2009年1月31日星期六

Chargers GM Smith reaches out to Tomlinson

SAN DIEGO (TICKER) —After being called out by his star linebacker, San Diego Chargers general manager A.J. Smith contacted LaDainian Tomlinson to straighten out the comments he made to a local newspaper.
On Monday, three-time Pro Bowler Shawne Merriman told the San Diego Union-Tribune the back-and-forth between Smith and Tomlinson needed to stop.
Merriman was referring to Smith’s comments to the newspaper last week, in which he mocked Tomlinson.
Last week, Tomlinson posted a statement on his personal web site saying he wants to end his career with the Chargers, who drafted the star running back fifth overall in 2001.
Smith responded by publicly mocking Tomlinson’s statement verbatim the following day.
After Merriman’s comments, Smith called Tomlinson on Monday to clear the air.
“It was important to me that L.T. know exactly what happened,” Smith said. “I just answered a question and unfortunately my response was inappropriate.
“After reading my response to the question, I can see why it was interpreted the way it was. “I absolutely meant no disrespect toward L.T. … none. I have the utmost respect for him on two fronts, as a player and as a person.”
Smith said it was a “great talk,” and Tomlinson echoed those sentiments.
“It was great to hear from him,” said Tomlinson, a five-time Pro Bowler. “It really went well. It’s always better talking directly to someone one-on-one. He was very upbeat and very sincere. He felt bad about what had happened.”
The whole situation started because Tomlinson felt the need to express his feelings about possibly playing in different uniform. Rumors have been circulating that the Chargers will ask him to take a pay cut, or possibly release him.
The issue has come up because Tomlinson, the face of the franchise, is inching closer to 30 years old - the age when the health and skills of most running backs traditionally decline.
Tomlinson, who is under contract through 2011, will turn 30 in June and is scheduled to count $8.8 million against the salary cap in 2009. The eight-year veteran has been slowed by injuries the last two seasons, which has added fuel to the fire.
He missed the Chargers’ two playoff games with a torn adductor (groin) muscle and also sat out most of last year’s AFC championship game vs. New England with a sprained MCL.
Chargers owner Dean Spanos said last week that the team “can’t let our emotions taint our decisions” regarding Tomlinson’s future.
Tomlinson surpassed 1,000 yards for the eighth consecutive season, but was held to a career-low 1,110 yards on 292 carries, also the fewest of his career.
The emergence of Darren Sproles is one reason the Chargers may feel Tomlinson is expendable, though Smith recently said he doesn’t view the 5-6, 181-pound Sproles as an every-down back.
A pending free agent, Sproles rushed for 115 yards in the Chargers’ 52-21 playoff-clinching victory over Denver. He added 105 yards in a 23-17 overtime win over Indianapolis in a wild card playoff game, but was held to 15 yards on 11 carries in the AFC championship game loss to Pittsburgh.
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Bolts hire Sullivan to coach O-line

Source: Associated Press
SAN DIEGO (AP)—Former NFL player Mike Sullivan was hired as offensive line coach by the San Diego Chargers on Tuesday.
Sullivan played for Tampa Bay for four years and Dallas for one season. He spent the last two seasons as the assistant offensive line coach in Cleveland.
With the Chargers, he’ll work alongside Hal Hunter in coaching the offensive line.

