Friday, December 5, 2025

USMNT at the World Cup Draw

Americans Receive Favorable Draw in Group D

The United States was shown its opponents at Friday's 2026 FIFA World Cup ceremony in Washington, D.C., learning they will face Australia, Paraguay, and a European playoff qualifier in Group D.

Currently ranked No. 14 globally, the Americans appear well-positioned to advance from a group many consider manageable. Australia, ranked 26th, has qualified for six consecutive World Cups but never advanced beyond the Round of 16. Paraguay, ranked 39th, returns to the tournament for the first time since reaching the 2010 quarterfinals. The final opponent will emerge from a March playoff between Turkey, Romania, Slovakia, or Kosovo.

The draw took place at the Kennedy Center,  where sports legends Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky, Aaron Judge, and Shaquille O'Neal participated in selecting the groups. At the same time, musical performances by Andrea Bocelli, Robbie Williams, and Lauryn Hill added to the spectacle, prolonging it. 

For the USMNT, expectations are sky-high. Under head coach Mauricio Pochettino, who was hired following a disappointing Copa América exit, anything less than advancing from Group D would be considered a significant disappointment on home soil. The Americans will open their campaign against Paraguay on June 12 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, then face Australia on June 19 in Seattle and conclude group play on June 25 back in Inglewood.

The expanded 48-team format means the top two finishers from each group, plus eight third-place teams, will advance to the knockout rounds. With the United States hosting the majority of matches, including all games from the quarterfinals onward, the pressure is on Pochettino's squad to deliver a memorable performance that can elevate soccer's profile in America and finally break through against non-CONCACAF opposition.

American Duo in Gladbach's Victory

Reyna and Scally Feature as Gladbach Secure One-Goal Win

Borussia Mönchengladbach secured a crucial 1-0 victory over bottom-placed Mainz on Friday, with USMNT players Joe Scally and Giovanni Reyna both featuring in the Matchday 13 opener. The match's decisive moment came in the 58th minute when Haris Tabaković's header deflected off Mainz defender Danny da Costa and looped into the net for an unfortunate own goal. It was Da Costa's first own goal in 212 Bundesliga appearances, proving the difference in a tightly contested affair.

Scally delivered a solid 90-minute performance at center back, showcasing his defensive reliability with eight clearances and four tackles while winning 80% of his ground duels. The 22-year-old American was heavily involved, recording 78 touches and completing five passes into the final third. He also drew three fouls as Mainz struggled to break down Gladbach's organized defense.

Reyna played 69 minutes in an attacking midfield role, demonstrating technical quality with a perfect dribbling record (2/2) and an 85% pass completion rate. The 23-year-old created one chance and completed all of his crosses. He also contributed defensively with two tackles and an interception, winning five of six ground duels before being substituted.

The first half proved cagey, with Gladbach coming closest when Jens Castrop's effort was cleared off the line. They thought they'd scored from the resulting corner, but VAR spotted a handball that negated another own goal. Mainz's best opportunity fell to debutant Fabio Moreno Fell, who struck both the crossbar and post in quick succession, though the play was ruled offside.

After Gladbach's breakthrough, Mainz pressed for an equalizer, with Nelson Weiper missing several quality chances. However, the visitors' defense, anchored by Scally, held firm to secure three points. The victory lifted Gladbach to ninth place, while Mainz remained rooted to the bottom with their winless league run extending to nine matches.

Americans Take Center Stage in the Bundesliga

Tillman Versus Banks as Leverkusen Visit Struggling Augsburg

When Bayer Leverkusen travels to the WWK Arena this Saturday, the spotlight will shine on two young American talents navigating vastly different circumstances in the Bundesliga.

For Leverkusen's Malik Tillman, momentum continues to build following a challenging adaptation period at his new club. The 23-year-old midfielder has rediscovered the form that justified his significant transfer fee, recently netting a goal in the victory at Wolfsburg. After dealing with injuries and the swift departure of the manager who recruited him, Tillman is finally demonstrating his quality. While his brother Timothy represented the USMNT during the recent international window, Malik used the break to rest in Germany—a decision that appears to have served him well. His recent performances have shown increasing confidence and influence within Kasper Hjulmand's system.

