Jordan Morris atones for mistake to score Gold Cup-winning goal for USA

SANTA CLARA, Calif. ā€“ US national team goalkeeper Tim Howard didnā€™t need to be a mind reader to see how terrible teammate Jordan Morris felt after letting his mark ā€“ Jamaican midfielder Je-Vaughn Watson ā€“ get free for a tying goal early in the second half of the 2017 Gold Cup final on Wednesday.


ā€œYou could see the disappointment on his face after the goal,ā€ Howard told reporters at Leviā€™s Stadium. ā€œYou saw it on his face. He was annoyed. He was pissed off.ā€


As the game wound down with the score still knotted at 1-1, the pain of that play lingered for Morris, even as his teammates encouraged him to keep going and stay in the match, mentally.


ā€œIā€™ve never really had anything like that in my career where I was kind of at fault for the other team scoring like that,ā€ Morris said. ā€œIt was tough to get over, especially in such a big game, but my teammates were great and, for me, I just had to keep pushing forward and try to make a difference.ā€


The moment for that difference arrived in the 88th minute, when an attempted clearance by Jamaica defender Jermaine Taylor wound up in the feet of Morrisā€™ Seattle Sounders teammate, Clint Dempsey. Dempsey couldnā€™t set himself up in time to take a shot, but he deadened the ballā€™s momentum, leaving it rolling, ever so slowly, for Morris to lash a 15-yard strike past Jamaica goalkeeper Dwayne Miller ā€“ a blast that not only delivered the Gold Cup to the US but also a measure of sweet relief for the 22-year-old from Seattle.


ā€œHuge relief,ā€ Morris said. ā€œI felt terrible. You never want to be the guy to let the team down, so for me it was just trying to come back and make an impact. I was glad to be able to do that.ā€


The goal was ā€œlike a dagger in the heart,ā€ as Jamaica coach Theodore Whitmore put it, knocking the visitors out just as it looked like they would overcome the injury-induced first-half departure of star goalkeeper Andre Blake to force overtime.


ā€œWe were trying to hold out to see if we could make extra time,ā€ said Jamaica defender Kemar Lawrence, ā€œbut what a banger.ā€


It was a performance that bore some similarities to the second-half brace Morris dropped on non-FIFA minnow Martinique in the group stage; despite being gummed up much of the night against a bunkered-in opponent, the youngster kept pushing until finally being rewarded. Morrisā€™ goal Wednesday was his only official shot of the match.


ā€œThatā€™s pretty encouraging,ā€ USMNT coach Bruce Arena said. ā€œI didnā€™t like the mistake on the corner kick, but to hang in there and play well and get the goal that made a difference in the game was encouraging. ā€¦


ā€œThose kind of moments are important for a player. Thatā€™s a big step he took tonight. Iā€™m really pleased with that.ā€