New England Revolution
IF YOU BUILD IT WILL THEY WIN?
10/05/02
by Jeff Dieffenbach
New England
Revolution coach Fernando Clavijo is nearing the end of an exciting
week.
Saturday night’s home opener against the Dallas Burn
marks the first contest in any sport to be played at owner Robert
Kraft’s state-of-the-art CMGi Field.
After four road games, the Revolution bring a respectable 1-2-1
record into the match.
With the MLS capacity of 22,000 seats
already sold out, Clavijo expects an overwhelming welcome from the
enthusiastic New England fans that have lifted the Revolution’s
all-time average home attendance to third despite the poorest
winning percentage over the league’s seven year existence.
“No excuses, motivation should not be a factor, we’ll have a
great crowd. The crowds in New England have always been great. We
have to make sure that we reward them with a great win and a great
season.”
On paper, the Revolution have by far their strongest
roster ever as they enter the 2002 season. The off-season addition
of 2000 scoring leader Mamadou Diallo, U.S. World Cup bound Carlos
Llamosa, 2001 scoring leader Alex Pineda Chacon, Steve Ralston, Jim
Rooney, Taylor Twellman, and others complements a strong returning
core that includes Ted Chronopolous (the only remaining member of
the inaugural 1996 team), Joe Franchino, Wolde Harris, Rusty Pierce,
goalkeeper Juergen Sommer, and Andy Williams.
Noting this
strength, Clavijo acknowledges that there are “a lot of expectations
to come out and do well, to perform well and get the win.”
In
preparation for the opener, Clavijo and the Revolution hosted a
media day on Thursday at CMGi Field. Director of Media Relations
Jurgen Mainka led a group of three dozen or so media members and
their families on a tour of the spectacular new
stadium.
Passing the signature lighthouse and crossing under
its accompanying bridge, the tour started in the field level media
working room in the Northeast corner, then snaked its way through
the East service corridor to the press box elevator at the South end
of the stadium. At the top, the elevator doors opened onto an
expansive three-tiered press area with a spectacular view of the
pitch. Electrical, phone, and network jacks serve a press seating
capacity of 150-200.
Taking the elevator back down to the
field level, the tour next made its way to the visitor’s locker
room. Spacious to be sure, but with a carpet pattern and color
scheme surely designed to disorient Revolution opponents with a
touch of vertigo.
Finally, before partaking of an excellent
lunch that bodes well for the game day customers of the more than
350 concession stands, Mainka led the group out to the field to
watch the end of practice and gain access to the players and
coaches.
Clavijo’s business card may say Head Coach, but that
doesn’t keep him from joining his players in scrimmages. Employing
the skills that made him the Major Indoor Soccer League’s Player of
the Decade for the 1980s and allowed him to go the full ninety in
the US Men’s National Team World Cup victory over Colombia in 1994,
he more than held his own against his younger
charges.
Decreeing the surface (and not his 46 year old legs)
“a little bit slow,” the Uruguay-born naturalized U.S. citizen
nonetheless praised the field condition. “We have today, tomorrow,
to get used to it. Cut the grass a little bit more, and we’re all
set.”
Newcomer and star-in-the-making Taylor Twellman, late
of the German Bundesliga’s TSV 1860 Munich reserves, concurred.
“Very good, considering that it’s brand new. Not much of a football
crown to it, we expected a bigger
one.”
Soccer365 asked Twellman, who has two
goals in four games, if he’s looking forward to netting the first
points in the new stadium. “Yeah, hopefully, we’ll see what goes on.
We’d like to get the first goal, the first win, get it
going.”
Reminded of the well-played assist from Diallo
against Columbus that allowed Twellman to tally the first of his two
goals and his first ever in MLS, he commented on whether he owes
anything in return. “If it’s me giving it to him, or him giving it
to me, it doesn’t matter.”
Are the players hungry to score
the first points at CMGi Field? Clavijo certainly thinks so. “Oh,
yes, you can see it in the way they practice, everyone is anxious to
put the ball in the back of the net.” As for who will be the first,
when Diallo’s name was offered, he replied with a smile, “I’ll go
with you on that.”
The mood at the stadium on Thursday can
best be described as fun. Asked by a young fan about the most
important aspect of soccer, another newcomer, Steve Ralston, the
league’s leader in career minutes entering the season with 15,500,
responded, “I don’t know how many minutes it’s been, but every
second’s been fun.”
Clavijo, the architect of the
Revolution’s powerhouse roster, gets the last word on fun. Asked if
he minded the Super Bowl Champion New England Patriots using the
stadium in the off-season, he laughed, “We’ll see about lending it
to them.”
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