USMNT: Becoming Giant Killers

 

Clint Dempsey will be the best American soccer player for years to come. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
Clint Dempsey, Giant Killer . (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

 

The United States Men’s National Team is close to becoming a Giant Killer.

 

Granted, there is a big talent gap between the technical ability of the United States as a collective unit, but someone like Clint Dempsey is a world-class soccer player, even if someone like Robinho is much better.

 

Furthermore, a defensive or box-to-box midfielder like Michael Bradley isn’t anywhere close to Paul Pogba in terms of skill or athleticism, but that certainly doesn’t take anything away from Bradley’s qualities and physical gifts.

 

For the United States to become a Giant Killer, the entire Starting XI needs to be players who are close to or equal to Dempsey’s and Bradley’s level.

 

The key is a team comprised of technically-skilled and athletic players who have different and complimentary skills that allow them to play their own natural positions better than other American players.

 

There has been real progress in American soccer, and even if Jürgen Klinsmann isn’t using the best outside backs at his disposal and even if he doesn’t seem to be entirely convinced that he needs to start a playmaker, the talent and athleticism is there in the core group of United States internationals.

 

To be fair, it was already there when Bob Bradley was coach because Tim Howard, Michael Bradley, Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, and Jozy Altidore were all regulars during his tenure.

 

The good news is that Bradley and Altidore are drastically better than they used to be, and Bradley was somewhat close to being a finished product before Klinsmann took the reins as coach of the United States.

 

Altidore is really the player who has seen an enormous improvement in his technical ability, his smoothness on the ball, his finishing, and the aggression with which he attacks the goal, but the reason for these improvement was his time spent in Dutch football.

 

On the other hand, Dempsey is a player who has just progressively become better over time, but Dempsey’s skill-level and his ability to excel against top competition was already excellent when he first started playing for the United States and before he went to play in the English Premier League.

 

Of all the core group of strong U.S. internationals, Donovan has been around the longest, and players like Bradley and Dempsey provided skills and qualities that he didn’t have or they served as needed support. Dempsey and Donovan play the same position, and they can just be started together on opposite sides of the field and allowed to roam free.

 

Looking really closely at Bradley, Dempsey, Donovan, and Altidore, what one sees is a defensive midfielder, two attacking midfielders who aren’t playmakers but who can score, and finally a first striker who combines athleticism with size and technical ability.

 

These four players along with Tim Howard give the United States half of a Starting XI minus the Back Four and a playmaker, and the role of playmaker has a front-runner: Benny Feilhaber, a proven and experienced central attacking midfielder.

 

Giant Killing is the next step for the United States.

 

Jürgen Klinsmann needs to start Bradley as a defensive midfielder behind Donovan, Feilhaber, and Dempsey as a line of three attacking midfielders with Altidore as the first striker.

 

If Klinsmann does that, which he hasn’t done, then he simply needs to find four quality defenders and either a second defensive midfielder or an additional center forward or a second striker, the latter of which can play off Altidore as a sort of secondary playmaker to compliment Feilhaber.

 

Once Klinsmann fields something like the Starting XI proposed in the paragraph above, then the United States Men’s National Team is inching closer to becoming a Giant Killer.

 

There are probably very few people in the American soccer media or in the American fan base who would strongly doubt the logic of starting Bradley, Donovan, Feilhaber, Dempsey, and Altidore together, especially if Geoff Cameron was inserted into the Front Six to be the midfield destroyer in place of Jermaine Jones so that Bradley had more license to go forward and attack.

 

Although Brazil, Spain, Germany, Italy, and the like would be better in terms of collective team skill, starting Cameron, Bradley, Donovan, Feilhaber, Dempsey, and Altidore together is certainly a competitive and legit Front Six that national teams would take seriously.

 

The Front Six proposed is strong because it has a more stay-at-home defensive midfielder or midfield destroyer, a defensive midfielder with more licence to attack, a playmaker flanked by free-roaming attacking midfielders who can score, and a first striker that has the skill and speed to stretch the opposition’s defense. The Front Six is also all players who can keep possession by playing one-to-two touch soccer with purpose.

 

Despite the skill of the Front Six, the weak area is thus the American defense because no matter how well that American Front Six does, what happens when really first-rate midfielders and attackers terrorize the American Back Four?

 

This is the true impediment to American success because Tim Howard or Brad Guzan can only make so many game-saving saves before top national teams or second-tier national teams eventually find the back of the net. Howard and Guzan cannot be expected to stop every shot off the feet or head of elite players.

 

Klinsmann has Brad Evans, Omar Gonzalez, Matt Besler, and DaMarcus Beasley as his preferred Back Four, but questioning their ability to stop the type of competition in the World Cup is a fair question, and it is a question that needs to be taken seriously.

 

Many people have placed too much trust in the ability of those four defenders (two of which aren’t defenders) to stop elite attackers or even merely international-caliber attackers, and this mentality could doom the United States in the World Cup.

 

American soccer and the United States Men’s National Team has improved, although not really because of Klinsmann, but the American defense is a problem and a matter of concern.

 

There are two solutions to the problems with the USMNT’s Back Four: 1.) Start a more proven Back Four such as Jonathan Spector, Michael Orozco, John Anthony Brooks, and Eric Lichaj; or 2) Start a Back Four made up of DeAndre Yedlin, Andrew Farrell, Shane O’Neill, and Chris Klute.

