By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
  1. Bill Archer

    Bill Archer BigSoccer Supporter

    Mar 19, 2002
    Washington, NC
    Club:
    Columbus Crew
    Nat'l Team:
    United States
    #1 Bill Archer, Feb 26, 2019
    Last edited: Feb 26, 2019

    Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

    By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
    The Curious Case of Handjob Bob

    It's just too easy to pile on Revs owner Robert Kraft; he's a widower who got a little randy and went looking for a rub & tug from a professional. That's actually the advice they give to NFL and NBA rookies: going to a pro is far better than trolling a nightclub for a little trim and ending up paying 18 years of child support, and the police generally don't even bother with that tier of the personal services industry.

    The problem of course is that, although The Deuce is first rate TV, the ugly reality is that BJ Bobby was apparently being serviced by a third world sex slave who's been bought and sold more times than the average '89 Corolla. One report says that the women were locked up 24/7/365, slept on their massage tables, cooked their meals on the back stairs and were required to service 1500 men every year.

    By almost anyone's standards, Bob has pretty much lapped former LA Clippers owner Donald Sterling in the Worst Person in Sports Sweepstakes. Sterling, a stupid old man from another era - if not planet - made some wildly bigoted private remarks to a friend. He was fined $2.5 million and banned from the NBA for life.

    Former Reds owner Marge Schott, a foul mouthed old hatebag, aside from the usual bigoted crapola (she said they were just jokes), kept Nazi paraphernalia in her bedside table and told people what a swell guy that Hitler fellow was. So long Margie.

    But Handjob Bob has left them in the dust; he was an active, willing participant in commercial grade human oppression although I'm certain we'll be hearing soon that he didn't know those women were literally slaves, he just figured they were University of Miami sorority girls with a side job.

    Or maybe that he heard the Revs are in serious need of a finisher.

    Still, two things render this topic not-yet-ripe-for-comment:

    First, we don't know much about MLS rules regarding owner behavior. We can assume that, like everyone else, they have a morals clause with some kind of sanctions for bringing the league into disrepute, but we just don't know. That said, wouldn't you love to see what the MLS I/O rights to Boston Massachusetts might be worth to some billionaire hedge fund whale who actually likes soccer?

    Secondly, Garber can't do anything until we hear what Roger Goodell is going to do. Don can't (not that he will, but work with me here) demand that Kraft sell the team and then have the NFL fine the guy $10,000 and suspend him for three months. And vice-versa.

    At the end of the day, Don is going to have to more or less mirror whatever Goodell decides to do or risk looking stupid. And it'll be quite a while before Roger does a damn thing.

    One suspects the most likely outcome is that Bob will be forced to turn over both teams to Uday and nothing much will change, but until then there's nothing much to say aside from offering you 3-1 odds that the alias Kraft gave the hostess was "Tom" and not "Brad".

    Just a hunch.

    Speaking of Contemptible Swine

    Anthony Precourt won't be attending Saturday's opening game in Columbus.

    Which actually isn't that unusual; he's never been to one before.

    And the last time he actually did find his was to MAPFRE stadium - November of 2017 - he didn't feel he was treated with the appropriate amount of respect.

    [​IMG]

    He was wrong.

    Enjoy your weekend, Frat Boy. Columbus sure as hell will.

    True Crime

    Apparently HBO is going to be making a movie out of the book American Huckster, which will star Will Farrell as Chuck Blazer. Hopefully, he keeps his clothes on for once, since the body prosthetics and makeup needed to turn him into a 450 pound man would bankrupt the network and, not coincidentally, gross us all out.

    Either way, I won't be writing about it. I've already expressed my opinion about the book, which - short version - is an execrable pile of crap which was written by a couple so-called journalists who wouldn't know a soccer game from a Jai Lai match.

    [​IMG]

    It served mostly as an emotional purgative for Chuck's live-in failed actress girlfriend of 20 some years, who swanned around the globe in private jets, sleeping in five star hotels, being whisked into stretch limos and carried off to the best restaurants on the globe bedecked in designer gowns and then, when the train got derailed, she found a cheap tabloid scribbler to tell how horrible it all was.

    If she found helping him dry his body after a bath by lifting huge folds of fat and using a hair dryer on them so utterly disgusting, well, there was always a door nearby. She chose to call room service and order the charcuterie and a bottle of Dom instead.

    In any case, the book itself - I'm embarrassed to say that I actually read the thing - consists mostly of descriptions of FIFA corruption which didn't involve him at all, and then concluding the section with: "This is the kind of thing, the kind of people, that Blazer was associated with", but they never get around to explaining how he was guilty of any of it.

