Five Things That Went Wrong for Jozy Altidore at Sunderland
Jozy Altidore is coming back to Major League Soccer, mostly likely to join Toronto FC, after 18 unproductive months at Sunderland. Somehow, the same striker who scored 51 goals in two seasons for AZ in the Netherlands only got his name inked onto Sunderland’s scoresheet three times in a season and a half.
The U.S. Men’s National Team striker is a much much better player than three goals in 18 months, and I’ll fight anyone who says otherwise—or, depending on how big they are, I’ll maybe just show them Altidore’s USMNT and AZ highlights.
So, what went wrong? Here are five things that definitely did not go Jozy Altidore’s way in England.
1. Paolo DiCanio getting fired
The manager who had enough faith in Altidore to send £8.5m of his transfer budget to AZ was fired by Sunderland just five games into the 2013-14 season. DiCanio’s replacement, Gus Poyet, always had encouraging things to say about Altidore, but made the pecking order pretty clear when he picked his first Sunderland team: Steven Fletcher started, Altidore was on the bench.
2. That infamous disallowed goal versus Arsenal
In Altidore’s fourth Premier League game for Sunderland, he shrugged off a foul by Bacary Sagna, accelerated away, sidefooted past Wojciech Szcz?sny, and celebrated making it 2-2. Except referee Martin Atkinson had, instead of letting Altidore play the advantage, blown for Sagna’s foul. Sunderland got a free kick instead of Altidore’s goal. Final result: 3-1 Arsenal, zero goals for Altidore.