 

Of course, the obvious third solution is some combination of the more-proven defenders with the newer MLS defenders.

 

Plenty of people will contend that the young MLS defenders are unproven and inexperienced, but at least they are defenders that are both skilled and athletic. Their youth or their lack of international inexperience doesn’t change the fact that they have the skill and the athleticism to compete at the international level, and their youth and inexperienced shouldn’t be used against them.

 

How long until the U.S lets the better defenders play?

 

The real question is not which players Klinsmann prefers, but rather who are the best American players at each position?

 

Given the amount of teams in the 2014 World Cup that are frankly much better than the current preferred Klinsmann starting line-up, the United States would be wise to start the Front Six advocated in this article and use a new Back Four that has the ability to compete with the types of players who will be in this World Cup.

 

The United States won’t be a Giant Killer in this World Cup if Klinsmann’s makeshift defenses are used or if no playmaker is used.

 

These two things need to change because starting Cameron, Bradley, Donovan, Feilhaber, Dempsey, and Altidore as the Front Six at the very least makes for a competitive group of players with the skill and the athleticism to do well in the 2014 World Cup.

 

No one will know how good the United States Men’s National Team really is until Klinsmann fields the best American players at the same time in a balanced formation that tactically makes sense.

 

Brad Evans, Matt Besler, Omar Gonzalez, DaMarcus Beasley, Graham Zusi, and Brad Davis are solid MLS players, but they are not Giant Killers.

 

They really aren’t as good as other American options such as DeAndre Yedlin, Andrew Farrell, Shane O’Neill, Chris Klute, Joe Corona, and Mix Diskerud.

 

Many of Jürgen Klinsmann’s first-choice starters hold players like Cameron, Bradley, Dempsey, Feilhaber, Donovan, and Altidore back, and this needs to change.

 

Camisa Dez: Benny Feilhaber

 

Benny Feilhaber. (Photo: Reuters)
Benny Feilhaber. (Photo: Reuters)

 

The American soccer media revived their interest in Benny Feilhaber after his impressive outing against the Houston Dynamo in the second leg of the MLS Cup Semifinal, which caused many observers to realize that that game was part of a series of influential playoff games.

 

Benny Feilhaber and Freddy Adu seem to attract the same American critics with the difference being that Feilhaber has been used more by the United States Men’s National Team and thus has more quality international performances to cite as evidence of his playmaking skill and efficacy against something close to the highest level of competition.

 

While many people value Feilhaber for his playmaking skills and his technical ability, which the USMNT needs, other people are very critical of his playing resume and his playing style.

 

By beating the Houston Dynamo recently, Feilhaber outlasted both Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey in the MLS Cup Playoffs. Of course, Feilhaber is a different type of player than Dempsey and Donovan, but Feilhaber’s play has highlighted the importance of playmakers.

 

One thing that Feilhaber showed was that no matter what critics said or wrote about him that he was willing and able to rise to the occasion in another important game when he was needed.

 

Feilhaber’s performances disprove the belief that skilled American players who Klinsmann hasn’t really used have no place on the national team.

 

The United States Men’s National Team will need to fit the various types of players together to form a balanced and skilled national team, and Feilhaber offered a glimpse of how the United States could improve by playing Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, Landon Donovan, Benny Feilhaber, Clint Dempsey, and Jozy Altidore together as the Front Six.

Read more

Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey Are Not Playmakers

 

Landon Donovan (10) and Clint Dempsey (8). (Photo: MexSport)
Landon Donovan (10) and Clint Dempsey (8). (Photo: MexSport)

 

Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey Are Not Playmakers

 

Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan are excellent attacking midfielders or second strikers, but they aren’t playmakers.

 

The best way to get the most out of both Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey is to start them as the right and left attacking midfielders with a true playmaker in between them.

 

Joe Corona won over a lot of American fans and members of the American soccer media with his play in the 2013 Gold Cup, but Corona had already proven himself way before the Gold Cup, particularly with his play against Corinthians in the Copa Libertadores.

 

With the coaching change at Corona’s club, Tijuana, Corona has found himself in the doghouse struggling to get club minutes, but for the purposes of the United States Men’s National Team, this shouldn’t matter given his skill-set as a playmaker who can also play on the right or left side of the field.

 

Mix Diskerud has also begun to win more plaudits due to his playmaking abilities and his clear ability to perform well against strong competition. Recently, Diskerud has reminded people of how Donovan and Dempsey aren’t playmakers and that they somewhat lack the true traits of a playmaker or central attacking midfielder.

 

Then, there is Benny Feilhaber. It’s unfortunate that after a season of quality passing and good form (not to mention his international record with the United States) that Feilhaber has only been praised or even discussed by the media or the majority of the American fan base after several excellent playoff games for Sporting Kansas City.

 

Furthermore, many of the people who praised Feilhaber after writing him off for so long seem to have been more interested in the amount of running he put into the second leg of the MLS Cup Semifinal against the Houston Dynamo than his technical ability, passing skills, and vision.

 

In short, Feilhaber garnered praise recently mostly by running a lot, and for Klinsmann’s entire tenure as coach, there has never been much support for using Feilhaber as a central attacking midfielder between Donovan and Dempsey.

 

The United States Men’s National Team has seen the most success when Michael Bradley was used as a defensive midfielder and when Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey flanked Benny Feilhaber who was used in the center to orchestrate the passing of the United States and create more scoring opportunities.

