Soccer·Recap

Copa America: U.S. finishes 4th after hard-fought loss to Colombia

Carlos Bacca beat goalkeeper Tim Howard in the 31st minute to assist Colombia in taking third place at the Copa America tournament with a 1-0 win over the U.S. on Saturday.

'I think they deserve a huge, huge complement,' U.S. coach says of his team

Colombia's Carlos Bacca celebrates his first-half goal against the U.S. to help his country finish in third Saturday at the 2016 Copa America tournament. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

Carlos Bacca beat goalkeeper Tim Howard by sliding to poke in a headed cross in the 31st minute, and the U.S. finished fourth in the Copa America with a 1-0 defeat against Colombia on Saturday.

After losing to Argentina 4-0 in the semifinals, the 31st-ranked U.S. was beaten by No. 3 Colombia for the second time in the 16-nation tournament. But the Americans gave a far better performance this time around.

"We didn't get played off the pitch [Saturday]," U.S. defender Geoff Cameron said. "If anything, I thought we dominated the game. I thought we had a lot of chances that we just didn't put in."

The U.S. outshot Colombia 10-9 and had 49 per cent possession. Bobby Wood came closest to scoring for the U.S. when he hit a post in the 62nd, one minute after Colombia's Juan Cuadrado hit the underside of the crossbar.

The U.S. matched its previous best finish in the tournament when it lost to Colombia in the 1995 fourth-place game in Uruguay.

After the Americans lost to Jamaica in the semifinals of last year's CONCACAF Gold Cup and struggled in the semifinal round of qualifying for the 2018 World Cup, U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann was hoping his team would rebound in the Copa.

"After six weeks being on the road to pull up a performance like that in a meaningless third-place game in a certain way," Klinsmann said, "I think they deserve a huge, huge complement."

'A positive performance'

Colombia, which never has won the Copa America, finished third for fourth time but first since 1995. Argentina plays Chile for the title on Sunday in East Rutherford, N.J.

Howard said the U.S. team didn't allow itself to get pushed around like it did against Argentina.

"We want to get in people's faces," he said. "One of our strengths is physicality. We weren't happy with that after the Argentina game, so there was a response [Saturday]. I thought that was good."

Both teams finished a man short after American defender Michael Orozco and Colombian defender Santiago Arias were ejected for a confrontation in the third minute of second-half stoppage time. Orozco, who also got a red card against Nigeria in the 2008 Olympics, was fouled by Arias and responded with a push to the chest of Arias, who fell over in front of Uruguayan referee Daniel Fedorczuk.

Orozco is suspended for the U.S.'s World Cup qualifier at St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Sept. 2.

"I thought we played well," Howard said. "We certainly could have won the game. So a positive performance, and certainly the last four or five weeks have been a step in the right direction."

Colombia scored after Cuadrado cut the ball to James Rodriguez just outside the penalty area. Arias made a run to get by Bedoya and Rodriguez lofted a pass to Arias, who jumped at the edge of the six-yard box and headed the ball on a bounce across Howard's goal to Bacca. The forward slid ahead of Yedlin to nudge the ball in for his 13th international goal and his second of the tournament.

Clint Dempsey, who led the U.S. with three goals in the tournament, nearly scored on a free kick in the 51st minute. Colombia goalkeeper David Ospina dived left and lifted his right arm to tip Dempsey's effort wide.

"It was just one of those days," Yedlin said. "We got into the box, just nothing was falling for us. So you take the positives from this game and there were certainly a lot of them. I thought for how aggressive we were being offensively, we actually defended pretty well.

"I thought we pressed pretty well and I thought overall it was a good team performance."