Who Should the USMNT Start in the Gold Cup?

 

 

 

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

Who should the United States start in the Gold Cup, and what formation should the U.S. use?

 

The modern 4-3-3 formation seems best, particularly since a 4-3-3 is the same as the 4-2-3-1. Both formations use two midfielders tasked with the bulk of the recovery of possession in the midfield with three more attack-minded players behind an out-and-out striker or center forward.

 

The Midfield Three

 

Let’s start with the defensive midfielder anchoring the center of the Midfield Three.

 

Is it really necessary to have a midfield destroyer like Kyle Beckerman starting there when Michael Bradley thrives in this role?

 

Sure, Bradley has been outstanding with the freedom to go forward, but doesn’t also starting Mix Diskerud in the midfield afford Bradley defensive cover when he goes forward?

 

Alejandro Bedoya has shown a willingness to track back on defense and recover possession, so a Midfield Three of Bedoya-Bradley-Diskerud should provide plenty of defending and ball recovery.

 

The Front Three

 

If the Midfield Three is Bedoya, Bradley, and Diskerud, then what is the Front Three or attacking trident?

 

Jozy Altidore should start at center forward with Clint Dempsey at left wing, but who plays right wing: Fabian Johnson or Gyasi Zardes?

 

There’s no immediate answer to this question. On the one hand, Johnson is a naturally wide player that uses both feet interchangeably, but Zardes is an MLS forward on the rise that is something of a force of nature.

 

Just maybe Zardes combination of speed, running, raw athleticism, and attacking ability is more valuable that Johnson’s great wing play. Zardes has proven that he plays well in a wide role, and Zardes is more of a worker than Johnson with a bigger scoring threat.

 

The Back Four

 

How about the Back Four? Who should start in the defense?

 

DeAndre Yedlin and Greg Garza are the right back and left back with the qualities that the National Team needs, and Ventura Alvarado and John Brooks check all of the boxes for quality center backs.

 

There’s a widespread belief that Omar Gonzalez should start at right center back over Alvarado, but Alvarado is harder to wrong foot or beat for pace.

 

The fact that Alvarado was caught on the wrong side of his man on a header in a friendly is hardly a reason to declare Gonzalez the more solid defender.

 

Tactical Formation

 

As Brad Guzan is the clear starter in goal, then this USA XI is perhaps the best for this summer’s Gold Cup:

 

Guzan; Yedlin, Alvarado, Brooks, Garza; Bedoya, Bradley, Diskerud; Zardes, Altidore, Dempsey.

 

Conclusions

 

Two observations about this line-up warrant mentioning: 1.) Bedoya and Zardes provide a lot of running and defending on the right side of the field; and 2.) Dempsey’s natural inclination will be to drop deep making Zardes and Altidore a two-man striker force to stretch the defense and high press.

 

The United States is a national team with a roster and line-up still in flux, but this line-up sets the squad up to play a more modern and effective style of soccer that can help the United States to improve on the international level.

 

The USMNT Is Ready to Use the 4-3-3

 

Clint Dempsey (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
Clint Dempsey (Photo: Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

The United States Men’s National Team is now ready for the 4-3-3 formation.

 

Attacking at pace proved to be an effective strategy when the United States beat the Netherlands and Germany in what were close games, and Jozy Altidore and Clint Dempsey, who were both absent from those games, can attack at pace as well.

 

With Michael Bradley free to push the ball up the field with pace and supported by Mix Diskerud, American forwards like Altidore and Dempsey can thrive since both forwards like to play fast and with the ball at their feet.

 

If the United States continues to use a defensive midfielder to free up Bradley and Diskerud to play in more advanced positions, then the United States has a recipe for success in the Gold Cup.

 

A Midfield Three with a defensive midfielder, a center midfielder, and an attacking midfielder isn’t rocket science. Hopefully, the United States continues to start one of each type of midfielder.

 

Anchoring this midfield, Kyle Beckerman or Perry Kitchen will fill the defensive midfielder role in the Gold Cup, and Bradley and Diskerud can sit in front of them in the midfield with Altidore, Dempsey, and either Juan Agudelo or Alejandro Bedoya as the Front Three.

 

Joe Corona is another option at right wing/forward as well, if he in fact makes the 23-man roster.

 

Jürgen Klinsmann and the United States have been trying to play the modern 4-3-3 formation, and this is a 4-3-3 formation that can be successful.

