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July 7 GC - Canada v Costa Rica - POST-match [R]


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Originally posted by SeanKeay

quote:

Also the reason all the north americans are "outplaying" the euro boys is because we play a north american style game with yallop and the NA players are used to, its the complete oposite of holger here and i think its a shame since our better players are european based.

This is a good point. I don't think the North American players necessarily outperformed the Europeans today but the more physical less technical players do seem to do better under Yallop than the more talented, higher division skilled players.

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Having not watched the match but only read the comments, I find people's comments quite encouraging in general. It seems that we at least played Costa Rica even during the match and this is with a side that is missing some of its best players (Radzinski, De Guzman, Stalteri, Kluklowski, Imoff, Jazic and Nsaliwa), most if not all of which would have started for this side.

I personally am not too concerned about wins or losses at this stage. Its the way we play that matters. We have 3 years before qualifying starts and we need to continue playing positive football which it seems like we are doing. I think this is encouraging.

On the issue of depth, I actually think that this is one area in which we are improving dramatically over years past and when I project into the future 2 to 3 years this will even improve further with the likes Peters, Ledgerwood, Edgar, Johnson, Haineault, De Jong, Wagenaar, Begovic, and Gyaki pushing themselves into contention as most of this side plus the more seasoned professionals will still be around in their prime (Rad being the one exception) for next qualifying.

I personally think we now have sufficient depth on the left side of midfield/defense with Simpson, Brennan, Jazic, and Kluklowski with De Jong possibly joining the list in a couple of years. We have good depth in central midfield with De Guzman, Hutchinson, Imoff, Grande, Serioux, and Bircham. We even have decent depth at striker with Rad, Hume, Occean, De Rosario, and now possibly Gerba (and Friend and Ademolou coming along).

Where we lack some depth is on the right. After Stalteri, we only have Peters who is still a couple a years away in my opinion from being a bona fide starter and possibly Sulentic. Otherwise, we are playing somebody out of position here. Lets hope that Ledgerwood develops in the future so that Stalteri or Peters can take the right wing position otherwise this maybe a home for Rad in a couple of years time.

Central defense is still our biggest concern. I am not sold on Gervais here although he at least seems to be able to play with the ball at his feet. McKenna is too slow but also needs to play regularly here with Cottbus to be any use. That leaves Nsaliwa to rejoin the program and hopefully continue his development in this relatively new position and then hope that Hainault and/or Edgar to develop in time to partner him here. Its interesting the comments on Hutchinson as during WCQ everyone was calling for him to start here...now that he does, people say he was wasted.

As for keeper, again this is a week position. Sutton seems capable but we really could use a shot stopper that can steal a game. Hopefully, one of the U-20s or Fernandes can take this position in 2 to 3 years time.

All this being said, we surely miss two things. An offensive midfielder which of course could be DeGuzman's brother. If he doesn't commit, I think we will need to hope 2 of De Guzman, Hutchinson, and Grande can combine enough defensive energy and ball winning skills with some offensive flair. Still we will then need to be able to have Peters and possibly Simpson or De Jong develop enough on the flanks to spread defenses and put crosses in. But that leaves us with the final problem. We have strikers like Rad, Hume and De Ro who are better suited a breaking down defenses and creating chances for others. We need a finisher...someone who can get themselves into position to get on the end of those crosses or through balls into the box. For that, I think we have Occean or possibly Friend or more i long shot Uccelo...these guys are the only ones that seem to have a real nose for goal...and at this stage, none of them are starters on my team. But one of them needs to develop in the next 2 to 3 years to take this spot. My money is on Uccelo.

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quote:Originally posted by SeanKeay

Plain and simple, we cant win games if we dont score.

Our attack is terrible and we have no one creating any chances, its terrible out there watching us not score. We played well with the ball in our half and around half and ok on defence tonight. But man against a good team we will be torn apart.

Also the reason all the north americans are "outplaying" the euro boys is because we play a north american style game with yallop and the NA players are used to, its the complete oposite of holger here and i think its a shame since our better players are european based.

Dont kno how im so bitter i won 100 bucks on poker tonight :P

Anyways!! GO CANADA

Bring on Will Johnson! he make it better give the young guys a try maybe you get lucky and get one!

