Category Archives: Soccer

Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 12th

Another incredible night for the US in the pool capped off a Friday that featured a medal in fencing that hadn’t happened in 84 years, tennis bronze, a medal for the sixth straight Olympics by a shotgun athlete, and an equestrian bronze. The US also took home medals in archery and boxing on perhaps the most diverse and busiest day of the games for the US. Continue reading Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 12th

Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 11th

Thursday may be remembered as the day that three Americans who are the greatest Americans ever in their sport, had their signature moment. Kayla Harrison on the judo mat is now not only the only American to ever win gold, she’s won it twice in a row. Simone Biles became the first American woman to win the Olympics all-around and the World Championships all-around (and she has three of those!). And finally in the pool Michael Phelps became the first swimmer ever to win the same event in four straight Olympics and has *22* gold medals now.

JUDOCA KAYLA HARRISON É OURO NA RIO 2016

flickr photo shared by Agência Brasil under a Creative Commons ( BY ) license

Continue reading Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 11th

Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 9th

The US nearly matched their five gold medals from the first three days of the Olympics on Tuesday as some of the biggest names on the team – Gabby DouglasSimone BilesKatie LedeckyMichael Phelps, and Ryan Lochte all added a gold medal to their resumes. There was the first silver medalist in men’s just since 1992 and the oldest member of the US team won a bronze medal in equestrian at the young age of 52.

Capt. Locke helps USA women's rugby sevens to fifth place in Rio Games
Continue reading Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 9th

Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 8th

Sunday was another strong day for the US with US coming close to gold in both fencing and shotgun before picking up medals. Cycling teased the country with a US rider not even a quarter kilometer from gold, and then swimming brought the house down in the evening with four pairs of swimmers reaching tomorrow night’s finals and, two gold medals, and three other medal. The weather was not great in Rio affecting several events and cancelling the rowing entirely for the day. Catch up on it all and preview Monday in our daily update.

Rio 2016 Olympic Games - Day 3
Continue reading Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 8th

Rio 2016 Daily Update – August 5th

Friday was the end of the three day lead-in to the Olympics where a couple of sports get underway but not very much is happening. From beginning to end the US action on Friday lasted only about six hours with a good break in there was well. On Saturday the action will be nearly nonstop from 7:30 AM to 8 PM with a bonus beach volleyball night cap three hours later.

August 5th Recap:

Archery

On the last day before the Olympics really swing into action there was just one event going on in Rio. The archery competitors all participated in a 72-arrow ranking round to set the seedings for the individual and team events to be held over the next week. The men went first and Brady Ellison was in top form posting a 690 that was second only to a world record 700 from Kim Woo-Jin of Korea. Finishing 15th with a 674 was Zach Garrett while Jake Kaminski ended up 31st with a 660.

Now if you focus on those seeds.. #2, #15, #31… you may quickly realize that they are closely bunched on the bracket. Indeed if Ellison and Kaminski both win their first matches they will face off in the second round. And the winner of that would face Garrett if he wins his first two matches. Unfortunately the US has three of the eight in one eighth of the bracket and thus only one will be able to reach the quarterfinals and try to medal. As far as matchups go it’s Kaminski vs. Marcus D’Almeida on Tuesday at 3:18 PM, Ellison vs. Ali Elghrari on Tuesday at 3:31 PM, and Garrett vs. Haziq Kamaruddin on Wednesday at 3:18 PM. I believe the round of 32 matches for all of them would be later on those days.

In the meantime the three will team up to try and secure a medal in the team event on Saturday. The US is seeded second after posting a score of 2024 and has a bye to the quarterfinals where they will face Chinese Taipei or Indonesia at 2:15 PM. The entire team competition is tomorrow so they will keep competing as the day progress if they advance.

On the women’s side the only one competing is Mackenzie Brown who was up and down at times in her ranking round but finished 19th with a 641 score. She’ll face Claudia Mandia in the first knockout round on Monday at 8:26 AM.

