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The United States Soccer Team Is Going To Dominate The 2024 Olympics

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At least if this YouTubed wizardry and some auspicious trends among American hearts, minds and wallets are any indication.

The United States men's U-23 team in a friendly against eventual Olympic champion Mexico.

Image by MIKE STONE / Reuters

The United States didn’t get knocked out of the Olympic soccer tournament, which finished up with Mexico's gold-medal victory over Brazil this morning in London. Rather, the Americans failed to qualify for the event – an Under-23 tournament with three "overage" players allowed per squad — in the first place. Olympic soccer is not taken incredibly seriously by national teams, but regardless, the U.S. does not have a powerhouse youth program. United States soccer national teams of all ages, in fact, are generally the domain of enthusiastic, explosive players who hope their athleticism can make up for their (relative) inability to dribble and pass. On a practical level this means our offense is predicated on kicking the ball way down the field and hoping to outrun and outmuscle the chasing defenders. It was thus quite a surprise that the viral soccer video of the summer — a highlight reel of snazzy passing and dribbling by a team of precocious children — originated not in Brazil or Spain but in southern California:

They play like normal-sized people! It's actually kind of unnerving.

Source: youtube.com

That’s La Canada, California's Barcelona USA club at work. Founded in 1999 as a penya (supporters' club) for the famed Spanish powerhouse, Barcelona USA launched a formal "development academy" last year. They don’t have any financial relationship — or really any relationship — with the Spanish club, but they are big fans, and they teach the quick passing, "tiki-taka" style perfected by Lionel Messi and the rest of the men from La Masia, FC Barcelona's own famed academy in Spain, which has produced the most successful club team of the past decade and much of the talent for what’s perhaps the most accomplished national side ever.

Here are some of the reactions to the video: "Watch Barcelona-USA U-11 side demonstrate why England are light years behind the best"; "Barcelona-USA: Possibly the greatest under-11 team anywhere on earth"; and, simply, "Barcelona’s U-11s Are Terrifying."

The declarations of greatness are hyperbolic but not misplaced. Barca USA's video shows a well-coached squad that’s disciplined but still very creative. Take the goal they score that starts at the 3:28 mark. Barca USA’s goalie gets the ball and instead of punting it up the field, rolls it to one of his central defenders. The team works the ball to the right, finds no space there, goes back left, then up the left side. A midfielder makes a beautiful turn after receiving a pass from a teammate, then outpaces two defenders while dribbling. He passes to a forward who has come back to the ball rather than waiting for a long pass. That player in turn chips toward his strike partner, who beats his man and turns goal-ward. He cuts between two collapsing defenders, and then touches the ball back to the teammate who passed it to him a few seconds earlier. Goal. At least eight players are involved, and they make 11 passes in 40 seconds. Arsenal chases the game the entire time, rarely even having a chance to regain possession. Barca’s players are relaxed, knowing they always have multiple outlets. It would be an impressive tally for a team on any level.

The team is not invincible, recently losing a game to Weston FC in the Danone Nations Cup. They’re not even, necessarily, the best American youth team. (These things are incredibly subjective, but the Dallas Texans, Clint Dempsey’s old team, are among the clubs who might have a good claim.) Nonetheless. "It's still an impressive feat," says Travis Clark, who covers youth soccer for TopDrawerSoccer.com and noticed the clip when it was first posted in March. "No matter how you want to get to consider it, it's hard to get players that age to play that way."

Getting players to play that way is, currently, United States Soccer's ambitious goal for a giant network of "development academies" they have at most informal control over. Basically, if you’re a youth club that follows certain guidelines, like like “in the 6-12 age group, focus on ball skills, enjoyment and experimentation,” you get to call yourself a Development Academy, even if you don’t have a cool, X-Men-style campus. But U.S. Soccer doesn’t fund the academy teams, and the long-term interests of the national squad don’t always jibe with the short-term interests of star players, star players’ parents, or coaches who want to win games. If you’re an 11-year-old prodigy on a typical team, passing to inferior players usually doesn’t help you look good or help you win.