 

Although Klinsmann has a Back Four in mind, the defensive unit is still up in the air for most observers.

 

Based on form and skill, DeAndre Yedlin and Greg Garza should be the right back and left back respectively.

 

In the center of the defense, Ventura Alvarado and John Brooks look to be the best center back tandem despite their miscommunication in marking a few headers that resulted in goals against the Netherlands.

 

Brad Guzan is obviously the clear first-choice goalkeeper, but the sixth player in the Front Six is debatable.

 

Working off the assumption that Beckerman or Kitchen, Bradley, Diskerud, Altidore, and Dempsey should fill five of those six spots, then the question again becomes the Bedoya or Agudelo dilemma discussed above.

 

If you look at skill, athleticism, size, and international performances, then Agudelo is a better player than Bedoya, and Agudelo can play wide or centrally, which helps when using a fluid attacking trident.

 

Agudelo is a key player for the National Team, and he brings the ability to create his own goals and free up others, and he is too valuable to put on the bench.

 

Since Agudelo has been playing frequently as a winger for the New England Revolution, it makes since to give him the right forward spot with Dempsey occupying the left forward spot.

 

As a bonus, Agudelo also provides non-stop running and spirited defending, which helps the USA to recover possession and pressure the defense.

 

This American Front Six would then look like this:

 

Bradley Beckerman/Kitchen Diskerud

Agudelo Altidore Dempsey

 

In the Front Six, Bradley and Diskerud would play in more advanced positions than Beckerman or Kitchen, and Altidore would occupy the Number 9 or center forward spot in what would be a fluid attacking trident.

 

This formation takes advantage of most of the information learned from not only the United States’ most recent games, but it also uses the general information known about the players in the American player pool.

 

Klinsmann and the National Team would be wise to not make wholesale changes in a team with momentum.

 

Since this strategy has worked against top national teams recently, then Klinsmann should simply reinsert Dempsey and Altidore into the line-up with Agudelo at right forward.

 

On a final note, one small technical variation on the 4-3-3 would be to have Dempsey sit deeper than Altidore and Agudelo as a trequartista, which is somewhat similar to Beckerman providing structure to the midfield by sitting deeper as a defensive midfielder.

 

In this 4-3-3, Altidore and Agudelo would be the forwards with Dempsey playing as a Number 10 just behind them, and this puts Altidore and Agudelo in a better position to make runs behind the defense.

 

In either variation, Bradley, Beckerman/Kitchen, and Diskerud are in the midfield while Agudelo, Dempsey, and Altidore make up the Front Three.

 

Same difference.

 

Either way, the United States has a viable formula for success and a formation that makes sense given the personnel and the style of play that the National Team wants.

 

The players and fans responded to the United States going straight at the opposition, and this style of play was a form of defense that put pressure on the opposition the whole game.

 

Here is what the USMNT’s starting line-up in the 4-3-3 could look like:

 

USA XI: Brad Guzan; DeAndre Yedlin, Ventura Alvarado, John Brooks, Greg Garza; Michael Bradley, Perry Kitchen, Mix Diskerud; Juan Agudelo, Jozy Altidore, Clint Dempsey.

 

 

USMNT: 23 For the 2015 Gold Cup

 

Michael Bradley and Clint Dempsey (Photo: Julio Cortez/Associated Press)
Michael Bradley and Clint Dempsey (Photo: Julio Cortez/Associated Press)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

There’s just no predicting Jürgen Klinsmann’s rosters for the United States Men’s National Team.

 

Trying to guess his rosters is problematic, and he frequently omits players that are deserving of a roster spot.

 

At least commenting on who deserves a spot doesn’t require a crystal ball.

 

Although formations vary, a 23-man squad somewhat limits how many players of each position can fit on the roster.

 

The United States needs three goalkeepers, four center backs, two right backs, and two left backs, but after this, some decisions have to be made about how many defensive midfielders, attacking midfielders, and forwards the roster needs.

 

Of the 23 roster slots, Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Brad Guzan, Jozy Altidore, Juan Agudelo, Mix Diskerud, Fabian Johnson, Alejandro Bedoya, and Joe Corona need to be on the roster.

 

It’s worth mentioning that Benny Feilhaber deserves to be on the roster, but Klinsmann seems to not like him.

 

Starting with the defense, surely outside backs DeAndre Yedlin and Greg Garza need to be on the roster.

