Brian McBride Announces Retirement

Section 8 recognizes Brian McBride

Section 8 recognizes Brian McBride

BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. – Chicago Fire forward Brian McBride fought through tears on September 3rd as he announced he will retire after the 2010 season, ending one of the most storied careers in American soccer history. McBride, 38, told the media that he has been in conversations with his family for more than a year on the decision, which ends a career that took from the early days of MLS to the English Premier League and back to MLS again, with a US record-tying three World Cup appearances sprinkled in between.

Commentary: Remember McBride as soccer royalty American fans love to debate how their players stack up, somehow managing to pit Donovan’s consistency against Tab Ramos’ natural talent from a different time, or wondering if John Harkes’ European success means any more than Brad Freidel setting up camp in England for more than a decade. There’s little argument McBride belongs in the conversation. He is, without a doubt, the best striker the US has ever produced, the country’s best player in the air and the most accomplished player in US history.

No other player has served as a regular captain with a club in the Premier League, something McBride did with aplomb at Fulham. Donovan and Clint Dempsey are the only other Americans to score in two World Cups, and ask both of those players about the one man who helped them get there, and you’re sure to get the same answer: McBride.

From the Chicago Fire website:
Teary McBride announces end of storied run

MLS players celebrate McBride’s legacy
Galaxy head coach Bruce Arena – who coached McBride with the US team in 2002 and 2006 and will coach against him Saturday night – reflected fondly on perhaps McBride’s signature moment, when he suffered a nasty gash to his face but played on during the Americans’ 1-1 draw against Italy in the group stage of the 2006 World Cup. “He was cut and he played 90 minutes, and he played an unbelievable role in allowing the US to get the point against Italy,” Arena said. “In that game, he was a warrior.”

Galaxy talk McBride
Seventy-two of McBride’s 95 national team caps and 24 of his 30 goals came during Arena’s tenure. He was the leading scorer at the 2002 CONCACAF Gold Cup, helping the Americans win the tournament for the first time since 1991 and showing a sign of things to come as he helped the U.S. to the quarterfinals of that year’s World Cup in South Korea, scoring the winning goals in victories over Portugal and Mexico.

Galaxy talk McBride part 2
Now the most recognizable face in American soccer, Landon Donovan was another player McBride helped through his formative years with the U.S. national team. The two suited up in the attack together 44 times from 2000-06 and played key roles in the American success during the 2002 World Cup, scoring the two goals that pushed the U.S. past Mexico and into the tournament quarterfinals.

“The biggest thing for me about Brian was watching the little things he did,” said Donovan. “Everybody sees the goals he scores, the way he holds the ball up, how strong he was. For me it was his example: every day eating right, hydrating properly, just being a good professional. He paid a lot of attention to the younger guys, helping us move along as players, showing us what it means to do this every day and making sure we understood none of this is a given. I’m glad I had the opportunity to be around him and learn from his example.”

McBride’s MLS Highlights
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McBride, who played prep soccer at Buffalo Grove HS in Arlington Heights (Chicago) IL, starred at St Louis University in the early 90′s where he holds all the career individual scoring marks; his 40 career assists and 72 career goals top the charts and is firmly entrenched as the Bills’ all-time leading scorer with 184 points.

Slovenia Grabs Group Lead, Play USA on Friday

From US Soccer comes this summary of Slovenia’s win over Algeria: Former West Brom midfielder and Slovenia captain Robert Koren scored a 79th-minute goal against a 10-man Algeria side to take first place in Group C after the first round of matches. Algeria’s Abdelkader Ghezzal received his second yellow card just 15 minutes after coming into the game in the 58th minute, and six minutes later Algeria’s Faouzi Chaouchi misjudged the bouncing shot from Koren that made Slovenia the first team to reach three points after a game that featured just six shots on goal, the same number of shots on goal Tim Howard saved against England. Bob Bradley said, “Slovenia played a tactical game. They are well organized and solid defensively. They got a good goal from Robert Koren, who has been an important player for Slovenia throughout qualifying.”

Clint Dempsey joined Brian McBride as the only U.S. player to score in two FIFA World Cups as the U.S. Men’s National Team came from behind to tie England. The U.S. fell behind in the fourth minute when Steven Gerrard slipped in behind the U.S. defense and slotted a goal past Tim Howard, marking the third-straight World Cup that the USA’s opening game featured a goal in the first five minutes.

