Chattanooga Times Free Press

Steffen displaces Turner as top U.S. keeper

- BY RONALD BLUM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Zack Steffen is in quite an unusual position: The No. 2 goalkeeper with Manchester City is No. 1 with the United States.

New England’s Matt Turner started the first five U.S. qualifiers, and Steffen took over for the 2-1 win over Costa Rica last month. Steffen made a pair of key saves in Friday’s 2-0 victory over Mexico and will start on Tuesday night when the Americans open the second half of qualifying at Jamaica.

“It was a difficult decision,” U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter said Monday. “It wasn’t something that was easy based on how we thought Matt was playing.”

While the U.S. beat Jamaica 2-0 on Oct. 7, the 59th-ranked Reggae Boyz have been boosted by the return of West Ham striker Michail Antonio and Aston Villa winger Leon Bailey.

The No. 13 Americans will be missing midfielder Weston McKennie and defender Miles Robinson, serving one-game suspension­s for yellow-card accumulati­on.

Berhalter prefers Steffen for his role in possession.

“We were looking at the games and how they were unfolding and were saying there’s a number of possession­s that we can be keeping in these games that we’re not,” Berhalter said. “We think Zack is stronger with his feet, and we made that decision based on that.”

Steffen’s September was disrupted by back spasms followed by a positive COVID-19 test. He returned for the Oct. 13 match against Costa Rica in Columbus, Ohio, where he played for the Crew from 2016-19. Steffen’s headed clearance led to Keysher Fuller’s goal 60 seconds in, but the U.S. rallied on goals by Sergiño Dest and Tim Weah for a 2-1 win.

Then against Mexico, he dived to make saves on Edson Álvarez in the 11th minute and Hirving Lozano in the 19th, keeping the U.S. even on a night Christian Pulisic and McKennie would score late in the second half.

“We ask keepers all the time: Can you make that one, maybe two big saves that you need to make?” defender Walker Zimmerman said. “And if he doesn’t make that save, I think the game is a lot different.”

Steffen is City’s backup to Ederson, a 28-year-old Brazilian who won the Golden Glove for most Premier League shutouts in each of the past two seasons.

A 26-year-old from the Philadelph­ia suburb of Coatesvill­e, Steffen signed with City in July 2019, then was loaned to Fortuna Düsseldorf for a season cut short by an injured left patellar tendon. The Cityzens announced this month he had agreed to a four-year contract through 2024-25, one year shorter than Ederson’s deal.

Steffen has four appearance­s at City this season: one in the Premier League, one in the Community Shield and two in the League Cup.

“My goal is to become a starter, whether that’s at City, whether it’s at another team,” Steffen said. “I go into training focused on trying to push Eddie, and I know that’s another good, really good goalkeeper. … We’re friends off the field, so then it becomes easier to to support and push each other on the field. So that’s my mentality, is just to go there and learn and train as best as possible, and the rest will fall in line.”

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 ?? AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ ?? The United States’ Zack Steffen reacts after defeating Mexico 2-0 during a FIFA World Cup qualifying soccer match Friday in Cincinnati.
AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ The United States’ Zack Steffen reacts after defeating Mexico 2-0 during a FIFA World Cup qualifying soccer match Friday in Cincinnati.

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