Showing posts with label jozy altidore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jozy altidore. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2016

USA lose in Columbus - MLS View

There was dramatic change between the last USA v. MEX at Crew Stadium in 2013 and the one in 2016 - and it has very little to do with Jurgen Klinsmann and everything to do with MLS.

A few years ago Major League Soccer decided that acquiring USMNT stars from abroad would help jump TV ratings in the lead up to the 2014 World Cup and raise the profile of the league. Make no mistake, this was a league wide initiative and not made by individual teams. MLS is a league that works together as one. This is important to state, and restate and restate because it is such a critical part of what has happened to some of the better players in the (or eligible to play for the) United States.

In order for what happened in the loss against Mexico in Columbus on November 11, we have to take a look at the lead up to the 2014 World Cup. For it was there that MLS purchased three of what we'll call "Group A" - bigger names - Michael Bradley, Jozy Altidore and Clint Dempsey. Each of them brought back for transfer fees in the $5-10 million range.

Because of this, a couple things happened that you don't hear much about.

1. The total spend is much more than anything MLS had paid for any cluster players in short period of time (for more details, see my post: USA's Place in the Transfer World). The expensive play vertically (re)aligned the USMNT with MLS. 
2. All the sudden, in one big swoop, MLS had three of the highest paid players in this hemisphere and they were all born on US soil. This, in turn, continued to dispose of the argument that MLS is inferior to Mexican competition because of salary restrictions.

No question that MLS went all in on the idea that bringing in these players would benefit the bottom line, but it came at a cost - an erosion in their playing quality. Now, this is a point of contention among some people in the United States soccer bubble, but in no way should it. These players have regressed. They are not as good as they were and it's absurd to suggest that not playing in the most challenging environment for them has somehow made them better.

A bi-product of bringing US born (an important distinction) players back from overseas was MLS doing everything it could to keep stars currently in the league from leaving. The examples of this are Graham Zusi and Matt Besler. Both players got sizeable wage increases to keep them both playing in the United States and with MLS (I wrote about how this would impact Sporting KC back in March 2015, head over here).

Same thing has happened with them. They never got better. Besler is to the point right now where he regularly is not selected for the starting eleven and Zusi has drifted into average with intermittent minor injuries.

Before we get to the second wave of players returning to the United States to play, let's take quick stock of key players so far...

1. Bradley: Worse than he was
2. Dempsey: Not playing, health
3. Altidore: Not as sharp, not getting better
4. Zusi: Got worse, not better
5. Besler: Didn't get better

On to the next round of USMNT eligible guys coming back in and around the last World Cup. We'll call this Group B. Jermaine Jones, Mix Diskerud, Alejandro Bedoya, Sacha Kljestan, Maurice Edu, DaMarcus Beasley, Brek Shea, Tim Howard and Michael Parkhurst.

Of this group, it is only Sacha Kljestan that has retained most of the quality he had playing for Anderlecht in the Belgian First Division. Jones is sort of in a category all his own. He is one of those players that by all rational football measures isn't meeting the grade yet somehow he immediately lifts shitty MLS teams into better competitive places. First, it was with New England (taking them to a Cup Final) and now it's with Colorado, who are currently in the quarterfinals this year.

The others in Group B are in various stages of not playing well (Diskerud, Shea) / breaking down (Edu) / ending their careers (Parkhurst, Howard, Beasley) or, lastly, just becoming anonymous (Bedoya).

Between Group A and B we have a total of 12 players who were once playing abroad just a few years ago and are now playing in MLS. Twelve! And out of all of them, it's only Kljestan and Jones who might be able to say their quality is not slipping.

THE GAME

The two goals scored were the result of direct involvement of two MLS players. On the first goal we had Bradley getting out worked and on the second we saw Altidore standing with hands on hips for the late corner Mexico scored.



There were moments in this game where both Bradley and Altidore played well (even Matt Besler!), most notably the first few minutes after halftime. But when you inch up the competition level it's the tiny moments that expose the quality difference over the course of a full game. Particularly at the international level where speed of thought, action and decision making are knives that need to constant sharpening 10 months a year.

These two moments were not because of some tactical decision Jurgen Klinsmann and his coaching staff made. Nor were they the only reason the USMNT lost for the first time at Crew Stadium. But, they were part of the two goals Mexico needed.

