viera, the country’s Brazilian coach.
South Africa will try to show its recent improvement is no fluke. After elimination from next year’s African Cup, it has won its four most recent games.
“It is true that at the beginning we did have some turbulence,” South Africa coach Joel Santana said. “But we believe we are on the right road.”
November 24, 2008 at 7:13 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308919sdduuuude
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]CARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
[/quote]
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—The United States will open the final round of regional qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup at home against Mexico and finish its run against Costa Rica.
The other three teams in CONCACAF’S qualifying tournament, played between February and October, are El Salvador, Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago.
The top three advance to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the No. 4 team meets South America’s fifth-place nation in a home-and-home playoff for another berth.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley was upbeat after Saturday’s draw. The low-key event was conducted a few hours ahead of FIFA’s draw for next year’s Confederations Cup, widely seen as a warmup to the World Cup.
“The expectation is always that the last round will be very competitive and certainly when you look at this schedule, opening at home with Mexico and finishing at home with Costa Rica, it’s a good test.”
The United States and Costa Rica had easy passage to the final qualifying round. Mexico, guided by former England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, struggled on the road and gained its only points with a tie against lowly Canada.
“It’s just the proof that all around the world qualifying is competitive,” Bradley said. “Especially when you play games on the road, you take nothing for granted. We have a great deal of respect for Mexico. They have a very good team.”
For the Confederations Cup, the U.S. was drawn with World Cup champion Italy, Brazil and Egypt in one group. European champion Spain joins New Zealand, Iraq and South Africa in the other.
Host South Africa, the lowest-seeded entry in the easier group, avoids Brazil and one of the two European teams. South Africa opens the two-week tournament against Iraq on June 14.
Bradley welcomed the chance to play in South Africa ahead of the World Cup despite being drawn in a difficult group. The U.S. defeated Mexico to advance to the Confederations Cup.
“It’s a very strong group,” Bradley said. “We know we will be tested a great deal but we are excited abut the prospect of playing these great teams.”
The Iraqi team recently resumed training at home since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraq has not played a home game in nearly two decades because of wars and sanctions.
Since the invasion, the national squad has been training mostly in neighboring Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. But the team brought jubilation in the war-torn country by winning the Asian Cup last year.
“We now have to prove to all of you what we can do,” said Jorvan Viera, the country’s Brazilian coach.
South Africa will try to show its recent improvement is no fluke. After elimination from next year’s African Cup, it has won its four most recent games.
“It is true that at the beginning we did have some turbulence,” South Africa coach Joel Santana said. “But we believe we are on the right road.”
November 24, 2008 at 7:13 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308940sdduuuude
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]CARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
[/quote]
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—The United States will open the final round of regional qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup at home against Mexico and finish its run against Costa Rica.
The other three teams in CONCACAF’S qualifying tournament, played between February and October, are El Salvador, Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago.
The top three advance to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the No. 4 team meets South America’s fifth-place nation in a home-and-home playoff for another berth.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley was upbeat after Saturday’s draw. The low-key event was conducted a few hours ahead of FIFA’s draw for next year’s Confederations Cup, widely seen as a warmup to the World Cup.
“The expectation is always that the last round will be very competitive and certainly when you look at this schedule, opening at home with Mexico and finishing at home with Costa Rica, it’s a good test.”
The United States and Costa Rica had easy passage to the final qualifying round. Mexico, guided by former England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, struggled on the road and gained its only points with a tie against lowly Canada.
“It’s just the proof that all around the world qualifying is competitive,” Bradley said. “Especially when you play games on the road, you take nothing for granted. We have a great deal of respect for Mexico. They have a very good team.”
For the Confederations Cup, the U.S. was drawn with World Cup champion Italy, Brazil and Egypt in one group. European champion Spain joins New Zealand, Iraq and South Africa in the other.
Host South Africa, the lowest-seeded entry in the easier group, avoids Brazil and one of the two European teams. South Africa opens the two-week tournament against Iraq on June 14.
Bradley welcomed the chance to play in South Africa ahead of the World Cup despite being drawn in a difficult group. The U.S. defeated Mexico to advance to the Confederations Cup.
“It’s a very strong group,” Bradley said. “We know we will be tested a great deal but we are excited abut the prospect of playing these great teams.”
The Iraqi team recently resumed training at home since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraq has not played a home game in nearly two decades because of wars and sanctions.
Since the invasion, the national squad has been training mostly in neighboring Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. But the team brought jubilation in the war-torn country by winning the Asian Cup last year.
“We now have to prove to all of you what we can do,” said Jorvan Viera, the country’s Brazilian coach.
South Africa will try to show its recent improvement is no fluke. After elimination from next year’s African Cup, it has won its four most recent games.
“It is true that at the beginning we did have some turbulence,” South Africa coach Joel Santana said. “But we believe we are on the right road.”
November 24, 2008 at 7:13 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #309003sdduuuude
Participant[quote=sdduuuude]CARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
[/quote]
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)—The United States will open the final round of regional qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup at home against Mexico and finish its run against Costa Rica.
The other three teams in CONCACAF’S qualifying tournament, played between February and October, are El Salvador, Honduras and Trinidad and Tobago.
The top three advance to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and the No. 4 team meets South America’s fifth-place nation in a home-and-home playoff for another berth.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley was upbeat after Saturday’s draw. The low-key event was conducted a few hours ahead of FIFA’s draw for next year’s Confederations Cup, widely seen as a warmup to the World Cup.
“The expectation is always that the last round will be very competitive and certainly when you look at this schedule, opening at home with Mexico and finishing at home with Costa Rica, it’s a good test.”
The United States and Costa Rica had easy passage to the final qualifying round. Mexico, guided by former England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, struggled on the road and gained its only points with a tie against lowly Canada.