La moviola di Catania-Inter

Primo Tempo
5° minutoSull'azione del primo gol nerazzurro firmato da Stankovic, è dubbia la posizione di partenza di Cruz. Al replay si può notare come l'autore del cross decisivo sia nettamente dietro alla linea difensiva del Catania al momento del lungo lancio di Maicon.
12° minutoIl Catania prova a reagire con un cross in mezzo all'area di rigore respinto da Burdisso. La palla vagante viene raccolta e depositata in rete da Paolucci. Il gol viene però annullato a causa di un'entrata con il piede a martello di Morimoto proprio sulla testa di Burdisso che si era tuffato. Episodio dubbio che nel post-partita è stato oggetto di discussione per le moviole di tutta Italia, anche se alla fine si può considerare corretta la decisione dell'arbitro.
15° minutoAppena dopo essere entrato in area di rigore, Ibrahimovic cade a terra. Al replay si può notare come Zlatan sia solo leggermente trattenuto da un avversario, ma non certo a tal punto da assegnare il calcio di rigore. Nel gioco del calcio è comprensibile la caduta dello svedese che, avendo perso il possesso di palla, ha cercato di ottenere la massima punizione. Bravo l'arbitro a non cadere nella trappola e ad ammonire l'interista per simulazione.
31° minutoNel tentativo di sradicare la palla dai piedi di un avversario, per qualche centimetro Muntari non trova la sfera ma solo le gambe del giocatore. L'arbitro estrae subito il cartellino rosso. A mio avviso l'intervento era da punire con l'ammonizione, ma in quanto privo di cattiveria, l'espulsione è decisamente esagerata. E' ormai ovvio che Muntari sconta la sua notorietà di giocatore falloso.
Secondo Tempo
25° minutoSul secondo gol nerazzurro, la posizione di partenza di Ibrahimovic è dubbia. Il replay ci fa notare come l'autore del gol sia nettamente tenuto in gioco da un difensore catanese al momento dell'assist a lunga gettata di Stankovic.
35° minutoIn una mischia nell'area di rigore nerazzurra, i giocatori del Catania chiedono il calcio di rigore per un presunto fallo di mano di Cordoba. Giusta la decisione dell'arbitro di far proseguire l'azione in quanto il difensore colombiano tiene il braccio completamente attaccato al corpo e tra l'altrao colpisce la palla con la spalla.
Ibrahimovic sta per segnare dopo essere scattato in posizione regolare

Proprio una bella serata!

Catania 0 - Inter 2
Le altre arrancano, e l'Inter "in crisi" vince
Proprio una bella partita quella dei ragazzi che riscattano le prime uscite un po' barcollanti del mese di Gennaio. Una partita difficile, vuoi perchè il Catania ha costruito la sua classifica in casa (22 punti), vuoi perchè l'Inter gioca per più di un'ora in 10 contro 11, per un'espulsione scandalosa su Muntari, che purtroppo sconta la sua pessima "notorietà" di giocatore falloso.
Merito di tutti. La squadra ha risentito dell'espulsione solo negli ultimi minuti del primo tempo, senza mai scomporsi, e riuscendo addirittura a segnare il gol dello 0-2 con uno splendido Ibra, ritornato dopo la squalifica.
La partita inizia alla grande, con un Inter dinamica, che pressa a tutto campo e che trova il gol dopo soli 5 minuti, con un grande Stankovic che infila Bizzarri.L'Inter continua ad attaccare, anche se il Catania non demorde. Viene annullato un gol al Catania (anche se l'arbitro fischia prima del tiro), con chiaro gioco pericoloso di Morimoto, su Burdisso.Poco dopo arriva la traversa fantastica di Ibra.A metà primo tempo arriva l'espulsione su Muntari, che cerca di prendere il pallone su Tedesco, anche se tocca il giocatore. Chiunque avrebbe dato massimo l'ammonizione, ma Rocchi vede gli estremi per il rosso.Da qui in poi il Catania tenta di aggredire un' Inter ordinata, che non soffre troppo la superiorità numerica dell'avversario, e che segna il gol della sicurezza proprio con Ibra, imbeccato da un perfetto Stankovic.
Questa partita ha dimostrato quanto sia importante Dejan Stankovic, fondamentale sia in fase d'attacco, sia in copertura.Inoltre ennesima prova convincente del giovane Santon, che dimostra grande tecnica e carattere da veterano.

