quinta-feira, 30 de abril de 2015

Columbus Crew SC midfielder Romain Gall looking to turn US Under-20 success into MLS minutes

Resultado de imagem para mls 2015    Resultado de imagem para BANDEIRA USA

OBETZ, Ohio – Since he was acquired last August, midfielder Romain Gall hasn’t seen the field much with Columbus Crew SC, relegated to a reserve role while players like Ethan Finlay andJustin Meram enjoy breakout success.
Though he only has three league appearances – all of which came last year – the 20-year-old attacking midfielder has plenty on his plate, traveling frequently with United States youth squads while working hard on a daily basis in Columbus. He recently returned from a week-long stint with the U-20 team in Austria, where he scored the game-winner in the team’s 1-0 victory over Croatia.
“The week went well,” he said. “I got back with the team after missing the last camp, and getting the game-winner, I’m obviously happy about that. I was able to deliver when I was called upon, so I’m happy.”

And after a training session in which Gall impressed head coach Gregg Berhalter by spending several minutes hitting shots past goalkeepers, the Crew SC boss said the team’s focus for Gall is a successful trip to the upcoming FIFA U-20 World Cup, which will begin late next month in New Zealand.
“We’re looking at this half of a year for him in terms of trying to prepare him for the Under-20 world championships,” Berhalter said. “The first step is making the roster and the second step is doing well there. So we’re preparing him for that.”
Berhalter said he thinks Gall is dealing well with his backup role, part of the learning process for any young player.
“You’ve got to stay focused and stay day-to-day; that’s the job,” Berhalter said. “He’s a pro now, and he knows chances will be difficult to come by at his age given the quality in his position on our squad. You just have to stay focused and each and every day show up.”
Gall said he’s not feeling frustrated with his lack of playing time, and is focusing on training.
“I’m all about hard work,” he said. “I just stay focused and work hard and things will pan out.”
And, after nearly a year with Berhalter and in MLS, he says he can feel himself improving.
“I can see it in myself on the field – even when I’m with the national team – the difference in myself as a player from being here and learning from Gregg and the team,” he said.

Berhalter said the national team has given Gall “game time and sharpness,” and the versatile attacker says he thinks the trips overseas with the group are helping him improve his game back home.
“We have a very competitive group, so the level is really high,” he said. “So when I’m over there and I can perform well, my confidence gets higher. When I come back here I can keep growing on that confidence. So I think it helps me, definitely.”
And while Gall’s spot on the World Cup roster seems certain – he led the US and tied for the tournament lead with five goals at the CONCACAF U-20 Championships this winter – he’s not taking anything for granted.
“I’m just hoping I can make the team and be on the final roster,” he said. “If I can, I’ll be looking forward to it. It’s exciting; it’s something you dream about when you’re a kid.”

American Exports: Cole Grossman scores as Bob Bradley's Stabaek win third straight, move to second


AMSTERDAM – Cole Grossman bagged a tidy insurance goal as Bob Bradley's Stabaek ran their Tippeligaen win streak to three games with a 2-0 road decision over Tromso on Thursday night.
Three minutes after Ernest Asante fired the Blue Ones ahead, Grossman (pictured above) stuck around in the box to capitalize on a the weak clearance of a corner kick. The former Real Salt Lake midfielder accepted a short feed to rip home a left-footed shot from 15 yards on the edge of halftime.
Stabaek needed no more than Grossman's second strike of the young season, closing out the win by extending their shutout run in league play to 285 minutes and the version that covers all competitions to 375 minutes. Through five rounds, Bradley has his side level on points with three other teams in second place.

Elsewhere, A.J. Soares was strong at the back in his first Viking start, a 2-1 victory at Sandefjord. By snapping a two-game slide, the visitors rose to ninth place in the table.
Zarek Valentin set up the late consolation strike and loan winger Danny Cruz made his debut as a halftime sub in Bodo/Glimt's 2-1 home loss against FK Haugesund.
In a match that saw a handful of dangerous Valentin crosses go unrewarded by finishers, Fitim Azemi finally made good on one of the right back's deliveries by nodding it home with six minutes remaining on the clock.
Cruz, meanwhile, picked up a 79th minute yellow card for griping when the referee ignored his side's handball shouts after the American's cross was pawed down in the area. With but one point on the season, Glimt stayed locked in the league basement.

It was all downhill after an early opener for Rhett Bernstein's Mjondalen, who collapsed in a 4-1 home defeat against Lillestrom.
The center back was only to blame for failing to track Fred Friday on the 49th minute winning goal, the second tally from his hat trick. Bernstein had a golden chance to tie the game when fortunate bounce sent him in alone at the other end mere moments later, but he fired too close to the keeper and was duly robbed. The loss, Mjondalen's first of the season, dipped them to eighth place.
Finally, IK Start defender Alex DeJohn worked the final 26 minutes of a 3-2 defeat away to league leaders Rosenborg.
The New Jersey native entered with the game tied 1-1, but was not at fault on either of the last two RBK goals. Now winless in three, Start fell to 10th.

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