Albuquerque Journal

US, El Salvador play to scoreless tie

Game was opener of World Cup qualifying

- BY RONALD BLUM

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — The United States showed promise but no ability to finish in its pandemicde­layed World Cup qualifying opener, drawing 0-0 at El Salvador on Thursday night in the type of Central American stadium that repeatedly has stymied the Americans.

Both teams created few chances before a boisteriou­s yet polite sellout crowd of about 30,000 that started filling Monumental Estadio Cuscatlán, Central America’s largest, about 8 1/2 hours before kickoff.

The U.S., trying to rebound from its failure to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, failed to win its sixth straight road qualifier dating to 2016 (two losses, four draws).

Qualifying was delayed a year by the pandemic, and a compacted schedule has teams in the final round of North and Central America and the Caribbean playing 14 matches in seven months. The U.S. hosts Canada on Sunday in Nashville, Tennessee, and plays at Honduras on Sept. 8.

Three of the eight nations in regional finals qualify for next year’s tournament in Qatar and fourth place advances to a playoff. But there rarely are easy games for the U.S. in Central America.

Riot police with helmets and shields were in front of the stands. Fans, most wearing blue home jerseys, were separated from the field by yellow chain-link fencing. Many held up the lights on their mobile phones, as if it were a rock concert.

Fireworks started during El Salvador’s national anthem and kept exploding for the first five minutes.

Miles Robinson had the best chance in the first half, putting an open header over the crossbar in the ninth minute from a Gio Reyna free kick.

Eriq Zavaleta’s header from Marvin Monterroza’s corner kick was stopped by diving U.S. goalkeeper Matt Turner in the 57th. Weston McKennie couldn’t get his head solidly on Reyna’s cross in the 73rd, then crossed to Kellyn Acosta for a header that was punched away by diving Mario González in the 76th.

McKennie and DeAndre Yedlin were given yellow cards for fouls in the second half. A second yellow in another game would cause a one-game suspension.

It had been 1,424 days since the 2-1 loss at Trinidad and Tobago ended the Americans’ streak of seven straight World Cup appearance­s.

Yedlin was the only holdover in the U.S. lineup from that night.

Coaching his first qualifier, Gregg Berhalter didn’t have star attacker Christian Pulisic (regaining fitness after testing positive for COVID-19) and goalkeeper Zack Steffen (back spasms), who remained in Nashville.

Turner, who made his internatio­nal debut in January, was in goal.

The U.S. lineup averaged 23 years, 282 days, the fourthyoun­gest in a qualifier in the modern era.

It included nine players making their qualifying debuts, all but Yedlin and central defender Tim Ream, who was on the bench in Couva.

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