La situazione prima del Torino

Convocazioni: fuori Balotelli e Samuel
Sono state diramate da poco le convocazioni di mister Mourinho per la partita contro il Torino di domani pomeriggio.Fuori Walter Samuel, che risente ancora dell'infortunio rimediato contro la Sampdoria di Domenica scorsa.Nulla di grave comunque per il forte difensore argentino, che ha comunque sostenuto un allenamento basato su corsa e terapie.Di nuovo fuori Mario Balotelli, che sconta ancora il provvedimento disciplinare dopo il rifiuto della convocazione per Catania-Inter di mercoledì.
Per quanto riguarda la situazione degli altri infortunati:Marco Materazzi si è allenato con il gruppo per il secondo giorno consecutivo, seduta differenziata per Adriano, Chivu e Bolzoni.Patrick Vieira invece continua il suo lavoro in Francia.
Intanto Mourinho ha rilasciato in conferenza stampa queste dichiarazioni:
Su Santon:"Magari la personalità aiuta Santon: in campo ha una corsa naturale, ci aiuta con gli inserimenti e si sta adattando a un ruolo nuovo per lui, certo ha bisogno di stabilità ma "il bambino" è bravo, è felice di giocare e di stare zitto visto che il suo allenatore gli impedisce di parlare con la stampa".
Su Balotelli:"Non pensate che per me sia un piacere tenerlo fuori. Mi fa male quello che sta succedendo, credo che lui un giorno capirà e distinguerà tra chi lo vuole aiutare e chi no. Ha tutto il tempo di diventare un grande giocatore e un grande uomo. Il pianto dopo l'allenamento? Non è vero, non è successo alla fine dell'allenamento, dopo non so , non posso saperlo".
Sul Torino:"Il Torino non merita questa posizione, ha giocatori di qualità e non ci regalerà nulla. Avrà un atteggiamento difensivo, cercherà il contropiede con Rosina, Bianchi o Amoruso, ma se sarà una partita più o meno difficile dipende tutto dal nostro atteggiamento. Nell'ultimo mese abbiamo capito in che modo possiamo fare la differenza. A Bergamo s'è visto subito come sarebbe andata a finire, a Catania dal primo secondo avevamo la mentalità giusta. So che questa bellissima figurina - continua Mourinho indicando l'ingrandimento dell'immagine dedicata dalla Panini alla sua squadra - ha un grande significato per noi, ma avrà valore solo se ne arriverà un'altra tra un anno".
Sull'espulsione di Muntari in Catania-Inter:“Abbiamo tutti visto, anche dall'entità della squalifica, che è stata una decisione sbagliata. L'arbitro non era lontano, eppure non ha avuto nemmeno un dubbio, per questo all’inizio ho pensato subito che fosse un rosso meritato da lontano. Poi dopo aver visto le immagini ci siamo sorpresi. Si parla tanto di prova tv: hanno dato tre giornate ad Adriano, perché non utilizzarla anche per rimediare a un errore dell'arbitro? Bisogna capire che Muntari non è più il giocatore di 18-19 anni dell'Udinese che perdeva il controllo. E' un altro uomo, più maturo. Le sue due espulsioni contro l'andata non hanno giustificazioni. Noi siamo una squadra disciplinata".

A Couple Quick NFL Thoughts from the SDSG & A New Sheriff Comes To Town Tomorrow

Well, the Eagles made a game of it in the second half but couldn't stop the Cardinals when it mattered most in the 4th quarter. As a result, my least favorite NFL coach, Andy Reid, will now have an opportunity to grow out his beard and stuff himself with donuts until the summer. Considering my feelings about Reid, I'm not really sure why I picked the Eagles to cover the spread yesterday. The Steelers did cover against the Ravens though and the SDSG is currently 6-4 vs. the spread in the playoffs (as well as 135-123-8 since the first week of the season)...I know at least three million people have said this already, but Mike Tomlin's resemblance to Omar Epps is absolutely uncanny. Tomlin has done a phenomenal job with the Steelers and I think Pittsburgh will beat the Cardinals by at least two touchdowns in the Super Bowl. The only other possible outcome is for Arizona to "shock the world" and win the game. If Kurt Warner can continue to avoid the costly turnovers that have plagued him on and off throughout his career then a victory is certainly within the realm of possibility. As it stands now though, I like the Steelers a lot at -6 1/2... Several months ago, SDSG favorite Scarlett Johansson said her heart belonged to Barack Obama and gave him a ringing endorsement. Barack is now set to take the reigns of the country tomorrow morning and we'll see if he can deliver the goods...

