Thursday, September 11, 2008

 

Impressive US win marred by inexcusable attendance



I could not believe my eyes when I saw the attendance report from last night's World Cup Qualifier in Chicago between the US and Trinidad & Tobago!

11,452

You'd think the game was held in South Dakota in January at 3 a.m. with those kinds of numbers. But nope, it was a gorgeous evening in the suburbs of one of the biggest, most sports-loving cities in the world. Moreover, it is the home of the headquarters of the United States Soccer Federation - the very organization that produced the match.

The Chicago Fire - who's home stadium was used for this match - drew more fans on two out of three previous mid-week matches so far this season. A league match against New England (15,553) on April 3rd and an exhibition match (YES, EXHIBITION) against Wisla Krakow (14,040) on May 21. They even nearly out-drew the US match on Wednesday, July 30th in a friendly against Everton with 9,125 brave soles daring to go spend an evening in a brand new soccer stadium watching the world's most popular game - how dare they!

Maybe there was something else going on in Chicago last night distracting sports fans? Let's see...

Cubs were away at St. Louis in an afternoon game, so no TV distraction
White Sox home against Toronto (attendance: 26,198), any chance baseball fans of the White Sox are the only ones who like soccer in Chicago?
Bears (NFL) did not play
Bulls (NBA) did not play
Blackhawks (NHL) did not play

How about some other facts...

Since US Soccer started reporting attendance figures in 1990:
Bottom line - we know the US team is has traditionally struggled to draw big crowds of US supporters, but such a low attendance for a World Cup qualifier in the home city of our country's Federation, and in a spanking new soccer-specific stadium is completely unacceptable. Someone should be fired at the Fire or USSF, or both. This is clearly a result of poor game promotion. Let's only hope the TV ratings are higher.

Case in point, according to officials at one of the best ticket-selling operations in MLS, D.C. United (who are responsible for ticket sales at RFK for the upcoming home qualifier against last place Cuba on October 11th) has ALREADY reached the 11,000 tickets sold mark - a full month before kick off, and against a much less storied team.

Everyone involved with soccer in Chicago should be embarrassed. USSF officials, Fire officials and fans, youth club directors and coaches, and even media editors for not carving out more space to preview the game - and maybe even the coach for not using any current Chicago Fire players, or calling in other legitimate pool players with a little more draw at the gate, like Freddy Adu or Jozy Altidore.

I'd rather see the US play Mexico in the Rose Bowl for all the marbles than another embarrassment like Wednesday night. At least then we can pretend there is some passion in the US for its national team.

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Friday, January 18, 2008

 

Nyarko goes a suprising 7th



So, the first player EVER selected in the MLS Superdraft from Virginia Tech is headed to Chicago - a team already fat on young, promising forwards and a lot colder than the California or Texas locals most expected him to end up.
Patrick Nyarko left school early - even after saying he wouldn't - presumably assuming to be chosen at least one or two in the draft. He looked nervous as pick after pick went before him, and during his off camera interviews had trouble breaking a genuine smile for the first few minutes.
I wonder how much he was looking forward to playing for San Jose when he first decided to enter the draft, and although Chicago has a good team, a beautiful stadium, and great players, I can see how the cold weather and number of existing forwards on the roster might not be what Patrick was thinking.

He's still swamped by the media here in the press lounge, much longer than other picks before or after, so this is definitely a story line likely to be followed by many news outlets. Let's see if the questions I raised above are answered in the coming days. For now however, congratulations to the first Hokie ever selected in the MLS draft, and let's hope many more follow in this dynamic player's footsteps.

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