Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Evaluating the Gold Cup roster

Awhile back I began to write a post about Bob Bradley's Gold Cup roster using the formula that I had used for the 2010 World Cup roster, but I realized that this formula should be different, in that youth should be emphasized to a greater degree as we are about to begin a world cup cycle with some different and (hopefully) younger players.

With that in mind, the way to create a roster for a tournament such as the Gold Cup should then be obvious. First, pick the standouts, stalwarts, starters and general leaders of the current team, regardless of their age. And then fill the rest of your needs with the most outstanding players (and those players that show the most potential) that will be less than 30 when the next World Cup rolls around. Given yesterday's post on the ages of the current player pool, it should be easy to evaluate Bob Bradley's roster against this metric.


Players that belong on the team regardless of their age include, due to past contribution, current form and likely future contribution, include Tim Howard, Carlos Bocanegra, Oguchi Onyewu, Steve Cherundolo, Michael Bradley, Clint Dempsey, Landon Donovan, Maurice Edu and Jozy Altidore. Bradley included all of these players and it would be tough to argue, ex ante, against including any of those nine players in the 23 player camp.

That leaves 15 spots to be filled with players that are both plausibly able to contribute now and in the future, with some mix between greater experience and youth to be expected. We'll give Bradley a free pass with Jermaine Jones (29 years old), as his dual citizenship and relatively recent decision to play for the US have left him with less chance to carve out a spot than other guys his age. I'll also give him a free pass with the two back-up keepers he called into camp (Nick Rimando is 32 and Marcus Hahneman is 39). Brad Guzan wasn't available and goalkeepers tend to have longer careers. Let's see how he did with the remaining 12 roster spots.

Of those 12 spots, he filled 10 of them with guys on my list of "not old players". There were some pretty questionable selections among those 10, including Jonathans Bornstein and Spector over younger guys like Gale Agbossoumonde, Edgar Castillo and Omar Gonzalez (Timmy Chandler was reportedly injured). But he was, technically, going with younger players.

The two spots that didn't go to the young guys went to Clarence Goodson and Chris Wondolowski. The selection of Goodson is more understandable: he had 18 caps coming in and has shown himself to be somewhat dependable against easy opponents (although I still would have gone with someone younger who is likely to contribute in 2014, for example Omar Gonzalez) but Chris Wondolowski is the real head-scratcher. He had barely played and never scored for the team, and is 28 years old. Bradley could have done better. Yes, Charlie Davies was hurt for the beginning of training but he has since been scoring goals for DC United while Chris Wondolowski sits on the US bench. This would have been a nice chance to get Davies back into camp where he belongs, for the first time since his accident.

While I disagree with many of Bradley's selections (Robbie Rogers and Sacha Klejstan are not guys that are going to take us to the next level of international soccer) I can't give him an F. For the most part he went with younger players (albeit "his guys", not the ones I would have chosen) which is exactly what he needed to do in a tournament like this.

Monday, June 27, 2011

A post for the ages

In the wake of an unmitigated disaster of a Gold Cup final, fans and journalists have been heaping criticism on the coach Bob Bradley for everything from roster decisions (the selection of the original 22 left many scratching their heads, as did Bradley's decisions about who to start and who to substitute) to failing to properly motivate his group. The players, for their part, looked at no point as if they actually wanted to win the Gold Cup, and have received their share of blame as well. The criticism, while almost always deserved, has not always been constructive. What is obvious is that the US is still searching for the right mix of players, and needs to be getting younger and better at the same time.

While every fan or pundit has their favorites as well as their dogs, there are a couple of principles with which we should all be able to agree. The first is that we need to be giving meaningful experience to young talent, and the second is that players who will be at least 30 when the next world cup starts, who are not already in the national team picture, should not be given the time of day. With these axioms in mind, below is a list of (younger) USMNT pool players and their ages.

18
Juan Agudelo (F)
Bobby Wood (F)

19
Gale Agbossoumonde (D)
Conor Doyle (F)

20
Mikel Diskerud (M)
Alex Zahavi (M/F)

21
Jozy Altidore (F)
Teal Bunbury (F)
Timmy Chandler (D/M)
Brek Shea (M)
Tony Taylor (F)

22
Freddy Adu (M/F)
Diego Chavarri (D/M)
Omar Gonzalez (D)
Sean Johnson (G)
Eric Lichaj (D)
Eugene Starikov (M)


23
Michael Bradley (M)
Tim Ream (D)
Jose Torres (M)

24
Alejandro Bedoya (M)
Edgar Castillo (D)
Dominic Cervi (G)
Chris Pontius (M/F)
Robbie Rogers (M)

25
Geoff Cameron (D/M)
Charlie Davies (F)
Maurice Edu (M)
Robbie Findley (F)
Stuart Holden (M)
Sacha Klejstan (M)
Jonathan Spector (D)

26
Jonathan Bornstein (D)
Benny Feilhaber (M)
Brad Guzan (G)
Ryan Miller (D)

Let me know if I have left any important players off this list. I am trying to get the best possible picture of our player pool before taking a look at who should and should not have been on the Gold Cup roster, and who should and should not be on the roster for the WCQ campaign beginning next year.