Bob Bradley isn't going anywhere.
Bob Bradley isn't going anywhere.
Landon Donovan says Major League Soccer must spend in order to keep its top young talent.
For those thinking the United States was near a breakthrough at the World Cup, Brazil's young, new-look team showed that the Americans still aren't close to catching up with soccer's elite.
Manchester United coach Alex Ferguson is ready to give Major League Soccer its due.
They started scattering Sunday to the United States and Europe, never to come together as a group again.
Over and over, everything seemed to go against them.
The pattern is hard to miss: The United States falls behind by a goal or two, then tries to scramble back.
Sixty years removed and 4,449 miles from a huge World Cup upset in Brazil, the U.S. and England finally meet again Saturday in a game that matters, a rematch in this year's World Cup opener for both teams.
Charlie Davies, the forward who was convinced he could recover from a shattering car crash in time for the World Cup, fell short of making the 30-man preliminary U.S. roster for the tournament.
Now that Charlie Davies won't be playing for the U.S. soccer team in South Africa, coach Bob Bradley must figure out his starting forwards.
U.S. coach Bob Bradley is uncertain whether Charlie Davis will recover enough from severe injuries sustained in a car crash last fall to earn an invitation for the Americans' pre-World Cup training camp next month.
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