U.S.-Honduras Preview

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jurgencarlos.jpgDo you think U.S. Captain Carlos Bocanegra has heard this German philosopher before? (AP Photo).

The friendly kicks off at 3 p.m. on Fox Soccer and Univision.

AP Sports Writer Tim Reynolds has the preview:

MIAMI (AP) - Jurgen Klinsmann made his mark in soccer by being one of the most prolific goal scorers the game has ever seen.

The U.S. could use his scoring knack right about now.

Since Klinsmann took over as coach of the U.S. national team this summer, the Americans have one goal in three matches - and no wins yet, either, settling for two losses
and a tie. They get a chance to change all of that in Miami on Saturday night against
Honduras, a team that reached the 2010 World Cup and may very well be an opponent for the U.S. on the way through qualifying for the 2014 tournament.

"The players at the end of the day, they make the calls," Klinsmann said. "They decide on the field if they want to shoot it, if they want to dribble it, if they want to pass. They will
make the difference. And we want to just guide them to a situation where they take their own careers in their own hands and be comfortable about it and confident."

Such is the process Klinsmann has talked about almost nonstop since taking over for Bob
Bradley and getting tasked with finding a way for the Americans to reach that proverbial next level.

He'll have most of the best American options available to play in this two-game stretch of
friendlies, first in Miami, then on Tuesday at Harrison, N.J. against Ecuador. The one glaring exception to that is Landon Donovan, who will miss the matches with a strained right quadriceps.

Still, there will be plenty of veterans ready to go, including captain Carlos Bocanegra (who
enters the weekend four shy of 100 international appearances for his career), and even
one-time national-team regular DaMarcus Beasley - who hasn't appeared for the national team since June 23, 2010 against Algeria, the World Cup match best remembered for
Donovan's spectacular late-game winner off a rebound in front of the net.

"Looking to hopefully get my feet wet with the national team again," Beasley said. "It's been a while since I put on a jersey. Hopefully I get a chance this weekend."

He's earned his chance by reinventing himself, happily going to Mexico and competing for a team where almost no one speaks any English. Beasley isn't exactly fluent in Spanish, though he's trying to learn.

"It shows you his character, his willingness to fight through different environments and
through difficult moments," Klinsmann said. "I think you see a far more mature DaMarcus
Beasley now than you probably saw a couple years ago, which is natural."

Beasley's presence in camp this week is one way to illustrate Klinsmann's plan. In short, he's looking at everyone and everything, older guys and younger upstarts, established players and ones with very few caps. Klinsmann is getting a first look at two-time World
Cup player Oguchi Onyewu this week, the highly touted Brek Shea is getting plenty of attention and German-born Danny Williams is getting a feel of how a U.S. national team camp works for the first time.

Out of that mix, eventually the core of a new team will emerge, the one he' ll take into World Cup qualifying.

"It's a group that kind of develops its own character over the next 2½ years," Klinsmann said. "It will be challenged in different ways, especially in the World Cup qualifiers. Every cycle of the national team, no matter what national team you're talking about, is always going through this path of redefining its leaders, redefining it's chemistry, and this is now the process we're going through the next months."

His players are going through a process as well - the one where they're still trying to come
to grips with the fact that one of the game's absolute giants is now their coach.

Klinsmann scored 47 goals for Germany in his career, and well over 200 goals for professional clubs like Inter Milan, Bayern Munich and Tottenham. On the field in training sessions, even at 47 years old and wearing a baseball cap pulled low to shield his face
from the sun, Klinsmann still looks like he could play.

U.S. goalie Tim Howard acknowledged that it's still a bit strange to see Klinsmann in charge.

"A little bit," Howard said, nodding. "The one thing that we get that some don't have is the
opportunity to realize how down-to-earth he is. For sure, we look at pictures of him winning
the World Cup, pictures of him on the sideline in 2006, all those crazy, crazy soccer moments that he was involved in, all these massive clubs. But once you get to speak to him, he's just so cool, so regular."

And with a win on Saturday, the Americans would get to see yet another side of Klinsmann - the celebratory one.

"It's a group of players that has a tremendous working attitude and a willingness to learn and a willingness to improve," Klinsmann said. "And so we're step-by-step trying to build
something that really prepares us well.


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About 100 Percent Soccer


Sportswriter Nick Green has written the 100 Percent Soccer column since 2005 for the Daily News, Daily Breeze and other Los Angeles area newspapers. The blog of the same name began in 2007. A native of England, he began writing about soccer in the mid-1980s and in 2000 permanently exchanged a seat in the stands for one in the press box. He lives six miles from Carson's Home Depot Center, home of the Los Angeles Galaxy, Chivas USA and the training headquarters for U.S. Soccer and is married to a long-suffering soccer widow. Join Nick on FaceBook and follow him on Twitter.

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