 

Given Freddy Adu’s almost total lack of playing time with Bahia, Adu has been scoffed at by Americans and non-Americans alike, but there’s never been much to suggest that the United States has the collective technical ability as a team to mock or freeze out skilled playmakers who haven’t lived up to people’s expectations or even seen a reasonable amount of club minutes.

 

When the 2014 World Cup comes around, the only thing that will matter is if the players that are started or used by Jürgen Klinsmann are physically fit to play and if they have the skill level to compete at the international level.

 

Feilhaber, Diskerud, Corona, and Adu are all skilled players with various club situations and form, and each player is different. The USMNT’s World Cup roster will probably need two or three of those players on the roster as they can all play left, right, or center, and they all bring playmaking qualities that Michael Bradley, Clint Dempsey, and Landon Donovan don’t bring.

 

With strikers like Jozy Altidore, Aron Jóhannsson, and Juan Agudelo in the American player pool, using a playmaker behind Altidore and in between Donovan and Dempsey with Michael Bradley and Geoff Cameron or Jermaine Jones in front of the Back Four is a strong tactical set-up to give the USMNT a balanced and talented Front Six that can compete in a World Cup.

 

Whether one prefers Feilhaber, Diskerud, Corona, or Adu playing as a central attacking midfielder, the United States really does need one of them to connect the defensive midfielders to Dempsey, Donovan, and Altidore. The playmaker will strengthen the passing and the attack of the United States, and it’s time for more people to accept that the use of one is vital to World Cup success and American soccer progress.

 

With the 2014 World Cup coming up next summer, at the very least Jürgen Klinsmann and Americans should support starting Geoff Cameron and Michael Bradley as a two-man defensive midfield where Cameron hangs back more than Bradley, and Americans should support playing a true playmaker in between Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey behind Jozy Altidore.

 

This set-up gives the United States defensive coverage and quality passing deep in the American midfield, and it gives the United States three attacking midfielders including a playmaker who can not only pass and attack well but who can ensure that Altidore receives enough service.

 

The key to this set-up is making a point of starting a true playmaker because no one has any major doubts about the efficacy of Cameron, Bradley, Donovan, Dempsey, and Altidore, even if observers have their own Starting XI preferences.

 

Ranking USMNT Players By Position

 

Clint Dempsey (right) and Freddy Adu (left). (Photo: MexSport)
Freddy Adu (left) and Clint Dempsey (right) . (Photo: MexSport)

 

Ranking USMNT Players By Position

 

GOALKEEPERS:

 

1. Tim HOWARD

2. Brad GUZAN

3. Clint IRWIN

4. Cody CROPPER

5. Nick RIMANDO

6. Tally HALL

7. Dan KENNEDY

8. Sean JOHNSON

9. Bill HAMID

 

CENTER BACKS:

 

1. Geoff CAMERON

2. John Anthony BROOKS

3. Michael OROZCO

4. Shane O’NEILL

5. Gale AGBOSSOUMONDE

6. Andrew FARRELL

7. Caleb STANKO

8. Maurice EDU

9. Jermaine JONES

10. Amobi OKUGO

11. Omar GONZALEZ

12. George JOHN

13. Matt BESLER

14. Zach LOYD

 

RIGHT BACKS:

 

1. Steve CHERUNDOLO

2. Chris KLUTE

3. Andrew FARRELL

4. DeAndre YEDLIN

5. Jonathan SPECTOR

6. Eric LICHAJ

7. Zach LOYD

8. Sheanon WILLIAMS

 

LEFT BACKS:

 

1. Chris KLUTE

2. Eric LICHAJ

3. Andrew FARRELL

4. DeAndre YEDLIN

5.  Jonathan SPECTOR

6. Fabian JOHNSON

7. Edgar CASTILLO

8. Zach LOYD

9. DaMarcus BEASLEY

10. Brek SHEA

 

DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDERS:

 

1. Michael BRADLEY

2. Geoff CAMERON

3. Jermaine JONES

4. Jonathan SPECTOR

5.  Maurice EDU

6. Perry KITCHEN

7. Amobi OKUGO

8. Jared JEFFREY

9. Ricardo CLARK

10. Will TRAPP

Read more

The Best USMNT XI (December 2013)

 

Clint Dempsey (left) and Jozy Altidore (right). (Photo: AP)
Clint Dempsey (left) and Jozy Altidore (right). (Photo: AP)

 

This United States Men’s National Team XI isn’t a status quo Starting XI meant to tell people what they want to hear. This is a Starting XI option made up of players with the skill-set and athleticism to play the position listed. Matt Besler, Omar Gonzalez, Landon Donovan, Graham Zusi, Brad Evans, DaMarcus Beasley, and Fabian Johnson aren’t on this list.

The best way forward for the USMNT is to take a Front Six made up of Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, Joe Corona, Benny Feilhaber, Clint Dempsey, and Jozy Altidore and combine it with a new Back Four made up of DeAndre Yedlin, Andrew Farrell, Shane O’Neill, and Chris Klute.

Sticking to the Status Quo Starting XI won’t work in the 2014 World Cup, and American soccer has been waiting for talents like Corona, Diskerud, Yedlin, Farrell, O’Neill, and Klute to take the United States to the next level in world football.

