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Cranking up the scoring machine

U.S. hopes to boost attack against Belgium

SAO PAULO

No wonder the United States is having problems scoring at the World Cup: The Americans hardly are attacking.

Head coach Jurgen Klinsmann is eager for the U.S. to create more chances in Tuesday’s second-round game against Belgium.

The U.S. had just 72 attacks during three group-stage games, according to FIFA. That ranked 31st among the 32 teams, ahead of only Costa Rica’s 69.

The Americans were dead last in attacks from the left with 21 and tied for last with Iran with 29 from the center. Right back Fabian Johnson seems to be providing the spark for most forays upfield, advancing more often than left back DaMarcus Beasley.

Midfielder Graham Zusi insists the approach and attitude must change if they are to reach the quarterfinals for the first time since 2002.

“The first minutes of the game, impose yourself, step on their toes a bit, get in their face,” he said.

The Americans know they have to surge upfield more often if they hope to reach a quarterfinal against Argentina or Switzerland – a lot more often.

A day after advancing despite a 1-0 loss to Germany in rainy Recife, they worked out at Sao Paulo Futebol Clube, where the temperature on the sunny day peaked at 81 degrees, 12 above normal.

They plan is to fly Sunday to Salvador, another beach city on the northeast coast for the matchup against Belgium. The Red Devils, back in soccer’s showcase after a 12-year absence, have won three consecutive World Cup games for the first time with one-goal victories over Algeria, Russia and South Korea. And their 136 attacks are seventh overall – nearly double the American total.

While Klinsmann wants his team to play attractive, attacking soccer, it hasn’t worked out that way. The Americans had scored in eight consecutive World Cup games before getting shut out Thursday.

“It’s definitely something that we learned out of the Germany game. We were too deep – especially the first 20 minutes,” Klinsmann said. “I was screaming my lungs off there to get the back line out and to move the entire unit high up the field. We will work on that in next couple days in training, to shift our entire game up forward. So that will put more pressure on the opponents and create more chances.”

The U.S. had 41 percent possession in its 2-1 win over Ghana, 48 percent in its 2-2 draw against Portugal and 37 percent versus Germany. The Americans have been outshot 54-27 in the three matches,

And this had occurred in a World Cup in which offense is up. There were an average of 2.83 goals per game in the group stage, up 35 percent from 2.10 in South Africa four years ago, and the highest in the initial phase since 1958’s 3.37, according to STATS.

In the last two games, Klinsmann opted for a 4-2-3-1 formation with five midfielders to feed Clint Dempsey as the lone striker up top.

Thus far, the U.S. has had just four solo runs into the penalty area, in a four-way tie for 27th, and the formation frequently morphs into a 4-4-1-1.

“We have to bring up the players higher up and create chances get more support for Clint and come down the line more often on the sides,” Klinsmann said. “This is something we will work on in the next few days.”

While midfielder Michael Bradley hasn’t been at his sharpest, he was the endurance-man of the first round, leading all players with 23.6 miles covered.

“He is all over the place. The defensive work that Michael puts in is absolutely outstanding,” Klinsmann said. “We know that he can add something extra to it going forward. He also needs to help with the team by shifting higher up. If we can get Michael more into that role behind Clint, I think we are even more dangerous then. So there is more to come.”

U.S. History

1930 in Uruguay

First Round

July 13:United States 3, Belgium 0

July 17: United States 3, Paraguay 0

Semifinal

July 26: Argentina 6, United States 1

1934 in Italy

First Round

May 27: Italy 7, United States 1

1950 in Brazil

First Round

June 25: Spain 3, United States 1

June 29: United States 1, England 0

July 2: Chile 5, United States 2

1990 in Italy

First Round

June 10: Czechoslovakia 5, United States 1

June 14: Italy 1, United States 0

June 19: Austria 2, United States 1

1994 in the United States

First Round

June 18: Switzerland 1, United States 1

June 22: United States 2, Colombia 1

June 26: Romania 1, United States 0

Second Round

July 4: Brazil 1, United States 0

1998 in France

First Round

June: Germany 2, United States 0

June 21: Iran 2, United States 1

June 25: Yugoslavia 1, United States 0

2002 in South Korea

First Round

June 5: United States 3, Portugal 2

June 10: United States 1, South Korea 1

June 14: Poland 3, United States 1

Second Round

June 17: United States 2, Mexico 0

Quarterfinal

June 21: Germany 1, United States 0

2006 in Germany

First Round

June 12: United States 0, Czech Republic 3

June 17: Italy 1, United States 1

June 22: Ghana 2, United States 1

2010 in South Africa

First Round

June 12: England 1, United States 1

June 18: Slovenia 2, United States 2

June 23: United States 1, Algeria 0

Second Round

June 26: Ghana 2, United States 1

2014 in Brazil

First Round

June 16: United States 2, Ghana 1

June 22: Portugal 2, United States 2

June 26: Germany 1, United States 0

Second Round

July 1: Belgium vs. United States, 2 p.m. (ESPN, Univision)

Associated Press

Jun 28, 2014
No slowing soccer’s surge
Jun 28, 2014
Broken, but not beaten


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