IRENE, South Africa | The Americans returned to the practice field Tuesday, not only to  prepare for their upcoming match with Slovenia, but the new role  they’ve been cast in at this World Cup. Favorites. Yes, that’s  right. The good, ol’ underdog Yanks are favored for a change - and  therein lies the problem. “In all likelihood, if we lose we’re out  of the tournament,” Landon Donovan said. “That’s the reality of the  situation. “A tie means we’re still in the tournament. You have to  be aware of that. That being said, we understand very clearly that if  we win the game, we’ve got a very, very good chance of getting through.  So that will be our focus,” he said. It doesn’t take a genius to  figure out that the Americans don’t want to be in the position of having  only one point through two matches while Slovenia has six and England  may have four. “Going into a game as possible favorites will be  different for us,” defender Jay DeMerit said, “to know you’re under  pressure to get three points or to get a good result instead of saying,  ’Let’s go out and try our best and make sure we work well together and  see what happens.’” Coming off an opening 1-1 draw against the  Three Lions, a victory against Slovenia on Friday would put the U.S. in  prime position to advance going into its Group C finale against Algeria  on June 23. Slovenia beat Algeria 1-0 in its opener. And even  though the U.S. is a 2-1 favorite, according to betcris.com., players  don’t see it as much of an advantage. “They’re going to be a tough  team,” said Clint Dempsey, who scored the tying 1-1 goal against  England in the opener. “They keep the ball well. They have players who  can cause you problems. So we’re just going to have to play our best  game to get something out of it.” There was some new gear at  training in Pretoria, with many players wearing navy ski caps, most  wearing sweat pants and some putting on gloves as a biting 22 mph  southern wind ripped across Pilditch Stadium, where the temperature was  just 46 before the sunset at 5:24 p.m. It will be a different type  of game, too, against Slovenia, which won its opener on Robert Koren’s  79th-minute goal when it bounced in off the arm of goalkeeper Fawzi  Chaouchi. Central midfielders Michael Bradley and Ricardo Clark  were pinned in defensive positions against the English, while Donovan  and Dempsey were pinched in, forcing attacking wingers to go wide. Slovenia,  which qualified by defeating Russia in a home-and-home playoff last  November, likely will rely on counterattacks. For that reason, there has  been speculation U.S. coach Bob Bradley might consider starting Jose  Torres in place of Clark in an effort in improve possession. Ever  since the draw last December, the focus was on the opener. “Everyone  was expecting England to wipe the floor with us, basically,” backup  goalkeeper Marcus Hahnemann said, That, of course, didn’t happen.  In the most-watched U.S. national team game in 16 years — viewed by  12.96 million on U.S. English-language television — Dempsey’s 40th  minute goal, a 25-yard shot that bounced twice and rolled through the  arms of goalkeeper Robert Green, offset Steven Gerrard’s fourth-minute  strike for the English. While the United States is ranked 14th in  the world, Slovenia is 25th. Still, Eastern European defenses have been  difficult for the Americans to infiltrate. Czechoslovakia won 5-1 at the  1990 World Cup, Romania won 1-0 four years later and Yugoslavia by the  same score in 1998, Even after the Americans started with a win  against Portugal and a draw with host South Korea in 2002, Poland beat  the U.S. 3-1. Four years ago, the United States opened with a 3-0 loss  to the Czech Republic. DeMerit expects Slovenia to be “very  organized, very willing to work together to try to make our day  difficult. “Teams like that can be very dangerous because you  don’t have the major superstars that you can really get yourself up for,  to say, ’Well, if I stop him and I do that job, then I’ll have  success.’ It’s a collective when it comes to teams like that,” he said. Players  understand the stakes. “When you’re playing England, you  understand that they’re one of the best teams in the world and you don’t  sort of just roll the ball out just to see who’s better, because they  have better players,” Donovan said. “This game, we’ll probably be a  little more aggressive and assertive.” NOTES: DeMerit didn’t see  Dempsey’s goal. “I was probably grabbing somebody’s shirt at that time,”  he said. … Hahnemann, who starts for Wolverhampton, received some  playful threats before the England game. “My landlord was saying if I  save any penalties, he’s kicking me out, raise the rent, you name it,”  he said. … Donovan on the television audience for the England game:  “We’re getting somewhere, but candidly that should be the standard.”
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