 

USMNT XI: 4-2-3-1

 

GOALKEEPER: Tim HOWARD

 

Tim Howard is the best American goalkeeper, and he recently showed an improvement in the one weakness in his game: the failure to come off his line enough to clear out or rip down balls played in the air around his six-yard box. Brad Guzan is probably as good as Tim Howard and as deserving of the starting spot, but Howard has a habit of making game-saving stops against tough opponents.

 

RIGHT BACK: DeAndre YEDLIN

 

In his rookie season, DeAndre Yedlin (along with Andrew Farrell) showed an ability at right back that probably hasn’t been seen out of an American right back since Steve Cherundolo. Only a real contest between Jonathan Spector, Eric Lichaj, DeAndre Yedlin, Kofi Sarkodie, and Andrew Farrell will show who the best American right back is. Yedlin’s ability to defend, track down, and tackle attackers now equals his technical ability and his skill as an offensive player.

 

CENTER BACK: Andrew FARRELL

 

By playing right back for the New England Revolution, Andrew Farrell showed that he had the technical ability to play a position that arguably required more skill on the ball than the center back position. Nevertheless, Farrell is really a center back, and his athleticism, defending, size, and technical ability make for a combination of physical gifts and skills at the center back position that allows the United States to defend better attackers. Skeptics will call Farrell young and inexperienced on the international level.

 

CENTER BACK: Shane O’NEILL

 

Shane O’Neill’s performances this season in MLS coupled with Tab Ramos’ opinion of him make O’Neill a legitimate center back option for the United States. Real improvement for the United States will require using better players, and O’Neill is a new talent who is a more complete center back than Omar Gonzalez and Matt Besler.

 

LEFT BACK: Chris KLUTE

 

Chris Klute is likely the best American left back, and not just because left back is a weakness that the United States Men’s National Team has failed to improve. Klute is an excellent defender and elegant tackler with world-class speed, and he uses both feet interchangeably. Speed kills, and Klute’s combination of attacking skill and defensive ability combined with his agility, height, and electrifying speed makes him a defender that the United States needs to start. Using the new crop of young defenders doesn’t guarantee an absence of mistakes, but it’s a real attempt to field the players with the tools to compete.

 

DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDER: Geoff CAMERON

 

Even as the midfield destroyer or the more stay at home defensive midfielder, Geoff Cameron gets to maximize his combination of smooth running, endurance, defensive prowess, and technical ability. Cameron is a skilled passer who performs his best when he has a lot of touches on the ball. Someone with Cameron’s size, technical ability, defensive skills, and athleticism directly in front of the defense not only strengthens the defense but it provides the defense protection when Bradley makes attacking forays. Cameron has the speed and skill to be actively involved in the attack, but a player with his qualities is a great asset patrolling the back of the midfield in front of the Back Four.

 

DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDER: Michael BRADLEY

 

Michael Bradley is a defensive midfielder who likes to take advantage of his passing ability and his natural endurance as a runner to make marauding runs forward. Bradley’s speed, defending, and technical ability makes him ideally suited to play as the deepest defensive midfielder, but by playing Cameron as the midfield destroyer, the United States can use two defensive midfielders that are excellent passers and that know how to play as a unit.

 

RIGHT ATTACKING MIDFIELDER: Joe Benny CORONA

 

Joe Corona brings better playmaking abilities than Donovan brings, and Corona can also score. If the goal is have the United States passing better and creating more scoring opportunities, then Corona excels at this more than Donovan who is gifted at using his speed and technical ability to run at defenders. Donovan and Corona are different, and Corona’s creative passing and movement off the ball give the United States an attacking midfielder who allows the United States to facilitate more possession than Donovan.

 

CENTRAL ATTACKING MIDFIELDER: Benny FEILHABER

 

Benny Feilhaber is the most proven American playmaker, but many people want him to change his style of play to one that doesn’t correspond to his natural position. With one or two defensive midfielders behind him, Feilhaber should be allowed to play his own brand of creative soccer and imaginative playmaking because it’s what Clint Dempsey and Jozy Altidore need to score. Pushing American playmakers out of the national team has been Jürgen Klinsmann’s default policy, and several wins courtesy of Clint Dempsey or a few headers doesn’t change the fact that the United States still doesn’t pass the ball well enough as a unit. Pretending that Landon Donovan or Clint Dempsey are playmakers isn’t fooling anyone.

 

LEFT ATTACKING MIDFIELDER: Clint DEMPSEY

 

Ever since the 2006 World Cup and in the qualification leading up to it, Clint Dempsey has been the best American soccer player ever. Dempsey is the most-gifted American player, and his technical ability, his will to win, and his work rate are a key element of the United States Men’s National Team.

 

STRIKER: Jozy ALTIDORE

 

Aron Jóhannsson is as good or better than Jozy Altidore, but Altidore’s technical ability combined with his speed and physicality are an excellent weapon to stretch opposing defenses and make them defend a striker who combines skill with size and athleticism. Altidore is a monster of a first striker who now attacks with more aggression, and the only thing holding him back in the past was a gap between his physical gifts and his technical ability. Amidst the debate over whether Altidore or Jóhannsson should start or whether they should start together, Juan Agudelo is lurking with a combination of both players’ best qualities, but with more creativity and trickery.

 

The Best American Soccer Players (December 2013)

 

Clint Dempsey (Photo: AP)
Clint Dempsey (Photo: AP)

 

In general, the American soccer media seems to rank American players based on how much they are used by Jürgen Klinsmann, as opposed to how skilled or capable the players are.

