The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Heat, pressure on for US team in Honduras

- By Ronald Blum

Wiping sweat from his forehead, Tim Howard said he understand­s the difficult position the United States faces going into Tuesday afternoon’s World Cup qualifier against Honduras.

SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS » Wiping sweat from his forehead under a broiling sun even before warming up, Tim Howard said he understand­s the difficult position the United States faces going into Tuesday afternoon’s World Cup qualifier against Honduras.

By losing home games to Mexico in November and Costa Rica on Friday, the U.S. needs at least a tie against Honduras at Estadio Olimpico Metropolit­ano to stay on track for the third and final automatic berth in North and Central America and the Caribbean. A loss would mean that even with wins in their final two games next month, the Americans could wind up in a playoff against an Asian team or miss next year’s tournament entirely.

Howard, the 38-year-old goalkeeper who started in the last two World Cups, cautioned against an allout attacking approach for a U.S. team that will be missing forward Jozy Altidore because of his onegame suspension.

“You also have to be careful of how much you push going forward and making it feel as if it’s doom and gloom,” Howard explained. “The more rah-rah you are sometimes in these situations, the more tense everybody gets.”

Temperatur­es in the low 90s with high humidity are forecast for the start (3:36 p.m. local, 5:36 p.m. EDT). That could make it feel like 110 degrees in a stadium set in the Sula Valley near the Merendon Hills. The grass was moist and heavy for Monday’s practice, a sign play could slow Tuesday, when rain is possible.

“It’s going to be a grind in every sense of the word. These are the days that are hard to explain to people who aren’t here,” U.S. captain Michael Bradley said. “The idea of big games, the idea of everything on the line, that can’t faze us.”

Mexico (5-0-2) leads the six-nation final round with 17 points and has clinched a berth, and Costa Rica (4-1-2) is second with 14. The U.S. and Honduras (both 2-3-2) have eight points each, with the U.S. ahead on goal difference, plus-one to Honduras’ minus-seven. Panama (1-2-4) has seven points and Trinidad and Tobago is last with three (1-6).

The U.S. concludes the round against Panama on Oct. 6 at Orlando, Florida, and four days later at Trinidad and Tobago. The last time the U.S. fate was uncertain going into its final qualifier was in 1989, when a 1-0 win at Trinidad put the Americans in the World Cup for the first time since 1950. That started a streak of seven appearance­s in a row.

“When I took the job in November and we had zero points after two games, we fully anticipate­d the fact that this would go a full 10 games in order to qualify the U.S. team, and that looks to be the case,” said Bruce Arena, who replaced Jurgen Klinsmann after a 4-0 wipeout at Costa Rica.

Altidore received a yellow card in the 71st minute of that Costa Rica match for running into Celso Borges, and a second yellow on Friday for pushing Johan Venegas in the 80th minute. That earned him an automatic suspension.

“It seems to me that the referees are refraining from issuing yellow cards because of that rule, which is, without going into a long debate, just a stupid rule,” Arena said.

Joel Aguilar of El Salvador will officiate Tuesday. He worked the infamous Snow Classico, a World Cup qualifier four years ago in Colorado in which the U.S. beat Costa Rica 1-0 in a snowstorm. Aguilar also was on the field for the Americans’ 1-1 draw at Mexico in a qualifier in June and for their win over Costa Rica in the semifinals of this year’s CONCACAF Gold Cup.

“I don’t think the referee is going to favor the United States when we go on the road in World Cup qualifying in CONCACAF,” Arena said.

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