Player Spotlight
DeAndre Yedlin's Rapid Rise Through the U.S. Ranks
The 21-year-old right back wasn't supposed to make the United States' 30-man provisional roster, or the final 23-man team, but he has proven to be a favorite weapon of national team coach Jurgen Klinsmann.
BY
Brooke Tunstall
Posted
July 01, 2014
10:20 AM
AT FIRST GLANCE, DeAndre Yedlin seems like an unlikely choice to have emerged as the United States national team’s super-sub at this World Cup.
After all, we’re talking about a 21-year old with less than a year-and-a-half of professional soccer who could be entering his senior year of college. He made the World Cup team with just two caps to his name, and now he is establishing himself as a defender who is a difference maker on offense.
But making the most of opportunities is something the Seattle Sounders speedster has done most of his young career. And it's a big reason why he’ll likely be one of the first players Juergen Klinsmann turns to this afternoon when the U.S. needs a second half spark against Belgium in the Round of 16 match in Salvador.
“He’s a guy who manages to do things before people expect,” said Portland Timbers coach Caleb Porter, who coached Yedlin for two seasons at the University of Akron. “When he got to college, we thought there’d be a transition time but he showed in preseason he was ready and he started right away… At Seattle, I don’t think even in their most optimistic projections did they see him having the impact he’s had right away but he became a starter almost immediately.""And now with the national team, he’s making an impact even with his inexperience.”
It raised eyebrows when Klinsmann named Yedlin to the provisional 30-man roster for the World Cup, and when the Seattle native survived the cuts to earn one of the 23 plane tickets to Brazil, many thought Yedlin would spend the tournament tethered to the bench, soaking up the atmosphere and experience to be applied for future national team appearances.
But with the U.S. tied with Portugal and needing a spark, it was Yedlin, usually a right back but playing in midfield, who entered in the 71st minute as the first American sub. Ten minutes later he overlapped down the right flank, catching up to a Jermaine Jones pass and sending in a cross that was eventually trundled in by Clint Dempsey.
Four days later with the U.S. down a goal against Germany, Yedlin was inserted in the 84th minute and in the dying moments helped create the Americans’ two best scoring chances. In the 93rd minute Yedlin collected ball at midfield and streaked down the right flank and sent in a low cross that culminated in a promising shot by Alejandro Bedoya that was blocked by a desperation save by Phillip Lahm. Seconds later Yedlin again flashed his athleticism, leaping to get his head on the end of a cross and nodding it to Dempsey, whose header went just over the crossbar.
“I think the role Jurgen is using him in is perfect for where he is right now,” said former MLS player Darren Sawatzky, who coached Yedlin since he was 12, first with Washington’s ODP program then the Sounders academy and later the Sounders PDL team. “They are playing to his strengths, let him come in against tired opponents and use that speed to create danger.”
That speed is what has helped Yedlin’s meteoric rise. “It’s world-class,” Porter said. “You hear that term a lot but there aren’t very many players out there with his speed.”
July 01, 2014
10:20 AM
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