The
U.S. Men’s National Team beat Trinidad & Tobago 1-0 on Wednesday
evening in an important World Cup qualifying match at Rentschler
Field in East Hartford, Conn., to inch closer to qualifying for FIFA
World Cup Germany 2006. The victory came courtesy of a second-minute
goal from forward Brian McBride in front of 25,488 fans in
Connecticut.
"I think we deserved
the three points,” said U.S. manager Bruce Arena. “I thought we
played very well and I think we felt guilty that perhaps we made it
a little bit difficult on ourselves. We created a number of good
goal scoring opportunities and came up short, and that allowed
Trinidad to hang around for 89 minutes or so, and I think they could
have been punished and sent home a lot earlier. Give them credit:
they never quit. They defended well and we failed to convert our
chances. However, the three points are huge. Fifteen points after
six games is as good as it gets and I think we're getting real close
to qualifying for Germany. We're pleased where we are. We'll size up
the troops after this game and prepare for the next set of games
against Mexico and Guatemala."
Next up for the
United States is a Sept. 3 qualifier against Mexico in front of a
sold out crowd at Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. With a win over
Mexico, the U.S. is guaranteed a spot in their fifth consecutive
World Cup. Likewise, a tie vs. Mexico could also clinch a U.S. berth
in the 2006 World Cup ONLY if the other two CONCACAF matches on
Matchday 7 (Panama vs. Costa Rica AND Trinidad and Tobago vs.
Guatemala) result in ties.
Mexico defeated Costa
Rica at home tonight 2-0, to maintain the top spot in the final
round of qualifying with 16 points. In tonight’s other CONCACAF
match, Guatemala came from behind to beat Panama at home 2-1.
McBride’s early goal
came just 91 seconds into the game on an easy pass from the left
side of the penalty area from Bobby Convey, playing in his third
straight qualifier for the U.S. The goal was created when midfielder
John O’Brien shook off his marker in midfield and played a perfect
ball into Convey, breaking behind a slow reacting Trinidad & Tobago
defense.
The goal for McBride
moved him ahead of Earnie Stewart as the USA’s all-time leading goal
scorer in World Cup qualifying play with 10 all-time strikes.
"Basically it was
good ball movement,” said McBride. “Bobby (Convey) ran off a
shoulder and was played in and I knew I just had to beat the guy to
the spot. The angle that he was at, he was going to play the ball
across. It was a nice ball in, and I just had to open up my foot."
In the 29th minute,
Landon Donovan had a chance to put the U.S. ahead 2-0 after a poor
clearance from Trinidad & Tobago goalkeeper Kelvin Jack landed at
the feet of the high-scoring forward at the top of the area. With
just the ‘keeper to beat, Donovan moved into the box and tried to
lift the ball over the charging Jack, but the goalkeeper redeemed
himself with a fine save.
Less than 10 minutes
later, Convey had a breakaway and slid a ball just outside the right
post after Donovan had split two defenders with a soft, short pass
to free the midfielder on his run.
At the end of the
first half, Donovan used his speed to turn a bad back pass from
Marvin Andrews into a red card for Trinidad & Tobago defender Dennis
Lawrence, who had to trace back as the U.S. forward sprinted toward
goal with the errant pass. As the pair reached the top of the
penalty area, Lawrence tugged on Donovan’s shoulder to throw him off
stride and earn the red card ejection from referee Marco Rodriguez.
John O’Brien was
forced out of the match at the start of the second half with a left
hip contusion, giving way to Chris Armas. O’Brien is not expected to
miss any significant time due to the injury.
The U.S. played the
bulk of the second half with the man advantage; however, a second
yellow card caution on Convey in the 88th minute evened the sides at
10 men each. Just moments before the red card, second half sub
Taylor Twellman appeared to ice the game in 86th minute with an
empty net tap in after an excellent cross from the right flank by
Santino Quaranta, a second half sub making his World Cup qualifying
debut for the U.S. However, the assistant referee raised his flag
immediately, disallowing the goal with a very close offside call.
