The World's Game In The Heart of the Sun Belt

Category — international soccer

GQ gives props to Atlanta’s Brewhouse Café

Even the fashion magazines are getting World Cup fever, and a slice of soccer nirvana well-known to many Atlantans is getting some national (even global) attention for its local reputation.

GQ Magazine has named the Brewhouse Café in Little Five Points as one of the “best soccercentric bars in America,” sharing that billing with some other vaunted footy watering holes, two of which this blogger has sampled for herself: Summer’s in Arlington, Va., and Fadó Irish Pub in Seattle.

The others are Woodwork in Brooklyn, Cock ‘N Bull Pub in Los Angeles and The Globe Pub in Chicago.

In its mini-reviews (available only in the print magazine), GQ writes that the Brewhouse will be “setting up a tent in the parking lot for match viewings on 3-D TVs.”

That’s all they said, since these truly were thumbnail reviews.

As those of you who have haunted that place know, the parking lot at the Brewhouse is rather small, but outside viewing should relieve some of the packed throngs inside.

The Fadó location in Buckhead has sent out its own “World Cup Media Alert” on Twitter. I especially like the link to “The Free Beer Movement” site, with its objective of “building American soccer one beer at a time.” A new one on me.

Here’s GQ’s online World Cup guide, which includes a Q and A with new fashion boy Oguchi Onyewu, among other things.

Trying not to be outdone, Vanity Fair has a fairly decent World Cup blog, and you might have noticed the beefcake cover of the magazine this month with Didier Drogba and Cristiano Ronaldo. They were among the World Cup stars (along with Landon Donovan) who gladly went before the cameras for Annie Leibovitz.

This was shot well before the final rosters were due, since Brazil’s Pato and Michael Ballack of Germany are featured:

May 27, 2010   No Comments

Clark makes official U.S. World Cup roster

The inclusion of Atlanta’s own Ricardo Clark to the 23-man U.S. World Cup roster was no surprise, but some of the other picks by coach Bob Bradley that were unveiled Wednesday did send some shock waves through the American soccer Tweetosphere.

No Brian Ching or Eddie Johnson up front, but Edson Buddle and Robbie Findley are in. So is Herculez Gomez, who scored in Tuesday’s 4-2 friendly loss to the Czech Republic.

No Chad Marshall or Heath Pearce in the back, but Clarence Goodson. And Oguchi Onyewu, injured most of the season for A.C. Milan (remember his formal introduction at the Georgia Dome last summer?) and who saw his first action in seven months last night.

In midfield, DaMarcus Beasley is in after nearly falling completely out of favor several months ago. Out are Sacha Kljestan, who was a borderline case for making the team, and Robbie Rogers, whom many pundits thought would be included.

In reality, Bradley didn’t have many options with injuries, including Clark, who got in a few games at the end of Eintracht Frankfurt’s season in the German Bundesliga. Speedy forward Charlie Davies was ruled out of the World Cup because of a long recovery following a near-fatal auto accident.

Before he got hurt, Clark was featuring plenty as the U.S. starting midfielder (along with Michael Bradley, the coach’s son). But the return of Maurice Edu adds to the decisions the elder Bradley will have to make about his regulars, and especially his lineup in the June 12 opener against England.

Defensively is where the U.S. looks particularly vulnerable, Onyewu’s fitness aside. The mistakes in the back against the Czechs can’t give Bradley much confidence at all. Tim Howard will have to be nothing short of amazing in the nets.

Up front, Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey are absolutely essential for the U.S., and big striker Jozy Altidore, who has shown some promise, needs to start living up to it. He and Davies were starting to click before that terrible accident, and Bradley has tried to compensate for the loss of Davies’ speed with Findley and Gomez.

On paper, this team may not be any better or worse than the 2006 team that crashed out of Germany in the group stage. The group in South Africa doesn’t appear to be as difficult, but the Americans can’t afford to assume anything about anybody they play.

In this segment that introduced the players ESPN’s Bob Ley didn’t ask Bradley any questions about whom he left out of the roster, but here are some later explanations from the coach about his final decisions.

May 26, 2010   No Comments

How does the U.S. World Cup bid rate?