Barca USA’s players, though, have both talent and preschool-teacher-endorsed sharing skills. If you watch the video, you see kids who look to pass, or at least evaluate their options, even when they could shake-and-bake and/or run over the nearest defender. And their success both on the field and online makes a point: given enough time, selfless teams can eventually win and make their players stars. (It’s not like LeBron and Magic Johnson were/are yawn-inducing losers.)

Can Barca USA’s achievement be replicated? Maybe! European and Latin American clubs have long been able to afford (relatively) big expenses (Walker says Barca USA spends $30,000 per team per year) on very young players who aren’t going to yield immediate financial rewards, while young players and their stage parents are more likely to heed the words of established clubs' coaches and systems, which have already produced world-famous stars. And here's the thing: the United States is, it seems, finally on its way to having a soccer economy that at least parallels, if not yet rivals, those abroad. The perpetual question of “will soccer take off in America?” has been answered in the affirmative. We have more youth soccer players than any other country. Major League Soccer has established itself as a viable business with rising attendance — look at those sellouts in heartland cities like Houston and Kansas City. The English Premier League has become an ESPN weekend staple. (Speaking of England: you may have noticed that those excited headlines above about Barca USA were from British sources, which is quite a validation.)

TV revenues and ticket sales are what pays for turning an eight-year-old into Lionel Messi. Meanwhile, your author has coached youth teams recently and can report that kids today are much more excited by the idea of becoming a professional soccer player — and knowledgeable about pros here and abroad — than he was as a kid, when he did not really know that professional soccer players existed. They chatter about MLS teams and big-time European games. There's a nation of soccer-playing kids out there with stars in their eyes. And for our hopes of someday being a big-time soccer country, that might be the most important viral sensation of all.


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Handcrafted DeLorean Hovercraft Appears At McCovey Cove

British Hero Mo Farah Wins The 5,000 Meters In A Thrilling Sprint

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Farah becomes only the seventh man to win the 5,000m and 10,000m in a single Olympics. See the finish here.

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Here's the last 400 meters.

Farah jostles with a number of other runners before dominating the final sprint. Unfortunately, his training partner and American runner Galen Rupp is unable to maintain the pace that he sets at the beginning of the last lap, and he fails to place.

Image by

Farah celebrated right: with a few sit-ups.

Farah celebrated right: with a few sit-ups.

A few other incredible pictures from his victory:

A few other incredible pictures from his victory:

Image by Anja Niedringhaus / AP

Image by Clive Brunskill / Getty Images


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The 20 Best Doppelgangers Of The 2012 London Olympics

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You'll never be able to watch the Olympics the same way.

Gymnast Tomás González and Kip from "Napoleon Dynamite:"

Gymnast Tomás González and Kip from "Napoleon Dynamite:"

Via: facebook.com

Michael Phelps' Mom...

Michael Phelps' Mom...

...And Goku:

...And Goku:

Runners Yordani Garcia and Leonel Suarez and Will Smith and DJ Jazzy Jeff:

Runners Yordani Garcia and Leonel Suarez and Will Smith and DJ Jazzy Jeff:

Image by Martin Meissner / AP


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The 11 Most Adorable Photos Of Tom Daley And His Abs Celebrating His Medal

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Now we know what it would be like if a member of One Direction won a bronze medal.

Yesterday, Tom Daley won bronze in the 10m platform dive. He became the first Briton to win a medal in the event since 1960. And then he celebrated adorably.

Yesterday, Tom Daley won bronze in the 10m platform dive. He became the first Briton to win a medal in the event since 1960. And then he celebrated adorably.

Image by Al Bello / Getty Images

Image by Clive Rose / Getty Images

Image by Clive Rose / Getty Images

Image by Al Bello / Getty Images


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What The Olympics Are All About In A Single Image

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American wrestler Jordan Burroughs defeated Iran's Sadegh Goudarszi in freestyle wrestling to win gold. After the match and medal ceremony, Burroughs tweeted this photo.

Source: @alliseeisgold

The 25 Best Moments Of The U.S. Men Celebrating Basketball Gold

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LeBron danced, James Harden stole the mascot, and even Coach K got excited.

Of course, the celebration starts with a group hug.