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I may sound crazy but between our two strikers I honestly felt that it always looked more likely that Gerba would score than DeRo. Considering that's what the job of a striker is I really have to find fault with DeRo. He probably gets man-of-the-match for effort but in the final analysis what did all of that create? Lots of running - an "honest" effort - may make the fans happy but scoring is how a striker has to be measured. At least Gerba put the ball away on that offside and looked composed and confident doing it.

That's why I really couldn't understand the Gerba sub. Frank, we needed a goal! Changing a striker for a (sorta) striker is not a positive substitution. The result was we had two (sorta) strikers on, DeRo and Hume, and the exact same shape in defence and midfield. Gerba was drifting out of the match yes but that can happen with strikers. The old cliche of doing nothing for 89 minutes and being a hero for 1 can often be quite accurate for strikers. It seemed to me that taking off LeDuc or a fullback (switch to three at the back) and playing either Hume or DeRo as an attacking mid would have made way more sense.

Personally I was most impressed with Grande. I though that he played his position just about perfectly. His set piece delivery was ultimately wasteful but that's a specialist task and its not really fair to evaluate his play as a central midfielder with that as a criteria. In his position he shielded the defence well, covered a lot of ground, won balls, and distributed effectively. Even that seemingly aimless diagonal ball late in the game wasn't as bad as it looked on TV. It showed ambition and was played into space (rather than at a defender) and if Brennan had read his intentions better could have created a decent oppurtunity.

Simpson had an absolute horrowshow game. I'm gonna trust that he has more talent than that but as a one game performance that was abysmal. Since I play defender myself I know how a few mistakes can really make you look bad so I have some sympathy for him and am willing to give him another chance but he needs to ste up and show some quality.

MOTM for CR has to be the keeper. His takes and punches on crosses and corners completely nullified Canada's strategy such as it was. Unfortunately we displayed no ability to come up with a different plan once Yallop's started to look ineffective.

All in all though another crap loss to a fairly crappy team. It may have looked nicer than I've been used to from Canada recently but no goals = no win.

Mike.

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quote:Originally posted by mattbin

I love to watch the Canadian team but I no longer schedule my life around seeing Canada's matches.

Exactly my sentiments. I even forgot about the Honduras friendly. it's weird how easily it can slip the mind now...

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What an absolutely unbelievably crappily officiated game. Just horrible, the ref and both linesman absolutely stunk the joint out. I'm surprised nobody has mentioned that we had one, possibly two legitimate breakaways by Gerba nullified by bogus offside calls - and that was on top of all of the other crap we were shafted with. Ali was clearly on side on that first half play (where he waved his finger saying "no, no" to the linesman) and I think he was on the play where he got a yellow, difficult to confirm for sure because on the crappy angles shown.

McKenna didn't even deserve one yellow, let alone two, and frankly while I didn't like the 2nd challenge, as a Captain its his job to show leadership on the field which includes screaming at the Ref and telling him what an unbelievable idiot the guy is that he doesn't even know what part of the anatomy the arm is supposed to be. Maybe not in those words, but you get my drift, he has to protest that rather than meekly accept it on behalf of the team, especially when its such an outrageously bad call that the Ref was in no position to make (Pendergrast's positioning was pretty well awful the whole night). That wasn't even ball to hand, it was ball to shoulder - what did he expect Bernier to do, separate his shoulder from the rest of the body and let the ball pass through?

Even the Ticos got shafted on that play where McKenna thought that the call was against him and Pendergrast gives a yellow for tripping over McKenna's foot accidentally after Kevin played the ball. Pendergrast was in no position to see what was happening for either the penalty for the sending off - I bet he didn't realize that McKenna actually won the ball on the play. Its debatable if its even a foul, definitely not a yellow.

Okay, now that the (unfortunately standard) rant about the crappy officiating screwing Canada is out of my system, on to our team. Of course its true that if you don't score you don't win, and we can only blame ourselves for not creating as many clear chances as I would have liked and not converting the ones we did. Our crossing was poor and our set pieces could have been better, especially with the Ticos giving us so many. But overall I liked the way we played, even if it would have been nice if we had started to take the game over before we were shafted, rather than after it. But we deserved at least a draw for that performance and no way should the Ticos have come out of there with 3 points.