The Atlanta-based World Football Insider site has already begun digging into the various World Cup bids for 2018 and 2022 that were submitted earlier this month to FIFA, and thus far the initial analysis indicates a fairly tight race at the top.

England, Qatar, Russia and the U.S. were neck-and-neck in WFI’s World Cup Bid Power Index, which reveals a thorough, detached method to assess the strengths and weaknesses of every bid.

The Americans rate strong in transport/accommodation and relationships with FIFA members, which figure to be two of the biggest factors of all. Not so strong is the “wow” factor, and the analysis does explain that expansive travel issues could be a drawback:

“The US bid’s transport system is one of the best but the distance between cities and venues raises questions over whether they would be able to fill stadia for low-profile World Cup matches.”

One of the centerpiece arguments of the Atlanta bid group is the primacy of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, and it figures into a proposal to have the city become the venue for an International Broadcast Center should the U.S. land one of the available World Cups.

Here’s a video from the official USA Bid YouTube page of all the bidding cities, with Atlanta leading off:

With Europe (likely England or Russia) likely to get the 2018 World Cup, the battle for 2022 figures to come down to the U.S., Qatar and Australia.

If your first reaction about the Qatar bid is to question its viability, check out this video of the first five proposed stadiums, which are fully air-conditioned but open-air. They’re almost as visionary as the Middle Eastern nation’s audacious attempt to land the 2022 World Cup.

More facilities would have to be built and the biggest question is whether Qatar is big enough to have a 32-team tournament, but the idea of FIFA extending its political and commercial reach into the Arab world by staging a World Cup there is what makes international soccer politics so unpredictable. And intriguing:

(h/t Cloudspark)

May 26, 2010   No Comments

Soccer film series begins at Goethe Institute

The Atlanta Goethe Institute is celebrating the World Cup with a month-long soccer film festival starting Wednesday and that is open to members and the general public.

The series kicks off with The Miracle of Bern, the story of Germany’s first World Cup championship in 1954, the first year Germany was invited to compete after World War II.

Cost for each film session is $5 for non-members.

The organization is also sponsoring the German Street Soccer Cup slated for June 26 in Sandy Springs. It is open to boys and girls ages 12-16.

The Goethe Institute is located at 1197 Peachtree Street, in Colony Square. For more information call (404) 892-2388 or visit the institute’s website.

May 25, 2010   No Comments

Champions League final events in Atlanta

Saturday’s European Champions League final is always a terrific appetizer in a World Cup year, and a couple of viewing parties in Atlanta are going beyond the usual.

Soccer in the Streets is sending four metro Atlanta youngsters to South Africa, host nation for the World Cup, and also where the FIFA Football for Hope Festival is taking place.

SITS is holding a fundraiser/ECL viewing party at Diesel Atlanta, 870 N. Highland Ave., from 1-6 p.m. Proceeds from drink specials will go toward travel expenses.

The Bayern Munich-Inter Milan game is also the centerpiece for the first Atlanta Soccer Artfest to be held at the Blue Tower Gallery, 675 Metropolitan Ave. That event runs from 2-11 p.m.

Kickoff from the Bernabéu Stadium in Madrid is 2:30 p.m. and is on the Fox broadcast network, the first time it has shown soccer. Martin Tyler, legendary British announcer who will calling the World Cup for ESPN, will have the play-by-play via the Sky Sports simulcast.

Gabrielle Marcotti has the definitive game preview.

May 21, 2010   No Comments

Soccer and the Falcons stadium proposal

Arthur Blank’s stated preference for a downtown outdoor stadium for the Atlanta Falcons — without a retractable roof that he says is too costly — is catching some flak for more than just that reason, and not just from the folks at the Georgia Dome who risk losing their primary tenant.

As my former AJC colleague Tony Barnhart wrote this morning, without a weather-proof venue, Atlanta risks losing a lot of events that have become a vibrant part of the city’s sports scene.

The Falcons owner and team president Rich McKay point out that an outdoor facility with natural grass is optimal for soccer, and it should be heartening to the Atlanta soccer community that the Falcons’ soccer interest remains strong.

Blank is harboring long-range hopes of landing a Major League Soccer franchise, dependent on a new facility for his NFL team that he has wanted for years. And MLS commissioner Don Garber recently reiterated the league’s desire to have Atlanta on board.

