Caleb Porter Selects Official 20-Player Roster for 2012 CONCACAF Olympic Qualifying

Compartir
Compartir articulo

CHICAGO (March 20, 2012) – U.S. Under-23 Men’s National Team head coach Caleb Porter has selected the 20 players that will compete in the 2012 CONCACAF Men’s Olympic Qualifying tournament and attempt to qualify for the Olympic Games in London this summer.

Drawn into Group A with Canada, Cuba and El Salvador, the U.S. opens play against Cuba on March 22 at LP Field in Nashville, Tenn. Kickoff is set for 8 p.m. CT, and the match will be broadcast live on Universal Sports Network, mun2 and streamed live on concacaf.com. The USA faces Canada on March 24 at 6 p.m. CT, and then closes out group play on March 26 against El Salvador.

The semifinal and final matches will be played at LIVESTRONG Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kan., on March 31 and April 2, respectively.

"We feel very confident about the team we have put together to help us achieve our goal of qualifying for the Olympic Games," said Porter. "It’s been a great week of preparation here in Nashville, and we are excited to reach this stage of the process. This group is united and ready for the challenge."

Porter named Philadelphia Union midfielder Freddy Adu as team captain and D.C. United defender Perry Kitchen as vice-captain.

Porter originally named a 19-player training camp roster on March 12, adding Tony Taylor a day later. On March 18, Molde-based defender Joshua Gatt was recalled by his club after the team experienced a series of injuries. The only new player named to the final 20-man roster by Porter was Sheanon Williams.

The roster is loaded with players who have experience in international competition, as 13 players have played in at least one World Cup at the youth level. Four players –Adu, Jared Jeffrey, Brek Shea and Williams – have appeared in both U-17 and U-20 tournaments.

The U-17 Residency Program developed 11 of the players who will represent the United States in Olympic qualifying, with many in Residency during the same cycles: Adu and Michael Stephens (2003 cycle); Jeffrey, Amobi Okugo, Kofi Sarkodie, Shea and Williams (2007 cycle); Juan Agudelo, Joe Gyau and Kitchen (2009 cycle).

A total of 14 players on the roster come from MLS clubs, with the Philadelphia Union contributing three players. Adu is the only player with previous experience in qualifying, having scored four goals in three appearances during the 2008 tournament. FC Dallas forward Shea, who has appeared in all 10 of the U.S. Men’s National Team matches under head coach Jurgen Klinsmann, was the 2011 U.S. Young Male Athlete of the Year and is coming off a strong season with FC Dallas that included MLS Best XI recognition and a nomination for MLS Most Valuable Player.

Agudelo joins the camp after earning 14 appearances with the senior team last year. Agudelo was the first player to come out of the U.S. Soccer Development Academy to earn a cap with the U.S. Men’s National Team. A total of four players on the roster have Development Academy ties: Agudelo, Joe Corona, Bill Hamid and defender Zarek Valentin.

In total, eight players on the roster have at least one cap with the full team, while Adu, Agudelo and Teal Bunbury have recorded goals. The development of these players throughout this cycle has been done in collaboration with the work of U.S. Men’s National Team head coach Klinsmann, continuing the process of having vertically integrated National Team programs.

Kitchen and San Jose Earthquakes centerback Ike Opara are both coming off their first appearances with the U-23 team, having participated in the February training camp that culminated with the 2-0 victory against Mexico in which Agudelo and Mix Diskerud tallied for the United States.

Five players are plying their trade outside the United States, including Corona (Club Tijuana), Diskerud (Gent), forward Gyau (Hoffenheim) and Jeffrey (Mainz). Borussia Dortmund-based striker Terrence Boyd will report March 21 to Nashville, having made his debut for the full team when he came on as a substitute in the USA’s 1-0 victory against Italy.

