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Name = United States | Name = United States |
Badge = US_Soccer_logo.gif | Badge = US_Soccer_logo.gif |
Nickname = The Stars & Stripes<br/>The Red, White and Blue<br/>Yanks| Nickname = Yanks, The Stars & Stripes<br/>The Red, White and Blue|
Association = ] | Association = ] |
Coach = ], ]- | Coach = ], ]- |

Revision as of 04:18, 10 June 2006

United States
Shirt badge/Association crest
Nickname(s)Yanks, The Stars & Stripes
The Red, White and Blue
AssociationUnited States
Soccer Federation
Head coachBruce Arena, 1998-
Most capsCobi Jones (164)
Top scorerEric Wynalda (34)
First colours Second colours
First international
Unofficial: USA 0 - 1 Canada
(Newark, NJ, USA; November 28, 1885)
Official: Sweden 2 - 3 USA
(Stockholm, Sweden; August 20, 1916)
Biggest win
USA 8 - 1 Cayman Islands
(Mission Viejo, CA, USA; November 14, 1993)
USA 7 - 0 El Salvador
(Los Angeles, CA, USA; December 5, 1993)
USA 7 - 0 Barbados
(Foxborough, MA, USA; August 20, 2000)
Biggest defeat
USA 0 - 10 England
(New York, NY, USA; May 27, 1964)
World Cup
Appearances8 (first in 1930)
Best resultSemi-finals, 1930
CONCACAF Gold Cup
Appearances8 (first in 1991)
Best resultWinners, 1991, 2002, 2005

The United States men's national soccer team is the national association football team of the United States and is controlled by the United States Soccer Federation. The United States is currently the fifth ranked team in the world according to the FIFA World Rankings.

History

In the 1st World Cup, USA won the first match in World Cup history, defeating Belgium 3-0 in Montevideo, Uruguay (occurring simultaneously with another "first game" across town where France defeated Mexico). In the next match, American Bert Patenaude possibly scored the first hat-trick in World Cup history as USA defeated Paraguay, again 3-0. For many years, FIFA maintained that Patenaude scored only two goals, the second of the three goals being credited to teammate Tom Florie, but his teammates and the U.S. Soccer Federation among other sources credited Patenaude with notching three. Other sources claimed that it was an own goal by Paraguayan Ramon Gonzales. Recently, FIFA has changed its mind and based on new evidence presented by the Argentine newspaper La Prensa, credited Partenaude with the first World Cup hat-trick.

In the first World Cup, the American side advanced to the semi-finals. This is still the all-time best World Cup performance by the men's team. No third place match was played. Some British football historians have claimed that the U.S. team at that competition was loaded with non-native players from British professional leagues, but the facts do not support that assertion.

In the

, the U.S. team pulled off one of the greatest upsets in soccer history, handing England its first ever World Cup defeat 1-0, after England had recently beaten the rest of Europe 6-1 in an exhibition match. Some news agencies in England reported the match result as 10-1 to England, a result which would perhaps have been less surprising. However, the U.S. failed to advance from group play after losing to Spain. The United States struggled in international soccer for the next 40 years. In 1988 the United States was controversially awarded the

, even though it had not qualified for a World Cup since 1950. The U.S. did qualify for the

on a dramatic 1-0 road win over Trinidad and Tobago on a goal from Paul Caligiuri - termed the 'Shot Heard Round The World' in American soccer circles. Although they were eliminated from the 1990 World Cup without earning a point, the side rebounded to win the first ever CONCACAF Gold Cup in 1991.

The United States was picked by some to become the first host country to fail to advance to the second round in the 1994 World Cup, but a tie with Switzerland and a stunning 2-1 upset of Colombia put the U.S. in the knockout round, where they lost 1-0 to eventual champion Brazil.

In the

, the team struggled to an 0-3 record, including a disappointing loss to Iran, and a last-place finish. Head coach Steve Sampson received much of the blame for the performance. The team's best performance since 1930 came in the

, when the U.S. reached the quarterfinals. They were one of the major surprises at the 2002 event, stunning highly fancied Portugal 3-2 in group play, defeating continental rivals Mexico 2-0 in the second round, and narrowly losing to eventual runner-up Germany in the quarterfinals 1-0.

The U.S. men are now considered a highly competitive side. In recent years, USA has become known for producing goalkeepers; three U.S. keepers started in the English Premier League in the 2003-04 season. Two of the three combined to win back-to-back Goalkeeper of the Year awards, as voted by the players, with Brad Friedel in 2002-03 and Tim Howard in 2003-04.

Since its recent successes, the team has been consistently ranked in the top 15 of the FIFA World Rankings; its highest-ever rank was 4th, first obtained in April 2006. More Americans than ever now have successful careers in European leagues, and the country's youth team is strong, as shown by the under-19s winning the 2005 Milk Cup.

The USA has had more men reach 100 caps (international appearances) than any other country, with nine to date.

On September 3, 2005, they qualified for their 8th World Cup by beating Mexico 2-0 in Columbus, Ohio. The United States was drawn for Group E in the World Cup, and will face Italy, Ghana, and the Czech Republic in the group stage. Because of the high FIFA ranking of the sides in Group E, it has been frequently called this Cup's group of death along with Group C (Netherlands, Argentina, Serbia & Montenegro, and Cote d'Ivoire.)