Team USA's Brady Ellison in action

August 6th Preview:

All times ET!! All events should be available online via NBC’s Olympic website and apps (assuming a cable package that gives you access). What is live in ET/CT is often tape delayed in MT/PT. Yell at NBC for their ridiculous decision to tape delay an Olympics happening one hour east of ET, it’s insane.

Archery

As mentioned previously, Brady EllisonJake Kaminski, and Zach Garrett will begin the men’s team event at 2:15 PM against Indonesia or Chinese Taipei. Semifinals and a bronze or gold medal final will follow if the US advances. The archery matches should be live as part of MSNBC’s coverage from 2:15-5 PM.

Basketball

The first of many beatdowns of the Olympics is expected on Saturday when the US men face China at 6 PM. This matchup doesn’t feature much intrigue as these two sides met twice in warmups for the Olympics with the US winning by 50 and 49 points. The game will be shown live on NBCSN.

Beach Volleyball

It won’t be until 3:30 PM before beach volleyball gets underway for any Americans when Jake Gibb and Casey Patterson take on Jefferson Pereira and Cherif Younousse to open up their pool play. The sport will keep us up late on several occasions though and Saturday is one of them as April Ross and Kerri Walsh Jennings won’t hit the sand until 11 PM when they face Mariafe Artacho and Nicole Laird. The Gibb/Patterson match will air live on NBC as will Ross/Walsh Jennings later in the evening.

Boxing

Two Americans will enter the ring for round of 32 matches on Saturday. Carlos Balderas starts the lightweight division with a match against Berik Abdrakhmanov at 11:15 AM while Nico Hernandez has a late afternoon 4:30 PM matchup with Manuel Cappai in the light flyweight division. You might be able to catch the Balderas fight live on Telemundo while NBCSN will have them tape delayed as part of their coverage from 9 PM-12 AM.

Cycling

Cycling will begin on Saurday with the men’s road race, only 150.1 miles. Brent Bookwalter and Taylor Phinney will be racing for the US and the race will include Tour de France winner Chris Froome of Great Britain. It begins at 8:30 AM. The road race will be covered live by NBC during their coverage from 8-10:30 AM and by NBCSN in their coverage between 10:30 AM and 3 PM.

Equestrian

The start of the eventing competition will take two days to get through all of the dressage programs but two Americans are in the ring tomorrow. Boyd Martin is the first American out at 10:36 AM while Clark Montgomery goes at 3:14 PM. You’ll be able to catch the equestrian coverage on USA between 3 and 4 PM. One would think they might get Montgomery’s on live, but that’s not certain.

Fencing

The first gold of Rio in fencing will be handed out on Saturday in the women’s individual epee event and two American sisters are in contention. Courtney Hurley will start in the round of 32 at 9:45 AM against Yana Shemyakina while Kelley Hurley faces Nathalie Moellhausen at 10:15 AM in the same round. The other American is Katharine Holmes and she takes on Erika Kirpu at 9:45 AM as well. The round of 16 and quarterfinals proceed pretty quickly after the round of 32 before the semifinals and finals come later in the day. You won’t get much fencing coverage on TV tomorrow as the only scheduled coverage is the final on tape delay during CNBC’s coverage from 5-8 PM.

Field Hockey

Competing in the third straight Olympics for the first time the US hopes to build on a competitive showing in London as they open up with a must win matchup against Argentina at 4 PM. The US has defeated them in the Olympics four years ago as well as in the Pan American games so it’s a winnable matchup and with the top four in the group of six advancing a win in this one could be a difference maker in the quest for the quarterfinals where anything could happen. This one will be shown live on USA.

Gymnastics

While there isn’t really and drama about how the US team will do in qualifying for the men’s event (hint – they’ll make it) the real question on Saturday is how individuals do overall and in each event because Saturday’s qualifying round is what will determine who gets to compete for individual all-around titles as well as individual event titles. The US competes in the second group to take to the apparatus at 1:30 PM. Chris BrooksJake DaltonDanell LeyvaSam Mikulak, and Alex Naddour make up the team this year. Looking to watch it live? Your only chance will be online as NBC will delay their coverage until the evening telecast from 8 PM-12 AM.

