soccer

Women’s soccer boom, version 2.0

For the past couple of weeks, I’ve seen people ask aloud whether the Women’s World Cup will boost WPS. My rote response on Twitter: WPS has its own issues that no goal in Moenchengladbach can solve.

Perhaps I should explain in more than 140 characters.

1. Big events usually don’t build leagues. The buzz always dies down quickly. The overly ambitious WUSA couldn’t build a sustainable league in the wake of the 1999 Women’s World Cup, and MLS needed to survive many lean years through patient business planning. (Yes, a book on that subject exists.)

2. WPS has had the deck stacked against it. The league launched during a recession, which is obviously bad for sponsorship and attendance. The downsizing mainstream media wouldn’t touch it. AP ignored it. A small band of beat writers (Craig Stouffer, Jeff Di Veronica, William Bretherton and others I apologize for missing) got out and paid attention.

The good news was that a hardy band of indie media — Jenna Pel, Jeff Kassouf and Jennifer Doyle, along with ESPN’s Jacqueline Purdy and the enterprising staff of Our Game magazine — jumped into the vacuum and frankly everyone’s concepts of women’s soccer. (Suffice to say I’ll be reading a lot more of Jenna’s Frauen-Bundesliga notes this year after touring Germany and seeing the league’s players in action on several national teams.) They’ll be around whether WPS sticks around or not.

3. We don’t know yet whether magicJack owner Dan Borislow is saving or killing the league. Borislow bought the Washington Freedom, moved it to South Florida an renamed it after his company. For that, he can’t be faulted — plenty of people in the D.C. area have the money and the supposed interest in women’s soccer to have stepped up to the plate and kept the Freedom in place, and they did not do it.

Borislow and the Sahlen family, which moved its W-League team up into WPS as the Western New York Flash, kept the league at a viable six teams. They also showed the will to splash plenty of cash on players. The Sahlens signed Marta and a sizable chunk of the Canadian national team. Borislow literally has the spine of the U.S. team — Hope Solo, Christie Rampone, Shannon Boxx and Abby Wambach.

The Flash settled neatly into WPS. Borislow, on the other hand, has been feuding with the league all season over everything from maintaining a Web site to putting up signage for sponsors. (He says he’s willing to do both but that the league makes it too expensive or too difficult.) He has been defiant through multiple fines and suspensions.

And magicJack has not been a typical pro team in many other senses. Coach Mike Lyons was reassigned after a couple of games, and the head coaching role has been assumed by a revolving cast of assistant coaches, players and Borislow himself. (Borislow already is the team’s PR contact, and it’s unclear whether Briana Scurry, the GM at the start of the season, is still playing much of a role.) Players have been only intermittently available to the media, and when you talk with them, they all give pat answers about how their owner is a sweet guy who just has his own way of doing things.

The cynics would say they don’t want to rock the boat when they have perks such as nice condos near the beach. Borislow has been quite willing to send players packing when they fall out of favor for whatever reason, but so far, no one has left the magicJack organization and vented about anything.

WPS has expansion prospects. But the questions are these:

– Will anyone be put off by an owner who has demonstrated such contempt for the league office?

– Will anyone be willing to spend the money to compete with someone who spends like the New York Yankees of WPS? Even in the middle of the season, magicJack simply bought Megan Rapinoe — yes, the Megan Rapinoe whose crosses in this World Cup have become the stuff of legend — from Philadelphia, which has been a viable contender this season.

– Will some owners prefer the business models in the W-League and the WPSL? The main drawback in those leagues is the schedule, which is far too short because of draconian restrictions on the college players who must fill out the talent pool. But a couple of teams have tested professional models in those leagues, and perhaps there would be enough to break away and play a season of a reasonable length. Even back in the mid-2000s, players like England’s Kelly Smith and France’s Marinette Pichon hung around in the States to give the W-League a whirl.

MLS succeeded by imposing a top-down single-entity structure with a salary cap, containing costs and putting all owners in the same economic boat. That might not work for women’s soccer — it only worked in MLS because Philip Anschutz, Lamar Hunt and Robert Kraft stuck with it after everyone else bailed out.

