The Malta Independent on Sunday

Neymer, Firmino lead Brazil over USA 2-0 in exhibition

Football

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Neymar and Brazilian teammates showed young American players how large a gap they must overcome.

Roberto Firmino scored in the 11th minute off a cross from Douglas Costa, who burst down a flank past 21-year-old left back Antonee Robinson. Neymar added a penalty kick in the 44th minute after a debatable foul call, and Brazil overwhelme­d the rebuilding U.S. 2-0 in an exhibition Friday night.

"I don't think we were afraid. I think just maybe a little nervous here and there," interim U.S. coach Dave Sarachan said. "There could have been a situation where maybe the shoulder slump, the confidence, was blown."

The U.S. has two wins, two losses and three ties under Sarachan, who took over last October after the Americans failed to qualify for the World Cup. New general manager Earnie Stewart said this week a permanent coach will be announced later this year.

Just 32,469 attended the match at MetLife Stadium, a possible site of the 2026 World Cup final, and Brazilian supporters outnumbere­d Americans by about a 10-1 margin. When Brazil beat the U.S. 2-0 in August 2010 shortly after the venue opened, the game drew 77,223.

In its first match since a quarterfin­al loss to Belgium at the World Cup, Brazil improved to 18-1 against the U.S. — with 11 straight wins since a 1-0 defeat in the 1998 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The Selecao has outscored the Americans 41-12, including 17-2 since the U.S. took a two-goal lead in the 2009 Confederat­ions Cup final — a game Brazil won 3-2.

Playing in New Jersey for the first time since losing to Costa Rica in a World Cup qualifier at Red Bull Arena last September, the U.S. did not force a save from goalkeeper Alisson until the 71st minute. All U.S. starters were 25 and under and the average of 23 years 117 days was under 24 for the fifth straight match.

Midfielder­s Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Wil Trapp struggled for possession. The Americans were missing their top player, 19-year-old midfielder Christian Pulisic, who has an unspecifie­d muscle injury.

"If we had Christian tonight, I can't say we'd have the ball 40 more percent of the time," Sarachan said.

Bobby Wood, the lone forward in a 4-14-1 formation, rarely had touches, and Sarachan said Pulisic and Jozy Altidore remain among the top American attack

Brazil went ahead when Costa beat Robinson, and Firmino split defenders Matt Miazga and Brooks and with his right foot directed the ball past goalkeeper Zack Steffen for his eighth goal in 26 internatio­nal appearance­s.

Neymar converted a penalty kick after the questionab­le call by Mexican referee Fernando Guerrero, the fourth official for U.S. loss at Trinidad and Tobago last October that eliminated the Americans in World Cup. Fabinho played a 1-2 with Firmino and cut into the penalty area. Trapp appeared to give him the slightest of pushes, and Fabinho tumbled past Brooks.

Neymar stutter-stepped in his run-up, Steffen dove to his right and the striker softly kicked the ball in the other way for his 58th goal in 91 internatio­nal appearance­s, third in Brazilian history behind Pele (77) and Ronaldo (62). Neymar scored at MetLife eight years ago in his internatio­nal debut.

Steffen kicked out his left foot in the 51st minute to save Neymar's 6-yard shot off a pass from Costa, and Miazga cleared the ball off the line. The best U.S. chance was McKennie's left-footed shot off a Kellyn Acosta pass in the 66th, which went wide.

"The ability to connect passes was a difficult chore for our group early in the game," Sarachan said, "and when you concede possession against a team like Brazil, it makes it hard. You do a lot of chasing."

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