Rowing

No medals at stake in rowing tomorrow as all we will see is the opening heats of several events. Gevvie Stone is in the second heat of the women’s single sculls which begins at 8:30 AM. In the men’s pair at 9:30 AM Nareg Guregian and Anders Weiss are in the first heat. Meghan O’Leary and Ellen Tomek will be in the second heat of the women’s double sculls at 10 AM while Anthony FahdenEdward KingTyler Nase, and Robin Prendes in the men’s lightweight four will have to wait to the third and final heat of the 11 AM event. Finally in the 11:50 AM women’s quadruple sculls Tracy EisserMegan KalmoeGrace Latz, and Adrienne Martelli will be in the second heat. Rowing will be covered in two places tomorrow, live on NBC between 8 and 10:30 AM and delayed on NBC between 3 and 4:15 PM.

Rugby Sevens

Rugby makes its return to the Olympics on Saturday with the beginning of the women’s event. The US will compete twice on Saturday, opening at 12 PM against Fiji and closing the day against Colombia at 5 PM. The Fiji match will be shown live on NBCSN while the Colombia match will be live on CNBC.

Shooting

The shooting events get underway with two events beginning and being decided on Saturday. Sarah Scherer and Virginia Thrasher will take part in the women’s 10m air rifle qualification round at 7:30 AM with hopes of advancing to the final at 9:30 AM. The other event being held is the men’s 10m air pistol with the qualification round at 12 PM featuring Will Brown and Jay Shi and that event’s final at 2:30 PM. The women’s rifle final will be live on NBCSN but there is no planned TV coverage of the men’s pistol event.

Soccer

Having already secured a win over New Zealand on Wednesday the US could more or less lock up the group by beating France on Saturday in their 4 PM game. The matchup of the #1 and #3 teams in the world according to the FIFA rankings could be a final four preview and was a great contest in 2012 when the US went down 2-0 early but rallied for a 4-2 win. NBCSN will be your destination for this game.

Swimming

Six events begin on Saturday with four of those ending later in the day and two more moving into evening semifinals. Things start off at 12:02 PM with Chase Kalisz and Jay Litherland in the fourth and final heat of the men’s 400m individual medley. Next up is Dana Vollmer in the fourth heat and Kelsi Worrell in the fifth heat of the women’s 100m butterfly at 12:28 PM. Starting at 12:48 PM Connor Jaeger takes part in the sixth heat with Conor Dwyer in the seventh heat of the men’s 400m freestlye. That’ll take a little while and it’s not until 1:32 PM that we’ll see Maya DiRado in the fourth heat and Elizabeth Beisel in the fifth heat of the the women’s 400m individual medley. The final individual event to start is the 2:04 PM men’s 100m breaststroke where Kevin Cordes and Cody Miller are together at the center of the fourth heat. The afternoon will wrap up with the US 4x100m freestyle relay team competing in the second heat of that 2:15 PM event.

In the evening we’ll see finals of men’s and women’s individual medley events as well as the men’s 400m freestyle and the women’s 4x100m freestyle. With no semifinals in those events swimmers will need a top eight time in the heats. In the other events it’ll be an evening semifinal so the heats in the afternoon only require a top 16 time to advance. The swimming events will all be live for ET and CT with afternoon heat coverage on NBC as well as the evening coverage.

Table Tennis

One of the more interesting potential storylines on Saturday will be that of 16-year-old Kanak Jha in the table tennis event. He starts the men’s singles competition with a matchup against Nima Alamian at 9:30 AM and would expect to have one more match later in the day if he wins. Jha is supposed to be a potential star but this is certainly not the Olympics where he will be in his prime. Lily Zhang opens her women’s singles competition by taking on Gremlis Arvelo at 10:15 AM while Jennifer Wu faces Eva Odorova at 11 AM. Much later in the day Yijun Feng is the last of the individuals to start as he faces Zhiwen He in the first round of the men’s singles event. NBCSN is planning to show the Zhang match on delay during their coverage from 1-4 PM while Jha’s and Wu’s matches will be on delay on MSNBC’s coverage from 2:15-5 PM. Any second round matches the US athletes would compete in would be shown on delay on NBCSN between 9 PM and 12 AM.