    Blazer's main crime was in fact tax evasion; he stupidly decided that he could send his salary and commissions to a shell company in the Caymans and nobody would notice. But backdoor accounting tricks are not the fodder for riveting filmmaking.

    In fact, there's a terrific story to be told about Blazer, an immensely complicated bundle of contradictions who found himself surrounded by an unimaginable amount of corruption and theft, saw others pocketing literally hundreds of millions of dollars and found a way - call it the 10% solution - to morally justify to himself activities whereby he could participate but pretend that his hands were clean.

    The problem was, he surely knew better and he died a broken - and broke - man.

    Unfortunately, HBO will surely focus on the apartment where he kept his ex-wife's cats, his penchant for nightly opulent meals and the fact that he couldn't fit into most cars.

    So I just don't care.

    Let Me Introduce You to the Future of US Soccer

    Something that I - and roughly a million others over the next five decades or so - will be writing about is Olivia Moultrie.

    [​IMG]

    She was the first girl ever to play for a boys DA Academy team. She started attending college showcase camps when she was ten and she was invited into the US U14's that same year. When she was 11, she accepted a full scholarship from North Carolina.

    This year, now barely 13, she told Coach Dorrance she has changed her mind.

    Another college? No, a representation deal with the Wasserman Media Group and a multiyear endorsement deal with Nike.

    And if you'll forgive the terrible music, take a second and watch her play the game:



    The amazing thing isn't her skills, which are ridiculous; rather it's her vision and her soccer IQ, which are way, way off the charts. For anyone.

    Some people are concerned because she spent last summer in Europe training with the likes of Bayern Munich and PSG, but the FIFA rule forbidding international transfers for players under 18 also applies to women, although this might be the first time anyone has had reason to notice.

    Plus, we've got our own problems here at home since there is currently no NWSL allocation rule that covers her situation, and in any case they don't allow signing players under 18.

    But now that she's a professional, she cannot play for a college team - not that there'd be much point - and thus the system itself is going to have to figure it out since, obviously, she has to play somewhere. Her father, K.C., who has been training her full time - she dropped out of fifth grade to devote more time to soccer - clearly must have something in mind, but he's not sharing.

    This all becomes even more complicated when you add in the fact that no NWSL team, by itself, can even begin to pay her what she would command in an open market, and asking her to sign for the league max of a bit over $40,000 a year (which no one actually gets anyway since it would mean paying everyone else on the roster minimum wage) would be an insult.

    Of course, star US women are paid - rather well - by USSF to play in the NWSL when not otherwise needed, but unless they put her on the USWNT right now, that doesn't apply, and that would seem more than a bit premature. Olivia may be tough but she's really not physically ready to bang bodies with women like Kelly O'Hara or Tobin Heath.

    However this all shakes out - and I do wish I had more confidence in the dullards at Soccer House to get it right - when the 2023 women's world cup rolls around, she'll be all of 17 years old. Too soon?

    Maybe, but so far at least, age hasn't seemed to hold her back much. Stay tuned.
    .
     
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Comments

Discussion in 'Articles' started by Bill Archer, Feb 26, 2019.

    1. kgilbert78

      kgilbert78 Member+

      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      United States
      Dec 28, 2006
      Cowlumbus, OH
      Club:
      Borussia Mönchengladbach
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      Nice highlights--but we'll see what happens when she grows up. Hopefully, it's good. But we've seen 14-15 year old whizzes before who, well, Freddie Adu'ed...

      Sometimes the body changes quite a bit. I have a buddy who graduated HS at 5'2". A couple of years later he was and remains 6'2".
       
    2. AndyMead

      AndyMead Homo Sapien

      Nov 2, 1999
      Seat 12A
      Club:
      Sporting Kansas City

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      I got sent Steve Davis's review copy of American Huckster (someone scrambled a media name/address list). I can confirm that it's little more than a salacious load of sensationalized excrement. Unlike Bill, I never finished it.

      I guess if you like juicy tell-alls, it's fine, but if you live and breathe American soccer, and you're actually familiar with most of the events and characters, it quickly becomes unreadable.

      And it's a shame. The real story is shocking and titillating enough all by itself - with the caveat that you need to be up to speed with the realities of international sports governance, rights fees and other machinations. Knowledge that isn't widespread enough to get a book on any best-seller list, or optioned to Hollywood.

