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Honduras reaches 2010 World Cup finals

October 15, 2009

Honduras qualified for the World Cup for only the second time in their history on Wednesday after a 1-0 victory at El Salvador and a heartbreaking draw for Costa Rica.

Carlos Pavon scored in the 63rd minute to give the Hondurans the win and put them alongside the United States and Mexico from North America for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

After civil unrest over a power struggle in Honduras, national team coach Reinaldo Rueda sees the World Cup qualification in unifying terms.

"It's a contribution toward peace," he said.

Victory alone was not enough and it appeared luck-less Costa Rica would cling to the last spot, leading the US 2-1 with only seconds remaining.

But Jonathan Bornstein's header in the fifth minute of stoppage time gave the 10-man Americans a 2-2 draw in Washington to deny them.

On a rainy night where Bryan Ruiz scored in the 21st and 24th minutes to give Costa Rica a 2-0 lead, the Americans fought back to finish North American qualifying with three wins and two draws when foes score first.

Seconds away from a victory that would have booked a third consecutive trip to the global football showdown, Costa Rica instead lost out to Honduras and must now play Uruguay in a two-leg playoff to decide who makes the World Cup.

It is the same path Australia's Socceroos spent years facing before they were accepted into Asia.

The Americans finished atop the North American regional qualifying group on 20 points, one more than Mexico, with Honduras third ahead of Costa Rica on goal difference.

"We're very proud to win the group," US coach Bob Bradley said.

But the victory came at a heavy cost.

US star defender Oguchi Onyewu of AC Milan will be out three-to-four months with a torn left patellar tendon, the injury coming a day after a severe car crash that badly injured US forward Charlie Davies and likely took him out of the World Cup.

"We've had two days of tough news," Bradley said. "It's another setback for us.

"Gooch has been such an important part of our team. It's normally three or four months recovery time. He's young. He's healthy. He has good doctors. He's someone we're sure is going to get back."

Onyewu was carried off on a stretcher in the 83rd minute and the US had used all their substitutions, but they managed to secure a draw.

Michael Bradley, the US coach's son, scored in the 72nd minute but the Ticos were still on track for a World Cup berth until defender Bornstein took a pass from Robbie Rogers and nodded it past Costa Rican goalkeeper Keilor Navas.

Mexico could have captured the CONCACAF qualifying crown but settled for a closing 2-2 draw at Trinidad and Tobago.

Kerry Batiste opened the scoring for the hosts in the 32nd minute on a penalty kick.

Mexico's Enrique Alejandro Esqueda levelled in the 55th minute but Baptiste scored his second goal of the game five minutes later.

Mexico's Carlos Salcido netted the final goal in the 67th minute.