Posts Tagged ‘Bafana’

ONELOVE 2010: And Then What?

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Alex Valhouli/June 20th, 2010.

Heading home after 9 days in Joburg.  What a dream.

When I was a kid, I would brag to my grandfather about my dreams of becoming a professional soccer player, a professional skateboarder, snowboarder, film director, business man, etc etc. Every couple months it was something new. Every time I came to him with a new plan, he would always wait til I was finished and then ask enthusiastically, “Wow, Al, and then what?” As a teenager, I began to understand what he meant. “And then what?” means, will that be your life? Will you be happy then? And even after I began to understand the question, I had no idea how to actually SOLVE the riddle.

I think I get it now. Just live. Work hard. Stay curious. Be good to people and listen. Maintain your health. Give what you can, when you can. Accept responsibility and let others do the same for themselves. Have fun. Dozens of people have told me all of these things in the past, but it all sounded vague and impersonal until I could embrace it all through the context of ONELOVE.

After spending time in Joburg I have more belief than ever in the potential of ONELOVE FC. We are bound together, not simply by a single passion for soccer, but by an openness to embrace the lives and perspectives of different people. This is not about America, or sports, or products, or politics. It’s about people, plain and simple. We love people, and soccer is, for us, the people’s sport.

As we grow, it is our ultimate goal to establish and maintain a global presence, committed to local initiatives in the United States and abroad. Since ‘abroad’ used to be an ambiguous (sometimes terrifying) term, we scrapped it from our initial mission statement. After meeting people, talking about what soccer means in other parts of the world, experiencing new cultures in the context of soccer, we see limitless opportunity to affect positive change on a human level. We are inspired by people. We affect change through the beautiful game.

My brother, Jamie, and I visited with our grandparents before leaving for South Africa. We sat with them and explained our dream for ONELOVE. I was prepared to answer the “And then what?” question. I was finally ready. But it never came. Instead, all we heard was, “go for it.”

1L

- Alex

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WORLD CUP ANALYSIS: GROUP A

Monday, June 7th, 2010

by Philip Cramer

Group A: South Africa, Mexico, Uruguay, France.

One of the most interesting and wide open groups. Any of the 4 teams can finish either first or last. Yes, I know most are giving South Africa little hope to advance and I am more than a tad biased but this isn’t the same team that endured a prolonged slump and failed to even qualify for the African Cup of Nations.

Carlos Alberto Parreira (Brazil ’94 coach) was brought in and since then Bafana has gone undefeated in 12 games, albeit mostly against weaker opponents. Home support will obviously be a huge factor despite limited success in their two previous appearances. Consider South Korea who had no wins in 14 prior games before they made it to the semi-finals as hosts in 2002.

Bafana has a solid defense although it is mistake-prone at times. Their strength is in the midfield where they match with up with any of their opponents. Their biggest problem is up front where they always struggle to score against quality teams. A big plus for South Africa is that the local season was shortened by two months to allow for extended training camps. They are well rested and Parreira is fanatical about fitness which will help in the later stages of their games.

Mexico were in the same bad shape as Bafana when they fired the overrated Sven Goren Eriksson halfway through qualifying. It looked as though they wouldn’t qualify, something that is normally automatic for them in the weak CONCACAF region. Javier Aguirre worked the same magic he did in 2002 in Korea, guiding ‘El Tri’ to qualifying comfortably. The team has a good mix of veterans and youth and the Dos Santos brothers controversy seems to have died down. The altitude will not be a problem for them. They’ve looked lively in their lead-in games and beat a lackluster Italy earlier this week.

They have excellent speed up front with Carlos Vela and Javier Hernandez and solid midfield support from Andres Guardado and Giovanni dos Santos, making for arguably the best attack in this group. In the back a lot will depend on Rafael Marquez who hasn’t seen much playing time with Barcelona this year. Their opening game against South Africa will answer a lot of questions. Mexico are a little more polished than Bafana, especially up front, but home support should negate that. It might come down to a bit of luck for either team in the opener.

