England 2 - 0 United States
England 2-0 USA: Terry and Gerrard on target

| Scoring Summary | |
| England | United States |
| John Terry (38) | |
| Steven Gerrard (59) | |
| Match Stats | ||
| England | United States | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 15(9) | 7(5) |
| Fouls | 22 | 19 |
| Corner Kicks | 3 | 5 |
| Offsides | 3 | 2 |
| Time of Possession | 55% | 45% |
| Yellow Cards | 1 | 2 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 5 | 3 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
Wembley Stadium, London, England
Attendance: 71,233 Match Time: 15:05 ET Official(s): Kyros Vassaras (Referee) |
Updated: May 28, 2008, 3:00 AM ET
Seven days too late for Chelsea's liking, John Terry was presented with an opportunity to score and duly obliged.
There were no tears at Wembley tonight but in putting England on the road to
beating the United States at Wembley, Terry exorcised a few demons created by
his shoot-out miss that cost victory for the Londoners in the match that so
crushingly ended in defeat to Manchester United.
Steven Gerrard added a second, in a very impressive introduction to the
left-wing role, to leave the rump of Capello's squad heading off for a goodwill
meeting with Trinidad and Tobago on Sunday in a contented mood, and the Italian
believing improvement is being maintained.
Yet, despite boasting seven men involved in last week's Champions League final,
England enthused no-one until Terry did what he so wishes he could have done in
Moscow a week ago.
Yes, there were moments that caught the eye, most of which involved
man-of-the-match Gerrard, but nothing that had a 70,000 crowd on the edge of
their rain-sodden seats.
The visitors had already survived one lucky escape when Gerrard slotted home
David Beckham's curling free-kick, only for the goal to be ruled out because
England's newest centurion had not waited for the whistle.
When Beckham picked Gerrard out with another free-kick, the midfielder's shot
seemed to be heading into the net until Clint Dempsey got his head to it,
providing Frank Lampard with a chance from the rebound which he promptly
volleyed wide.
Terry at least put a different complexion on proceedings, even if his fourth
goal for his country could hardly make up for his misery at the Luzhniki
Stadium.
It might have got Capello thinking though. With one more potential captain -
probably Gareth Barry - to see in Trinidad on Sunday, this was Terry's
opportunity to salvage a job given to him by McClaren and which he holds with a
passion.
And Terry's goal was a reminder he is capable of leading from the front in a
manner Rio Ferdinand, his central defensive partner and favourite for the job
when it is officially handed out prior to the August 20 meeting with the Czech
Republic, is not.
He did so again against the country which is now his adopted home, and having
ditched him once and regretted it during his days at Real Madrid, Capello is
unlikely to do so again.
Beckham's departure at half-time offered David Bentley some valuable time on
the pitch, although clearly it is going to take a long time for the boo-boys in
the stands to forget his decision to abandon the England Under-21 squad prior to
last summer's European Championships.
He was certainly not close to the touchline when he cushioned a header into
Wayne Rooney's path midway through the half, only for the Manchester United man
to screw his shot wide.
It was Rooney's last chance before Joe Cole made his entrance, yet still
Gerrard stayed on the left.
Maybe, like Terry, Gerrard and England can look to the future with confidence.