This writer finds Klinsmann’s player selections and the criteria that many American soccer observers use or value to be highly questionable.

World Soccer Source’s rankings include MLS players, non-MLS players, USMNT regulars, USMNT veterans, uncapped American players, Americans who refused to play for the United States, and players who weren’t born or raised in the United States.

The players below are all well-known names to American soccer fans, and none of these players are unknown players that no one has seen play. American soccer players have improved over time, so many of the best players are quite young with the exception of players like Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Landon Donovan, Jozy Altidore, Tim Howard, and Geoff Cameron who are easily some of the best players every produced by the United States.

New MLS players like Chris Klute, Andrew Farrell, DeAndre Yedlin, Shane O’Neill, José Villarreal, and Gyasi Zardes are players who have seen lots of playing time, which has allowed people to see how good they are.

Therefore, none of these players have been placed on this list for the purpose of being controversial or disagreeing with the collective thinking of the American soccer media. These are professional soccer players that the media has seen play either at the club or international level.

One of the good things about MLS is that it compiles so many videos and statistics about all of its players that no one can really argue that players like Chris Klute, Andrew Farrell, DeAndre Yedlin, and Shane O’Neill haven’t earned a national team call-up. Even soccer fans who only watch MLS know that those players have started and excelled for an entire season at positions at which the USMNT is weak.

Whether you look at international performances, club performances, skill-level, or performances with the U.S.’ youth teams against quality competition, all of the players below are legit talents who earned their way into these rankings.

 

Without excluding Freddy Adu, here is World Soccer Source’s Best American Soccer Player Rankings for December 2013:

 

1. Clint DEMPSEY (Seattle Sounders)

2. Giuseppe ROSSI (Fiorentina)

3. Michael BRADLEY (Roma)

4. Aron JÓHANNSSON (AZ Alkmaar)

5. Landon DONOVAN (LA Galaxy)

 

6. Benny FEILHABER (Sporting KC)

7. Mix DISKERUD (Rosenborg)

8. Jozy ALTIDORE (Sunderland)

9. Geoff CAMERON (Stoke City)

10. Juan AGUDELO (Work Permit for Stoke City denied)

 

11. Freddy ADU (E.C. Bahia)*

12. Joe Benny CORONA (Tijuana)

13. Benji JOYA (Santos Laguna)

14. Fabian JOHNSON (Hoffenheim)

15. Terrence BOYD (Rapid Wien)

 

16. Jermaine JONES (Schalke)

17. Tim HOWARD (Everton)

18. Brad GUZAN (Aston Villa)

19. Julian GREEN (Bayern Munich)

20. Mario RODRIGUEZ (Borussia Mönchengladbach U-23)

 

21. Alonso HERNANDEZ (Monterrey)

22. Paul ARRIOLA (Tijuana)

23. Shane O’NEILL (Colorado Rapids)

24. Eddie JOHNSON (Seattle Sounders)

25. José VILLARREAL (LA Galaxy) 

 

26. Junior FLORES (Borussia Dortmund*)

28. Andrew FARRELL (New England Revolution)

28. DeAndre YEDLIN (Seattle Sounders)

28. Chris KLUTE (Colorado Rapids)

30. John Anthony BROOKS (Hertha Berlin)

 

31. Gyasi ZARDES (LA Galaxy)

32. Herculez GOMEZ (Tijuana)

33. Michael OROZCO (Puebla)

34. Dax McCARTY (New York Red Bulls)

35. Brek SHEA (Stoke City)

 

36. Eric LICHAJ (Nottingham Forest)

37. Gale AGBOSSOUMONDE (Toronto FC)

38. Kofi SARKODIE (Houston Dynamo)

39. Jonathan SPECTOR (Birmingham City)

40. Kellyn ACOSTA (FC Dallas)

 

USMNT: 23 For Brazil (December 2013)

 

Michael Bradley (Photo: Garrett Ellwood / Colorado Rapids)
Michael Bradley (Photo: Garrett Ellwood / Colorado Rapids)

 

A United States Men’s National Team 23-man Roster for the 2014 World Cup (December 2013 Edition)

 

GOALKEEPERS: Tim HOWARD, Brad GUZAN, Clint IRWIN

CENTER BACKS: Geoff CAMERON, John Anthony BROOKS, Shane O’NEILL, Andrew FARRELL, (Amobi OKUGO)

OUTSIDE BACKS: Chris KLUTE, (Andrew FARRELL), DeAndre YEDLIN, Kofi SARKODIE

DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDERS: Michael BRADLEY, Jermaine JONES, Amobi OKUGO, (Geoff CAMERON), (Shane O’NEILL)

ATTACKING MIDFIELDERS: Clint DEMPSEY, Landon DONOVAN, Benny FEILHABER, Mix DISKERUD, Joe CORONA, Freddy ADU, Benji JOYA

STRIKERS: Jozy ALTIDORE, Juan AGUDELO, Aron JÓHANNSSON

*Player’s listed twice are in parentheses

 

Roster Explanation:

-The skill-level and the depth of the national teams in the 2014 World Cup is going to be off the charts, and the USMNT will have to shake up its status quo roster and line-ups.

-This roster is a combination of proven veterans like Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Landon Donovan, Benny Feilhaber, Tim Howard, Jozy Altidore, and Geoff Cameron along with new talents being thrown into the deep end due to their skill level and athleticism.

