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An intriguing foursome that we'll see in the U.S. national camp

I'm eager to see how Red Bulls center back Tim Ream (right) does over 20 or workouts next month at the Home Depot Center. The U.S. camp begins Jan. 4.

Bob Bradley named 24 who would dare on Tuesday. These are two dozen promising up-and-comers who will get their chance to impress the U.S. boss over 20 or workouts in sunny So Cal in January – assuming the sun does come out, and that the Home Depot Center training fields don’t erode away in the Pacific in all this Cali-crazy weather.

I wrote more extensively about the just-released roster at SI.com. Today's piece includes a sentence or two about all 24 members. Pretty much all of the words are spelled right, so check it out.

Meanwhile, here is a foursome of players that I’m particularly intrigued with:

  • Six months ago Chicago Fire goalkeeper Sean Johnson was an unknown backup to an unknown starter. So, suffice to say, he was stuck pretty far down the list. But he got his shot and, at 21, opened eyes with big and brave and sure performance in a nationally televised match against Los Angeles. What really stuck out that night for me was his presence. He never looked out of his element, managing a big night with aplomb.

Star-divide

 

  • If you follow MLS, you know about steady center back Tim Ream. And he’s no longer a stranger to the national team, having played almost 70 minutes in the 1-0 win last month over South Africa, a match that capped the U.S. year. Ream looked a wee wobbly in the first half but settled down and seemed the same trusty presence we saw all of his highly successful rookie year at Red Bull Arena. You got the feeling that he is a player on the cusp, and that he needs only a little more seasoning at the international level to really flourish. I’d say that he has already lapped Chad Marshall, who remains a good domestic center back but may have plateaued in terms of how high he can climb internationally.
  • Talented striker Justin Braun scored nine times this year for Chivas USA in 2010, which may be as impressive a total as anyone in MLS employment could muster last year. That’s because Chivas USA was bad. I mean, bad like a sitcom that gets cancelled after six eps. (We’re lookin’ at you Cavemen.) You could have listed Braun as one of the “surprise names” on the 2010 January camp. “Hmmm. Look who’s in camp. That’s interesting.” Now he’s had another year of MLS to learn from, and he’s got the confidence of last year’s camp to work from. If Braun can keep climbing the ladder, he can be the target man they’ll need in some situations going forward.
  • I suspect that attacker Chris Wondolowski’s memorable run to the 2010 MLS Golden Boot was lightning in a bottle type stuff – and that it will be difficult to repeat. I’d wager a delicious cup of granny’s special eggnog that he can’t hit the 18-goal mark again. And I don’t see him as a guy who can make a difference at the international level. That said, here’s his chance to put me in my place. I suspect he would be putting a lot of people in their place, as I don’t think I’m alone in my opinion.

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This camp is like the minor league all star game

the day before the MLB all star game. Some of these guys will be future stars. Others will flame out.

Wondo will probably not score 18 goals again next season but he could bag a lot again if the Quakes don’t pick up more forwards to help shoulder the goal scoring load. Ryan Johnson can’t shoot worth a damn but he and Convey are excellent assists guys… if no one else steps up their goal scoring then these two will keep feeding Wondo, who is an elite finisher in MLS.

Wondo led the reserve league in scoring 3 years in a row so this was not a fluke. He was just buried on the Houston bench behind Ching, DeRo, et. al. in 06 and 07.

Win or lose, we will always be here for you.

by johnjahafanclub on Dec 22, 2010 7:55 PM EST reply actions  

Let's give some of the European league guys a chance, hey?

No Spector or Lichaj (who need some reps)? No lower league guys like Marcus Tracy? Always appeared to me that going to play in the lower Euro leagues out of college or wherever (rather than MLS) has been a black mark against selection for a trial with the national teams. So… are we petty (punishing kids for not playing in the US for a monopolistic soccer cartel), or lazy (not keeping tabs on good young Americans in the lower tier European leagues)? This has hurt us with dual citizenship kids in the past, and is a pretty dumb pattern.

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by Londonjoe on Dec 26, 2010 7:28 AM EST reply actions  

It’s not about denying those players a chance, it is about not pulling them away from their teams when they are in the middle of a season.

Speaking of which, did anybody see Licaj play for Aston Villa against Tottenham on Boxing Day? He did a way better job of shutting down Bale than Maicon did this year, and he had a shot hit the woodwork at the end of the game. Based on that performance I’d expect to see him getting more playing time in the near future.

Los Angeles is like Manchester. There is a red team that wins championships and a blue team that doesn't.

by oc phil on Dec 28, 2010 10:06 AM EST up reply actions  

Euro players

The January camp is always about emerging MLS talent since the Euro players are in season, which is fine with me. I’d rather see Lichaj starting for Aston than bopping around a January camp.

by Irrlicht on Dec 28, 2010 9:19 AM EST reply actions  

I would have liked to see Geoff Cameron in there. Any reason/thoughts on why he wasn’t called up?

"We don't care who finishes second." -- Celtic's Peter Lowrie

by Martek on Dec 28, 2010 5:59 PM EST reply actions  

I’m always wary of my own talent analysis of Fire players because of my built in bias.

It has been a pleasure learning I’m 100% right about Sean Johnson. Chicago doesn’t have much at the moment but luckily goaltending is not something we need to worry about in 2011.

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by Tweed Thornton on Jan 3, 2011 11:39 AM EST reply actions  

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