Monday, June 26, 2006

Late goal saves point for United - The Daily Graphic

By Julie Horbal
The Daily Graphic
Friday June 23, 2006

Mark Nunn’s patience has paid off in a big way.
After working tirelessly on the sidelines for his entire United career to date, Nunn’s first ever Southport goal gave his squad a much-needed point last night.
With just minutes remaining in the match between Southport United (1-3-2) and Reservoir Dogs (1-4-1) last night at Southport Recreation Complex soccer pitch, Nunn delivered a beauty of a tally off a goalmouth scramble for a 2-2 final and pulled his club out of a three-game losing streak.
“He was so discouraged last year because he couldn’t put the ball in the net. It was so good to see him deliver,” said excited Southport coach Albert Philippot following the nailbiter. “After three losses, that tie is nice to have.”
It was not nice the whole way through, as the game, which was Southport’s first after a 9-0 blowout at the hands of Winnipeg Triumph on June 16, did not start out promisingly.
Reservoir Dogs went up 1-0 with 24 minutes gone in the contest, while Southport flailed around the field and left men unmarked.
Philippot took some blame for the early confusion, as he was trying “something new,” but expected the players to be a little more organized than they were.
“We tried to mix the players’ positions around and basically everybody didn’t know which position they were supposed to be in,” laughed Philippot.
“That’s why we had a slow start. Once we got back to our normal positions, though, things improved considerably.”
United started mounting pressure midway through the first half and fired shot after shot at the Dogs’ keeper and gradually wore him down.
At the 55-minute mark, Southport’s Trevor Kehler corralled an incoming corner kick and kept chipping away until the ball found the back of the Dogs’ net to even the game 1-1.
“At moments, we had momentum. There were some moments that we seemed to struggle, but it’s not a loss,” said Philippot, who had great praise for his squad, but also some constructive criticism.
“We’ve got to practice our first touch, because that was our killer. We couldn’t get more than three passes together. That doesn’t work. If you can’t make more than three passes, you can’t win a game.”
Both sides had trouble getting the ball to settle down for themselves following the equalizer and both were fervent in their attempts to break the deadlock.
Southport keeper Steve Assenmacher made a few huge jumping saves, but eventually fell victim to a defensive miscue, which found him on the ground at the front of the penalty area and the ball in the back of the United net.
United lost some of its drive immediately following the go-ahead goal, but rallied enough to give Nunn the big opportunity he needed to knot the affair.
With 10 minutes left in the contest, Jamie Bernard delivered a pass to the front of the net and Nunn missed the shot, regrouped and finally buried it.
Southport’s bench erupted in a moral -- if not statistical -- victory.
“Everyone’s spirits definitely improved,” said Philippot, whose club next faces Tri-S Strike Force (0-5) at home on June 28 at 7:30 p.m.
“That was basically a win for us. After that 9-0 thumping, this is improved. We’ve got to play our positions a little bit better, but I’m very happy with this outcome. The guys played hard.”