-Geoff Cameron and Shane O’Neill both excel as center backs and as defensive midfielders, and Cameron is also a skilled outside back, which is a position that O’Neill has also shown that he can play.

-The roster features roughly five outside backs: Lichaj, Cameron, Klute, Yedlin, and Farrell.

-There are five center backs: Cameron, Brooks, O’Neill, Farrell, and Okugo. Michael Bradley and Jermaine Jones also have all the qualities to play as center backs if for some reason the United States decided that it needed them as center backs to beat some opponent like Brazil.

-The selection of midfielders contains various types of midfielders who can play in various formations. The roster has the personnel to play three playmakers in a line of three, and the roster also has the players to play two defensive midfielders of either variety: the midfield destroyer variety or the box-to-box variety.

-Three first strikers give this roster three complete out-and-out strikers who can score against elite defenders.

-With plenty of center backs, outside backs, defensive midfielders, attacking midfielders, and forwards, this is a balanced roster with skilled and athletic players who can be deployed in various formations.

-Unlike many Jürgen Klinsmann rosters, this roster actually has enough natural outside backs including both left backs and right backs, as well as players who can play on either side.

 

My Preferred USMNT Starting XI:

HOWARD; YEDLIN, FARRELL, O’NEILL, KLUTE; CAMERON, BRADLEY; DONOVAN, FEILHABER, DEMPSEY; ALTIDORE

Starting XI Rationale:

With Geoff Cameron as a midfield destroyer, Michael Bradley has more freedom to participate in the attacking and passing of the three attacking midfielders, and Cameron can take advantage of his own technical ability, speed, and endurance more so than he can in the defense.

Juan Agudelo, Jozy Altidore, or Aron Jóhannsson up top makes for a Front Six with a balance of skilled defensive midfielders and skilled attacking midfielders who have one of those talented strikers as the focal point of the attack.

Agudelo, Altidore, and Jóhannsson are all excellent strikers who are basically complete in regards to their physical gifts, technical ability, and playing style, but this writer views Agudelo as the the striker with the best combination of technical ability, athleticism, size, and the willingness to attack the goal and take risks. For the time being, Altidore has earned his starting spot, but Jóhannsson and Agudelo deserve heavy minutes.

The Back Four proposed is a hypothetical attempt to improve the American defense with better young players. In addition to Chris Klute (who has been playing as a left back), Farrell and Yedlin are likely the two best American right backs, but Farrell is naturally a center back where he can use his technical ability, speed, and tackling to improve the center of the American defense.

Shane O’Neill is the logical partner for Andrew Farrell if the goal is to improve the overall skill level and effectiveness of the center of the American defense. Omar Gonzalez and Matt Besler are many people’s default picks for center back due to Klinsmann’s habit of starting them, but Farrell and O’Neill are more skilled players and better defenders with more athleticism while still being tall and strong.

With the exception of Geoff Cameron, Yedlin, Farrell, O’Neill, and Klute are upgrades to the current USMNT Back Four.

 

The USMNT Should Start Three Number 10s

 

Freddy Adu's time with Bahia may be coming to a close. (Photo: E.C. Bahia)
Freddy Adu’s time with Bahia may be coming to a close, but the United States could still use him. (Photo: E.C. Bahia)

 

One of the weak areas for the United States Men’s National Team is the absence of quality passing and significant possession against quality opponents.

Given Michael Bradley’s ability to help to orchestrate passing from the defensive midfielder position, starting three playmakers in a line of three with a second striker and first striker in front of them would be an excellent way to improve the quality of the United States’ passing.

If the United States were to employ this system, it would mean that Michael Bradley would sit directly in front of the Back Four with Joe Corona, Benny Feilhaber, and Mix Diskerud in front of him. Bradley, Corona, Feilhaber, and Diskerud all display lots of movement off the ball, and starting them together would foster a style of fluid passing, which is something that the United States has never displayed unless Freddy Adu or Benny Feilhaber are playing.

Despite the lack of club playing time with Bahia, Freddy Adu is another playmaker who could play in a line of three attacking midfielders at any of the three positions. Adu is controversial due to his lack of club playing time and the amount of clubs that he has played for, but Adu has always performed at the international level for the United States.

Looking more closely at this concept of using a line of three attacking midfielders, starting only one defensive midfielder in front of four defenders is a perfectly acceptable formation that has plenty of defensive-minded players in the line-up. By only using one defensive midfielder, the United States would elevate its play to a superior brand of soccer that produces more scoring chances and more goals.

Based on the teams that have qualified for the 2014 World Cup, the United States will have to look to improve the level of its play in any way that it can in order to keep up with an enormous list of incredibly talented and deep national teams.

With Corona, Feilhaber, and Diskerud playing behind Altidore and Dempsey, the USMNT can make a real attempt to field most of its most talented attacking players without being too weak on the defensive front.

The key to starting three 10s in a line of three is that the players listed as right or left midfielders on paper aren’t wingers or players who are confined to one side of the field; the system is based on the constant movement of all three 10s all over the field with Bradley being heavily involved in the passing of the United States while playing deep to provide the defensive coverage that is needed in front of the Back Four.

Another key to this system is Clint Dempsey’s freedom to go wherever he wants as opposed to just floating around Jozy Altidore. Altidore is a first striker, and his job is to constantly make runs into space and to look to get into scoring positions.

