ATLANTA — Jurgen Klinsmann strolled into a room in the basement of the Georgia Dome, not looking overly concerned about the biggest upset loss in United States men’s soccer history.
Sure, the coach was disappointed that his team won’t be heading to the Gold Cup final on Sunday, having been upended by Jamaica, an island nation of 2.9 million people that’s known mostly for Usain Bolt and some of the world’s greatest Olympic sprinters.
“It’s unfortunate, but that’s reality,” Klinsmann said. “We have to swallow that pill.”
More than that, a 2-1 loss to Jamaica in the semifinals on Wednesday was a striking reminder that Klinsmann, approaching four full years as the team’s coach, has yet to push the national team from the fringe of international contention to a full-fledged powerhouse.
He did produce a Gold Cup title in 2013 and an inspired run to the knockout round at last year’s World Cup in Brazil, but in this what-have-you-done-for-me-lately world, the stunning setback to the Reggae Boyz showed Klinsmann’s tenure is still a work in progress.
The Americans will face Panama in the third-place game on Saturday in suburban Philadelphia, which the coach views as the first step in turning things around.
“It’s about finishing off in style in front of our fans,” Klinsmann said. “We need to go in with the right attitude.”
After the Gold Cup, the focus turns to qualifying for the next summer’s Olympics during the first two weeks of October and a CONCACAF playoff game on Oct. 9 that would give the team a chance to play in the 2017 Confederations Cup. The Americans will face the champion of Sunday’s final between Mexico and Jamaica, with the winner gaining a coveted spot in the most important warm-up for the next World Cup in Russia.
As the 2013 Gold Cup winner, the U.S. could have avoided a playoff with a second consecutive title. Jamaica scuttled those plans, skillfully executing two set pieces about five minutes apart in the first half and holding off a furious rally in the second.
The U.S. had a dominating 10-3 edge in shots on goal and largely controlled the flow of play, but all it could manage was a goal early in the second half by Michael Bradley.
“The luck was not with us, and maybe we weren’t clinical enough to put it in there,” Klinsmann said. “Effort wise, rhythm wise, passing combinations — everything was there. That was a lot of good stuff we saw, but the goals weren’t there.”
Klinsmann stepped in as the U.S. coach in July 2011, shortly after Bob Bradley was fired on the heels of the U.S. squandering a two-goal lead in a 4-2 loss to Mexico in the Gold Cup final.
There have been plenty of promising signs during the Klinsmann era — most recently a pair of wins five days apart in friendly matches in the Netherlands and Germany in early June.
The Gold Cup was a step backward. During group play, the Americans hardly impressed in wins over Honduras and Haiti and a draw with Panama. None of their opponents ranked higher than 62nd in the world. A 6-0 blowout over 104th-ranked Cuba, a team ravaged by defections during the tournament, didn’t prove much of anything. Then, against No. 76 Jamaica, the Americans lost on home soil to a Caribbean nation for the first time since 1969.
“Maybe we were missing a little bit luck, a little bit sharpness, a little bit of whatever you want to call it,” said Michael Bradley, the team’s captain and son of the former coach.
Klinsmann said he was impressed by the play of 24-year-old Aron Johannsson, but the front line was hurt by the loss of striker Jozy Altidore, dropped from the squad after group play because he hadn’t fully recovered from a hamstring injury.
At the back, goalkeeper Brad Guzan made a silly mistake on a routine throw, giving the Jamaicans a free kick that they converted into their second goal. Guzan got the nod because the country’s top keeper, 36-year-old Tim Howard, took a sabbatical from the national team after the World Cup last summer.
Howard is ready to return, targeting a friendly match against Peru on Sept. 4.
With an eye farther down the road, Klinsmann is looking for improvement out of the junior teams. The Americans failed to qualify for the 2012 London Olympics, a significant setback for the under-23 program.
Klinsmann wants to get some younger players into the mix, a group that includes 20-year-old Jordan Morris and 19-year-olds Rubio Rubin and Emerson Hyndman.
After the CONCACAF playoff and Olympic qualifying, the U.S. turns its attention to World Cup qualifying, which begins in November.
“We’ve got to keep building, keep progressing, keep working hard,” Klinsmann said. “Then it starts all over again.”
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