No. 1, they would have to have US Citizenship, and getting that without having a parent who is American is pretty tough. Especially if we are trying to get a guy who didn't pan out with his country.<div>
</div><div>No. 2, we have to make sure he isn't capped (playing an actual full-fledged FIFA event, not a friendly) with that country.<div>
</div><div>No. 3, the process is slow to be naturalized (took seven years for my wife), so if they decided that they can't play for Brazil/Spain/Etc. but could play for us, they might 26-29 before they could even suit up unless they get a special exemption.</div></div><div>
</div><div>No. 4, it hurts the chances to build some experience in our player pool if we just go out and get a guy to fill in a spot.</div><div>
</div><div>No. 5, we actually have done pretty well identifying guys who are dual-citizens, and have had some pretty good success getting them into our player pool. We lost Rossi, but have done well in other areas (Jermaine Jones, Timmy Chandler, Alejandro Bedoya, Freddy Adu, Juan Aguedelo, Jozy Altidore, Oguchi Onyewu, Mixx Diskerud, David Yelldell, Benny Feilhaber [actually born in Brazil, lol]). We have some good young dual-citizenship kids overseas as well, especially in Germany.</div>