The U-23 goalkeeping tandem includes D.C. United’s Hamid and the Chicago Fire’s Sean Johnson. Both played for the U.S. Men’s National Team at the start of the year. Hamid manned the net during a 1-0 victory against Venezuela on Jan. 21 in Glendale, Ariz., as the U.S. Soccer Development Academy alum became the ninth goalkeeper in U.S. history to collect a shutout in his first game. Johnson earned his second international cap when he played in the second half of a 1-0 win against Panama on Jan. 25 in Panama City.

The diverse roster includes players hailing from 13 different states reaching from coast to coast, with three coming from California and two each from Maryland and Texas.

U.S. U-23 MNT Roster By Position - Detailed Roster

GOALKEEPERS (2): Bill Hamid (D.C. United; Annandale, Va.), Sean Johnson (Chicago Fire; Lilburn, Ga.)

DEFENDERS (6): Perry Kitchen (D.C. United; Indianapolis, Ind.), Ike Opara (San Jose Earthquakes; Durham, N.C.), Kofi Sarkodie (Houston Dynamo; Huber Heights, Ohio), Zarek Valentin (Montreal Impact; Lancaster, Pa.), Jorge Villafaña (Chivas USA; Anaheim, Calif.), Sheanon Williams (Philadelphia Union; Boston, Mass.)

MIDFIELDERS (6): Freddy Adu (Philadelphia Union; Potomac, Md.), Joe Corona (Club Tijuana; Chula Vista, Calif.), Mix Diskerud (Gent; Oslo, Norway), Jared Jeffrey (Mainz; Richardson, Texas), Amobi Okugo (Philadelphia Union; Sacramento, Calif.), Michael Stephens (LA Galaxy; Naperville, Ill.)

FORWARDS (6): Juan Agudelo (New York Red Bulls; Barnegat, N.J.), Terrence Boyd (Borussia Dortmund; Berlin, Germany), Teal Bunbury (Sporting Kansas City; Prior Lake, Minn.), Joe Gyau (Hoffenheim: Silver Spring, Md.), Brek Shea (FC Dallas; Bryan, Texas), Tony Taylor (Estoril Praia, Jacksonville, Fla.)

As a service to our readers, Around the Rings will provide verbatim texts of selected press releases issued by Olympic-related organizations, federations, businesses and sponsors.

These press releases appear as sent to Around the Rings and are not edited for spelling, grammar or punctuation.

20 Years at #1:

Recent Articles

Sustainable Olympic Games: the legacy of the clean Seine and the global inspiration for the mega-events to come

Paris 2024 not only pledged to clean up the iconic river in the French capital, but it also claims to have reduced its carbon footprint to 50 percent with decisions such as not building new stadiums. Georgina Grenón, the Argentinian in charge of the environmental area in the Organizing Committee, told details of how they work on the objective.
Sustainable Olympic Games: the legacy of the clean Seine and the global inspiration for the mega-events to come

Failures in the investigation: The United States reached a million-dollar settlement with 139 of Larry Nassar’s victims

The Department of Justice reported that it will pay them $138.7 million and pointed to the FBI's actions after the first complaints: “They should have been taken seriously from the start.”
Failures in the investigation: The United States reached a million-dollar settlement with 139 of Larry Nassar’s victims

The Beach-Handball in Paris 2024 may have its big chance

Most of the sports that started their Olympic dream in exhibition mode were left alone in that. Others, such as tennis, came back to stay. The reasons why this specialty deserves to have a space similar to that of rugby, in 3x3 and beach volleyball.
The Beach-Handball in Paris 2024 may have its big chance

Novak Djokovic received the Laureus Athlete of the Year Award for the fifth time

The Serbian tennis player, who won the 24th Grand Slam in 2023, repeated the distinction he had received in 2012, 2015, 2016 and 2019. The Spanish soccer player Aitana Bonmatí won among the women and the American gymnast Simone Biles was also awarded as the comeback of the year.
Novak Djokovic received the Laureus Athlete of the Year Award for the fifth time

Garbiñe Muguruza says goodbye to tennis

The former number 1 in the world and winner of two Grand Slam titles announced her retirement from tennis after twelve years of professional career.
Garbiñe Muguruza says goodbye to tennis