Friday, June 23, 2006

Late goal saves point for United The Daily Graphic

Late goal saves point for United


By Julie Horbal
The Daily Graphic
Friday June 23, 2006

Mark Nunn’s patience has paid off in a big way.
After working tirelessly on the sidelines for his entire United career to date, Nunn’s first ever Southport goal gave his squad a much-needed point last night.
With just minutes remaining in the match between Southport United (1-3-2) and Reservoir Dogs (1-4-1) last night at Southport Recreation Complex soccer pitch, Nunn delivered a beauty of a tally off a goalmouth scramble for a 2-2 final and pulled his club out of a three-game losing streak.
“He was so discouraged last year because he couldn’t put the ball in the net. It was so good to see him deliver,” said excited Southport coach Albert Philippot following the nailbiter. “After three losses, that tie is nice to have.”
It was not nice the whole way through, as the game, which was Southport’s first after a 9-0 blowout at the hands of Winnipeg Triumph on June 16, did not start out promisingly.
Reservoir Dogs went up 1-0 with 24 minutes gone in the contest, while Southport flailed around the field and left men unmarked.
Philippot took some blame for the early confusion, as he was trying “something new,” but expected the players to be a little more organized than they were.
“We tried to mix the players’ positions around and basically everybody didn’t know which position they were supposed to be in,” laughed Philippot.
“That’s why we had a slow start. Once we got back to our normal positions, though, things improved considerably.”
United started mounting pressure midway through the first half and fired shot after shot at the Dogs’ keeper and gradually wore him down.
At the 55-minute mark, Southport’s Trevor Kehler corralled an incoming corner kick and kept chipping away until the ball found the back of the Dogs’ net to even the game 1-1.
“At moments, we had momentum. There were some moments that we seemed to struggle, but it’s not a loss,” said Philippot, who had great praise for his squad, but also some constructive criticism.
“We’ve got to practice our first touch, because that was our killer. We couldn’t get more than three passes together. That doesn’t work. If you can’t make more than three passes, you can’t win a game.”
Both sides had trouble getting the ball to settle down for themselves following the equalizer and both were fervent in their attempts to break the deadlock.
Southport keeper Steve Assenmacher made a few huge jumping saves, but eventually fell victim to a defensive miscue, which found him on the ground at the front of the penalty area and the ball in the back of the United net.
United lost some of its drive immediately following the go-ahead goal, but rallied enough to give Nunn the big opportunity he needed to knot the affair.
With 10 minutes left in the contest, Jamie Bernard delivered a pass to the front of the net and Nunn missed the shot, regrouped and finally buried it.
Southport’s bench erupted in a moral -- if not statistical -- victory.
“Everyone’s spirits definitely improved,” said Philippot, whose club next faces Tri-S Strike Force (0-5) at home on June 28 at 7:30 p.m.
“That was basically a win for us. After that 9-0 thumping, this is improved. We’ve got to play our positions a little bit better, but I’m very happy with this outcome. The guys played hard.”

Kickers doubled up by SpartaCarman Valley Leader

Kickers doubled up by SpartaBy Gene Still
Friday June 23, 2006

Carman Valley Leader — After exploding offensively for seven goals in their previous games, the Carman Kickers weren't able to muster that kind of production against Sparta and it proved costly.
The visiting Sparta squad from Winnipeg doubled up the host Kickers on Thursday, June 15 at the Carman Collegiate Soccer Field.
And along with the loss, Carman lost striker and leading scorer Lyle Vanveen to an undetermined (as of press time) knee injury during the opening half.
“We’re hoping for the best,” said Kickers Coach William Hoogerdijk. “Lyle’s a real offensive catalyst for this team but he also comes back to help out defensively.
“He helps out all over the field.”
said it was a combination of factors that led to his club's second defeat of the Fourth Division Season.
"We didn’t start off that well," Hoogerdijk said, but the visitors took advantage of the poor start and got the game’s first goal 15 minutes into the contest. "We eventually got over that but by that time it was 1-0 (for Sparta)."
He said they had high hopes going into the contest, despite the fact that Sparta was undefeated. The optimism was based in part on their previous 7-2 defeat of Colo Colo. Hooegerdijk said they felt like Sparta had a style (speed) that they matched up well against.
But once again it was a combination of lack of finish around the net offensively and defensive breakdowns that led to the loss.
"You can create all the chances you want but if you don’t cash in, then you end up on the short end of the stick," he said.
Before Vanveen was forced to leave the contest, he got Carman’s only goal of the opening half but Sparta came away with two before the intermission. The visitors then recorded the next pair to take a 4-1 lead before Kendall Ferris rounded out the scoring late in the final half to make for a 4-2 final.
The result left Carman at .500 with a 2-2 mark good enough for third spot in the Black conference while Sparta is 4-0-1 in first place in the Gold conference.
Kickers' Notebook: It doesn't get any easier for Carman as they were scheduled to host another undefeated team Winnipeg Triumph on June 22. Results were unavailable as of time. See next week's Valley Leader for more on this game.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Kickers get offensive with Colo Colo -Carman Valley Leader

