Howard states case for defence

08 June 2010 09:41
Tim Howard has branded the World Cup ball "terrible" but admits the USA defence must learn to cope with it if they are to deny England.[LNB] The USA back four looked insecure virtually everytime the ball came into their box during Saturday's friendly international against Australia in Johannesburg despite winning 3-1.[LNB]With the likes of Aaron Lennon and Shaun Wright-Phillips able to send in testing crosses, Howard knows his side have to improve in that department for the Rustenburg meeting this weekend.[LNB]The Everton goalkeeper said: "The ball is terrible. You are going to hear that next week and next month but it is what it is.[LNB]"We are trying to get used to it, trying to read an unreadable situation and hopefully it doesn't come back and bite us.[LNB]"But I think you are going to see some crazy things with it.[LNB]"It dips, dives, moves all over. If you hit five balls with the same striking motion, you wouldn't get the same result.[LNB]"It is hard, it is hard for defenders to read, for keepers it is not easy.[LNB]"We don't make the rules with the balls. It is tough and up to us to get adjusted and adapt as best we can for the weekend."[LNB]USA playmaker Landon Donovan echoed Howard's sentiments and said: "I think the majority of the problems were due to the flight of the ball.[LNB]"I think a lot of times the ball doesn't fly true and it puts your defenders under a lot of pressure.[LNB]"Even balls that are comfortable coming in to your defenders, heading it is challenging at times and with crosses it is very difficult.[LNB]"So we are going to have to do some work this week, just judging the ball better, so we are more comfortable against England."

Source: Team_Talk