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A Leap of Craziness

There is an annual tradition at The Ohio State University for students to jump into the famed Mirror Lake during Michigan “That Team Up North Week.” This leap is usually quite cold because it takes place in mid-late November. However, Mother Nature decided to test the sheer will and bravery of the Buckeye faithful this Winter season with extra frigid winds and plenty of fresh snow to play with in ways that can only be concocted in college.

All of us can now say in unison, “I miss college!”

How many fans would make the bone-chilling leap, despite new campus restrictions requiring participants to wear a wristband…?

Was there ever a doubt? This is The Mirror Lake Leap during “That Team Up North Week.” Just as the Buckeyes will take the field on a blisteringly cold Saturday afternoon in Ann Arbor, the fans have once again clearly shown their dedication and solidarity with the men in scarlet and gray.

Borderline freezing weather? What borderline freezing weather?

The question of the week: What heats up a frozen Buckeye?

Kicking That Team Up North’s ___ (clearing my throat) football team.

Go Bucks!

Do You See What I See?

It’s astonishing.

The image is the exact same, and yet my eyes see it transform into something new every time I look at it for a few seconds. Is my mind playing tricks on me or am I seeing precisely what I should be seeing? What’s going on?

One day, it’s a wise old man. The next week it’s definitely a desert creature. “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” just popped into my head. Not one of its countless comedic moments, but the most emotional scene of the entire series between Will Smith and his Dad.

The background is now leaping into the foreground and vice versa. There it hangs in its strong black frame, with its white background and bold colored shapes of blue, green, red, yellow and black trying to define itself, but with a gentle fluidity that allows it to change upon fresh glance.

Art is frustratingly ambiguous on Monday and magically inspiring on Saturday morning. The artist clearly painted with great intent with his brush strokes. Still, a new viewer will all but certainly have a varying view of the artist’s proposed meaning when compared to someone who has looked at it before for some time. The painting has a unique story to each observer.

Anyways, I was driving by the Columbus Commons during lunch on Monday, alongside the construction of the new apartments. The apartments look like they should be a fantastic addition to a growing metropolitan area. Conversely, the opposite side of the street looks depressed, lonely and void of any hope or acknowledgement. In the past when I’ve driven past this same stretch, the sight of it has just been flat out sad with the same worn, aged, dirty store fronts. I wonder what it used to look and be like?

That is until, while driving past this area, a song that was playing in my CD player (yes, some people still buy CD’s) sparked a flurry of imaginative ideas for what this strip could look like. All of a sudden, flashes of bustling small local shops mixed with a big-name brand here and there electrified my mind with images of smiling faces, adults and children alike, proudly parading the street with a new sense of optimism and happiness. This picture lasted only a few seconds, but it was undeniably vivid.

I’m no architect (nope, I’m no Ted Mosby or George Costanza), but perhaps that’s not who those old buildings need right now. Maybe what that side of the street needs is someone to stop, pause and take a long, uninterrupted look on a Saturday morning.

OH-It’s Good to be Home

Crew Stadium will once again play the patriotic host to a pivotal World Cup qualifying match. This evening, under a Midwestern blanket of stars, the United States of America will battle “That Team Down South.”

The stands will be painted with jerseys and shirts that will proudly showcase the brightest and boldest color combinations of red, white and blue. The chanting and support will be relentless because, honestly, it’s the USMNT’s homecoming.

The fans, players and coaches all know what’s waiting for them. Kickoff is set for 8:00 p.m. on ESPN, but the excitement has been building since the last match four years ago.

The stage is set for another defining 90 minutes of American soccer.

For the United States, tonight’s game can (should) provide this squad with a unique window into the future. Can the Americans regroup after suffering an embarrassing loss in Costa Rica 3-1 in a matter of just a few days with a depleted starting lineup (injury and yellow card accumulations)? Like today, and potentially during the summer of 2014 in Brazil, can the red-white and blue prove to have a short memory. When maximum points and victories are necessary and when the team is forced to travel between games, will Jürgen Klinsmann’s team rise to the occasion?

When an individual is under pressure, there are only two reactions: get crushed or push back.

The United States vs. Mexico is an incredible soccer rivalry. Luckily for the American players and fans, they will feel right at home in Columbus, Ohio. In the three World Cup Qualifying games played between these two nations at Crew Stadium (2001, 2005 and 2009), the United States has won all three games with a final tally of 2-nil.