Sorry folks, but from what I saw out of Atiba tonight I would have preferred him over Gervais at the back even if the latter was healthy. He slipped on one occasion and got a yellow, but other than that he was superb & shut down his opponents. Nobody beat him one one one. Best decision by Yallop as a coach I've seen in a long while. Costa Rica created nothing outside of one free kick and a bogus penalty, I don't think we can be too upset with our defensive play on the basis of that. Though the US will be a more severe test for our makeshift backline.

The only player I was truly disappointed with was Leduc, who seemed invisible and had poor night passing and crossing. I would go with Serioux over him, or put Hume on the right, Bernier in the middle and Occean up front with DeRo. Gerba played well for his first cap, unlucky not to have at least one breakaway if not two and had a nice set up to DeRo for the last first chance, but he would have been more effective if our crosses had been sent to him rather than a Tico player's head

Overall the makeshift nature of the team is still hurting us. Too many times our players pass the ball and stop running where they wouldn't with their club teams - and I think that is because they know where their club teammates will pass the ball next, where as here players too often (for my liking) stand still watching what their teammate on the ball because they don't know what he's going to do with it.

Well done to the west coast Voyageurs tonight, you did your duty.

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CSA Report - anyone else sensing a bit more bias in these things lately?

Men's World Cup Team

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Canada Falls 1-0 to Costa Rica in Gold Cup Opener

Canada's Jim Brennan

Seattle, WA, USA – Canada’s Men’s National Team opened its 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup with an agonizing 1-0 loss to Costa Rica on a magnificent evening in Seattle. The Canucks, by far the better team over the 90 minutes, could not find a way behind Jose Porras in the Costa Rican goal but a seemingly harsh penalty decision in the 30th minute proved to be the difference between the two sides.

Even after Canadian captain Kevin McKenna was given his marching orders for a second bookable offense deep into the second half, the Canucks pressed forward and certainly deserved far more than to be on the losing side of a one-nil score line.

Both teams shared possession early in the half and looked dangerous at times but could not seem to find the decisive ball to open up each other’s defense.

Canada seemed to enjoy most of its space on the flank with Brampton’s Dwayne de Rosario and Montreal’s Patrice Bernier finding loads of space on the right and Jim Brennan (Newmarket, ON) finding gaps on the left with which to maneuver. But again, the final cross failed to find its target on numerous occasions.

But at the half-hour a decision by Jamaican referee Peter Prendergast turned the game.

After a blocked free kick from the top of the Canadian area, the Ticos lobbed the ball back into the area. The Costa Rican winger, stationed at the left corner of the area, attempted to swing a ball across the box but Bernier seemed to have blocked the pass with his chest. Prendergast however pointed directly to the spot. Jafet Soto stepped up to the spot-kick and slammed his left-footed shot to the left of Sutton, who had guessed correctly but could not get a hand to the shot.

The Canucks immediately went searching for the equalizer and 15 minutes after the Costa Rican penalty almost had it after some superb inter-play between Bernier and Ali Gerba (Montreal, QC) sprung de Rosario at the top of the Costa Rican area.

Bernier picked out Gerba who had taken up a superb position near the top of the area with his back toward the Ticos goal. The Impact striker controlled the pass deftly off his chest and then coolly slipped a delicate pass with the outside of his foot to de Rosario at the top of the box. The San Jose-based striker chose to shoot immediately but his effort sailed high and wide.

The second half was more of the same.

Although in the 61st minute, Costa Rica came extremely close to stretching the lead to two. A freekick from the left wing was whipped into the area and was met by a Costa Rican attacker just shy of the Canadian penalty spot. The glancing header smacked off the bar and the score line remained the same.

Things turned worse for the Canadians in the 80th minute when McKenna was shown his second caution for an innocuous foul in the middle of the field. Now down to ten men, the Canadians could have easily limped through the final minutes with nothing to show for their effort but that was certainly not the case.

The final ten minutes saw Canada continue to knock on the door. But the best two chances came when time had all but expired.

