Los 40 USA
Sign in to commentAPP
spainSPAINchileCHILEcolombiaCOLOMBIAusaUSAmexicoMEXICOlatin usaLATIN USAamericaAMERICA

USA 2-1 ECUADOR

USA dominate then struggle, but overcome Ecuador 2-1

USA beat Ecuador 2-1, with Clint Dempsey scoring his 52nd international goal and setting up the second to make it 2-0. Valencia was sent off. Arroyo made it 2-1.

Seattle
USA dominate then struggle, but overcome Ecuador 2-1
AP

Host nation USA through to the semi-finals

Clint Dempsey was the hero for the United States as they made it through to the semi-finals of the Copa América Centenario on Thursday in a stormy 2-1 win over Ecuador that saw both sides finish down to 10 men.

Dempsey scored his third goal in as many games for Jurgen Klinsmann's side at CenturyLink Field, nabbing the opener after 22 minutes before setting up a second for Los Angeles Galaxy forward Gyasi Zardes in the 65th minute.

Dempsey (L) powers home his header.
Full screen
Dempsey (L) powers home his header.JASON REDMONDAFP

Ecuador pulled a goal back

Michael Arroyo got one goal back for Ecuador in the 74th minute to set up a frantic finale, but the US held on and will now face either Argentina or Venezuela in the semi-finals in Houston next week.

Dempsey named man of the match 

Man of the match Dempsey said the hosts were determined to extend there stay in the tournament beyond the semis.

"Hopefully we can keep going, we're in the semi-finals of a major tournament so we're happy," Dempsey said.

"This is what you dream about as a kid. We're going to keep wishing, we're going to give everything we can, we're going to try and get to the final, we want to win it.

"You don't get many opportunities to go all the way in a major tournament and that's what we're trying to do."

USA's Jones will miss semi-final

But the victory came at a cost for Klinsmann's side, as key midfielder Jermaine Jones was sent off early in the second half to earn a suspension which will see him miss the semi-final.

France-based midfielder Alejandro Bedoya and Hamburg striker Bobby Wood also earned yellow cards that will see them suspended for the last four.

Klinsmann: Sending off was an "absolute joke"

Klinsmann was furious at the manner of Jones' dismissal, which he branded "an absolute joke."

"I was right there -- the fourth official made the decision, not the referee, he didn't see it," Klinsmann said. "He followed the decision of the fourth official. It's a disgrace, a decision like that."

Man Utd's Valencia sent off

For Ecuador, Manchester United's Antonio Valencia was dismissed after picking up two yellow cards before triggering the melee which led to Jones' dismissal.

How it USA 2-1 Ecuador unfolded

A cagey start saw both sides begin tentatively before Jones and Michael Bradley steadily imposed themselves in midfield as the US started to gain the upper hand.

Wood's speed troubled the Ecuador defense on 17 minutes, when he darted onto a low pass only to prod his finish well wide of the advancing Alexander Dominguez.

Yet five minutes later the US took the lead with a beautifully worked goal that began when Dempsey gathered in midfield and released Wood, who fed Jones near the edge of the area.

The midfielder picked out Dempsey with a superb cross and the former Tottenham and Fulham stalwart duly headed home.

Five minutes later Dempsey was threatening again, this time his shot well-saved by Dominguez.

Bedoya almost doubled the US lead three minutes before the break when played through Dempsey, yet Dominguez saved smartly down to his left.

The South Americans had a strong shout for a penalty when Enner Valencia was bundled over by Stoke City's Geoff Cameron, and the West Ham striker also went close with a glancing header in the 48th minute.

Three minutes later the simmering nature of the contest boiled over, when Antonio Valencia, booked for a sly kick on John Brooks in the first half, picked up a second yellow for clattering into Bedoya.

In the skirmish that followed Jermaine Jones appeared to flick Valencia in the face with a hand and earned a straight red from Colombian referee Wilmar Roldan.

With both sides down to 10 the game opened up dramatically but it was to be the US who struck first.

Dempsey latched onto a long ball forward and showed great determination to cut back for Zardes, who had the easiest of tap-ins at the far post for 2-0.

Ecuador responded furiously, pulling a goal back through Michael Arroyo's thunderous low strike in the 74th minute.

Enner Valencia had hearts in American mouths two minutes later when he headed wide from close range.

Ecuador laid siege to the US goal and in a frantic finish saw manager Gustavo Quinteros given a red card from the touchline.