Kickers get offensive with Colo Colo
Effort finally rewarded on the scoreboard

By Gene Still
Friday June 16, 2006

Carman Valley Leader — The Carman Kickers got downright offensive with Colo Colo en route to a convincing 7-2 victory.
Led by striker Lyle Vanveen's four goal performance, the Kickers improved their overall record to 2-1 with the win over the host Colo Colo squad.
Carman dominated the opening half at Crocus Park in Winnipeg and it showed on the scoreboard as they built up a commanding 5-0 lead before the break.
Vanveen opened the scoring and then got the third tally of the contest on a penalty kick which turned out to be the eventual winner.
Kickers' Coach William Hoogerdijk said overall they played a solid game and as the score indicated, especially the offence where – unlike other matches they've played – scoring opportunities generated by hard work were rewarded on the scoreboard.
“That was really encouraging. The offence got a lot of confidence in this game,” Hoogerdijk said.
However it wasn't necessarily a case of total domination by the visitors as the second half essentially ended in a 2-2 draw with both Carman tallies coming courtesy of high-scoring striker Vanveen.
"It was a tale of two very different halfs," Hoogerdijk said. "But we still could've had a few more (goals) in the second half."
The coach noted that they also played a lot of their bench in the final half and worked on other parts of their game, such as defensive play.
"We don't want to embarrass anybody by trying to run up the score but we also don't want to lose our intensity," Hoogerdijk explained. "I was happy but kind of disappointed at the same time with the two goals that they scored on us.
"It wasn't necessarily that we gave up the two goals but it was how we gave them up because of some defensive lapses on our part. You can't make those kind of mistakes in the games we've got coming up because they're going to burn you."
The coach noted they were also able to get some playing time for a couple of new additions from Winnipeg.
Midfielder-forward Stephen Melvin brings some speed and height along with offensive playmaking and scoring skills to the line-up. He's joined by fullback Gareth Davies who Hoogerdijk described as a solid defensive player.
"It's just another wrinkle that we've been able to add to our line-up," he said.
Kickers notebook: Carman's next home game was June 15 against Sparta FC. Results were unavailable as of press time. After that they again play the role of hosts on Thursday, June 22 at 7:30 p.m. when the Winnipeg Triumph travel to Carman Collegiate field.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Refs in short supply


Sam Mizuno (middle) referees an MMSL match between Sons of Italy and St. James United. Schedules have been affected by the ref shortage. JESSE JOHNSTON Sun

Refs in short supply
Attacks from players part of problem
By KEN WIEBE, STAFF REPORTER

The Manitoba Major Soccer League had a problem and the only way to solve it was to shorten its schedule.

Teams in the MMSL used to play 22 games, plus playoffs, but the numbers this season have been capped at 18 maximum per team.

Where does the problem stem from?

A shortage of qualified referees, caused at least partly by an increase in abusive situations toward the officials.

A quick glance at the discipline section of the Manitoba Soccer Association website shows a laundry list of incidents that had to be penalized -- and many of them harshly.

The two categories of offences include physical assault of the referee and threatening the referee with physical harm.

Some of the players are eligible to return later this summer, but Northwest player Matt Cabral's suspension runs until 2021.

COULDN'T FILL SCHEDULE

"About four or five years ago, we told the league that something needs to be done," said Larry Eloy, a long-time member of the referee fraternity. "Nobody really took it (the shortage) seriously. Basically, last year there were times we couldn't fill the schedule. That's when it really hit the fan."

In November of 2005, the Manitoba Soccer Association put a task force for referee development in place to try and remedy the problem, with Eloy serving as the chairperson.

While it's a little early to gauge the results, most believe the task force is a step in the right direction.

