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Bruce Arena, again at the helm of the U.S. national soccer team, speaks during an interview in New York on Nov. 29, 2016.Bebeto Matthews/The Associated Press

Bruce Arena opened a binder to a page with 48 names, his depth chart for the U.S. soccer team.

Back in charge for the first time in a decade, he views the U.S. team's state as urgent following losses in the first two games of the final round of World Cup qualifying and already has plans.

"We're fighting for our lives starting March 24. We're behind the eight ball," he said. "We've got to close the gap, and we get six points in the next two games, the gap is closed."

During an hour-long session with reporters Tuesday, Arena said comments he made in 2013 about foreign-born players on the national team were aimed at the U.S. player development system, not a criticism of German-Americans who made up almost a quarter of the 2014 World Cup roster under Jurgen Klinsmann.

"I was told today, somebody, they referenced me in Spain as the Donald Trump of soccer," Arena said. "I think that I'm at fault obviously for those statements, but I would like to clear that up. It's absolutely ridiculous. It's no way in the way I think."

I think the phrase foreign nationals is a very poor term, whoever uses it, and I will not use it. I will not use dual citizens. They're national team players," he explained. "The comment regarding foreign-born players, at the time I believe was referencing player development. And I was simply saying that if our senior national team program consists of a large minority of players, large majority of players that were born elsewhere, where are we going with our development? It has nothing to do with who should be playing on the national team, who should not."

Now 65-years-old and a member of the U.S. National Soccer Hall of Fame, Arena coached the U.S. from 1998-2006 and is the winningest coach in team history. He led the Americans to the 2002 World Cup quarterfinals, their best finish since the first tournament in 1930, then was fired after a first-round elimination in 2006. He took over from Klinsmann last week following a 2-1 home loss to Mexico and a 4-0 rout at Costa Rica.

"Mexico certainly came out and took control of the game early, and I don't think that should happen at home," Arena said. "I think the game in Costa Rica was not good from start to finish. In general, I think the theme in both games [has been]: Our back line played poorly, and I don't think they're poor players. I think they can play better, so we've got to get them organized, get the right players in the right spots and get them playing better as a unit."

Arena plans to open training camp in Carson, Calif., around Jan. 8 and follow with a pair of exhibitions with a roster mostly from MLS. Qualifying competition resumes March 24 with a home game against Honduras, followed four days later by a match at Panama.

Arena says goalkeepers Tim Howard and Brad Guzan need competition from the rest of the player pool, 31-year-old midfielder Benny Feilhaber likely will get an opportunity to return after playing just three games under Klinsmann and 35-year-old midfielder Jermaine Jones "certainly still has something to offer."

He views captain Michael Bradley as a defensive midfielder rather than a playmaker, a role Klinsmann encouraged Bradley to assume.

Settling on the centre of the field is one of Arena's keys.

"We need a better passer in the midfield than we have. We need to have a player in the attacking half of the field that can deliver the right ball at the right time," he said. "Who that is remains to be seen. There's a couple of domestic players that are very good at that that we'll look at in camp in January, and that to me is an area that we've got to identify. And that will help establish how we play. Do we play with one striker, two strikers? Do we play with three? How do we define our midfield shape based on that."

Arena's office at the StubHub Center moves only about 30 feet from his previous job as coach of the LA Galaxy, and his parking spot remains the same. As he takes over, he wants to change the U.S.'s mentality and consistency.

"Too many peaks and valleys," he said, moving his hands up and down. "We've got to get them to level out their performance a little bit more."

A former German star player and coach, Klinsmann criticized the level of play in MLS. Arena said it has come a long way.

"MLS isn't on the level of the EPL or the Bundesliga or La Liga, Serie A. We know that," he said. "But right after that, we're in that area below that, and it will get better."

Arena doesn't tweet and isn't that interested in statistics.

"I'm not a person that digs deep into analytics because I don't think the sport of soccer is an analytic sport," he said. "I think baseball clearly is. I think football can be, obviously, basketball a little bit more. I think soccer is a hard one."

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