COLUMBUS, Ohio (Feb. 11, 2009) — The U.S. Men’s
National Team continued their domination of Mexico
with a confident and clinical 2-0 victory to open
the final round of CONCACAF qualifying for the
2010 FIFA World Cup in wet and windy conditions at
Columbus Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.
Midfielder Michael Bradley scored goals at the
conclusion of each half to blaze the way for the
USA in front of a rabid pro-American sell-out
crowd of 23,776 fans.
The U.S. is now
9-0-2 at home against Mexico since 1999,
outscoring their rival 19-3 in that span. The 2-0
triumph also adds to the team’s recent slate of
significant victories by the same margin, marking
the sixth time this decade the team has defeated
Mexico by that score (a tally which includes three
World Cup qualifiers and a second round victory in
the 2002 FIFA World Cup).
“It's great to
start the final round with a win against Mexico,”
said U.S. Men’s National Team head coach Bob
Bradley. “The all around team effort was good.
It's a good starting point and something to build
on.”
For the 21-year-old Michael Bradley,
the two goals were the fourth and fifth of his
career, and his third and fourth in seven career
World Cup qualifying games. He is the fourth
player in U.S. history to score two goals in a
game against Mexico, and the first since Steve
Moyers did it 19 years ago in a 2-1 FIFA World Cup
qualifying win on Nov. 23, 1980.
Bradley’s
first goal came just two minutes before halftime,
as he pounced on a save from Mexican goalkeeper
Oswaldo Sanchez to power home a close-range finish
from the center of the goalkeeper area after
Oguchi Onyewu had headed a hard shot on target
from six yards out. That first goal came just a
few seconds after Frankie Hejduk had set up a
corner kick by hustling to a quick post-up pass
from Brian Ching, getting to the ball just before
it crossed the endline and playing it off Mexican
defender Carlos Salcido. On the ensuing corner,
DaMarcus Beasley hit a high, looping ball that got
caught up in the wind before finding the head of
Landon Donovan on the far post who headed
perfectly back into the area for Onyewu before
Bradley finished the rebound.
The final
goal came in the second minute of stoppage time
with Bradley finishing easily from 25 yards out
with a powerful shot that froze a slow-reacting
Sanchez. Second-half sub Jozy Altidore helped set
up the goal by calmly collecting a ball at
midfield, establishing his position against a
challenging Mexican defense and then laying off an
easy pass into the left flank for a sprinting
Donovan to carry toward goal and lay off for
Bradley.
“These are special games, they’re
fun games to play in,” said Michael Bradley. “As a
player, these are the games we want to play in. In
the locker room before the game, we looked at
every guy and knew we were ready to play. I don’t
think its one guy, its 11 guys committed to do
every little thing on the field to make sure we
were going to get the result.”
The U.S.
controlled play throughout most of the match,
continually combining in the middle of the field
with quick passes and fast pace to create space
and keep Mexico on their heals. The confident play
resulted in a number of close early chances, most
notably a great build-up in the 16th minute that
ended with Beasley taking a stab from the top of
the penalty arc that sailed high and wide. Six
minutes later, Brian Ching earned a free kick from
just outside the area that Donovan hit just wide
of the left post.
The game could have been
much different, though, in the third minute, as
young Mexican forward Giovani Dos Santos was
stonewalled on a sitter from just 10 yards out by
U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard following some sloppy
defending from the U.S. The save was one of three
on the night for Howard, who was his usual
sure-handed self on numerous other crosses and
balls played into his penalty area.
It was
Howard who was at the center of another pivotal
moment in the game when he was on the receiving
end of a malicious stab to the right thigh from
the cleats of Rafael Marquez in the 65th minute.
Marquez received an immediate red card from
referee Carlos Batres of Guatemala on the play.
Unfortunately for Howard, the result of the play
also saw him pick-up a yellow card for time
wasting, his second of World Cup qualifying, which
means he must sit out the USA’s next qualifier on
March 28 in El Salvador.
The red card
challenge from Marquez came just seconds after
Mexico’s best chance to score. Pavel Pardo sent a
perfect free kick from the center of the field
into the penalty area where an errant touch from
Dos Santos set up Fausto Pinto perfectly on the
left side of the box. Pinto took a touch and then
slid a dangerous shot past an open goal that was
somehow missed at the far post for an easy tap-in
by Dos Santos, laying flat on his back. Although
Dos Santos was arguably in an offside position on
the missed open net tap-in, the flag stayed down
and the ball was quickly played back into the area
where Howard confidently snared it before being
spiked by Marquez in the thigh.
