Friday, October 25, 2019

Concacaf League Week 7 Wrap Up

Down to the semifinals now, which means my job here is much easier. Only two games were played this week, with Olimpia hosting Saprissa and Alianza hosting Motagua. Honduran clubs had a day to celebrate, and it looks like we may be headed for an all-Honduras final. Here's the highlights from the two matches:

Olimpia 2-0 Saprissa


Jorge Benguche's brace meant a great result for Olimpia despite still playing in an empty stadium. Saprissa have the capabilities to turn it around at home, but it won't be easy without an away goal here.

Alianza 1-1 Motagua


Alianza have been relying upon their fantastic home performances to get this far, and now a stumble at Estadio Cuscatlán against their toughest competition yet looks like it will be their undoing. Certainly a lot still to play for next week, but advantage Motagua.

Saturday, October 12, 2019

No, the Concacaf Nations League isn't useless, even for the US



As is seemingly always the case, USMNT discourse is exhausting. Today’s topic is the Concacaf Nations League, which the fanbase has overwhelmingly declared a useless competition because they defeated a weakened Cuba side 7-0 at home (There were some Mexico voices saying similar things about Bermuda, but for the most part they were more respectful).

Where to even begin with this. First of all, there are 41 teams in Concacaf, so saying the competition is worthless is just... baffling. If you’re reading this you know my stance on the Nations League for the smaller countries. I’m not going to get into it and will simply say that it is very good. This rant is exclusively talking about the US.

Now what these fans presumably intend to say is that the competition is useless FOR THE US, but those are two entirely different things. The Nations League is of great benefit to literally everyone outside of Mexico, who are *maybe* capable of getting high enough quality friendlies where I could say they’re more valuable than the upcoming competitive games against Panama (and even Bermuda, who are actually a solid team!).

But for the US, forget it. The team that just finished fifth in the Hex and last cycle lost to Trinidad and Guatemala on the road in World Cup qualifying is not in any way “above” the Nations League. I’d love to know how playing at Canada in a decisive game is not better than playing Paraguay’s B team in Charlotte before a crowd of 6,000 people.

But hey let’s even assume friendlies are better. Cool! This tournament doesn’t replace friendlies, it replaces the first group stage of the World Cup qualifiers, which no longer exists. In that stage last cycle the US played St. Vincent and the Grenadines twice, Guatemala twice, and Trinidad twice. In this Nations League they’ll play Cuba twice, Canada twice, and then likely Honduras and Mexico in the knockout round. How is that not a better schedule for the US?

Considering the team’s greatest pitfall has been they can’t win away from home against almost anyone in the region, surely playing competitive games away from home against teams in the region would be the best way to practice that skill?

I don’t even understand what the fanbase wants instead. Do people believe we can just schedule top teams whenever we want? UEFA has their own Nations League now and play less friendlies than ever before. CONMEBOL teams are available sometimes, but the US typically plays those teams at home, which doesn’t really help solve their problems at all.

So like, what is the problem here? Yes this particular Cuba side at home is not a super-useful experience, but the Cuba game only happened the way it did due to extraordinary circumstances. Prior to the recent waves of defections, first at the Gold Cup and then again in Canada last month, the team was playing well in qualifying, finishing ahead of Jamaica and El Salvador who are both currently in League B. But even so, Canada is not worth our time now?

For the record, I am not entirely of the opinion that the US is not good. Much moreso I am of the opinion that lots of Concacaf teams are good. Curaçao took the US to the brink in the Gold Cup because they’re just a good team. Same for Haiti with Mexico.

The idea that the US should be beating every island nation 6-0 just shows a complete lack of knowledge about any of their local opposition. “Games vs Trinidad don’t count” is such a hilarious mindset considering that... nevermind. Just throwing it out there that if the Gold Cup had a rotating host, a LOT of different countries would have won it by now and the perception that the US and Mexico are an untouchable duopoly wouldn't exist.

Please think about the fact that the US regularly loses to almost every team in League A and that if they want to get back to the World Cup they need to stop regularly losing to League A level teams before the next Hex starts up. Perhaps some practice matches against those teams is a good idea?

Friday, October 4, 2019

Concacaf League Week Six Wrap-Up

We're getting down to the nitty gritty now; after this week's fixtures only four teams are left standing in the fight for continental glory. The end of the week six also signaled the end of the Champions League qualifying period, and the following sides have progressed to the region's biggest stage in 2020: Alianza (SLV), Saprissa (CRC), Motagua (HON), Olimpia, (HON), San Carlos (CRC), and Comunicaciones (GUA).

The semifinals will be in late October. Here are the highlights from the quarterfinal second legs:

Motagua 0-0 Waterhouse (2-0 aggregate)

A scoreless draw was enough for Motagua to advance to the next round, but Waterhouse have to be pleased with their run this year. Knocked off the mighty Herediano and nearly made it to the Champions League.



Independiente 0-1 Saprissa (2-4 aggregate)

Independiente couldn't make anything of their two away goals from the first leg while Johan Venegas snagged his sixth tally of the competition. A disappointing tournament for CAI after the great CCL run, while Saprissa continue to do what Saprissa do.




San Carlos 1-0 Alianza (1-2 aggregate)

Great defending from Alianza saw them hold on late to defeat the Costa Rican champions and qualify to the Concacaf Champions League yet again. They've now got three straight series wins to go along with their stellar domestic campaign.





Comunicaciones 0-0 Olimpia (0-2 aggregate)

Comunicaciones fall to a really strong Olimpia side without scoring a goal, but they did enough to qualify for the CCL, not bad considering they started in the preliminary round.