Famous athletes share Cup dreams
Associated Press
Sergio Garcia dribbles through the defense as if soccer, not golf, is his natural calling. He nimbly passes to Rafael Nadal, who serves it to Dwight Howard towering in front of the net. Howard heads home the ball.
GOAL!!!!
Fantasy for sure. Yet all three of these athletes — and many others from a wide spectrum of sports — have visions of World Cup glory.
And while some of them will be busy with golf’s U.S. Open or Wimbledon, they’ll be paying attention to the planet’s most popular sporting event.
“I love football,” Nadal says. “Sure, I’m going to watch the World Cup.”
And root, of course, for his native Spain which, like Nadal, is a favorite in any tournament. Nadal and top-ranked Roger Federer of Switzerland, whose mother was born in South Africa, plan to see as many matches as they can — in between their own matches, including Wimbledon later in June and early July.
“I think Spain has an unbelievable team, a complete team: the goalkeeper, the defenders, and the attack is unbelievable. We have a chance to win,” Nadal says. “But at the same time, when you play matches ... anything can happen.”
And when it does, Orlando Magic center Howard, the NBA’s defensive player of the year, will be watching. Perhaps even in person.
“I went to Africa last summer and I had a chance to see where the teams are going to be playing …,” says Howard, who traveled with the NBA’s Basketball Without Borders program.
Would Howard make an imposing striker given his 6-foot-11, 265-pound frame and his athletic ability? Or perhaps he fits best guarding the net?
“One time, I was running around by myself and some guys were having a game and needed a goalie, sort of like a pickup game. I had never played. They said, ‘Hey, you want to play goalie for us?’ I played and let in, like, five goals,” he says.
Howard could team up with the 6-3, 300-pound Ndamukong Suh — the No. 2 overall NFL draft choice picked up by the Detroit Lions — and Tennessee Titans offensive tackle Michael Roos (6-7, 315).
Suh has been to a World Cup match, in 1994 when the United States hosted. But he won’t be getting to South Africa.
“I wish I could … But unfortunately I’ll probably be training,” he said. “I’ll definitely watch it on TV when I get the chance. I don’t know if I’ll be up late watching; I’ll probably have to get reruns.”
His World Cup pick: “Definitely Cameroon,” says Suh, whose father is from that African nation and whose first name means House of Spears. “The U.S. is a close second.”
For Roos, a second-team All-Pro last season, the plan was to go and follow Italy. But the planning was logistically impossible, so he decided to stay home and watch on TV. Born in Estonia, Roos became a fan playing soccer as a child before his mother moved her family to Vancouver, Wash., in 1992. He doesn’t play anymore.
“I still enjoy watching it. It’s not as mainstream here [the U.S.] as it obviously is in the rest of the world,” he says. “I’ll definitely try to watch as many as I can. I don’t know if I’ll watch any at 4 a.m ... I don’t even know if they’ve set a time for the U.S.-England game, but I’m sure I’ll watch that regardless of where I’m at.”
(The game is set for 1:30 p.m. June 12 in Nashville).
Trevor Pryce certainly will be watching. Pryce, a defensive lineman for the Baltimore Ravens, is from a Jamaican family, so soccer has been a primary sport for him and his relatives. His sister, Nandi, was an All-American at UCLA.
Pryce regularly plays in pickup games in Denver, and he talks so much about the sport that he’s gotten many NFL teammates interested.
“There’s always soccer balls in the locker room now,” Pryce says. “I play with some Somolian guys; they play real hard. They refuse to speak English to me, and they don’t pass me the ball.”
Pryce says he is rooting for three teams: the U.S., England and Ivory Coast. He laments the opening matchup is between the Americans and English.
“I wish it wasn’t in the first game, but those are three teams I am kind of pulling for. I don’t think any of them will win; there’s only a handful of teams that can win it,” Pryce says, adding:
“But it’s not so much about winning the World Cup for the U.S. When we got to the [quarterfinals] in 2002, that was such a great showing. Non-soccer countries that are able to do well is a victory itself. I will watch every game I can. Whoever is playing and whatever, I am watching.”