No “traditional” (I’ve been doing this for seven months) Tuesday newsletter because of the holiday later in the week. (Paid subscribers will still get their newsletter on Friday.) Instead, we’re doing two live chats today: first for US-England at 12 PM PT, and then for Brazil-Argentina at 5:30 PM PT. I’ll be in the thread during both games, but like last week, feel free to jump in now and chat among yourselves, too. We are all Dalian Yifang fans now.
What's the best American celebration England could do if they score? Have the CIA initiate a coup in some country with a recently-democratically-elected non-capitalist leader?
Rapinoe is an icon who's scored some huge goals this tournament. Also: Christen Press's first 35 minutes have been better than any 35 Rapinoe's played in France.
You don't need possession to control a game. Controlling space is more important than controlling the ball -- US did that for most of the game against France and have dominated in that regard so far against England.
-Brazil easily marching the ball up to the Argentina penalty area whenever they win possession ... and then just, like, kicking the ball out for a goal kick every time.
-Sergio Aguero, the starting striker for the most intricate-passing club team in the world, turning into Gyasi Zardes every time Messi tries to play a 1-2 with him.
Messi just dropped in as a defensive midfielder, received a pass, played the ball into the final third, then played three one-touch passes to set up a chance for De Paul. Do it if you can, I guess.
Some Messi stuff: five successful dribbles (no one else with more than three), nine attacking-third passes (no one else more than seven), three chances created (no one else more than one). Neither good, nor bad, but he's at least getting on the ball a comparatively significant amount.
I've loved watching Paredes this tournament. He's misplaced, like, five passes in four games but is also seemingly on the verge of getting red-carded at any moment.
I don't know how everyone feels about this, but I am really offended by Richard Keys tweet, specifically his derisiveness toward Dalian Yifang. He asked where Dalian Yifang was.
Well, Dalian Yifang is in DALIAN! It's sort of the fault of an ignorant, arrogant Englishman that he didn't know where a major port city with rich history and a place where Japanese, British(!!!), and Russian colonial history is still present.
I loved that game. I'd much rather madness like that instead of a watered-down version of what we see every weekend. More managers should just say "defend" or "attack" and offer no other advice. In fact, FIFA should limit all coaching to just those two directives. In all seriousness, though, what made that game so compelling -- beyond the atmosphere and the stench of looming death -- was that it was filled with great players trying to figure things out on the fly. The patterns in the club game can often feel systematic of pre-scripted; even if teams haven't practiced the exact attacking moves, they've practiced something similar. In Brazil-Argentina, it was just a ton of on-the-fly problem-solving and in-the-moment individual creativity. Brazil march on; they've lost just one competitive game since the summer of 2016 ad haven't conceded a goal at the Copa America. Argentina, meanwhile, at least put up a fight. They were unfortunate not to score, and they held Brazil to just four shots, but two of them were essentially tap-ins. I'm not sure I'd add that one to the list of tragic Messi losses, though. The game was in Brazil, and Brazil are the best national team in the world.
Otamendi's defending on that goal was beautiful. He held his hands behind his back but also dove face-first in the wrong direction to block Firmino's cross.
Can anyone tell me what formation Argentina are playing? It's all very [coach twirls his fingers in the air and flicks his hand toward the center circle without saying anything specific to his players]
OK! That was fun; this team plays fun games. I'm coming back at 530 PT for Argentina-Brazil. Thanks for hanging out! And shame on all of you for being afraid of the Central Intelligence Agency!
Should the US be able to dominate games from start to finish? Probably! But they're manipulating these knockout games about as well as they can. Score early, put numbers behind the ball, attack into space, and then destroy the final 5-10 minutes of every match. You need luck to pull that off -- see: the free kick against France, the penalty save and the VAR against England -- but they're playing "winning" soccer as far as that can even be a thing.
