

Close to a Record in Futility; and of course we lost
By: Herschel | September 1st, 2009Down a goal, up a man for about 60 minutes, against a Real Salt Lake team that was missing a few starters and decided to play only one forward, the Peter Vermes strategy called to have, on paper, 5 defenders on the field. Wow, and I thought before the game that things couldn’t get any worse.
Hope springs eternal and it was with hope that I went to the game on Saturday: hoping for a win, hoping for a goal, hoping at least not to lose…. Was it too much to ask? It appears so, because Peter Vermes and the group of players he started seemed to lack interest, effort and quality when confronted with a RSL team that still had something to play for but at the same time knew the quality of their opponent and decided to rest some starters. Not that KC was eliminated at that point but the odds were against us. Be that as it may I was hoping for a good showing that never happened.
KC started with some game control but quickly Kyle Beckerman took over and started pulling the strings of the game. In the 18th minute Pablo Campos slid through the defense, caught Jimmy Conrad out of position (and lost) and scored the only goal of the game. KC as always tried to react but to little avail; even when RLS went down to 10 men with the Ned Grabavoy ejection. Of course being a man up just spelled disaster for KC, that time and time again this year has failed to capitalize when their opponent goes a man down.
Not much else happened for the rest of the game. KC missed a few clear scoring opportunities, RSL hunkered down in the back and by the end of the game the Wizards were only 3 minutes away from setting a new KC record in scoring futility; according to the Hillcrestroad Blog they currently have not scored in 424 minutes of MLS play. We also caught a glimpse of the Peter Vermes attack tactics that can be summarized as playing 5 defenders on the field when losing 0-1 and a man down. I can only imagine that if RSL had all 11 players we would have seen a couple of more defenders in the mix so that they could hold that 0-1 score. Pathetic to say the least, and just one more reason for On Goal to help him pack his bags at the end of the season.
Player Ratings:
Everyone gets a 3 except Watson who gets a 5.
Commentary:
I know people say we should not play our Reserves or young players because they “suck” but here is my argument. Have we really seen them play regularly? It’s time to stop the Conrad, Arnaud, Hirsig, Wolff, Jewsbury, Lopez, Gomez love affair; these players (and the coaches) have the team where it is now. We need to know what we have in Reserve and see what we want to keep in the Reserves. The key to victory of teams like Houston is that they have those players that can step in when Ching, or Clark or DeRosario(last year) leave the team. Their pool of young talent goes hand in hand with their good coach. We lack that here in KC.
How do we know that our Reserves are good or bad when you see them for a few games or a few minutes here and there after not playing the whole year? We expect them to come in and take Arnaud, Conrad or Jewsbury’s spot without even flinching? That is utterly stupid. If a player needs to see the bench or worse after a few bad games, a lot of those “senior” players mentioned before should have been there long ago. Arnaud has been absent since week 3 or 4, Hirsig has given up 6 or 7 plays that have led to opponent goals, Jewsbury disappears for long stretches of the game, Lopez can’t cross a ball worth his life, Gomez has a track record of missing open shots, Wolff…, well enough said. If a few bad games mean the end of your MLS career, I’m sorry to say that these guys should call it quits. The only reason they are where they are is because someone gave them the chance to move through the ranks, take the hard knocks and learn from them. What better opportunity that now, with 9 games left to play at least half a team of youngsters and see if they need to be here next year taking up a roster spot; if they can live up to some of the hype and hope.
It might sound stupid but I believe we have some talent here and there have been players that when given regular starts have shown quality, but are quickly moved off to the side when they have a bad game. If this is the rule to be followed I don’t want to see Conrad on the pitch next Saturday since the last 2 goals we have given up have been on him.
I can only hope for a change. I for one can go watch a game where the players on my team are fighting for a roster spot next year, and a chance to something more, instead of watching a bunch of stiff showing up at the game thinking that whatever happens they’ll be penciled in every time. By the way, let’s not look back because the Red Bulls are closing in; at least if we play the “youngesters” we have an excuse if they catch up to us.
Here are the highlights of the game:
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Comments | Add your comment
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Well said. We currently suck playing these more experienced players. The season is over, so might as well let the younger players get a feeling of a true game so when they are asked to step up they might be able to contribute. It’s not like our starters are producing.