First, it was substitute Jaime Peters (Pickering, ON) who teased two defenders on the right then whipped a teasing ball toward the far post. The ball eventually bounced back to the top of the area where Brennan had taken up position. His left footed shot skipped through a sea of bodies but straight into the hands of Porras.

Seconds later a Canadian freekick from the left side of the Costa Rican area was clipped in toward the penalty spot but skips pass everyone to Brennan, unmarked for a moment at the far post. The Norwich-based midfielder had to hurry his shot and in the process just yanked his effort wide of the right post.

In the dying seconds the Canucks had a freekick at the top of the box and a corner but again could not find that elusive goal.

“We put everything into the game this evening and really should have gotten something out of it,” said a dejected Canadian Head Coach Frank Yallop during the post game press conference.

“I am proud of the way we played this evening,” continued Yallop.

“We knew Costa Rica would be dangerous but personally, I think we dealt with that danger and for that we should be praised. But in the end we have nothing to show for that effort and will have to grab something from our last two games I we hope to advance.”

Canada will now prepare for its next match on Saturday, July 9th at 1:30pm PT against the home nation USA at Seattle’s Qwest Field.

Thursday, July 7, 2005

2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup

Qwest Field

Seattle, WA, USA

Attendance – 10,616

CANADA – 0 (0)

COSTA RICA – 1 (1)

Goals

CANADA – none

COSTA RICA – SOTO 10’ (PK)

Cautions

CANADA – HUTCHINSON 28’; MCKENNA 29’, 80’; GERBA 54’; BRENNAN 66’; BERNIER 90’

COSTA RICA – SEGURA 56’; RUIZ 62’

Expulsions – MCKENNA 80’

CANADA: 1 – SUTTON Greg; 2 – BRAZ Adam; 4 – MCKENNA Kevin (Capt.); 6 – BERNIER Patrice; 9 – GERBA Ali (7 – HUME Iain 69’); 11 – BRENNAN Jim; 12 – GRANDE Sandro (17 – PETERS Jaime 90’); 13 – HUTCHINSON Atiba; 14 – DE ROSARIO Dwayne; 15 – SIMPSON Josh; 16 – LEDUC Patrick (8 – SERIOUX Adrian 83’)

Head Coach: YALLOP Frank

Subs not used: 3 – POZNIAK Chris; 5 – GERVAIS Gabriel (Inj.); 10 – OCCEAN Olivier (Susp.); 18 – DODDS Rhian; 33 – FRANKS Mike

COSTA RICA: 3 – MILLER Roy; 4 – UMANA Michael; 6 – FONSECA Danny; 8 – LOPEZ Jose Luis; 9 – RUIZ Bryan; 10 – SOTO Jafet (7 – ROJAS Oscar Emilio 76’); 11 – BOLANOS Christian; 13 – CORDERO Victor; 15 – WALLACE Harold (14 – SEGURA Geiner 56’); 17 – BRYCE Steven (20 – SEQUEIRA Douglas 85’); 18 – PORRAS Jose (Capt.)

Head Coach: GUIMARAES Alexander

Subs not used: 1 – MESEN Alvaro; 5 – BADILLA Gabriel (susp.);; 12 – DIAZ Junior; 19 – WRIGHT Mauricio; 21 – BRENES Randall; 23 – GRANT Donny (not dressed)

Referee: PRENDERGAST Peter (JAM); A1: GARWOOD Anthony (JAM); A2: TAYLOR Joseph (TRI); Fourth Official: BRIZAN Neal (TRI)

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quote:Originally posted by Gian-Luca (CSA Report)

Seconds later a Canadian freekick from the left side of the Costa Rican area was clipped in toward the penalty spot but skips pass everyone to Brennan, unmarked for a moment at the far post. The Norwich-based midfielder had to hurry his shot and in the process just yanked his effort wide of the right post.

Wasn't that a Serioux throw in and not a free kick? Although, I can easily see how you could mistake one for the other. Wow :D.

The only thing I can really add to everything already mentioned is that I was disappointed with the timing of the subs. It seems to me that Yallop waits a little too long to bring people on. I would've definitely brought Serioux on earlier and maybe Peters in the 80th-83rd minute.

Saturday should be interesting.

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Disappointing match for the patchwork crew, and we really need to find someone who can put the ball in the net.