With three playmakers and Dempsey, Altidore doesn’t need to concern himself with dropping deep to receive the ball where his back would be to goal. Altidore should be the focal point of the attack without having to waste his time and energy by shielding defenders off him with his back to goal.

Not many defenders are going to be able to outrun or outmuscle Altidore, and these qualities should be directed toward the goal instead of having Altidore post defenders up like a center or power forward in basketball.

No top national team has their strikers playing with their back to goal except for the rare times that a striker receives a pass with his back to goal and takes the defender off the turn.

Strikers playing with their backs to goal is a very English and long ball style of play that always gets destroyed by elite national teams on the international level. The purpose of using multiple creative midfielders who are playmakers is to set the striker free to hunt with his eyes toward the goal.

The attacking midfielders are there for possession, creativity, and quick ball movement. Altidore is there to put the ball in the back of the net, and he has shown that his finishing has become more clinical and more deadly.

Players like Bradley, Dempsey, Corona, Feilhaber, and Diskerud don’t need any charts or strategy explained to them, they just need to be allowed to play the way they want to play: one-to-two touch soccer with constant movement off the ball.

Starting a line of three number 10s makes this style of play possible without being tactically unsound.

 

The Importance of Joe Corona for the USMNT

 

Joe Corona. (Photo: AP Photo)
Joe Corona. (Photo: AP Photo)

 

Joe Benny Corona is important to the United States Men’s National Team not only because of his abilities as an attacking midfielder but also for his ability to play out right, out left, and in the center as a central attacking midfielder.

Corona is also the logical substitute for Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey as Corona has the ability to bring lots of technical ability, creativity, and quickness to their roles, which have largely been described as irreplaceable.

Given the choice of selecting Joe Corona, Alejandro Bedoya, or Graham Zusi to replace an injured or suspended Donovan or Dempsey, Corona has to be the logical choice due to his ability to fill the roles of Donovan or Dempsey, which requires a combination of quickness and a very high-level of technical ability.

Bedoya’s style of play is more based on cutting to the inside of the field at pace, and Zusi’s style of play is largely based on playing lots of crosses into the penalty box. On the other hand, Corona’s style of play is more based on a combination of quick passing, movement off the ball, and actively looking to score.

In short, Corona can fill Dempsey’s and Donovan’s roles better than Bedoya and Zusi who are each one-dimensional in their own ways. Corona is the obvious substitute for Dempsey and Donovan, and Corona is also a player who can actually play as a central attacking midfielder in between Donovan and Dempsey.

Both Dempsey and Donovan were pioneers for American soccer because of their combination of 1v1 skills, scoring ability, and a fluid style of play that was in lines with elite soccer seen outside of the United States.

Jürgen Klinsmann and the United States Men’s National Team cannot afford to leave Joe Corona off the roster in favor of Graham Zusi or Alejandro Bedoya because they don’t offer the same complete package of attacking midfielder skills that can be used all over the attack.

Mix Diskerud has begun to win Klinsmann’s approval, and it’s time that Klinsmann realizes that he also needs Corona not only for his skill-set and smooth and fluid style of play but also for Corona’s ability to replace Dempsey or Donovan without exposing the United States Men’s National Team to a huge drop in skill out left or out right.

Playmakers are rare, and American playmakers are more so. Joe Corona is a natural playmaker that can also play in wide positions without being a one-dimensional winger who hugs the sideline, dribbles into crowds, or plays blind crosses one after another.

Joe Corona has earned his national team spot, and it’s time that Klinsmann made him a fixture on the USMNT for the good of American soccer.

 

Which American Defenders Are Good Enough For the World Cup?

 

Chris Klute, the Best American Left Back. (Photo: Garrett Ellwood / Colorado Rapids)
Chris Klute, the Best American Left Back. (Photo: Garrett Ellwood / Colorado Rapids)

 

Using your best defenders regardless of age or international experience within reason is a customary and logical tactical game plan for competing in a World Cup.

Every national team in the world uses its best defenders either based on club performance, international performance, or skill-level regardless of their youth or lack of youth.

If the best American defenders are young players with plenty of club experience but not a wealth of international experience, then so be it. Soccer is a skill sport, and international experience doesn’t guarantee that defenders won’t make mistakes in a World Cup.

There are no guarantees in soccer; the best thing a national team can do is to play its best players.

Eight defenders is the traditional number of defenders for a national team roster, but seven defenders would suffice if some players double as center backs and as defensive midfielders.

This is precisely the case with Geoff Cameron and Shane O’Neill, the latter of whom really demonstrated throughout an entire season in Major League Soccer plus the U-20 World Cup that he was just as good if not better than Omar Gonzalez and Matt Besler.

The United States Men’s National Team likely has defenders who are good enough to hold their own and even excel at the 2014 World Cup.

While Neymar and the like are essentially unplayable, which means incapable of being marked, players below that level can be well-defended and marked by the USMNT with team defense.

Michael Bradley and Jermaine Jones or some other defensive midfielder in front of center backs like Geoff Cameron, John Anthony Brooks, or Michael Orozco should really be equipped to mostly contain much of the World Cup competition unless elite attackers really turn up the intensity and the style points, which almost no defender can contain anyway.

Whether it’s Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Mario Balotelli, Thomas Müller, or Neymar, players of that level are capable of victimizing and embarrassing any defender, so the best thing the United States can do is field the defenders with the defensive instincts and fundamentals, the athleticism, and the technical ability to perform well on the international level.

