2009 Spring


Washington, DC – On a beautiful spring afternoon, Wake Forest beat Maryland 3-1 in a preliminary match before the main event New England Revolution vs. DC United at RFK Stadium.

New England’s coach, Steve Nichols has used WF as his personal farm team drafting or acquiring Michael Parkhurst, Wells Thompson, Pat Phelan, James Riley, Ryan Solle, Jeremiah White, etc.

DCU has tapped the talent pool from Maryland, as well, with the following players playing for DCU in the past few years, Rodney Wallace, Marc Burch, Dom Mediate, Kenny Bertz, Leo Cullen amongst others.

Maryland wore pink uniforms as part of their Kicks Against Breast Cancer campaign.  With those pink uniforms, Maryland reminded me of newborn white mice: helpless, blind and motionless.  Wake in their black uniforms imitated a large black cat toying with the helpless mice before putting them out of their misery.

The match was over in the first 30 minutes with WF up 3-0.  Both teams are mere shadows of their 2008 teams when MD won the national championship and WF was arguably the best team in the country.

MD has lost their entire starting defense and 3 of the 4 starting midfielders from 2008.  WF lost key defenders and much of their midfield.  Additionally, WF has lost the best defender in college, Ike Opara, to injury.  WF is going to need to learn to play without Opara because he’ll be gone for at least a month in the fall preparing and playing for the U20 team in Egypt.

MD was simply awful in the back.  WF is going to have problems if they don’t play better in the back, as well.  WF is not holding the ball as well as they have in years past.

Just a reminder, player identification is sketchy in the spring, because players change numbers.

Starting Lineups:

WF 4-4-2 flat central midfield with Bone migrating centrally.

F: Zack Schilawski, Cody Arnoux

M: Luke Norman, Danny Wenzel (wearing #2), Kyle Adams, Corben Bone

D: Nick Courtney, Nick Millington, Justin Lichtfuss, Chris Estridge

G: Akira Fitzgerald

MD 4-4-2 with a diamond midfield.

F: Jason Herrick, Casey Townsend (wearing #11)

M: Drew Yates (wearing #10), Matt Kassel, Kaoru Forbess, Doug Rodkey

D: Kwame Darko, Sean Flatley, Kevin Tangney, Alex Lee

G: Zac MacMath

WF Observations:

While WF dominated a helpless MD defense, WF shouldn’t be too content with their play, because they are not even close to the team that they have had for the past couple of years.  WF has a lot of work to do to get back to that level.

Kyle Adams started the scoring in the 3rd minute from a Corbin Bone corner kick.  MD GK MacMath had an opportunity to punch the ball away but didn’t get much of it and Adams headed from 6 yards from the back post.  MD cleared the ball off the line, but the AR said that it went in.  From midfield, I can’t contest the call.

15 minutes later, Cody Arnoux was fouled by Kevin Tangney just past midfield when he was breaking behind the defense (probably a smart play).  However, Bone served a pretty free kick that Arnoux headed from the near post 10 yards out to his strike partner, Zack Schilawski, left alone on the far post 6 yards from goal.  Schilawski finished this gift with his head.  3 touches, Bone’s foot, Arnoux’s head, Schilawski’s head –> Goal.

These three are going to be involved in most of the WF goals in the fall.

The last goal was assisted by Schilawski driving down the left side crossing the ball on the ground past Tangney (who needed to do more than whiff on the cross) to an open Luke Norman from 5 yards in the 30th minute.

Arnoux is a sniper with accurate shots.  He can shoot.

Kyle Adams’s passing needs to improve. He is not good on the ball.

I don’t think that Akira Fitzgerald is a quality GK.  He doesn’t move well. I question his ability to cover high balls – for example, Herrick out-jumped Fitzgerald – Herrick is not that tall.

Danny Wenzel is cementing the central DM position.

Norman is good as the wide midfield.

Incoming freshman Ben Newnam is confident on the ball.  He’s going to be a good one.

I don’t care for Nick Millington teaming with Wenzell.

