Pulisic and Wright scored again as the won 2-1 over Paraguay today, so far they are 3-0 and first in their group. Play Colombia tomorrow in the quarterfinals.
well, they looked like i would expect them to. it is a real bummer that Joe Gallardo broke his leg though. that is a big loss for the US up top. he works so well with Haji and Pulisic.
Haji looked offside for that last goal but the angle was weird so it was kinda hard to tell…
The major thing we should be impressed with here is the speed and accuracy with which this team is able to counterattack. Good at closing down space and blocking off the passing lanes, then plenty of bodies going forward with pace.
World’s number one economy…TAKE THAT! Hey, we’ll always have soccer over them.
But on the real, definitely impressed with Pulisic’s free kicks. It doesn’t matter the opponent: a wall is a wall, and the goal is still the same size.
Agree with your sentiments. Just because China is bad doesn’t necessarily mean what the U.S. did is not impressive. Good teams beat bad teams 6-0 in soccer; thus, it is okay to be impressed by the result.
China were awful defensively. Those kind of basic mistakes could be exploited by a much lower level US team as well. I wanted to be impressed by these highlights, but instead just came away with the impression that China is WAY off the pace for a youth national team.
Really China looked horrendous, but it’s always fun to watch a team in red white and blue put up big numbers and make some pretty impressive plays while doing it.
Any time you want to feel better about US Soccer’s place in the global pecking order, have a gander at China and India, who account for a whopping 36.4% of the world’s population but have yet to produce a single footballer conclusively superior to (or even on par with) Brian Maisonneuve. There are many theories to explain this , most of which conclude that development infrastructure is lagging so badly behind the basic need for countries of such size and population as to render the exercise of “catching up” to be borderline worthless. Makes you wonder where we would be if not for 1994.
Here is an article from 2011 on the China problem from the Economist
Any time you want to feel better about US Soccer’s place in the global pecking order, have a gander at China and India, who account for a whopping 36.4% of the world’s population but have yet to produce a single footballer conclusively superior to (or even on par with) Brian Maisonneuve. There are many theories to explain this , most of which conclude that development infrastructure is lagging so badly behind the basic need for countries of such size and population as to render the exercise of “catching up” to be borderline worthless. Makes you wonder where we would be if not for 1994.
Wright, Pulisic, and Gallardo are going to be really special. JUST STAY OUT OF THE COLLEGE SYSTEM!!!
Haji already has a grown man body. Great free kicks from Pulisic. And I love the footwork from the right back(Shaq Moore?)
Is there a stream for tomorrow’s game?
Pulisic and Wright scored again as the won 2-1 over Paraguay today, so far they are 3-0 and first in their group. Play Colombia tomorrow in the quarterfinals.
well, they looked like i would expect them to. it is a real bummer that Joe Gallardo broke his leg though. that is a big loss for the US up top. he works so well with Haji and Pulisic.
Wright and Pulisic must be averaging 1+ goals per game in their US U 17 careers thus far….against damn good competition too.
How Flores compare with Pulisic? They appear to play somewhat similarly
Some of these kids have fantastic touch. That was the most promising part for me. We lack technical skill more than anything.
Also, where’s the goal line technology?? (j/k)
Speaking of youth teams the U-20 Womens World Cup kicks off today with us against Germany….http://www.fifa.com/u20womensworldcup/news/y=2014/m=8/news=usa-germany-ensures-world-class-start-2416082.html
Nice fun from box to box by wright on the second goal.
And then they all turned 18 and their development stalled…
I kid, I kid…
Who is #2 at RB? Nice footwork…
Haji looked offside for that last goal but the angle was weird so it was kinda hard to tell…
The major thing we should be impressed with here is the speed and accuracy with which this team is able to counterattack. Good at closing down space and blocking off the passing lanes, then plenty of bodies going forward with pace.
Lookin’ good fellas, keep up the good work!
World’s number one economy…TAKE THAT! Hey, we’ll always have soccer over them.
But on the real, definitely impressed with Pulisic’s free kicks. It doesn’t matter the opponent: a wall is a wall, and the goal is still the same size.
Agree with your sentiments. Just because China is bad doesn’t necessarily mean what the U.S. did is not impressive. Good teams beat bad teams 6-0 in soccer; thus, it is okay to be impressed by the result.
I believe China’s still the #2 economy, btw. Although I think it’s projected to eventually rise to the top.
China were awful defensively. Those kind of basic mistakes could be exploited by a much lower level US team as well. I wanted to be impressed by these highlights, but instead just came away with the impression that China is WAY off the pace for a youth national team.
I think China needs help at right back.
Best…comment…ever.
Haji Wright is certainly going to be leaving the Galaxy academy soon. Nice hat-trick
He already did. He’s got an agent and trying to shop himself to European clubs. His younger brother is still in though.
Really China looked horrendous, but it’s always fun to watch a team in red white and blue put up big numbers and make some pretty impressive plays while doing it.
Good result…BUT…wow China looked awful. Pulisic looks to enjoy those free kicks!
Any time you want to feel better about US Soccer’s place in the global pecking order, have a gander at China and India, who account for a whopping 36.4% of the world’s population but have yet to produce a single footballer conclusively superior to (or even on par with) Brian Maisonneuve. There are many theories to explain this , most of which conclude that development infrastructure is lagging so badly behind the basic need for countries of such size and population as to render the exercise of “catching up” to be borderline worthless. Makes you wonder where we would be if not for 1994.
Here is an article from 2011 on the China problem from the Economist
http://www.economist.com/node/21541716
And another from the Atlantic in 2013
http://www.theatlantic.com/china/archive/2013/07/why-is-chinas-national-soccer-team-so-bad/277439/
Any time you want to feel better about US Soccer’s place in the global pecking order, have a gander at China and India, who account for a whopping 36.4% of the world’s population but have yet to produce a single footballer conclusively superior to (or even on par with) Brian Maisonneuve. There are many theories to explain this , most of which conclude that development infrastructure is lagging so badly behind the basic need for countries of such size and population as to render the exercise of “catching up” to be borderline worthless. Makes you wonder where we would be if not for 1994.