CHICAGO — Brek Shea sure knows how to make an entrance. Just  42 seconds after coming into the game as a substitute Sunday, Shea  pounced after Landon Donovan whiffed a shot and poked the ball into the  net. His goal in the 69th minute gave the United States a 1-0 victory  over Panama and the CONCACAF Gold Cup title. It is the fifth Gold Cup  title for the Americans, but their first since 2007. It also is the  first international title as a coach for Jurgen Klinsmann, who won the  1990 World Cup and 1996 European Championship with Germany. “It doesn’t matter who scored today,” Shea said. “We won.” The U.S. is doing a lot of that lately. This  was the 11th straight victory for the Americans, four more than their  previous record, and they likely will leapfrog Mexico as the best team  from the North and Central America and Caribbean region when the next  FIFA rankings come out Aug. 8. When the final whistle sounded, the  Americans on the field began celebrating while the rest of the team  raced off the bench. Several players jumped up and down, and hugs and  high-fives were exchanged. Klinsmann, who watched the game from a luxury  box after being suspended for his tirade over the officiating in the  semifinal, quickly made his way down to the field, pumping his fists in  the air as he walked. “They wanted to send out a signal that they are the best group in CONCACAF, and they are,” Klinsmann said. “For today.” But  their performance in this tournament is likely to stay with the  Americans for a while. At least until the next round of World Cup  qualifying in September. Not only did they outscore opponents 20-4 in  the tournament — no other team had more than 11 goals — but they showed  they are deeper than they’ve ever been, with one young player after  another stepping up. And one veteran, too. Despite his big  whiff, Donovan was selected the tournament MVP. He finished with five  goals and seven assists, a particularly impressive performance  considering it followed a four-month sabbatical over the winter that  cost him his place on the national team. “In terms of just having fun, it’s up there,” Donovan said. “I’m just enjoying being part of it, I really am.” Though  Klinsmann picks his roster based on form, not reputation, he  acknowledged it would be almost impossible to leave Donovan off the  roster for the next round of qualifying. “He deserves every compliment for this tournament,” Klinsmann said. The  only disappointment for the Americans was the loss of Stuart Holden  with another right knee injury. Holden sprained his knee early in the  first half, and while he will have further tests, Klinsmann said after  the game that “it’s not looking good.” “We are very, very sad for  him,” Klinsmann said. “We are very concerned about Stuey’s situation. It  looks like a very serious knee injury.” While most expected a  Mexico-US final, Panama had other ideas, upsetting El Tri twice on the  strength of its stingy defense. Panama was just as dogged against the  Americans early, crowding Donovan and Eddie Johnson and not giving the  U.S. any space. But rather than taking wild shots or trying to force things, the Americans stayed patient. “At times it may have been a little slow or been going back and forth, but we stuck to the game plan,” Besler said. And  as the game went on, the Americans began to break Panama down. They  finished with three shots on goal and another eight that were off target  — six in the second half alone. Their best chance came in the 56th  minute, DaMarcus Beasley chipped a ball into Donovan, who was in front  of the goal at the near post. Donovan got his head on the ball, but not  at the angle he wanted and it flew wide of the net. As the crowd  groaned, Donovan threw back his head and Beasley swatted the red flag in  the corner. “We were all hopeful, we all wanted to win,” Panama  coach Julio Dely Valdez said. “But we all go away feeling we gave it our  all. I said I wanted to walk away from the Gold Cup feeling good, and I  do.” Shea replaced Joe Corona in the 68th minute, just as the  Americans were pressing forward again. Alejandro Bedoya got the ball on  his left foot and crossed to Donovan, who took a mighty swing — and  missed. But it was enough to throw goalkeeper Jaime Pendeo off, and when  the ball rolled past Panama’s Roberto Chen and on toward the net, Shea  was ready. Parked inches from the goal line, Shea stuck out his left  foot and tapped the ball into the net for his second international goal. “I was there just to put it away,” he said. Asked if it was the quickest goal he’d ever had or the closest, Shea replied, “Easiest.” The  Americans had a chance to double the lead in the 84th minute when Shea  fed a wide-open Eddie Johnson 2 yards from the goal. But Johnson  couldn’t finish it, sending the ball flying over the cross bar. But it didn’t matter as Panama never threatened. “I  think they were rewarded today for the fantastic Gold Cup they played,”  Klinsmann said. “They put all their energy in that they had. They  should be very, very proud of themselves.”
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