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Drilling down on: at New England 0, Philadelphia 0

Sep 1, 2012, 10:55 PM EDT

Philadelphia Union v New England Revolution Getty Images

Man of the Match: In a game like this, it had to be one of the defenders, and with Philadelphia looking better on the ball throughout the night, we’re going with New England’s.

A.J. Soares’ continued injury problems have given Stephen McCarthy a chance to solidify his place in the New England team, a chance the 24-year-old Hawaiian’s made the most of. On Saturday, he was one of the few players on the pitch who had an above average night, his work at the back helping to render Philadelphia’s possession useless.

Packaged for takeaway:

  • This was one of those bad, bad games. They happen every once in a while, and thankfully, they’ve gotten pretty rare. But this was 90-plus minutes all of us would love to have back.
  • The match started slow, with neither team exerting any pressure on the other. Philadelphia was able to establish a rhythm, building with short passes through the midfield. New England relied on more direct play along the ground, usually Benny Feilhaber trying to hit an attacker with a long, prodding ball in Carlos Valdes’s channel.
  • The Union was able to maintain their advantage in the middle thanks in part to the tactics resulting from Freddy Adu’s inclusion. The Philly designated player was back in the starting XI and playing through the middle. Michael Farfan was the left-most attacker for much of the match, even if he stayed inside the width of the penalty area.
  • As a result, Philadelphia had numbers through the middle but a completely open left flank. It gave Gabriel Farfan the chance to get forward, though Feilhaber’s passes helped pin him back.
  • Instead of just releasing Farfan to get that width on the left, John Hackworth briefly switched Danny Cruz, who started on the right, to that side mid-way through the half. Scoreboard told the results.
  • The one tactic that almost paid off for Philly was getting the ball behind right back Florian Lechner, allowing Antoine Hoppenot (in for Jack McInerney) to get behind the defense. Unfortunately, that left Adu, Farfan, and Cruz playing penalty box hawks. Scoreboard told the results.
  • As for New England, they seemed to miss Saer Sene, out for the season with a knee injury. Lee Nguyen was quiet on the left, while Feilhaber was pushed too deep by Philadelphia’s possession. Diego Fagundez (in for Sene) was the Revolution’s best chance to get on some of Feilhaber’s passes, but unable to do so, New England was unable to bring Jerry Bengston into the match.
  • With both teams already thinking about next year, there was little incentive for Hackworth and Jay Heaps to chase the points. So when the final whistle blew, Heaps briskly walked over to Hackworth, shook his hand, and headed to the locker room.
  1. firewolf777 - Sep 1, 2012 at 11:10 PM

    So many article mistakes, also makes me question if you watched the game.

    • Richard Farley - Sep 1, 2012 at 11:24 PM

      Sorry you feel that way. It’s unusual that I get a comment like this, so I just took time to check every reference I make above against the stats, heat maps, and other resources available on this match. After doing so, I stand by everything.

      Again, sorry you feel that way, but after spending some time double checking against an independent resource, I can’t be sorry for anything above.

      Thanks for your comment, though. It’s good to be questioned and have to go back over your work. Ultimately, I feel better about this post.

    • ryanrosenblatt - Sep 1, 2012 at 11:47 PM

      I see only one mistake — watching the match. It sucked.

      • Steve Davis - Sep 2, 2012 at 12:08 AM

        Now THAT is a good comment!

  2. firewolf777 - Sep 2, 2012 at 8:25 AM

    I respect you would go back and look I just saw many things that threw me off a bit. Than once I got down to “Andrew hoppenot(in for jack mcinherney)” I just got upset. I’m sorry for saying something rudely.

    • Richard Farley - Sep 2, 2012 at 9:29 AM

      I don’t think your were rude. If you thought I was wrong (and I didn’t watch the game), that’s still feedback.

      The Hoppinot thing … yeah. That’s just an editing error on my part. Fixing it now. It’s a bit funny, I suppose. I call him Tony Ropeadope on Twitter, a play on the sound of Antoine Hoppenot. I should have caught that – totally my bad.

  3. firewolf777 - Sep 2, 2012 at 8:30 AM

    More than anything I love to see people finally giving soccer it’s recognition. Especially the union. DOOP!!!

  4. jelliot1978 - Sep 2, 2012 at 10:43 AM

    The man of the match to me was Reis. Without him NE loses by more than a goal. NE had no pressure on Philly and they stole a point at home. Nice to see a decent showing from Adu after getting benched the past two games. He still can be better but hopefully this is a start in the right direction for him.

    • Richard Farley - Sep 2, 2012 at 10:45 AM

      I debated McCarthy, Okugo, and Reis, and if I had to do it all over again, McCarthy would be my #3. I feel like I undervalued those early second half saves.

  5. firewolf777 - Sep 2, 2012 at 3:40 PM

    Reis prevented us from scoring anything.
    I have come to respect Richard, your articles will be great reads.
    I am excited to continue reading your articles. I hope you especially write all union articles here on out.

    • Richard Farley - Sep 3, 2012 at 1:10 PM

      Thanks, and thanks for sticking with he after the initial disappointment. I’ve definitely been encouraged by and learned something from this exchange.

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