A new Falcons stadium also has been included in the Atlanta venue component as part of the U.S. Soccer Federation’s World Cup bid submitted to FIFA last week, with the Dome as the ready-to-go option.

The Atlanta stadium tussle figures go on for some time, beyond the December deadline for FIFA’s decisions on selecting host nations for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, minus final venue choices.

The threat of not getting an MLS team is the greater concern. Atlanta possesses one of the two critical factors the league has required for expansion or relocation: A committed ownership group.

The other is a proper place to play. If Blank’s dream stadium doesn’t come true, then men’s professional soccer in Atlanta will be the biggest casualty. The Falcons likely would remain at the Dome, along with the SEC Championship game, Final Fours, ACC and SEC basketball tournaments and other events that occasionally are staged there.

Blank has prided himself on making the Falcons organization a positive and influential corporate and sporting citizen, and to a large degree that has happened. The Falcons are no longer a laughingstock, either on the field or in the community. That they’re upfront about their interest in soccer is a boon that the sport in this city hasn’t enjoyed in decades.

But his announcement this week also underscores the tensions that have existed for some time over the promotion of college and professional sports in Atlanta. Soccer could be caught in the squeeze if those differences aren’t resolved about a new Falcons stadium.

Gary Stokan, who leads the Atlanta World Cup bid group and is a former soccer marketer for Adidas, departed earlier this year as executive director of the Atlanta Sports Council and now presides over the Chick-fil-A Bowl, which was spun off from the ASC. He also is the chief operating officer for the College Football Hall of Fame that will be relocating to Atlanta from South Bend, Ind.

A sinister mind might wonder if Blank’s aversion to a retractable roof isn’t just about the costs. If all, or even some, of those events did leave Atlanta, the sports offerings in Atlanta would be reduced, especially during the fall football season. There would be less competition for the Falcons for the attention (and dollars) of Atlanta sports fans not fanatically tethered to the exploits of UGA, Georgia Tech, or other college teams, etc., etc.

Admittedly, that’s an Oliver Stone scenario. The Braves, who play in summer, have been outspokenly in favor of having pro sports promoted better. They don’t have any serious competitive threats to their season, since both the WNBA’s Atlanta Dream and the revived Atlanta Beat of Women’s Professional Soccer are in very small niches. An MLS team would be in a bigger niche.

In 1997, after the Braves moved to Turner Field, a local soccer group that included Phil Woosnam felt extremely chastened as it fought vainly to preserve Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium as a soccer venue.

The old home of the Braves was absolutely going to be razed, but there were suspicions that the Braves, and Robert Dale Morgan, Stokan’s predecessor at the ASC, were either hostile to a bigger soccer imprint in Atlanta or at least indifferent to it.

An outdoor stadium built for the Falcons would mean not only keeping the possibility of MLS alive, but also having it stage friendlies such as those last year and this coming summer at the Dome, World Cup qualifying and other big-time soccer events.

Atlanta could finally become a major soccer city and shed its notorious fragmentation in that sport. There’s time to make something work with or without the World Cup coming here, but right now the larger Atlanta sports community appears to be very divided.

May 20, 2010   1 Comment

Clark trying to get fit for World Cup

At the U.S. World Cup training camp in Princeton, N.J., Soccer By Ives correspondent Franco Panizo talks to Ricardo Clark and his battle to get fully healthy after recovering from a calf strain that sidelined him for most of the winter and spring:

“I feel ready, I have the mentality that I’m always going to be ready. I played the last three games of the season, played full 90 minutes and felt fit so I think I’ll be good for this camp.”

May 19, 2010   No Comments

U.S. formalizes World Cup bid

The “book” has been handed over in Zurich, by U.S. defender Carlos Bocanegra, and into the hands of the folks at FIFA who in December will choose the host countries for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments.

Atlanta, of course, is one of the 18 venue cities included in the bid, both for games as as the city for an international broadcast center. The World Cup draw would be held in Miami with the opening match in the montrous House That Jerry Jones Built in the Big D.

The BBC breaks down the bidding field of nations, including the oddsmakers’ lines. They’re not so good for the U.S. in 2018, but there isn’t a line for the Yanks in ‘22. What’s up with that?