Of course, the celebration starts with a group hug.

Pau Gasol single-handedly kept Spain in the game in the third quarter. Coach K and Gasol share a touching moment.

Pau Gasol single-handedly kept Spain in the game in the third quarter. Coach K and Gasol share a touching moment.

And then Kobe and the rest of Pau's NBA counterparts come over.

And then Kobe and the rest of Pau's NBA counterparts come over.

How many other players will Kobe's hug last? This is two...

How many other players will Kobe's hug last? This is two...


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13 Stunning Examples Of Tilt-Shift Photography At The London Olympics

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Tilt-Shift photography uses a special lens to create a shallow depth of field, and make the subjects of a photo look like toy miniatures. Here are some striking examples from the Olympics.

Image by Alex Livesey / Getty Images

Image by Phil Walter / Getty Images

Image by Cameron Spencer / Getty Images

Image by Cameron Spencer / Getty Images


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Watch One Direction Perform At The Olympic Closing Ceremonies

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GOLD'S WHAT MAKES YOU BEAUTIFUL.

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Here are the charismatic impish fellows performing their hit, "What Makes You Beautiful." The sound in the arena isn't very good, but you can make it out.

See The Spice Girls' Gaudy Olympic Performance

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They did “Wannabe” and “Spice Up Your Life” while standing atop sparkly black cabs.

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Image by

The 25 Most Absurd Moments Of The Olympic Closing Ceremonies

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Holy Boris Johnson, this thing was weird .

1. They did that strange, epilepsy-courting London-scenery countdown again.

1. They did that strange, epilepsy-courting London-scenery countdown again.

2. Winston Churchill popped out of the top of Big Ben and recited passages from Shakespeare's "The Tempest."

2. Winston Churchill popped out of the top of Big Ben and recited passages from Shakespeare's "The Tempest."

I, for one, feel great about the fact that Timothy Spall can play both Winston Churchill...

I, for one, feel great about the fact that Timothy Spall can play both Winston Churchill...

...and Peter Pettigrew in "Harry Potter."

...and Peter Pettigrew in "Harry Potter."


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Beautiful Multi-Exposure Olympic Photography

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These are so cool.

Taekwondo

Taekwondo

Image by KIM KYUNG-HOON / Reuters

Judo

Judo

Image by Paul Sancya / AP

Fencing

Fencing

Image by TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA / Getty Images

Image by TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA / Getty Images


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Sesame Street Has A Message For McKayla Maroney

Michael Phelps Models For Louis Vuitton

10 Of The 23 Openly Gay Olympic Athletes Won Medals

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A strong showing for the out Olympians. 2 of 3 openly gay men medaled!

Gold

Seimone Augustus — Basketball — United States

Seimone Augustus — Basketball — United States

Image by MARK RALSTON / Getty Images

Carl Hester — Team Dressage — Great Britain

Carl Hester — Team Dressage — Great Britain

Image by Alex Livesey / Getty Images

Marilyn Agliotti — Field Hockey — Netherlands

Marilyn Agliotti — Field Hockey — Netherlands

Image by Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images


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Next Time Let’s Do This Without The Bronze Medals

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Third place is a third wheel.

Image by Streeter Lecka / Getty Images

Why does the bronze medal exist?

That’s not just a rhetorical question. I’ve been asking a lot of people who you’d think would know. Tony Bijkerk didn’t, and he’s the Secretary General of the International Society of Olympic Historians in the Netherlands. (The ISOH is headquartered in the village of Fochteloo in the municipality of Ooststellingwerf, FYI.) Jim Greensfelder of Sharonville, Ohio didn’t know, and he wrote the Olympic Medals Reference Guide AND a history of the 1904 St. Louis Olympics. That’s relevant because St. Louis’ Games, we do know, are the first at which bronze medals were awarded to third-place finishers. (The prizes in 1896 and 1900 — generally, as these things weren’t totally formalized yet — were silver for first and bronze for second.) But even St. Louisians don’t seem to recall why they decided to do the third-place thing. The Missouri Museum didn’t know, and neither did anyone from the St. Louis Public Library. The International Olympic Committee’s own Olympic Studies Centre sent me a polite e-mail informing me that “based on the documentation we have available to us…we are unable to answer your question of 'why' the Organizing Committee for the 1904 Olympic Games decided to give medals for first, second and third place.”

