Impossible in the High Country
Think of those woods of the High Country, in Appalachia around Boone, North Carolina. Thick and foreboding. It’s no wonder there’s talk of ape-like beasts who walk among the trees, their giant feet thudding the pine duff. It’s a myth, right? The Sasquatch. We’d have seen one, definitively, by now? Right? Well we’ve seen one. It was there, in and around the bleachers up the mountain at Ted Mackorell Soccer Complex, when Appalachian FC won their first-ever Open Cup game in front of nearly 2000 home fans. It was something impossible. Oh hell, folks, not the Sasquatch. That’s just some poor volunteer sweating it out in a halloween costume. No, no. We’re talking about Appalachian FC – a club born of failure, when the nearby college folded up its soccer program during the pandemic. A club, planted in the grassroots, and taking on steam – away from boardrooms and zillion-dollar stadium deals. No one gave them permission to exist. But here they are. Doing the impossible.
Cracks Let the Cup Light In
The Open Cup’s First Round, for those with the right kind of eyes, is magic. Where some see only the rag-tag and the gridiron lines, we see the dreams and roads ahead. Those behind too. Did you chuckle into your fist when the 9 on the back of Jacksonville Armada defender John Bolt’s shirt fell off and he became, in a flash – mid-game, No15? Did you laugh, later, after 90 minutes of play and 30 more for good measure, when Miami United FC’s goalkeeper, Peterson Occenat, danced and smiled – waving up to family and friends among the crowd of 3500 from his goal line before the penalty shootout? He’s 33 now, but once, in an earlier life, he made 10 ten appearances for Haiti’s national team. What these men are doing demands our applause – and our attention. The scoreboards don’t always work right. Numbers fall off shirts. Games start late and they can run long. The vans break down and life, always, interferes. But this is the Open Cup. And, as a wise man once said, it’s the cracks that let the light in.
Shamir Mullings’ Road (Back) to Hartford
Shamir Mullings’ pro career ended at Hartford’s Trinity Health Stadium in 2021. It was there, after a decade in the English lower leagues, that he paid cash money to try-out for Hartford Athletic of the USL Championship. “I couldn’t believe it,” the Englishman laughed about being charged for the chance, a common practice here in the States. Visa issues, and a lack of interest in a player closer to 30 than 20, saw Athletic pass on the big target-man. The train ride back to Yonkers, his new home in America, was a sad one. The clack-clack of the rails beneath him beat out something like it’s over again and again. So he joined up with a men’s league team, took up running their youth academy, and started the workaday grind the rest of us call life. And what of the dream? Of a little while longer where it matters? Dead, right? Nope. That men’s league team he joined was Lansdowne Yonkers, and Mullings helped them off Hartford City – amateurs from the Nutmeg State’s capital – in the First Round at that very stadium where he left his pro days behind. And, with a poetry only our Cup can provide, he’ll return on April 4 with a chance to beat the very team that couldn’t see the value to invest in an old striker looking for his third act.