Story Published:
Jun 17, 2002 at 2:23 AM PST
Story Updated:
Aug 30, 2006 at 11:43 PM PST
JEONJU, SOUTH KOREA - The United States has arrived among
the world soccer powers, pulling off upsets and defying
expectations. Even President Bush has noticed.
Brian McBride and Landon Donovan scored on counterattacks to
lead the Americans to a 2-0 victory over Mexico on Monday and into
the quarterfinals of the World Cup.
"When I got to the locker room, I said, 'This is really
weird," Donovan said. "It's like it's not happening. It's like a
dream."
It is the best showing for the U.S. team since the first World
Cup in 1930, when it beat Belgium and Paraguay in the first round,
then lost to Argentina 6-1 in the semifinals.
Before the game, Bush called the team and told coach Bruce Arena
he was confident the Americans would win.
"The country is really proud of the team," Bush said. "A lot
of people that don't know anything about soccer, like me, are all
excited and pulling for you."
The American players, unaccustomed to attention in their own
country, were surprised when they found out the president was on
the speaker phone.
"We were thinking - which president?" Donovan said. "That was
awesome. You could tell he genuinely cared."
The United States next plays on Friday against Germany, a
three-time World Cup champion that pushed the Americans around
during a 2-0 victory in the first round at the 1998 World Cup, when
the U.S. team finished last in the 32-nation field.
"They used to call us the sleeping giant in the old days. I
think the sleeping giant has woken up," U.S. Soccer Federation
president Bob Contiguglia said. "Someone said to me this is the
World Cup for the minnows. The minnows are becoming bigger fish."
It was a shattering loss for Mexico, which dominated its North
American neighbor on the soccer field until recent years. The
United States was 0-21-3 against the Mexicans from 1937-80, but
since 1991 the Americans have gone 9-6-5. This was the teams' first
meeting in a World Cup.
"We played very good football, but in football, you win by
scoring goals and we didn't score any," Mexican forward Jared
Borgetti said. "The United States has a very good team, very fast
with a very dangerous counterattack."
While the Mexicans held the ball for almost 70 percent of the
game, they couldn't get it past goalkeeper Brad Friedel, who had
another brilliant performance for his first World Cup shutout. He
got some help on a non-call.
Portuguese referee Vitor Melo Pereira failed to see U.S.
midfielder John O'Brien punching the ball out of danger on a corner
kick in the 57th minute, one of four corners in a three-minute
span.
"A great header, wasn't it?" Friedel said with a smile. "The
referee made the decision. I took a double-take, maybe. When I saw
it, I didn't believe it. This happens in a game. We've been on the
wrong side of a lot of decisions, too."
The Mexicans were incensed they weren't awarded a penalty kick.
"They showed the replay on the big screen and we saw it, 40,000
fans saw it," Mexico coach Javier Aguirre said.
O'Brien admitted his hand hit the ball, bringing back memories
of the "Hand of God" goal by Argentina's Diego Maradona against
England in the 1986 World Cup.
"It was a freak play," O'Brien said. "It was a situation
where you're trying to mark your man, and someone comes up
underneath you and hits your arm. I didn't do it on purpose."
McBride beat goalkeeper Oscar Perez from 12 yards out in the
eighth minute after U.S. captain Claudio Reyna - playing right
midfield instead of in the center in Arena's revamped lineup - made
a fine run.
Reyna crossed to Josh Wolff, near the goal line, and Wolff
flicked the ball back to an open McBride, who hit the left side of
the net with a hard right-footed shot.
"I made it hoping he would be there, that he would be in that
space," Wolff said.
McBride said: "I knew if there was an opportunity for me to get
the ball, it was on a layback like that."
With the Mexicans pressing, Donovan scored in the 65th minute on
a header from just inside the 6-yard box off a cross from Eddie
Lewis, who had sped upfield. Donovan then whipped off his shirt to
celebrate.
"It was all Eddie," Donovan said. "It's hard to miss balls
like that."
The Americans, playing on just two days' rest, bounced back from
Friday's 3-1 loss to Poland, their final first-round game. They
advanced to the second round only because South Korea upset
Portugal 1-0, allowing the United States to finish second in its
group.
These Americans are far different from U.S. teams of the past,
in talent and temperament. They proved it from the start of the
World Cup when they shocked Portugal, the world's fifth-ranked
team, 3-2 for the first of many upsets at the tournament.
Powerhouses Argentina, Portugal and defending champion France
already have been eliminated, while upstarts such as the United
States, Senegal and co-hosts South Korea and Japan are alive.
Still, the Americans are searching for respect.
"I don't think we had any coming into the World Cup. I don't
think we had any coming out of the first round," forward Clint
Mathis said. "We may not get any for coming this far."
While the Mexicans usually have the home-field advantage, even
in the United States where Mexican-Americans dominate the stands,
there were several thousand U.S. fans at Jeonju World Cup Stadium,
a half-world from home. Many of them taunted Mexico with chants of
"Adios, amigos."
U.S. players noticed. At the end of the game, they sprinted off
the field to congratulate each other, raising their hands high,
while their families - sitting right behind the bench - cheered
them on. Then, as Donovan jumped on Friedel's shoulders, they
walked to the end of the field and saluted the Americans in the
stands, many clad in the Stars and Stripes.
The Mexicans walked straight off, not even staying for the
traditional exchange of shirts with their opponents.
Already, the Americans were thinking about Germany.
"We understand that they are the overwhelming favorites,"
Arena said. "On paper, it looks to be no match. However, we don't
play this game on paper."