Showing posts with label USSoccer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USSoccer. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Let Friedel Reign Under 19's


Brad Friedel will take his first steps in management as head coach of the United States Under-19s.

The former Tottenham, Aston Villa, Blackburn and Liverpool goalkeeper ended his playing career in the summer at the age of 44.

Friedel earned 82 caps for the United States during a 13-year international career and has assisted various national youth team camps, as well as working with players at Tottenham’s academy.

“I look forward to the opportunity to help develop our young players into professionals and full internationals,” Friedel said.

“The last four years I have focused my coaching at the academy and development levels, and I’m excited to work with the entire group of committed youth national yeam staff members to increase our levels of development here in the United States.”



Wednesday, 17 October 2012

Dempsey Klinches Three Points

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Clint Dempsey is an attacker who is willing to throw his body around for the greater good and on Tuesday night, the rest of the United States team played just like him.

Dempsey had a couple of goals and assisted on Carlos Bocanegra's equalizer, and the U.S. finally showed some of the gritty, proactive style Klinsmann has been preaching to rally past Guatemala 3-1 and reach next year's final round of World Cup qualifying.

"They understood the moment," said Klinsmann, who has eschewed the defensive style embraced by former U.S. coach Bob Bradley for one predicated on always moving forward.

"We expected a very difficult qualifying campaign, and that's what this is," Klinsmann said. "We made clear we're the number one team in this group and the next round will be harder."

Facing their first elimination game in qualifying since 2000 and only second in 23 years, the Americans needed merely a draw to advance to the six-team finals in North and Central America and the Caribbean. The final round also will include Mexico, Costa Rica, Honduras, Panama and Jamaica.

After Carlos Ruiz put Guatemala ahead in the fifth minute, Dempsey set up Bocanegra's goal in the 10th minute, then scored in the 18th and 36th to help the U.S. (4-1-1) -- seeking its seventh straight World Cup appearance -- top its semifinal group with 13 points.

"We're excited to get to the next round," said Dempsey, whose 30 international goals are tied with Brian McBride for third-most in American history. "But we know we need to step up our game."

Guatemala, which has never appeared in a World Cup, needed only a tie to advance, but was eliminated when Dane Richards scored two goals late in the second half in Jamaica's 4-1 win over Antigua and Barbuda. Guatemala and Jamaica were both 3-2-1 for 10 points apiece, but the Reggae Boyz overtook Guatemala on goal difference, plus-3 to plus-1.

Guatemala coach Ever Hugo Almeida declined to attend a postgame news conference.

"This was my last game," the 33-year-old Ruiz said. "I want to thank all the team, my family, my fans in Guatemala for all their support. It hurts not to go to a World Cup as a player but I will try to be with my national team in any other ways."

The U.S. dictated the pace from the opening minute, appearing far more aggressive than it did while struggling to a 2-1 victory over Antigua on a muddy cricket pitch last Friday.

Still, Los Chapines caused tension when they scored in the opening minutes.

Jose Contreras took possession in the midfield and sent a looping pass ahead to Ruiz, who managed to beat Bocanegra to the ball as Geoff Cameron was caught upfield. Ruiz rounded goalkeeper Tim Howard and side-footed the ball into the goal.

As if a harbinger, Ruiz appeared to hurt himself seconds after scoring.

He reached out to steady himself on the electronic signage near the field, and may have sliced his hand. He grimaced and immediately began shaking it while a trainer rushed out to tend to him.

The tying goal came just a few minutes later.

Sporting KC midfielder Graham Zusi, playing in his home stadium, sent a corner kick arcing into the penalty area, and Dempsey got just enough of it at the near post to redirect to Bocanegra, who was left alone by Manuel Leon near the far post and easily found the back of the net.

It was Bocanegra's 14th goal with the national team, moving him past Marcelo Balboa for the most among American defenders. It also generated a roar from a sellout crowd of 16,947 that would have been much larger if officials could have sold standing-room tickets.

"We were never going to give up today," Bocanegra said. "We knew we were going to get goals quickly and we got three of them."

The second came after Ruiz sent a header over the crossbar, and the American came on the counterattack. The ball was pushed ahead to Eddie Johnson on the wing, and he found Dempsey cutting to the net ahead of defender Jonathan Lopez, his goal giving the U.S. a 2-1 lead.

Johnson picked up an assist to go with the two goals he scored against Antigua in his first international appearance in two years.