Or, in better words: Dos a Cero.

There have been great goals, hard tackles, beautiful passes, yellow cards and McBride’s “eye wide shut.”

With three games left in World Cup qualifying and a point differential of 1 between the United States and first-place Costa Rica, 5 between the U.S. and Mexico and 6 between Costa Rica and Mexico, tonight’s match is critical for both teams.

The stakes are undeniably high. The rivalry is real. This is the game and Crew Stadium is the venue!

To build the suspense even more, there will be several intriguing story lines playing out tonight in the heat inside (but really outside) the house Lamar built.

  • Without the maestro in the middle, can the U.S. be guided without the quiet, steady leadership of Michael Bradley?
  • How will Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey play together in such a vitally important game? Will they be the catalysts or finishers on goals?
  • Will Mexico, having fired its head coach last Saturday morning, be dejected or inspired by pride?
  • How many yellow and red cards will the ref show or not show?
  • Will Chicharito (Javier Hernández Balcázar) play like a Manchester United star?
  • Besides Tim Howard, which American player will take the strategic and emotional leadership role tonight? FYI-This responsibility is not limited to the man wearing the captain’s armband…
  • Does the American side have a reliable and dependent back line?
  • Will the United States of America pull off another paramount victory in front of its best crowd?

Now, the most critical question: will it be miraculously cold tonight like back in 2001? The forecast says mid-80s, so probably not. But remember: this is Columbus, where the hopes and dreams of American soccer fans, players and coaches come true…

Plus, it all depends on how you define “cold.”

Another 2-nil win for the U.S. could seriously start to freeze the hopes of a berth to the 2014 World Cup in sunny Brazil for “That Team Down South.”

I’m getting chills just thinking about it!

Will They Use GBS as Their Guide?

Yesterday morning, the Columbus Crew announced that the 5-year Robert Warzycha era as the head coach of the Columbus Crew had ended.

Incredibly, after five years, nearly every single Crew fan reverted back to the first leg of the 2009 playoffs in Salt Lake City when Warzycha benched the Crew’s Argentinian star player, Guillermo Barros Schelotto. Columbus lost the game 1-nil. Recall that Columbus had won the Supporter’s Shield (for the second year in a row) and therefore was the number one seed in the playoffs. The expectations were high with an unthinkable repeat as MLS Cup champions on the horizon for Crew Nation.

And then the head coach benched the Crew’s star player. It’s been a long five seasons of seeing the erosion of the shine and jubilant celebrations from the Crew players and coaches hoisting the MLS Cup back in 2008 at the Home Depot Center in sunny Los Angeles, California. Actually, now it’s the StubHub Center, which only adds distance to the memories of the Crew’s magical season.

Through five seasons, Warzycha accumulated 70 wins. That seems like a lot, until you divide that number by 5 and discover it equates to about 14 wins a year. That translates to the Crew winning, on average, less than half of the games it played/season. And, again, recall that the Crew won MLS Cup in 2008 and earned the Supporter’s Shield for the second straight season in 2009.

Yes, Warzycha was the head coach in 2009. However, he was clearly riding the wave of momentum (Surf Ohio!) of 2008 and when he finally interjected “his style” just in time for the playoffs, the fans witnessed the precedent of what has transpired the past 4-seasons.

Imagine “Groundhog Day” with soccer.

While the Columbus Crew is not officially eliminated from the playoffs, it was looking nearly impossible under Warzycha. Hence, the coaching change with eight games remaining.

It must be said Warzycha was an effective assistant coach under Sigi Schmid and a skilled member of the Columbus Crew as a player (#19, “The Polish Rifle”). For that, we thank him and wish him good luck in his future endeavors.

Brian Bliss (the Technical Director) has been chosen to serve as the interim head coach.

However, now is the time to seek, find and hire a new head coach. The ideal candidate needs to have successful, professional experience (coaching and/or playing) and an effective and efficient style of play in mind while encouraging plenty of space and opportunities for creativity. The flow should be quick, smooth and exciting. The tempo should demonstrate control and purpose.

The new head coach needs to instill trust in the fans and generate a pulse on the field of a team fully capable and driven to winning championships again.

Ironically, Crew Nation would be quite joyful to see Guillermo Barros Schelotto on the bench again…as long as it’s in the spot closest to the center line.