Soon, the circus will pull up the tent stakes and leave South Africa behind. As the World's Greatest Sporting Tournament winds down, it's time to look back on the month that was. Now, I am not a teacher. I don't even play one on TV (like
the immortal Gabe Kaplan,) but I'm going to be distributing report cards to various aspects of the Cup. First up, that intrepid group of Bradley's Boys we often call "The Yanks."
(image courtesy jasonwhat)
Overall: B
As champions of CONCACAF and
winners of the qualifying group, expectations for this edition of The Yanks were arguably higher than ever. As the qualifying process wore on, however, several warning signs were already beginning to appear. Mounting injury concerns and a maddening habit of surrendering an early goal should have sounded the sirens. Still, a relatively soft group draw of England, Slovenia, and Algeria, only served to solidify the conventional wisdom that failure to advance to the second round would be viewed as failure.
As we all witnessed, our golden boy Landon Donovan rescued us with that
last gasp strike against Algeria. Not only had we advanced to the second round, we went through as top of the group! In that sense, our lads probably performed a bit better than expected in the group stage. In the end, it's hard to be disappointed, but also feels like a bit of an opportunity lost.
Goalkeepers & Backs: B-
Five goals allowed in four matches is not a bad record, but conceding an early goal in three of the four is unforgivable. Against
England,
Slovenia, and
Ghana, the Yanks found themselves behind by the 13th minute! Three of the five goals seemed to result from confusion between the central defenders. Oguchi Onyewu's lack of match fitness, as well as the necessity to deploy Carlos Bocanegra at left back, are excuses not reasons. Steve Cherundolo was generally excellent, while Jay DeMerit vacillated from terrible to very good. And, in the last two matches, Jonny Bornstein was surprisingly adequate. In a tournament rife with howling goalkeeping mishaps, Tim Howard was mostly immune. According to his very high standards, though, there was little to write home about.
Midfield A-
It was a tale of a bit ugly, a little bad, and substantial good. The Ugly: Unfortunately, Ricardo Clark was unable to make the jump in class. He foundered against England, then coughed up possession easily and catastrophically early against Ghana before being replaced in the first half after earning a silly yellow card. The Bad: Jose Torres only contributed 45 minutes against Slovenia. He looked lost defensively, but did manage to strike a very dangerous free kick before being substituted. Clint Dempsey should count himself very fortunate not to have been sent off for
a stray elbow by hapless referee Koman Coulibaly in the opening minute of the Slovenia match. The Good: Despite that indiscretion, Dempsey was a constant threat to opposing defenses and scored
the speculative equalizer against England. When called upon Maurice Edu was solid, notching what seemed the clear winner to everyone aside from Mr. Coulibaly against Slovenia. Michael Bradley was sensational, tireless and combative throughout.
His goal late in the Slovenia match was mainly a testament to his will. Landon Donovan, quite simply, emerged as the greatest American international to ever play the game in South Africa. From
his stunning pronouncement versus Slovenia,
heroic winning strike against Algeria, to the
calm penalty that drew us level in the Ghana match, his brilliance continually snatched American hopes from the brink of despair. Know hope.
Next: Grading World Cup 2010 Part 1b - The Yanks (Attack & Coaching)
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