Pulling back and looking at the bigger picture - Mexico had only beaten the US 2 times out of 14 from the year 2000 to 2009 (both wins at Estadio Azteca). Since then Mexico has won 5 out of 10 with 4 of them in the United States. That's the best run Mexico has had since the 1980s.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Diskerud Bubble Burst


Jozy Altidore, Sacha Kljestan, Brek Shea, Jermaine Jones and Mix Diskerud have all been linked with Major League Soccer teams as the August 6th deadline to sign players currently contracted drew to a close. All of them high profile USMNT team players and all of them likely looking for a big deal similar to the gaudy one's Micheal Bradley and Clint Dempsey received over the last 12 months.

Kljestan, Jones and Diskerud were the closest it seems. Jones may still actually be in play because he isn't under contract, but he isn't getting anywhere near the reported couple million he was seeking. According to Bruce Arena's comments today, Kljestan appears to be a casualty of MLS rules and regulations and Diskerud... we'll get to Mix in a minute.

...but first: Why wouldn't these players poke around MLS for a exorbitant deal should be the question. The league set the market for players with Bradley ($6.5m in wages) and Dempsey ($7m) when they paid premiums to pry them away from foreign clubs and the other guys want a piece of that as well.

Their combined wage makes up nearly 10% of all salaries in MLS and if you look down the list of other USMNT players (or fringe) you see that they are getting market value. Edu, Johnson, Wondolowski, Zusi, Besler, Gonzalez... these are all guys making around that $600k level.

Mikkel Morgenstar Pålssønn "Mix" Diskerud

Late last night Taylor Twellman reported that the Columbus Crew offered Mix Diskerud double his current salary. Most believe would have pushed the figure up to around $0.6 to 1.0 million. The same amount the rest of the USMNT band makes - save for Dempsey and Bradley - and herein is the problem for some of the younger USMNT players.

Mix, along with Altidore and Aron Jóhannsson, are a completely different breed of US International. They are young, talented and will likely feature in upcoming tournaments. This $0.6 - 1.0 million dollar range that MLS likes to tout as overpaying - is more what they are worth right now (or will be on their next contract), on the open market. MLS's decision to actually overpay for Dempsey and Bradley made sure of that.

Mix Diskerud
Diskerud became a big fan favorite here in Columbus. His happy Norwegian attitude and good looks got him noticed by a handful but that turn and assist he had at Crew Stadium last year against Mexico, well. Swarm of native Ohio bees to honey right there.

After the deal finally failed to connect late last night after months of courtship, Investor / Operator Anthony Precourt expressed his disappointment with not being able to get him. Early today Head Coach and Sporting Director expressed the same. Hard not to feel for the organization. It would have been a huge get.

But say they did get him? Then what. What about next year? Would we be seeing Diskerud in local Papa John's pizza commercials? Hanging out at Hendocs or 4th Street? Local lasik TV commercials? Could MLS and the Crew keep affording to increase his salary, along with his contemporaries, for another four years?

MAX FISCHER
Rushmore was my life. Now you are!

MISS ROSEMARY CROSS
That's bullshit!

(Silence.)

MISS ROSEMARY CROSS
What do you really think is going to happen between us? You think we're going to have sex?

(Max looks shocked.)

MAX FISCHER
That's kind of a cheap way to put it, don't you think?

(pause)

MISS ROSEMARY CROSS
Not if you've never fucked before, it isn't.

The Crew pursuit of Mix is reminds me of a moment in Wes Anderson's Rushmore when Rosemary Cross decides turn to Max, who had be trying to win her over since he first set eyes on her, and ask what he might do if he did actually have her.

In this exchange it's the fans, Precourt and Berhalter that are Fischer. Columbus was their Rushmore but it changed to Diskerud. I found it really strange the way an entire organization became so intensely focused on one player.

(Miss Cross moves towards Max with her hand outstretched. Max retreats backwards, banging into desks and chairs. Miss Cross stops.)

MISS CROSS 
Please. Get out of my room.

(Max walks out of the room and stands in the doorway.)

(Miss Cross turns away and goes back to taking down her maps from the wall. Max watches her for a minute.) 

(Max leaves.)



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FINALE
"The supporters of Columbus Crew might not be the biggest by shire numbers – but please go check what they write, and how they critique. Are they not the most cunning of all the MLS supporters - as we speak?" - Mix Diskerud on BigSoccer (or someone pretending to be him for a few years now, either way... here's how the whole thing ended).