AL/NL and Combined First Base Rankings for 2009

I am going to give you a ranking for each league and then combined ranking for those of you in a mixed league. I don't think there will be any major surprises in this ranking, considering other than outfield first base is the deepest of an position in baseball right now! The way I compiled my rankings, was based upon 2 things...first what do you fo for your team, and secondly, what do you do for your fantasy team.
NL AL
1a. Albert Pujols 1. Kevin Youkilis
1b. Ryan Howard 2. Miguel Cabrera
3. Lance Berkman 3. Mark Texiera
4. Derrick Lee 4. Justin Morneau
5. Adrian Gonzalez 5. Carlos Pena
6. Prince Fielder 6. Paul Konerko
7. Carlos Delgado 7. Mike Jacobs
8. Conner Jackson 8. Jason Giambi
9. Jorge Cantu 9. Lyle Overbay
10. Joey Votto 10. Ryan Garko
Mixed
1a. Albert Pujols 11. Carlos Pena
1b. Ryan Howard 12. Carlos Delgado
3. Lance Berkman 13. Paul Konerko
4. Kevin Youkilis 14. Mike Jacobs
5. Derrick Lee 15. Conner Jackson
6. Miguel Cabrera 16. Jorge Cantu
7. Mark Texiera 17. Jason Giambi
8. Adrian Gonzalez 18. Joey Votto
9. Prince Fielder 19. Lyle Overbay
10. Justin Morneau 20. Ryan Garko

Are You Stumped? I Have The Answers!

Okay its conference championship day in the NFL, and we have two games that were very unlikely when the brackets were released three weeks ago. The Eagles v the Cardinals and the Steelers v the Ravens. Well I know one thing...there is a 75% chance that there will be an all bird Super Bowl.
This week I am going to break down both games for you in detail. The Eagles and Cardinals are both on such an emotional high that something has to give. When looking at these two teams, there is something that stands out to me about the Eagles...they have played defense ALL year, and it is the main reson why they are in this game. With that being said, I see the Cardinals defense coming back down to Earth and the reality of the situation will be evident at halftime. Kurt Warner does not fair well under pressuer, and he is going to face a defensive coordinator in Jim Johnson that didn't sleep for a week coming up with new blitz packages to rattle Warner. The Cardinals and their fans are soooo excited about the return of Anquan Boldin for this game...thats great and they should be...but lets think back to Thanksgiving Day when the Cardinals were at full strength and beaten like a drum by the Eagles...different day same result! Take the Eagles and the Over!
The Steelers and Ravens game will be very diffferent compared to the NFC Championship game. The temperature at game time for instance is going to be a balmy 0 degrees. This is going to be a very intense, and hard hitting game. The biggest story line in this game is going to circle around two things. First can the Steelers really beat the Ravens for a third time this season. It is one of the most difficult thing in sports to do...beat a team over and over and over, especially when its a rivalry, and divisional foe. The second stroy behind this game is going to be whether or not the Ravens will be able to even put up a fight because of all the injuries they have! The Steelers are at home and I believe that is the biggest advantage in this game. I plan to see plenty of hits that will allow for the unlucky to bestow upon us snot bubbles, but in the end...I just don't see the Ravens having enough in the tank to finish off an improbable run...different day same result! Take the Steelers and the Under!

Can Philly Pull A Boston?

The Philadelphia Eagles, yes I said the Philadelphia Eagles are just two wins away from claiming two major professional sports titles in the same year! For almost two months now people from all over the country thought the Eagles had dug about a 6 foot grave and that Donovan Mcnabb and Andy Reid were destined to be buried together. Unfortunatly for those who hated on them, the Eagles look like a finely tuned wrecking machine by taking out two conference champs, and a third could fall this Sunday.
I would have to agree with a lot of people if they said there was no way that Mcnabb could have done this himself. The fact is this...he has!!! Brian Westbrook has been playing virtually broken the last 5 weeks and hasn't contributed much during the playoffs. The Eagles do not have a single prototype big play receiver, and go with a wideout by committee approach. Finally, Correl Buckhalter has shown up pretty big at times, but he is a spot player. The outstanding defense has helped, but I say this the proof is in the pudding ladies and gentlemen...Donovan is showing the Philly fans just why they love him, he makes things happen! If it wasn't for his playmaking abilities the Eagles would be at home watching the rest of the playoffs!
I say this to the many Eagles fans out there...I know you love to hate him, but how can you hate a guy that has had you in the NFC Championship game 5 times in 8 years? Granted he has not won your beloved Eagles the Super Bowl...but can't you just give the guy a break! He holds every major quarterback record in franchise history, and if he somehow pulls off the most improbable of feats over the next two games you will be the ones telling him you love him, you will be the ones pulling him up on your shoulders and carrying him around Philadelphia, and most importantly all of you will puff out your chests and say we are the world champions regardless of whether or not you have thrown Donovan Mcnabb and this Eagles team under the bus just once this year!
I say go E-A-G-L-E-S, and go Donovan!

