This is the personal blog of Robert Hemphill, a young professional in Spokane, WA. Any views stated here are my own and not reflective of any employer.
Monday, July 21, 2014
Sunday, June 22, 2014
USA - Portugal tie in thrilling game
The US Men's Soccer Team played to a 2-2 draw today against Portugal, falling just short of advancing to the next round of the World Cup. The US still has a chance to advance (a very good chance, in fact), but that will be decided Thursday.
How did the US stack up today? A few thoughts.
How did the US stack up today? A few thoughts.
- Geoff Cameron struggled today. His mistake in the fifth minute sent the US down early, and his marking in the 95th minute let a last minute goal through. USA's defense has long been scrutinized, looking poor (though showing improvement) during the pre-Cup friendlies. Against Ghana, they looked better, but still are clearly a weak spot on the team. Germany, with an even stronger offense than we've yet seen, will try our defense.
- Hooray for water breaks! The timing may have been a bit odd, coming with just a handful a minutes before the half, but was a smart and safe move by the referee and FIFA. More of these, please.
- Michael Bradley was much improved, but still doesn't seem like he's found his full potential. The General, as he is known, connected well with Dempsey and was far more active in the middle, as the US clearly dominated the middle of the pitch. But he missed a wide open shot on goal (unlucky, really), and turned the ball over in the 95th minute that led to Portugal's last second equalizer. Here's to hoping that improvement continues this week.
- The US needs to work on how to hold onto a lead. I'm not clear if it's Klinsmann's direction or the nature of the players, but turtle-ing up doesn't work for us. Mexico came back from 2-0 to tie 2-2. Ghana equalized last week. Portugal equalized today. The US looks dangerous when it's in control, when it owns the midfield, and when it's in possession. But when it lets the foot off the gas, it gets itself in trouble. Yes, it was a hot and demanding game, Portugal knew it needed a point to stay in, and the US was celebrating an apparent victory, but this issue runs deeper than this game. Play the full ninety, not just until we lead.
The US team faces Germany on Thursday, 6/26 at 12pm ET, 9am PST. We'll be watching!
Monday, June 16, 2014
3 thoughts about | 2 USA - Ghana 1 |
The USA played their first 2014 Fifa World Cup match today
against their historical rival Ghana. After Ghana knocked us out of the last
two world cups, coach Jürgen Klinsmann remarked that we could see a third time
lucky. He got his wish (as did I), and the USA walked away with three points.
The USA started the game in stunning fashion, with Captain
Clint Dempsey scoring 29 seconds into the game. For much of the rest of the
game, though, the USA played rope-a-dope, and was fortunate to walk away with
the win.
Three thoughts about the performance:
·
Graham Zusi showed that he can be the kind of
substitution that turns a game around. The US suffered much of the first and
second half without meaningful possession of the ball. Watchers at the bar I
was at groaned at the USA’s inability to keep possession and get a simple pass
off. The offense was productive, but the midfield struggled to feed them the
ball. That changed with Zusi subbed in for Bedoya. Though Ghana scored shortly
thereafter, the US started seeing more possession, including possession in
Ghana’s back third. Zusi’s golden foot was also behind the corner kick that
John Brooks headed in for the win.
·
The US still looks uncomfortable in the diamond
midfield. The diamond midfield is a new layout Klinsmann has been trying to
adopt, in which the four midfielders are aligned in a diamond, in this case
with Michael Bradley at the top and Kyle Beckerman at the rear, with Jermaine
Jones on the left and Alejandro Bedoya on the right. The diamond, when
operating properly, should feed Bradley the ball, for him to feed the strikers.
In much of today’s game, the midfield couldn’t maintain possession, especially
through the middle where the diamond often finds itself centered. Ghana did
well to shut it down. Additional, in defensive posture, the US switched to a
4-4-2, with the 4 midfielders staying in line together instead of in a diamond.
It’s natural to adopt different layouts for offense and defense, but overall
suggests that the diamond isn’t quite working for USA yet.
·
The loss of Jozy Altidore will hurt the USA
going forward. US Soccer tweeted that Altidore suffered a “sprained left
hamstring” and did not mention how long he would be out. This viewer doubts
Altidore will be healthy before the knockout stages, if then. Strikers aside
from Dempsey will need to step up their game if the US hopes to have a shot
against Portugal on Sunday 6/22 and Germany on Thursday 6/26.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Grateful
Last night I had a gathering at my apartment, which impressively managed to bring together nearly every single friend I've made in Spokane. It's always an interesting experience when different groups of friends come together under one roof, but I would call last night a great success, and it meant a lot to me that so many people would celebrate a quarter century with me. Here's to you!
