Tuesday, May 25, 2010

The proper send-off

The vacuum the closure of the club season left will now be replaced by scores of international friendlies featuring countries that are making the last tweaks before the June 1 deadline to glean 23 players from a 30-man preliminary roster.

The United States joins the party this evening as it will prepare to face the Czech Republic in the first of three games that are being dubbed the “send-off series”. Of course completing the 90 minutes unscathed on the injury front will be the primary concern for head coach Bob Bradley.

For players on the fringe of that 30-man roster — this means you Eddie Johnson, Robbie Findley, Heath Pearce and Sacha Kljestan — the contest represents a final opportunity to impress head coach Bob Bradley and the U.S. coaching staff that they are fit for the final 23-man roster. Bradley is slated to announce the team on ESPN Wednesday afternoon.

Unlike the 2006 send-off series the results may not matter as much this time around. Most of the core of the American team has played in big international matches, including previous World Cups, so the atmosphere surrounding the event should not be overwhelming.

Also, the competition in this year’s edition of the series is much better than what the Americans faced in 2006.

Morocco, Venezuela and Latvia were teams that were not close to qualifying for the Germany 2006, yet the Americans found a way to be unimpressive in all three contests.

Losing to Morocco on home soil was dispiriting enough, but to watch winger Bobby Convey utterly gassed after 65 minutes less than a month before a World Cup should have been a sign the U.S. was not going to make a return to the quarterfinals four years ago.

This time Bob Bradley’s team will face a quality opponent in the Czechs, Turkey, a semifinalist in Euro 2008 and an Australian team that qualified for South Africa and has the talent to make the quarterfinals.

Of the six combined matches against the Czech Republic—which includes a match as Czechoslovakia at the 1990 World Cup—Turkey and Australia the Americans have never won a contest. Granted, the 3-0 blowout to the Czechs at the 2006 World Cup was the only game that has been contested within the past five years.

“We expect a very good challenge,” U.S. midfielder Landon Donovan said during a recent press conference. “If you can’t play one of the teams that have qualified for the World Cup, there’s not many better teams that you can pick that the Czech Republic.”

However, for the American public to no longer consider events like the 2009 Confederations Cup run a surprise, as Donovan himself once noted when accepting an ESPY award, playing teams like the Czech Republic should evolve from a challenge to a tune-up for bigger conquests.

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