"Every year we get 30 to 40 people who take the referee's course but by the end of the summer, we've got three to five who stick around to (referee) and that's not a very good retention rate," said Eloy, noting burnout is another factor leading to referees stepping aside. "For our part, the referee development went downhill as well because all the instructors and assessors were referees as well and we didn't have time to look at these new guys and give them pointers and help them out. We had to fill the gaps (in the schedule) and referee games."

This year, a point was made to ensure assessors were getting out to help the new referees rather than just filling out the schedule.

"Our short-term goal was to slow the bleeding down for this year," said Eloy, noting the referee shortage is a global problem rather than a local one. "We've got to achieve some long-term goals for five years down the road. You don't just become a referee overnight, not a good one. It probably takes five years to know if somebody is going to be good. On average, you get 100 referees and you hope to keep 30 of them and probably only three of them will be superstars. The rest will be mid-grade guys who treat it as a hobby."

Brent Boulton, a vice-president for MMSL, is concerned about the shortage of officials.

"A lot of people are retiring and they're not being replaced by younger officials," said Boulton, noting the old adage of having to suffer through short-term pain for long-term gain has surfaced. "That situation will get worse before it gets better and we've got to be prepared for it. We've made a long-term decision that we cannot sustain 22 games anymore. We have had a game or two canceled because we didn't have referees for it. It's been tricky to do the schedule and keep it down to 10 games per day.

"The league will continue to be strong, it's in good shape."

As for the abuse Boulton hopes incidents can eventually be eliminated.

"We don't approve of it at any time," said Boulton. "(Offenders) will be dealt with severely.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

The world's watching - Winnipeg Free Press

The world's watching
Millions of rabid soccer fans will see Winnipeg assistant referee Hector Vergara follow his World Cup dream

Fri Jun 9 2006

Paul Wiecek



IT is a rare person who can do their job in front of the watchful eyes of 300 million people and the lenses of 20 television cameras poised to catch the slightest mistake.
It is rarer still to find a person who wants to work -- indeed, dreams to work -- under that kind of scrutiny.

Put the two together -- the ability to perform under the most intense pressure imaginable, coupled with the motivation to do so -- and you have that rarest of human beings, the World Cup soccer referee.


If they do their job well, no one notices them. And if they make a mistake? There were riots in Italy in 2002 after a particularly bad call at a World Cup game against South Korea.

So what kind of person aspires to a job in which the worst-case scenario is you cause civil unrest on a global scale and the best-case scenario is no one even noticed you were there?
As it turns out, it's the same kind of person who ejected his brother from a game in Winnipeg -- more than once.

It's the kind of man who jokingly gives his children, ages three and one, yellow and red cards for misbehaviour at their Whyte Ridge home.

It's the kind of man who single-mindedly pursued a career as a soccer referee from the age of 16 with the same kind of passion, zeal and commitment other Winnipeg boys put into playing hockey.

He's Winnipeg's Hector Vergara, who this month will make history in Germany when he becomes the first Canadian to officiate in two World Cups, and one of just a few dozen officials from any country ever to do so.

"To go to one World Cup is very difficult," says Vergara, who made his World Cup debut as an assistant referee in 2002. "To go to two World Cups is almost impossible."

"This is unprecedented," says Kevan Pipe, head of the Canadian Soccer Association. "Hector has joined the elite of the elite of the world soccer community.

"Canada is not going to the World Cup as a competing nation, but we are going with Hector Vergara as an on-field official. It's something all Canadians can be proud of."

It is also a monumental achievement for a man whose parents fled Chile three decades ago seeking a better life in Canada, only to find themselves forced to take blue-collar jobs once they arrived because their teaching credentials didn't qualify here. So Ana and Hector Vergara Sr. took manual-labour jobs and embarked on a mission familiar to many Canadian immigrants -- to make life better for their children than it was for them.

For Hector Jr., who was 11 when his family came to Canada, that meant his parents put the same kind of commitment into his budding refereeing career as most Canadian parents put into their kids' hockey careers.

