8 Results for ricardo clark

Bradley is a film star

Luke Cyphers

MIAMI -- Whatever happens Saturday night in Honduras, the U.S. is certain about one thing: It won't be surprised. Part of that is a familiarity with ...

ESPN Insider Blog Entry | Conversation | October 09, 2009

Honduras' unusual home-field advantage

Luke Cyphers

MIAMI -- The U.S. national team says it isn't concerned about the political situation in Honduras affecting their World Cup qualifier in San Pedro Sul...

ESPN Insider Blog Entry | Conversation | October 08, 2009

Dempsey injury creates opportunity for Holden

Luke Cyphers

...unfazed. "I'd assume the midfield that played in the last game (Landon Donovan, Michael Bradley, Ricardo Clark) will probably play, and then there's a decision to make on Clint's spot, whether...

ESPN Insider Blog Entry | Conversation | October 07, 2009

Clark finds the range against Trinidad & Tobago

Luke Cyphers

Midfielder Ricardo Clark had been disappointed not to play in the U.S. team's previous game. He made up for it and then some against T &T, writes Luke Cyphers.

Story | Conversation | September 09, 2009

DeMerit likely out for U.S.

Luke Cyphers

...Mexico, alongside Landon Donovan and Michael Bradley in the American 4-4-2. That would leave Ricardo Clark, who is known for his defensive play but not his possession skills, out of the midfield...

ESPN Insider Blog Entry | Conversation | September 03, 2009

U.S. team rides newfound confidence into Sunday's final

Luke Cyphers

After beating Spain, the U.S. team heads into the final against Brazil confident it can produce another upset, writes Luke Cyphers.

Story | Conversation | June 26, 2009

Intel: Anatomy of an upset

Luke Cyphers, ESPN The Magazine

The United States' ability to squeeze off the middle and force Xavi, David Villa and Fernando Torres wide frustrated Spain's top scorers. And the stats help explain why.

ESPN Insider Story | Conversation | June 24, 2009

Destination 2010

Luke Cyphers, ESPN The Magazine

After 15 months, 14 games and 27,927 miles, America's quest to play in its sixth straight World Cup hinged on one week in September. The Magazine was there.

Story | Conversation | September 30, 2009