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Brad Guzan hopes to keep top U.S. spot over Tim Howard, Nick Rimando

Brad Guzan hopes United States coaches have an easy decision in picking a replacement for starting goalkeeper Tim Howard -- and that it will be a difficult choice to hand the No. 1 role back to Howard when he returns from a yearlong sabbatical.

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The Aston Villa keeper will compete with Nick Rimando of Real Salt Lake to fill in for Howard, who asked for a break from the national team after a tremendous performance at the World Cup this summer.

That created an opening for Guzan, who is the favorite to inherit the top job.

Coach Jurgen Klinsmann says it is a two-man tryout for the job, and both potential replacements played a half in last month's friendly a, 1-0 win at the Czech Republic. But Guzan is 30 -- five years younger than Rimando -- and has been playing in the Premier League against tougher competition than Rimando has in Major League Soccer.

"Ultimately, you try to make it tough for the manager come selection time, and make it to the last 11," Guzan said on Monday as the U.S. practiced at Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "You have to seize the moment, because in soccer you don't know when the next chance it going to come."

And that means Guzan isn't just trying to be a fill-in; he's trying to replace Howard permanently.

"That's what it's about: Making it tough on the manager, to not only select me but to keep me on the field," Guzan said. "When you get the chance, you don't want to give it up."

Guzan played for Chivas USA in MLS from 2005-08 before going to England, spending four seasons as the Villans' backup and the last three as the starter. Howard, 35 and in his ninth season as Everton's starter, had spoken with him, and Guzan was not surprised by the decision to take a break.

"Obviously, he's getting older and at some point there's going to be a change," Guzan said. "Whether it's sooner or later, that's going to be up to him."

An NCAA champion at UCLA, Rimando started for the U.S. when it won the 2013 Gold Cup and was the third keeper at the World Cup this summer. He is also the MLS career leader in shutouts.

"We've been fortunate with a great line of goalkeepers in this country, and I'm just trying to step in," Guzan said. "Goalkeepers are unique in that only one goalkeeper can play every game. There's only one of you."

The U.S. are preparing for two friendlies in the coming week, beginning against Ecuador in East Hartford, Connecticut, before hosting Honduras in Boca Raton, Florida.

"It creates an opportunity," U.S. goalkeeping coach Chris Woods said. "Both guys have got to look at it and say, 'I want to be the one who takes that opportunity.'"

Woods said there have been no promises made to Howard that he will get his job back.

"I think Tim realizes he's got to be playing at the level he showed at the World Cup," the former England goalkeeper said. "At the same time, he understands the situation: If the other goalkeepers come in, it is going to be a competition. It depends on how the others perform as well."

The Ecuador game at the University of Connecticut's Rentschler Field will also mark the international finale for Landon Donovan, a national team mainstay who was left off the roster for Brazil by Klinsmann. The Americans reached the round of 16 before losing to Belgium.

"It's exciting," Guzan said. "It's a chance to kind of show Landon how grateful we are as a country and a team for his contributions."

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.