SAN JOSE, Calif. ā US national team midfielder Michael Bradley and his teammates have had 127 days to marinate in the ugly feeling of a 4-0 shellacking delivered by Costa Rica ā a World Cup qualifying defeat so horrid it ultimately led to the dismissal of American coach Jurgen Klinsmann.
Yet the US captain knows it would only take 90 good minutes against Honduras 1543931659" tabindex="0">on Friday(10:30 pm ET | FS1, UniMƔs, UDN, Follow on the MLS App) to help wipe away those memories.
āThereās no two ways about it ā we let ourselves down in Costa Rica,ā Bradley told reporters on Tuesday after the US finished training at Avaya Stadium. āWe didnāt play well enough. Mistakes turned into bigger mistakes, which turned into bigger mistakes. ... We are where we are, and now itās about 1543931660" tabindex="0">on Friday night beginning this process of moving ourselves back up the table ā stepping on the field from the first minute and playing in a really, really aggressive way that ultimately leaves no doubt as to whoās stepping off the field the winner.ā
This may not be the most trying time in Bradleyās tenure with the USMNT, but if not, it has to rank near the top. The US, which also dropped a 2-1 decision to Mexico in Columbus on 1543931661" tabindex="0">Nov. 11, had never previously lost both of their first two games in the Hex. Going into 1543931662" tabindex="0">Friday, they sit dead last, trailing even Trinidad & Tobago on goal differential, as coach Bruce Arena makes his competitive debut in his second stint leading the national team.
The situation āmeans that our margin for error is now very, very small,ā Bradley acknowledged. āBut nothingās changed in that we still feel good about the team that we have, the group that we are. I think Bruce has come in and done an excellent job in terms of re-establishing certain things and getting at a few things. I think the mentality and the spirit in training and around the group ā both in January and now this week ā has been excellent. So weāre excited about the chance to step on the field in a big-time qualifier.ā
Bradley wouldnāt specifically identify what things were re-established by Arena, who first coached the US from 1998 to 2006, but he made it sound like the back-to-the-future regime went back to the basics, as well.
āJust across the board, we feel like we let some different things slip,ā Bradley said. āHeās come in and found the right way to work and talk and show some things and make sure we understand who we are and what weāre about ā [to] ultimately where weāre stepping on the field giving ourselves the best chance to win.ā
Bradley is expected to be the metronome as the US attempts to pry open a Honduras defense which has shown a propensity to pack in bodies to interdict passing lanes. So how do you unlock, say, a five-man back line?
āItās a lot of different things,ā Bradley said. āCertainly, patience is important. You understand that when you play against a team that has a lot of different guys behind the ball and lines are tight, the understanding that things arenāt going to come easy, thereās not going to be tons of space. Itās not going to be, I wouldnāt think, a wide-open game. Weāve worked on a few different things in terms of how we would like to go about things so that we can put them on their heels a little bit and be dangerous, tilt the ball in our favor.ā
But game-planning will only take a team so far. And after the whistle, itās up to Bradley and Co. to ensure that a face-plant like the one they endured some four months ago doesnāt get repeated.
āTo win a big game, you need six, seven, eight guys to play really well, to play real good games,ā Bradley said. āAnd then you need the others to be good and solid. If all of a sudden you donāt get enough guys playing good games and now the others are not good, thatās the recipe for losing a game like we did in Costa Rica. Itās not complicated. We need guys to step on the field and understand the moment, not be fazed by it and go for it in a fearless way."