USA TODAY US Edition

Arena lightens it up; USA lights up

World Cup shot gets boost with improved mood

- Martin Rogers mjrogers@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Bruce Arena sprawls in a chair in a hotel here and starts talking about clowns. He quickly warms to this theme. He is going to bring in a clown at lunch, he says, to entertain his U.S. men’s national team players. The performer will make balloons for the players and perform other tricks.

After a moment, it becomes clear Arena has made it all up. He’s joking. When the U.S. players sit down to eat ahead of Tuesday’s World Cup qualifying game against Panama at Estadio Rommel Fernandez, there won’t be some creepy guy with a painted face jostling for a spot at the table and juggling peanut butter-andjelly sandwiches.

Then again, anything is possible under Arena, whose sarcastic wit is one way in which he is different from Jurgen Klinsmann, whom he replaced last year.

Arena is not big on rules, just big on making sure the Americans take another step toward next year’s World Cup in Russia.

“Be on time,” Arena said, when asked what behavioral stipulatio­ns he has in place. “That’s it. They are adults. Does your newspaper tell you what you are supposed to do? We are just kind of acting normal.”

Arena does not do curfews and tries to avoid team meetings. The players’ free time is typically their own, without the coach or other staff members monitoring their every move. Under Klinsmann, who was fired after two qualifying defeats in November, the atmosphere was far different.

Klinsmann would call latenight meetings that players thought were an attempt to monitor their social habits. There was no extensive rulebook, yet Klinsmann wanted his troops to feel on edge. Certain soft drinks were strictly frowned upon. It was as if players were trying to avoid being admonished by their teacher.

During the 2002 and 2006 World Cups, Arena did little to monitor his players, simply insisting they turn up for training and perform at a high level. Some players, especially in 2006, made greater use of the freedom than others. In Germany in 2006, there were occasional incidents of players frequentin­g clubs and bars and mingling with fans late into the night.

Four years later, Arena’s successor, Bob Bradley, kept a much tighter ship, with the players sequestere­d on a farm outside Johannesbu­rg, although much of that had to do with security concerns in South Africa.

Arena relies on veterans such as Tim Howard, DaMarcus Beasley, Clint Dempsey and Michael Bradley to ensure that everybody remains profession­al.

“When you step across to play, he wants nothing but your everything,” Howard said. “The rest of it, you kind of let your hair down and do whatever the heck you want to do.”

The vibe of the camp seems different. There is more noise when the players mingle, more smiles.

“There is not one rule on how you do anything in life,” Arena said. “There is more than one approach to things. I am not doing anything differentl­y than I do. I am not taking a survey. I know it is different. Again, we lose to (Panama), there will be articles written on this (expletive) letting these guys run loose.

“The veterans lead the way. It is not my team; it is their team. They have got to take ownership in the team. I don’t think they are checking curfew, they are just being good profession­als, and it becomes contagious in a group. If you have a bunch of people who are (expletive), it tends to be what your team looks like.

“If it is my job to control them all day, then I don’t think we have a chance. I am not interested in doing it. I would just open up a preschool somewhere.”

Friday’s 6-0 thumping of Honduras in Arena’s first competitiv­e game since replacing Klinsmann was a huge positive and lifted the team from last place to fourth place in the six-nation CONCACAF regional qualifying group. The top three teams reach Russia automatica­lly next summer while a fourth goes into a playoff. Panama occupies the third spot, adding extra significan­ce to Tuesday’s match.

One of the most surprising things about the last week has been Arena’s sense of humor. He threatened to cut Alejandro Bedoya’s hair. He ribbed news media members for being “stiffs.” He made the gag about the clown.

Don’t, however, suggest that his approach equates to a lack of discipline.

“I don’t have a whole lot of time to make a whole lot of changes,” Arena said. “Whether that is good or bad — who knows? (But) I don’t have a lax rule environmen­t. What is a lax rule environmen­t — asking people to live like normal people?”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? New coach Bruce Arena says of Team USA, “The veterans lead the way. It is not my team; it is their team.”
CHRISTOPHE­R HANEWINCKE­L, USA TODAY SPORTS New coach Bruce Arena says of Team USA, “The veterans lead the way. It is not my team; it is their team.”
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