It’s not surprising that no one can remember a good reason to give out a third-place medal: there isn’t one. For starters, they’re ineffective as commemoration. There are no famous or infamous bronze medalists. Do you remember Phillip Edwards or Adrianus de Jong? Edwards, a Canadian sprinter, and de Jong, a Dutch fencer (from The Hague, which is 219 km from Ooststellingwerf municipality), are the athletes who’ve won the most bronze medals without a silver or gold. But there’s no cachet, even tragic Buffalo Bills cachet, in being a perennial second runner-up. Not making it over the last hill might be indicative of greatness thwarted by a dramatic flaw, but not making it over the second-to-last hill is just indicative of needing to spend more time on hill training.

Silver medals at least make intuitive sense. There’s an honor in being the last, toughest obstacle to a victory, implicit in the way we remember the winners who had fearsome competitors (Pete Sampras/Andre Agassi, for example) with a respect surpassing that which we have for those who defeated relatively anonymous fields (Ivan Lendl). A worthy silver medalist is essential for the most memorable golds. Usain Bolt’s most blazingly mind-bending (and only world-record setting) run of the London Games came in the 4x100 relay, when a brilliant American performance forced Bolt to run his anchor leg with as much desperation as Usain Bolt is ever forced to run with, just to win the race. (The United States’ time in the relay tied the previous world record.) Michael Phelps’s most famous race is his photo finish against Milorad Cavic of Serbia in Beijing’s 100m butterfly. Put another way, the spirit of the silver medal is the spirit of Rocky. The spirit of the bronze medal is the spirit of Brad, which is a movie that doesn’t exist about a guy, Brad Jenkins, who Rocky beat before he fought Apollo Creed.

This all goes to explain the sinking feeling one gets when coming across a third-place game or match. (That and the essential un-covetability of bronze. A “golden age” is a time of peak greatness. The Bronze Age is when people learned how to make, like, spears. Spears — can they even get wifi?)

"Can you hear me now?" "No."

Source: cf.mp-cdn.net

"But Ben," you might be saying, "the Olympics aren’t just about the viewers at home, demanding entertainment while we lie on the floor, eating pretzels with cheese pre-baked inside them. The Olympics are also about the athletes themselves." I’ll say to you, yes, and those pretzels are delicious, especially when you melt a bowl of Velveeta so you can cover the outside in cheese as well. And then I’ll say that it turns out that the bronze actually does have adverse effects on athletes — specifically silver-medal winners. A 1995 study in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology examined the relative mental states of silver and bronze winners and found that bronze recipients seemed both happier and more generally optimistic after their competitions than silver recipients. In one facet of the study, college students who weren’t sports fans — and didn’t have any information about who finished where — were shown videos of athletes who’d just finished their races/matches; the students were asked to simply rate how happy each athlete seemed. Silver winners averaged a 5 on a 1 to 10 scale and bronze winners 6.7. (The study’s authors used pre-Olympics Sports Illustrated medal predictions to make sure that they weren't just stumbling on a random group of bronze winners who’d way outperformed expectations; in fact, it turned out, the silver winners in the study had done better than expected and bronze winners hadn’t.)

What the hell kind of prize makes people feel better for doing worse? Simply qualifying for the Olympics is a great achievement, and “Olympic athlete” a title of great prestige; I think that’s enough for third-place finishers, like it is for everyone who finishes fourth and thereafter.

While I was finishing up this piece, I got an e-mail from Tony Bijkerk (the “pride of Ooststellingwerf”). I’d sent a follow-up to his original response to my questions about bronze, worried maybe that I’d worded my query imprecisely or in an idiomatic way that his (highly-functional, of course) command of English didn’t quite recognize. In the follow-up I put it directly: “Do we have any idea why bronze was added?” Reads his reply: “No Sir, we have not!” Indeed, Mr. Bijkerk — indeed, world — we have not!


