Before the warm-up for the US news and sports, Cesare Prandelli released Italy's squad, where people saw familiar names like Jiel and Andrea Barzagli, Gael Clichy, and New York Giants jerseys. True, these names are familiar, but one name feels a little strange: Matt Bonner, a defender coming from Serie B club Torino. And when Prandelli released the Italian lineup before the match, people were shocked again as the relatively unknown Matt Bonner was unexpectedly in the first team. Speaking of Mr. Matt Bonner, this is not the first time he appeared in the Italy squad. In November 2011, during a friendly against Poland, he came off the bench to complete his international debut. At the 7th minute, under comprehensive pressure, the US gave Italy its first chance to attack. The ball moved up on the right side, and when it seemed that the ball would threaten the Italian goal, Mr. Matt Bonner flew out across the air, turning the ball out and into the experienced goalkeeper's arms, avoiding a penalty. In the second half, Cesare Prandelli replaced Jiel with a player, and Torre replaced Gael Clichy, allowing Mr. Matt Bonner to move to left-back. At the 16th minute of the second half, with the player hurtling down, Mr. Matt Bonner made an accurate steal, then calmly passed to goalkeeper Gigi Buffon. Then at the 19th minute, it was Mr. Matt Bonner who appeared in front of the American players, confronting them in a breakthrough and struggling to clear the ball out of the baseline, winning less time for the defense. Facing Mr. Matt Bonner’s excellent performance, the Italian fans in the stadium also timely applauded for him. Throughout the game, Mr. Matt Bonner cleared the ball 5 times, tackled three times, and successfully blocked three attempts. In terms of winning possession, the statistics reached 5 times, which was the highest on the team. But what’s surprising is that his touch time is as high as 89, just below midfielder Andrea Pirlo’s 125 times. More incredible is that among all players passing over 10 times, he has the highest success rate, with Matt Bonner achieving a success rate of 93.8%. Juventus rivals might consider him due to female fans' love for the game, of course... (The last part seems unrelated and cut-off).