World Cup record

File:US-Soccer-Dont-tread-on-me.gif
Nike's 2006 World Cup "Don't Tread on Me" logo for the men's national team.

Gold Cup record

Copa América record

Starting from 1993, CONMEBOL has invited teams from other confederations to participate in their confederation championship, Copa América. USA has taken part as one of the invited teams twice, in 1993 and 1995.

  • 1993 - Round 1
  • 1995 - Fourth place
  • 1997 to 2004 - Was invited but turned down due to MLS season schedule conflict

Head coaches

2006 World Cup roster

Head coach: Bruce Arena

Chris Albright was announced on 4 May as a replacement for Frankie Hejduk, who suffered a torn ACL in his right knee.

Gregg Berhalter, who will join German club 1860 Munich next season, was announced on 25 May as a replacement for Cory Gibbs, who re-injured his right knee in a 1-0 loss to Morocco on 23 May.

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Club
1 1GK Tim Howard 6 March 1979 16 England Everton (on loan from Manchester United)
2 2DF Chris Albright 14 January 1979 20 United States Los Angeles Galaxy
3 2DF Carlos Bocanegra 25 May 1979 40 England Fulham
4 3MF Pablo Mastroeni 26 August 1976 48 United States Colorado Rapids
5 3MF John O'Brien 29 August 1977 31 United States Chivas USA
6 2DF Steve Cherundolo 19 February 1979 35 Germany Hannover
7 3MF Eddie Lewis 17 May 1974 70 England Leeds United
8 3MF Clint Dempsey 9 March 1983 21 United States New England Revolution
9 4FW Eddie Johnson 31 March 1984 18 United States Kansas City Wizards
10 3MF Claudio Reyna 20 July 1973 109 England Manchester City
11 4FW Brian Ching 24 May 1978 20 United States Houston Dynamo
12 2DF Gregg Berhalter 1 August 1973 44 Germany Energie Cottbus
13 2DF Jimmy Conrad 12 February 1977 15 United States Kansas City Wizards
14 3MF Ben Olsen 3 May 1977 34 United States D.C. United
15 3MF Bobby Convey 27 May 1983 39 England Reading
16 4FW Josh Wolff 25 February 1977 47 United States Kansas City Wizards
17 3MF DaMarcus Beasley 24 May 1982 58 Netherlands PSV Eindhoven
18 1GK Kasey Keller 29 November 1969 93 Germany Borussia Mönchengladbach
19 1GK Marcus Hahnemann 15 June 1972 6 England Reading
20 4FW Brian McBride 19 June 1972 92 England Fulham
21 4FW Landon Donovan 4 March 1982 81 United States Los Angeles Galaxy
22 2DF Oguchi Onyewu 13 May 1982 14 Belgium Standard Liège
23 2DF Eddie Pope 24 December 1973 80 United States Real Salt Lake

Alternates

After the promotions of Albright and Berhalter, the eleven remaining alternate players are:

No. Pos. Player Date of birth (age) Caps Club
1GK Tony Meola 21 February 1969 100 United States Red Bull New York
1GK Matt Reis 28 March 1975 1 United States New England Revolution
2DF Todd Dunivant 26 December 1980 2 United States Los Angeles Galaxy
3MF Chris Armas 27 August 1972 65 United States Chicago Fire
3MF Chris Klein 4 January 1976 22 United States Real Salt Lake
3MF Pat Noonan 8 August 1980 12 United States New England Revolution
3MF Steve Ralston 14 June 1974 31 United States New England Revolution
3MF Kerry Zavagnin 2 July 1974 21 United States Kansas City Wizards
4FW Conor Casey 25 July 1981 7 Germany FSV Mainz 05
4FW Chris Rolfe 17 January 1983 4 United States Chicago Fire
4FW Taylor Twellman 29 February 1980 18 United States New England Revolution

Famous past players

References/Notes

  1. "FIFA: USA - Paraguay match report". FIFA. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
  2. "CNN/Sports Illustrated - Bert Patenaude". CNN. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
  3. "Planet World Cup - World Cup Trivia". PlanetWorldCup.com. Retrieved 2006-06-09. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. "The Football Association 20 World Cup Facts". The FA. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
  5. "RSSSF - THE FIRST WORLD CUP HAT TRICK". RSSSF. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
  6. "FIFA credits Partenaude". 2006 FIFA World Cup Official Site. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
  7. "Corrections to World Cup History". SoccerHall.org. Retrieved 2006-06-09. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  8. There was no official Third Place match in 1930; USA and Yugoslavia lost in the semi-finals but did not face each other.
  9. There were six British-born players on the 1930 team, all of whom played every minute of the team's three World Cup matches. However, at the time of the 1930 World Cup, the combined experience of those six players in British professional leagues was two games, both by a single player in the English Third Division (equivalent to today's Football League One). Four of the six had come to the United States as teenagers or younger. Three of the six never played professionally in Britain; their pro careers were entirely in North America. In the 1920s, there was a thriving professional league in the United States, and the league survived into the mid-1930s. Two of the six did have significant professional careers in Britain, but not until after 1930. All 16 members of the 1930 World Cup team were living in the United States by 1928. For more details on this issue, see this article.
  10. "Sampson destroyed U.S. unity with late changes to lineup". SoccerTimes.com. Retrieved June 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  11. "Albright Replaces Injured Hejduk on U.S. FIFA World Cup Roster". ussoccer.com. Retrieved May 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)

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