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our washington insider

Under the guise of allowing the youngsters to play and letting Bradley look at his boys, I’m not addressing Copa America today. I think I said everything I needed to say in the last post (Keller starting? Players playing their way off the team). So I’m here today to give you something else, far from the back and forth between the USA haters and apologists. Although it is a back and forth…

Toronto FC’s rocket launch aside, arguably no other team has created a soccer atmosphere like DC. Maybe it was always meant to be – for reasons you’ll see below – but you can’t overlook the outreach methods taken by the team, the media, and their fans. The team signed players to represent the various immigrant communities in nation’s capital – almost as if the roster was in ratio with the region. The media, from local cable to its national newspaper, The Washington Post, assigned coverage. The internet wasn’t far behind. Post copy editor turned beat reporter Steve Goff entered the blogosphere, following what was already healthy world wide work from supporters’ groups and fan sites like DCenters.

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In journalism, there is this idea of convergence, bringing all the available platforms and technology together in order to maximize things like dissemination and market share. The same term could be used for American soccer, USSF, or a MLS club. Offer everything in hopes of attracting everybody. There will always be hits and misses, but it wouldn’t be hard to argue that no one has a better track record than United.

Continuing to mine the microcosm of American soccer that is the growth rate and/or fate of the professional soccer writer, we turn our attention to Mr. Goff, his Washington Post, and their Soccer Insider blog. Steve joins the discussion after the jump…
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due justice

The popularity of the Houston Dynamo has helped bring some attention to the sport there.

“Kind of neat, huh?” Those are the words Houston Chronicle sports columnist Richard Justice used to end his column yesterday regarding the ‘club or country’ question that invades soccer like no other sport. The phrase is a perfect proposal for Justice, a writer and sometime television and radio guest, who in this world of sports talk insanity where two guys yelling at each other goes for journalism is a beacon of honest reportage and sincere opinion.

Richard is not a soccer guy, but he’s long been one of my favorite baseball writers (I’ll apologize right now if this sounds like some lauding celebrity profile, but…). He delivers the occasional scoop, but more importantly, he knows what he is talking about and presents it in an entertaining and professional manner, safe for all viewers in a world where journalists are increasingly coming forth with extreme volume if not some lame schtick suited for a PG-13 crowd. He even maintains this persona when placed in the shark tank that is any number of ESPN’s programs.

Not that he is alone in that department, but it’s been downsized in the last few years like Milton at Initech, in turn raising the profiles of writers like Justice to those of us who want our ‘eyes and ears’ to stay the course and avoid the express train to talking-head fame, and nights out on the town with “you’re with me with, leather” or ”lemme know”.”

Now, maybe Richard is a wild man who just keeps his indiscretions far from blogger eyes, but he does not have a catch phrase or a penchant for prescribing nicknames, and I love him for it.

So imagine my surprise yesterday when I came across his column in the Houston Chronicle – a paper, I might add, that has some of the most thorough soccer reporting in the nation. Richard Justice on soccer? I had to know how this happened. How often do top-level, mainstream columnists, who aren’t soccer writers, cover the sport? You know, without it being a complete hack job or rag fest? It took a little convincing – “Adam, I’d talk to you about almost any topic other than soccer. I just don’t have enough knowledge on the topic” - but finally Richard obliged me a few questions.

After the jump, Richard Justice on soccer. Kind of neat, huh?
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Ives at the helm during last year’s World Cup opening match between Germany and Costa Rica

After lunch at a brew pub, which has become my soccer office of late in Times Square, New Jersey Herald Red Bulls beat reporter Ives Galarcep expressed his slight hesitation in participating in a profile about himself, in that he would incite criticism for his lack of being a soccer player, and as he put it, “I’m not nearly as interesting as Jack Bell or Grant Wahl.”

Not one to cast off Ives’ opinions, which I’ve come to greatly respect over the years, I considered it, and then cast it aside. Ives might be more interesting. As he remarked on his blog, he doesn’t have photos of himself with Pele or Ronaldinho, but what he has is the day-in day-out life of a fulltime soccer writer, something Jack and Grant can’t say. So, for that reason only, Ives has something to share that is rare. And we should all pay attention, because as Ives goes, so goes our soccer coverage. Will his paper continue to cover soccer? Will his newspaper… continue? None of those answers are crystal clear.

What is clear, however, is that Amado Guevara is no fan of Ives. Just one day after our meeting, in which one of the topics we addressed was the unique relationship between beat reporters and the players they cover, Guevara banned Ives from his media circle for some critical columns he wrote about the Honduran striker. Just another day on the beat. At least Clint Mathis and him are friends again (keep reading).

For one of the first times in print, the coveted life of an endangered species is exposed. OK, I didn’t spend three years waiting for images of a snow leapord in the Himalayas, but soccer beat reporters, they’re no less a fascinating breed.
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New York Times’ Jack Bell with FC Barcelona’s Ronaldinho.