Nick Courtney makes poor decisions.  He may have the skills, but isn’t thinking clearly.  For example, in the 67th minute, he had space with the ball coming to him, rather than calmly bringing the ball down with his chest and maintaining possession.  He headed the ball back up the field giving the ball back to MD.

Arnoux is a MLS first round draft pick – he reminds me of Pontius last year.

MD Observations:

Kaoru Forbess impressed me with his ball skill.  It’s something that I hadn’t seen in the fall.  He played AM (another surprise for me) and was competent.  He started the play that resulted in the lone MD goal.  Forbess was one of the few bright spots on an otherwise lackluster MD performance.

Drew Yates (with a new number #10) played wide midfield.  His dribbling is fun to watch.  He’s not overly quick or fast, but he keeps the ball on a string, step overs, enable him to keep defenders off balance.  Yates will never be questioned about going forward.  However, getting back that is a different story.

Matt Kassel serves a sweet free kick, but he was unsuccessful stopping WF attacks through his middle. His shooting was erratic, too.

Matt Oduaran played the last 53 minutes.  He has a body like Jozy Altidore, big and fast.  Oduaran scored the goal from a long service by Forbess getting behind the WF defense.  He pulled the ball back avoiding the retreating defenders, dragging the ball along the top of the box before slotting the ball into the lower corner.

Oduaran doesn’t have sufficient skill nor confidence on the ball in the box.

The MD defense was abysmal. They were in disarray for much of the first half.  Flatley and Tangney have been in the program for several years.  I don’t understand this confusion.  Generally, MD was too soft in the back.

Tangney played horribly.  Making a soft pass that WF was able to intercept forcing MacMath to make a point-blank save to save a goal.  Tangney is better than he displayed at RFK.

Flatley has never impressed me (other than an emergency fill-in).  He did nothing to change my opinion.  On a free kick, he let Arnoux had too much space in the box.  How could he permit one of Wake’s best snipers any space?

I never considered Kwame Darko more than a practice player or someone getting a few mop-up minutes.  He’s fast but he just didn’t do anything that made me anxious to see more of him.

Alex Lee was rumored to be transferring to PSU to play with his twin brother.   He was continuously exposed by Arnoux and Schilawski on the dribble.

Even MacMath, who I think may be the best freshman GK in the country, had a very shaky game.  He kept dropping the ball.  He has better hands that what I saw in this game.  If MacMath has a bad year, MD is done in 2009.  He is going to have a lot of pressure to save the weak MD defense.

Doug Rodkey is slick, making space for himself to serve in dangerous crosses.  Rodkey can be a key contributor, but he is going to need others around him to do well.

Casey Townsend left late in the first half suffering a “leg injury”.  He tried to warm up in the second half but running with a limp – I’m glad to see that he was shut down.

Townsend and Herrick have a lot of responsibility to score given the defense is like a sieve.  Townsend seems to have grown a few inches.

MD may lose the alumni game on May 1.

Washington, DC – On a rainy, cool afternoon, AU was able to hold off a fierce WVU 2nd half attack after scoring 2 first half goals to win the game 2-1.

AU and WVU shared dominance with AU taking the first half while WV was much better in the second.

Just a reminder, player identification is sketchy in the spring, because players change numbers.

Starting Lineups:

WVU 4-4-2.

F:  Alex Silva, Declan Coll

M: Ryan Gillespie, Chase Dewese, Gift Maworere, Tuan Doan

D:  Dan Hagey, Jason Bristol, Ruben Garrido, Raymon Gaddis

G: Zach Johnson

AU 4-4-2.

F:  Jack Scott, Mike Worden

M: Cameron Petty, Mark Wysocki (#13 – I think the player identification is incorrect), Colin Zizzi, David Menzie

D: Dor Yasur, Karsten Smith, Jon Freimark, Michael Roberts

G: Matt Makowski

WVU observations:

WVU were pathetic in the first half.  The midfield allowed AU to freely deliver balls behind the WVU defense without pressure.  Additionally, WVU came out in the first assuming that AU would roll-over from a team from the mighty Big East.  They were sadly mistaken.  WV was in disarray after the second goal.  Half time was their salvation.

In the second half, WVU were much better, holding the ball and pressuring AU.  They scored there lone goal in the 81st minute to make the end of the game exciting.

