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Tim Howard won't last forever; Cracks in the U.S. goalkeeper pipeline?

Houston Dynamo goalkeeper Tally Hall ... in the pipeline to stand between the U.S. pipes.

Nick Green is on my starting XI of well-informed, highly respected soccer writers. He works hard and has smart opinions.

So I hope he won’t take offense when I respectfully disagree with a little something he wrote. It’s just a wee disagreement. Think “friendly debate over icy cold Pacificos” more than “screaming match in the bosses’ office.”

Green wrote a compelling piece, suggesting that cracks are appearing in a previously prodigious pipeline of U.S. goalkeepers. It’s a really interesting point, and Green has some persuasive evidence to support his position. I must say, his numbers gave me pause.

American goalkeepers started 94 percent of MLS matches between 1998 and 2005, including every match during the 2002 season, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

But for the past four years that figure has hovered around the 70 percent mark.

That’s great reporting. He goes on to illuminate how more MLS goalkeepers these days tend to come from, ahem, the older part of town. There’s Donovan Ricketts (33), Pat Onstad (43) and Faryd Mondrag (39). He’s getting a double-word score here since all of those fellows are from outside the States. There’s also some aging Americans between the pipes: Kasey Keller (41) and Kevin Hartman (36).

Green reports that the average age of starting MLS goalkeepers was 28 from 1995-2005, whereas it’s 32 today. That’s more great reporting.

But is the cupboard bare? (Green doesn’t really say that it’s bare, by the way, he just warns that breaks in the pipeline have occurred before in lands of brawny goalkeeping, such as England ; his piece is more of a “heads-up.”) Read on ... 

Star-divide

I would say that MLS quality has increased, along with the number of teams. That has left MLS sides to gaze beyond the United States for talent across the field, including in goal. That’s why, in my opinion, we’re seeing a decrease in percentage of U.S. goalkeepers. In other words, the number of qualified Americans has remained about the same, but the number of worthy goalkeepers needed to fill MLS nets has increased. Hence, the reduction in percentage of U.S. starters.

As for ‘keepers to fill the bill behind current U.S. No. 1 Tim Howard: it’s true that there are no Tim Howards currently behind Tim Howard in the U.S. pool.  Then again, a lot of countries don’t have one back-stopper of Howard’s quality, much less a bullpen full of them.

Brad Guzan has years and years of quality goalkeeping ahead. At 26 years old he’s just reaching the sweet spot in a goalkeeper’s career arc.  At that age, Howard was an in-and-out presence at Manchester United; he didn’t really take off until he landed at Everton a couple of years later.

Behind those two: Between Chicago’s Sean Johnson (21), D.C. United’s Bill Hamid (20), Celtic’s Dominic Cervi (25), Houston’s Tally Hall (25) and a couple of others in varying stages of development, I’d wager a pair of old-school Uhlsport gloves that one or more will keep climbing the charts and land somewhere special.

Johnson has struggled recently and may have lost his starting spot in Chicago. But, again, he’s just 21. The professional ups and downs are out there, of course. Meanwhile, Hall may be the best U.S. goalkeeper that most fans have never heard of. The sample remains small at the moment, as he’s in his first starting assignment with the Dynamo. But he’s been rock solid so far, and damn spectacular in two particular matches.

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Watching Hall against my Red Bulls has alleviated my worries about our national goalkeeping future. Also great job pointing out that the even though the percentage went down the number of teams has increased.

by Patrick MacDonald on Apr 19, 2011 1:20 PM EDT reply actions  

The Brad Guzan paragraph is the highlight to me.

We were seriously spoiled (those of us that have watched the US for a while). I mean, seriously, the best teams in the world would have given their eye teeth to have had the flood of solid keepers we had ‘90-’06. It was seriously abnormal. And at times I wonder how much it was a result of us having such a weak national team. US goalkeepers were forced to be heroic.

It’s different now.

