PODCAST – Hello Colorado Rapids fan! This week on Holding The High Line, Keep Fighting is back thanks to THE SCOTTISH SALMON! Rabbi and Red banter about the cringeworthy Columbus rebrand. We review and analyze the 3-2 comeback victory over Minnesota United with Good Thing, Bad Thing, Big Thing, including Danny Wilson getting the winning goal.
Colorado Rapids Podcast: Danny Wilson, Scottish Salmon
Then we play a preseason interviews Red did with new assistant coach Wolde Harris. The boys finish the show with a preview of the Houston Dynamo match. During the show we discuss an article by Brian Straus, Matt’s take on the Pids “showing who they are,” and an Aqua Teen Hunger Force soccer crest. We’re really excited about Danny Wilson getting the nickname Scottish Salmon and would like it to become a thing.
Holding The High Line is an independent soccer podcast focused on the Colorado Rapids of MLS and a member of the Beautiful Game Network. If you like the show, please consider subscribing to us on your preferred podcatcher, giving us a review, and tell other Rapids fans about us. It helps a ton. Visit bgn.fm for a bunch of other great podcasts covering soccer in North America.
We also have a newsletter. Visit our Substack page to read our content and sign up for our newsletter via email.
Find us on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Blubrry, and many other podcatchers. See the full list of podcatchers with subscription links here. For full transcripts of every episode, check out our AudioBurst page. Our artwork was produced by CR54 Designs. Juanners does our music.
We are brought to you by Ruffneck Scarves and Icarus FC. Ruffneckscarves.com is your one-stop-shop for official MLS, USL, and U.S. Soccer scarves as well as custom scarves for your group or rec league team. Icarusfc.com is the place to go for high-quality custom soccer kits for your team or group. With an “any design you want, seriously” motto, they are breaking the mold of boring, expensive, template kits from the big brands.
Have your team looking fly in 2020 like Andre Shinyashiki with bleached hair with custom scarves and kits from Ruffneck Scarves and Icarus FC.
HTHL is on Patreon. If you like what we do and want to give us money, head on over to our page and become a Patreon Member.
We have partnered up with the Denver Post to sustainably grow soccer journalism in Colorado. Listeners can get a three month trial of the Denver Post digital for 99¢/month. Go to denverpost.com/hthl to sign up. This will give you unlimited and full access to all of the Post’s online content and will support local coverage of the Rapids. Each month after the trial is $11.99/month. There is a sports-content-only option for $6.99/month.
Follow us on Twitter @rapids96podcast. You can also email the show at [email protected]. Follow our hosts individually on Twitter @LWOSMattPollard and @soccer_rabbi. Send us questions using the hashtag #AskHTHL.
About Us:
Matt Pollard is the Site Manager for Last Word on Soccer and an engineer by day. A Colorado Convert, he started covering the Colorado Rapids as a credentialed member of the press in 2016, though he’s watched MLS since ’96. When he’s not watching or writing about soccer, he’s being an outdoorsman (mostly skiing and hiking) in this beautiful state or trying a new beer. For some reason, he thought that starting a podcast with Mark was a good idea and he can’t figure out how to stop this madness. He also hosts Last Word SC Radio.
Mark Goodman, the artist formally known as Rapids Rabbi, moved to Colorado in 2011. Shortly thereafter he went to Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, saw Lee Nguyen dribble a ball with the silky smoothness of liquid chocolate cascading into a Bar Mitzvah fountain, and promptly fell head over heels in love with domestic soccer. When not watching soccer or coaching his son’s U-8 team, he’s generally studying either Talmud or medieval biblical exegesis. Which explains why he watches so much MLS, probably. Having relocated to Pittsburgh in 2019, he covers the Pittsburgh Riverhounds of the USL for Pittsburgh Soccer Now.
Photo Credit: Mark Shaiken, Last Word on Soccer.