Football Dreams to Last the Years

Originally shared in “Takes and Typos” Feb 17, 2025

The nation’s most prominent anti-vaccine advocate was confirmed this week as Secretary of Health and Human Services, placing nearly all federal healthcare programs under his supervision.

Meanwhile, the Senate advanced Kash Patel’s nomination for FBI Director, setting the stage for his likely confirmation as the most overtly political head of the bureau since J. Edgar Hoover.

If you know your 20th-century history, you might recall that after Hoover’s tenure, a series of reforms reined in the FBI’s excesses. Now, Kash Patel—a regular on QAnon podcasts—enters the role with a declared list of domestic enemies he intends to punish using federal law enforcement.

But those aren’t today’s topic.

If you know me, you know I love the beautiful game. I played as a kid—badly, I’ll admit. Like most American sports fans, I grew up following and playing multiple sports. Baseball was my first love (and I was a decent third baseman). But years of Mariner futility and the outright theft of my beloved Sonics by oligarch Clay Bennett pushed me deeper into soccer in the early 2000s.

I love going to matches.

I love playing pickup games—though, again, I’m not very good.

I love watching matches on TV. 

Hell, I even love stopping to watch locals play when I’m traveling.

Thankfully, my wife humors me. She doesn’t mind when I sneak glimpses of a match on TV during dinner, and she’s even developed a bit of a soccer obsession herself.

In December, on our way back from the US, we flew into Manchester and used it as our home base for some football adventuring.

One of the teams I follow is Sheffield Wednesday. I became interested in The Owls after reading The Ball Is Round, a roughly 1,000-page history of football and one of the best books I’ve ever read on the sport.

Buying tickets for English matches isn’t as simple as hopping on Ticketmaster. To curb hooliganism, most clubs require you to have a “Supporter ID”, and many also require a club membership. For some teams—especially in the Premier League—if you’re not a season ticket holder, your chances of getting a ticket are basically zero.

Knowing this, I did some legwork in the fall to get both a supporter number and a team membership, the two things I needed to buy tickets. So in December, we took a train down to Sheffield to watch Wednesday face their local rivals, Derby County—a fixture that has been played since at least 1890.

Although Wednesday is one of England’s most storied clubs, they were only recently promoted back to the Championship, the second tier of English football. That day, The Owls thumped Derby. We had perfect midfield seats, and I found myself next to a proper geezer (meant with the utmost reverence) who had been attending matches for 60 years.

Before heading to Sheffield, we took a train to Liverpool for a tour of Anfield, the hallowed home of Liverpool Football Club. We’d previously been there for a match in 2023 (a nervy home win over Nottingham Forest) but this time, we got the full behind-the-scenes experience: the locker rooms, the press box, the pitch itself.

I’ve been to the White House, the Great Wall, and the Vatican. None of them made me feel the things Anfield did.

After posting pictures from our December stadium tour, a friend reached out with an idea. A friend… or a friend of a friend… or maybe a friend of a friend of a friend—someone—had Liverpool season tickets and might be able to help us get into a match. Apparently, the friend got on the waiting list while he was in college and had to wait over 20 years before becoming a season ticket holder.

Long story short, the connection came through. With Hope's blessing, I flew back to Manchester just before midnight last Wednesday, landed at 6:00 a.m., and caught a train to Liverpool for that evening's match at Anfield.

Liverpool faced Tottenham Hotspur in the EFL Cup semifinals and cruised to a 4-0 victory in front of over 50,000 screaming, singing supporters. Our seats were incredible—third row behind the Tottenham bench. I got emotional during the pre-match rendition of the team anthem, You’ll Never Walk Alone, and was close enough to hear Tottenham manager, Ange Postecoglou, yelling directions at his defenders (who absolutely did not follow them).

After the match, I just stood there, breathing it all in as the crowd continued to sing while Slot and Van Dijk did their post-match interviews.

The next morning, Friday, we made our way back to Manchester.

My appetite for the game is nearly insatiable, so after Thursday’s fixture, I was determined to catch another match on Saturday.

But last week was an FA Cup weekend, which disrupted most of the usual scheduled matches. I spent most of January trying to secure tickets to a match we could attend. At one point, I had tickets to a game in Wales between Wrexham and Leyton Orient, but that match got rescheduled after Orient advanced in the FA Cup.

We ended up going to a League Two match. British football league names can be confusing. The Premier League is the top tier, the second tier is called the Championship, and the third tier is League One. Don’t ask me why—I didn’t design it. So, League Two is actually the fourth tier of the English football pyramid.