      ----
      As to the latest Freddy Adu, the NWSL and USSF have enough problems without dealing with a 13/14 year-old young woman. I see you're also not writing about the wife of New Jersey's governor taking over day to day operations of Sky Blue FC. The NWSL has to figure out what it wants to be when it grows up first. And for me the "federation player" contracts in NWSL are what the three league owned teams were to MLS - a necessary evil to get the league up and running, but eventually a weight around the neck of the league that prevents expansion and investment and needs to be dealt with before the league can really move forward. That's complicated because, unlike the fact that MLS ownership had contracted to three rich guys plus Horowitz by 2002, the NWSL is an even mix of MLS/USL co-owned teams with resources and legacy teams that are probably burning more cash than they're comfortable with without giving back the USSF's money for the federation players.
       
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    3. Bill Archer

      Bill Archer BigSoccer Supporter

      Mar 19, 2002
      Washington, NC
      Club:
      Columbus Crew
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      I don't find Tammy Murphy taking control of Sky Blue to be anything other than a hopeful sign. Her husband does, after all, own the team and she clearly can't do any worse than the last team President.

      At the least she can get those women out of housing with cardboard and trash bags instead of windows and into a practice facility with running water so they don't have to commute covered in sweat and dirt.

      Governor Murphy, a Goldman Sacs alum, has owned the team for 12 years and has lost a boatload of money doing it. His entire motivation, like most of the others, was philanthropic; he wanted to see womens professional sport succeed.

      The bottom line truth here is that it isn't working and USSF either needs to come up with a Plan B or else pull the plug
       
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    4. TimB4Last

      TimB4Last Member+

      May 5, 2006
      Dystopia

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      Did Sunil Gulati rate a mention, in either the Kraft story or the Blazer book?
       
    5. Lloyd Heilbrunn

      Lloyd Heilbrunn Member+

      Feb 11, 2002
      Jupiter, Fl.
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      MLS will punish Robert Kraft by making him keep the Revs...
       
    6. Kejsare

      Kejsare Member+

      Portland Timbers
      Mar 10, 2010
      Virginia
      Club:
      Portland Timbers
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      Ms. Moultrie is apparently moving to Portland to train with the Thorns youth team. It will put her in the same town as Nike and to (potentially) train with the senior squad in a few years.
       
      Bill Archer repped this.
    7. autogolazzo

      autogolazzo Member+

      Mar 4, 2007

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      Speaking of things that people didn't talk about until well after the fact (Chuck Blazer), why is nobody investigating Russian doping at the World Cup?
       
    8. Beau Dure

      Beau Dure Member+

      May 31, 2000
      Vienna, VA

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      Coincidentally, I'm reading American Huckster now, and I have to be grateful because it saved me from a mistake in my next book -- a mistake made by several news outlets and now corrected at a fine one, which wrote an utterly charming correction:

      https://www.theguardian.com/football/2017/jul/13/chuck-blazer-obituary

      The way the story was told, mostly because the NY Daily News story that begat this book had a passage that was either clumsy or corrected, Blazer was intercepted by the feds on his way to Elaine's in November 2011. Unless his mobility scooter has a time-travel function and go back before May 2011, when Elaine's closed, that would not be possible.

      I'm not as down on the book as everyone else, but I've found it really loses focus about halfway through. The chapter I just read was basically "FIFA, FIFA, FIFA, FIFA ... oh, right, Chuck was there, too."

      The details of how FIFA entertains the wives of ExCo members were entertaining. I wonder what would happen if an ExCo member had a husband.
       
      TimB4Last repped this.
    9. MarioKempes

      MarioKempes Member+

      Real Madrid, DC United, anywhere Pulisic plays
      Aug 3, 2000
      Proxima Centauri
      Club:
      Real Madrid
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      How is it that Mr. Kraft would know he was being serviced by a slave? Was it on her forehead? In her eyes? I wasn't there, but I'd bet the place doesn't advertise that fact. So how was he supposed to know? Most disturbing is that Kraft is worth 6.6 Billion. He can't buy a girlfriend? Sheesh. Why take the risk (legal, health, social, etc.)? Makes no sense.
       
    10. Beau Dure

      Beau Dure Member+

      May 31, 2000
      Vienna, VA

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      I once Googled a cross-country skier I was writing about at the Olympics. Turns out she shares a name with a very classy Las Vegas escort. The protocols for hiring such people are detailed, and the "you are not hiring me for sex" disclaimer is an impressive bit of lawyering. It was fascinating.
       
    11. Jazzy Altidore

      Jazzy Altidore Member+

      Sep 2, 2009
      San Francisco
      Club:
      Los Angeles Galaxy
      Nat'l Team:
      United States

      Stuff I Won't Be Writing About

      By Bill Archer on Feb 26, 2019 at 9:53 AM
      He wouldn't know. And the women were not slaves. One woman who serviced Kraft actually owned the parlor. The other woman was a Florida resident with a massage license. There have been no sex trafficking charges brought.
       

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