A young United States team was nearing victory in its World Cup return. Then Walker Zimmerman needlessly plowed into Gareth Bale.
Bale converted the resulting penalty kick in the 82nd
minute, giving Wales a 1-1 draw Monday night that left the Americans feeling
frustrated and made their path to the knockout stage more precarious.
“You feel like you have the game and you’re going to win the
game,” midfielder Brenden Aaronson said. “It’s a punch in the face.”
Tim Weah put the Americans ahead in the 36th minute off a
pass from Christian Pulisic, scoring in front a crowd that included his father,
former FIFA Player of the Year and current Liberia President George Weah.
Back in the World Cup after missing the 2018 tournament, the
United States had only to close out the final minutes. But Brennan Johnson made
a throw-in that Aaron Ramsey cut back to Bale, who had his back to the goal
near the penalty spot. Zimmerman's sliding tackle took out Bale's left leg, and
Qatari referee Abdulrahman Al-Jassim pointed to the penalty spot.
“He probably just puts his leg not for the ball but to try
and get in the way of me hitting the ball," Zimmerman said. “So I kind of
went through him and I think I still got the ball. But clever move — I wish I
would have seen him out of the corner my eye.”
Shooting in front of the Red Wall of supporters, Bale sent his
kick past goalkeeper Matt Turner for his 41st goal in 109 international
appearances, salvaging a point for Wales in its first World Cup match since
1958.
“Obviously, a difficult game,” Bale said. “First half was
not how we wanted to play and the United States played really well. We played
quite poorly.”
Next up for the United States is a high-profile matchup
Friday against England, which opened with a 6-2 rout of Iran. Wales faces the
Iranians.
The top two teams advance.
“It think it’s pretty clear — a disappointing result for
us,” Turner said.
Weah, just 22, was part of a new-look American team that is
the tournament's second-youngest.
Yunus Musah, at 19 years, 358 days the youngest American to
start a Cup match, started the move to Weah's goal when he headed the ball to
Josh Sargent at the midfield stripe. Sargent dished off to Pulisic, who burst
up the middle of the field. On his fourth touch Pulisic rolled the ball ahead
to Weah, who timed his run perfectly to break in ahead of Neco Williams.
From near the penalty spot, Weah used the side of his right
foot to poke the ball over the left thigh of sliding goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey
for his fourth goal in 26 international appearances.
“It's a dream come true for every attacker, for every player
to score in a World Cup,” Weah said, "and I did that tonight in front of
my fans, my teammates, my family."
In the 750th international U.S. match, the Americans started
a U.S. Cup record 10 players from European clubs, with only Zimmerman from
Major League Soccer. DeAndre Yedlin, who entered in the 74th minute, was the
only American with previous World Cup experience.
Sargent nearly put the Americans ahead in the 10th minute
when he hit a post with a header from Antonee Robinson’s cross.
After the U.S. dominated the first half with 66% possession,
Wales switched to a three-man attack and had 67% in the first 15 minutes of the
second. Ben Davies’ header in the 64th minute was pushed over the crossbar by a
leaping Turner.
The match was played in the Arabian desert west of Doha at
rebuilt Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, lit in brilliant colors and featuring an
exterior facade meant to replicate undulating sand dunes. The U.S. Soccer
Federation sold about 3,300 tickets, and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken was
on hand in the crowd of 43,418.
“The nerves were there,” Pulisic said. “Now we have to
figure out how to put that together for 90 minutes.”
CARDED
Sergiño Dest, Weston McKennie, Tim Ream and Kellyn Acosta
received yellow cards.
TRAINER'S ROOM
U.S. midfielder Gio Reyna was held out because of what coach
Gregg Berhalter said was tightness without specifying. Berhalter envisioned him
playing against England.