No matter which leagues and teams survive the Darwinian battle of business models now underway, someone has to have the patience (and deep pockets) of Anschutz and the practicality of Hunt to make this work. They paved the way for sensible owners who have made soccer work in Seattle, Portland and even the long-derided Kansas City market. A few owners opening their wallets with starry eyes after another Wambach goal or Solo save in Germany won’t translate into a sustainable league.

All that said, as Pia Sundhage says in nearly every press conference, the glass is half-full. The USA has shown it can fall in love with women’s soccer more than once. The ratings for Sunday’s final may well beat the ratings for baseball’s All-Star Game.

And if that attracts a wave of patient, rational investors with reasonable expectations, pro women’s soccer will be here to stay.

soccer

Germany 6: Last legs

Yesterday, I had a pleasant but sweaty walk almost all the way up the 1.6-kilometer Hauptstrasse, a pedestrian strip in Heidelberg’s old city. I detoured through parts of the university and up, up, up into the castle. Photos are below, and I’m waiting on the video to pop up at espnW.

Then I took the train to Sinsheim for the game and decided to go all the way to the alleged “Museum/Arena” stop. It’s nowhere near the “Arena.” That walk was equally sweaty and less pleasant, up a strip of car yards and fast-food places. I skipped Burger King and plopped down in the McCafe about halfway through.

But my grumpiness faded quickly at the stadium. The media center crew is one of the nicest at the Cup, and I was able to spread out a bit because Mexico and New Zealand didn’t attract a huge press contingent. Then I saw one of the more remarkable games of the tournament. A volunteer who wanted to practice his English and talk about the USA gave me a ride back to the train station during a gap between media shuttles, and I caught an earlier train back to Heidelberg.

So now I’m almost finished. In 24 hours, I’ll be on a plane. It’s bittersweet, definitely. I can’t wait to see my family. I’m less thrilled about going back and picking up projects that don’t involve pleasant rides on comfortable trains in which the conductors make sure you don’t go more that 90 minutes without chocolate. I haven’t driven a car in two weeks, and I don’t miss it in the least.

Actual television might be nice, though. I finally got an explanation of German TV from my friend Tracy, who met up with me in Heidelberg — Germans apparently just don’t care enough about TV to produce much of their own stuff beyond news, sports, talk shows and the occasional cooking show. So that’s why all the comedies and dramas are dubbed-over American fare. It’s not that they’re so enamored of Charlie Sheen and company — they just can’t be bothered to produce anything to fill that space. I admire that. At the same time, I’d like to see some English-language sports programming. And I’m tired of missing UFC cards.

I’m also missing all the dogs I know (mostly mine, of course). I see dogs all over here, occasionally in unexpected places like train stations, hotels and restaurants. Yesterday, I saw two dogs with a family starting the trek up the hill to the castle — one bounding around with energy, one focused straight ahead. I said, “one old, one young?” “Mother and daughter” was the response.

So at this point, I’m very happy with everything. Happy to be here, happy to be going home. I’m only angry at one thing.

The Atlantic Ocean.

If not for the Atlantic Ocean, we could hop on a train in Washington and pop up in Frankfurt. Maybe Americans would learn a thing or two about all the well-run aspects of European culture. Maybe Europeans would learn not to make people pay to use the toilet in the train station.

To put a more positive spin on things — I wish the USA and Germany were closer. It’s remarkable that we can go back and forth so easily just a couple of generations after two devastating wars. But as the USA becomes more diverse, I hope we’ll keep looking to Germany and exchanging ideas, tourism money and cultures.

Except the food.

Final photos, barring something unforeseen in Wolfsburg, follow here:


From Mostly Heidelberg, posted by Beau Dure on 7/06/2011 (23 items)

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soccer

Germany 5: Welcome to Heidelberg, Beau!

There’s a classic Cheers episode in which Sam keeps getting partway to a boys-weekend-out retreat at a ski resort but keeps rethinking something Diane said and returning to the bar. By the third time, he says he’s been back and forth on the road so much, they’ve changed the signs to “Welcome to Vermont, Sam.”