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Monday, March 17, 2014
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Why I'm leaving Spokane after my Service Year
I came to Spokane a little over six months ago. About six months from now, I intend to leave Spokane.
My time in Spokane has been a huge learning experience. I came to get away. I came for adventure. And I came to see if I could make life work in the mountains. I don't regret the decision.
Spokane is a tough town for young people. I'm not original in saying that. Yet one of the things I like about Spokane is the various communities that pop up around trying to create a space for young people. The (currently down) Spovangelist, Spokane Faith and Values, various gathering spaces like The Shop, Jones Radiator, Boots, and Zolas. I joined the UU church right as a young adult group was starting. Young people are involved in non-profits. Project HOPE has an incredibly young and awesome Board. Through all these connections, I found that a lot of young people like myself were just passing through, looking at Portland and Seattle as places to relocate to. Putting words in their mouths isn't fair, but I got the impression that for many of them, staying in Spokane would be accidental, not intentional. And I didn't want to make that same accident.
After some professional success back in the Midwest, I learned that I found my happiness in the life I kept outside of work. I worked a rewarding job 60+ hours a week. I worked a shitty job up to 80 hours a week. But it was the life outside of work that kept me even-keeled emotionally. I'm proud of myself that my time in Spokane is marked by social success. I once said to a friend that I may have liked Minnesota better (though I didn't live through the horrible winter they just had), but I was happier here in Spokane.
Despite the social success, it's a struggle to see myself staying here and finding a person to start a family with. Too many young people leave; some come back once they find a partner. As I was sending personal emails out to colleagues and friends about my intent to leave at the end of my term, I was struck by how many people understood what I was going through. Two people shared stories of their own - leaving Spokane, finding their partner, and moving back to have a family.
I don't know what my plans are. All I know is that by deciding I'm leaving, I get to focus my efforts on finding a job and home in another place. I hope it will be long term - I haven't enjoyed the feeling of just passing through. Yet by being public that I intend to leave, I also hope that helps balance the changing incentives I face. I know it's tough to maintain difficult partnerships are harder when I'm just passing through.
I still have a decent chunk of time left, and I intend to make the most of it. Looking forward to it - and if the days keep staying as beautiful as today was, I think it will be great.
My time in Spokane has been a huge learning experience. I came to get away. I came for adventure. And I came to see if I could make life work in the mountains. I don't regret the decision.
Spokane is a tough town for young people. I'm not original in saying that. Yet one of the things I like about Spokane is the various communities that pop up around trying to create a space for young people. The (currently down) Spovangelist, Spokane Faith and Values, various gathering spaces like The Shop, Jones Radiator, Boots, and Zolas. I joined the UU church right as a young adult group was starting. Young people are involved in non-profits. Project HOPE has an incredibly young and awesome Board. Through all these connections, I found that a lot of young people like myself were just passing through, looking at Portland and Seattle as places to relocate to. Putting words in their mouths isn't fair, but I got the impression that for many of them, staying in Spokane would be accidental, not intentional. And I didn't want to make that same accident.
After some professional success back in the Midwest, I learned that I found my happiness in the life I kept outside of work. I worked a rewarding job 60+ hours a week. I worked a shitty job up to 80 hours a week. But it was the life outside of work that kept me even-keeled emotionally. I'm proud of myself that my time in Spokane is marked by social success. I once said to a friend that I may have liked Minnesota better (though I didn't live through the horrible winter they just had), but I was happier here in Spokane.
Despite the social success, it's a struggle to see myself staying here and finding a person to start a family with. Too many young people leave; some come back once they find a partner. As I was sending personal emails out to colleagues and friends about my intent to leave at the end of my term, I was struck by how many people understood what I was going through. Two people shared stories of their own - leaving Spokane, finding their partner, and moving back to have a family.
I don't know what my plans are. All I know is that by deciding I'm leaving, I get to focus my efforts on finding a job and home in another place. I hope it will be long term - I haven't enjoyed the feeling of just passing through. Yet by being public that I intend to leave, I also hope that helps balance the changing incentives I face. I know it's tough to maintain difficult partnerships are harder when I'm just passing through.
I still have a decent chunk of time left, and I intend to make the most of it. Looking forward to it - and if the days keep staying as beautiful as today was, I think it will be great.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)