San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

U.S. MEN EARN OLYMPIC BERTH WITH WIN

- BY KEVIN BAXTER Baxter writes for the L.A. Times.

The United States traditiona­lly has had a lot of luck in Olympic soccer qualifying. Unfortunat­ely, all of it has been bad.

Five years ago, the Americans lost a two-leg interconti­nental playoff for the final spot in Rio de Janeiro on a goal late in the second half. Four years earlier, they were eliminated on a score deep in stoppage time.

The U.S. gets another chance at qualifying for the Summer Games today when it faces Honduras in the semifinals of the CONCACAF Olympic qualifying tournament in Guadalajar­a, Mexico. Win and the Americans go to the Olympics for the first time since 2008. Lose and they go home to wait three years for another chance.

The same fates await Mexico and Canada in today’s second semifinal.

“This group should be capable of qualifying to the Olympics, and that is our clear goal and that is what we’re going to move forward for,”

U.S. coach Jason Kreis said. “But I don’t feel any extra pressure about what’s happened in the past because, frankly, we’re at a different place in our country in the game.”

Actually, Kreis should be feeling extra pressure precisely because the U.S. is at different place in soccer. For the men, the Olympic tournament is an under-23 competitio­n — although the one-year postponeme­nt of the Tokyo Games led FIFA to extend eligibilit­y to players born on or after Jan. 1, 1997.

If the U.S. qualifies, senior national team veterans such as Christian Pulisic, Giovanni Reyna, Josh Sargent, Yunus Musah, Sergiño Dest and Weston Mckennie all would be eligible to play. That core not only would give the U.S. the best Olympic team in its history, but it also likely would stamp the Americans as medal favorites in Tokyo.

There would be several hurdles to clear in putting together such a roster, of course, the most significan­t securing releases from each player’s European club. But Pulisic and Musah already have said they’re interested.

“The Olympics is something that is, of course, a massive honor to play in. To represent your country in an Olympics would be amazing,” said Pulisic, who plays club soccer for Chelsea. “It’s something I’ve thought about and I have wanted to play in.”

All that will be moot, however, if the U.S. doesn’t beat Honduras. While the Americans are 5-3-1 against Honduras in Olympic qualifiers, the team from Central America has won three of the last four meetings dating to 2004. That’s a big reason why Honduras has played in four of the five Olympic tournament­s this century while the U.S. has qualified just once since 2000.

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