God bless DeRo and his work ethic/skill to run at players, but he needs to be paired up with a pure poacher type, someone who wants nothing but to put the ball in the net. Perhaps Gerba is that player, or maybe it's a younger player like Uccello or Lammie. Either way, it's tough to argue for DeRo's exclusion from any starting XI, given that he causes every defence fits.

What I can take from this match is that Peters will one day own that right side of the Canadian midfield (how many players do you know can make some out of nothing like he did in injury time?), Hutch is so awesome and composed he outshone people who regularily play CD (and needs to be put in the midfield when the 'A' team reconvenes, whenever the hell that could be), and Sutton is our clear-cut number one keeper, at least until someone (Hirschfeld? Fernandes?) forces him out.

Simpson looked woefully out of season (but his skill on the ball is still apparent), same goes for Brennan. Perhaps as the tournament goes on thes guys will play themselves into form.I agree with most here that Leduc was invisible, Grande played well as he usually does, and Braz has probably earned himself a few more looks.

I'm not going to add anything about that ridiculous officiating job, since its just so frustrating to think about.

I say start Serioux, Hume and Occean in the next match, cross our fingers that Gervais can take McKenna's place in the back four, and let's give the Yanks hell!

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The officiating was really poor last night - but Yallop is right: we have to get used to it and adjust. Note that the dissent card that Mckenna got versus the look of disbelief and the silence of the Tico who got the Yellow for tripping over McKenna. Yeah, circumstances were not the same, but we gotta be able to put a lid on it when it happen, and it will happen to us over and over again. We gotta get good enough that 1) it won't matter and 2) the officals won't dare. The US has largely overcome this problem this way.

As per usual, they pressured our backline until we proved we could pass it out under pressure then they backed off, except for Simpson who they pressured constantly, largely because he turned it over frequently. Unlike Braz, who refused did push forward, but did a stellar defensive job, Simpson was always looking to push it forward with turnovers often the result. Simpson needs to pick his spots better and go back to the centre halves or Grande more than he did. Braz needs to push it every now and then just to keep the opposition honest, but he always made a safe pass when pressured. I am not too worried about Simpson, I think it is just part of the maturation proces.

The only guy who looked overmatched for Canada was Leduc. If he doesn't show more, I think it is B team for him.

Sutton played a good game and commanded his box well.

Generally we played all right. Offensively though, poor crossing and set pieces and really not a lot of good ideas in the opposition third. Poor execution when there was a spark of creativity. Some of the problem is not recognizing an oportunity until it is gone. The lack of a true offensive mid was a big part of that problem.

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quote:Originally posted by Gordon

The officiating was really poor last night - but Yallop is right: we have to get used to it and adjust. Note that the dissent card that Mckenna got versus the look of disbelief and the silence of the Tico who got the Yellow for tripping over McKenna. Yeah, circumstances were not the same, but we gotta be able to put a lid on it when it happen,

That's just it though, as the circumstances were totally different its a poor comparison, particularly as the Tico in question was a horrible diver anyway and was asking for it as much as the boy who cried wolf (still a terrible call though to be fair to him). Asking players to meekly accept absolutly ridiculous decisions that put your team down a goal isn't really the way to go in my book, and I doubt that any team would have taken the "handball" call as lightly as you are suggesting.

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quote:Originally posted by BHTC Mike

That's why I really couldn't understand the Gerba sub.

I suspect it was tiredness due to him being flown back and forth across the continent. I was happy to see him start as it was a long time coming and he's a class guy (I never understood why he got cut from the final squad for the WYC in Argentina 2001), but I expected that the less tired Hume would start.

With better service, I think our strikers would do better. Outside of the Grande accurate long-balls (which are nice) there isn't much that comes up the middle for us and our crosses weren't finding the heads of our often surrounded-by-defenders strikers.

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quote:Originally posted by DoyleG

Pendergast calls another bad one.

Making up for the O'Brian handball from the World Cup?

Pendergast's hand ball call was against Berhalter in a July 2000 WCQ at Costa Rica. The O'Brien non-call (opinion is split on that one) was against Mexico. The ref was the Mello character from Portugal and he was pathetic. Mercado, Blanco and Garcia Aspe should also have been sent off and there was no way on God's green earth that Friedel should have been a card for saving a ball shot after the whistle.

