Cuba Outplays the US in Havana

by Kartik Krishnaiyer on September 8, 2008 · 2 comments

873866 small Cuba Outplays the US in Havana

Reuters Photo

Three points is three points I sup­pose. But tonight’s game unlike last months qual­i­fier in Guatemala City has me very con­cerned about the state of play regard­ing the US Team. Against a side that in its own sta­dium last month gave up three rel­a­tively quick goals to Trinidad and Tobago, the US had to grind out a result again depen­dent on some clutch goal­keep­ing and quite frankly some mis­takes by the Cuban team.

Right now the United States lacks the tech­ni­cal skill nor the clean fin­ish­ing or aware­ness in counter attack­ing sit­u­a­tions to ever put away the oppo­si­tion. The bad give­aways by defen­sive mid­field­ers con­tin­ues to be a trade­mark of this team with its cur­rent lineup and the inabil­ity for the strik­ers to fin­ish the chances cre­ated for them against respectable oppo­si­tion is painful to watch. In the last twelve matches, the cur­rent set of US strik­ers, Brian Ching and Eddie John­son have scored in only one match: the 8–0 rout of Bar­ba­dos, while every US goal in the other matches has come from mid­field­ers or defend­ers and typ­i­cally off set pieces.

Today’s per­for­mance was sub­stan­tially worse than the game many have crit­i­cized the US for in Guatemala City last month. Again thye most solid play­ers were the keeper Tim Howard and the two cen­ter backs, Car­los Bocane­gra and Oguchi Onyewu. The per­for­mances of DaMar­cus Beasley and Mo Edu in par­tic­u­lar were for­getable. Given Scotland’s loss today to FYR Mace­do­nia in Skopke per­haps both play­ers fea­ture on one of the two big sides in the SPL because of the lack of Scot­tish tal­ent, not because of their indi­vid­ual qual­i­ties. Beasley in par­tic­u­lar is becom­ing less and less use­ful as a player as time goes on.

A word on the atmon­sphere tonight: Give the Cuban play­ers and sup­port­ers a lot of credit. Despite the polit­i­cal ten­sions which I am in par­tic­u­lar famil­iar with because of where I live (South Florida) the event tonight was per­fect except for the light­ing, with a polite crowd, and some good sports­man­ship among both sides. Foot­ball really can over­come the prob­lems politi­cians and dic­ta­tors cause.

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2 comments… read them below or add one

1 Aaron S. September 8, 2008 at 9:02 am

That is total nonsense. The US played badly in Havana, but to say that Cuba outplayed them is just your usual hyperbolic, overly-negative crap.

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2 Really? September 8, 2008 at 10:26 pm

Not once do you mention how the Cubans outplayed us which only lends itself to the propaganda which is your article's title. If you're looking for readers, I guess it worked, but its totally inaccurate. on the contrary, I thought we were super proessional in our approach to the game, and perhaps our style of play actually shows that we are becoming more mature on the world football stage. to grind out a victory like that in an away qualifier instead of pressing the game when unnecessary, and spreading ourselves out defensively and then possibly conceding a goal might be boring but sometimes that what it takes in these kinds of games. If we hadn't scored in the final minute of the first half the game would have looked like you wanted it to with more creativity and chances on goal, but we didn't have to play like that to get the result.

Did you even watch (think about) the game?

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