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Game over! - Boyz crash out of Gold Cup after losing to USA

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  • Game over! - Boyz crash out of Gold Cup after losing to USA

    Game over! - Boyz crash out of Gold Cup after losing to USA

    Boyz fail to break USA jinx, exit Gold Cup
    IAN BURNETT @ THE CONCACAF GOLD CUP ?in the USA
    Monday, June 20, 2011


    WASHINGTON DC, USA — Jamaica's participation at the 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup Tournament came to a crashing halt after they were beaten 2-0 by the United States here at the RFK Stadium yesterday.

    Jermaine Jones gave the Americans a deserved lead with a deflected shot off Jamaican defender Jermaine Taylor in the 49th minute, and after the said defender had been cruelly sent off after the hour mark, the Americans wrapped up victory when Clint Dempsey connected on Juan Agudelo's pass inside the penalty area 10 minutes from the end.


    WASHINGTON, DC, USA — The USA’s Michael Bradley (centre) gets closest to the ball ahead of Jamaica’s (from left) Rodolph Austin, Dane Richards and Eric Vernan during their CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-final match at the RFK Stadium here, yesterday. The USA won 2-0. (Photos: AFP)

    WASHINGTON, DC, USA — Players of the United States celebrate their first goal in the second half against Jamaica during their CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-final match at RFK Stadium here, yesterday. USA won 2-0.





    It was the second consecutive defeat for the Reggae Boyz by the Americans at the quarter-final stage, following the 1-3 defeat in the 2005 edition in Boston, and it was their third defeat to the supersized North Americans in Gold Cup Tournament play.

    The Americans have also stretched their unbeaten record against the Boyz to 20 games, inclusive of two Olympic Games Qualifiers in 1972, when the teams met for the first time. The US have so far scored 11 victories.

    Unfortunately, the Boyz saved their worst performance for last after they had gone unbeaten in group play with three wins from as many starts.

    But yesterday they unwittingly abandoned their passing game, and became too easily confused by the off-the-ball movement by their opponents, which led to them chasing shadows for long periods and becoming too impatient when in possession of the ball, after a fairly decent first half hour.

    They should have opened the scoring from as early as the fourth minute when Dane Richards intercepted a pass on the right hand side of the field at the half-way line. He dribbled by a couple of defenders and raced into the penalty box where he skilfully evaded another challenge before serving Rodolph Austin, whose miscued shot picked out Johnson on the left side of the six-yard box.

    Tim Howard advanced and blocked with his legs, but the ball fell kindly to Luton Shelton more centrally located no more than 12 yards away from the unguarded net. However, to the disbelief of the Jamaican supporters inside the capacity 45,423 RFK Stadium, Shelton blasted over the horizontal.

    Experience has dictated that such missed opportunities often come back to haunt, and for Jamaica, it certainly did, as goals build confidence at one end and deflate at the other end.

    As the teams pressed for the early opening, Dempsey, who left his team following last Tuesday's win over Guadeloupe to attend the wedding of his sister in Texas on Saturday, saw Donovan Ricketts palm away his volley from inside the penalty area for a corner, which the Boyz had difficulty clearing.

    The hosts, without much individual creativity, but embracing steady and uncompromising solid play, increased the tempo with their off the ball movements, and this appeared to have caused panic in the Jamaican defence, so much so that whenever the Boyz regained possession, they resorted to booting long, hopeful balls up field instead of playing their possession game, which had led to their success thus far.

    Whenever they employed the passing game, the Americans were found wanting, as on the half-hour mark Austin released Johnson with a straight ball over the top and the San Jose Earthquakes forward turned his marker inside the box before setting up Shelton at the top of the area, but the wily striker tried to do too much and lost the clear opportunity to test Howard.

    The Boyz then had to ward off a barrage of attacks for the remainder of the half as the US completely dominated play, but the LA Galaxy goalkeeper Ricketts kept his team in the game with a number of fine saves.

    As the shambolic team defending continued in front of him, Ricketts easily tipped over Dempsey's 35-yard free-kick; kept out Juan Agudelo, the 12th-minute substitute for the injured Jozy Altidore; denied Eric Lichaj from inside the area and warded off a number of other threats.

    In between, the Boyz countered on a three-man fast break, but Richards' end product was gratefully accepted by Howard from an acute angle.

