The Day

Donovan’s back with a renewed love of the game

- By NANCY ARMOUR

Chicago — Burned out and exhausted from more than a decade as the standard bearer for U. S. soccer, Landon Donovan needed a break.

For four months last winter, soccer was the last concern for the Americans’ career scoring leader. He spent time with family and friends, making up for all those holidays and get-togethers he missed over the years. He traveled to far-flung places, reveling in his respite from the harsh glare of the spotlight.

And somewhere along the way, he rediscover­ed his love for the game he’d been so desperate to escape.

The rejuvenate­d Donovan is a big reason the Americans are in the CONCACAF Gold Cup final today, where they’ll face Panama. He has five goals in five games, tied for a tournament high, and seven assists. Those 12 goals are one more than Panama’s entire team has scored; the Americans lead the tournament with a total of 19 goals.

“I’ve enjoyed myself tremendous­ly,” Donovan said Saturday. “I’ve enjoyed helping with the younger guys. I’ve enjoyed being a part of team that really doesn’t have

UNITED STATES VS. PANAMA ego, that’s really excited about this opportunit­y. It’s been really fun to be a part of, and I’ve enjoyed it a lot.”

Donovan wasn’t enjoying much after helping the Los Angeles Galaxy win their second straight MLS title on Dec. 1.

Saddled with the title of “best player the U. S. has ever produced” since he scored twice at the 2002 World Cup, helping fuel the Americans’ stunning run to the quarterfin­als and earning him best young player of the tournament honors, nothing Donovan did was ever good enough. Though the entire U.S. team was dismal at the 2006 World Cup, he took the brunt of the criticism. He was the hero four years later after his spectacula­r goal against Algeria in stoppage time lifted the Americans into the knockout round, only to hear more grumbling when the Americans lost to Ghana.

His early failures in Germany only fueled the negativity, and his success with the Galaxy was overshadow­ed by the arrival of David Beckham.

By the time the Galaxy hoisted the trophy, he was, understand­ably, drained — mentally and physically, and wasn’t sure if he wanted to keep playing. Never mind that he only turned 31 on March 4, and the World Cup was less than two years away.

While the Galaxy told him to take the time he needed, U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann wasn’t quite so understand­ing. He left Donovan off the roster for a series of World Cup qualifiers, saying Donovan needed to work his way back onto the team. When he finally felt Donovan was ready to play, Klinsmann said he expected Donovan to be even better than the player he’d been before his sabbatical.

“It was his choice to take a little bit of time off. It was his choice to get a little bit of distance,” Klinsmann said Saturday. “He knew his way back to this group only goes through hard work. It goes through good performanc­es. It goes through showing on and off the field.

“Because of what he achieved in the past, his benchmark is higher than a lot of the other guys,” Klinsmann added. “We had honest conversati­ons about it, and I said, “I want the best Landon ever, I’m not happy with anything less.’ And he took that challenge.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP PHOTO ?? Landon Donovan looks on during a Gold Cup quarterfin­al against El Salvador last Sunday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP PHOTO Landon Donovan looks on during a Gold Cup quarterfin­al against El Salvador last Sunday.

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