"My dad would drive me around the city all summer to different fields so I could referee," Hector Jr. recalled. "It was that kind of support from my family back then, and my wife now, that's allowed me to get to this high level."

Think Vergara has overcome long odds? Consider what his wife, Joanne, has done.

Born with a birth defect that required amputation of both her legs below the knee, she went on to set six world records and win six gold medals in swimming at the 1988 and 1992 Paralympics.

Joanne Vergara says it's her husband who's had the toughest obstacles to overcome.

"In swimming, it's you against the clock," said Joanne, 34. "It's black and white -- who went the fastest against the clock that day.

"But as a referee, you're dealing with crowds reacting emotionally and passionately, and in this day and age, with TV and replays and all of that, it's even tougher to do his job.

"But he's just one of these people who has the confidence to make the calls and stand behind his judgments. He doesn't worry too much about what the crowds think." So what's it like living with a referee? "We're both incredibly competitive and it comes out in all kinds of silly ways," she says.

"And he'll joke sometimes that he's giving the kids a red or yellow card, but he knows better than to do that to his wife."

Vergara got his start refereeing minor soccer games in St. Charles as a teenager. He never gave it up, even as his career took him to a job as bid co-ordinator for the 1999 Pan Am Games and later to being the chief administrative officer of the Manitoba Soccer Association.

While some referees in Europe, like the recently retired Pierluigi Collina, have achieved fame and fortune, Vergara says that for him, it's a hobby.

A hobby, not surprisingly, that has had its controversial moments, none more so than last December when he called back three goals by Liverpool against Sao Paulo in the final of the World Club Championship in Japan.

Sao Paulo went on to win 1-0 and Vergara became Liverpool's whipping boy, even though replays showed all three of his calls were correct.

Within days, messages from irate Liverpool fans began piling up on the Manitoba Soccer Association website, where Vergara had been posting photos of his trip to Japan.

One accused him of taking bribes, even as the Liverpool coach suggested to reporters that a Canadian had no business officiating such a big game.

"Some of them were pretty upset," says Vergara. "But I also got a handful of messages from people who live in Liverpool saying, 'Please disregard the comments above because these people are just sore losers.' "That's probably the toughest game I ever called, and probably the most controversial. But the fact I'm going to the World Cup tells me I made the right calls."

Officials with FIFA, the governing body of international soccer, even bent the rules to make sure they got Vergara back for another World Cup.

The 2002 World Cup was dogged by a series of questionable calls and the resulting furor prompted FIFA to overhaul the way officials are chosen.


THE new system required officials to work in crews consisting of one referee and two assistant referees for the four years preceding the World Cup to get them accustomed to working with one another. The best crews were to be selected for Germany's World Cup.

But the referee on Vergara's crew got injured and was unable to pass the fitness test. Vergara figured that was the end of his dream.

"The system is you all go or no one goes," he says. "So the fact they found another crew for me to work on tells me someone wants me to be there.''

A record five billion people watched the World Cup 2002 matches on television and observers predict more viewers this time. Conservative estimates peg the worldwide TV audience for next month's final to be in the neighbourhood of 300 million -- more than triple the 95 million that tuned in to watch this year's Super Bowl.

Vergara hopes to be in the thick of that final. He was one of the few officials who stayed out of trouble in 2002 and was rewarded by being selected as one of just a handful of officials returning to officiate this year's World Cup. Officials at the World Cup are graded by their superiors for their performance in each game and Vergara's assessments in 2002 were so good, he ended up working more games than any other official, including the third-place game.

He went on to officiate a semifinal of the Olympic soccer event in Athens in 2004.

This time, Vergara hopes his consistent work will get him to the big game.

"Everyone wants to referee the final. The first dream of every referee is to get to the World Cup. And once you get to the World Cup, it becomes, 'OK, can I get to the final?' "

He says what most Canadians cannot appreciate about soccer is the passionate atmosphere when seeing a game live.