Centerback Ruben Garrido scored the goal acrobatically after a corner kick was bounced around the AU box. Garrido biggest contribution is his ability to read the game and support the other defenders.  I like him a lot.  He might have the best professional opportunities of any player on the field today.

In the first half, Gift Maworere was not shutting down the middle of the field.  He wasn’t helped by Chase Dewese assistance.  Dewese ill-advised dribbling was directly responsible for the second goal.  Losing the ball in the AU half, the goal was 2 quick passes away from the shot.  Dewese sat for the rest of the half after this exhibit.  In the second half, Dewese must have gotten “stern instruction” to release the ball quicker.  He was better until he yelled at his team mate for not running after one of his poor passes.   Cancer.

Many of Maworere passes are East-West which I can appreciate to reset the offense.  But, if he is unwilling to gamble to make the killer pass, his value is reduced.

Rightback Raymon Gaddis has tremendous speed and athleticism, but has unacceptable ball skills and his defending requires too much Garrido recovery.

Zach Johnson was horrific in the first half.  In the half-dozen games that I’ve seen him, the first half was by far his worst.  He looked better in the second.  Perhaps the wet field caused him concern.  If so, he won’t be joining former team mates in England!

Forward Declan Coll has a sweet first touch.  At times, he tries to be too clever settling for flash over substance.

Alex Silva delivers a dangerous corner kick, but was ineffective on free kicks just outside of the box.

AU observations:

AU seems to win their share of games over teams that are more talented.  This is indicative of their desire and their fanatical task master, Todd West.

After dominating the first half, West tried bleeding the clock by making continuous substitutions.  However, this served WVU by never allowing AU to find their rhythm in the second half.

The first goal was scored by Mike Worden in the 22nd minute.  He received a long pass from Colin Zizzi (I think – notes got wet).  Worden’s first touch beat both Jason Bristol and Zach Johnson (who just wandered out there without purpose) to find himself with an open goal.

The second goal was from a terrific strike by Jack Scott in the 28th minute.  After dispossessing Dewese (see above), AU quickly worked the ball out of midfield with the final pass a long ball that was bouncing.  Scott struck the bouncing ball from 25 yards, looping the ball into the upper right corner in a spot that the goal keeper could not reach.  Delightful.

I like Worden’s first touch.  He expertly puts the ball exactly where he wants it.  I like the way that he plays.  He needs to improve his awareness to stay on-side.

Scott is fast, but his touch is normally very ugly.

Many good things happen when Cameron Petty touches the ball.  He is very aware of the field and is pretty good.  I think he may have the potential to be a fringe pro player.  Maybe.

Dor Yasur had a forgettable game.  He would win the ball then promptly turn it over.  He left his football feet in the locker room, today.  Yasur has played better than this.

Goalkeeper Matt Makowski didn’t have too much to do in the first half.  In the second, he enjoyed the bench.

With a tightening travel budget, here are the remaining 2009 spring matches that I plan to attend:

4/11 West Virginia @ American at 1pm

4/17 Wake Forest vs Maryland at RFK 4pm (definite)

ah, forgot to publish this.

The main article is on College Soccer News.

Just a reminder, players change uniform numbers and new players are brought on during the spring.  If I made a mistake identifying a player, send me a note.

Kentucky vs UNCW

Kentucky in a 4-4-2 with the central midfield flat.

Fwd: Taylor White, Marco dos Santos

Mid: Stephen Beiro, Tyler Burns, Jason Griffiths, Chad Hagerty

Def: Reid Baker, Brad Walker, Tim Muessig, Barry Rice

GK: Dan Williams

UNCW in a 4-4-1-1 with the midfield configured in a diamond.

Fwd: Devan Carroll

W/Drawn Fwd: Nassim Berhouni

Mid: Allen Lomax, Brian Harrison, Daniel Roberts, Tyler Wheaton

Def: Jeffrey Shapiro, Jeremy Lappas, Indy Smith, Shaun Utterson

GK: Brandon Miller

Furman vs Winthrop

Furman were not wearing numbered jerseys for this game, but according to a knowledgeable Furman fan here is the Furman 4-4-2.

