“I don’t care where you’ve been or what you plan to do”
Courtesy Connor Cunningham
Match Haiku
This given Sunday
Gotham a different class.
The goals have dried up.
“I don’t care where you’ve been or what you plan to do”
“I am the Resurrection” - The Stone Roses, 1989
It was hard to look at the two starting elevens prior to kickoff and not imagine the performance and the scoreline that we got on Sunday. There are some NWSL rosters that when you use them as a yardstick, you see just how far the talent gap is for Racing at the moment. At this point in the season, Racing is often getting “out talented” but also outplayed. Nothing that Racing did seemed to cause Gotham any problems. Racing’s disruptive style isn’t yielding any results and the better teams in the league have figured out that Racing can’t play through them. Gotham managed the game using possession and then dared Racing to prove that they can manufacture a goal. My opinion is that Racing needs to have a rethink about the midfield composition. Fischer isn’t an accurate enough passer to play in the central attacking midfielder role. Unfortunately, I am not sure there are any better options. It is hard to identify who the orchestrator of Racing’s attack is supposed to be.
Things are not working at the moment. That could just be that Racing can’t match up with the league’s best. It could also be that teams have Racing’s number now. It is hard to look at the match against Gotham and say that Racing played poorly top to bottom. I just think that Racing has become too predictable. That is the downside of having a strong identity when you don’t necessarily have the talent to back it up. This team isn’t as good as last year’s team right now. It is too early to write off a season, but I think it is time to start sprinkling some rookies into the starting eleven. Racing went all in on signing young talent this year, so I would like to see what they have, outside of 10–15-minute cameos.
Post Match Moment of the Match
Lo and Quincy McMahon were made available to the media after the match. Lo has to be sick of me at this point. We are in our 6th year of doing this. However, she is a consummate professional and spoke honestly about the performance. I did ask both her and Bev if the team needed some kind of spark or catalyst to change things. Lo said that she felt that the team needed “something” but doesn’t think that it has to be “life-altering”. She also spoke about “getting over that final hurdle” and “kicking things into gear’. The one specific item that she identified was that the team wasn’t creating enough quality chances. I totally agree there.
I pressed Bev a little on her comment that she thought the second half of the match was better for Racing. In the second half, they didn’t register a shot or touch in Gotham’s box until the 86th minute. She pointed to the relative improvement in possession and more composure that allowed Racing to have more attacking options. She did concede that Racing was not quick enough in their decision making once they started their attack. I saw quite a bit of forward, then directly backward, passing at times and it really stood out against Gotham’s more purposeful movements. Something that I made a mental note to do going forward is to spend a couple of minutes each match comparing Racing’s first touches in attack to their opponent’s. There was a sequence from Racing where almost every first touch was way too loose. The ball seemed to bounce away too far for the next touch to be a good one. In contrast, Gotham’s players kept their first touches close during that same period. Personally, I think a poor first touch sometimes negates your decision making because you run out of options if you are just trying to regain control.
On my question relating to whether Racing needed a spark or some kind of catalyst Bev said that it is hard to “manufacture” those types of things. Instead, she said that the team needs to stay in the right headspace because the players and the staff feel like they are “just shy” of getting the results that the team needs. The focus remains on the process, not the outcome at the moment. That mentality is about to run out of shelf life if Racing doesn’t start to get points very soon.
The Taylor Flint Honorary Yellow Card of the Match
I have decided to pull in the Opta descriptions of the yellow cards in this space going forward:
7th Minute: O’Kane-Tactical Foul
50th Minute: Flint-Reckless Offence
2nd Half Stoppage: McMahon-Tactical Foul
The Flint card was the only contentious one. She was obviously frustrated to lose possession in the spot that she did, but I didn’t think that a yellow was necessary. The other two were no-brainers.
NWSL Watch Party Drinking Game to Help You Get Plastered
If you’re out watching a random NWSL match (I had lunch at Shogun yesterday and the Stars-Thorns match was on at the bar) have someone turn up the volume if Merritt Mathias is on the broadcast. Do a shot/take a sip/destroy a Buzzballz every time she says the word “comfortability”. On second thought, maybe stick to sips. The other options are bound to lead to a stomach pump.
Madchester Song to Make You Feel Better
Your choice: chunky or smooth.
The top version is the album or “chunky” version. I prefer it.
The bottom version is technically “WFL”, which is the Vince Clarke remix. It’s more “Madchester”.
Would you call what Shuan Ryder does “singing”?
It’s good to be Jae
I am happy to see Jaelin Howell thriving in NYC. She seems happier. It’s a good time be Jae.
I don’t know what Racing could have or should have done to keep her here, but I think things worked out for the best for her.
That dress is such a great idea.
“Don’t waste your words”
I told Bev that I don’t look at the standings this early. She admitted that she doesn’t either. Both of us know the points total though. Four points from seven matches is nowhere near good enough. There are explanations and excuses, but you have to put those behind you now. I think I heard on the broadcast that Utah had won four in a row. Utah? The only thing you can say about figuring out this league is that you can’t figure it out. Racing frankly needs a “Utah-esque” run to pull itself out of the funk they are currently in. Everything seems low energy to me. I know we are supposed to “trust the process”, but I hate that phrase. What if your process is bad? It’s time for actions and results to speak instead of relying on words.
Racing’s hot start offensively now looks like fool’s gold (quick digression: Fool’s Gold by The Stone Roses is ineligible for selection for post titles because it wasn’t part of the original album). Teams are starting to make Racing “play football” and when Racing does that at the moment, they can’t sustain meaningful possession. Racing needs help in the midfield. I don’t think Bev is considering a formation change, but she may have to think about some sort of inversion to get numbers there when Racing has possession. The Flint/O’Kane/Fischer midfield is a factory for inaccurate passes. Against Gotham they had accuracies of 54%/67%/36% respectively. No philosophy, formation, tactic or identity can disguise those numbers well enough to make them not matter.
Jordyn Bloomer needs to have taken her last free kick from the forward two thirds of the pitch. Watching Berger distribute compared to Bloomer is night and day. Distribution is not Jordyn’s strongpoint and when she had another free kick from midfield in this match, it floated harmlessly into Berger’s arms. When Racing deploys Bloomer in this way it just makes them look like a team that has run out of ideas.
Racing often looks clueless on the ball instead of supposedly comfortable without it. I think the team needs to try to focus on possession more in matches, especially in the first half. Racing is not a team that can consistently go down a goal early and expect to get an equalizing goal in the run of play. The Spirit and Gotham have shown the league that playing within yourself is the way to neutralize Racing’s biggest threats.

