Wow, I've been phenomenally lazy with the blog lately, but I've been working a lot. However, I've still been keeping up to date with all the sports news out there and I'll keep posting interesting articles that I find here. In addition, I promise I'll be posting more original content soon. In the mean time, here's a great article about the World Cup (THANK GOD for the world cup . . . if I had to sit through another f***ing women's softball game on ESPN, I might have killed myself.
In less than 48 hours, our televisions will be taken over by the biggest sporting event the world has to offer. Your TweetDeck (or whatever Twitter application you use) will be lousy with friends, celebrities, and sportswriters tweeting about it. Your Facebook friends will be centering their status updates about it. And, for the next five weeks, when you walk into your favorite sports bars, as you peer at the flat-screens you’ll notice an increased presence of a game to which you might not be accustomed.
It’s World Cup time.
Like the Olympics and the Fields Medal, this is an every-four-year event. It pits nation against nation in the sport that still stirs up the most passion among its fans on a worldwide scale. Imagine if we only got one NCAA Tournament every four years. Well, this is the one summer in four that soccer (the word we’ll use for this article, though we’re aware that most of the world calls it football) lovers get to enjoy their chance to crown a champion. If you follow RTC on Twitter (if you don’t, shame on you, and go click our logo at right), you’ve probably been impressed by our occasional tweet about other sports or even current events. It’s not exactly a long limb we’d be going out on for us to assume that if you’re a college basketball fan, you’ve probably got an interest in other sports, too — though international soccer might not be one of them.
Worry not, our fellow college hoopheads. We’ve got you covered. We want you to be able to hang in those conversations at those sports pubs. We want you to be able to approach that lovely blonde bespectacled German girl wearing her Deutschland jersey in the supermarket (this actually happened to us a week ago). We want you to impress your friends with your world vision and increased overall sports knowledge. You think those kids in the stands at Duke or Xavier or Utah State are both well-prepared and berserk? Wait until you hear the crowd at a World Cup soccer match. We want you to enjoy that vital aspect of it all, as well. We’re by no means experts on the subject, but to those ends, we give you — trumpet flourish — Rush The Court’s College Basketball Fan’s Guide to Watching the World Cup.
THE TEAMS
First, let’s list some of the participating teams and define those squads in terms familiar to college hoop fans. As you’ll see, by the way, national soccer teams have some of the best nicknames you’ll ever hear. The best? Cameroon. The Indomitable Lions. I mean, COME ON…
South Africa. The host nation. Not much is expected of them, but this is a sports-loving nation that’s becoming more soccer-savvy by the day. They’ve improved in recent years and they’ll be better after this particular World Cup. They don’t have the resources of the bigger national programs, but the chance to play history-making matches in front of their home fans may propel them farther in the tournament than a lot of people will pick them. In terms of college basketball parallels, could this be anybody else but the Butler Bulldogs from last season? We haven’t asked him, but we guarantee you, this is the side (soccer teams are often called “sides” by the way) for which Kyle Whelliston and the Mid-Majority are rooting.



Spain. They’re currently the world #2, but they’re the team everyone’s picking to win it. If you took last year’s Kansas and Syracuse teams and made an all-star team out of it, you got Spain. Like both of those teams last season, Spain can get scoring from any position, except maybe from defender and captain Carles Puyol. I wouldn’t leave Xavi, David Villa, Fernando Torres, Cesc Fabregas, or Andres Iniesta open past the midfield line. The problem is, like Cole Aldrich, Wesley Johnson, and Sherron Collins, they’ll use their size and/or speed to create their own scoring space regardless of what you do, unless they allow you to bring a baseball bat, and even that might not do it. Like our KU/SU all-star team parallel, there just aren’t any weaknesses, here — the second team would contain starters for most other squads. Ridiculous athletes? Check. Gorgeous passing? Check. Scoring ability? Double check. Coaching? Check. Most experts feel you can go ahead and write the check for La Furia Roja (awesome, again). Of course, that’s what we thought about Kansas last season…which is why we threw Syracuse in there.


Netherlands. A national side with a proud and illustrious history (but no World Cup titles), this year’s Netherlands team is loaded with goal scorers possessing laser-knife accuracy, namely Arjen Robben (who’s 26, looks 40, but plays with the passion and speed of 19), Wesley Sneijder, and that bully Dirk Kuyt. And we think Robin van Persie still has some goals in him. Despite the loads of skill at both ends, almost nobody’s talking about them, and they also have a pretty easy draw, all things considered. The parallel may break down as far as the titles are concerned, but otherwise this sounds a lot like last year’s Duke Blue Devils — overflowing with talent, getting blamed for an easy draw, and ignored without good reason. And, like some recent Blue Devil teams, the Netherlands has a little recent history of bowing out of the big tournament earlier than expected. We saw what Coach K’s team thought about that last year, though, didn’t we?

OUR PICKS
Keep in mind, this is a college basketball blog. We don’t even know if what’s written above is coherent. We just took what we know about these teams and personalities and made connections with what we really know, which is college roundball. So don’t be making any special trips to the ATM after reading this, unless you’re betting opposite what we say.
So, disclaimer out of the way, here we go: we’ll take England over Mexico in a seriously close quarterfinal, and the Netherlands surprising the holy living caipirinhas out of Brazil in the other quarter on that side. On the other end, we’ll take Tim Duncan and Argentina over Tom Izzo’s Germany side, and Spain’s La Furia Roja over Cameroon’s Indomitable Lions in a battle of great nicknames (Cameroon wins that one if it were nicknames only, though). That gives us Netherlands over England is the first Final Four matchup, and call us crazy, but we’re taking the Oranje (that’s Holland). Then it’s Spain over Argentina in the other Final Four bout.
It would be the safe play to take Spain in the final…but where’s the fun in that? We’re going with the Netherlands to pull the shocker. It wasn’t a shock when Duke won in Indianapolis a few months ago, but as far as the tournament as a whole, the similarities are there. They’re talented at every spot, deep, have scorers who can light up the scoreboard and defenders who can turn out your lights. They’re well-coached. The road in won’t be very difficult, and despite all that, nobody will really talk about them until they actually get close to winning it. If they actually get there and knock off the Spaniards, it would be closer to Villanova over Georgetown, but what the hell. The Netherlands will be singing “One Shining Moment” on July 11th — or some strange-sounding version thereof.
And that pick has nothing to do with the fact that the administrative assistant here at the RTC Southern Compound is a knockout babe from Maastricht.
Enjoy the World Cup, fellow college basketball fans…now that you can.
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