Few Surprises, A Little Drama in US World Cup Provisional Roster
by 05/13/2010 08:05
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For a pragmatic coach like the US Men’s National Team’s Bob Bradley however, finding out that Davies’ French club team, Sochaux, couldn’t see to giving him the full medical release necessary to attend the pre-tournament training camp set to convene simply meant that Bradley needed to call up everybody even marginally capable of filling a roster spot on the US forward line, with the only exceptions seemingly the out of form twin towers of Kenny Cooper and Conor Casey. I’m not sure how else Robbie Findley makes this list. And only the miracle that was 3 goals for Eddie Johnson in the Greek playoffs for a Champions League spot helped him escape the frozen tundra wasteland of strikers who inexplicably can’t seem to score. (Charlie Davies and France's Sochaux
(last updated May 25))
All that being said, how about we start with a quick position-by-position look through the 30 men who safely cleared the first hurdle for a participant’s ticket to Africa? (US World Cup 2010 Roster Speculation
(last updated June 2))
No surprises here. There just isn’t any reason to take a fourth into the training camp as the position is totally stable, and without any shakiness in form or injury problems that might otherwise require someone to get a provisional look-see.
If nothing else, that last reality alone should be the last wake-up call one Freddy Adu should need to receive that if he doesn’t get his head straight around the need to do whatever is necessary to get a roster spot on the senior national team, even if it’s play as a left wing midfielder instead of in his preferred position as a withdrawn second forward in the hole behind the front striker, he’s going to become someone who not only won’t play in the 4 World Cups he was originally projected to as a 14-year-old professional, but might miss out entirely considering the fact that he realistically only has two more shots left in him after this year’s miss (unless he becomes the most ridiculous late-bloomer ever). (Freddy Adu and Greece's Aris
(last updated February 23))
So who’s on the bubble, knowing that 7 have to be cut? Obviously the 3 goalkeepers are a lock, and conventional wisdom dictates at most 4 forwards, with the possiblity of 3 given what was said above about Donovan and Dempsey, it seems safe to think that 2 or 3 of the forwards will remain behind, plus 2 or 3 defenders, and presumably the same setup in the midfield depending on who forces Bradley’s hand.
That being said, here’s who I think are truly on the bubble:
And here’s the next crop that I’d say the bias would general be towards including in the absence of compelling reasons otherwise given historical performances (plus those whom Bradley appears to have a predilection for despite inconsistent play when given the chance):
Everybody else I’d consider as close to a lock as you can get, with the acknowledged caveat that we don’t know how far along some truly are in their injury recoveries (Oguchi Onyewu, Stuart Holden, Brian Ching, Ricardo Clark).
Not that I’m a gambling man, but were I, I’d bet that the following get disappointing news in the next couple weeks:
That leaves me 1 shy of the 7 Bradley needs to cut, and I really can’t make up my prejudiced mind as to whether that last player cut would be Bornstein or Pearce. As much as I think Beasley’s play of late leaves much, far too much, to be desired, I still think the numbers and players available today dictate that Bradley cuts 2 defenders, with the second being the winner of the grudge match between this pair of second–string, attack–minded left back wannabes, neither one of which is even likely a starter if chosen despite the lack of true left–sided alternatives.
As far as an early guess at who will be taking the field vs. England next month, right now I’m thinking Stuart Holden if healthy will get a start on the right with Donovan again on the left, with Dempsey partnering Altidore up top. Michael Bradley anchors the middle of midfield, along–side either Maurice Edu or Ricardo Clark (I’d vote for Edu, just so we don’t have 2 likely recipients of cards in the same area of the field).
Not a particularly dangerous looking attack, but set pieces with the central back pairing of Onyewu and Carlos Bocanegra coming forward could certainly present problems for anybody we’re playing, at least in the first round. As far as their wing back counterparts, I still think Cherundolo gets the call on the right, with Jonathan Spector occupying the same left side he plays for club team West Ham United.
That I think puts pretty close to the best 11 players currently available on the field, but given Holden’s lack of playing time after recovering from the broken leg he suffered at the hands of the Netherland’s Nigel de Jong back in March, I could also see an argument for Donovan on the right and José Torres on the left, assuming of course Bradley finally thinks he can hold his own at the international level. Failing that, and if Ching or one of the other forwards just seems on fire, then Dempsey goes back to his usual spot at right midfield, with Donovan again attacking from the left. (US vs. England (June 12, 2010-World Cup Group C)
(last updated June 3))
Either way, I don’t expect too much experimentation in the last two friendlies before boarding the planes for South Africa so we should know which way the argument is leaning come May 25 in Connecticut vs. the Czechs. (US MNT vs. Czech Republic (May 25, 2010 Friendly)
(last updated June 2))
Think I've got it all wrong or just have a comment or suggestion? Let me know here and I'll make any modifications/corrections necessary, giving credit where requested.
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