The Star Malaysia

The smiles are back

Arena’s return has given US team sense of purpose again

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PANAMA CITY: Alejandro Bedoya missed a goal in training, and Bruce Arena wanted to make sure the midfielder knew he noticed.

“He threatened to chop my man bun off,” Bedoya said, smiling. “That’s the kind of grief I get around here.”

Humour has returned to the US national team since Arena replaced Juergen Klinsmann as coach in November, following losses in the first two games in the final round of World Cup qualifying.

In the first competitiv­e match of Arena 2.0, the US responded with a 6-0 rout of Honduras on Friday.

A member of the US National Soccer Hall of Fame who coached the national team from 1998-2006, Arena wanted to quickly put aside worries the Americans would fail to qualify for an eighth straight World Cup.

He turned over staff, tore up rules and defined players’ roles during his first four months.

He discarded Klinsmann’s curfew, eliminated the prohibitio­n on meetings with agents at the team hotel, limited training sessions to one per day and allowed the support staff to sit in on video analysis sessions with players.

“Be on time and be respectful. Those are the rules,” he said on Monday. “If it’s my job to control them all day, then I don’t think we have a chance, and I’m basically not interested in doing it. I’d just open up a preschool somewhere.”

If not quite chaos under Klinsmann, there was constant uncertaint­y. Arena brought his own brand of Brooklyn bluntness back to the job, a self-confidence boosted by five NCAA titles at Virginia and five Major League Soccer (MLS) championsh­ips with DC United and the LA Galaxy.

“If I was coaching college today I’d be fired, because there’s too many rules,” he said. “In my days there was nothing wrong with having a beer with one of your players.”

Veteran players say Arena is a steady presence, unchanged through the years.

“I think we’re all surprised by the sarcasm. That’s Bruce. It’s great. It keeps you on your toes. He’s very tough to impress, and all of that hasn’t changed,” goalkeeper Tim Howard said.

“If you get a ‘ pretty good’ from Bruce, you should feel like you’re on top of the world, because that’s all you get.”

Klinsmann was a star forward on West Germany’s World Cup championsh­ip team in 1990 and coached Germany to the 2006 World Cup semi-finals.

The German replaced Bob Bradley in 2011 and coached the US to the 2013 Concacaf Gold Cup title and the round of 16 in the following year’s World Cup.

But the Americans were shocked by Jamaica in the 2015 Gold Cup semi-finals and struggled in qualifying for the 2018 World Cup.

“We had lost our way in some ways,” said US captain Michael Bradley, Bob’s son, who made his national team debut under Arena 11 years ago.

“I think Bruce has just done a very good job of coming in and being very clear with how we’re going to do things, with what he wants us to be about, on the field, off the field, and I think the group has responded in a really good way.”

According to Bradley, Arena re-establishe­d “what we emphasise, the group, the mentality, the identity, the spirit”.

“A lot of us felt like over this past stretch some of those things had started to drop a little bit,” Bradley added.

 ?? Reuters ?? Taking it easy: Two United States players goofing around in Monday’s training session ahead of the World Cup qualifying match against Panama. —
Reuters Taking it easy: Two United States players goofing around in Monday’s training session ahead of the World Cup qualifying match against Panama. —

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