Farmers Gastropub is open every day at 9am, except for Mondays. You can watch any World Cup game while enjoying their farm fresh menu. It’s smoke free and there’s also a great outside patio area. I’ll be there on Friday morning for the USA game, come down and join us for a simple English breakfast and an important game!

Mike Sorber Is Missouri’s Connection To The World Cup

Mike Sorber, SLU/US Men's Team Assistant Coach

Mike Sorber, SLU/US Men's Team Assistant Coach

The Post-Dispatch had a pair of excellent articles on Sunday in advance of the World Cup. The first, St. Louis has no playing link to World Cup, opens this way

It’s the first time that a U.S. World Cup team hasn’t had at least one player with a connection to St. Louis, though in the past three events, the lone link has been Brian McBride, who played at St. Louis University but was born and raised in the Chicago area. No player who was a product of St. Louis has represented the United States in the World Cup since Sorber in 1994.

It delves into some of the players that got looks although they missed Jack Jewsbury, with his SLU roots who spent two weeks in camp in January 2009.

The second article, Soccer coach Sorber in right place, looks at the history of Mike Sorber’s introduction to the US National Team and subsequent development as an assistant coach. One of the opening paragraphs offered some background I wasn’t familiar with, that being how Sorber was ‘discovered’.

Sorber was a player at St. Louis University who had never been on a U.S. youth national team and hadn’t even been a college All-American. But coach Bora Milutinovic saw Sorber at the 1991 NCAA College Cup, liked his ability to hold and distribute the ball and called him into camp, which led to Sorber starting all four games at the 1994 World Cup and making 67 appearances in all with the national team.

If you are interested in the history of the game and St Louis soccer traditions, both are a must-read. They also point to a discussion needed here in Southwest Missouri as well as St Louis. Sorber addresses it at the end of the first article I referenced:

“St. Louis is slipping, but we’re not so far off,” Sorber said. “It’s not like the rest of the country is producing (Lionel) Messis or Rio Ferdinands. We still have a long way to go as a nation. But if you look at St. Louis, St. Louis has not done well in a while. … St. Louis soccer has always been built on short passes, but there’s more in the modern game. That’s not enough anymore. There are more pieces.

“At the end of the day, at what level do you want to produce, what standard are you holding clubs to? Are we getting kids ready for college or saying we want to have some players at the national team level or playing in MLS?”

What do we need to do here in our corner of the world’s game? Anyone interested in an in-depth discussion on the steps we should be taking? I’ll be collecting feedback during the World Cup, join me at Farmer’s Gastropub this Saturday for the USA vs England game and help open the conversation. Game time is 1:30 pm, I’ll be there early.

It’s The Playoffs

Mid-May and we’re supposed to be complaining about the heat by now if previous seasons are any guideline. Instead we’ll keep our eye on the sky and our soccer blankets handy…

Class 1 – the ladies got their games in Saturday, despite the weather. The semifinals are this evening at Willard with the final scheduled for Wednesday.

#1 Catholic vs. #4 Willard – 5:00PM
#2 Bolivar vs. #3 West Plains – 7:00PM

Class 2 – Lebanon and Joplin are the hosts for District 11 and 12, respectively, with games beginning this evening. Waynesville and Glendale are the top two seeds in Lebanon while Ozark and Kickapoo hope to meet in the final Thursday in Joplin. Check the calendar and this site for updates!

Middle School playoffs have begun as well, I hope to get out for one or two games and get an early peek at next years High School contributors. And if you haven’t heard the news, the Springfield SC U17 boys successfully defended their State Title on Saturday against Lou Fusz Popovic.

Across the pond, Red is the big winner over Blue as Manchester United win their 10th EPL title in the past 16 years. Ryan Giggs ties Bobby Charlton’s record of 758 matches while the BBC lauds Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro

The Portuguese maestro’s 31 league goals did not just make him only the fifth man in Premier League history to reach the 30-goal landmark. They also proved crucial in helping Sir Alex Ferguson’s men finish top of the table – Chelsea simply did not have a goalscorer to match.

In related news, Fulham pull out a win and avoid relegation. That’s good news for a side with 5 American’s on their roster

Danny Murphy headed Fulham into next season’s Premiership League with a priceless tally in the 76th minute. Americans Kasey Keller, Brian McBride and Clint Dempsey all saw action, with the latter being substituted in the 72nd.

Adam Spangler was there and writes about One Last Miracle

On Wednesday, the UEFA Cup Title game will feature Rangers (Scotland) vs St Petersburg (Russia), I anticipate being at Coester’s to enjoy the game, beginning at 1:30 pm.