Tennis

It’s hard to talk about exact start times in tennis since matches do vary in length quite a bit and they don’t make any promises that you won’t be on an hour after the match before you started if it goes quickly, but we do know that Madison Keys will lead off the day with her singles match against Danka Kovinic. It’s a busy day for the US on the tennis court as in addition to Keys we’ll see Jack Sock take on Taro Daniel around 11:30 AM, Sloane Stephens take on Eugenie Bouchard in a tantalizing North American matchup around 2:30 PM, and three men’s matches around 1 PM: Brian Baker against Yuichi Sugita, Steve Johnson against Darian King, and Denis Kudla against Andrej Martin. Later in the day, not before 5:45 PM, Venus Williams will face Kirsten Flipkens. If it’s tennis you want it’s all live and on Bravo, though you’ll only get a single match at a time of course.

Volleyball

The US will start their quest to take home gold for the first time by battling potential 51st state Puerto Rico in their Olympic opener at 4:05 PM. Puerto Rico has never been to the Olympics so this will be a big moment for them. Telemundo will have coverage from the start while NBC will have most of it live but won’t have the very start.

Water Polo

Water polo will get underway with the US men taking on defending gold medalists Croatia at 9:20 AM. With four of the six teams in the group moving to the knockout round it’s certainly no must win for the US but it would be a great way to start their Olympics. The match will be live on NBC.

Weightlifting

The US only has four athletes competing in weightlifting in Rio and one of them will get it over with on the very first day. Morghan King will take part in the women’s 48kg competition at 6 PM. There is only one group of competitors in that weight class. Coverage of the event will be delayed on NBCSN between 8 and 9 PM.

Rio 2016 Olympic Review – August 3rd

Women’s Soccer:

The Rio Olympics kicked off for the US on Wednesday with the women’s soccer team taking to the field to take on New Zealand. Riding an 11-match Olympic win streak the US scored early in the game, their earliest Olympic opening goal, through Carli Lloyd in the ninth minute. It was the third straight US Olympic goal scored by Lloyd after she had the brace to win the gold against Japan in 2012. The US had other chances throughout the first half but wouldn’t secure their second until the first minute of the second half when Alex Morgan secured the win. Hope Solo had the shutout in goal for the US. Tobin Heath and Morgan Brian picked up the assists on the two US goals.

The other game in the US group saw France dominate Colombia 4-0. With both teams sitting on three points and likely to win their final games the matchup between the USA and France is almost surely for the top spot in the group. Those two last met in the Olympics in the group opener in 2012. The US was down 2-0 within 14 minutes but rallied for an incredible 4-2 win.

US Soccer Recap
NBC Highlights

Next US game:
Saturday, August 3rd – 4 PM ET – France – NBCSN

Rio 2016 – Women’s Soccer Preview

Soccer has been held at nearly every Olympics held, missing only the first games in 1896 and again in 1932. The 1932 games in Los Angeles instead featured american football as a demonstration sport where some of the best American college players faced off in an exhibition. Women first got the chance to compete in 1996 when women’s soccer was added for the Atlanta Olympics. The soccer tournament in Rio will… not really be in Rio. With so many stadiums used just two summers ago for the World Cup the teams will be traveling across the country to play in five other cities in addition to Rio. That includes Manaus, a four hour flight from Rio in the Amazon. You don’t want to have to play in Manaus.

The US women qualified for the Olympics by winning the CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship in February in Houston. The US men finished third CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying Championship in Salt Lake City and then lost a playoff to Colombia for an Olympic spot in March as they will miss the Olympics for the second straight edition.

The Team:

Unlike a World Cup team which would consist of 23 members the US Team is made up of just 18 women, a mix of veterans from the the last few Olympics and newcomers breaking into the team.

Seven of the 18 members were on the team in London and three were on the team in Beijing. Hope Solo is the oldest player on the team having turned 35 on Saturday while Mallory Pugh is the youngest by four years at just 18.

Links are to twitter accounts for the athletes.