I’m not that worried. Guzan appeared virtually out of nowhere 5 years ago… just like Hamid and Johnson. Having gotten used to such a deep keeper position, it does feel a litlte worrisome to look around, and see Howard, then Guzan, then who? But that ‘who’ is a very broad group of keepers that have been earning their keep both here and abroad. Hell, in a pinch, even Hartman could be called on. I think there’s plenty of time for the young keepers to find spots. And I think the odds are pretty good that, despite it being just one position and unlike their field-playing counterparts, they’ll manage to find a place on some Euro teams.

by reklemrov on Apr 19, 2011 1:45 PM EDT reply actions  

Another factor

“Green reports that the average age of starting MLS goalkeepers was 28 from 1995-2005, whereas it’s 32 today. That’s more great reporting.”

Is that FOs have become ‘more serious’ in terms of winning than ever before, which may skew towards veteran GKs. This may be why in addition to getting more foreign, they’ve also gotten older recently. 32 is close to a goalkeeper’s prime, and vets are perceived as reliable.

It could be that there are as many good young GKs as ever before or even more, but more of them are waiting behind established vets.

'Gentlemen' he said,
'I don't need your organization,
I've shined your shoes,
moved your mountains and marked your cards,
but Eden is burning.
Either get ready for elimination,
or else your heart must have the courage,
for the changing of the guards.'

by Sgc on Apr 19, 2011 2:44 PM EDT reply actions  

MLS FO's have no choice but to go with old non-american veterans like Mondragon

after young Americans like Seitz and Brad Knighton fall flat on their faces when given opportunities.

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

by johnjahafanclub on Apr 19, 2011 5:30 PM EDT up reply actions  

you missed one

You use Philadelphia’s 3 goalkeepers in your example, but you left out of your argument that they also used their #5 overall draft pick on a young American goalkeeper

by UnionFan on Apr 21, 2011 2:47 PM EDT up reply actions  

Hall made me a believer in that match against Seattle.

Pretty sure we would have heard more about him earlier had he not been stuck behind Onstad.

by The King of Norway on Apr 19, 2011 5:30 PM EDT reply actions  

I would assume we have 3.5 years until we have to worry about this

I assume the soonest Timmeh would ever retire would be at the end of the 2014 WC cycle

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

by johnjahafanclub on Apr 19, 2011 5:32 PM EDT reply actions  

GKs and Stats

First, the 70% figure is deceptive math. The league is much bigger now in 2011 than it was in 1998. In fact, there are more starting American GKs in MLS now than there were in 2002 (in part b/c there were only 10 MLS teams in 2002).

Second, the age thing is also a bit deception: Keller, Mondragon and Onstad really throw the data off. Remove Onstad from that data set and replace it with Hamid and I bet it drops by 2 years (from 32 to 30) just b/c of one player being switched. The real reason we see this data is that in 1998, etc. MLS teams were CHEAP and couldn’t afford to spend major bucks on a GK. You certainly couldn’t afford to bring a NT veteran like Mondragon (or a USNT star like Keller) on to your roster. Instead, maybe Joe Cannon at $100K would be tops and most GKs make substantially under that (think: punters in the NFL).

I think the more accurate statement is this: we may not have another Tim Howard (b/c he’s a unique confluence of circumstances: young, physically impressive and exposed to the highest levels of competition early in Europe). instead we may be “stuck” with guys who are good Euro subs or strong MLS GK’s—which ain’t Tim Howard. But that’s not the same as saying the cupboard is bare. It’s more honest to say that for a while we walked along and found a $100 bill on the ground (Keller) and then another (Friedel) and then another (Howard) and maybe from now on we only find $20 or $50 bills (guys like Rimando or Hartman or Guzan right now—nothing to sneeze at but not world class). Time will tell. The USA doesn’t have something in the water that produces world class GKs. We have some traits and circumstances that produce lots of GK talent. But that doesn’t mean we are destined to always have Friedels and Kellers and Howards on our roster. We may get stuck with really good (but not great) GKs.

by JoeWillmore on Apr 19, 2011 7:16 PM EDT reply actions  

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