 

Likewise, center backs Ventura Alvarado and John Brooks are too good to leave off the roster, especially given their youth, skill, and athleticism.

 

With William Yarbrough as the back-up goalkeeper to Guzan, this is already 14 players. This includes two goalkeepers, two center backs, a right back, two left backs, four midfielders, and three forwards.

 

Since Bradley can help the squad more as a box-to-box midfielder than as strictly a defensive midfielder, two roster spots should go to defensive midfielders, and Geoff Cameron and Maurice Edu or Perry Kitchen deserve these places.

 

Edu can probably help the national team most as a center back where he frequently plays in MLS, so Cameron and Kitchen are good choices to occupy defensive midfielder spots.

 

Edu, Alvarado, and Brooks make three center backs, and Andrew Farrel who is having an excellent MLS season would be a strong choice to fill the fourth center back place on the squad.

 

Farrell would be new to the national team, but it’s hard to argue that he doesn’t deserve it.

 

The USMNT needs a fast and skilled center back that can defend on the ground and in the air, and Farrell is a technical player that is really hard to beat for pace.

 

Another new player that the United States would benefit from is Dillon Powers who is a two-way midfielder that can play anywhere in the midfield.

 

His skill, work-rate, and defending are bolstered by the fact that he’s a player with enough speed and endurance to perform at the international level against better competition.

 

As a general policy, Klinsmann cannot afford to keep excluding this new breed of better young American players now playing in MLS.

 

In keeping with the need to bring in more of these new MLS players into the fold, London Woodberry is another player ready for international play.

 

The right back fills a need the national team has for another right back that can defend and go forward at the international level, and Woodberry looks to be the player to fill this need.

 

The American attack needs so more firepower on the bench to back up Dempsey, Altidore, and Agudelo, so Gyasi Zardes and Rubio Rubin have demonstrated that they have what it takes to perform well as forwards on the international stage.

 

Zardes is a powerful, fast, and skilled Number 9 that plays well as a wing, whereas Rubin can play well as either a second striker or as a Number 9.

 

Finally, the squad needs a third goalkeeper, and Bill Hamid is qualified to fill this role.

 

So, what would this roster look like in a more organized fashion?

 

Here is the 23-man roster discussed above:

 

Goalkeepers (3): Brad Guzan, William Yarbrough, Bill Hamid

 

Defenders (8): Ventura Alvarado, John Brooks, Maurice Edu, Andrew Farrell*, DeAndre Yedlin, Greg Garza, London Woodberry*, Fabian Johnson

 

Midfielders (7): Michael Bradley, Geoff Cameron, Perry Kitchen, Dillon Powers*, Mix Diskerud, Alejandro Bedoya, Joe Corona

 

Forwards (5): Clint Dempsey, Jozy Altidore, Juan Agudelo, Gyasi Zardes, Rubio Rubin

 

* = New players

 

 

That 23-man squad consists of 12 MLS players, 7 players from European leagues, and four players from Liga MX.

 

How would this USMNT line up?

 

 

 

 

Gold Cup: The Best USMNT XI

 

Juan Agudelo. (Photo: Fred Kfoury/Icon SMI)
Juan Agudelo. (Photo: Fred Kfoury/Icon SMI)

 

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

Jürgen Klinsmann hasn’t established a core group of United States Men’s National Team players, nor has he decided upon a preferred starting line-up that has developed chemistry.

 

This is a problem, and this makes predicting or endorsing a starting line-up for the 2015 Gold Cup difficult.

 

Questions arise about what the center back pairing should be and what midfielders and attackers play well together.

 

The Back Four is in the air, and the midfield and attack is in the air.

 

The 4-3-3 formation is a fluid and safe set-up because it is essentially the same thing as a 4-2-3-1 formation, which you could argue is the most sound formation.

 

For starters, Brad Guzan deserves to be the starting goalkeeper, and DeAndre Yedlin and Greg Garza deserve to be the starting right back and left back. But what about the center backs?

 

Ventura Alvarado and John Brooks are likely the best two center backs in the player pool, and despite a few miscommunications on marking headers, both have displayed strong 1v1 defending, good skill on the ball, and athleticism.

 

Klinsmann should make these two his starting center backs. Both have all the qualities and experience to man the center of the American defense.

 

The key to the midfield is using Michael Bradley correctly, and this boils down to giving him the freedom to both defend and attack how he sees fit.