World Cup Profile: Qualifying only part of ambitious year for United States


A 3-2 friendly victory over Sweden was an encouraging start to an ambitious year for the United States.
Yet in a year with the Gold Cup, Confederations Cup and especially World Cup qualifying, the January 24 win served only as an opportunity for players to impress coach Bob Bradley; midfielder Sacha Kjlestan certainly didn’t hurt his cause with three goals.
A much more important test will come February 11 — the quadrennial World Cup home confrontation vs. Mexico in Columbus, Ohio.
That match could very well set the tone for both countries this year. A U.S. win would extend its home supremacy. A Mexican victory would give them some much-needed confidence playing north of the Rio Grande. A draw probably would settle nothing, except restore some Mexican pride. The Americans haven’t lost to the Mexicans on U.S. soil since a 2-1 defeat in San Diego on March 13, 1999. Since then, the U.S. has won eight and drawn two at home against its archrival.
Mexico barely reached the final round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, clinching its place in the last match and on goal difference. Recently, the team has been hampered by injuries. But despite those problems and the U.S. dominance over Mexico at home, Bradley isn’t taking anything for granted.
"Mexico has a deep pool of talent, but the players [who could miss the qualifier] are good players," Bradley said. "Nonetheless, we play a game that, as the first game of qualifying, you expect Mexico to come in organized and ready to give everything they have to make it a hard game. The respect that we have for Mexico is always going to be the starting point when we prepare to play them.”
The United States’ challenge in 2009 is immense. Its schedule includes 10 World Cup qualifying matches, three-to-five games in the Confederations Cup in South Africa in June, and another three-to-five at the CONCACAF Gold Cup in the United States in July.
The heaviest period will be from June 3 through July 27, when the Americans will play at least eight highly competitive matches, and as many as a dozen in three competitions over 55 days in three countries over two continents.
In World Cup qualifying, the U.S. will visit Costa Rica on June 3 and then will host Honduras in a qualifier at a site to be determined on June 6.
After that will be the FIFA Confederations Cup in South Africa, a rehearsal for next year’s World Cup. The U.S. will play a minimum of three group games — against world champion Italy, European champion Spain and African champion Egypt. If it reaches the semifinals, the Americans will place twice more.
And finally, there’s the CONCACAF Gold Cup at home. The two-time defending champ has never failed to advance to the quarterfinals, which means a minimum of four games. Only once has it failed to get past the quarterfinals, which likely means five games and possibly a sixth if it reaches the championship match.
The Americans captured the 2007 edition of the Gold Cup, which opened the door for them to play in this year’s Confederations Cup.
Bradley is expected to follow a similar strategy he deployed in 2007 when he used entirely different teams in the Gold Cup and Copa America. He can’t afford to take players away from Major League Soccer teams – which will be in the middle of their season — for more than three weeks.
As important are the Confederation and Gold Cups, the U.S.’s ultimate goal is qualifying for an unprecedented sixth consecutive World Cup. That entails two-leg encounters against familiar opponents:- Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Trinidad & Tobago and, of course, Mexico. The top three CONCACAF finishers will qualify for South Africa with the fourth-place team taking on the fifth-place side from South America for a berth.
Anything less than booking a spot in South Africa would be considered a colossal failure.A 3-2 friendly victory over Sweden was an encouraging start to an ambitious year for the United States.
Yet in a year with the Gold Cup, Confederations Cup and especially World Cup qualifying, the January 24 win served only as an opportunity for players to impress coach Bob Bradley; midfielder Sacha Kjlestan certainly didn’t hurt his cause with three goals.
A much more important test will come February 11 — the quadrennial World Cup home confrontation vs. Mexico in Columbus, Ohio.
That match could very well set the tone for both countries this year. A U.S. win would extend its home supremacy. A Mexican victory would give them some much-needed confidence playing north of the Rio Grande. A draw probably would settle nothing, except restore some Mexican pride. The Americans haven’t lost to the Mexicans on U.S. soil since a 2-1 defeat in San Diego on March 13, 1999. Since then, the U.S. has won eight and drawn two at home against its archrival.
Mexico barely reached the final round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, clinching its place in the last match and on goal difference. Recently, the team has been hampered by injuries. But despite those problems and the U.S. dominance over Mexico at home, Bradley isn’t taking anything for granted.
"Mexico has a deep pool of talent, but the players [who could miss the qualifier] are good players," Bradley said. "Nonetheless, we play a game that, as the first game of qualifying, you expect Mexico to come in organized and ready to give everything they have to make it a hard game. The respect that we have for Mexico is always going to be the starting point when we prepare to play them.”
The United States’ challenge in 2009 is immense. Its schedule includes 10 World Cup qualifying matches, three-to-five games in the Confederations Cup in South Africa in June, and another three-to-five at the CONCACAF Gold Cup in the United States in July.
