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One last chance for U.S.

PRETORIA, South Africa -- One more game, one last chance to make their reputation.

When the Americans play Algeria at the World Cup today, they'll either live up to all the hype and earn a spot among the final 16 teams -- or fall painfully short of their long-stated goal and lose a watershed opportunity.

"We have a great chance tomorrow night to get a win and advance on to the second round," captain Carlos Bocanegra said Tuesday. "It's important for us because we had that disappointment in '06. It's not really extra motivation, but it's just in the back of our minds. You work so hard and you train for so long for the World Cup, and it can be over so quickly if you don't advance."

A victory or possibly a tie would move the United States into the knockout rounds on a high that will set off midday celebrations back home. Replicate the loss to Ghana that knocked the U.S. out in 2006, and it will start a new round of soul-searching that could cost coach Bob Bradley his job -- not to mention dampening the burgeoning enthusiasm for soccer in America.

Since returning to the World Cup in 1990 after a 40-year absence, the U.S. has alternated first-round elimination (1990, 1998 and 2006) with a second-round appearance at home in 1994 and a trip to the quarterfinals in South Korea in 2002.

This World Cup started with a come-from-behind 1-1 tie against glamorous England. Then the Americans trailed Slovenia by two goals at halftime only to fight back as Landon Donovan and Michael Bradley scored for a 2-2 draw. They appeared to go ahead, but Maurice Edu's 85th-minute goal was disallowed for reasons referee Koman Coulibaly of Mali didn't explain.

The U.S. has never before faced the Desert Foxes, who have yet to score in this tournament following a 1-0 loss to Slovenia and a 0-0 draw against England. Algeria can advance only with a win.

A win would send the U.S. to a second-round matchup this weekend with Germany, Ghana, Serbia or Australia and another big television audience for American soccer. With France knocked out, and England, Germany, defending champion Italy and Spain all uncertain of reaching the knockout stage, the U.S. could find itself in a fairly wide-open tournament if it advances.

Coaches will be paying attention to the England-Slovenia game, which will be played simultaneously in Port Elizabeth. If the English lose, the U.S. would advance with a tie. If both the U.S. and England draw, the Americans reach the second round if they maintain their goal edge over the English, currently 3-1.

It could get thorny if the U.S. and the English tie, and England scores two goals more than the Americans. Then Slovenia would win the group, and a televised drawing of a ball from a bowl would be held in Johannesburg to determine whether the U.S. or England finishes second.

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