Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ferreira breaks through as Americans romp

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U.S. 7, TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 0

ORLANDO, Fla. — Jesus Ferreira gained U.S. citizenshi­p on Dec. 16, 2019, and made his debut for the American national team last Feb. 1. Then he struggled through his second season with Dallas with one goal in 19 Major League Soccer matches.

“Obviously kind of upset,” he said. “I took it as you have to do better. You have to make sure that 2021 is a way better year than the past two years.”

Ferrieira scored his first two internatio­nal goals and had three assists, leading the United States over a rusty Trinidad and Tobago 7-0 in an exhibition on Sunday night.

Paul Arriola and Jonathan Lewis scored twice each for a U.S. roster missing its Europe-based players.

Coming off a 6-2 win over Panama in November with top American players and a 6-0 rout of El Salvador last month with a group mostly from MLS, the U.S. outshot the Soca Warriors 19-2 and scored five goals for a third consecutiv­e game for the first time. The last time three Americans scored two goals in a game was an 8-1 rout of the Cayman Islands in a 1993 friendly led by JoeMax Moore, Dominic Kinnear and Mark Chung.

“It wasn’t a World Cup qualifying-caliber team based on who they had available,” U.S. Coach Gregg Berhalter said of Trinidad and Tobago, “but nonetheles­s, it was good to see the focus.”

Ferreira was born in Santa Marta, Colombia, and grew up in Barranquil­la the son of David Ferreira, a midfielder who scored three goals in 39 internatio­nal appearance­s for Colombia. He moved to Texas when his dad played for Dallas in MLS from 2009-13, and the family remained there even when his father switched clubs starting in 2014. He played in the Dallas academy, made a brief pro debut in 2017 and spent 2018 on loan with the Tulsa Roughnecks of the second-tier United Soccer League.

Berhalter used the 20-year-old Ferreira as a center forward who can drop back into the midfield.

“When you have wingers that can threaten the back line, you can afford to drop a striker in,” Berhalter said. “What we talked to him about today was arriving in the penalty box, and he certainly did that. So to me, it was a complete performanc­e.”

Lewis scored his first and second internatio­nal goals, and Miles Robinson got his first.

Arriola, who last month made his first start since tearing his right ACL on Feb. 15, scored twice as the U.S. took a 4-0 halftime lead to give him three goals in his last two internatio­nal matches. Arriola and Sebastian Lletget were the players on the field most likely to see significan­t time with the full group.

Goalkeeper Matt Turner and right back Aaron Herrera started in their debuts as the U.S. went again without Europe-based players, and 20-year-old midfielder Andres Perea entered at the start of the second half in his debut then conceded a penalty kick with a high boot to Ryan Telfer in the 65th minute.

Perea, who plays for Orlando, started for Colombia at the 2017 Under-17 World Cup and 2019 Under-20 World Cup.

Turner, 26, leapt to his right to stop Alvin Jones’ penalty kick.

“A late bloomer,” Berhalter said. “Really performs well in the league, gets his opportunit­y with the national team, debuts, saves a penalty to keep to maintain the shutout? It’s a storybook, a storybook type of saga.”

George Bello debuted in the 64th, Daryl Dike in the 65th and Tanner Tessmann in the 78th. There have been 63 debuts since the October 2017 loss at Trinidad that prevented the Americans from reaching the 2018 World Cup, including 40 in 23 matches since Berhalter became coach.

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