"We just worked really hard," Ramos said. "That was the only thing that we knew for sure we could do. We didn't have any international experience. Most of us played in college. We knew that the college game was about working hard, outworking your opponent. We had that. We really fought for every ball from the first minute to the last minute, and that made it difficult on Central American teams. They weren't used to that."
The USA had only one match left in the 1989 Concacaf Championship – an away fixture at Trinidad & Tobago on Nov. 19.
Before flying to Port of Spain, the team had a training camp in Cocoa Beach, Fla., for about a week, playing another island team that had similar characteristics to Trinidad: Bermuda. The USA won, 2-1, as subs John Doyle and Eichmann scored.
Bliss remembered how the tension was building during camp.
"I remember multiple guys getting into fist fights at the training field over whatever tension, stuff you wouldn't think would lead to something," he said. "Just a regular charge along the sideline, the guy goes down. It's normal and all of a sudden it turned into a fist fight. I think the tension got to everybody."
Well before the USA got close to Hasely Crawford Stadium, the team had seen red - at the Port of Spain airport - as 20,000 citizens wearing the colors of the Soca Warriors greeted the team.
"Trinidad was something,” Murray remembered. “The pilot comes on before [we] land. 'Now, I don't know if you guys know this, but you've got 20,000 people here waiting for you.' We were like, Really? You can't make it up. People were five, 10-deep all the way to the hotel. They were a very jovial, festive crowd. That was one thing to take away. As intimidating as Trinidad was -- and it was the most intimidating atmosphere I've ever been involved in - the actual spirit of the people should be commended forever because that's what real fans should look like."
It wasn't going to be easy. The U.S. had not won a World Cup qualifier on the road -- not a neutral site -- in more than 21 years, when the Americans defeated Bermuda in Hamilton, 2-0, on Nov. 10, 1968, and Trinidad wasn't about to roll over and die.
In fact, the country of 1.2 million was soccer-mad for Italia '90, only needing a draw against the USA to punch their own World Cup ticket, and the government dedicated every day of the preceding week to its National Team. On Sunday, Nov. 12, exactly a week before the game, citizens were asked to wear red -- its national colors -- in a show of support for its soccer team. Another day was set aside for prayer for the team. The day after the game, Monday, Nov. 20, was declared a national holiday, an audacious move by the government for a team that had not yet qualified.
Calypso ballads also were composed, singing the praises of coach Everald Cummings (who once played for the New York Cosmos), of the team, and even of the 88th-minute goal that Trinidad scored to secure that 1-1 tie back on May 13 in the U.S. "When we get them in the stadium, we're going to beat them like bongos," said one of the catchy songs composed by a musician called Super Blue.
The U.S. stayed at the Hilton, situated on the top of a mountain, in which the first floor was on top and the 24th floor was at the bottom. Not surprisingly, the players' rooms were street level and the locals played music and made noise for a good portion of the night.
"I think we eventually got to sleep," Meola said. "I can't say we would have gotten a good night's sleep either way, given the fact we were getting ready to play this game and the atmosphere we walked into coming off that airplane and knowing what the job was. I'm not sure we would have slept all that well anyway. It was very strategic that the entire country knew what hotel we were staying in the night before the game. There was no doubt in my mind that that was advertised in some newspaper."
There was plenty of pressure on the Americans. “If we didn't qualify in ‘90, there would have been no soccer for a couple of years before 94,” Windischmann said. “It would have been a mess.
“You have to win. That's crazy that you've got to win, you can't tie. At the same time against Costa Rica, we had to tie and we couldn't lose. So, we felt very confident going into the Trinidad game.”