[clari.sports.misc] Uruguay, Costa Rica meet for Marlboro title

clarinews@clarinet.com (JEFF SHAIN, UPI Sports Writer) (02/04/90)

	MIAMI (UPI) -- Costa Rica and Uruguay, two teams whose hard-charging
tactics create havoc for opponents, can boost their World Cup standing
Sunday when they meet in the final of the Marlboro Cup of Miami.
	In the consolation game, the United States plays Colombia.
	Uruguay and Costa Rica won by 2-0 scores in Friday night's opening
round, each using a high-pressure style that created turnovers in
midfield and good scoring opportunities.
	Though the tournament is nothing more than a tune-up leading to
June's World Cup, a championship would give Sunday's winner tangible
evidence it should not be taken too lightly in Italy.
	Uruguay is the prohibitive favorite, having already beaten a
tougher opponent in Colombia. A comfortable margin of victory could show
the world Uruguay has better than an outside chance at reaching the
quarterfinals in Italy.
	``We don't like to speculate what might happen,'' Uruguay Coach
Oscar Washington Tabarez said. ``We like to decide it on the field.''
	However, a victory would show the Uruguayan team to be deeper than
thought. Uruguay is playing without striker Ruben Sosa and midfielder
Enzo Francescoli, both fulfilling commitments to European clubs.
	``(Thursday) many people were taking pity on us for having to play
reserves,'' Tabarez said. ``(Friday) we showed we are superior.''
	The Uruguayans played their usual hard-tackling game against
Colombia, a match that featured three yellow cards and one ejection.
	But the strategy paid off. Uruguay wore down the Colombians and
created several good scoring opportunities in the second half. Uruguay
took 11 shots after halftime to Colombia's one.
	``We have to start somewhere,'' said Colombia goalkeeper Rene
Higuita, whose mistake on a ball in the air helped Uruguay score its
first goal in the 78th minute. ``This is a start. Now we have to go from
here and find success in the World Cup.''
	Costa Rica could greatly enhance its image with a victory. Despite
winning the qualifying group of Central and North America and the
Caribbean, oddsmakers list Costa Rica the third-longest shot in the
World Cup field, ahead of only the United Arab Emirates and the United
States.
	The Costa Ricans used superior speed to win many loose balls Friday
night. They also exploited a disjointed U.S. defense and found
themselves with a winger alone near the penalty area for an uncontested
shot.
	``We knew we were going to play well and dominate,'' said
midfielder Hernan Medford, who set up the first Costa Rican goal and
created several other chances.
	The United States started four players whose professional
commitments kept them from attending training camp last month in San
Diego.
	``We've got to have people play together longer,'' U.S. Coach Bob
Gansler said. ``It lacked cohesiveness. We've got to get more time
together.''