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The Most Powerful Moments From The London Olympics

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These are the moments from the 2012 Olympics that you'll still be hearing about at the 2064 Olympics.

Shin A Lam Refuses To Leave The Piste

Shin A Lam Refuses To Leave The Piste

After a controversial ruling led to her defeat in the women's individual épée fencing semifinal, South Korea's Shin A Lam refused to leave the floor as the ruling was being appealed. She stayed on the piste for the better part of an hour, and when a judge came to tell her that her appeal had been declined and to take her away, she walked away from him and stood defiant on the piste. She would eventually win a silver medal in the team épée fencing competition.

Learn more about this moment here.

Liu Xiang Fights Through His Hurt Achilles, Hops To The Finish Line

Liu Xiang Fights Through His Hurt Achilles, Hops To The Finish Line

Liu Xiang won gold in the 110m hurdles at the 2004 Olympics. Since then, he has battled Achilles injuries that made him a last-minute scratch from the 2008 Games. London was supposed to be his return to form, but on the very first hurdle he crashed. After writhing in pain, Xiang hopped off the track and down the tunnel, before stopping and deciding to return to the track. He hopped the rest of the race, stopping only to kiss the final hurdle. Upon crossing the finish line he was embraced and helped to a wheelchair by his opponents.

Learn more about this moment here.

Image by Anja Niedringhaus / AP

Oscar Pistorius Becomes The First Double Amputee To Sprint In The Olympics

Oscar Pistorius Becomes The First Double Amputee To Sprint In The Olympics

Oscar Pistorius (aka "The Fastest Man On No Legs" aka "Blade Runner") not only became the first double amputee to run in the Olympics — he actually advanced a round, coming in second in his first heat in the 400m.

Image by DAVID GRAY / Reuters

Andy Murray Gets Wimbledon Redemption

Andy Murray Gets Wimbledon Redemption

One month ago, the UK's own Andy Murray heartbreakingly lost to Roger Federer in the Wimbledon final. Three weeks later, Murray and Federer met again on the exact same court in the gold medal match, where Andy Murray annihilated the defending Wimbledon champ. British tennis fans have been waiting since the 1930s to see one of their own win on that court, and at the 2012 Olympics, Murray gave it to them.

Image by Julian Finney / Getty Images


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12 Killer Images From The Watkins Glen Road Races

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“The Glen” hosted a number of races — including a NASCAR Sprint Cup event — this weekend as drivers navigated the rare non-oval track. Here are some of the visual highlights.

Image by John Harrelson / Getty Images

Image by Todd Warshaw / Getty Images

Image by Tom Pennington / Getty Images

Image by Tom Pennington / Getty Images


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Watch Britain's Olympic Team Sing "Don't Stop Me Now"

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The US may have beat the world in medal count, but the Brits always dominate in music … even lip syncs.

The 33 Best GIFs Of The London Olympics

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The best/funniest/weirdest moments from London in nice, little, animated packages.

Liu Xiang Hops To Finish His Race And Kisses The Final Hurdle

Liu Xiang Hops To Finish His Race And Kisses The Final Hurdle

China's Liu Xiang had won gold in the 110m hurdles in Athens, but since then had fought Achilles issues. At the first hurdle in London, he crashed and fell to the ground gripping the back of his foot. He began to hop off the track and down the tunnel before stopping, and turning back. He hopped the rest of the race, stopping only to kiss the final hurdle.

Learn more here.

Shin A Lam Stands Defiant After Being Screwed Out Of A Chance For Gold

Shin A Lam Stands Defiant After Being Screwed Out Of A Chance For Gold

When a controversial ruling cost Korea's Shin A Lam a chance at gold in the women's individual épée fencing, she refused to leave the floor as that would be taken as a sign she accepted the ruling. So she filed an appeal and stayed on the piste for 45 minutes. When a judge came to tell her that her appeal had been denied, rather than go with him, she climbed back onto the platform and stood, defiant.

Learn more here.

McKayla Maroney's Jaw Dropping Vault

McKayla Maroney's Jaw Dropping Vault

No Really, The Judge's Jaw Dropped

No Really, The Judge's Jaw Dropped


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