Uruguay’s strength is up front where Diego Forlan and Luis Suarez are formidable. Forlan won the scoring title in Spain this past season and can be a gamebreaker. Suarez has all the tools and can both create and score goals. Close them down and it becomes a lot harder for Uruguay. As you work your way back back from the front Uruguay’s weaknesses become more apparent. Goalkeeping has been dodgy although Walter Gargano, who plays for Napoli, stands out in defence. Martin Caceres has become a regular on the Juventus squad, but considering their lame performance this season, that might not be much of a recommendation. Nonetheless, there is little depth beyond those two.

Since winning the cup for the second time in 1950 they Uruguay hasn’t done much other than a semi-final appearance in 1970

Zidane was France’s talisman. Consider the record. With Zidane they won in ’98, won Euro 2000 and if not for a moment of sheer insanity might have won in Germany. With Zidane injured they crashed out in ’02 without scoring a goal and didn’t make it out of the group in Euro ’06, although they did manage to score. They only made it to South Africa when Thierry Henry utilized his volleyball skills against Ireland.

If there is justice in soccer, France ought to be sent home early, but sadly there is little. Their warm up games include a 2-1 win against Costa Rica, a draw with Tunisia, and a 1-0 loss to China. There is a measure of gloom in their camp and with a number of their players rapidly approaching their ‘use by date,’ more problems are likely to surface. Then again, they have the talent with Ribery, Gourcuff, their rising midfield star, Malouda and a trio of Arsenal defenders and they could just as easily win the group.

France’s first game against Uruguay might be their easiest as long as they can contain Forlan and Suarez. Ribery, Gourcuff and Malouda are all coming off excellent seasons and should stretch the Uruguayan defense beyond its capabilities. The game is at sea level but their next games are at altitude against the two teams that are comfortable in the thinner air.

A couple of the more fancied teams will crash out in the first round and France is a prime candidate.

My fearless forecast:
1 – South Africa 2 – Mexico
(It’s the week before the kickoff when hope springs eternal for all fans and I have to go with my heart)

Check out more from ONELOVE Ambassador Philip Cramer at Irritable Liberal Syndrome.

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BAFANA, BAFANA!

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

by Philip Cramer (contributing writer & South Africa correspondent)

It’s almost upon us. The dream that was so cruelly shattered by one abstention that gave Germany the cup in 2006 is now a reality. Despite the naysayers in Europe and sadly particularly among some soccer reporters in America who said the stadiums wouldn’t be ready, that the infrastructure was totally inadequate to host the cup, that there wasn’t enough accommodation and that there was too much crime.

They were wrong. Five new world class stadiums were built and another five were upgraded. The new stadiums in Durban and Cape Town are both quite spectacular as you will see once the games start.

Bafana, Bafana (boys, boys) the South African team were also written off as almost certain to be the first host team not to make it out of the first round with good reason. The team suffered a spell where they could barely beat even the weakest teams. In Africa, the World Cup and the African Nations Cup were combined into one competition. While South Africa were guaranteed qualification for the World Cup as hosts they couldn’t even qualify as one of the 16 teams for the Nations Cup.

The team was dispirited and it showed in their performances until they fired the previous coach Joel Santana and replaced him with another Brazilian, Carlos Alberto Parreira who coached Brazil (twice, with a win in ‘94), Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in previous world cups. He has assembled a South African team that is unbeaten in 11 games and should contend for a place in the second round.

Home advantage in a World Cup is enormous. Consider South Korea had a dismal record of ten losses, four draws and no wins in the finals before playing host when they made it to the semi final albeit aided by some awful refereeing. Another built in advantage will be the altitude. Johannesburg is at 5,700 feet where they face Mexico in the opening game while there other 2 games are at venues of over 4,000 feet. It’s now winter in South Africa so temperatures will be cool dropping into the 30’s at night. There will also be little or no rain except in Cape Town which is cool, rainy and windy in winter. This should help the European teams that are used to playing in cool conditions rather than the energy sapping hear often experienced at finals played in midsummer.

