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USA-El Salvador: What Did We Learn

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The US in a sloppy and erratic way dominated a sloppy and erratic El Salvador team, yet the US suffered from the oh so classic problem of scoring. In the end they got two goals to win the game, but this should have been a rout. Instead, the US found themselves behind midway through the second half.

The US just plain and simple lacked class in the final third and El Salvador just lacked class, giving the ball away in their own half endlessly. Yes the El Salvadorean keeper had a good game, but the lack of finishing quality was downright maddening - with Robbie Rogers second half one-on-one shank the most obvious.

In the end, this game I think didn't clarify all that much about the US World Cup squad. The decision over the final forward slots is still a question, with Conor Casey, Brian Ching, and Robbie Findley in some ways performing as expected. One would expect Bradley's attention will turn to some European options next week in the form of Eddie Johnson and maybe Kenny Cooper. Bradley did confirm his love-affair with Jonathan Bornstein by bizarrely playing him in the center of defense and making him captain. Fortunately he had little to do, except of course for getting his wires crossed with Brad Evans on the lone El Salvador goal.

So while I think few really helped or hurt themselves, it was still a friendly less than four months from the World Cup, so we must of learned somethings about some of the players. Here is a rundown of who helped and who hurt themselves.

Who helped themselves:

Heath Pearce, LB - Pearce was perhaps the most consistent player on the night. He showed something that we haven't seen from Jonathan Bornstein - that is touch and quality on the ball. I think he made a strong case for himself and a good start to the MLS season may see him get a ticket to South Africa.

Brian Ching - Dude scored. He positioned himself well on crosses and put himself in good positions. If Bradley is determined to bring another target man, he outdid Conor Casey tonight.

Robbie Findley - He looked dangerous on the ball but showed his inexperience off the ball often wondering off sides. He left me wanting to see more, which is always a good thing. How he plays in MLS will be key.

Sacha Kljestan - He looked solid and scored. But he is very much on the outside for the World Cup. He still tends to drift in and out of play and he just doesn't seem to dominate space in the middle of the field. He is if you will, an American, Jermaine Jenas - does some good things, but never does enough.

Clarence Goodson - Ditto to what John Harkes said, he was solid. And solid is what you want from an emergency reserve defender.

Who hurt themselves:

Robbie Rogers - There just isn't enough quality there. He at times can effectively push the ball past people and put in a good ball, but he can also just as easily give the ball away and make a bad decision. Just isn't ready and I can't seem him really adding anything in South Africa.

Brad Evans- He looked a little shaky at right back frequently having to chase players down. But his failed clearance header was just a catastrophic brain fart. He wasn't really in the frame anyway.

 
 
 
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01:51 PM on 02/25/2010
We had a pretty similar view of the game Bergman. I must admit I am still baffled-- like you-- to as why Bornstien still gets called up. He is horrendous in the defensive transition, lacks ball awareness and gets caught sleeping far too often. And unlike Johnathan Spector--not a great defender-- he can't cross the ball from the wing or create chances go forward on the overlap. He needs to be dropped.

But the build-up lacked the patience and creativity in the final third. I must agree with you Bergman. The U.S. is always in a rush to attack, we don't seem to want the ball or want to create and wear down our oppositions. We are a counter attack team that can't regain its composure and work the ball a bit. And because of that we just send in poor cross after poor cross to a penalty area with two strikers trying to beat out 3 or 4 opposing defenders. Hopefully Rodgers and a few others can fill that attacking spot, and help us hold the ball down for a bit and finish on our chances.

But Bradley has baffled me so many times before with his selection that I see myself being irritated by next week's picks and the selection for the World Cup final roster.

By the way, I hope you have seen Adu recently. He has been getting regular action and is performing pretty well in Greece now that he is comfortable.
06:02 AM on 02/25/2010
Since Brad is a box-to-box midfielder and not a fullback I think that is to be expected. He'd be better off starting in place of Beckerman who should be out of chances by now.

However, if Seattle decides to trot him out at RB for a season he might get better and I might change my tune.
01:44 PM on 02/25/2010
I liked what Beckerman did. He isn't a classy midfielder, he is a down in the trenches kind of guy. In fact, I like him more than Clark. Ricardo Clark pains me to watch as the HOLDING (defensive) midfielder.