Does anyone else dislike JP Dellacamera on the broadcast as much as I do? It's like his tone and inflection are totally off. It sounds like he's getting really excited for a cross or back pass when his voice inflects. Maybe it's just because I'm at work listening so I'm sensitive to that. But I'll hear him get excited and glance over only to see the defenders knocking it around.
The 2018-19 season was my introduction to the Premier League, and I needed to pick a side to support. I ended up choosing Newcastle United, and since then:
* worst 10-game start to a top flight season in club history
* Rafa leaves the club
On the bright side, as a lifelong Cincinnati Reds fan I've grown accustomed to dealing with this type of soul-crushing gloom.
In the men's game, most people would say that the best club team in the world would beat the best national team. Would this still hold for the women's game considering the U.S. just beat France who have six players also starting for Lyon? Or would having players like Ada Hegerberg and Lucy Bronze and having more time to use different tactics flip the result? I guess my question is how big is the gap between the top women's national team and top women's club team?
What's the best American celebration England could do if they score? Have the CIA initiate a coup in some country with a recently-democratically-elected non-capitalist leader?
omfg rose lavelle
Rapinoe is an icon who's scored some huge goals this tournament. Also: Christen Press's first 35 minutes have been better than any 35 Rapinoe's played in France.
That's the ol' "get megged, get hit in the face with a shot, and get red-carded" hattrick for Millie Bright.
If Alisson is hurt, I'm shutting this off and going for a long walk.
You don't need possession to control a game. Controlling space is more important than controlling the ball -- US did that for most of the game against France and have dominated in that regard so far against England.
Two things I've enjoyed this half:
-Brazil easily marching the ball up to the Argentina penalty area whenever they win possession ... and then just, like, kicking the ball out for a goal kick every time.
-Sergio Aguero, the starting striker for the most intricate-passing club team in the world, turning into Gyasi Zardes every time Messi tries to play a 1-2 with him.
The US are so good at milking the clock at the end of games.
WOWWWWWWWWWWWWW
WE MUST BE INTELLECTUALLY CONSISTENT WITH OUR VAR CRITIQUES.
That goal was not a great moment for Lucy Bronze, England's best player, who lost her mark at the back post.
Sorry. Jill Ellis is God.
Messi just dropped in as a defensive midfielder, received a pass, played the ball into the final third, then played three one-touch passes to set up a chance for De Paul. Do it if you can, I guess.
Some Messi stuff: five successful dribbles (no one else with more than three), nine attacking-third passes (no one else more than seven), three chances created (no one else more than one). Neither good, nor bad, but he's at least getting on the ball a comparatively significant amount.
I've loved watching Paredes this tournament. He's misplaced, like, five passes in four games but is also seemingly on the verge of getting red-carded at any moment.
World-class swing-miss-and-call-for-a-penalty from Ellen White.
I'll quote myself here: "Perfect switch, perfect cross, perfect finish."
Does Cameroon have a word for schadenfruede?
I don't know how everyone feels about this, but I am really offended by Richard Keys tweet, specifically his derisiveness toward Dalian Yifang. He asked where Dalian Yifang was.
Well, Dalian Yifang is in DALIAN! It's sort of the fault of an ignorant, arrogant Englishman that he didn't know where a major port city with rich history and a place where Japanese, British(!!!), and Russian colonial history is still present.
That's it for today, all. We'll do more of these soon. Thanks, as always, for reading and for following along.
I loved that game. I'd much rather madness like that instead of a watered-down version of what we see every weekend. More managers should just say "defend" or "attack" and offer no other advice. In fact, FIFA should limit all coaching to just those two directives. In all seriousness, though, what made that game so compelling -- beyond the atmosphere and the stench of looming death -- was that it was filled with great players trying to figure things out on the fly. The patterns in the club game can often feel systematic of pre-scripted; even if teams haven't practiced the exact attacking moves, they've practiced something similar. In Brazil-Argentina, it was just a ton of on-the-fly problem-solving and in-the-moment individual creativity. Brazil march on; they've lost just one competitive game since the summer of 2016 ad haven't conceded a goal at the Copa America. Argentina, meanwhile, at least put up a fight. They were unfortunate not to score, and they held Brazil to just four shots, but two of them were essentially tap-ins. I'm not sure I'd add that one to the list of tragic Messi losses, though. The game was in Brazil, and Brazil are the best national team in the world.