Matt Besler and Omar Gonzalez have done well as center backs under Jürgen Klinsmann, but Geoff Cameron, John Anthony Brooks, and Michael Orozco are likely better.

That would be five center backs on the roster unless one takes the view that Cameron and Orozco are doubling as outside backs. Furthermore, Shane O’Neill is an excellent center back, but he was listed as a defensive midfielder in World Soccer Source’s previous article on midfielders.

At this point, Brad Evans and DaMarcus Beasley have shown that they can do well enough as outside backs in a pinch, but starting them over natural outside backs or converted outside backs like Cameron is misguided.

Chris Klute, DeAndre Yedlin, and Andrew Farrell proved this season in MLS that they are likely the best outside backs available to the United States in addition to Eric Lichaj, Jonathan Spector, and Steve Cherundolo.

Fabian Johnson is also a capable outside back, but his defending and recovery defense seems outmatched by Farrell, Yedlin, and Klute. Johnson is an excellent player who attacks with speed and two-footed skill, but from a defensive standpoint, Farrell, Yedlin, and Klute are better defenders.

Farrell and Klute looked better than Yedlin from a defensive standpoint for most of the MLS season, but over the last few months of the season, Yedlin has evolved into an effective defender who has improved his ability to tackle and dispossess attackers.

Klute, Yedlin, and Farrell would be new to the United States Men’s National Team set-up, but that’s not a good enough reason to exclude them for players that are not only not as good but that are also being played out of position.

If the United States selects seven defenders with either Cameron or O’Neill listed as midfielders, then Brooks, Cameron, and Orozco add up to three defenders, and Yedlin, Farrell, and Klute make six defenders. The final spot should go to Eric Lichaj who is an experienced, young, and talented outside back that can play as a right or left back, and he has the club and international experience to be considered by and large a proven performer.

Omar Gonzalez, Matt Besler, Brad Evans, and DaMarcus Beasley didn’t make World Soccer Source’s list of preferred defenders for the World Cup, but Cameron, Brooks, and Orozco are all more complete center backs who aren’t a liability in terms of defending, speed, or technical ability.

Gonzalez isn’t quite as fast or as skilled defensively as any of those three, and Besler falls just slightly below Cameron, Brooks, and Orozco in terms of his overall package as a center back. Besler is certainly an upgrade from Carlos Bocanegra or Clarence Goodson, but anything that Besler can do, Cameron, Brooks, and Orozco can do better.

Shane O’Neill and Andrew Farrell are also better center backs than Gonzalez and Besler because there’s no weak area for O’Neill and Farrell as defenders. Both are tall, strong, fast, quick, and technically-skilled, and both are outstanding defenders who aggressively tackle without fouling.

Youth and international inexperience shouldn’t be qualities that disqualify Farrell, O’Neill, Yedlin, and Klute from the USMNT. All of these players were starters for their club teams for the entire season, and the international experience of Gonzalez, Besler, Beasley, and Evans as defenders was mostly against fairly weak competition.

The argument that many observers use for supporting Evans, Gonzalez, Besler, and Beasley as the starting Back Four is that they played for the United States during a nice winning streak, but the performance of all four of those players went down as the competition went up.

World Soccer Source would rather see USMNT defenders with the physical gifts and the tools to succeed against better competition, then just sticking with the status quo that looked shaky when the quality of the opposition went up.

With Shane O’Neill listed as a midfielder, Geoff Cameron, John Anthony Brooks, Michael Orozco, Andrew Farrell, Eric Lichaj, DeAndre Yedlin, and Chris Klute are the seven or really eight defenders that World Soccer Source believes have what it takes to perform at the 2014 World Cup.

Additionally, Gale Agbossoumonde is a center back prospect who is too promising to not be evaluated and seriously considered before the World Cup. Hypothetically, Agbossoumonde has everything one could ask for in a center back: excellent defensive instincts and fundamentals, refined technical ability with both feet, calmness, and great athleticism in a tall, strong physique.

As American soccer has continued to improve, it’s quite logical that newer American defenders are better than ones in the past. Major League Soccer has never seen a crop of defenders like O’Neill, Farrell, Yedlin, and Klute, and making them wait years for another World Cup is a waste of good talent that can help the United States to improve.

Starting a Back Four made up of DeAndre Yedlin, Shane O’Neill, Andrew Farrell, and Chris Klute with Geoff Cameron and Michael Bradley as the defensive midfielders is one of the boldest and best options for the United States in the 2014 World Cup, and another viable option would be to start Farrell, Cameron, Brooks, and Klute as the Back Four.

These are new Back Fours, but they are made up of better players than the Standard Klinsmann Back Four comprised of Evans, Gonzalez, Besler, and Beasley.

Finally, a Back Four comprised of Lichaj, Orozco, Brooks, and Klute with Cameron and Bradley as a two-man defensive midfield would be another option where basically everyone except Klute was experienced and by and large proven at the international level or at the high level of the Bundesliga in Brooks’ case.

 

Eight American Defenders Who Can Compete in the World Cup:

CENTER BACKS/DEFENSIVE MIDFIELDERS: Geoff CAMERON, Shane O’NEILL

CENTER BACKS: John Anthony BROOKS, Michael OROZCO, Andrew FARRELL.

OUTSIDE BACKS: Eric LICHAJ, DeAndre YEDLIN, Chris KLUTE, (Andrew FARRELL)