sounderfan
08 Jul 2005, 07:46 AM
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/ABPub/2005/07/07/2002367978.jpg
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/sports/2002368142_judd08.html
Official attendance, which usually tends to be optimistic, was initially announced as 10,616. Press-box managers, receiving, uh, updated information, later revised it to 15,831.
Either way, more people have paid good money in this town to watch Lauren Jackson puff herself into shape at KeyArena.
Isn't this supposed to be a soccer town?
Maybe everybody was stuck on the Viaduct. Maybe they were home watching Portland's Natefest — or worse, competitive poker — on cable. Maybe they simply can't work up the gumption to drop $20 to $65 on a pair of soccer games whose ultimate meaning, to steal a soccer term, is close to nil.
Still, where was the cadre of Puget Sound fans who still find themselves, from time to time, daydreaming about Tommy Hutchinson tearing up the left wing on that nasty old AstroTurf in the Kingdome?
If soccer is, as legend has it, part of the lifeblood of recreational sport in this town, where were the faithful last night?
Maybe they're all coming tomorrow, when the U.S. takes on Canada. Maybe not.
Either way, Act 1 was a letdown, both on the field, where the U.S. struggled before finally powering past badly outmanned Cuba, and off.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/sports/2002368142_judd08.html
Official attendance, which usually tends to be optimistic, was initially announced as 10,616. Press-box managers, receiving, uh, updated information, later revised it to 15,831.
Either way, more people have paid good money in this town to watch Lauren Jackson puff herself into shape at KeyArena.
Isn't this supposed to be a soccer town?
Maybe everybody was stuck on the Viaduct. Maybe they were home watching Portland's Natefest — or worse, competitive poker — on cable. Maybe they simply can't work up the gumption to drop $20 to $65 on a pair of soccer games whose ultimate meaning, to steal a soccer term, is close to nil.
Still, where was the cadre of Puget Sound fans who still find themselves, from time to time, daydreaming about Tommy Hutchinson tearing up the left wing on that nasty old AstroTurf in the Kingdome?
If soccer is, as legend has it, part of the lifeblood of recreational sport in this town, where were the faithful last night?
Maybe they're all coming tomorrow, when the U.S. takes on Canada. Maybe not.
Either way, Act 1 was a letdown, both on the field, where the U.S. struggled before finally powering past badly outmanned Cuba, and off.