Funny itinerary on this trip, especially after the recent change that wipes out my trip to Dresden. I spent three nights in Berlin, then did a whirlwind of six cities in seven days. When I arrived in Wolfsburg on Sunday, I was “done” in the sense that I’ve now seen every city, every stadium and (pending a possible change) every hotel.

I’ll spend the remaining three days going back and forth between two vastly different towns. One thing they have in common — I’m taking every opportunity to leave my luggage somewhere. I spent last night in Wolfsburg; my suitcase spent the night in Heidelberg. If I can’t change hotels for Wednesday night, my suitcase will spent the night at the Wolfsburg train station while I spend the night at the Holiday Inn that’s 15 minutes away on foot.

Heidelberg is a tourist destination nestled by the Neckar River and framed by mountains. It’s gorgeous. Like Augsburg, it has a quaint walking district, though on my Saturday visit before the USA-Colombia game, it had more tourists (many American) than students and other locals.

The Marriott hotel is terrific, and it has a scenic view. Its lone drawback is that it’s rather far from the nice walking district and most restaurants. The hotel staff recommended “Das Boathaus” on the river, but it was closed for lunch. I settled into a Thai place that looked sketchy from the outside — one of the windows is actually broken — but offered up one of the best meals I’ve had here.

Other ESPN personnel also were staying in the Marriott, so I met up with my old buddy Brandi Chastain and fellow TV analyst Rebecca Lowe, a witty English woman, to get a ride over to the ESPN production truck thatthey’ve shown off many times on espnW. Seeing it in person gives you an even better sense of how well they use such a small space. I walked up into the truck and was immediately five feet from the broadcast desk where Bob Ley, Briana Scurry and Tony DiCicco were prepping for a live broadcast.

I shot a fun video in and around Heidelberg, but it didn’t make it to espnW for a couple of technical reasons. A bunch of U.S. fans realized Brandi was in the truck, and they gathered for pictures. She’s tremendous in these situations — immediately putting everyone at ease. We sat outside the truck with some more U.S. fans to watch part of the Sweden-North Korea game, then headed over for more American-style refreshment at Starbucks.

Along the way, I shot video of a gang of street performers that I could swear will be Germany’s answer to Mumford and Sons before we know it. They were pretty good.

Here’s the funny thing about Heidelberg — it’s not actually hosting the World Cup games. Those are in Sinsheim, a 40-minute train ride away. This curious arrangement is a result of a small German men’s soccer team, its sudden windfall of money and its success. Hoffenheim, an even smaller town than Sinsheim and Heidelberg, had a club sitting in the lower divisions that suddenly drew a big benefactor. Now it’s a Bundesliga club that even had a good storybook run in the upper reaches of the table for most of a season, and it has a gleaming new stadium in Sinsheim.

I was surrounded by U.S. fans on the train and interviewed a couple of them for my video. One couple had come from Saipan on a flight itinerary that sounded like a two-week diplomatic mission. Another guy was from Houston (shoutout to Jenna here). I even talked with one player on the train — Sarah Huffman, who plays alongside several U.S. players with the WPS team magicJack and had played several years for my hometown Washington Freedom. (No, I didn’t grill her for information about the team.)

The most unusual aspect of the Sinsheim stadium is that the media, rather than being up in the rafters, are almost at field level. So when Heather O’Reilly scored and the U.S. team lined up to salute, they saluted us. (They had no way of knowing that, of course.)
I spotted the ESPN crew stepping out of the stadium and got a ride back to Heidelberg with them, which was a bit lucky on my part. I got back and finished my story just in time to watch the heavyweight title fight between Wladimir Klitschko and David Haye. It was the perfect cure for insomnia.

The next morning, I finally met Bob Ley for the first time after having spoken with him online and on the phone a couple of times. Very nice guy, as you’d expect.

I also traveled with fellow journalists — ESPN.com’s Jeff Carlisle and my colleague from traveling to Whistler with USA TODAY, David Leon Moore, took the trains with me from Heidelberg to Wolfsburg. They’re following the U.S. team, which was immediately flying (yes, flying, for some reason) up to Wolfsburg for their Wednesday game with Sweden. I’m covering that, too, but I have this back-and-forth to Heidelberg in between. (This was originally a back-and-forth to Dresden.)

