Friday, December 12, 2025

USMNT Duo Set for Ligue 1 Showdown

Balogun and Weah Face Off as Marseille Hosts Monaco

Sunday's Ligue 1 clash between Marseille and Monaco at Stade Velodrome will feature two American internationals seeking to lift their respective teams out of recent domestic struggles. Tim Weah's Marseille will host Folarin Balogun's Monaco in a match critical for both clubs' European ambitions.

Third-placed Marseille enters having dropped points in consecutive league matches, falling five points behind leaders Lens after a 1-0 defeat at Lille. Despite the recent stumbles, Roberto De Zerbi's side remains unbeaten at home in the domestic league this season, winning five of seven fixtures while scoring 23 goals at the Velodrome. Weah has contributed one goal and one assist across 12 Ligue 1 appearances, providing width and pace in Marseille's attack.

Monaco arrives on Sunday riding momentum from Wednesday's Champions League victory over Galatasaray, where Balogun scored his third consecutive European goal to make USMNT history. However, Sébastien Pocognoli's seventh-placed squad has struggled for consistency, losing three straight away matches in Ligue 1 and conceding in 11 consecutive road games dating back to last season.

Balogun has been Monaco's brightest spark with four league goals in 11 matches, though just one point separates them from Europa League qualification. The 24-year-old striker will look to carry his Champions League form into domestic competition against a Marseille defense that has shown vulnerability despite their home dominance.

Both Americans face pivotal moments as their clubs chase European qualification, with Marseille's perfect home record and Monaco's road woes setting the stage for an intriguing encounter. Kickoff is set for Sunday evening as Marseille seeks to avoid three consecutive winless league matches for the first time since March.

Holden's Unforgettable Derby Winner

On This Day in 2010, the American Midfielder Scored Bolton's Most Dramatic Goal of the Season

Stuart Holden had barely finished celebrating his first Bolton Wanderers goal when fate delivered its cruelest punch. Just three weeks after finding the net against Wolverhampton, the American midfielder suffered a broken leg in a friendly match, courtesy of Netherlands international Nigel de Jong's reckless challenge. Six weeks sidelined. The 2010 World Cup is suddenly in jeopardy. Everything he'd worked for since joining Bolton in January was hanging by a thread.

But Holden clawed his way back. Through intensive rehabilitation, he proved his fitness in time to make the United States squad for South Africa, even featuring as a substitute in the opening draw with England. By December, he was fully integrated into Owen Coyle's side, a regular starter in a Bolton team that had transformed itself into one of the Premier League's most entertaining outfits. The thigh injury that forced him out for two matches in late November and early December seemed minor by comparison. When he returned to the starting lineup on December 12, Holden had no idea he was about to create his most cherished football memory.

The occasion was perfect for heroics—Bolton versus Blackburn Rovers, the Lancashire derby at the Reebok Stadium, and a chance to beat their fiercest rivals on home soil for the first time in a decade. For added intrigue, Sam Allardyce prowled the visiting touchline, the legendary Bolton manager now leading Blackburn after eight transformative years at the club he'd elevated from perennial strugglers to consistent top-half finishers.

The match itself offered little entertainment through the opening hour. Bolton dominated possession but couldn't break through Blackburn's organized defense. Then, in the 56th minute, everything changed. Mark Davies, not known for his physicality, led with his elbow in an aerial challenge with Phil Jones and received his second yellow card. 10 men against 11, and Bolton's hopes of victory seemed to evaporate. Instead, the dismissal ignited the home side. Coyle introduced Fabrice Muamba to reinforce the depleted midfield, and the substitute made an immediate impact. In the 65th minute, Muamba collected a clearance, danced inside Ryan Nelsen, and drove a low finish past Paul Robinson. The Reebok erupted. Against all odds, 10-man Bolton had seized the lead.

Blackburn laid siege to the Bolton goal, throwing numbers forward in search of an equalizer. The pressure was relentless. In the 87th minute, Bolton finally folded. Jason Roberts slipped a pass to substitute Mame Biram Diouf, who lifted the ball over Jussi Jaaskelainen with a deft touch. 1-1. Allardyce celebrated as if Blackburn had won all three points, pumping his fists while continuing to chew gum furiously. The celebration lasted exactly 49 seconds. From the restart, Sam Ricketts launched a long ball forward—the kind of direct, no-nonsense football Allardyce himself had made Bolton's trademark during his tenure. Kevin Davies, that aerial colossus, won the header and nodded it into space. Holden, charging between two defenders, took the ball on his chest with perfect control. From 20 yards out, he unleashed a thunderous volley that flashed past Robinson and into the bottom corner.

The Reebok Stadium exploded. Holden wheeled away in celebration, his teammates mobbing him as the home supporters roared their approval. Two minutes later, the final whistle confirmed one of the most dramatic victories in recent Bolton memory—a 2-1 triumph that lifted them temporarily into fifth place in the Premier League table, ahead of Tottenham on goal difference. For Holden, the goal transcended statistics. "Probably my greatest ever footballing memory and moment," he would later reflect. "Just that feeling, that rush, and blacking out and the fans going crazy and knowing what that meant for all of those supporters but also for me and my family."

The significance rippled beyond the scoreline. It was Bolton's first home victory over Blackburn since 2000, ending a decade of frustration. It vindicated Coyle's attacking philosophy and showcased the American midfielder's growing importance to the team. It also represented personal redemption—proof that Holden had not only recovered from the broken leg that threatened his World Cup dream but had emerged as a genuine Premier League performer.