US Women’s Soccer Team
GK – Alyssa Naeher
GK – Hope Solo**
DF – Whitney Engen
DF – Julie Johnston
DF – Meghan Klingenberg
DF – Ali Krieger
DF – Kelley O’Hara*
DF – Becky Sauerbrunn*
MF – Morgan Brian
MF – Crystal Dunn
MF – Tobin Heath**
MF – Carli Lloyd**
MF – Allie Long
MF – Megan Rapinoe*
FW – Lindsey Horan
MF – Alex Morgan*
FW – Christen Press
FW – Mallory Pugh
* – Was on team in 2012 (London)
** – Was on team in 2012 (London) & 2008 (Beijing)

Format:

The Women’s Soccer Tournament is made up of 12 teams divided into three groups. After round-robin play in each group all the teams that finish in 1st and 2nd and two of the 3rd place teams qualify for the Quarterfinals. At that point it is a regular knockout tournament. In the group stage it’s three points for a win, one for a draw with GD and GF used as tiebreakers before head-to-head results.

Schedule:

The US’s group consists of France and Colombia (both for the second straight Olympics) as well as New Zealand. As the defending World Cup and Olympic champions they are expected to win their group and would face a third place team that could be someone like China or Canada. The US starts in Belo Horizonte for their first two matches but does have to go to Manaus for their third match. Only two other teams (South Africa and Brazil) will face that long travel.

The US is ranked first in the world with France third, New Zealand 17th, and Colombia 24th.

Wednesday, August 3rd – 6 PM ET – New Zealand
Saturday, August 6th – 4 PM ET – France
Tuesday, August 9th – 6 PM ET – Colombia
Sunday, August 12th – Quarterfinals
Tuesday, August 16th – Semifinals
Sunday, August 19th – Medal Matches

Past Results:

The US Women are the three-time defending champs, along with winning a silver in 2000 and a gold in the Inaugural tournament in 1996.  The only other team to win a gold medal is Norway. Japan and Canada won medals for the first time in 2012 while Brazil (two silvers), Germany (three bronze) and Norway (a gold and a bronze) are the only countries other than the US with multiple medals.

Canada Defeats US, No CONCACAF Futsal Championship for Americans This Cycle

The damage done over the final ten minutes of leg one continued over the first half hour of leg two as Canada scored three times in the first ten minutes after the half to lead 5-1 with ten minutes left. Tony Donatelli and Daniel Mattos both added late goals but it wasn’t enough and the US was eliminated after a 9-7 loss on aggregate. Adriano Dos Santos had scored for the US in the first half. It’ll be a long four years until the US gets another shot to reach the 2020 CONCACAF Futsal Championship.

Previous CONCACAF Futsal Championship Coverage:
Preview
Day 1 Update

USA Blows 3-0 Lead Against Canada in First Game of Futsal Playoff

Things were going so well for the US Wednesday night in San Jose, Costa Rica as they lead 3-0 with just ten minutes left in the first leg of their playoff against Canada. Goals from Franck TayouPatrick Healy, and Nelson Santana over the previous ten minutes had given them the lead. Canada scored in the 30th minute but even with five minutes left the US still had a good 3-1 lead heading towards the halfway point of the playoff. Then Canada erupted for three quick goals to take a 4-3 lead and all the US could do was salvage a tie with a late Daniel Mattos goal. With the scores level after the first leg it’ll all come down to game two tonight. The US has never missed out on a CONCACAF Futsal Championship.

Previous CONCACAF Futsal Championship Coverage:
Preview

USA Futsal Team to Attempt to Reach 2016 CONCACAF Championship

The USA Futsal team will take on Canada in a two-leg matchup down in San Jose, Costa Rica with hopes to qualify for the CONCACAF Championship. The US has qualified for all five of the previous CONCACAF championships and needs to advance to keep their hopes alive of advancing to the CONCACAF world cup for the first time since 2008. The team to advance will be the one scoring more goals on aggregate. Game one will be tonight with game two tomorrow night.

For those not in the know, futsal is a form of indoor soccer played 5-on-5 and is not the same as the more common indoor soccer played in the US.  Each game is made up of two 20-minute halves.