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Tuesday, 11 May 2010 17:40

U.S. National Team coach Bob Bradley announced the 30-man provisional U.S. World Cup team that will head to Princeton, NJ, for its pre-World Cup camp today.   This is not an easy task, and Coach Bradley will inevitably have people pick away at his choices from every conceivable angle.

Choosing this team, and soon having to narrow the list to the 23-man FIFA limit, is a difficult task for any World Cup bound coach—at least as far as media/blogger critics are concerned.  

I do not plan to second-guess the coach...but that does not mean I don’t have some opinions on the choices—or on those left out.

 

Goalkeepers

Tim Howard, Marcus Hahnemann, Brad Guzan

 

Thoughts on the Goalkeepers

Frankly, this was the position with the least mystery.  The three choices are all capable keepers and probably well ahead of others that follow on the depth chart.  

No surprises.

 

Defenders

Carlos Bocanegra, Oguchi Onyewu, Steve Cherundolo, Jonathan Spector, Jay DeMerit, Clarence Goodson, Jonathan Bornstein, Heath Pearce, Chad Marshall

 

Thoughts on Included Defenders  

Hard to say that there are any real surprises here.  

Bornstein seems to get more criticism than he deserves, but is a Bradley favorite.  Onyewu is coming back from injury and—if we are honest—didn’t look like a world-beater in his preseason friendly matches with AC Milan.  

Goodson and Chad Marshall are in a tough spot for making the 23-man limit, since others like Bocanegra and Spector are more versatile across the back line. 

 

Thoughts on Excluded Defenders

Edgar Castillo looked like a possibility for a while, but was never too likely to bounce Bradley-favorite Jonathan Bornstein. (Nor was it clear he should.)  

As a New England Revolution fan/watcher, I have a soft spot for Michael Parkhurst and Kevin Alston, but Parkhurst had not done enough to be here, and Alston isn’t ready for a World Cup.   (Watch this space though…)

 

Midfielders

Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Stuart Holden, Ricardo Clark, Maurice Edu, Benny Feilhaber, Jose Francisco Torres, Alejandro Bedoya, DaMarcus Beasley, Sacha Kljestan, Robbie Rogers

 

Thoughts on Included Midfielders

Donovan, Dempsey, and Bradley were obvious choices.  After watching qualifying and Gold Cup games, I believe that Holden, Clark, Edu, and Feilhaber were also all likely choices.  

After that, it gets a bit interesting.  

Many in the U.S. fan base will be glad to see Torres included, though he’s not a lock for the 23.   Beasley, Rogers, Kljestan, and Bedoya are bubble players right now.  Beasley brings experience, while Bedoya represents the future.  

Rogers is a bit of an enigma, having performed very well for the U.S. against lower-level competition, but not really looking like a game-changer against stronger opponents.  Kljestan is a positive offensive factor when on-form, which is never guaranteed.

 

Thoughts on Excluded Midfielders

Generally speaking, there were not huge surprises here.   Kyle Beckerman’s fate was probably sealed when Maurice Edu reached full fitness. 

 

Freddy Adu

If you’ve read my work before, you know I have a soft spot for Freddy Adu.  Seeing his pro-club teammate Eddie Johnson make the 30-man cut must be extremely hard on Freddy, who seems to be finding his form to some degree in Greece.  

I could argue that there’s more experience in Adu than Bedoya (or Rogers?), despite both showing promise, but that’s from an outsider’s view, so I’ll defer to the coach’s perspective.   

 

Forwards

Jozy Altidore, Robbie Findley, Brian Ching, Edson Buddle, Eddie Johnson, Herculez Gomez

 

Thoughts on Included Forwards 

Clearly, current form rules the day.   Buddle, Gomez and (even) Johnson have been scoring, and that is clearly the determining factor here.  

Jozy was a lock, though his season was more about promise than results.  Ching will need to prove he’s game-ready in camp to make the 23, but there aren’t many other forwards like him available.  Johnson would be a surprise to make the final cut, but that is what the camp is for.

 

Thoughts on Excluded Forwards

This was always going to be the most scrutinized group.

 

Charlie Davies

Coach Bradley did what he had to do.  The World Cup is not a place for sentimentality.  It is a place for the best team you can assemble—which at forward has a lot to do with form and confidence.  

It’s not a popular thing to say in U.S. soccer circles, but ever since that horrible accident took place, Charlie was always on the outside looking in. 

 

Jeff Cunningham and Conor Casey

Jeff and Conor must be wishing that the World Cup was in 2009, instead of 2010, because they were the hot properties of last year.  Thaven’t made an impact this year, while others have been shining for their respective leagues or teams. 

 

Kenny Cooper

Hindsight is 20/20 for Kenny Cooper, whose pro-club hopping was an over-engineered attempt to make this World Cup team, which failed on a number of levels.  

As he watches Edson Buddle (MLS), Herculez Gomez (Mexico), and Eddie Johnson (Greece) prove: It’s not where you play, it’s how you are playing.

 

Logic Trumps Emotion

The exclusion of Charlie Davies will clearly be the main discussion point following this 30-man roster selection.   But clearly Bob Bradley made the decision that he won’t be ready.  

That’s logic. 

My wanting Freddy to get another look? 

That was more emotional.

Now that the team is beginning to take shape, let’s get back to illogical commentary about the expected results.   How we’ll beat up poor injured England.  (Illogical.)  How if we don’t get far into the tournament, Bradley and Sunil Gulati are useless.  (Illogical.)

The next few months are logically going to be an emotional ride. 

Game on.

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