Of course, if it is later rather than sooner, maybe Arthur Blank will have a new Falcons stadium.

If the Brits don’t get the World Cup in ‘18, after the Beckham Factor on display in Switzerland, then they’re never going to get it again. Jeez, even The Daily Telegraph gives him some op-ed space for all this

And these “books” look about as thick as Congressional legislation, don’t they? Will Sepp Blatter and the Lords of FIFA be inclined go through these any more than the garden variety Capitol Hill backbencher?

After all, Josep has publicly said he does like the bid by Qatar, for the purely political reason of having the World Cup in the Arab world, and therefore expanding his geographical power base from one end of Asia to another.

You know where to keep up with the Atlanta World Cup efforts at its Web site and Facebook page. Here’s a list of local tournaments, festivals and other events in Atlanta tied to the bid effort.

And here’s the U.S. bid’s promo video that may or not get a look in Zurich with decision day less than seven months away:

May 14, 2010   No Comments

Fashanu biographer seeks Ruckus material

Calling all fans, players and coaches of the Atlanta Ruckus, especially from the 1997 season:

Want to be involved in a book project?

A British author writing a biography of the late Justin Fashanu has contacted me looking for material from his Atlanta Ruckus days.

From the questions posed it sounds like the Atlanta portion of his life is something the author is straining to research.

If you have something you’d like to share about Fashanu for the book, e-mail me at atlantasoccernews@gmail.com and I can get you in touch with the writer.

If you’re not familiar with Fashanu, a little tragic history: He played here briefly in 1997, not long after becoming the first (and still only) openly gay British soccer player.

After he left Atlanta, he latched on with the A-League Mania in Maryland, where he was charged with sexually assaulting a teenage boy.

Fashanu denied the allegations, but not long after that he fled to Britian, committing suicide in London.

Earlier this year his niece Amal, the daughter of John Fashanu, a star player in his own right, joined an anti-homophobia campaign in the U.K.

May 13, 2010   2 Comments

International soccer returns to Georgia Dome

What’s been rumored for several weeks was made official today: Soccer is returning to the Georgia Dome this summer.

For the second time in as many summers, the home of the Falcons will play host to an international friendly, this time on July 28, pitting Club América of Mexico against Manchester City of the English Premier League.

It’s formally called the Atlanta International Soccer Challenge, and for a time tickets are a (comparatively) cheap $25 a head. If you wait until late June (with World Cup frenzy heating up) the tickets start at $40.

So welcome, Atlanta, to the expensive international soccer friendly tour.

I only mean that partially tongue-in-cheek, because it’s another audition for Atlanta as a World Cup venue with FIFA due to decide on the 2018 and 2022 events later this year.

On Friday, the U.S. Soccer Federation formally sends its World Cup bid to FIFA on Friday, and that package includes Atlanta not only playing host to games but also to be the site for the World Cup international broadcasting center.

It’s a feature that Gary Stokan, head of the Atlanta bid organizing committee, has been discussing for nearly a year.

Here’s more on the Atlanta bid.

The game features a returnee from last year’s World Football Challenge. Club América, one of the most popular teams in Mexico, will face Manchester City, which has splashed out nearly $300 million in new players since being purchased by an Abu Dhabi conglomerate last year.

Yet City managed to finish only fifth in the Premier League, three points short of earning place in the European Champions League qualifying.

By the time of its American tour, City may well be going through another major makeover. Briefly put, this club is one of the big soap operas of global soccer, and there’s no telling who’s going to make the trip or even take the pitch at the Georgia Dome.

So think about that before you open your wallet.

The idea, of course, is to support spectator soccer in Atlanta, which has had a checkered history of support. Crowds of more than 50,000 turned out for each of the games at the Georgia Dome last year, and a similar draw is likely.

The first big international soccer match in Atlanta also involved Manchester City, which came over to play the Atlanta Chiefs in 1968. That was the last year City won an English top-flight title, while the Chiefs won the inaugural North American Soccer League crown that year.

Over at The Global Game, his most excellent site on soccer and culture, my friend John Turnbull writes about when soccer contagion first hit Atlanta.

May 12, 2010   No Comments