Spencer Richey Interview

Last week I talked with Spencer Richey, a goalkeeper for the University of Washington. Going into his senior season, Richey and Washington both had high expectations. Washington was ranked 21st in the national and Richey was consistently being in the top collegiate goalkeeper conversations. However in the fourth game of the season he broke his leg and was out for the year. Spencer took some time to talk to me about his year and where he stands now going forward. 30s_9313g

Can you talk about how you got to Washington? What were the steps that took you there?

Yeah, I grew up about five minutes from the University. I was fortunate to be invited to the residency program down in Florida with the US 17s. I wasn’t getting too much love in terms of getting attention from colleges so when I went to residency that sparked up a lot of interest. Having that on your resume is obviously attractive for lots of college coaches. I looked at UNC a lot. Wake Forest a little bit. Maryland a little bit. At the end of the day, it’s always been a dream to play college soccer as a Huskie. It’s something I’ve always wanted to do. Going to games as a young kid and watching guys play… This is something I’ve always wanted to do and I’m 100% happy that I made the decision to come here.

So you went to see the Huskies play soccer growing up?

Oh, yeah! I was a ball boy and was always down there trying to get their autograph. I remember way back in the day watching CJ Klaas and some other big time Washington players that really helped the program in the early 2000s. So, yeah, I’ve been a Huskie fan for a long time, especially Huskie soccer so it’s cool to finally be able to play for them.

Entering the season, Washington was really highly touted and you yourself had a lot of hot press. What were some goals for the team and yourself this season?

Similar to some of our goals as last year, but we had a little bit higher expectation this year. We knew we had the players and we knew we had a good off-season so our expectation was, first, to compete for the Pac 12 title. Earlier in my career, we might not have had as high expectation but Jamie Clark, our head coach, really implemented in us that we have to raise our standards and raise what we expect out of ourselves. So the Pac-12 title was something we definitely had our eyes on. And that starts with having a good non-conference to start the season and working those things out and becoming better as a team because you don’t have much time in preseason to do so. At mid-season, being a top four seed was realistic for us and became one of our goals. Now that we’re here, our goal is to win and make it to the Final Four to have a chance in Philly.

Fourth game of the season, y’all are playing UConn and all I could read was a bunch of tweets that said, “Spencer Richey broke his leg”. I couldn’t find anything more than that. Could you walk us through that injury and how that happened?

It’s kind of funny because the doctors were asking me what happened and I was telling them. I was talking to one of teammates and he was like, “No, that’s not at all what happened.” So my memory was a little disjointed, for lack of a better word. It was kind of an awkward challenge. A guy got slipped in on a 1v1 and I came out on a close angle. He took a big touch so I came out sliding as he was lunging for the ball. I don’t think it was a dirty challenge, I think it was one of those unfortunate ones where his cleats went right through my mid-shin, on the inside of my right leg. The force just unfortunately fractured my tibia and fibula. Actually, when I got the cast off two weeks later there were some cleat marks and stuff. So that’s my best guess as to what happened.

Ryan Herman came in and has played throughout the season. What was yall’s relationship like and did you have any advice for him going into that?

We are so fortunate to have the quality of goalkeepers that we have. Ryan is a local guy so I’ve known him before he went down to Santa Clara. ** But he’s stepped up and been totally awesome for us. Him and I get along really well. When I was down and shaken up a bit in the hospital weeks he was super supportive and told me he was praying for me.

When I was in Florida I was backup for a year and a half so I was trying to help him out in a sense of what it’s like to come in from a position when you’re not exactly the main guy and you have to step into it. It’s especially difficult for goalkeepers because your games are irreplicable. You just can’t replicate them at practice so for him to step in and play the way he’s played this season, for the lack of games he’s played for the past year or two, has totally been a huge part of our success.

** Sophomore goalkeeper Ryan Herman transferred from Santa Clara to Washington after his freshman year

Health-wise, where are you now?

I had my second check up about eleven weeks out of surgery. I just got cleared to walk without the boot a couple of days ago. I’ve been off crutches for a little over a month now. So, yeah. I’m walking. My rehab is slowly starting to move into getting my calf back, my quad back, and my hamstring. I’m trying to do some gateway exercises that hopefully in another three to four weeks to do some really light jogging. And hopefully in the next six weeks I’ll be able to do some jogging on it.

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Photo by Sang Cho
I read that you have the option of taking a medical redshirt for this season to play next year. Is that still an option? Are you still looking at that?

