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United States 0 - 3 Brazil

Brazil cruises to easy win over U.S.


GettyImages
Group hug: Brazil celebrate Maicon's goal
Scoring Summary
United States Brazil
 Felipe Melo (6)
 Robinho (19)
 Maicon (61)
Match Stats
United States Brazil
Shots (on Goal) 5(0) 14(8)
Fouls 9 8
Corner Kicks 3 6
Offsides 1 0
Time of Possession 0% 0%
Yellow Cards 1 0
Red Cards 1 0
Saves 5 0
Match Information
Stadium: Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria
Attendance:
Match Time: 15:00 UK
Official(s):
Massimo Busacca (Referee)

Updated: June 18, 2009, 8:00 AM UK

PRETORIA, South Africa -- If this was a dress rehearsal for next year's World Cup, the United States showed it's far from ready.

The U.S. was hammered for the second time in a four-day span at the Confederations Cup, with Brazil outplaying the Americans 3-0 Thursday.

Felipe Melo scored off Maicon's free kick in the seventh minute and Robinho made it 2-0 in the 20th, completing a counterattack that began when DaMarcus Beasley and Landon Donovan failed to combine on a short corner kick. Maicon added the third goal in the 62nd.

"They're always going to be the better team, right?" U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard said. "It's just for us about going out and trying to give a good showing of ourselves because the best team doesn't always win. Today it did. We were overpowered, and sometimes you just come up against Goliath and David doesn't win."

Brazil outshot the Americans 23-9, including 11-2 for shots on goal.

And the United States (0-2) finished a man short for the second straight game. Sacha Kljestan was ejected by Swiss referee Massimo Busacca in the 57th minute for a rough foul on Ramires.

"He played the ball off before I got there and I got him in the foot," Kljestan said. "I don't know if it was a red or not, but the end state is that I let my team down today."

Combined with an opening 3-1 loss to Italy on Monday, the defeat put the United States on the verge of first-round elimination. While the U.S. plays Egypt on Sunday, the Americans would have no chance to advance if Italy gained at least a tie against the Egyptians later Thursday.

Missing injured defenders Carlos Bocanegra, Steve Cherundolo and Frankie Hejduk, the U.S. has been shaky in the back. Melo's goal marked the third time in four matches the United States fell behind within the first seven minutes.

"It was a very nervous, tentative start to the game," U.S. coach Bob Bradley said. "The early goal in a set piece put us in a difficult situation right from the start."

The U.S. has never overcome a deficit against Brazil, which improved to 13-1 in head-to-head meetings and has outscored the United States 26-8. The lone American victory was a 1-0 upset at the 1998 CONCACAF Gold Cup, the championship of North and Central America and the Caribbean.

Brazil (2-0), the defending Confederations Cup champion and a five-time World Cup winner, opened with a 4-3 victory over Egypt and is virtually assured a berth in the semifinals going into its final first-round match, against Italy on Sunday.

"For us it's important to win all the time, for Brazil to win all the time," said Brazil's Kaka, the 2007 FIFA player of the year. "Spain is in a good moment, Italy is the actual World Cup winner, so we have a good challenge here."

Melo beat defender Jonathan Spector for the first goal, taking Maicon's 25-yard free kick following a foul by Michael Bradley and heading it past Howard from about 5 yards.

The second goal came on an end-to-end effort after Beasley fumbled Donovan's short corner kick, the ball rolling past him. With Beasley slapping the ground in frustration, Andres Santos cleared to Kaka, who touched the ball to Ramires. He dribbled 50 yards upfield before dishing off to Robinho, who celebrated by faking an interview into a microphone at the advertising board to the right of the goal.

Maicon got the third goal off passes from Kaka and Ramires, with the last pass bouncing off defender Jonathan Bornstein right by the goal.

The closest the U.S. came to scoring was when second-half substitutes Benny Feilhaber and Conor Casey hit the crossbar in the final 10 minutes.

"It hasn't been great, these two games for us," Howard said. "One of the things I always say is that if we can take this into the Gold Cup and World Cup qualifying and learn from some of the lessons and not be so naive in certain instances, it could be a success. But that's only if you apply it, not just if we talk about it."

 
Thursday, June 18, 2009
United States 0
Brazil 3 FT
Egypt 1
Italy 0 FT