Wolfsburg was wet, windy and quite cold. I began to regret leaving my sweatshirt back in my luggage in Heidelberg. I skipped the hotel for the moment and took the shuttle bus to the stadium, which took little time.

After the game, I had two pieces due — one for Soccernet/ESPN.com, one for espnW. The game report for Soccernet/ESPN is my now-infamous “Marta’s Maradona moment” story. The espnW piece hailed Marta’s brilliance. In hindsight, that approach may be a little schizophrenic, but if you read the details, I don’t think I’m totally wrong. One comment on the Marta/Maradona story has valid criticism. Another asks if I was even born in 1986 when Maradona played. Nice to know I still look so young.

Then the part I was dreading — a 25-minute walk to a hotel I had not yet seen. Taxis are not plentiful. Buses stop running early.

Here’s Wolfsburg in a nutshell: Suppose Disney ran a car company and built a small theme park and pedestrian strip to go with it. The car company is Volkswagen, and it has built up several neat comprehensive areas. The stadium is part of a sports park that has smaller soccer fields, water skiing and even beach volleyball, which would have been amusing in this weather. Next to that is the Autostadt, a bunch of attractions celebrating cars. Walk across the river — on a bridge with moving sidewalks — and you’re in the Porschestrasse, a pedestrian strip in which the only things open at this hour were the ever-handy McCafe and two casinos.

I was in my raincoat, which kept me surprisingly warm, and I was just hoping I’d be able to find the hotel. Fortunately for hotel-spotting purposes, it’s a Holiday Inn. So when I saw a bunch of big green lights and a familiar logo, I raised my arms in triumph. Then I walked all the way around looking for the bloody entrance.

I saw the Norway and Sweden team buses parked out front, and I asked if the teams were staying there. Oh no, I was told, just the drivers. The next morning, the entire Swedish team walked past me as I checked out.

The hotel is charmless, as if they built all these big rooms and had no idea what to do with the space. But I found I could get online cheap using Skype credit, and I had a nice video chat with my loved ones.

I liked the Porschestrasse on my morning walk back to the train station, which is a little more than halfway between the hotel and the stadium. Plenty of neat places to shop, a big museum, even a small playground which I found by accident on my night walk when I wondered why the sidewalk was suddenly squishy.

They say cold, damp air doesn’t make you sick. Well, they’re wrong. The lingering summer cold I brought from the USA was nearly gone, but it roared back this morning.

But as I write on the now-familiar train ride between Wolfsburg and Mannheim (where I’ll change for Heidelberg), I’m feeling much better. The cars were crowded, but a couple of the compartments (where Jeff, David and I camped out until someone showed up with reservations yesterday) were wide-open. So I’m by myself in a compartment built for six. The waitress has been extraordinarily nice, and I’ve enjoyed a Warmes Schinken-Kase-Baguette for the second straight day. The conductor saw that I was American and wished me a happy Independence Day.

The familiarity makes things easier, but it’s a bit sad to think I’ve seen it all now. No more new towns to explore, though I may have a chance to see more of Heidelberg given that I’ll have 24 hours until my next game rather than my usual three or four. No more new scenery on the trains. No more new stadiums to dazzle me.

But that means I’m nearing the end of a wonderful trip and getting ready to go home to the people who are coming with me the next time I go to Germany.


From Heidelberg-Wolfsburg, posted by Beau Dure on 7/04/2011 (23 items)

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soccer

Germany 4: Stuck inside of Frankfurt with the Augsburg blues again

One of the reassuring aspects of going on a whirlwind tour is that any stereotypes you could form are quickly whittled away. Find yourself in an impossible situation with impossible people, and all you have to do is keep going to try the next situation.

I believe I left off in the middle of a train delay on the way from Bochum to Augsburg. As you can see from my two videos — one at an Irish pub and another in a public square that is stony yet warm — Augsburg was worth the wait.

Imagine that students at the University of Georgia or the University of North Carolina, instead of walking from the older part of campus to their favorite haunts on Broad Street or Franklin Street, all hopped on trams for five minutes and then walked around friendly pedestrian thoroughfares, writing Bach-style fugues in the windows of coffeehouses. (Yes, I asked the young music student what she was writing, and her English was barely good enough to explain.)

