Friday, December 30, 2011

Tournament?

Jan. 13-16, 2011

Compete with the best teams in the Northeast!!!

Venues

Park School, Brookline, Fessenden School, Newton and other locations

Divisions

Boys and Girls, U9 - U18, Men's & Women's Open

Officials

All matches officiated by two, professional, futsal-licensed referees

Fees

$380/team $350 if registered by Dec. 13
Additional $8 per player for non USYF-affiliated players

Format

3 game minimum
48-minute games
round-robin style
playoffs for top teams
Friday night games for local teams only
Semifinals/finals on Monday

Awards

Medals and trophies for top two teams
Fair Play Awards for one team per division

Qualifier

Champions and finalists receive automatic berths to National Futsal Championships, February 2012

Deadline

Jan. 3, 2011

Teams are guaranteed participation if they register by Dec. 13. After that date registration is subject to availability. Payment must be received in full no later than Jan. 5.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Match Report: Yes, But Offense Still Wins Games

When Edi called to say he had hurt his hand, the immediate reaction was not good. Sure we have a Dave backup, but he has already announced his retirement several times and has not done calisthenics or even bent at the waist in 6 months. He is like Brett Favre minus the pictures of his junk (and I guess the bending at the waist too--how else do you take the pictures?).

Fortunately, it only took several minutes and several goals for Dave to dust off the cobwebs.

The game had an NBA feel to it, with both sides trading goals and not playing much defense. And while DPR scored first and never trailed, it was unable to open a big lead. From the start, Chris made it clear that he would be unstoppable, as he quickly turned defenders and got himself in good shooting positions. Like Justin Bieber, he scored early and often.

Though depleted, the Optometrists were still dangerous. The right-footed dude pretty much decided that he would shoot every time, regardless of angle, distance, or defenders on him. That strategy, at least early on (see above) was working.

DPR kept the pressure on early, but was never able to stretch or even maintain a lead. The match was knotted at half time. It should be noted that I had a hattie by halftime.

The second half saw the fresh legs and attacking versatility of DPR take control of the game. Two of the best goals of the game were off of throws from Dave. On the first, he looked like Tom Brady hitting Wes Welker in stride on a delayed pattern. In this case, Welker was played Chris, who released into space I created when I made an Ochocinco-esque run across the middle. Dave hit the streaking Chris in stride, and Chris calmly slotted it past the keeper.

On the second, Dave pinged a low bouncer towards me and Chris, who were stacked a few feet apart. I was going to take it and began peeling to the left in anticipation. Chris called me off at the last moment, and then peeled to the right. The defense apparently had decided to follow me. This left Chris with yet another easy look.

The goal surge concluded with a nice back heel redirection of a shot headed for the left post, tucking it just inside the right post.

The second half also saw some nice defensive and transitional play. Craig and Jordean settled down our possession and made nice tickling passes out the back. Nick and Dan made simple economical touches in transition.

We also began winning tackles, and unlike the first half, we were able to clear the ball away from danger. Out of spite, Dave made some saves. Perhaps the play of game, though was one of the unlikeliest things you will ever see: I broke up a 3 on 1. That was not a typo. In fact, it may have even been a 4 on 1. We gave the ball away on a counter, leaving me alone to stop the onslaught. Fortunately, the ball was at the feet of their stay-at-home defender, whose first touch was leaden. I launched myself forward to win the ball, perhaps over optimistically, and realized I could only win it by sliding. By luck, I was able to plant my arm on the floor and keep by body off the ground (kind of like a Street Fighter sweep kick, but more accurately like one of the gals to above), thereby avoiding the foul and yellow card that I am certain would have followed. That fulfills my defensive quota for the year. Be warned.


Final Result
DPR 15–11 Otpisini

Team record: 2-1-0

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Next Game: Optometrists

Our next game is against Otpisani on Sunday, December 18, at 8:00 am (Park 1).

Let's get up for this game! We know we can beat these guys. We know we can play better than last week. Let's stay positive and focused (and sober, because for the early kickoff)!

