If he's back, our center mid depth is crazy deep. Especially going forward with the logical development of Torres, Bradley and Edu. Benny, Sacha and Freddy need to keep stepping their game up. hoeness has to be full of it. is donovan really not able to crack bayern's reserve squad? he's maybe not world class but come on/ He is. I watched every televised game while they had Lando and all but a few of their entire season. As someone who has watched dozens and dozens of Landon Donovan games I can say they were using him wrong. If what Gerland meant was he'd never play him in the reserve team as an out and out forward, then I actually agree with him, and that is how Klinsmann was playing him. Landon's problem is that he has no natural position. He's a tweener. It works out fine when he's the most talented guy on the squad because the manager can build around him and let him do what he wants. On a team where he's is just an equal cog in the wheel, he's lost. I think in the long run, developing in the US has hurt him greatly. If he came up in another country, they would have found a role for him early on. Either as a winger or a goal-poaching creative mid. In the US, he always just got stuck where they needed and let him run buck wild doing whatever he wanted simply because he was the most talented player on the pitch. We all know you have to be patient with Landon. He isn't the kind of guy who you can bring off the bench, plug him in where you need him and expect him to be a difference maker. That's the role he needed to play to make it work at Bayern, if he wasn't doomed to failure from the beginning which I believe he was. It was just a bad fit in a bad situation. Klinsmann was bad at Bayern. When his style worked, it was brilliant. When it didn't, he couldn't adjust. The great managers adjust. When you can't find a spot for Lukas Podolski, you're doing something wrong. Landon could have worked at Bayern, but not in the role they were asking and certainly not playing like he does in MLS or for the Nats. Unfortunately (or fortunately depending on what you think of Donovan's heart) I don't think he can adapt at this point and there is no one outside of the US that is going to want to build it's team around a three-time European flame out. What he lacks is the same thing that Clint Dempsey has in spades. Heart. The heart to, when you aren't getting used how you think you should, grind through it. Clint was MLS Maradona. He was brilliant and easily the most entertaining player in the league. Obviously, the stuff he pulled in MLS wasn't going to fly on a lower table Premiership side that needed to avoid relegation at all costs. Instead of not adapting, he changed. Now he's a great two-way player and a vital part of that squad. Clint doesn't have Landon's tools. He never has, never will, but because of what he does have inside, he has achieved more than Landon. I don't know if that's a case of two different personalities or if it's an indictment on how we develop players in the US. Here's the poster boy for the system who's growth was, I believe, been [expletive] by a system that allowed him to dictate how he wanted to play simply because of his athleticism vs the poster boy for the outlier ignored by the system who had to develop a fire and work ethic to get where he is today.