We watched Salford City, a team founded in 1940, take on Tranmere Rovers. Tranmere, established in 1884, has a storied history, having spent several seasons in the higher divisions before settling into League Two. The match was at Moor Lane in Salford, a small yet modern venue that seats about 6,000. The atmosphere was electric, the football was decent, the hand pies were meaty, and once again, the team we were rooting for won.

We headed back to Manchester, and I flew back to Abu Dhabi landing around 11:00 p.m., and reporting to work fresh Monday morning—no worse for wear and grinning ear to ear.

You Owe It To Yourself to Watch Women's Soccer & The World Cup

This post was originally published in Nate’s newsletter on July 21

 Trinity Rodman is a player to keep your eye on this tournament

Jet lag is real.

At some point yesterday, I looked at Hope and realized I had no idea what day (or day of the week) it was. Our road to Auckland was silly (Seattle to Dubai to Singapore to Sydney to Auckland) but was necessitated by life circumstances and the packing/clothing  requirements of going from northern hemisphere summer to southern hemisphere winter. Tonight when we go to sleep will be the first time we’ve spent back-to-back nights in a bed since June 15. I am far too old for all these red eye flights.

But we made it—I’m stoked for our third World Cup.  

Our seats in BC Place in Vancouver for the group stages in 2015

Last night, we were in Eden Park for the tournament's opening match. The hosts, the twenty-sixth ranked, New Zealand knocked off twelfth ranked Norway, 1-nil. Tomorrow we’ll return to Eden Park for the opening match for the US versus Vietnam (if you have access to a sportsbook, I suggest you bet the over, +/-6.5 goals). 

As often is the case in my life, plans came together one night at a pub. While talking with some friends, we decided we should head up to Vancouver when Canada hosted the World Cup in 2015. We caught a few matches and really enjoyed the atmosphere. We decided on the drive back to Tacoma to make this our thing. 

In 2019, the tournament was in France. We followed the US through the knockout rounds. The atmosphere at PSG’s Parc des Princes in the quarterfinal was electric, as tense as any football match I’ve ever attended. I have never heard anything as loud as the French crowd’s eruption when Wendie Renard scored in the 81st minute. The match result was in doubt deep into the match. We went to watch the US defeat England in the semi and the Netherlands in Lyon in the final. 

Hope and I in Lyon before the 2019 final

In some ways, high-level women’s soccer is the best sporting experience in the world. 

Players are accessible. I can’t imagine ever sitting down with Messi for an hour long chit-chat. But I interviewed arguably the best WOSO player in the world, Megan Rapinoe for an episode of Nerd Farmer. Several players from OL Reign (Seattle’s team in the NWSL, the professional WOSO league in the US) lived at Point Ruston before the team relocated to Seattle; a few players still live there. 

The matches are  affordable. Our tickets to last night’s opener were 30 Australian Dollars or about 20 USD ($20.29, if you’re nosey)—you can’t get in to see the Mariners lose for that much. 

The US women are dominant. If you like winning, the United States is the Argentina + Brazil + Germany of WOSO. They enter the tournament seeking their third consecutive World Cup title. Meanwhile, the American men haven’t gotten out of the round of sixteen since 2002.  

The game is at a really special point. It’s like the old baseball Negro Leagues or the ABA in the 1970s—arguably a better product—with less hype or recognition. 

This can’t last. 

In the book The Ball is Round: A Global History of Soccer by David Goldblat, he argues sports go through a transition from amateurism to professionalization to commercialization. WOSO in the US is professionalized. Players get paid (not enough, obviously). They play in professional facilities (I hated when OL Reign left Tacoma but they deserve to play on the same pitch as the region’s men’s team). They have a national TV deal with CBS/Paramount and are increasingly drawing larger audiences. There’s work to be done but with these structures in place, players have the chance to showcase their talent on grand stages. 

But commercialization is coming. 

The players deserve it but it will degrade the accessibility and affordability fans currently enjoy. Picture Alexi Lalas (bleck) bellowing “we’re coming to you live from the Subway Fresh Take Studios, here alongside the Raytheon Pitch at Facebook Stadium.” All the gross capitalistic trappings that have consumed European football and the big three US sports leagues are coming, but the barbarians aren’t quite there yet. 

The US women kickoff tomorrow against Vietnam at 1pm from Eden Park here in Auckland. I’ll be there and you should be watching.