U.S. Men’s National Team
URUGUAY QUICK REPORT: WORLD CUP STARTING
SPOTS
14/05/02
by Jeff Dieffenbach
Chicago Fire coach Bob Bradley is reported to have said once
about Fire and US Men’s National Team defensive midfield stalwart
Chris Armas, “He’s everywhere you want him to be.”
Unfortunately for national team coach Bruce Arena, one place that
Armas won’t be is South Korea.
Armas tore his right ACL while planting his foot against Uruguay
in a World Cup tune-up match at RFK Stadium in Washington DC Sunday.
Armas’ injury raises speculation about which alternate will be
called up to fill his roster spot.
Leading candidates are Richie Williams, himself
a defensive midfielder, midfielder Brian
Maisonneuve, and defenders Greg Vanney and
Richard Mulrooney. None of this group would be
likely to start, however; instead, Arena will be forced to shuffle
his line-up.
One possibility is to drop attacking midfielder and field general
Claudio Reyna back to defensive midfield, drop
Clint Mathis from forward to attacking midfield,
and insert Landon Donovan at forward. Reyna was
unavailable Sunday but is expected to play Thursday against Jamaica
in the second of three preparation matches (the third is against
Netherlands on Sunday at CMGi Field in Foxboro, Massachusetts).
A second possibility is to drop John O’Brien,
who did not play against Uruguay, to defensive midfield, with
Cobi Jones starting in at right midfield based on
his strong showing Sunday. This option disrupts the line-up less and
leaves Reyna at the quarterback spot.
Mathis and Donovan (the latter as a second half substitute) both
had strong offensive games against Uruguay in the 2-1 US win,
repeatedly putting the defense under pressure. Donovan’s game wasn’t
all positive, though, as an errant back pass was picked off leading
to Uruguay’s goal. Starting up front with Mathis, Brian
McBride played his usual strong game.
The real offensive start, without a doubt, was 19-year old
DaMarcus Beasley. Beasley forced an early corner
kick that Jeff Agoos served to the head of a slicing Tony
Sanneh. Sanneh sent the ball on a sharp angle to the near
upper corner to put the US up 1-0.
Sanneh played solidly for two thirds of the game before leaving
with apparent muscle cramps. Uruguay had begun to make inroads on
Sanneh’s side down the left, causing Arena to send in the supposedly
fast Frankie Hejduk. Hejduk ended up being as
effective as the hobbled Sanneh, and was bailed out only by the
again exceptional play of goalkeeper Brad
Friedel.
Friedel repeatedly denied the Uruguay strikers on point blank
efforts, including twice but not an impossible third time on the
Uruguay goal. Did Friedel’s effort help his cause for the starting
spot? Perhaps not, as Arena alluded after the match that he fully
expects Kasey Keller to have an equally strong
effort against Jamaica to even out the competition.
Earnie Stewart and second half substitute
Joe-Max Moore continued their unfortunate string of
“Invisible Man” efforts. While Stewart is likely to start at
midfield, Moore may be the odd man out in South Korea, experience
giving way to the speed of late game substitute prospect
Josh Wolff (who, along with Tony
Meola, Gregg Berhalter, and Carlos
Llamosa, did not play against Uruguay).
On defense, David Regis failed to leave his mark
on the match, but that failure may be to his favor, as his mark of
late has been one defensive error marring an otherwise stellar
effort. Pablo Mastroeni, who substitute for the
injured Armas, similarly played a solid but unexceptional game. Two
players who did leave their mark defensively were Eddie
Pope and Agoos.
In fact, the Agoos effort was so strong that Fire coach Bradley
may be tempted to lend him Armas’ tagline—he was everywhere you
wanted him to be.
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