The heaviest period will be from June 3 through July 27, when the Americans will play at least eight highly competitive matches, and as many as a dozen in three competitions over 55 days in three countries over two continents.
In World Cup qualifying, the U.S. will visit Costa Rica on June 3 and then will host Honduras in a qualifier at a site to be determined on June 6.
After that will be the FIFA Confederations Cup in South Africa, a rehearsal for next year’s World Cup. The U.S. will play a minimum of three group games — against world champion Italy, European champion Spain and African champion Egypt. If it reaches the semifinals, the Americans will place twice more.
And finally, there’s the CONCACAF Gold Cup at home. The two-time defending champ has never failed to advance to the quarterfinals, which means a minimum of four games. Only once has it failed to get past the quarterfinals, which likely means five games and possibly a sixth if it reaches the championship match.
The Americans captured the 2007 edition of the Gold Cup, which opened the door for them to play in this year’s Confederations Cup.
Bradley is expected to follow a similar strategy he deployed in 2007 when he used entirely different teams in the Gold Cup and Copa America. He can’t afford to take players away from Major League Soccer teams – which will be in the middle of their season — for more than three weeks.
As important are the Confederation and Gold Cups, the U.S.’s ultimate goal is qualifying for an unprecedented sixth consecutive World Cup. That entails two-leg encounters against familiar opponents:- Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Trinidad & Tobago and, of course, Mexico. The top three CONCACAF finishers will qualify for South Africa with the fourth-place team taking on the fifth-place side from South America for a berth.
Anything less than booking a spot in South Africa would be considered a colossal failure.A 3-2 friendly victory over Sweden was an encouraging start to an ambitious year for the United States.
Yet in a year with the Gold Cup, Confederations Cup and especially World Cup qualifying, the January 24 win served only as an opportunity for players to impress coach Bob Bradley; midfielder Sacha Kjlestan certainly didn’t hurt his cause with three goals.
A much more important test will come February 11 — the quadrennial World Cup home confrontation vs. Mexico in Columbus, Ohio.
That match could very well set the tone for both countries this year. A U.S. win would extend its home supremacy. A Mexican victory would give them some much-needed confidence playing north of the Rio Grande. A draw probably would settle nothing, except restore some Mexican pride. The Americans haven’t lost to the Mexicans on U.S. soil since a 2-1 defeat in San Diego on March 13, 1999. Since then, the U.S. has won eight and drawn two at home against its archrival.
Mexico barely reached the final round of CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, clinching its place in the last match and on goal difference. Recently, the team has been hampered by injuries. But despite those problems and the U.S. dominance over Mexico at home, Bradley isn’t taking anything for granted.
"Mexico has a deep pool of talent, but the players [who could miss the qualifier] are good players," Bradley said. "Nonetheless, we play a game that, as the first game of qualifying, you expect Mexico to come in organized and ready to give everything they have to make it a hard game. The respect that we have for Mexico is always going to be the starting point when we prepare to play them.”
The United States’ challenge in 2009 is immense. Its schedule includes 10 World Cup qualifying matches, three-to-five games in the Confederations Cup in South Africa in June, and another three-to-five at the CONCACAF Gold Cup in the United States in July.
The heaviest period will be from June 3 through July 27, when the Americans will play at least eight highly competitive matches, and as many as a dozen in three competitions over 55 days in three countries over two continents.
In World Cup qualifying, the U.S. will visit Costa Rica on June 3 and then will host Honduras in a qualifier at a site to be determined on June 6.
After that will be the FIFA Confederations Cup in South Africa, a rehearsal for next year’s World Cup. The U.S. will play a minimum of three group games — against world champion Italy, European champion Spain and African champion Egypt. If it reaches the semifinals, the Americans will place twice more.
And finally, there’s the CONCACAF Gold Cup at home. The two-time defending champ has never failed to advance to the quarterfinals, which means a minimum of four games. Only once has it failed to get past the quarterfinals, which likely means five games and possibly a sixth if it reaches the championship match.
The Americans captured the 2007 edition of the Gold Cup, which opened the door for them to play in this year’s Confederations Cup.
Bradley is expected to follow a similar strategy he deployed in 2007 when he used entirely different teams in the Gold Cup and Copa America. He can’t afford to take players away from Major League Soccer teams – which will be in the middle of their season — for more than three weeks.
As important are the Confederation and Gold Cups, the U.S.’s ultimate goal is qualifying for an unprecedented sixth consecutive World Cup. That entails two-leg encounters against familiar opponents:- Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Trinidad & Tobago and, of course, Mexico. The top three CONCACAF finishers will qualify for South Africa with the fourth-place team taking on the fifth-place side from South America for a berth.
Anything less than booking a spot in South Africa would be considered a colossal failure.

