Jurgen Klinsmann’s improvement bid: also on the line in tonight’s critical World Cup qualifier
Sep 11, 2012, 12:30 PM EDT
Here is a little foreshadowing of what’s ahead if things go sideways tonight in Columbus:
It’s a piece at Foxsports.com from veteran writer Leander Schaerlaekens, who looks at the highly imperfect, squeaky-bum place the United States finds itself in tonight and assigns much of the blame on Jurgen Klinsmann.
Credit and blame walk hand in hand and Klinsmann knows so – but that’s beside the point here.
Schaerlaeckens reckons the longer things go on, the more this team resembles Bob Bradley’s teams. Or Bruce Arena’s teams. Or even Steve Sampson’s U.S. teams, and that’s going back well over a decade now.
He’s talking style and formation, mostly, adjudging that Klinsmann’s bid for dynamic innovation is petering out.
The gist of Schaerlaeckens’ piece:
After all the fuss about reinvention, the team looks more or less the same in style and personnel, relying on or deeming unworthy exactly same players as Bradley did – a generation clearly set in its ways and for the most part ill-equipped to handle a technical helter-skelter philosophy. It isn’t in their footballing DNA. The US team, to use a terrible sporting cliché, is what it is, no matter who is in charge.
It’s hard to argue that point if you only examine game-day tactical arrangements; some nights things do look more assertive, with a greater forward lean and more emphasis on pressure in the soft spots. And then some nights they don’t.
But I believe that some fans and media members miss the mark slightly when they talk about the Klinsmann approach to U.S. national team enrichment.
I would argue that Klinsmann’s most important – “innovative,” if you like – initiative wasn’t so much about style between the white lines. That was an element of his plan, for sure, but probably a secondary one.
Most important was Klinsmann’s comprehensive effort to elevate the individual aspiration and professionalism of everyone associated with the national team.
That’s not to say that professionalism was lacking under Bradley. It wasn’t. In fact, a high degree of well-disciplined predictability around the program was a hallmark of Bradley’s tenure, and something the players appreciated about the former U.S. manager.
Klinsmann’s central aim is to take each individual piece and squeeze the dickens out of it, to extract every wee drop of talent, energy and productivity from it.
He wants to elevate things collectively by adjusting each individual mindset, insisting that anyone wearing the national team crest ask more of themselves, push themselves a little further in diet, fitness, technique, dedication to craft, attention to detail, study habits … everything.
None of that changes the situation one iota tonight, of course. Nor will it rebalance the harrowing headlines tomorrow if a United States side – one still not equipped with its best, with no Landon Donovan, no Michael Bradley and with the Clint Dempsey vehicle still chugging forward on three wheels – departs Columbus with anything less than all three points.
But one way or the other, we should zero in on the right points of light here. Klinsmann’s quest was always about style – but about a lot more, too. Whether his plan is bearing fruit or just soaking up more water with little effect … well, let’s talk about that tomorrow.
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- footballer4ever - Sep 11, 2012 at 1:46 PM
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Bob Bradley was a safe coach and did what needed to be done. He receives credit for his contribution; Nevertheless, bringing Klinsmann can enhance the agenda to make national teams better. Will it be an easy thing to do? No! Will it take time? Yes. Are players better qualified needed to reach that goal? Definitely. Whatever it is, we can’t afford to miss any world cup and not have the full qualified “veterans” to do that. Leave the young one to experience up and mess up , if needed, on lower competitions, but not on WC qualifiers.
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- bigdinla - Sep 11, 2012 at 4:44 PM
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Still do not understand why he did not bring in Bradley.
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- Steve Davis - Sep 11, 2012 at 4:49 PM
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You are kidding about this, right?
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- stackhousesoccer - Sep 11, 2012 at 5:35 PM
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Honestly, they can roll with the 3-6-1 Steve Sampson special for all I care. I just want to see them tie on the road (not lose like Friday) and win convincingly at home. Give me that and I am on board.
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- cornet76 - Sep 12, 2012 at 12:59 AM
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Klinsmann has said a lot of things since he got the job. What I mostly remember is he spoke about how this was a long term project.
The fact that the USMNT looks more and more like Bradley’s , Arena’s and Sampson’s teams should surprise no one. After all JK is mostly using Bradley’s players. And those guys are very similar to Arena’s players who were not dissimilar to Sampson’s players.
Why is everyone surprised?JK has set the goal of trying to attain a certain style of play and a certain attitude for 90 minutes. And his approach and attitude to the players and the public is radically different from BB’s style. In a few years there may well be a whole new crop players available but until they develop, to qualify for WC 2014, JK is stuck with basically the same player pool as Bradley had.
JK has many wonderful ideas but he is also a hard bitten pro who has won a lot of medals. So while he may be willing to take a few risks, he knows how to win and win ugly if need be.