EAST HARTFORD, Conn. — Jurgen Klinsmann is searching for a few good men. Nearly two dozen of them, actually.
When the World Cup rolls around in Brazil next year, he hopes to have 22 interchangeable parts on the U.S. national team.
In a 1-0 victory over Costa Rica on Tuesday night that gave the Americans their group title in the CONCACAF Gold Cup, Klinsmann's willingness to reserve judgment — as well as his seemingly inexhaustible faith in most of his players — paid off again.
Brek Shea, who didn't expect to get off the bench after he struggled in an earlier Gold Cup appearance, scored his first international goal off a feed from Landon Donovan in the 82nd minute. Seconds before that, fourth-string goalkeeper Sean Johnson made a brilliant save off a corner kick and Joe Corona cleared the ball, setting up the winning sequence.
Three youngsters and the wily veteran Donovan stepped up at the perfect time.
"It's good giving them a taste of these kind of battles," Klinsmann said of using multiple lineups. "We'll keep on building this and giving them opportunities whenever possible.
"I am happy for them, they deserve these opportunities. We have a lot of young players coming through the ranks. All these players, we need to carefully build them and support them when things go wrong. Eventually, it will pay off."
Klinsmann is seeking to make his personnel decisions for Brazil 2014 as difficult as possible by developing unprecedented depth in the U.S. program. Already, his team has set a national mark with eight straight victories as it heads to Baltimore on Sunday for the knockout rounds.