 

If the United States goes with three midfielders, then Geoff Cameron and Mix Diskerud should be the other two midfielders, especial since Klinsmann doesn’t rate Benny Feilhaber.

 

This midfield would be Cameron as the defensive midfielder, Bradley as the box-to-box midfielder, and Diskerud as the attacking midfielder.

 

Since Diskerud defends well and tracks back on defense in addition to being a creative playmaker, this trio would work out well.

 

Cameron’s tireless running, skilled passing, athleticism, technical ability, and his strong defensive fundamentals make him the best defensive midfielder option. Defensive midfielder is after all his natural position.

 

A middle three of Bradley, Cameron, and Diskerud would be dynamic, balanced, and fluid, and this allows for the type of possession, pressing, and counter-attacking play that Klinsmann wants.

 

The American attack for this writer is a no-brainer. Juan Agudelo, Jozy Altidore, and Clint Dempsey should be the attacking trident. Agudelo is an excellent center forward and wide player, and this allows the U.S. to have him in the attack along with Altidore.

 

Dempsey doesn’t need a fixed position, and just lining him out left on paper allows him to roam free. This position out left in the attack is the common place to start a team’s best right-footed attacker, and we see it with top club teams and national teams around the world.

 

With Yedlin and Garza running the flanks, Agudelo and Dempsey don’t need to hug the sidelines. Agudelo, Altidore, and Dempsey can then combine with one another and swap places as they see fit, and this gives the American attack a certain amount of dynamism that should create more scoring opportunities.

 

Klinsmann’s revolving door of formations and starting lineups is too chaotic for any real conclusions to be drawn from the USA’s games, so sticking to a rational 4-3-3 made up of talented and experienced players makes more sense.

 

Most observers and fans of the United States Men’s National Team can likely agree on a Front Six made up of Bradley, Cameron, Diskerud, Agudelo, Altidore, and Dempsey, or at least they can acknowledge that it makes sense and that all of those players are qualified.

 

Using Alvarado and Brooks as the center backs is more controversial, but the USA needs mobile and technical center backs with good defensive skills, and these two have all of these things.

 

There are no defenders that never get beaten or lose their man. Being the last line of defense in front of the goalkeeper is a job where mistakes are a guarantee.

 

Given everything we know going into the 2015 Gold Cup, the following USA XI (4-3-3) makes the most sense:

 

Guzan; Yedlin, Alvarado, Brooks, Garza; Bradley, Cameron, Diskerud; Agudelo, Altidore, Dempsey.

 

 

Gold Cup: The NT Positional Depth Chart

 

William Yarbrough and Ventura Alvarado (Photo: US Soccer)
William Yarbrough and Ventura Alvarado (Photo: US Soccer)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

GOALKEEPER

     Starter: Brad Guzan

     Back-Up: William Yarbrough

     Third GK: Clint Irwin

 

RIGHT BACK

     Starter: DeAndre Yedlin

     Back-Up: Fabian Johnson

 

RIGHT CENTER BACK

     Starter: Ventura Alvarado

     Back-Up: Maurice Edu

 

LEFT CENTER BACK

     Starter: John Brooks

     Back-Up: Michael Orozco

 

LEFT BACK

     Starter: Greg Garza

     Back-Up: Brek Shea

 

DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDER

     Starter: Geoff Cameron

     Back-Up: Jermaine Jones

 

CENTER MIDFIELDER

     Starter: Michael Bradley

     Back-Up: Dillon Powers

 

RIGHT ATTACKING MIDFIELDER

     Starter: Joe Corona

     Back-Up: Alejandro Bedoya

 

CENTRAL ATTACKING MIDFIELDER

     Starter: Benny Feilhaber

     Back-Up: Mix Diskerud

 

LEFT ATTACKING MIDFIELDER

     Starter: Clint Dempsey

     Back-Up: Kelyn Rowe

 

STRIKER

     Starter: Juan Agudelo

     Back-Up: Jozy Altidore

 

 

 

Looking at the First Team

 

Guzan in goal with Yedlin, Alvarado, Brooks, and Garza as the Back Four is a strong defense. American soccer fans can be proud and confident with this defense.

 

Cameron and Bradley as the defensive midfielders with Corona, Feilhaber, and Dempsey is a balanced and talented combination of defensive midfielders and attacking midfielders.