For the match, the
U.S. out shot their Caribbean rivals 18-1 as Kasey Keller earned his
fourth straight shutout in World Cup qualifying without being called
upon to make a single save. Keller now has a shutout streak of 417
minutes in qualifying play dating back to the USA’s 2-1 loss in
Mexico on March 27.
Keller has also now
played in 30 World Cup qualifiers for the U.S., tying him for the
team’s all-time lead with Cobi Jones, Eddie Pope and Earnie Stewart.
The match at
Rentschler Field was the 100th all-time FIFA World Cup qualifying
game for the United States, and improved the USA’s record to
44-29-27.
It was the team’s
first game since the USA claimed their third CONCACAF Gold Cup crown
in July with a penalty kick victory over Panama in East Rutherford,
N.J. The U.S. takes the field again in just a little more than two
weeks against Mexico in Columbus, Ohio, on Sept. 3. That game is
followed immediately with a Sept. 7 match in Guatemala City against
Guatemala, the eighth of 10 final round World Cup qualifying matches
in CONCACAF.
About Induction 2005
The
National Soccer Hall of Fame will host
Induction 2005 in
Oneonta, New York on August 27th through the 29th. Induction Weekend kicks
off on Saturday, August 27th with a Northern Eagle Beverage
Pub Night starting at
7:00 p.m. Then on Sunday, August 28th the Hall of Fame will
present the 2nd Annual
Hall of Fame Golf Tournament
presented by Nike at the Delhi Golf Course in Delhi, New York.
For those who are interested in exploring beautiful Otsego
County there will a
Leatherstocking Summer Sampler
tour at 9:00 a.m. on Sunday.
The Hall of Fame will host the
President's Reception & Dinner,
sponsored by Field Turf and Clark Companies, starting at 6:00
p.m. in the Hall of Fame's Atrium.
The
Induction Ceremony on
Monday, August 29th
honors three of the most identifiable
players in U.S. Men's National Team history and pioneers of Major
League Soccer as
Marcelo Balboa,
John
Harkes, and
Tab
Ramos
will be enshrined into the Hall of Fame
starting at 10:00 a.m. The ceremony is free of charge and open
to the public and will take place in the Museum. The
2005 Hall of Fame Game
will kickoff at 1:00 p.m. on
August 29th and will
feature four-time MLS Cup Champion D.C. United as they take on
the Colorado Rapids.
Tickets for the
Hall of Fame Golf Tournament,
President's Reception & Dinner
and the
Hall of Fame Game
are available at the Hall of Fame by calling 1-800-545-FAME
(3263), or visit 3 More Reasons ..., our Ticket
Outlet at 66 Main Street in Cooperstown, New York.
About the National
Soccer Hall of Fame and Museum
Located in
Oneonta, NY, the National Soccer Hall of Fame opened a 30,000
square foot, state-of-the-art museum in 1999. The Hall of Fame
tells the story of soccer in
America through artifacts, photographs, and video clips. The new
Hall features an extensive interactive, youth oriented Kicks
Zone where visitors have fun kicking,
heading and playing computer trivia stations and video
soccer games. The VideoWall portrays some of the greatest
moments and the greatest goals in history as well as live soccer
action with World Cup, MLS, and U.S. Soccer matches. Unique and
rare artifacts on exhibit range from the world’s oldest soccer
ball to the FIFA Women’s World Cup trophy won by the USA in
1999,
Pelé's and Mia Hamm’s uniforms, Kristine Lilly’s golden
shoes, NASL championship rings, the original MLS championship
trophy, MLS gallery - it’s all at the National Soccer Hall of
Fame. In addition to the interactive Museum, the National Soccer
Hall of Fame complex boasts the
Kicks
Zone Store,
a research library, four world-class soccer fields and
office/meeting facilities. The Hall plans to add a stadium, an
indoor soccer arena and housing facilities in the future.
The mission of
the National Soccer Hall of Fame is to celebrate the history,
honor the heroes, inspire the youth and preserve the legacy of
soccer in the United States.
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