It’s one of my first thoughts when I went down. It was an unfortunate situation but one of the parts that I was fortunate in was that it was early enough in the season. So appealing for a medical redshirt and a fifth year is totally an option. It’s something I will definitely apply for. I’ve been talking with Jamie [Clark] and the staff a lot and they’re super supportive. If they think in six months what’s best for me is to come back for a fifth year they’d be happy. But maybe if something pops up, some opportunities at the next level this summer or who knows, that I shouldn’t turn down then you just have to take and go with it. He knows; he’s dealt with and been at big time programs in the past and he’s dealt with tons of players. He’s not a coach that wants to smother you if he thinks there’s a good opportunity for you. He’s totally selfless in that area. He just wants his players to be successful. At this point in the plan, yes, it’s to come back for next year, excluding anything that pops up this summer.

If a NASL or USL Pro team reached out to you, would you be able to now make a decision on it?

Uh… Yeah, I think… *pause* it’s tough to evaluate. Each situation is different than the next one. The first thing that I have on my plate is to get my leg back healthy, get back to playing and to get back to 100%. Then I’ll go from there. I have a lot of good people in my corner giving me a lot of good advice so I’m sure when the time comes I’ll have the right advice to make the proper decision.

Washington beat Stanford last night 1-0 and will face New Mexico on December 7th, 8pm ET. For more interviews, check out:

Alan Mayer, 1970s USMNT goalkeeper, 1978 NASL Player of the Year

Brad Stuver, ex-MLS Pool keeper and current Columbus Crew goalkeeper

Brad Stuver Interview

Brad Stuver was in the MLS Goalkeeper Pool for the 2013 season. Making up 50% of the pool, one could say it's one of most exclusive positions in American sports. Last season, he was regularly called out to various teams that needed more depth to their goalkeeper chart. He appeared on rosters for the Crew, New England Revolution, Real Salt Lake and Chivas USA as well as making reserve games. There is a highlight video here of his time in the combine, along with one of the cooler kick saves I've ever seen at the 0:39 mark. For a little more on the goalkeeper pool, you can read this article. At one point did you realize you could play professionally? Was that something you wanted to do growing up or was it in your last years at Cleveland State you thought that you could continue with soccer?

Mostly growing up. I always thought I wanted to play professional soccer. I never really knew the reality of how hard it was going to be. I always heard stats that 1% of youth players make it to Division 1 [sports] and .5%, or whatever the stat is, make it to professionals. When I was in college I went on a couple trips to MLS teams and that’s when I knew I could make it.

In the 2013 Superdraft you selected by Montreal. You’re the first goalkeeper picked in the draft. What happened with Montreal?

It was just one of those things that Montreal had a plan that they wanted to go through with and I wasn’t a part of their plans at that time.

What was the next step for you? How did you find out about the goalkeeper pool?

After Montreal, I was at home. My agent was calling different goalkeeper coaches throughout the week that we had been in contact with before the draft to see if they needed anybody else to come into their camps. Everyone was pretty much set but a couple of coaches told us about the league pool. Some of them were very nice and contacted the league for us and got me on the track to becoming one of the league pool goalkeepers.

How does the contract with the pool work? Is it kind of known that Brad Stuver wants to play goal or are you in contact with the league somehow?

I’m in contract with the league for one year. I signed in March and my contract is up in December. It’s a one year contract that says I’ll have a host team, which is the Columbus Crew, and I train there every day unless a team calls me because they have extreme needs due to red cards or injuries.

How do these teams get in contact with you? Does your agent get in contact with them or do they contact you?

A team administrator will call me or they’ll call my agent. They’ll tell us they need me to fly out and then the next thing I know I have an email confirmation with flight details.

And how much of a heads up do you usually get for that?

Normally it’s about a day.

Is that stressful at all? Turning around one day and flying out and coming back?

It’s a little stressful but most of the time it’s been longer than just a day. I’ve been called out a week before the game, stayed a week through the game, and then I come home. It’s more the constant stress of not knowing where I’ll be on a week to week basis.

What are major pros and cons of being in the pool?

I’m very thankful to be in this position with every that happened. I get to say I’m a professional athlete and I get to train at the top level every day. I’ve learned so much this year. I’ve travelled to four or five different teams so I’ve gotten the feel of multiple teams throughout the league. I’ve gotten exposure to coaches that I normally wouldn’t get exposure to, which is a great thing. The only negative is that you don’t really have one team affiliation. So you’re not really part of one team. You’re more like a nomad. And the constant not knowing where you’re going to be week to week but overall it’s not bad.