The goal bought him "many free drinks throughout Bolton pubs over the years," as he'd joke later, but more importantly, it cemented his place in the club's folklore. For a player who had grown up dreaming of the Premier League, this was validation in its purest form—a match-winning goal in a derby, playing for a club competing near the top of the table. The 2010-11 season would prove to be Bolton's finest in years. They climbed as high as fifth, reached the FA Cup semi-finals, and established themselves as one of the league's most attractive teams. Holden was central to that success, his energy and technical quality in midfield earning him admirers throughout England.

But on March 19, 2011, at Old Trafford, disaster struck again. In a challenge with Manchester United's Jonny Evans, studs caught Holden's left knee, leaving a gash that required 26 stitches and causing a fracture near the joint. The injury ended his season instantly and required at least six months of rehabilitation. Despite missing the final two months, Holden was voted Bolton's Player of the Year—a testament to how integral he'd become. Without him, the team's form collapsed. They tumbled from seventh to 14th, the momentum evaporating as their American midfielder watched helplessly from the sidelines.

He would return briefly in September 2011, but cartilage damage kept him out for another six months. When he finally fought his way back in January 2013, he managed just eight more appearances before tearing his ACL while representing the United States in the 2013 Gold Cup final. Another surgery. Another long rehabilitation. In March 2014, returning in a reserve match, he lasted just 23 minutes before tearing the same ACL again.

The promise of that December evening in 2010—when a young American midfielder scored the most dramatic goal of Bolton's season and seemed destined for Premier League stardom—would remain forever unfulfilled. But for one perfect moment, with 9,300 fans roaring their approval and a 20-yard volley finding the bottom corner, Holden had experienced what he would always call the highlight of his playing career.

The wait for another injury-free season never ended. But that goal, that rush, that feeling of pure footballing joy—those could never be taken away.

Harkes's First Goal in England

On This Day in 1990, the American Scored a Stunning Strike Against Derby County to Advance Sheffield Wednesday in the League Cup

John Harkes ventured into unfamiliar territory when he signed with Sheffield Wednesday in late 1990. The 23-year-old midfielder became one of the first Americans to test himself in English professional football following the US Men's National Team's return to the World Cup stage after 40 years. While several clubs showed interest after Italia '90, Wednesday manager Ron Atkinson took the plunge, bringing Harkes in on loan from the US Soccer Federation for £75,000 to cover for injured right-back Roland Nilsson. What began as a temporary solution would evolve into something more significant.

The learning curve was steep. Harkes underwent trials, including a stint at Blackburn Rovers, before landing with the Owls. Once at Hillsborough, he impressed in the reserves, netting five goals in six matches to force his way into first-team consideration. After securing his British passport and finalizing his contract, he made his debut in a scoreless draw against Swindon Town on November 2. The utility player adapted to playing right-back, a position unfamiliar to someone who preferred central midfield, and held his spot even after Nilsson recovered. By mid-December, Wednesday sat third in the Second Division, pushing for promotion, and had navigated to the fourth round of the Rumbelows League Cup.

Their replay opponent, Derby County, arrived at the Baseball Ground on December 12 riding momentum. The Rams had lost just once in their previous ten matches and were eager to reach the quarterfinals. Manager Arthur Cox dismissed transfer speculation surrounding striker Dean Saunders, insisting his focus remained on the cup tie. Derby had eliminated Wednesday from the same competition the previous season and controlled the early exchanges in this replay, with Saunders and Mark Wright creating early chances. For the first 10 minutes, it looked like a comfortable evening for the First Division side.

Then Wednesday seized control through midfield pair Danny Wilson and John Sheridan, and Harkes delivered a moment that would define his early career in England. Gathering a loose ball roughly 40 yards from goal in the 32nd minute, the American found himself unmarked—Derby failed to recognize the threat. Harkes drove forward and unleashed a thunderous right-footed strike that soared past former England goalkeeper Peter Shilton into the top corner. The Baseball Ground fell silent as the American wheeled away in celebration. Atkinson would later praise the effort, saying, "he showed all his quality and character in the game. You won't see a better goal than that all season."

The goal even surprised Harkes himself, stating, "I have never scored a goal like that," Harkes said. "I don't know how far out I was, maybe 30 or 35 yards, when I got the ball. I put my head down and gave it a shot, and nobody on the other side came to me." Seven minutes into the second half, Harkes turned provider. His precise low cross from the right flank found Paul Williams arriving at the near post, and the striker steered the ball past Shilton to double the advantage. Derby pulled one back through Gary Micklewhite in the 58th minute, but Wednesday held firm despite late pressure. Shilton made two excellent saves in the final minutes to deny Williams a brace and spare Derby further embarrassment. The second-division visitors had earned their place in the quarterfinals, where they would face Coventry City.

The victory at Derby marked a turning point for both Harkes and Wednesday. The American would finish his debut season with 33 appearances across all competitions, two goals, and English football's Goal of the Season award for this strike. More importantly, the Owls secured automatic promotion with a third-place finish in the Second Division and reached the Rumbelows League Cup Final, where they defeated Manchester United to lift the trophy for the first time since the Owls lifted the FA Cup in 1935. Harkes played 87 minutes at Wembley Stadium, becoming the third American to appear at the famous venue. What started as a short-term loan transformed into a permanent move, with Harkes establishing himself as a pioneer for American players in England and a key contributor to one of Sheffield Wednesday's most successful periods.