15 June 2010

13 June 2010

Well, that crashed and burned quickly.

So Germany applied a big smackeroo to Australia, 4-0. The win didn't surprise me, but the margin did. More to the point, with star Tim Cahill out for a red-card offense, the Aussies' chances to advance sunk through the floor. If they want to succeed at something this month, maybe they should apply for Pac-10 membership.

In the meantime, that bracket I posted last Tuesday now lies in ruins. I had tipped the U.S. to reach the semifinals, but that assumed that the Yanks would win Group C and draw Australia in the round of 16. The Aussies are pretty much out, and with them go the American's most realistic hopes of even getting to the quarter-finals.

At this point, it's pointless to keep posting my picks until the first round has finished. Crazy things will happen, so I anticipate posting something about the Cup every day or two. Just not daily predictions.


12 June 2010

Cat Watches Cup, Day 2

Day 2 results:
  • South Korea looked good, and Greece did not.  2-0 for Korea.  (Prediction: 0-0)
  • Argentina surprised no one with the 1-0 win over Nigeria.  (Prediction: 2-1)
  • The 1-1 draw between the U.S. and England is good for my ego.  For my brackets?  Not so much; I had England winning this one.
  • Only one out of three picked correctly.  Ugh.
Day 3 predictions:
  • Group C winds up with a big Slovenian win over Algeria.
  • Ghana and Serbia finish level, 1-1, to start the Group D action.
  • Australia turns out to have more issues than Germany, so the Socceroos lose, 2-1.



11 June 2010

(Okay, I give up.) The Cat Watches the Cup, part 1

Since the first day wasn't a disaster for the projections I made last time, I've decided to post after every day a game is played. The idea is to compare today's results to the prediction I made, then present my picks for tomorrow.

Day 1 predictions:  I picked South Africa and Mexico to draw, 1-1.  Uruguay was to embarrass France by 3-1.

Day 1 results:
  • Bull's-eye on RSA-MEX: 1-1!  Rafael Marquez matched Siphiwe Tshabalala's opening goal to create the tie.  Neither side deserved to win, so the result is fair.
  • France sucked almost as hard as I thought it would in its 0-0 draw.  The bad news is that no one played well enough tonight to win, and that includes Uruguay, too.
  • Everyone in Group A has a point, with Bafana Bafana and El Tri ahead on total goals.
  • My overall projection still rests on the Uruguay-South Africa match.
Day 2 predictions:
  • South Korea meets Greece in the Group B opener -- and they promptly put me to sleep with a goalless draw.  Like I need help sleeping at 0630.
  • In the other Group B match, Argentina opens with a 2-1 win over Nigeria.
  • Group C opens with a 2-1 win by England over the U.S.  (John Oliver goes nuts.)


08 June 2010

Tuesday Football: The Cat's World Cup forecast

With less than three days before the first kickoff, it's time to tell you which national teams will succeed this month in South Africa, which ones will crash, and which one will win it all.

In a competition like this, which starts with eight qualifying pools, I find this Sherlock Holmes quotation useful:
How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?
Keep it in mind as I go through the groups.

Group A:  Uruguay is just average, South Africa is just awful, and France is just a mess.  That leaves Mexico, a team I smacked two weeks ago, to win the group in shockingly easy fashion.  The hosts will advance, too, thanks solely to the power of the mighty vuvuzela.  That's "mighty" as in, "That brass section that infests every Southern Cal football game is mighty annoying."  France and Uruguay will prove no match for the tens of thousands of vuvuzelas blowing on Bafana Bafana's behalf.
  • Through:  Mexico, South Africa.  Out:  Uruguay, France (which doesn't even get a draw).
Group B:  It's possible that temper-prone Diego Maradona could coach Argentina out of the tournament, but at the group stage, it's not likely.  In the first place, the same could be said of Mexico's Javier Aguirre; more importantly, Barcelona star Lionel Messi won't let it happen.  The rest of the group looks pretty even, but I think Nigeria squeaks past its defense-oriented rivals.
  • Through:  Argentina, Nigeria.  Out:  Greece, South Korea
Group C:  Back when the draw happened in December, I thought that England and the U.S. were the obvious choices to advance.  On further reflection, Slovenia may be tougher than I thought.  With those three sides beating each other up, the stage win will come down to who can most comprehensively blow out luckless Algeria.  That side might actually be the United States.  Shockingly, it's England that crashes out -- done in by Slovenia, not the U.S.
  • Through:  United States, Slovenia.  Out:  England, Algeria
The other groups follow the fold.

07 June 2010

Pleasant dreams, Himan Brown

Himan Brown died last Friday at his New York home, although it didn't become public knowledge until yesterday.  As creator of the CBS Radio Mystery Theater, Brown single-handedly extended the age of viable radio drama by almost a decade.  The creaking-door sound effect that Brown turned into RMT's signature became an audio icon for those of us who were too young for the Baby Boom but too old  for Generation X.

One thing I didn't realize until I started downloading RMT episodes in 2000 was how important Brown was to American radio.  Decades before RMT, he was responsible for popular radio dramas like Inner Sanctum -- RMT's immediate parent -- The Adventures of the Thin Man and Grand Central Station.  While he wasn't able to transition to television as it displaced radio, he really didn't need to.  (The picture above is from 1943, at the height of his long career.)  It's easy enough these days to hear old-time radio on the Internet, and Himan Brown is a big reason why.

My condolences to Himan Brown's family and friends.