Slammers play for title today
Most teams headed for the Snickers U.S. youth soccer national
championships prepare with limited, intense training sessions and
rest to keep their players fresh.
The Slammers FC under-14 girls from Newport Beach have taken a
different path this year with a 16-day, 12,000-mile journey that they
hope ends with two gold medals hanging from their necks.
The Slammers opened play Wednesday at the Maryland SoccerPlex in
Germantown, Md., with a hard-fought 3-2 win against Eclipse
(Libertyville, Ill.) Select, then defeated Tophat ’07 Gold from
Georgia, 3-0, on Thursday, setting up today’s title match against
Pennsylvania’s FC Delco Fusion.
The Slammers were fresh from last week winning their age group at
the Gothia Cup in Gothenburg, Sweden, one of the world’s largest
youth soccer tournaments with nearly 1,400 teams from 55 nations
participating.
Teams normally would not travel abroad so close to the national
championships, but it was an invitation that the Slammers said they
could not decline. Prior to their victorious run at the Far West
regional in Honolulu last month, they had won the Manchester United
Premier Cup in May. That earned them a trip to the Gothia Cup
sponsored by Nike, and the team left Southern California for Sweden
on July 12. They arrived in Maryland on Sunday and don’t expect to go
home until after today’s national championship final at 8 a.m.
“I give these girls a lot of credit,” Slammers coach Walid Khoury
said. “They are handling it pretty well. This has been a long trip
already, but it was a lifetime opportunity and we took advantage of
it.”
The Slammers know they are facing stiffer competition this week
than they did in Sweden. In eight games, they did not allow a goal
while scoring 52, defeating Tillberga IK of Sweden, 2-0, in the
championship game. While the soccer wasn’t top-flight, the team did
enjoy the tournament’s atmosphere, which included a crowd of 41,000
fans for the opening ceremonies and nearly 4,000 games.
“It was one of the best experiences ever with the opening
ceremonies and playing teams from different countries,” said
lightning-fast forward Mo Press, who scored two goals against Eclipse
Select. “Every country plays their own style of game, and it was cool
to see it.”
With a group of young players, missing the comforts of home could
be expected. Khoury said the worst part for girls during their stay
in Sweden was the food, and many of the players have not seen their
families since they left home.
“It’s actually really hard,” Press said. “I’ve had my whole family
here, but some of the girls don’t and they’ve been homesick the whole
time.”
Yet they want to follow the footsteps of last year’s Slammers
under-14 team, which came here and won the club’s first national
title. They are considered by most observers to be the strongest team
here. It’s just a question of whether they can hold up for three more
games.
“We’ve got to show up like champions, and I think they will do
it,” Khoury said. “That is a great, great team that we played today,
and our kids found a way to win.”
Two Newport Beach residents, Taylor Fallon and Jacqueline Zinke,
play for the Slammers. Fallon will be a sophomore at Corona del Mar
High in September, while Zinke will be a freshman at Mater Dei.
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