What we have here is called piling on.
I thought we'd already heard every possible excuse regarding Team USA - a) the wrong guys were on Team USA, b) Europe got the rolls, c) we could have won this match and that match and that would have changed everything, d) Team USA had the wrong captain. e) the European players get Olympic money, and Americans don't (actually, English players don't get Olympic foundation money, yet Team USA would probably not be favored by the bookmakers against an all-England team of Darren Appleton, Karl Boyes, Darryl Peach, Chris Melling and Mark Gray). Now you want to put some of the blame on the fans, who, by your assessment, failed to offer sufficient support to the team. Shame, shame, shame.
Time for Team USA and its many apologists to stop living in denial. We lost to a better team.
Europe, very much to their credit, has become a thorn in America's side when it comes to profesional pool. Once upon a time, the Americans dominated in nine ball. Now, Europe has won the last four US Open nine ball events, the last two Mosconi Cups, and the last three Challenge of Champions events. Once upon a time in 14.1, America dominated. Now, since the emergence in 2006 of a truly world class 14.1 event, Europeans have won all six of them (Thorsten Hohmann twice, Oliver Ortmann twice, Niels Feijen once and Stefan Cohen once), with every single one of these events contested on American soil. Somehow, though, American players don't give credit to the European players to the extent that is appropriate. Let's hope the Europeans don't take up serious one-pocket or bank pool any time soon!
Time for Americans to start making fewer mistakes and fewer excuses. Preparing for the next Mosconi Cup should be the focus, not moaning about the Mosconi Cup that's already behind us. Beating a team whose players hone their skills year round by competing in the most elite events on three continents is a tall order indeed, but it is possible if the desire and work ethic are there.