Not the same as mine. I’m just really glad that the Obama’s did not choose a golden doodle. It saves me lots of questions about mine being the same age as theirs and is that why we picked it, etc…
Here’s my dog…

Not the same as mine. I’m just really glad that the Obama’s did not choose a golden doodle. It saves me lots of questions about mine being the same age as theirs and is that why we picked it, etc…
Here’s my dog…

In the class I am co-teaching, my colleague asked the students, with regard to Antigone, “was Creon wrong to think people would see him as weak for changing his mind?” The question led to a discussion on why we do not let our leaders change opinion. One student pointed out that leaders are loved when they represent our interest. Another interesting answer was that we expect leaders to deserve the privileges of their office more than us because they are better than us.
I really like the second answer, because it brings out the curious nature of ressentiment that companies a democratic society with a strong spirit of equality. If we are all equals, we want there to be impeccable reasons for the vast differences in our fate and prosperity. This might not only explain the complicated reaction to bad political decisions, but also our public reaction to Michael Phelps, Alex Rodriguez, etc.
This week’s derby of the week takes us to Catalonia, the half-origin of Stephen Maturin, art, and cultural center, and a spirited and independent coastal region of Southern Europe. Barcelona seem to be the consensus best football team on planet earth right now, and Lionel Messi the best player. Espanyol are beyond struggling this year. They sit dead bottom of the table, and this club that was a UEFA Cup Finalist just two years ago is now facing relegation.
While Barcelona are the symbol of Catalan independence, Anti-Franco politics, and above all, anti-Madrid, Espanyol is clearly the city’s second club… to the point where even when they were up 3-0 on Bayern Leverkusen in the 88 UEFA Cup final, the Catalan papers led with a story about than Barca manager Johan Cruyff… no respect I tell ‘ya.
While one sympathizes with Espnayol’s status, and it would seem sad to open a new stadium next year in the second division, the plot lines here are all Barcelona. They are running away with the La Liga title, they have more goals than 20-18 place combined. And two weeks ago, Henry, Eto’o, and Messi had more goals than ANY other side in the whole league. They are awe-inspiring right now.
But, it is a local derby, a 108 year old rivalry at that. Not to mention Barcelona will be traveling to Lyon on Tuesday for their first leg in the Champions League Quarterfinals. Nevertheless, it’s hard to see this as anything but an easy Barcelona triumph.
I’m going to see Joshua Bell play Barber’s Violin Concerto with Minnesota Orchestra on Thursday. I like to be familiar with pieces before I go to hear them, so I went to download the piece. I didn’t see a Bell recording, but there was on by Hilary Hahn who is Baltimore trained, world class, and was essentially traded by her record company for Joshua Bell. I’ve listened to the piece twice, and then I noticed something funny about the recording on my playlist. It is not just Hilary Hahn instead of Joshua Bell, it is Hilary Hahn and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. Strictly speaking, Hahn and Bell are not really rival performers, and the MO and the SPCO are not either… but I found it a strange coincidence that I was preparing to listen to a concert by listening to recording by the colleagues that both the soloist and the group are probably compared with most frequently. The nice thing about the rivalry is that, in the end, all four parties presumably got a share of my money, and they are all good value for it.
“Dos a Cero.” The chant from Sam’s Army must be getting quite tired for Mexican football. It has become such a part of the recent rivalry that you can pretty much write off Mexico when they get down 1-0 in the US every time because they are equally as close to hearing that mocking phrase by a bunch of Americans who can probably barely speak English properly, let alone Spanish as they are to tying up the match. The second came at the death in this match, but I guarantee you you will NEVER see Mexico come back from 2-0 down on US soil for at least the next 20 years.
Here’s a youtube clip of the match highlights.
Some thoughts on the match:
How good is this rivalry? Voodoo dolls are being sold to Mexico fans of a USA footballer with the name “gringo” on the back of the kit. You cannot make this stuff up!
UPDATE: USA XI for tonight:
GK Tim Howard (Everton)
RB Frankie Hejduk (Columbus Crew)
CB Carlos Bocanegra (Rennes)
CB Oguchi Onyewu (Standard Liege)
LB Heath Pearce (Hansa Rostock)
DM Michael Bradley (Borussia MoechenGladbach)
LM Demarcus Beasly (Rangers)
AM Clint Dempsey (Fulham)
RM Sacha Klestjan (Chivas USA)
F Ladon Donovan (Bayern Munich)
F Brian Ching (Houston Dynamo)
Not a huge surprise really. I’m not a big Brian Ching fan, I think Altidore is already shown enough to get a run out, and I’d imagine he’ll come in off the bench. We are weak at fullback, and Michael Bradley is not having the same success in Germany that he had in Holland. No Andres Guardado for Mexico and no Carlos Vela either. That will help out Hejduk and Pearce, who can be dangerous going forward. We should be much taller than Mexico and we tend to exploit that fact against them.
My head says the US will win, but my heart feels like our magic run against Mexico is long overdue for a reversal.
Some youtube clips worth making your acquaintance with if you want to be up on your NAFTA Derby.
Below: The last time they played, a friendly between USA and Mexico. (Programming note: Drew Moore, who did not do very well marking Johnny Magillon, will not be in Wednesday’s match. USA Goal scorer’s Jozy Altidore and Oguchi Onyewu were named to the team… as were players of note Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan)
Match report from USA 2 Mexico 2 (February 6, 2008)
Below: Last meaningful game: 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final (Soldier Field, Chicago) USA 2, Mexico 1. Benny Feilhaber has fallen off the face of the earth, but here’s his spectacular tournament clincher.
Below: A bit of the flavor of the rivalry. Landon Donovan scores a goal in a friendly and Mexico Keeper Oswaldo Sanchez slides in on Eddie Johnson during the celebration. Yikes!
As a potential new blog feature, I am planning on picking a major soccer rivalry/derby to cover for the week. I will try and give a sense of the history, the cultural interest and the news during the run-up for these big time matches. This weekend seems a good time to start as the greatest rivalry in all of sports, the Old Firm Derby between Rangers and Celtic is Saturday. But this week also requires some cheating. Inter plays AC Milan on Sunday, so I may have to slip in some double coverage.
To take cheating on the premise to an even higher level, Old Firm coverage will be preempted through Wednesday so that I can instead write about the USA-Mexico World Cup Qualifier. Why? Because USA-Mexico is the most intense (I didn’t say best, everyone in South America can calm down) international rivalry in the hemisphere. It also is, to be quite brutally honest, the only time that an American side, club or country, plays a match that is “must see television” for the global football fan.
Our players fight their players during matches. Our players fight theirs after matches. Landon Donovan said publicly that he hated the Mexican team before the 2002 World Cup Round of 16 match against Mexico… and then beat Mexico. Our clubs play their clubs in friendlies and tournaments, they always fight after the match. Mexico has never, to my recollection, shook hands with the USA after a match the USA has won. I’m not condoning any of this behavior, especially the violence, but I mention these facts to emphasize the bitterness between the two sides.
I have often joked that I could get a grammy award simply by angling for one of the grammy’s ridiculous categories that seems so specific that it elimintaes every other person on earth. I can picture it now, “and the grammy for the best album recorded of songs sung by someone named Steven singing to music while doing something else at the same time goes to….” (cue shot of me with fingers crossed). A stretch? I present to you the clip of the media Q & A for “Best Hawaiian Music Album.”
To make amends, allow me to show the yutube of Radiohead and USC marching band: