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A tricky situation involving Jurgen Klinsmann and Juan Agudelo

Juan Agudelo has been awfully quiet for the Red Bulls lately. A little too quiet.

There were talking points galore on the first legs of the four MLS quarterfinal playoff series. I tried to hit as many as possible in the SI.com review, which should be posted later today. (Update: posted here now.)

But I didn’t get to one issue that’s sitting out there, kind of by itself, like a shy kid at a big, fancy dance.

I’m talking about Juan Agudelo and asking this question: where do current events leave him?

Here’s the quick catch-up:

The U.S. international cannot get off the bench for his Red Bulls. File that under “highly surprising” considering the circumstances. His Red Bulls were without starting forward Luke Rodgers last week in Dallas. So, start the kid, right? He’s a U.S. international, for Pete’s sake.

Agudelo didn’t start. Didn’t even get off the bench.

Rodgers was back for the weekend biggie against Los Angeles. But the Red Bulls were light on attacking ideas. So, bring in the kid, right? A change of pace late, that kind of thing. Right?

Agudelo didn’t get off the bench. Again.

He’s played sparingly late in the MLS season while manager Hans Backe cleverly talks around the issue. All Backe ever says is something along the lines of “I always pick the best team.” That’s it. That’s the reason Agudelo is playing, according to the Red Bulls’ boss.

You may not care about the Red Bulls. They are very likely to be done for the year on Thursday, unless they can do something no club has this year: go into the Home Depot Center and beat the Galaxy.

But you may care about Agudelo and his overall development, especially as it relates to U.S. national team duty. So, read on … Because all this may be bigger than Agudelo and the Red Bulls.

Star-divide

This is a tricky situation for U.S. manager Jurgen Klinsmann. He says he won’t pick players who aren’t getting regular minutes, who aren’t sharp and fit.

So … where does that league young Agudelo for upcoming friendlies? The Red Bulls striker has been a national team regular under Klinsmann, but for how much longer? There’s a precedent that can no longer be ignored. Again, this is no recent thing: Agudelo has played 36 minutes in the Red Bulls last seven matches. Let that sink in. Roll it around on your tongue for a minute. Yuk!

There’s really only one explanation: Agudelo isn’t working hard enough in practice, and Backe is loath to reward a young player for anything less than daily, professional diligence. They guy is still a few weeks shy of his 19thbirthday, after all, so some teenage sulking when things don’t go his way isn’t all that perplexing.

Remember this story from earlier in the year, and add it to the conversation:

During the summer Gold Cup, the story came out that Red Bull teammate Tim Ream noted how Agudelo seemed to find more fire in his belly for U.S. practices than he typically did for club sessions. Ream thought Agudelo could do more for his club, and he mentioned it to the young striker.

But Ream wasn’t getting through, apparently. So he asked Jozy Altidore to have a word with Agudelo, about how it all starts with daily training habits.

Well, seems that didn’t take either.

“I think he was a little discouraged, not playing as much as he likes [with the Red Bulls],” Ream told MLSSoccer.com Kristian Dyer at the time. “Going in with the national team, I noticed he definitely trains hard there. A couple guys, myself included, had a conversation with him just to let him know that you have to train just as hard here and you’re going to get your chances.”

I know a bunch of Red Bulls supporters have the pitchforks out for Backe, for this and for other reasons. And it may be true to that the coach has made some mistakes in tactical approaches and in personnel selection.

But the man wants to win, and that’s undeniable.  And he wants the organization to succeed, for sure. That sometimes means sacrificing the short-term for the long-term good – and he wouldn’t be the first coach to sit a young player who simply isn’t getting it.

Comment 13 comments  |  1 recs  | 

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This story is very familiar

It sounds a lot like a tall, blonde haired kid in Dallas some people know.

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by Daniel Robertson on Oct 31, 2011 11:51 AM EDT reply actions  

I think that if Klinsmann rates him (he should), then JK might suggest to young Mr. Agudelo to find another arrangement. I’d prefer he stay in MLS but Scandinavia or Holland might be better. Or he can wait until Soler and Backe are fired, in other words, hold on one more season.

by Alan Jacobson on Oct 31, 2011 11:53 AM EDT reply actions  

Or if what Davis is suggesting is true

Klinsmann might suggest that he train as hard for his club as he does for the national team and get regular playing time that way.

by CMC_Stags on Oct 31, 2011 4:27 PM EDT up reply actions  

if he really is having teenager ego and motivation issues

then going oversees is only going to be worse for him just like it was worse for unmotivated US teenage phenoms Jozy Altidore and Freddy Adu.

Win or lose, we'll always be there for you.

by johnjahafanclub on Nov 1, 2011 1:52 PM EDT up reply actions  

off-season prediction

NYRB trades Agudelo to DCU for a litter of RFK raccoons. Benny Olsen gives the kid some respect and lights a fire in his belly. Agudelo goes on to win the golden boot.

by rke on Oct 31, 2011 12:28 PM EDT reply actions  

Nice idea, but . . . . .

. . . . . even the RB’s management must remember the firepower they gave DCU with DeRo.

by Runningcloud on Nov 1, 2011 9:08 AM EDT up reply actions   1 recs

racoons

would have to be from Norway, if so RBNJ may just take the trade.

by Irrlicht on Nov 1, 2011 1:20 PM EDT up reply actions  

Teenagers

Hard to say what’s going on in the mind of a teenager…and remember that is exactly what Agudelo is. It doesn’t mean that he feels entitled, although its not uncommon in teenagers, but he may have some hard lessons to learn if he continues down this same path.

by Brian1204 on Nov 1, 2011 10:42 AM EDT reply actions  

maybe he needs a latino/columbian manager who can get through to him

and relate with him…

like mancini with balotelli (ok maybe that’s not going so well off the field but at least balotelli is scoring goals).

Carlos Valderrama for NYRB coach!?

Win or lose, we'll always be there for you.

by johnjahafanclub on Nov 1, 2011 1:55 PM EDT up reply actions  

Ridiculous comment

Quite offensive, really. You basically are calling him a racist.

"We don't want our people to be preoccupied with seminude, crazy men jumping up and down who are chasing an inflated object," said Sheik Mohamed Osman Arus, head of operations for the Hizbul Islam insurgent group.

by PaulThomas on Nov 2, 2011 10:58 PM EDT up reply actions  

???

who? backe? or agudelo? I’m not saying either is racist. It’s a well accepted fact that it’s important to help players acclimate to new cultural environments to help their performance on the field.

a better counter-argument is that agudelo is more American than he is Columbian.

Win or lose, we'll always be there for you.

by johnjahafanclub on Nov 3, 2011 4:48 PM EDT up reply actions  

Completely agree, with a small addition

He’s a teenager living in an adult’s world. And that’s a particularly tough place to be. Most American athletes operate in a college environment, with like-minded and similarly aged athletes around them. It’s a more fostering atmosphere. Yes, teenage athletes are integrated into the “adult world” in Europe, South America, etc. But since that’s the norm, everybody understands better about how to integrate them, at a better pace, with more mentoring, etc.

So, it’s a highly imperfect place for the young American soccer player. It will get better. Until then, guys like Agudelo will be asked to make more of the adjustment on their own.

by Steve Davis on Nov 1, 2011 12:53 PM EDT reply actions  

Backe

is the single worst coach I have ever seen on the /MetrostarsRed Bulls sidelines when it comes to managing player minutes and using his bench. And his infatuation with Ballouchy is mind boggling. Other than that, I have no problem with him.

Victor Cruz is the 2011 Ahmad Bradshaw. He giveth, and he taketh away.

by bigbluethruandthru on Nov 2, 2011 12:05 PM EDT reply actions   1 recs

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