Fwd: Debola Ogunseye, Fabien Vorbe

Mid: Brooks Duff, Jordan Howard, Coleton Henning, Warren Creavalle

Def: Jonathan Collier, Patrick White, Nasarachi Onyeuku, Eric Cobleigh

GK: Alec Kann

Winthrop was in  a 4-3-3.  This is one of the teams that has many players switching numbers).

Fwd: Matthew Skonicki, Michael Luk, #11 – not Grant Wise

Mid: Andrew Murphy, Matt Lacey, Miguel Casajuana

Def: Magnus Leung,  #4 – Not Henry Kalungi, Jordan Osborn, Matt Horn

GK: (didn’t record – but Mike McCullion started 2nd game)

College of Charleston vs Clemson

College of Charleston plays a 4-5-1 which at times transforms into a 4-4-1-1.

Fwd: Kareem Yearwood

Mid: Zach Prince, Branko Gavric, Diego del Castillo, Gus Teren, Jake Helmig

Def: John Bello, Rudi Hellberger, Sean Bateau, Will Moore

GK: Clark Hankins

Clemson plays a 4-4-2 with a diamond midfield

Fwd: Nathan Thornton, Hassan Ibrahim

Mid: Rene Onate, Connor Barbaree, Keegan Priest, Tommy Drake

Def: Riley Sumpter, David Newton, Mackenzie Ward, Greg Eckhardt

GK: Joseph Bendik

Charlotte vs South Carolina

Charlotte plays a typical 4-4-2 with a diamond.

Fwd: Andres Cuero, Evan James

Mid: Isaac Caughran, Jason Hawes, Luke Exley, Adam Gross

Def: Justin Tucker, Charles Rodriguez, Nathan Mathers, Alexander Deitz

GK: David Martin

South Carolina 4-4-2 (diamond)

Fwd: Sam Arthur, Blake Brettschneider

Mid: Jeff Scannella, Stephen Morrissey, Vance Benson, Schuyler Reardon

Def: Danny Cates, Tyler Ruthven, Will Traynor, Daniel Lynch

GK: Jimmy Maurer

————————Second Games————————————–

Furman vs Kentucky

Furman wearing numbered jerseys for this game in a 4-4-2.

Fwd: Debola Ogunseye (wearing #17 but not Eric Baffour), Brooks Duff

Mid: Coleton Henning, Jordan Howard, Caleb Suri, Warren Creavalle

Def: Jonathan Collier, Michael Erwood, Walker Jernigan, Eric Cobleigh

GK: Alec Kann

Kentucky in a 4-4-2 with the central midfield flat.

Fwd: Taylor White, Marco dos Santos

Mid: C. J. Tappel, Jason Griffiths, Kyle Smith Chad Hagerty

Def: Tim Muessig, Reid Baker, Brad Walker, Barry Rice

GK: Didn’t record but I think it was Dan Williams

Clemson vs UNC Wilmington

Clemson plays a 4-4-2 with a flat central midfield

Fwd: Konnor McGee, Rene Onate

Mid: Tommy Drake, Connor Barbaree, Keegan Priest, Eric Cava

Def: Riley Sumpter, David Newton, Francklin Blaise, Greg Eckhardt

GK: Joseph Bendik

UNCW in a 4-4-1-1 with the midfield utilizing 2 central DM.

Fwd: Shawn Guderian

W/Drawn Fwd: Nassim Berhouni

Mid: Allen Lomax, Brian Harrison, Daniel Roberts, Tyler Wheaton

Def: Christian Davidson, Jeremy Lappas, Indy Smith, Jeff Shapiro

GK: Brandon Miller

Winthrop vs South Carolina

Winthrop was in  a 4-3-3.  This is one of the teams that has many players switching numbers).