The passionate South African fans will be a huge ally especially with the ubiquitous vuvuzelas which Bafana love but drive foreign players insane. Some have complained they can’t hear each other on the pitch. I have no problem with that.

Parreira’s biggest achievement has been changing the way the team plays from too many individualists into a cohesive team that moves the ball in the midfield with quick sure passing. Their biggest weakness is up front where they will be without all time leading goal scorer Benni McCarthy who has had a love/hate relationship with Bafana. He arrived completely out of condition despite having just finished a Premier League season where he admittedly was injured for much of the time but he had obviously eaten one too many pies and was overweight.

Here is a breakdown of the key players:

In Goal:

Itumeleng Khune – a great young talent, acrobatic with a keen sense of finding the open man when he has the ball.

Defense:

Matthew Booth – the only white player on the team. Tall and bald, he reminds me of Peter Garrett, the lead singer from Midnight Oil. Imposing in the air and tough as nails is much loved by Bafana fans. You will hear what sounds like boos every time he touches the ball but it’s the crowd going Booooooooooooth.

Aaron Mokoena – Experienced captain who got his 100th cap recently. Tough with lots of Premier League experience but sometimes tends to give away unnecessary free kicks in vulnerable areas.

Tsepo Masilela – Solid reliable on defense and always willing to take the ball upfield down the side.

Sibosiso Gaza and Licas Thwala should also feature prominently.

Midfield:

Steven Pienaar – Everton player of the year and the engine of the team. Great distributor of the ball and a great sense of where everyone is. Creates a lot of goals but scores very few.

Siphiwe Tshabalala – Together with Pienaar, he drives the team. Hard worker, takes most of the corners and free kicks.

Teko Modise – One of the best locally based players coming off a mediocre season but has come on strong in training camp and in friendlies. Great ball skills and scores quite often except for the recent season.

Kagisho Dikgaco – plays for Fulham and is a strong defensive midfielder. Few get by him.

Macbeth Sibaya who plays for Russian champions Kazan and Surprise Moriri will also feature prominently. Thandyise Khuboni was virtually unheard of six months ago but played brilliantly in warm up games should also see some action off the bench.

Forwards:

Katlego Mphela – a rising talent who scored on a stunning free kick to tie Spain in the last minute at the Confederations Cup.

Bernard Parker – Plays for FC Twente, Dutch champions has a great nose for the goal but is sometimes erratic.

Siyabonga Nomvete.- a solid veteran who will need to be at his best. He will probably start most games on the bench.

Great Expectations:

To prepare for the World Cup, South Africa condensed their league season by two months so the locally based players have had three camps in Durban, Brazil and Germany to gel. Parreira has emphasized physical fitness and it shows in their recent performances in friendly games. Their spirits are sky high and the country has become besotted over the team. Local support should be worth at least a goal a game as long as their Achilles Heel up front doesn’t let them down. They have a tendency to take too many speculative long shots which can sometimes pay off in the thinner air at high altitude.

They have no easy games in their group and all three opponents are more than capable. They open against Mexico who does not always travel well and the problems with the Dos Santos brothers could be a distraction.

Uruguay is a useful team. The key is Diego Forlan. Close him down and Uruguay will struggle. Bafana’s last game is against France and with a bit of luck it and a couple of wins Bafana can have already secured a spot in the second round. France is a schizophrenic team that can be brilliant and can equally be awful. They needed luck and a horrible referee call to make it to the finals. They failed miserably in Korea and looked like they were going nowhere in Germany until they put it all together against Spain and then Brazil.

All in all it will be both an interesting and exciting group with the added flavor of Bafana being the home team. You will appreciate how boisterous and passionate their fans are.

Philip Cramer is a South Africa native who currently resides in California. He is the creator and voice of a must-read blog: ‘irritable liberal syndrome’.

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