    There was an early sign that the Jamaicans had not cleared the cobweb from their heads during the half time interval, as they started the second half without Johnson on the pitch.

    And within minutes they were behind, thanks to a wicked deflection. It was Taylor, who had out-jumped an attacker to head clear a deep cross, but the ball fell at the feet of Jones, who rifled goalwards from 30 metres. Ricketts seemed to have been comfortably placed to save, but Taylor stuck out his right boot and the ball deflected into the goal, wrong-footing the big goalkeeper, who was going left.

    It was the first goal conceded by the Jamaicans in over three-and-a-half games at the tournament, their best ever, but instead of getting better, the Boyz were becoming more vulnerable.

    On the hour mark, Ricketts, arguably the best goalkeeper in Major League Soccer, pulled off a miraculous one-handed save to deny Dempsey from just a few metres away from the goal.

    The Boyz were the victims of inept officiating the last time they were at the RFK Stadium in a World Cup Qualifier against the Americans back on October 3, 1997, when ace defender Ian 'Pepe' Goodison was called for a hand ball penalty.

    The incident had happened outside the penalty area, but the referee somehow missed it. Yesterday, Mexican referee Marco Rodriquez ensured that the trend continued, as he sent Taylor to the showers in the 66th minute for what he perceived to be a foul on Jones, who had broken away towards goal.

    The Jamaicans' appealed for innocence as it was obvious that Jones had taken a tumble after the ball had gone, as the Jamaican slid in to challenge, but the appeal was waved off by Rodriquez, who did not hesitate to pluck the red card from his back pocket.

    Television replays suggested that it was Jones who tried his best to draw contact from Taylor and should have been the one to be booked for unsporting behaviour.

    The US made the game safe in the 80th minute when Dempsey had the easiest of tasks to tap home from close range after rounding Ricketts. The Jamaican defence was stretched and he benefited from composed team play between Landon Donovan, who came off the bench after he, too, had been granted permission to attend his twin sister's wedding in California on Saturday.

    Being a man down and pressing to get back in the game, the Boyz were short on defence and they were lucky not to have conceded more goals.

    It was good while it lasted, but the Boyz will have to await another opportunity to shed the monkey of not beating the US off their back.

    Teams: Jamaica — Donovan Ricketts, Shavar Thomas, Jermaine Taylor, Adrian Reid, Jason Morrison (Keammar Daley 69th), Rodolph Austin, Demar Phillips, Eric Vernan (Jevaughn Watson 64th), Luton Shelton (Omar Daley 74th), Dane Richards, Ryan Johnson.

    Subs not used: Dwayne Miller, Damion Williams, Richard Edwards, Navion Boyd.

    Booked: Austin (16th), Taylor (ejected 66th)

    USA — Tim Howard, Carlos Bocanegra, Michael Bradley, Steve Cherundolo, Clint Dempsey, Jermaine Jones (Maurice Edu 75th), Eric Lichaj, Sacha Kljestan, Jozy Altidore (Juan Agudelo 12th), Clarence Goodson, Alejandro Bedoya (Landon Donovan 65th).

    Subs not used: Marcus Hahnemann, Jonathan Bornstein, Tim Ream, Freddy Adu.

    Booked: Jones (26th)

    Referee: Marco Rodriquez (Mexico)

    Assistant Referees: Jose Luis Camargo (Mexico), Alberto Morin (Mexico)

    Fourth Official: Walter Lopez (Guatemala)

    Match Commissary: Victor Daniel (Grenada)



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1PrSaJ53l
    Last edited by Karl; June 20, 2011, 07:28 PM.
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    Good read, Ian!
    Respek, sah!
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

    Comment


    • #3
      Jinx continues... Reggae Boyz eliminated...

      Jinx continues... Reggae Boyz eliminated after sloppy display

      Published: Monday | June 20, 2011


      Jamaica's Demar Phillips (right) goes for the ball in front of United States' Alejandro Bedoya during the second half of the CONCACAF Gold Cup quarter-final match yesterday at RFK Stadium in Washington. USA won 2-0. - AP

      Audley Boyd, Assistant Editor - Sport

      WASHINGTON DC, United States:
      JAMAICA were knocked out of the CONCACAF Gold Cup yesterday, going down 2-0 to the United States, before a 45,423 capacity crowd at the RFK Stadium in Washington DC.