When you arrive at other clubs, what is the relationship like with you and already established goalkeepers there? Do they ignore you or are they pretty helpful?

Everywhere I’ve gone, all the goalkeepers have been extremely nice. They’ve all been very helpful. They’ve all helped me grow as a young goalkeeper. They all help me during training sessions and tell me their experiences. Every goalkeeper is different, so getting all the goalkeepers’ perspectives on things has been great.

Next season, are you looking to get plugged in with a team or do you feel comfortable enough with the pool?

Next season I’m hoping to get picked up by a team, wherever it may be.

Brad was recently signed by the Columbus Crew in the 2013 Waiver Draft. He joins Andy Gruenebaum, Matt Lampson, and Daniel Withrow in Columbus.

Howard v. Scotland - 11.15.13

Thank you Scotland for making this review a little bit easier on me. For the last two games of the year, neither Brad Guzan or Nick Rimando were called up for the Euro-friendlies. Guzan was reportedly dealing with an unnamed injury and Rimando was just left out in the cold. From Express and Star

Guzan was expected to be given a chance in at least one of the matches after starting in the USA’s final World Cup qualifier against Panama last month.  Jurgen Klinsmann’s side qualified for Brazil 2014 with Guzan fighting with Everton’s Tim Howard to start while DC United’s Bill Hamid and Sean Johnson of Chicago Fire trying to fill the third goalkeeping spot... Klinsmann said. “There are some injury issues that now give other players the chance to step up.”

...and 7500 to Holte...

...it seems Brad Guzan won't be part of the squad assembling for these friendlies. Instead, Tim Howard, Sean Johnson and Bill Hamid were the goalkeepers named by Jurgen Klinsmann. According to Twitter and some actually reputable news outlets, Guzan isn't on the list because he's picked up an injury. A vague injury. One that has yet to be confirmed or named by Aston Villa. Or articulated by any news sources.

So Howard starts while Johnson and Hamid pick up the slack. I'd expect for Johnson to start versus Austria on Tuesday but reserve the right to not be excited about it.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLqypKd8pVc&w=560&h=315]

Starter: Tim Howard Bench: Sean Johnson Not in 18: Bill Hamid

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Howard only had one save so I'm going to look more at his positioning than usual because what else is there to talk about when a goalie only saves one shot?

Seventh minute, a cross gets sent in that Cameron clears while Howard does the "should I, shouldn't I?" dance in the box. The ball drops to Craig Conway a top of the box and Howard does about fifty jump sets that continually inch him forward to the ball.

It's small, as is this post on this game, but he's cutting down his reaction time and opening up a backdoor chip. It doesn't affect the game but it's not a good practice.

Twenty-fourth minute, Howard faces a free kick outside the box. But the free kick taker, Charlie Mulgrew, has lined up so drastically to the right of the ball that the only realistic shot on goal would be right at Howard.

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Howard easily sees this over.

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In the thirty-sixth minute, Howard faces a somewhat similar situation that he faced against England in 2010: a simple throw-in unzips the back line when the CB unsuccessfully chases the ball up field. However, Scotland does not have Steven Gerrard on their team and do not put the ball on target. Howard does a good job of covering the goal width.

Howard makes zero saves in the first half and is still at a 0.0 for his GSAR at this time. A few minutes into the second half he is finally called upon.

Yawn? I thought so too. US Soccer only gave him one save for the game (and we all know what's coming up next) so I guess they thought this was too easy to credit with a save as well. Howard takes note of how boring this was and makes up for it by giving us a wonderful distribution.

Fifty-third minute and we get the save of the match.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJ77Olakko8&w=560&h=315]

For all those Howard nay-sayers saying he struggles with long free kicks... yooou could still argue that because this is actually very different from previous free kick goals. Here, he can see the ball before the shot but against Guatemala he could not. So while the shot is a little faster at ~57 mph, Howard has a full second to get to the ball as opposed to less than half a second. In the first ever "How They Saved [It]" Howard reveals that he was expecting the shot to go to his left. So Howard sees the ball the entire way to a spot he is already leaning towards. Not to take away from the save, but it is different.

If Howard doesn't make that save... well there might be people screaming for Guzan but I don't think anyone would really blame Howard on that one.

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shutout: -0

36' catch: +.01 53' save: +.77

Total: +.78

And that was it. Don't be surprised to see Johnson on Tuesday. [SPOILER IT IS HOWARD AGAIN]