 

This midfield even has the all-important duo of a stay-at-home defensive midfielder with a box-to-box midfielder, and it has a true Number 10 flanked by technical and creative attacking midfielders with lots of freedom to float around.

 

Agudelo as a striker gives the United States a very talented striker that is creative, fast, tall, and strong, and he can score with both feet and his head. Agudelo also can create his own scoring chances and set up others to score.

 

 

Hope For the Future of American Soccer

 

José Villarreal (Photo: LA Galaxy)
José Villarreal (Photo: LA Galaxy)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

 

There is much for which to be hopeful for the future of American soccer and the United States Men’s National Team. Plenty of talent is coming through the pipeline.

 

The United States has technical and athletic players that are young and youngish at virtually every position.

 

In goal, the USA has William Yarbrough, Clint Irwin, Cody Cropper, and Zack Steffen.

 

In defense, the USA has DeAndre Yedlin, John Brooks, Andrew Farrell, Greg Garza, Erik Palmer-Brown, Cameron Carter-Vickers, Matt Miazga, and Christian Dean.

 

In the midfield, the Stars and Stripes have the likes of Mix Diskerud, Joe Corona, Dillon Powers, José Villarreal, Kellyn Acosta, Benji Joya, Emerson Hyndman, Luis Gil, and Paul Arriola.

 

In the attack, the United States has Juan Agudelo, Gyasi Zardes, Bradford Jamieson IV, Jordan Allen, Rubio Rubin, Mario Rodriguez, Alonso Hernandez, Junior Flores, and Romain Gall.

 

These young players coupled with others that weren’t listed along with the players in the 25-32 year old range give the USMNT a deep pool of talent where many need experience, playing time, and seasoning.

 

But, one thing is for sure, and that is that the skilled and proven experienced players can be started with a few of the younger players to give them experience, seasoning, and chemistry with the senior squad.

 

Of all of the younger players in the pool, with the exception of players like Agudelo, Yedlin, Alvarado, and Brooks who have proven themselves with the National Team, Bradford Jamieson IV really stands out as the most exciting national team prospect of the group.

 

Jamieson has an excellent first touch, advanced technical ability, speed, fearlessness, size, vision, excellent passing ability, and lots and lots of speed and quickness. Jamieson also has the thing that American soccer has been looking for: a player that can take defenders off the dribble and score solo goals from the run of play. Jamieson will attack defenders directly and continue to do so even when defenders take possession from him on his previous dribbling attempts.

 

If the United States wants to use a 4-2-3-1, 4-4-2, or 4-3-3 formation, there is room for Jamieson to get some real minutes with the National Team.

 

There are many conflicting views of who should start for the United States, but if we look at a 4-2-3-1 formation with the experienced and proven players, then there is room to put Jamieson in to play the first half or the last 20-30 minutes of the game.

 

What is a proven USA XI in a 4-2-3-1?

 

I’d argue that Brad Guzan, DeAndre Yedlin, Ventura Alvarado, John Brooks, Greg Garza, Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, Alejandro Bedoya/Joe Corona, Mix Diskerud, Clint Dempsey, and Jozy Altidore is a non-controversial and strong starting line-up.

 

If we look at that line-up, what does it hurt to start Juan Agudelo over Altidore and Jamieson over Bedoya and Corona just to give him experience and the squad an explosive and quality attacker?

 

Furthermore, how could it hurt to give Dillon Powers minutes in the midfield and to give Andrew Farrell minutes at center back?

 

Surely, these players are good enough to see minutes in friendlies or in the first round of the Gold Cup against truly weak opponents.

 

The most important thing is that MLS appears to be producing more and more technical and athletic defenders, midfielders, and forwards.

 

Despite being produced here, these players are demonstrating a level of technical ability along the lines of Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, and Michael Bradley.

 

Once again, of all of these players, Jamieson is by far the most polished and exciting of these young players, and Jamieson is the type of creative and skilled attacking player that the United States has been waiting for more of since the appearance of Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey.

 

Jamieson’s technical ability, speed, and 1v1 skills are truly special by any standard. The fact that an 18-year-old American player that was born and raised in the United States is displaying these skills is a reason for hope for the undeniable rise of American soccer.

 

Let us not forget all of the other promising young players that are defenders, midfielders, and forwards. It will be interesting to see which players begin to stand out more and more from the others.