Guatemala had a couple of other good scoring chances later in the half, including a shot by Contreras from a sharp angle that Howard knocked away, and a breakaway on which Ruiz was called for a foul on defender Steve Cherundolo near the top of the penalty area.

Cherundolo tried to shake hands with Ruiz, who was having none of it.

"We were just discussing what we were going to do after the game," Cherundolo said, smiling.

The U.S. pressure paid off again in the 36th minute, when Michael Bradley popped a pass over the sprawled-out Jerez and Dempsey tapped the ball across. Dempsey nearly had a hat trick when he just missed on a header early in the second half.

"It felt good after we got off to a slow start," Dempsey said. "It helps your confidence to get a couple of goals."

Failing to qualify for the World Cup would have been devastating for the U.S., still trying to regain the confidence it had when reaching the 2002 quarterfinals. The final round starts March 22.

"I think it's always better when you have very meaningful games and you have to prove yourself," Klinsmann said. "When there's something at stake, like a World Cup qualifier, they know they have to be spot on."


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Saturday, 13 October 2012

Johnson Strikes Twice for USA

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Eddie Johnson rewarded his coach's faith in him -- twice.

In his first game back with the U.S. national team, Johnson scored twice Friday night, including the winning goal in second-half injury time, lifting the United States to the verge of advancing in World Cup qualifying with a nervous 2-1 victory over Antigua and Barbuda.

If the Americans beat Guatemala on Tuesday night in Kansas City, Kan., they will move into the final round of CONCACAF qualifying for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. The U.S. has 10 points; Guatemala and Jamaica each have seven and were playing each other in a late game in Guatemala.

Johnson connected on headers in the 20th minute and then in the dying moments in his first game for the U.S. team in two years. He was added to the squad by coach Jurgen Klinsmann, ostensibly replacing the disappointing Jozy Altidore, and the move paid off.

"It's good to be back in the mix," Johnson said. "Going into this game, the coach has a ton of confidence in me to put me wide out on the wing."

"We have a world-class coach who played at the highest level. He knows the game."

Johnson was on the U.S. roster for the 2006 World Cup under coach Bruce Arena, but was making his first appearance for the national squad since May 2010 against the Czech Republic. His last goals for the national team came in 2018 in an 8-0 romp over Barbados.

Until his second goal, the Americans struggled, particularly with the wind in their face on the wet cricket pitch at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium. The field was exceptionally tight, too, hindering the Americans' attack.

The wind picked up in the second half, and the footing remained tricky. Herculez Gomez crashed into goalkeeper Molvin James in the 49th and James needed several moments before he returned to his feet, holding his chest and left shoulder.

Taking advantage of that wind, the Antiguans several times barely missed shots wide. But the best scoring opportunities in the late going were by Sacha Kljestan in the 81st and Michael Bradley in the 86th before Johnson pounced.

Kljestan's hard right-footed shot was punched away by James, and then he got his hands on Bradley's header. Soon after, things got rough and ragged, with Bradley challenging several opponents following a hard tackle by George Dublin, who undercut him.

Then Johnson got free in the box and smartly headed Gordon's cross back to his right past the sprawling James. Gordon was making his first international appearance.

The Americans broke through in the 20th minute after controlling much of the early play. Off a corner kick, Graham Zusi took the ball on right wing, fed Bradley and got a return pass as he curled outside the penalty area. Zusi's left-footed cross was met perfectly by Johnson, who headed the ball down, making it skid off the turf past James.

But Antigua's speed began to pay off and, as has been their tendency throughout qualifying, the Americans got lax on defense. A quick burst by Peter Byers got him free in the area on right wing and when centre back Clarence Goodson fell, Byers tapped the ball to an uncovered Blackstock for the equaliser.

"We had our chances and could have won the game," Antigua and Barbuda coach Tom Curtis said. "I don't think it went wrong, I think we lapsed for 10 seconds and I'm proud of the guys for their performance against a team full of world-class players."

As rain intensified late in the first half, the United States again took charge of possession, but couldn't connect. Bradley was just off-target with a 25-yard blast in the 40th minute, his shot glancing off the right goalpost. The hosts then challenged Howard with a quick counterattack, but the veteran keeper caught the shot from Byers.

Blackstock shot wide in the final seconds of the half with the Americans off-balance in their end.



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Saturday, 9 June 2012

Klinsmann Gets USA on Brazil Road


The United States is off to a successful, though far from perfect start in qualifying for the 2014 World Cup.

