Let's seriously hope that Eduardo da Silva plays again. It is always disheartening to see a
promising career threatened by the actions of a clumsy hack who tries to combat a skilled opponent
by taking liberties with the limits of fouling strategy. In the meantime, Martin Taylor may have
just gifted Manchester United the Premiership title.
Then he should know that United lost just a week and a half ago. From his World Soccer Rankings for
this week:
By our own logic, we can't deny Sir Alex
Ferguson's boys anything -- they haven't been on the wrong side of a score sheet since the
New Year, unbeaten in 10 straight.
As much as we here on 116th Street enjoy a Barnsley upset over Liverpool, the Champions League is
the undoubted source of our football happiness. The FA Cup might be useful for exciting upsets and
the occasional knockout spectacular (not to mention those incredibly useful lessons in English
geography), but there is nothing like seeing the masterful play and contrasting styles on display
in the premier football competition in the world.
Good luck to the Premiership in trying to nail down that "39th fixture": when Asian and Oceanic
clubs attempt to keep you out of their stadiums (and your dirty paws out of their revenue), when
that Everton-Middlesbrough fixture isn't selling so well in Toronto, and when your entire fan base
is pissed off at you for selling them out, you'll wish you had simply scheduled a couple of
friendlies in New York and LA featuring the Big Four (oh wait, they can already do that themselves;
what do they need you for, Richard Scudamore?
So I take back everything I said Monday about USA vs. Mexico, a game full of intrigue and
excitement. After a day of watching some fairly dull international friendlies, it was fantastic to
see some true passion and end-to-end action. While I wrote on Monday that there would be little
gleaned from this February soirée, I can thankfully say that I was very much in the wrong.
And so it is that we return for what I suppose has become our annual February dance with Mexico, a
game that would be so much more interesting had they scheduled it just a few days prior. The chance
to witness the first significant merging of national politics with the rise of soccer in our
country would have been an amazing sight, with presidential campaigns scrambling to pander to the
millions of captive Latino viewers glued to Univision for a USA-Mexico matchup ahead of Super
Tuesday.