Are you experienced? Americans won't be at Copa America
By NANCY ARMOUR, AP National Writer
June 22, 2007
CHICAGO (AP) -- DaMarcus Beasley remembers fans tossing a chicken head at him as he readied to take a corner kick. Carlos Bocanegra was unnerved when he climbed on the bus and saw armed guards.
Away games can be a nerve-racking adventure for the U.S. soccer team, and there's no way to prepare besides playing them. What better place than Copa America, the South American championship?
Coach Bob Bradley went heavy on youth in his 22-man roster released Friday. There's no Beasley, Bocanegra, Landon Donovan or Clint Dempsey. In their place are 16 players with 10 or fewer appearances for the national team, including three who've never played a game. Fourteen players are under 25, the youngest being 20-year-old midfielder Eddie Gaven.
"It'll definitely be a good learning experience for players who haven't been in that situation," said goalkeeper Kasey Keller, by far the veteran of the Copa America squad.
"You have to start somewhere," Keller said. "Much better than in the first stage of (World Cup) qualifying."
The Americans begin play Thursday in Venezuela against Argentina, which is ranked fifth in the world and is bringing its best players. The United States plays Paraguay on July 2, followed by Colombia three days later.
"Copa America is going to be a great opportunity for our younger players to gain invaluable experience at the highest international level," Bradley said. "This group has many of the faces that could play a role in 2008 and 2009 when our focus turns to our ultimate goal of qualifying for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa."
This is a time of transition for the U.S. team. Claudio Reyna, Brian McBride, Eddie Pope, guys who were seemingly around forever, are gone. The 37-year-old Keller has dropped behind Tim Howard, and Donovan and Beasley qualify as the "old men" of the team.
A new generation of players is jockeying for positions and playing time, and those whose places are secure are adjusting to new faces around them. It's a delicate process, and there is little time to waste with World Cup qualifying beginning in a year.
"We've got good young talent," Keller said. "What we need to do now is start getting to where you know what team is on the field. Let's make sure Michael Bradley plays two or three seasons in a row as a starter."
The United States brought its best players to the CONCACAF Gold Cup, where the Americans will play rival Mexico on Sunday for the title. But with the U.S. team going straight from Chicago to Venezuela and European-based players having only a few more weeks before their training camps start, Bradley opted for youth in South America.
Only eight players from the Gold Cup are on the Copa America roster, Keller being the most recognizable name. Keller, who played his 100th game for the United States on Thursday night, also is one of only four players on the roster who was at last summer's World Cup. Defender Jimmy Conrad, midfielder Ben Olsen and forward Eddie Johnson also played in Germany, with Keller and Conrad the only two to start.
Thirteen players on the Copa America roster have been on a world championship roster -- but at the youth level. Midfielder Justin Mapp started five games for the United States at the 2003 World Youth Championship and scored the game-winner that put the U-20s in the quarterfinals.
Benny Feilhaber, Sacha Kljestan, Lee Nguyen and Gaven, all midfielders, and defender Marvell Wynne were on the U-20 team that made it to the knockout stage of the 2005 World Youth Championship. The team the Americans beat in their opening game? None other than Argentina.
But there's a big difference between playing a bunch of teenagers and a squad that has Lionel Messi, Juan Roman Riquelme and Carlos Tevez.
"It's good," Beasley said. "For one, you're playing against some of the best teams in the world. Second, you get experience playing away from home when people are not with you.
"They've done it at the youth level, but it's not in front of 60,000 fans," he said. "That'll only help in (World Cup) qualifying."
The roster:
Goalkeepers: Brad Guzan (Chivas USA), Kasey Keller (Borussia Moenchengladbach, Germany)
Defenders: Jonathan Bornstein (Chivas USA), Bobby Boswell (D.C.), Dan Califf (Aalborg BK, Denmark), Jimmy Conrad (Kansas City), Jay DeMerit (Watford, England), Drew Moor (Dallas), Heath Pearce (Nordsjaelland, Denmark), Marvell Wynne (Toronto)
Midfielders: Kyle Beckerman (Colorado), Ricardo Clark (Houston), Benny Feilhaber (Hamburg SV, Germany), Eddie Gaven (Columbus), Sacha Kljestan (Chivas USA), Justin Mapp (Chicago), Lee Nguyen (PSV Eindhoven, Netherlands), Ben Olsen (D.C.)
Forwards: Charlie Davies (Hammarby, Sweden), Herculez Gomez (Colorado), Eddie Johnson (Kansas City), Taylor Twellman (New England)