That’s Augsburg. Fun, friendly people all around. All in a city with remarkable historic buildings still standing or faithfully restored after the wars.

It’s also a city that has had a good run in soccer. The major local club, FC Augsburg, played its way up the ladder and will be in the Bundesliga for the first time this season. The stadium is a neat one with some idiosyncrasies — I had to bend nearly in half to duck under one of the rafters of the stadium roof just to get to my seat.

I also had my first serious encounter with media officials who simply didn’t see it as their role to be helpful.

The press conferences here are UN-style. You pick up a translation device, switch it to your language of choice and go from there. In Berlin, I was asked to sign my name to pick up my deice. In Bochum, they just handed them out.

In Augsburg, I was asked for my “press card.” Not my credential, not my ticket for the press conference. A card that’s apparently quite common among print journalists in Europe.

Well, I don’t have a “press card.” And as far as the woman handing out translation devices was concerned, I wasn’t getting one. As if I had somehow conned my way to getting a credential and a ticket to a press conference, all in hopes of absconding with a set of headphones.

A BBC World Service freelancer was in the same boat, and we more or less formed a blockade to get someone in some position of authority to come over and solve the problem. (German journalists neither complained about us nor offered to help. That’s fairly typical.) Someone in a suit came over, listened to us and said, proud of his English, “Yes, you give your press card.” I pointed out, yet again, that we freelancers had no such thing.

They agreed to let us use our credentials as collateral. Turns out, this was just a warmup.

I was sad to leave Augsburg. The InterCity hotel desk clerk I saw two straight days later recognized me as I left the “McCafe” where I had been working next door and said a nice hello to “Mr. Durrre.” I felt like I was making friends. Getting around on the trams was easy, even if one wasn’t going where it was advertised.

Another long-ish train ride awaited, so I hopped on the now-familiar ICE, which takes us at speeds up to 300km/h in stunning comfort, with people who come by every 90 minutes or so to make sure you don’t go too long without chocolate.

Candy is everywhere here. And the funny thing is that dental care doesn’t seem to be a priority. Shops in the train stations carry every sort of travel need imaginable — except toothpaste. One large shop in Frankfurt offered bras, which I suppose could be a traveler’s unforeseen need. Not so sure why it offered ice cream scoops.

I had used the handouts at Berlin’s Abion Spreebogen hotel, then visited an “apothecary” (pharmacy) to find really slim selection and a pharmacist who seemed befuddled not by English but by the very concept of cleaning teeth. I settled on Sensodyne, which is a Glaxo product of some sort. I’ve concluded that it’s actually Glaxo’s waste product, scraped off laboratory floors. It was absolutely disgusting, and I was relieved beyond belief to find honest-to-goodness Crest at another “apothecary” in the giant Frankfurt station.

I didn’t have much of a chance to investigate Frankfurt. All I can tell you is that it’s huge. It’s a big, big city. The InterCity next to the station is terrific. The station is roughly the size of Washington’s Union Station but far sleeker.

The train to the stadium drops you a good 10-minute walk from that stadium, but it’s pleasant. The road is lined with trees and occasional buildings offering grilled food and beer.

The first hint of trouble in Frankfurt was that the media center was a large tent about 200 yards from the stadium. A big fan zone was set up between the two. Before the fans arrived, this was fun — I played a fast, competitive game of foosball with a company rep of some sort and accepted a very rare loss (10-7 final) with good humor. The fan zone wasn’t as fun going the other direction, particularly when the crowd around a stage pretty well blocked the path to the stadium.

At most stops, I’ve been given a ticket either for the formal press conference or the informal “mixed zone,” where you try to stop players as they walk by. For Germany-Nigeria in Frankfurt, I was given a mixed zone ticket. Given my limited lingual skills, that’s not much help.

In Berlin, I had been encouraged to trade with someone to get into the press conference. I know from other journalists that this is pretty typical.

So I stood in the hallway in front of the press conference and mixed zone doors, asking people if they wanted to trade.

A bearded, bureaucratic type stepped up to tell me such trades were not allowed. I said they were allowed and even encouraged. In hindsight, I have no idea why I thought that would be the end of it.