“It’s just the proof that all around the world qualifying is competitive,” Bradley said. “Especially when you play games on the road, you take nothing for granted. We have a great deal of respect for Mexico. They have a very good team.”
For the Confederations Cup, the U.S. was drawn with World Cup champion Italy, Brazil and Egypt in one group. European champion Spain joins New Zealand, Iraq and South Africa in the other.
Host South Africa, the lowest-seeded entry in the easier group, avoids Brazil and one of the two European teams. South Africa opens the two-week tournament against Iraq on June 14.
Bradley welcomed the chance to play in South Africa ahead of the World Cup despite being drawn in a difficult group. The U.S. defeated Mexico to advance to the Confederations Cup.
“It’s a very strong group,” Bradley said. “We know we will be tested a great deal but we are excited abut the prospect of playing these great teams.”
The Iraqi team recently resumed training at home since the U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraq has not played a home game in nearly two decades because of wars and sanctions.
Since the invasion, the national squad has been training mostly in neighboring Jordan, Qatar and United Arab Emirates. But the team brought jubilation in the war-torn country by winning the Asian Cup last year.
“We now have to prove to all of you what we can do,” said Jorvan Viera, the country’s Brazilian coach.
South Africa will try to show its recent improvement is no fluke. After elimination from next year’s African Cup, it has won its four most recent games.
“It is true that at the beginning we did have some turbulence,” South Africa coach Joel Santana said. “But we believe we are on the right road.”
November 24, 2008 at 5:38 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308499sdduuuude
ParticipantCARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
November 24, 2008 at 5:38 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308868sdduuuude
ParticipantCARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
November 24, 2008 at 5:38 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308886sdduuuude
ParticipantCARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
November 24, 2008 at 5:38 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308908sdduuuude
ParticipantCARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
November 24, 2008 at 5:38 PM in reply to: Market soars like an eagle on heels of Obam economic speech #308972sdduuuude
ParticipantCARSON, Calif. – The tear trying to escape the corner of Sigi Schmid’s eye didn’t even begin to tell the full story of the emotional maelstrom churning within the Columbus Crew head coach.
In his moment of triumph Sunday, after his Crew capped a superb season by capturing the MLS Cup thanks to a 3-1 win over the New York Red Bulls, Schmid’s professional life flashed before him.
There was joy, redemption and a sense of justice, all released at the moment Columbus captain Frankie Hejduk hoisted the Cup aloft and an explosion of streamers cascaded around the Crew players’ shoulders at Home Depot Center. Yet there was also a truly personal element to Schmid’s mindset.
Foremost in his thoughts was his wife, Valerie, who encouraged him to take the Columbus position two years ago even though it would take him thousands of miles away from the family. Throughout the season, she told her husband that the Los Angeles venue of this year’s final was fate – and that he would emerge a champion from the city in which he was disgracefully fired as coach of the Los Angeles Galaxy in 2004.
But in the early hours of Sunday morning, Valerie, who still lives in Southern California, suffered a health scare.
“It was an eventful day because I got a call from my wife at 4.30 a.m. because she was not feeling well,” said Schmid of Valerie’s gastrointestinal problem. “My son-in-law, who is a doctor, got her hooked up to an IV – they even had her hooked up in the parking lot so she could come to the game. It was all pretty emotional.”
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Schmid celebrated the fruits of his labor through moistened eyes, yet he went about the pursuit of a championship with the precision of an architect.
His blueprint dictates that the Crew plays more like a South American team than one typical of Major League Soccer in that they are generally content to operate by stealth instead of taking too many risks. Some unfairly call their style dull, yet just how any side including the magnificent Guillermo Barros Schelotto could ever be described as such defies belief. Then again, Schmid has rarely received the full credit he deserves, and the bitterness he feels will never fully subside.
His alleged crime with the Galaxy was that their style of soccer was not entertaining enough – never mind that the team was then in first place – and L.A.’s embarrassing failure in recent times has, and continues to highlight, the utter folly of the decision to fire him.
But with doubts surrounding the Crew, Schmid came into the 2008 campaign amid predictions of failure and with his job in jeopardy. Instead of struggling, the Crew won six of their first seven games and carried on the momentum.
“Our goal before the season was to get into the playoffs,” Schmid said. “As the season progressed, we thought we might as well try to win the Eastern Conference and get home advantage, then to win the Supporters’ Shield. But we believed early on after six or seven games that we had a team with a chance to win the MLS championship.
“It is a very special moment for me, winning in L.A. in front of family and friends and in the town I was fired in. That meant an awful lot.”
Sunday’s result made it the first time since 2002 that the team with the best regular-season record emerged as MLS champion. The key to it all has been the way Schmid has built a team around the 35-year-old Schelotto – the Argentinean soldier of fortune who is happy to live by his wits on the field.
Schelotto’s thinking is on an entirely different plane than most of the players in the league, yet Schmid got his squad to understand how to coexist with the former Boca Juniors star and to read and maximize his quick-thinking methodology.
“Guillermo has been very consistent for us. He has been there game in and game out,” Schmid said of Schelotto, who assisted on all three Columbus goals Sunday to set an MLS Cup record. “He is a player that always belongs on the field and as an individual he is the sort of person who can raise the level of those around him.”
Schmid’s contract is up this month; Schelotto’s future is also in doubt. To sign both men required foresight and initiative. To lose either without the sturdiest of fights would be nothing short of criminal.
As a franchise that failed to make the championship in each of the league’s first 12 seasons, Columbus has waited a long time for its moment in the sun. How it handles the matter of two of the league’s most influential men will dictate whether or not this is the start of a brighter future.
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ParticipantGosh, breeze. You must be really annoyed at all the good housing threads on the site lately. I can understand how a dearth of political topics on a housing forum can really get under your skin.
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