OBETZ, Ohio ā Repeatedly, athletes say that most aspects of rivalries, psychological games and other narratives surrounding important contests are manufactured by fans or the media.
But as US national team players train in advance of another World Cup qualifying home match against Mexico in Columbus (Friday, 7:45 pm ET, FS1, Univision), none of them are downplaying the importance of facing El Tri at the intimate stadium thatās become the teamās fortress.
The national team have never lost to Mexico in Columbus, where results have finished 2-0 (popularly known as "dos a cero" to USMNT fans) in each of the five matches since 2001. And while fans in Seattle, Kansas City and other emerging soccer towns clamor to host Mexico in a qualifier of their own, US Soccer shows no indications of leaving MAPFRE Stadium.
āIt should always be here; this is where it belongs,ā goalkeeper Tim Howard said. āThis is USA-Mexico. Weāve finally got that in our back pocket, a place we feel comfortable and feel at home. The temperature is dropping [which is] good for us, and Iām sure they wonāt like that. So this is all great. We love coming to Columbus.ā
Friday will be Howardās third Mexico match in Columbus, and says he isnāt sure whether the building gets into Mexican playersā heads.
āIāve not asked any of them what they think and I donāt think theyād tell me the truth,ā he said. āBut the results, I think, tell us the true story.ā
For Sacha Kljestan, who is on the roster for his first Mexico clash in Columbus since 2009, the MAPFRE Stadium environment is more about a boost for the Yanks.
āI think itās more in our heads [than theirs],ā he said. āWe have a lot of confidence when we come here. We come here knowing weāve won the past four here, weāve shut them out, weāve had good performances, great home support. The weather is always a little chilly, which kind of plays into our hands. So more so than them, for us we just have this huge sense of confidence when we come to Columbus.ā
While tempers often flare in match-ups between the rivals, USMNT players say thereās no ill will toward their opponents.
US defender Omar Gonzalez, who is of Mexican descent and currently plays in Liga MX for Pachuca, said the rivalry is a respectful one.
"I don't hate Mexico, but I don't want to lose against them,ā he said. āI'm a Mexican-American, and I have a lot of family in Mexico. This game is very important for me. So, I don't hate the Mexicans; there is a lot of respect.ā
But that respect doesnāt get in the way of what is almost always a cagey affair, and the players expect a home field advantage they donāt get anywhere else in the country.
āItās not the biggest stadium; itās intimate,ā Gonzalez said. āBut itās loud and people are close to the pitch. Itās going to be great.ā
Howard played in two of the four 2-0 qualifying wins over El Tri at MAPFRE to date, and while he said much of the colorful atmosphere fades into āone big blur,ā one particular quirk of the venue lingers in his mind.
āI think I always remember the sound of the metal bleachers, which a lot of stadiums don't have,ā he said. āIt's kind of special and unique to Columbus and I have no doubt they'll be banged on again this weekend.ā