The red
card for Marquez was reminiscent of his exit from
the USA’s 2-0 victory over Mexico at the 2002 FIFA
World Cup in Korea, when he was sent off after a
vicious head butt to all-time U.S. cap leader Cobi
Jones.
As evidence of the pace and
confidence with which the U.S. played, Mexico made
all three substitutions and had a player ejected
all before the U.S. made a single change as the 11
starters played with a rhythm that left the result
rarely in doubt. Eventually, Bob Bradley would
make two changes in the final 10 minutes as the
U.S. controlled the game with a man advantage for
the final 25 minutes.
Tonight’s victory
guarantees that the USA’s home streak against
Mexico will officially surpass the 10-year mark
(with the last victory for Mexico in the United
States coming on March 13, 1999). If the teams
don’t square off on U.S. soil in the 2009 CONCACAF
Gold Cup this summer, the U.S. will close out the
decade with an undefeated record against their
arch-rival.
For the USA, the match was the
first of 10 games in the Final Round of CONCACAF
qualifying for the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South
Africa. In other opening day results from the
final round, Trinidad & Tobago and El Salvador
drew 2-2, while Costa Rica defeated Honduras 2-0.
The top three teams in the six-team group qualify
for the 2010 World Cup, while the fourth place
team enters a playoff with the fifth place team
from South America.
The U.S. will next
take the field for a pair of FIFA World Cup
qualifiers at the end of March. The U.S. first
travels to El Salvador on March 28 for the second
match of the final round. Three days later, the
U.S. hosts Trinidad & Tobago at LP Field in
Nashville (tickets). Kickoff for that match is set
for 6:45 p.m. CT, and the match will be broadcast
live on ESPN2 and Galavision.
The team’s
final three FIFA World Cup qualifying matches at
home were recently finalized for Chicago, Salt
Lake and Washington, D.C. The U.S. will host
Honduras on June 6 at Soldier Field (Game No. 5),
and then face El Salvador at Rio Tinto Stadium on
Sept. 5 in Salt Lake (No. 7). The team closes out
the final round of qualifying against Costa Rica
on Oct. 14 at historic RFK Stadium in Washington,
D.C. (No. 10).
- U.S. Men's National Team
Match Report -
Match: United States Men's
National Team vs. Mexico
Date: Feb. 11, 2009
Competition: FIFA World Cup
Qualifying; Final Round
Venue:
Columbus Crew Stadium; Columbus, Ohio
Kickoff: 7 p.m. ET
Attendance: 23,776
Weather: 53 degrees, overcast
Scoring Summary:
1 2 F
USA 1
1 2
MEX
0
0 0
USA – Michael
Bradley
(unassisted)
43rd minute
USA – Michael Bradley (Landon
Donovan) 92+
Lineups:
USA:
1-Tim Howard; 2-Frankie Hejduk, 3-Carlos Bocanegra
(capt.), 5-Oguchi Onyewu, 15-Heath Pearce; 8-Clint
Dempsey, 4-Michael Bradley, 16-Sacha Kljestan
(13-Ricardo Clark, 86), 7-DaMarcus Beasley;
10-Landon Donovan, 11-Brian Ching (9-Jozy
Altidore, 83)
Subs not used: 18-Brad
Guzan, 6-Jonathan Bornstein, 14-Danny Califf,
17-Jose Francisco Torres, 12-Marvell Wynne
Head Coach: Bob Bradley
MEX: 1-Oswaldo Sanchez;
2-Aaron Galindo, 3-Carlos Salcido, 4-Rafael
Marquez (capt.), 5-Ricardo Osorio; 6-Leandro
Augusto, 12-Alberto Medina (15-Antonio Naelson,
60), 8-Pavel Pardo; 11-Carlos Ochoa, 10-Nery
Castillo (14-Israel Martinez, 34), 17-Giovani dos
Santos (9-Omar Bravo, 72)
Subs not used:
13-Guillermo Ochoa, 18-Leobardo Lopez, 7-Luis
Perez, 16-Guillermo Franco
Head Coach:
Sven-Goran Eriksson
Stats
Summary: USA / MEX
Shots: 10 / 9
Shots on Goal: 5 / 3
Saves: 3 / 3
Corner Kicks: 5 / 1
Fouls: 26 / 16
Offside: 4 / 3
Misconduct
Summary:
MEX – Rafael Marquez (sent
off) 65th minute
USA – Tim Howard
(caution)
67
Officials:
Referee: Carlos Batres (GUA)
Assistant Referee 1: Roberto Giron (HON)
Assistant Referee 2: Edwin Gonzalez (GUA)
Fourth Official: Walter Lopez (GUA)
ussoccer.com Man of the
Match: Michael Bradley