If a publication came to you and said you could write a story about Ronaldinho but you’d have to pay your own way to Barcelona, what would you say? Ok, easy question. What if you had been a journalist and editor for more than two decades covering soccer from the Cosmos to the MLS? Would your answer be any different? For New York Times Jack Bell, passion has to trump payment from time to time.

It’s a problem in American soccer journalism. It goes along with the naysayers of my Red Bulls ticket give-a-away plan: if you start giving it away for free, who is going to pay for it? More than the fact that there is only so much news to go around to so many writers, the editorial powers that be contend a market is not there to demand it. They’re not wrong, but they’re not exactly right either.

Bell’s Ronaldinho story became one of nytimes.com’s most-read stories after it was posted, but it isn’t any easier for him to get soccer stories published (it’s a bit easier when you have a name like George Vecsey). If you’re like me, you believe a news outlet like the New York Times has an obligation to cover American soccer, even if only on-line, even if behind the veil of the pay-to-play Times Select.

It turns out that pay-to-play goes for some writers as well, a situation I’ve been on losing side of with some of the top outlets in journalism, garnering responses like, “We’d be happy to publish the work if it’s good, but we can’t pay you for it.” It should be no surprise that money talks, but during my hour-long conversation with Jack Bell over lunch in Times Square, I was surprised to learn a veteran of the genre would face the same obstacles.

Our conversation, including his thoughts on the Times’ treatment of soccer and many other subjects are after the jump, along with a few photos from inside Ronaldinho’s house that were passed up by the Times and are now a TIAS exclusive…
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skimming the surface

photo credit: David Doubilet

I may have been too harsh with Frank Dell’Apa. When I criticized his column in Friday’s Barometer, there was an important detail I failed to consider. He’s a columnist, not a reporter. So when I asked, “is not that your job” in regard to his call for “concentrated research,” the answer was no. While he could take it upon himself to do the reporting, he’s a columnist, and by rule, columnists don’t do much reporting. At least not anymore. They’re the veteran professors on tenure, giving lectures, but essentially retired from conducting and publishing research, which is at the heart of the most sought after academic minds.

In a way, you could say columnists were proto-bloggers, holding court in broadsheets before blogs were a glint in the eye of silicon valley. So, Sorry Frank. You’re off the hook. But if not Frank, than who? Who’s going to do the concentrated research?
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the sport of the internet

If you’ve read TIAS for any length of time, you’ve seen a link to du Nord. About Bruce, it’s creator, you’ve heard me say something to the effect of ‘he’s the hardest working man in the online soccer community.’ You could also argue he is the most mysterious, in that besides that first name, you really have clue who he is. No personal page, very little editorializing. Who is that masked man behind the random titles that don’t seem to make any sense? Well, it’s time to break down that firewall and find out. Bruce McGuire sat down with me over one time zone to dish the scoop on how the website of the North became the one-stop shop to fill up on soccer. Join us after the jump…
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Robert Ziegler interviews U17 Head Coach John Hackworth

Before looking back on the year past or looking forward to what lies ahead, I need to finish this thought on youth soccer. After all, a new year always calls attention to rebirth and regeneration. Weeks of research and background gave me Bradenton, but maybe the best thing Bradenton gave me was a chance meeting on the sidelines with Rob Ziegler, editor of TopDrawerSoccer.com. Youth Soccer is its own beast, but thanks to Rob, it’s not quite the mystery anymore. It will forever be a bait and switch, the intangible variables that turn a good soccer player into a national hero. Thus, the weight, the sweat, must fall upon the system, not the player, who is only a child. Our discussion of that parental outpouring, or lack thereof, is after the jump.
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no experience necessary

a short-lived smile. Jeff sets up shop in Germany for the USA v. Czech Republic

In just a few short years, Jeff Carlisle went from engineer to journalist. His unlikely story begins our lengthy conversation, after the jump.
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If you’ve ever wondered what an hour-long conversation looks like on paper. Well, today’s your lucky day. 9 pages of typing, hours of play, pause, rewind, play, and repeat. It sucks, but there is no substitute for doing your own transcription. Sure, I could pay someone to do it – countless firms will churn it out verbatim for a fee – but there is something in the process that becomes priceless to me. There’s the obvious rehashing of the conversation which pricks the brain and its rational creativity, helping to bring complicated subjects to light, but there is something more.

Take my recent conversation with Sport Illustrated’s Grant Wahl. We weren’t trying to deduce cold fusion from the hot variety, and we weren’t solving world hunger. We were, however, strangers getting to know each other through our shared experience, and it is somewhere within those shared words that a nascent muse embeds within, creating something much more important to me than that of the definition of the transcription. It’s hard to explain it - as if that last sentence doesn’t make that abundantly clear - but I feel I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention it.
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the ole ball coach

Fathers, lock up your daughters, unless of course a great education is something that interests you. Because you know, there isn’t a women’s professional soccer league anymore, and the likelihood of your daughter making a national team is not so good. Seriously, just make them quit playing soccer before someone like Becky Burleigh gets her hands on them, because once she does, your little daughter will quickly become a woman, a strong woman, and maybe a national champion.
Click HERE for the full story…

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