BTW, 5 defenders indeed. Wow.
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Gomez and Jewsbury… c’mon!! missing those 2 OPEN shots?? +1 Josh… play the young players. Mix and match, try new options, really do something people can find interesting, instead of the useless efforts of every weekend.
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60 minutes a man up? Wasn’t the red card like a few minutes before half time? At most it was 50 minutes.
I’m fine with having some younger players play but 1) you’re crazy if you even have the slitest idea that it will actually happen and 2) think that they’ll do much better. The last time we had a back line without Conrad we let in 6, and the thought of going back to that line is scarier than what I’m seeing on the field currently. And as or blaming the last two goals on him, the blame for the San Jose goal falls on Gomez, Hirsig, whoever that didn’t close down Corrales and gave him all day to cross the ball into the box. Wodolowski made a good play.
In the end it’s not the defense I want changed, they’ve been doing better overall, it’s our offenses lack of scoring that’s the major problem and the one that needs to be addressed more rapidly.
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@Dan: what will the team gain by continue playing our inefficient veterans? What do you have to lose by playing rookies and younger players who haven’t had any chance? The current lineup isn’t working, and we have NO idea of what a refreshed (not 100% changed) lineup could do until they are given a fighting chance, a couple of games. So what if they suck, lose the rest of the games and extend the current scoring drought? We can’t sink lower than our current situation. Plus, a new coach, during the offseason, would be look at videos and decide who he could/should keep and who to let go, with a valuable argument -not just by looking at the training sessions and games agains jv teams-. It’s time to start looking at next season, planning and trying out players and schemes. And if PV doesn’t do it, then it just underlines the urgent need of getting a new coach.
And Conrad did look slow, at least his instinct is leaving him, letting a player slip behind him that easily for the score.Posted from
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It’s so bad at this point that Ryan Pore could score against us.
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@WSFM: I agree with that analysis.
How good are some of these young players with only some minutes here and there? I’d never heard of most of the Houston players but like Herschel says, they step up when needed either in their Concacaf games or when they are thrown in due to NT call ups. It could be good scouting, but it also has to do with the fact that they are rotated in constantly. We can’t do that because most of our players never get a chance. Players that are behind so of these “stars” (although on these teams I have my doubts) never see the field and when the “star” goes down he’s thrown in there.
I guess I just want to salvage something from this season, be that seeing someone come up and show something or get rid of those who don’t.
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Preki Preki Preki for Head coach of the Wizards. Interimi match up of Peter Vermes of KC vs. Richard Williams of NY RedBulls tranlates to their playing careers; One was a simpl minded bull, the other a sharp thinking midfielder, you guessed. Simply, the same mentality now reflected as interim coaches, the result is the worst interim coaching debut ever in MLS for Vermes. Vermes was part of the problem and picked all the players, Onalfo made lemonade out of lemons and was forced to sell off his best goal scorer Eddie Johnson and replaced with old timer star who is only good for 30 minutes, hence no goals for >500 minutes. Richie Williams quietly, thoughtfully worked his players back into confidence and is making his own lemonade.. 2-0 wins so far to Vermes 0-3 distruction of KC club from the front office and now the bench which we need our KC owners to wake up and clean him out too. Preki, Preki, Preki! Caldron Faithful cheer it from the stands. Preki, Preki, Preki.
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You’re kidding right? Williams, aka ABMOD, was a sharp thinking midfielder? You can’t be serious. ABMOD (Ankle biting midget of death) was a horrible player. To say that ABMOD was a better player than Williams is down right laughable.
And you know jack about what happened with Johnson. Johnson bought out his own contract to make the move to Fulham. He wasn’t coming back, that’s not on Vermes.
You also apparently don’t know Wizards history, let alone MLS history. Ken Fogarty has the worse record for an interim coach, going 4 without a win back in 99.
Also your assumption that picked out all the players and it’s all on Vermes is complete and utter bull shit. Both Onalfo and Vermes picked the players.
Finally, don’t tell the Cauldron how to cheer for Preki, because that sure as hell ain’t Preki’s chant from when he played here.
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