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SI.com, Monday, March 30, 2009 4 PM
With injured right back
Steve Cherundolo unavailable for U.S. duty, a familiar face (and ratty mane) has stepped in to fill the void for the U.S. defense: one
Frankie
Hejduk, who even at 34 has outperformed other replacement options like Frank Simek,
Jonathan Spector,
John Thorrington and
Marvell Wynne to
earn starts in both U.S. final round World Cup qualifiers.
SI.com's Greg Lalas calls Hejduk the "master of seizing opportunities," noting how he "provided the only
heartbeat to a flat-lined team and earned himself a move to Bayer Leverkusen" at the 1998 World Cup and "did it again in '02, when he supplanted
David Regis at left
back." And now here we are in 2009, where after missing the 2006 World Cup because of injury, Hejduk is back in the mix, taking advantage of another's absence to make a case for himself as
a part of the USA's South African plans.
While he might not have the same wheels as when he flew up and down the flanks for the Tampa Bay Mutiny, Lalas credits Frankie's
longevity to other strengths, including a "cult of personality that surrounds the dude," a trio of qualities (discipline, perseverance and experience) that Hejduk must've picked up from
his days as a surfer, and last but not least, an "ocean-sized heart."
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