Oh hey, a Dybala sighting.
Not to be "this game" guy, but THIS GAME.
They need to just bury Juan Foyth's body in the penalty area. RIP.
Argentina really seem like they're gonna score if nothing changes for Brazil.
This is a not-at-all impressive performance from Brazil, especially considering that they're, you know, playing at home.
Brazil have still only taken one shot. This is so dumb.
Otamendi's defending on that goal was beautiful. He held his hands behind his back but also dove face-first in the wrong direction to block Firmino's cross.
Can anyone tell me what formation Argentina are playing? It's all very [coach twirls his fingers in the air and flicks his hand toward the center circle without saying anything specific to his players]
Daniel Freaking Alves is 36 years old.
Daniel Alves just breaking the Argentina defense down and then dropping off a no-look pass. International soccer is so dumb -- and so good.
Only took eight minutes for the first referee-swarm to occur.
All right! This game is going to be an absolute mess -- can't wait to see how. Abel has a nice rundown of each team for the curious: https://twitter.com/BundesPL/status/1146012900743622657
OK! That was fun; this team plays fun games. I'm coming back at 530 PT for Argentina-Brazil. Thanks for hanging out! And shame on all of you for being afraid of the Central Intelligence Agency!
Should the US be able to dominate games from start to finish? Probably! But they're manipulating these knockout games about as well as they can. Score early, put numbers behind the ball, attack into space, and then destroy the final 5-10 minutes of every match. You need luck to pull that off -- see: the free kick against France, the penalty save and the VAR against England -- but they're playing "winning" soccer as far as that can even be a thing.
There have been three total shots this half. Given the scoreline and the stakes ... that is crazy!
Horan is just incredible in the air. USWNT hitting every goal-kick toward her.
Story of the first half: England had 57 percent of the ball, but completed ZERO passes into the box and only attempted three. The US? Eleven for 23.
Crossing is good now. https://twitter.com/BassTunedToRed/status/1146137960343097344
The ref should've ended the game after this, imo. Like the snitch or whatever it's called in the children's wizard books everyone loves ... https://twitter.com/mike_sell/status/1146133319010177024
Perfect switch, perfect cross, perfect finish.
I wonder if all the early goals are part of a strategy or just due to the USWNT being both really good and really lucky. https://twitter.com/OptaJack/status/1146135320481730561
US odds to advance dropped from -275 to -250 when the Rapinoe news hit. Interesting.
Important note: No one knows anything re: why Rapinoe isn't starting.
Does anyone else dislike JP Dellacamera on the broadcast as much as I do? It's like his tone and inflection are totally off. It sounds like he's getting really excited for a cross or back pass when his voice inflects. Maybe it's just because I'm at work listening so I'm sensitive to that. But I'll hear him get excited and glance over only to see the defenders knocking it around.
Good morning! https://twitter.com/rwohan/status/1146097745893003264
The 2018-19 season was my introduction to the Premier League, and I needed to pick a side to support. I ended up choosing Newcastle United, and since then:
* worst 10-game start to a top flight season in club history
* Rafa leaves the club
On the bright side, as a lifelong Cincinnati Reds fan I've grown accustomed to dealing with this type of soul-crushing gloom.
Morgan's going to need a month-long ice bath after this tournament
In the men's game, most people would say that the best club team in the world would beat the best national team. Would this still hold for the women's game considering the U.S. just beat France who have six players also starting for Lyon? Or would having players like Ada Hegerberg and Lucy Bronze and having more time to use different tactics flip the result? I guess my question is how big is the gap between the top women's national team and top women's club team?
Similarly, how many goats do you think you could get for this Argentina roster, and are they in the best interest of the club?