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Next Game: Waltham Hawks

Our next game is against Waltham Hawks on Sunday, December 11, at 11:00 am (Park 2). The late kick-off time is meant to accommodate the Hawks--all their kick-offs are at 10:30 or later--presumably because of choir practice, Sunday school, or they have to report to their parole officer early on Sunday morning.

Match Report: Off-Target

I can hear Rob now: "you couldn't score in a brothel holding a fistful of fifties!"

That was us Sunday. We had chances from just about every imaginable angle, and about every spot in the paint. The match could have been 10-0 half-way through the first half. Instead, it was knotted at nil-nil, as things became increasingly tense for us, the Arsenal Whatchamacallits, and then the refs. More on that later.

Many of our shots we parried away by the delicate toes of the otherwise not delicate keeper. He was a cross between Kung-Fu Panda and, umm, just a regular panda I guess.

Finally, we gained momentum when Chris slotted one into the bottom corner where twinkle toes could not reach. From that point, DPR cruised out to a 6-0 lead. But this masked tremendous pressure that we let ourselves face, mostly giving up quick counters or giving the ball away in dangerous places. A resurgent Arsenal started catching us off-guard, and began forcing Edi to make some great saves. And, as usual, Edi delivered. Hands. Forearms. Even a great chest save. All the skills were on display.

The attack was lumpy, with some good play followed by some erratic, sloppy, or overly-adventurous plays. I was just about to warn the team about selfish over-dribbling when Nick selfishly over-dribbled, cutting left, and then right, and then back left again and sliding a shot past the ample keeper.

The second half was largely forgettable. The teams traded 2 goals apiece. The lone bright spot a fantastic team goal where we played one or two touch, move the ball to the right flank, squared it back across the middle, and tapped in the easy finish. If I had been paying attention, I could have told you who was involved. Oh well. Another bright spot was Jordean, who began dancing with the ball out the back. However, our movement was minimal at that point, so Jordean was mostly on his own.

It wasn't that anyone played poorly. Dan had one of his usual belted goals. Caley and Craig were solid. It was just that we weren't moving off the ball at all. I hope this was lesson learned.

Now, back to the refs. In case you haven't read it yet, one of the refs is clearly not a real referee. There were some laughable non-calls, including someone tripping me right in box, the keeper swinging his leg at me like it was Ryan Miller's goalie stick, and an obvious shirt-pull about 4 feet from the non-referee's nose that left my jersey dimpled and my undershirt ripped. After the game, I pointed out to the other hobbit-like referee about the non-calls. His response? "He had a good view of each play." Ummm, that's the problem.

Final Result
DPR 8–2 Arsenal Ramsey

Team record: 1-0-0

The Blawg Investigates: Counterfeit Referee

The blog is investigating reports that there is a counterfeit referee working the league. Last Sunday, the alleged impostor refereed a number of morning games, including the DPR match against Arsenal McWhatever.

To the untrained eye, this impostor looks exactly like league referee Ĵoħʼn MċĶęnʼną (shown above at center wearing a black top, next to some dorky dude that looks like Longo...hey wait, that is Longo!).

But there are some key differences. First, the counterfeit ref looks a little different. Although he has managed to capture Ĵoħʼn MċĶęnʼną's likeness down to the smallest detail, he appears to have made one key mistake. Ĵoħʼn MċĶęnʼną wears glasses as seen in his facebook page. This referee does not wear glasses during the match.

Second, the impostor showed that he lacked the referee training. He missed a penalty from about 4 feet away where one player clearly tripped another in the box. He also missed a blatant shirt pull from about 3 feet away. These are mistakes a trained referee would not make.

In a strange twist, after the DPR match, Ĵoħʼn MċĶęnʼną was spotted at the warm gatorade stand. Or was it him? Perhaps the impostor realized his mistake, and put on the glasses hoping nobody would notice.

League officials could not be reached for comment. The blog will keep you posted.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Next Game: Season Opener!!

Our season begins on December 4th at 10:00 am against Arsenal Ramsey (Park 2).

Time for Some Book Learnin' (Final Day)

Ha! The Washington Generals get their revenge: