segunda-feira, 4 de janeiro de 2016

Roster: U.S. U-20 women start World Cup prep


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Coach Michelle French brought 26 players into the U.S. U-20 women’s national team's first camp of 2016, Jan. 3-10 in Carson, Calif. French is preparing for the Papua New Guinea-hosted U-20 Women's World Cup (Nov. 13-Dec. 3), for which the USA qualified in December while winning the U-20 Concacaf championship.
French’s first camp since qualification includes college players who weren’t available for the qualifying tournament, which conflicted with the NCAA playoffs. Twenty of the 26 are collegians.
The 20-player roster for the qualifying tournament comprised of eight collegians and 12 high-schoolers.
“The first couple camps we’ll revisit college players who were with us,” said French. “And we saw a number of players bubble up during the college season, so it’s only right to give those players an opportunity to come in and fight for roster spot.”
Among those not in camp are 17-year-old Mallory Pugh, who captained the USA in U-20 World Cup qualifying and was the tournament’s leading score and MVP, and Ashley Sanchez, who scored three goals – including the gamewinner in the 1-0 final win over Canada -- and had five assists in qualifying.
Pugh has been called into Coach Jill Ellis full national camp for Olympic qualifying preparation while Sanchez is back with the U-17s, who are gearing up for U-17 World Cup qualifiers.
U.S. U-20 women’s national team
GOALKEEPERS (3): Rose Chandler (Penn State; Atlanta, Ga.), Brooke Heinsohn (New England FC; Norfolk; Mass.), Casey Murphy (Rutgers; Bridgewater, N.J.).
DEFENDERS (9): Julia Ashley (Univ. of North Carolina; Verona, N.J.), Alana Cook (Stanford Univ.; Far Hills, N.J.), Maddie Elliston (Penn State; Omaha, Neb.), Emily Fox (FC Virginia; Ashburn, Va.), Shannon Horgan (Clemson Univ.; Long Beach, N.Y.), Natalie Jacobs (Notre Dame Univ.; Coto de Caza, Calif.), Taylor Otto (CASL; Apex, N.C.), Kaleigh Riehl (Penn State; Fairfax Station, Va.), Alex Thomas (Louisiana State; New Orleans, La.).
MIDFIELDERS (9): Savannah Demelo (Beach FC; Bellflower, Calif.), Jordan Dibiasi (Stanford Univ.; Littleton, Colo.), Kelcie Hedge (Univ. of Washington; Post Falls, Idaho), Emily Ogle (Penn State; Strongsville, Ohio), Courtney Petersen (Univ. of Virginia; Canton, Mich.), Mayra Pelayo (Univ. of Florida; West Palm Beach; Fla.), Haley Pounds (Texas A&M; Spring, Texas), Parker Roberts (Univ. of Kansas; Leawood, Kansas), Shannon Simon (Univ. of Washington; Torrance, Calif.).
FORWARDS (5): Mimi Asom (Princeton; Fairview, Texas), Cecelia Kizer (Univ. of Mississippi; Overland Park, Kan.), Taylor Racioppi (Duke; Ocean Township, N.J.), Jessie Scarpa (Univ. of North Carolina; Lakeland, Fla.), Ally Watt (Texas A&M; Colorado Springs, Colo.)



SA Positional Rankings: Whitecaps' Ousted leads keepers

The rapid expansion of MLS -- nine teams since 2007 -- hasn’t seemed to appreciably affect the general quality of the goalkeeping, a traditionally solid area that seems to be holding up as MLS reaches deeper and deeper into the player pool. There's no superstar a laTony Meola or Kasey Keller or Brad Friedel, and there aren't many stiffs, either.

SA Positional Rankings:
Best Striker: Kei Kamara
Best Forward: Sebastian Giovinco
Best Attacking Midfielder: Benny Feilhaber
Best Right Midfielder: Ethan Finlay
Best Central Midfielder: Michael Bradley
Best Left Midfielder: Fabian Castillo
Best Defensive Midfielder: Dax McCarty
Best Right Back: Steven Beitashour 
Best Right Center Back: Nat Borchers
Best Left Center Back: Matt Hedges
Best Left Back: Waylon Francis

Teams that don’t get it right suffer the consequences. SKC had to scramble when Jimmy Neilsen retired after leading it to the league title in 2013, and went through three goalies -- including Chilean international Luis Marin -- before stabilizing its situation.

The Galaxy’s issues this year with Jaime Penedo -- who left midseason in a contract dispute -- led to the return of Donovan Ricketts, who has since departed LA. He’s been replaced by former Chivas USA keeper Dan Kennedy, beaten out for the top job by one of the many promising youngsters developed by the FC Dallas player development program. In Philly, the goalkeeping resembles a running fiasco (the Union used four, none of whom played more than 12 games, in 2015).

Not many teams have taken the international route to fill their needs in goal despite the increased opportunities; each team is allotted eight international players and can trade for additional slots. The colleges continue to produce talented keepers, and with more teams fielding their own USL subsidiaries and the academy programs of individual teams grooming players starting at the U-14 level, the domestic goalkeeping pipeline should continue to flow.
  
SA Positional Rankings: Goalkeepers1. David Ousted (Vancouver)
2. Adam Kwarasey (Portland)
3. Bill Hamid (D.C. United)
4. Stefan Frei (Seattle)
5. Luis Robles (NY Red Bulls)
6. Nick Rimando (Real Salt Lake)
7. David Bingham (San Jose)
8. Clint Irwin (Colorado)
9. Jesse Gonzalez (FC Dallas)
10. Tim Melia (Sporting KC)
  
Ousted has commanded admiration and respect since coming to MLS from his native Denmark midway through the 2013 season. In 2015, he notched 13 shutouts for the second consecutive season and was again among the leaders with 99 saves. He’s a confident commander of the penalty area and very rarely is betrayed by a poor decision. He also saved two penalty kicks in the same game against the Red Bulls.

Kwarasey tied Ousted with 13 shutouts and won Save of the Year by soaring to the top corner and tipping away a blast off the foot of Luke Mulholland. For the past few offseasons, D.C. United head coach Ben Olsen says one of his goals is to lessen his team’s dependence on Hamid, and each year the keeper racks up impressive games and remarkable stops. He was the only regular to average more than four saves per game. Frei had the heaviest workload among keepers on the top defensive teams, with 111 saves (third-most in the league) and a 1.08 goals-allowed average. Robles gave up just two goals in four playoff games and won Goalkeeper of the Year honors for his consistency and reliability.

RSL missed the playoffs for just the second time in Rimando’s tenure (since 2007) yet he posted a sparkling 1.00 goals-allowed average and logged eight shutouts despite missing 10 games. In his first season as the Quakes’ No. 1 goalie Bingham played every minute, blanked a dozen opponents, and saved 105 shots.

Colorado’s feeble attack (a league-low 33 goals) put more pressure on the defense, and Irwin responded with 88 saves and eight shutouts. Gonzalez, 20, took over in August and allowed less than a goal per game in his 11 regular-season appearances but suffered a couple of costly, shaky moments in the playoffs. Melia ended one and a half years of musical chairs in the SKC goal and finished 10th in goals-allowed average (1.22).

HISTORY. Kevin Hartman is the only goalkeeper who was named the top goalkeeper three times in the Soccer America annual rankings. Reflecting the depth at the position through the years, 16 different goalkeepers have been named No. 1 in MLS's first 20 years.

SA's Best Goalkeepers
2015 David Ousted
2014 Nick Rimando
2013 Donovan Ricketts
2012 Jimmy Nielsen
2011 Kasey Keller
2010 Kevin Hartman
2009 Matt Reis
2008 Jon Busch
2007 Brad Guzan
2006 Matt Reis
2005 Pat Onstad
2004 Joe Cannon
2003 Pat Onstad
2002 Kevin Hartman
2001 Tim Howard
2000 Tony Meola
1999 Kevin Hartman
1998 Zach Thornton
1997 Walter Zenga
1996 Brad Friedel

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