"To have 20,000 people here at an arena for a hockey game is something. But to have 110,000 people in a stadium like Azteca in Mexico City, there's a hum.

"It sounds like a swarm of bees. That's exactly the sound you hear -- and it lasts the full 90 minutes.

"And you don't get that in any other sport -- baseball, hockey, basketball, football -- you don't get that sound. And that passion... it's a religion to them. It's a way of forgetting all their problems. They could be dirt poor, but they'll find a way to get a ticket, because that's the way they forget."

Vergara says it's hard not to be a fan at the World Cup, even when you're an official. "The games feel like about 15 minutes. You appreciate the players, the touches, the skill level and mostly the atmosphere."

But it's also a draining experience to have your work so closely scrutinized, with the stakes so high.

"I've never left the soccer field after an international match physically exhausted. Never ever. I could always go another hour. But I've always left the field mentally drained, and that's because of the concentration you have to have to stay focused on what's going on. That's the difficult part -- the concentration."

So what's it like to blow a call? Vergara says he realizes it immediately.

"You have a sense right away whether you are right or wrong. My experience has been if I make a call, I know right away whether I made a mistake or not. You just know."

But he says an official has to be unflinching. Several times over the years, he says he had to eject his brother, Yanko, from a match, and he's also lost friends over calls.

"I think I had integrity from Day 1. I wasn't one of these referees who could be persuaded, and I lost a lot of friends because of it. I come from a Chilean background. I lost many Chilean friends because I was a referee and I couldn't be swayed by the fact that I knew you.

"My own flesh and blood and I wouldn't tolerate anything from him, so why would I tolerate it from anyone else?"

While he's become a minor celebrity in the world of international soccer, Vergara remains a blue-collar referee at home in Winnipeg. Recently, Vergara was to officiate a high school game in Fort Garry only to discover the game had been cancelled because someone had forgotten to paint the lines on the field. Then there are players who seem unswayed by his international experience.

"I had a boy in a high school game complain to me about a call," Vergara says, "so I ended up cautioning him. He doesn't care I was at a World Cup. He's still going to complain."

Winnipegger Vergara to work Brazilian opener -- Canadian Press

Sports


Winnipegger Vergara to work Brazilian opener


Sun Jun 4 2006




MUNICH -- Canadian assistant referee Hector Vergara will work defending champion Brazil's opening match at the World Cup, FIFA announced yesterday in releasing the officiating assignments for the first 16 matches of the tournament.
Brazil begins defence of its title June 13 in Berlin against Croatia.

The Winnipeg match official is the only Canadian among the 81 at the finals. Vergara works in a trio with referee Benito Armando Archundia and assistant Jose Ramirez, both from Mexico.

Vergara also worked at the 2002 World Cup, officiating nine matches including the third-place game.

There are just six officials here from CONCACAF, which covers North and Central America and the Caribbean.

Argentinian referee Horacio Elizondo will take charge of the opening match between host Germany and Costa Rica in Munich on June 9.
The refereeing assignments for the 47 remaining matches will be announced a later date.

Vergara, who doubles as chief administrative officer of the Manitoba Soccer Association, also officiated at the Athens Olympics and was an assistant at the final of the 2005 Gold Cup and a string of 2006 World Cup qualifying matches. Vergara's officiating crew came in for abuse from Liverpool manager Rafael Benitez in the final at FIFA's Club World Championship in Yokohama, Japan, in December 2005.

Despite outplaying their Brazilian opponents, Liverpool was beaten 1-0 by Sao Paulo. Three Liverpool goals were called off by Vergara for offside during the match, which was refereed by Archundia's team.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Header- the carilon


Header
A member of the Hanover Kickers (in white) leaps high to head the ball during the Kickers' Manitoba Major Soccer League Division One season opener Saturday afternoon in Steinbach. It was a tough outing for the Kickers as they were blanked 5-0 by the NKMB Saints.