The situation escalated over a couple of minutes. The guy would leave me alone a bit, and I actually got into a discussion about a possible trade. But then he finally said firmly that I needed to stop.

I was adamant, and I poked my head around the corner to say this was simply ridiculous, and I wanted to speak to someone else. I didn’t have the steward in mind, but he seemed happy for the opportunity to crack some skulls, at least metaphorically.

“Go!” he yelled. “Auf wiedersehen!” (I’ve heard “Auf wiederschen” instead of the less formal “Tchuss” maybe twice on this trip.)

“You have no authority to tell me to leave!” I protested.

He patted his orange steward vest and repeated himself. “Auf wiedersehen!”

I turned back around the corner. For a split second, I simply wasn’t going to give this guy the satisfaction, and I so nearly announced again that I was looking for a trade. But self-preservation kicked in — having a credential yanked from my neck would put a crimp on the rest of the trip, even if I managed to appeal and get it back — and I stormed back to the media center.

The desk people at the media center told me they had indeed been told we couldn’t trade. I said, “They’re telling you one thing and telling Berlin another!” They seemed crushed, and I abruptly switched gears to reassure them none of this was their fault.

And they were so nice to me. They made sure I could watch the press conference on a TV in the media center, not that I could understand the Germans.

So I left in a much better mood and walked toward the station with my English journalism friend Carrie, who got a kick out of hearing the whole story.

I left without finishing my story because I guessed, correctly, that we could end up stranded at the media center. The game ended at 10:45, the press conferences ended at 11:15 or so, and train service started to wind down after midnight. So I got on the crowded platform and found that it wasn’t so crowded at all if you got away from the doors. Somehow, the crowd never realized what a good idea it would be to spread out. So I had plenty of elbow room on the short ride back to the Hauptbahnhof (main station).

Again, I took up residence in a McCafe, which was nearly full. I worked until 1 a.m., when my connection started to conk out. No more trains were scheduled to depart, and they had locked a few doors — including the door from the McCafe back into the station. So I walked outside the other door and out of the station, then back in so I could walk out the north exit by the hotel. THAT was locked. Back to the main entrance, back around the station, back to the InterCity and a wonderful but brief sleep.

The Hauptbahnhof also had a Starbucks, so I parked myself there and caught up on my travel plans online before heading to Leverkusen, my first stop without a major train station. Koln seems to regard Leverkusen as little more than a suburb, which the romantic in me wants to attribute to soccer jealousy — Bayer Leverkusen is a perennial contender, while FC Koln can’t seem to stay in the Bundesliga.

Leverkusen itself has pretty neighborhoods. I know this because I got lost. I wound up walking with a Russian man from Vladivostok who was there to cheer for Japan, and we occasionally stopped people to ask for directions. One elderly woman did not know how to get to the BayArena. Or the football stadium, when we tried to use the generic name. This conversation took place while we could see part of the stadium roof.

Once we found it, I had a terrific time. The hotel is actually connected to the stadium. The media center crew couldn’t be nicer. They told me I could swap my press conference or mixed zone ticket all I wanted, and they laughed at my impression of the “Auf wiedersehen!” guy.

The only truly disappointing part was dinner. I ate in the hotel instead of McDonald’s — yes, those were the two viable options. I got the hotel’s burger, figuring they couldn’t mess that up. Oh, but they did. It combined the firm texture of a hockey puck with the taste of a hockey puck.

The next morning, the helpful hotel staff told me how I should *really* walk back to the small Leverkusen train station. It was a lovely walk through a park that had a river (really a creek) running in a straight line down the middle. The path takes you by Bayer Leverkusen’s extensive training facilities. And there are dogs.

I’ve changed my travel plans because one game I was supposed to cover will now feature two teams that have been eliminated. That rules out a trip to Dresden, which I regret — the unanimous view is that it’s unimaginably beautiful. Instead, I’ll spend my last five days here hopping between Wolfsburg and Heidelberg.

Big photo gallery follows:


From Augsburg-Frankfurt-Leverkusen, posted by Beau Dure on 7/02/2011 (25 items)

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