Fwd: Said Abdi, Miguel Casajuana, Matthew Skonicki

Mid: Michael Luk,  Matt Lacey, Andrew Murphy

Def: #11 Not Grant Wise, #4 – Not Henry Kalungi, Jordan Osborn, Matt Horn

GK: Mike McCullion

South Carolina 4-4-2 (diamond)

Fwd: Sam Arthur, Blake Brettschneider

Mid: Jeff Scannella, Stephen Morrissey, Vance Benson, Schuyler Reardon

Def: Danny Cates, Tyler Ruthven, Will Traynor, Daniel Lynch

GK: Jimmy Maurer

Charlotte vs College of Charleston

Charlotte in 4-4-2 with a diamond.

Fwd: Andres Cuero, Evan James

Mid: Isaac Caughran, Jason Hawes, Luke Exley, Adam Gross

Def: Justin Tucker, Charles Rodriguez, Nathan Mathers, Alexander Deitz

GK: David Martin

College of Charleston playing a 4-4-1-1 (perhaps that was what they were playing in the first game).

Fwd: Kareem Yearwood

W/Drawn Fwd: Andrew Autenzio

Mid: Jake Helmig, Branko Gavric, Diego del Castillo, Zach Prince

Def: John Bello, Rudi Hellberger, Sean Bateau, Will Moore

GK: Brendan Smith

After a full week-end which started with excitement and some Willie Nelson (“On the Road again”), it ended arriving home on Monday morning at 2am with work week starting just a couple of hours later.  Appropriately, Bob Seger’s “Turn the page” came on the radio with 90 minutes remaining in the drive.

But your thoughts will soon be wandering
the way they always do
When you’re ridin’ sixteen hours
and there’s nothin’ much to do
And you don’t feel much like ridin’,
you just wish the trip was through

The main article is at Collge Soccer News.

Here is the formation of the starting line-ups.

Denver in a 4-1-4-1.

Fwd: Sam Garza

Mid: Jarod Stigall, Ryan Garren, Collin Audley, Marc Kocel

DM: Alex DeCosta

Def: Blake Shannon, Kris Banghart, Kyle Varvil, Michael Perry

GK: Joe Willis

Wake Forest. Started playing a 4-4-2 with the 2 central midfielders playing more defensive.  Corben Bone abandoned his position to play more centrally as the first half progressed.

Fwd: Zack Schilawski, Cody Arnoux

Mid: Luke Norman, Ben Newman, Danny Wenzel, Corben Bone

Def: Nick Millington, Justin Lichtfuss, Nick Courtney, Kyle Adams

GK: Akira Fitzgerald

Due to inclement weather, the Manchester Cup in Rock Hill, South Carolina is postponed until Sunday for the college teams.

Here is a link with a revised schedule.

On the road again
Just can’t wait to get on the road again
The life I love is ‘watchin soccer’ with my friends
And I can’t wait to get on the road again

Spring is here.  It’s time to get started.  While my unbridled enthusiasm is muted somewhat by the economy which has forced me to reduce my spring travel from previous years, I’m in the Carolinas for a week-end of college soccer.

My week-end exploits will be posted on the big board, CollegeSoccerNews.com early next week.

On Friday, I watched Wake Forest continue their dominance over Denver with two Zack Schilawski goals to win 2-0 on a rainy evening.

On Saturday, I travel to Rock Hill, South Carolina for 10 games on a forecasted rainy day (send sympathy, aspirin and tissues) for the Manchester Cup.

Here is the schedule:

1st game:

  • UNC Wilmington vs Kentucky
  • Winthrop vs Furman
  • Clemson vs ODU
  • South Carolina vs UNCG
  • Charlotte vs College of Charleston

2nd game:

  • Furman vs Kentucky
  • Clemson vs UNC Wilmington
  • Charlotte vs South Carolina
  • College of Charleston vs ODU
  • Winthrop vs UNCG

These are some of the best teams in the southeast that I would have a hard time seeing in the Fall.  I came to this tournament last year and really enjoyed the format – essentially non-stop soccer all day.  There are two fields that are back-to-back and the tournament starts at staggard times allowing no down time.  It’s a soccer junkie’s nirvana.

As I mentioned, my travels this spring is significantly reduced, I only have a few more games on my schedule after this week-end.

West Virginia @ American

Maryland vs Wake Forest

Again, look at CollegeSoccerNews.com for my article on this week-end’s game early next week.  I’ll post a note with a link when the article is published.