Local soccer stars hope one day to capture what the women’s national team almost won.
Seven of the 10 members of the SEYAA U-19 Indoor Championship squad hit their home field Monday to practice and reflect on the United States Women’s National Soccer Team.
Centre-back Saki Kumagai broke many local hearts Sunday when her penalty shoot-out attempt beat American goalkeeper Hope Solo and gave Japan the 2011 FIFA Women's World Cup. The loss, however, did not leave Tonia Russo with a languid lump.
“The U.S. played great,” the resident of the 800 block of Pierce Street and recent graduate of Ss. Neumann-Goretti High School, 1736 S. 10th St., said Monday at the Southeast Youth Athletic Association Sports Complex, Seventh and Bigler streets. “The players have inspired so many girls to see how much they can get out of soccer.”
Russo and her SEYAA U-19 teammates have proven they could one day find themselves chasing international glory. Many of the 10 athletes have made the 17-year-old facility their sporting home for more than a decade. Tenacious towards opponents yet tender towards one another, they are a formidable mix of ruthlessness and camaraderie.
“Teams come at us harder because we have a bit of South Philly swagger and they really want to beat us,” Joann McAfee, SEYAA’s four-year treasurer, said as the young ladies practiced.
The resident of 12th and Wolf streets watched with glee as daughter Nicole, a soon-to-be senior sweeper/back for Neumann-Goretti, and the others made it seem they need not wait until September to begin competing in their numerous leagues. This year has yielded enough stellar achievements to cause them to develop big heads, but they would rather use their domes for scoring goals and stopping shots than for carrying about large egos.
“We’ve grown up together, so we realize we have to have fun,” Alaina Zepp, a senior-to-be Neumann-Goretti star, said.
The resident of 16th and Porter streets sports a dollar sign on the back of her jersey because her teammates deemed her “money in the net.” With her goal-tending skills, the squad captured this year’s U-19 Philadelphia Department of Recreation Indoor Soccer Championship.
Fishtown’s Daniel Shissler Recreation Center served as the site for their 12 contests, all victories, and enabled the girls to show off their penchant for tactical play and speed. Indoor play uses only four players and a goalie, so action can be intense.
“Let’s just say there’s no waiting around,” Russo said.
A forward for SEYAA, she will become the starting left midfielder for Neumann University. Her final appearances before her collegiate career commences came in June at the ninth annual Cape Express Beach Blast in Wildwood, N.J.
“We do the Beach Blast for fun, but we always expect something crazy,” Nicole McAfee said.
With 1,000 teams competing on 100 fields in one weekend, craziness can certainly ensue. The competition is open to teams from all over the country and involves pool play. Three 12-minute periods quicken the pace, but patience must be a good friend of all participants.
The local bunch lost last year’s final and desired to build on its second consecutive City title with another impressive march. It again finished as the runner-up, but nobody left The Garden State gloomy.
“With so many teams, there’s nothing wrong with finishing where we did,” Russo said.
The same sentiment likely would not win the favor of many of the national team’s supporters. Many had expected the United States, winners of the 1991 and ’99 tournaments, to become the first country to triumph three times.
The American nearly missed an opportunity even to make the trip to Germany, as their third-place finish in last year’s CONCACAF Women’s Gold Cup required them to face Italy in November playoffs. A pair of 1-0 wins allowed the women to grab the World Cup’s 16th and final spot.
They dumped fellow Group C members North Korea, 2-0, June 28 and blanked Colombia, 3-0, July 2. A 2-1 loss to Sweden July 6 kept them from a perfect pool play record, but they still secured a quarterfinal spot. They met Brazil, the 2007 runners-up and silver medalist from the last two Olympic Games, July 10 in what many experts and fans later hailed as the tournament’s best clash.
The South-American squad, featuring four-time FIFA World Player of the Year Marta Vieira da Silva, was moments away from eliminating the Americans. Centre forward Abby Wambach, the four-time U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year, netted the equalizer to necessitate a penalty shoot-out. The Americans outpaced Brazil, 5-3, to claim a semifinal berth.
Though only 99 days remain until the Summer Olympic Games begin in London, U.S. Women’s National Team coach Pia Sundhage admitted she is not obsessing over devising plans for her soccer stars to defend their gold medal.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart began composing at 5. Raimondo Partito could call the Austrian a slacker, as he started scoring goals before turning 4. The Packer Park resident has booted and headed his way to prominence over the last seven years and just finished his sixth month on the YSC Union Juniors, a training squad under the watchful eye of Major League Soccer’s Philadelphia Union.
Thanks to our faithful readers for dishing out assists in the balloting process. Your voices were loud and clear -- especially on topics related to those Philadelphia Eagles. Other races were very closely contested, with most ties broken by a single vote. And the titles for everything from favorite pro mascot to best youth organization go to ... A strong lead Every recreation center needs a good rec leader and at Palumbo, 10th and Fitzwater streets, it is John McBride. "Obviously, I am flattered," McBride, now in his eighth year at the center, said of the award. "There are a lot of good leaders down here. "If the community wants something, that's what we do. There were a lot of good programs in place when I got here. I just tried to improve what was here." Right now there is plenty going on, including 145 kids ages 6 to 15 participating in a basketball league, an adult softball league starting April 16 and summer-camp preparations are under way. McBride said he has a strong support staff. "I owe a lot to the people I work with," McBride, whose right-hand man is rec leader Bill Fuller, said. He also noted supervisor Lisa Ann...
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