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Armour: Donovan snub doesn't diminish accomplishments

U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann gave little explanation for why he left Donovan off his23-man roster.
Landon Donovan of the US Men's National Team practices in Stanford, California on May 14, 2014. In the upcoming World Cup 2014 the US is drawn in Group G, along with Ghana, who reached the quarter-finals in the 2010 edition, Euro 2012 semi-finalists Portugal, and one of the favorites for the trophy Germany. They will kick off their campaign on June 16 against Ghana. AFP PHOTO/JOSH EDELSON (Photo credit should read Josh Edelson/AFP/Getty Images)

Consider the outrage over Landon Donovan'sexclusion from the World Cup roster yet another testament to all he's done for American soccer.

Twelve years after a young Donovan led the U.S. on an improbable run to the quarterfinals of the 2002 World Cup, the Americans have progressed to the point where there's no room on the roster for sentimentality. Not even for the best player the Americans have ever produced, a man who's become as symbolic of U.S. soccer as red, white and blue scarves and fuzzy Uncle Sam hats.

U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann gave little explanation for why he left Donovan off his23-man roster. Klinsman didn't say whether the nagging knee injury that has cost the 32-year-old Donovan an extra gear — and likely would have reduced him to a bench player — made him simply too big a risk, even if he is the Americans' leading scorer.

Instead, Klinsmann simply dropped the roster and ran. His only comments Thursday night came on a video released by U.S. Soccer about 90 minutes after the roster announcement.

"I just see some other players slightly ahead of him," Klinsmann said. "I have to make the decisions, what is good today for this group going into Brazil, and I just think that the other guys right now are a little bit ahead of him."

That left conspiracy theorists to flood the Internet. A classless tweet by Klinsmann's son that appeared to taunt Donovan, and was quickly deleted, didn't help matters.

Yes, Klinsmann and Donovan have had a complicated relationship. Donovan was a free spirit long before he took his sabbatical from the U.S. team and the Los Angeles Galaxy, and that's just not something Klinsmann can understand.

But Klinsmann is practical, if nothing else. He'll put anybody on his roster — and the field — who he thinks will give him a better team. Look back to last summer. Klinsmann gave Donovan the cold shoulder following his four-month break, leaving him off the roster for three World Cup qualifiers and saying Donovan would need to earn his way back onto the team.

US World Cup Team:

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The snub was short-lived. Klinsmann brought the rejuvenated Donovan back for the Gold Cup, and he responded with five goals as the Americans won the title. When the Americans resumed World Cup qualifying in the fall, Donovan was firmly back in the fold. It was his corner kick, in fact, that set up the goal against Mexico that would secure the Americans' spot in Brazil.

But soccer, like every other sport, is cruelly indifferent to legacies, caring only about the here and now. And there have been troubling signs for months that Donovan was not the player he was last summer, let alone four years ago.

Klinsmann left him on the bench for last month's exhibition against Mexico, saying the knee injury had hindered him in practice. Donovan also got off to a slow start with the Galaxy, and has yet to score a goal.

"For me personally I sort of liken it to 2002," Donovan said earlier this week. "In 2006 and 2010, I knew for the most part that, unless I was awful, I was going to make the team. This time is more similar to 2002, where I wasn't sure."

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