      "I'm very disappointed," said Jamaica's head coach, Theodore Whitmore, of the Jamaicans' elimination. "But I still have to give credit to the players, they went out there and they performed."

      Jermaine Jones (49th) and Clint Dempsey (80th) netted second-half goals to ensure that the Americans, who played a sound tactical game, kept their unbeaten record against the Caribbean champions.

      The United States now advance to Wednesday's semi-final in Houston against Panama, after their 5-3 penalty kick victory over El Salvador in the other quarter-final played at the same venue. Penalties were needed to settle the tie after both teams played to a 1-1 regulation and extra time scoreline.

      Jones volleyed a headed clearance from a corner kick powerfully along the ground at near 25 yards, and it took a wicked deflection off Jamaican defender Jermaine Taylor's right boot, to steer it beyond the path of goalkeeper Donovan Ricketts.

      Dempsey got an easy goal. With the Jamaican defence unmanned, Juan Agudelo took advantage with a dribble into the box on the flank, made a grounded square to Dempsey, who dummied Ricketts into a dive, before placing the ball into the empty goal.

      Yesterday's win lifted the Americans' tally to 10 in the 18th contest between the nations' senior football teams, as the hosts took over the match from near the middle of the first half and dominated for the rest of the way.

      Interestingly, they could have won by a much wider margin had goalkeeper Ricketts not been in brilliant form, as he made a number of key saves.

      The Reggae Boyz ended the game with 10 players, following the ejection of Taylor at the 67th minute.

      In similar fashion, Taylor had not finished the last Gold Cup match-up between the teams, when he was ejected almost on the stroke of half time, when Jamaica went on to lose 3-1 at the same quarter-final stage at the Foxboro Stadium, in Massachusetts, in 2005.

      Broke for goal

      Taylor, who represents Houston Dynamo in the USA's Major League Soccer, was red-carded after Jones broke for goal at the centre of the pitch then went down as the central defender, the last man, got into position and made a challenge.

      TV replays suggested the Jamaican never touched his opponent.
      Ironically, it was the Jamaicans who got the first wide-open chance to take the lead, as early as the fourth minute. Two unmarked players - Ryan Johnson and Luton Shelton - combined to squander what was a golden opportunity at goalmouth, after Dane Richards had slipped a pass inside from the right flank to Rodolph Austin, wide at the top of the penalty box.

      Austin hit the ball one time low to the far post and Johnson met the ball inside the six-yard box, only to place it on to goalkeeper Tim Howard's body. With Howard floored, the rebound rolled out nicely to Shelton, who amazingly side-footed the ball over the empty goal from six yards, with not a single opponent within reach.

      Good save

      "The keeper made a good foot save, that's all," admitted Johnson.
      Whitmore believes it made a difference.

      "I think that was very crucial," he said of the miss. "I think that would have changed the complexion of the game. But as I said before, we can't keep getting chances and not score, especially against a team like the US.

      "That would've made a lot of difference in the game this afternoon," he stated.

      The Americans, who left out star player Landon Donovan at the start, ensured that Jamaica never got another opportunity that easy to score, even while the Boyz were giving their best performance of the match, up to the 25-minute mark.

      Even then, they failed to match the heights of their previous impressive performances, which was characterised with heavy ball possession, patient build-ups and confident all-round play.

      "I think we never kept a lot of possession, I think we allowed Bradley to dictate the pace of the game," Whitmore confessed. " ... It could be nerves. I think some of our better players never played today."
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

      Comment


      • #4
        Bring back some of the U40s. Its the only way to uplift our entire standard and have a chance of qualifying. Right now we will not be able to get past Maxico, USA, Panama, Canada, and C. Rica. no time to build from scratch, which is what the current team would require to qualify. Just not enough talent to go to the other level. Sorry, but I call it as I see it.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Reggaedoc View Post
          Bring back some of the U40s. Its the only way to uplift our entire standard and have a chance of qualifying. Right now we will not be able to get past Maxico, USA, Panama, Canada, and C. Rica. no time to build from scratch, which is what the current team would require to qualify. Just not enough talent to go to the other level. Sorry, but I call it as I see it.
          I am glad that is only your opinion and that is how you see it. I am sure Tappa has different ideas.
          "We're not getting our butts kicked." Lauryn Williams on the U.S.-Jamaica rivalry.

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