 

Looking toward the Gold Cup, perhaps Powers, Farrell, and Jamieson are the most deserving of surprising roster inclusions for that tournament. With proven players largely already filling up the 23-man Gold Cup roster, there is room for Farrell, Powers, and Jamieson on this summer’s roster.

 

The continued improvement of American soccer will depend on risk. The players starting for the National Team should be consistent performers at the club level or at least proven performers at the club or international level, but the United States needs to start incorporating its younger players that display the most skill.

 

 

The Best American Footballers (May 2015)

 

Clint Dempsey. (Photo: Getty Images)
Clint Dempsey. (Photo: Getty Images)

 

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

After the Mexico friendly and with the 2015 Gold Cup a few months away, World Soccer Source ranks the Best American Footballers (May 2015 Edition).

 

The players are listed in order in groups of five with their position or positions and their club team. “GK” denotes Goalkeeper. “DF” denotes Defender. “MF” denotes Midfielder. “F” donates Forward.

 

Here are the rankings:

 

1-5: Clint Dempsey (F/MF, Seattle Sounders), Michael Bradley (MF, Toronto FC), Benny Feilhaber (MF, Sporting KC), Jermaine Jones (MF/DF, New England Revolution), Juan Agudelo (F, New England Revolution).

 

6-10: Jozy Altidore (F, Toronto FC), Geoff Cameron (DF/MF, Stoke City), Ventura Alvarado (DF, Club América), Mix Diskerud (MF, NYC FC), Joe Corona (MF, Club Tijuana).

 

11-15: Brad Guzan (GK, Aston Villa), Tim Howard (GK, Everton), Alejandro Bedoya (MF, Nantes), DeAndre Yedlin (DF/MF, Tottenham), Greg Garza (DF, Club Tijuana).

 

16-20: Dillon Powers (MF, Colorado Rapids), Michael Orozco (DF, Puebla), Fabian Johnson (DF/MF, Hoffenheim) Maurice Edu (MF/DF, Philadelphia Union), Charlie Davies (F, New England Revolution).

 

21-25: Aron Jóhannsson (F, AZ Alkmaar), William Yarbrough (GK, Club León), John Brooks (DF, Hertha Berlin), Andrew Farrell (DF, New England Revolution), Gyasi Zardes (F, LA Galaxy).

 

26-30:  Kelyn Rowe (MF, New England Revolution), Teal Bunbury (F, New England Revolution), Brek Shea (DF/MF, Orlando City SC), José Villarreal (F/MF, LA Galaxy), Bradford Jamieson IV (F/MF, LA Galaxy).

 

 

What’s the Best USMNT Gold Cup Roster (April 2015)?

 

 Joe Corona (Photo: George Frey/Getty Images )
Joe Corona (Photo: George Frey/Getty Images )

 

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

Brad Guzan, DeAndre Yedlin, Ventura Alvarado, John Brooks, Greg Garza, Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, Mix Diskerud, Joe Corona, Juan Agudelo, and Clint Dempsey is the Best USMNT XI in a Diamond 4-4-2 formation for the 2015 Gold Cup, and below is the best 23-man roster USMNT fans can hope to see this summer.

 

The 23-man roster is made up of three goalkeepers, eight defenders, eight midfielders, and four forwards, and the group below allows for several different formations and tactical schemes.

 

Much of this roster consists of proven and very experienced players. Such players include Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Maurice Edu, Jozy Altidore, Geoff Cameron, Brad Guzan, and Michael Orozco.

 

Other players like Juan Agudelo, Mix Diskerud, Joe Corona, Alejandro Bedoya, Fabian Johnson, Ventura Alvarado, DeAndre Yedlin, John Brooks, Greg Garza, and William Yarbrough are too good to really contest.

 

So, in essence, this roster only contains several players that are debatable, and these players are Dillon Powers, Brek Shea, Gyasi Zardes, Perry Kitchen, and Clint Irwin.

 

Powers has been very impressive in MLS for several seasons, and he plays every position in the midfield. He’s technical and fast, and he defends and attacks. He has the vision and skill to set up goals, and he can score goals himself.

 

Zardes has shown well in MLS and for the U.S., and Shea has been converted into a left back, which seems to best exploit his skill set.

 

Irwin is easily one of the very best goalkeepers in MLS, and frankly a level above Bill Hamid or Sean Johnson. Nick Rimando is more experienced, but nothing about Irwin’s play suggest that he isn’t ready to be the USA’s third goalkeeper.