Panama beats Guatemala to complete UNCAF cup semifinals, advances to Gold Cup



TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Panama claimed a third straight trip to both the Central American Nations Cup semifinals and the CONCACAF Gold Cup, beating Guatemala 1-0 on Tuesday.
Alberto Zapata scored in the 21st minute and Panama overcame the expulsion of Victor Herrera 18 minutes later, prevailing to earn a knockout match against host Honduras on Friday. Costa Rica will play El Salvador in the first semifinal on Friday.
Guatemala still has a chance to qualify for a seventh straight appearance in the Gold Cup. It will face Nicaragua on Thursday with the winner claiming the last place in the 12-team field. Los Chapines have qualified for every Gold Cup except in 1993.
Panama, which has never won the Copa de Naciones Digicel de UNCAF but lost on penalties to Costa Rica in the 2007 final, qualified for its third straight Gold Cup after missing the previous five. Los Canaleros were beaten on penalties by the United States in the final of the 2005 Gold Cup.
Zapata, who led San Francisco FC with three goals during the CONCACAF Champions League, converted the only goal Panama needed after taking a free kick from Wilson Barahona and directing it past Guatemalan keeper Ricardo Jerez.
Panama joined fellow semifinalists Costa Rica, Honduras and El Salvador in the Gold Cup. Canada, Mexico, the United States as well as Jamaica, Grenada, Guadeloupe and Cuba already had claimed their places in the 10th Gold Cup field.

Bremen looking to build on Cup Win

The dress rehearsal went perfectly. Werder were impressive in getting by Borussia Dortmund 2-1 on Wednesday night to advance to the quarter-finals of the German Cup. Now the Green-Whites want to assert themselves in their everyday Bundesliga life and work their way up the standings. Werder’s first Bundesliga test in the 2009 calendar year will be DSC Arminia Bielefeld.
“It was just one game,” said Werder head coach Thomas Schaaf, not wanting to over-value his team’s win over Dortmund. He does know, however, that it was “a good game”. He said his team “showed that the work in the preparations paid off. The training camp had an impact and the positive trend in the test matches was confirmed.” Schaaf added: “This kind of success gives the team strength and self-confidence. And it gives the players a confirmation for the effort they are giving.”
Werder of course will not rest on their laurels after the Dortmund victory. Just the opposite. “The game showed what we have to do. We want to call up this effort every time now. We really need to continually have the self-assurance and concentration, which exemplified our game against Dortmund,” demanded Schaaf. Werder’s first Bundesliga hurdle of the new year, Arminia Bielefeld, meanwhile, is hugely confronted with their Bundesliga existence. The Blues are currently 14th in the standings with just a three-point difference from a relegation spot and want to stay up at all costs.
Three points at Werder would be a great step for coach Michael Frontzeck’s team. But the guests will most likely not come out with an offensive firework. Schaaf and company will more likely have to respect Arminia’s effective counter-attack. “Bielefeld were very active in the winter break. And they are very dangerous with the counter. They switch to offense really quickly and get their shot off just as quickly. We have to watch out,” warned the Bremen coach. But Schaaf said he has the antidote ready: “We know that we can cause them problems with our offensive game. We cannot let Bielefeld get out of the backfield.”