Published
7/5/2007 9:31:17 PM
by
staff
from
espn.com
Brad Guzan made several key saves, including one on a penalty, in his first Copa America appearance but couldn't get to Jaime Castrillon's 14th-minute header and the United States lost 1-0 to Colombia on Thursday night. It was the first time the United States lost three in a row since 2001. Both teams were eliminated from South America's soccer championship the day before when Brazil beat Ecuador, but the match nevertheless took on urgency at the finish.
Colombia goalkeeper Robinson Zapata was given a second yellow card and sent off for wasting time in the 84th minute when he fiddled with his shoe after Kyle Beckerman's tying goal was called back for offside. As his teammates pleaded with Venezuelan referee Manuel Andarcia to no avail, Zapata took off his goalkeeper's jersey and striker Hugo Rodallega stepped into the net because Colombia had used all three of its substitutions. The disorganized U.S. attack didn't capitalize, however, and the Colombians even managed to send some counterattacks Guzan's way during the rest of regulation and the four minutes of added time.
Castrillon's goal came off a long, perfectly placed pass from Camilo Zuniga on the right wing. Castrillon stepped past his defender and headed it smartly past Guzan into the far side of the net. In the 34th, Guzan drew a penalty when he took down Rodallega in the box while going for a loose ball. He redeemed himself on the kick by correctly anticipating Rodallega's shot and making a save that kept the score 1-0.
"In all three games, we had moments when we played well. But we still must be more consistent for 90 minutes in order to move to the next level," Bradley said following the match.
Kasey Keller started the first two matches in goal for the United States, a 4-1 loss to Argentina and a 3-1 loss to Paraguay. The United States sent a mostly inexperienced squad to the tournament after winning the championships of North America, Central America and the Caribbean. The United States left many of the best players from that CONCACAF Gold Cup-winning team off this roster, and only six members of the 22-man roster had more than 10 international appearances when the Americans left for Venezuela.
"We are here to give these guys this experience," said Keller, a member of the past two U.S. World Cup teams. "Unfortunately, sometimes you have to make mistakes to learn. Hopefully now as we go forward in this tournament and into future games, we have learned from this experience and will be better for it."
The U.S. team's inexperience became an issue Wednesday, when a high-ranking CONMEBOL official criticized the Americans for not bringing their top squad. Brazil, too, is without superstars, but the five-time World Cup champions made it into the knockout stages with its 1-0 win over Ecuador. Bob Bradley was 10-0-1 in his first 11 games as U.S. coach before the Copa. The United States' next international game is a friendly with Sweden in Goteborg.
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by
William Montero
from
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from
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from
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Roberto Garcia
from
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Published
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by
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from
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