 

Kitchen has been a consistently good performer in MLS, and he put in a good showing against Mexico on April 15, when he came into the game late and had no problem adjusting to the speed of play or playing well as a midfield destroyer.

 

Plenty of other players are qualified to make this roster, but except the five players singled out, this group of U.S. internationals should all be easily recognizable as highly-qualified players by USMNT fans.

 

Benny Feilhaber was excluded due to the fact that Jürgen Klinsmann has shown no intention of making him part of the U.S. Men’s National Team.

 

 

Here is the best 23-man USMNT roster for the 2015 Gold Cup:

 

Goalkeepers (3): Brad Guzan (Aston Villa), William Yarbrough (Club Leon), Clint Irwin (Colorado Rapids)

 

Defenders (8): Ventura Alvarado (Club America), Jermaine Jones (New England Revolution), Michael Orozco (Puebla), John Brooks (Hertha Berlin), DeAndre Yedlin (Tottenham), Greg Garza (Tijuana), Fabian Johnson (Hoffenheim), Brek Shea (Orlando SC)

 

Midfielders (8): Michael Bradley (Toronto FC), Geoff Cameron (Stoke City), Maurice Edu (Philadelphia Union), Perry Kitchen (DC United), Mix Diskerud (NYC FC), Joe Corona (Tijuana), Alejandro Bedoya (Nantes), Dillon Powers (Colorado Rapids)

 

Forwards (4): Clint Dempsey (Seattle Sounders), Jozy Altidore (Toronto FC), Juan Agudelo (New England Revolution), Gyasi Zardes (L.A. Galaxy)

 

 

Deeper Positional Breakdown:

 

Goalkeepers: Guzan Yarbrough Irwin

Center Backs: Jones Cameron Alvarado Orozco Brooks

Outside Backs: Yedlin Garza Johnson Shea

Center Backs/Outside Backs: Cameron Orozco Alvarado

Center Backs/Defensive Midfielders: Jones Cameron Edu

Defensive Midfielders: Bradley Jones Cameron Edu

Center Midfielders: Bradley Jones Edu Diskerud Powers

Center Midfielders/Attacking Midfielders: Diskerud Powers

Attacking Midfielders: Diskerud Corona Bedoya Powers

Attacking Midfielders/Forwards: Dempsey Corona Bedoya

Wings: Johnson Shea Corona Bedoya Yedlin

Strikers: Altidore Agudelo Zardes

 

 

 

The Best USA XI (Diamond 4-4-2): Guzan; Yedlin, Alvarado, Brooks, Garza; Cameron; Bradley, Diskerud; Corona; Agudelo, Dempsey.

 

 

 

The Best USMNT XI (April 2015)

 

Mix Diskerud (Photo: Getty Images)
Mix Diskerud (Photo: Getty Images)

 

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

 

Here is World Soccer Source’s Pre-Gold Cup USMNT Best XI (4-3-3):

 

 

Goalkeeper: Brad Guzan (Aston Villa)

 

Right Back: DeAndre Yedlin (Tottenham)

Center Back: Geoff Cameron (Stoke City)

Center Back: Ventura Alvarado (América)

Left Back: Greg Garza (Tijuana)

 

Right Midfielder: MIX Diskerud (NYC FC)

Center Midfielder: Michael Bradley (Toronto FC)

Left Midfielder: Joe Corona (Tijuana)

 

Right Forward: Juan Agudelo (New England Revolution)

Center Forward: Jozy Altidore (Toronto FC)

Left Forward: Clint Dempsey (Seattle Sounders)

 

 

 

Roster Explanation:

 

Brad Guzan has been ready and qualified to be the USA’s Number 1 for years, and he’s proven that he can play over Tim Howard with no drop in the level of the U.S. National Team’s goalkeeper. William Yarbrough of León is ready to be the USA’s Number 1, but Guzan is much more experienced and ahead of him. Yarbrough looks better than Nick Rimando.

 

A Defensive Back Four of DeAndre Yedlin, Geoff Cameron, Ventura Alvarado, and Greg Garza is a big upgrade for the United States.

 

Yedlin, Alvarado, and Garza have already played well together, and Cameron is a better center back than Omar Gonzalez or Matt Besler.

 

Cameron plays in a better league, and he’s more technical, more athletic, and more skilled defensively.

 

Alvarado is a young center back that starts for Club América, and he checks all the boxes for a quality international center back.