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Hmmm! One wonders how people see the same game so differently. For my part, I think Canada played abominably last night, showing the same lack of discipline (on or off the ball) that has cost them so much in the last year or so. Very well, it's a team in transition, but it always will be, given the lack of a top class domestic league to keep players here and more importantly, wanting to play for Canada.

50 minutes into the game, Canada did not have a shot registered, other than De Rosario's embarrasing blast to row Z. We'll never know if Costa Rica's goalie was any good. We never gave him more than one trickler to deal with all night. What's more, the only save he actually had to pull off all night was a headed deflection off his own player.

I saw much way too much praise for De Rosario on the forum. He repeatedly made wrong decisions last night: hasty passes that missed their mark when a shot was the obvious choice; shooting with way too many yards of undefended ground between him and the untested goalie; being caught offside time-and-time-and-time again (there were no bad calls by the linesman in that respect).

The best three players of the night were undoubtedly the three subs. God only knows why we waited so long for these players to enter the game. I'll take a slightly less fit european based player over most of the uninspired performers in action last night anytime. We never once looked like scoring until they came on (row-Z effort aside).

Awful, awful set plays. So many opportunities lost to the hefty innacuracy of Grande's boot.

I did like Sutton. Why do people still question his ability? We haven't had a keeper close to that 'instinctively' good since Forrest.

As for the officiating - get with it, get over it! It's the same crap for everyone. you either fight it like some idiot schoolkid that spends his life in the corridor as a result, or you get with it and start rolling around on the floor with the rest of the 'performers'.

My overall opinion is that our Gold Cup ends there. We can't possibly defeat the US in this manner, and it won't matter by the time we play Cuba. As for the next World Cup(for us, it's 2010 folks, with qualifying starting 2008!), er... you really want to be looking that far ahead?

Every player on the field for Costa Rica last night showed superior skill, superior composure and better acting skills than any player on the field for Canada. I wish some people would start looking at these games with heads instead of hearts and see what crap our team plays so, so often.

Still Passionately Canadian

but extremely depressed - Neil

[xx(]

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quote:Originally posted by Rudi

Simpson looked woefully out of season (but his skill on the ball is still apparent), same goes for Brennan. Perhaps as the tournament goes on thes guys will play themselves into form.I agree with most here that Leduc was invisible, Grande played well as he usually does, and Braz has probably earned himself a few more looks.

Well I agree and disagree regarding Simpson. I agree with the part about him looking " woefully out of season ". I think that is about the kindest thing that I can say given what I saw last evening. But the bit about: "but his skill on the ball is still apparent", well I didn't see that at either.

What I see from this game is a re-affirmation in my belief that we need to encorporate more and more North American based players in to the program and we need them playing domestically at a higher level of competitiveness. Furthermore, unlike some other comments earlier, I saw more technical abilities from the North americans last night than I did from the Euro based players. Performance-wise, the subsititions switched the tide somewhat in that insertion of Hume and Peters were positive. But as far as the starters, the most disappointing players were the Euro based ones.

Another observation, I have come to realized after many years of following this board that this game offers some unique contrasts in terms of performance evaluation between watching the game on TV and being there live. Perhaps its that Voyageurs at the game always sit at field level ( rather than higher up). but I really do believe that the advantage that TV offers is a better appreciation of individual skills. Grande made some terrific passes last night. For example, that first half flick that found Brennan dashing in on the left was was a beauty. He wasted a long ball in second half, but aside from that his passes were on the mark, well weighted, and intelligent. I think that these are the kind of attributes that get missed when you are sitting in a stadium. I noticed more luke warm appreciation here for this from those who went to the game.

Lastly. Nobody is completely unbiased and I have noticed examples whereby we have a greater tendancy to give euro based players the benefit of the doubt in our evaluation and new commers who are a-leaguers don't enjoy the same. How could Patrick Leduc have been singled out by some for poor play yet Simpson and Brennan don't. I like Brennan and am glad he's back, but he wasn't great last night. Leduc did not play poorly. Not a standout either but he did some good things and seemed to work well with Grande.

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