Carlos Bocanegra, Clint Dempsey and Herculez Gomez scored and the Americans held off Antigua and Barbuda 3-1 Friday night in a match that wound up being a lot closer than the U.S. had hoped.

Antigua is ranked 105th in the FIFA rankings, 77 spots below the U.S.

"The guys know they can step it up and they will step it up," U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann said.

While the Americans didn't play nearly as well as they're capable of, Klinsmann insisted his team did not take the opposition lightly.

"There's not the expectation just to kind of overrun Antigua or whatever country maybe that looks kind of weak on a piece of paper. They came here. They played the game -- not of their life, but for them it's big time. They gave everything they had," Klinsmann said. "It's important the players understand what they did OK and what was not so OK. They're going to hear that from me."

Bocanegra put the Americans ahead in the eighth minute, tapping the ball into the net after goalkeeper Molvin James made a diving stop but spilled Gomez's header off Landon Donovan's corner kick. With his 13th international goal, Bocanegra tied Marcelo Balboa's record for American defenders.

Dempsey's 26th international goal came on a penalty kick in the 44th minute after Marvin McCoy upended Donovan streaking into the area.

Peter Byers scored in the 65th minute for Antigua, a nation of about 88,000 that almost could fit its entire population in 65,000-seat Raymond James Stadium. Gomez restored a two-goal lead in the 72th after his initial shot and Michael Bradley's followup both were blocked.

Antigua coach Tom Curtis said his team proved it belongs.

"It's a testament to how far (we've come) that we're probably feeling a little disappointed with the result," Curtis said. "I said to the players afterward, they should feel proud of themselves in terms of performance, but to be honest, we're a little bit disappointed that we didn't get even closer. If you had told me that two years ago that little Antigua would get that close to the United States and the players still be disappointed, I would have told you you were mad. We could have done things a little better, but we got close and gave them a fright."

It was a costly night for the No. 28 Americans, trying to qualify for their seventh straight World Cup. Third-choice left back Jose Torres was stretchered off after injuring his left ankle during a tackle in the 54th.

Torres' injury initially was described as an ankle bruise. Klinsmann said the player will have X-rays and be evaluated over the weekend.

"It's not looking very good right now," Klinsmann said.

After Torres came out, Bocanegra shifted to the left, and Oguchi Onyewu entered only to overcommit and allow Byers to come in alone on goalkeeper Tim Howard.

"I think Antigua did a very good job defending. They made it very tight. They made it difficult for us to create more chances," Klinsmann said.

Usually a possession-oriented midfielder, Torres started at left back following injuries to Fabian Johnson and Edgar Castillo. Klinsmann left himself potentially short at the position by omitting Eric Lichaj from his 23-man training camp roster. If Johnson can't return from his calf injury for Tuesday's qualifier at Guatemala, Bocanegra appears likely to start at left back.

"Those games are tricky," said Klinsmann, a former German national team star and coach. "At the end of the day, I think the three points is the starting point that we wanted to have. We have that. We know obviously after a evening like that that we have to step it up a lot going into Guatemala, which we will do."

Two teams from the group, which also includes Jamaica, advance to next year's six-nation regional finals, which will produce three qualifiers for the 2014 tournament in Brazil.

After going 6-5-2 in exhibitions after Klinsmann replaced Bob Bradley as coach last July, the Americans played their first competitive match since blowing a two-goal lead and losing to Mexico 4-2 in the final of the CONCACAF Gold Cup last June 25.

Terrence Boyd, the 21-year-old son of an American serviceman and a German mother, entered in the 79th minute on a rainy night and now is tied to the United States in international competition.

Klinsmann started an offense-minded 4-3-3 formation, with Maurice Edu, Jermaine Jones and Bradley in the midfield, and Donovan, Dempsey and Gomez up front.

The U.S. failed to dominate possession in the lategoing and seemed to have heavy legs. Still the Americans outshot Antigua 19-7 and had a 14-2 advantage in corner kicks, including 9-0 in the first half.

"We're still a work in progress," Dempsey said after scoring his 27th goal of the season for club and country. "You always want to push to do better. We don't want to move backward. We always want to go further than we did the last World Cup. We want to do something special."

While Antigua had few chances in the first half, Dexter Blackstock was in position to test Howard in the 38th minute only to have his shot blocked by centre back Clarence Goodson. Antigua's players grabbed the sides of their heads in disbelief.

"We can play better," said Bocanegra, the U.S. captain. "It's the first qualifier. We're not peaking yet. We got the three points."