 

Yedlin and Garza are the kind of modern two-way outside backs that the United States needs. Both are attacking threats, and both are underrated defensively. Yedlin plays in the EPL, and Garza plays in Liga MX for Tijuana.

 

A midfield made up of Mix Diskerud, Michael Bradley, and Joe Corona from right to left makes so much sense. All three of these players allow the United States to keep possession, attack, and take the game to the opposition.

 

Bradley is an excellent defender and tireless runner, in addition to his technical ability and passing skill.

 

Diskerud has become formidable defensively. He aggressively looks to win back possession, and he tackles well.

 

Corona is known for his creativity and technical ability, and he has also shown a willingness to close down opponents and high press the opposition. Corona is crafty and quick with the ball at his feet, and he plays dangerous first time balls that open up games.

 

Diskerud, Bradley, and Corona make the American midfield technical and dynamic, and there is enough defending and running between those three to win back possession. Having all three playing together is key to upping the overall technical ability and creativity of the American midfield.

 

While there is room to be concerned about the lack of two defensive midfielders where a Number 6 or midfield destroyer plays deeper than Bradley who would play as a Number 8, team defense and high pressing is the name of the game.

 

With these three midfielders, and the three forwards or attackers discussed below, the United States should have plenty of team defense.

 

Jozy Altidore and Clint Dempsey are a dangerous strike partnership, and Juan Agudelo has to be included in the starting line-up.

 

Given the versatility, movement, dynamism, and creativity of Agudelo’s style of play, there is no problem for him to play nominally out right while Altidore is listed as the center forward.

 

A swirling trifecta of Agudelo, Altidore, and Dempsey is exactly the type of quick, dangerous, and skilled attack that the United States needs to continue to close the gap with world soccer’s elites.

 

This line-up is based on using technical ability and high pressing to beat opponents. The 4-3-3 formation is more nominal in actuality than three lines of outfield players maintaining a square formation on the field. Constant passing and movement make the formation ever changing, but certain players like Bradley and Altidore have more fixed positions than others in the Front Six.

 

 

 

 

Dillon Powers For USMNT

 

Dillon Powers, Colorado Rapids midfielder. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)
Dillon Powers, Colorado Rapids midfielder. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

 

Dillon Powers embodies the type of two-way midfielder that Jürgen Klinsmann has been calling for.

Klinsmann preaches proactive soccer where his midfielders recover possession and keep possession, and this is exactly what Powers does.

Powers attacks and defends with a high work rate, and he has a level of technical ability and vision that the National Team needs more of.

Amongst American footballers, only Benji Joya, who is younger and looking to improve his club situation, plays like Powers.

Powers’ facility at playing centrally or wide or in more defensive or more attacking roles makes him a player that can be useful to the National Team precisely because of this ability to play where he’s needed, in addition to the qualities that he brings to the squad.

With Michael Bradley playing best as a defensive midfielder or as a central midfielder of the box-to-box variety, Powers could partner with Bradley to play either role or Powers could play a more attacking midfielder role as he does with Colorado.

He can be deployed centrally or out wide in the line of three attacking midfielders, and he even plays as a second striker. Unlike some other MLS midfielders that Klinsmann has used, Powers has a more complete skill-set that doesn’t limit him to only hitting crosses.

The goal for American soccer is to have more players that can play with skill and speed at the international level against top national teams, and someone like Powers is simply too talented and too qualified to be routinely ignored from even consideration by Klinsmann and his coaching staff.

Given Powers skill-set and consistent performances at the club level, United States Men’s National Team coaches in the past would have used Powers one to two years ago with the national team, but Klinsmann’s reasons for selecting or not selecting players to represent the USA have never really been clear.

Anyone familiar with MLS would recognize Powers as not only a complete midfielder, but also one who has stood out in the league against players with much more experience than him.

On more elite national teams, there might be multiple players of Powers level, but given the problems the United States has had keeping possession and displaying a high level of technical skill, it’s hard to justify keeping him off the National Team.

Powers stands out for how impactful and technical he is all over the field both in the recovering of the ball and in the attack. The Rapids midfielder is all over the field positively impacting the game, and he’s scored some impressive goals that display his skill and willingness to play aggressively.

He’s too good to leave off the National Team.

Klinsmann’s snubbing of so many qualified MLS players like Powers has to be something of a running joke with American players and coaches in MLS.