Standing in Tillman's path is Augsburg's towering teenage defender, Noahkai Banks, one of American soccer's most intriguing emerging talents. The 18-year-old has earned seven consecutive Bundesliga starts, anchoring Augsburg's backline with a physical presence and technical sophistication that belies his age and limited top-flight experience. At 6-foot-4, Banks combines imposing stature with surprising composure on the ball. His strongest showing came in the recent victory over Hamburg, where he demonstrated the defensive qualities that could make him a solution to the USMNT's mounting center-back crisis, with Cameron Carter-Vickers sidelined until May.

The contrasting trajectories of their respective clubs frame Saturday's encounter. Augsburg dismissed head coach Sandro Wagner after enduring five defeats in six matches, turning to interim boss Manuel Baum for their final three fixtures before the winter break. The hosts share the Bundesliga's joint-worst defensive record, having conceded 27 goals across 12 matches, with four of their last five losses coming without scoring.

Leverkusen, meanwhile, is surging. Hjulmand's squad has won five of their last six across all competitions, including impressive triumphs over Manchester City in the Champions League and Borussia Dortmund in the DFB-Pokal. Currently sitting fourth with 23 points, they arrive as overwhelming favorites against 14th-placed Augsburg.

Dempsey Sunk Liverpool to Set American Record

On This Day in 2011, Dempsey's Late Strike Breaks Liverpool Hearts and Makes American History at Craven Cottage

The late consolation at Newcastle had proven to be just that – a consolation. In the weeks that followed, Fulham's season continued to drift in troubling directions. Martin Jol's experimental blend of youth and experience wasn't gelling, and by early December, the Cottagers found themselves languishing in 15th place, just two points above the relegation zone. What had begun with such European promise in August had devolved into a grim domestic reality: just two home wins in nine Premier League matches, a meager 15 goals scored across 13 league games, and the growing sense that Jol's revolution might cost Fulham their top-flight status.

For Clint Dempsey, the individual form that had tormented Dnipro for two goals in August remained intact, even as his team struggled. He had found the net against QPR in that anomalous 6-0 thrashing and struck again at Wigan, but those moments of brilliance stood isolated against a backdrop of draws and defeats. During the November international break, he had added to his U.S. tally with a header in a foggy 3-2 victory over Slovenia in Ljubljana, moving him level with Joe-Max Moore for fourth on the American national team's all-time scoring list. Yet returning to Craven Cottage meant returning to uncertainty, where even the experienced heads of 34-year-old Danny Murphy and 31-year-old John Arne Riise couldn't provide consistent answers to Fulham's offensive struggles.

Liverpool arrived on that cold December 5 evening riding an 11-match unbeaten streak and hunting a club record seventh consecutive away victory. Kenny Dalglish's side had banked more points on the road than at Anfield, and with the quick feet of Luis Suárez, the physicality of Andy Carroll, and the bite of Craig Bellamy, they looked capable of extending both runs. What the Merseysiders didn't anticipate was a match that would turn on controversy, a goalkeeper's error, and the predatory instincts of an American striker chasing history.

The game meandered through its opening stages like the Thames flowing past Craven Cottage, both sides feeling each other out on a freezing night. Liverpool enjoyed the better of possession, their attacking trio probing Fulham's veteran defense. Tempers flared early in the second half when Dempsey lost his composure after a challenge from Bellamy. The American pushed his face alarmingly close to the Welshman's, a dangerous provocation that could have earned him a red card. Referee Kevin Friend brought the pair together for what might charitably be called peace talks, booking both players but allowing Dempsey to remain on the pitch – a decision that would prove pivotal.

The match's defining moment arrived in the 72nd minute, though not through the brilliance anyone expected. Jay Spearing, Liverpool's young midfielder filling in for the injured Lucas Leiva, went in hard on Mousa Dembélé. The challenge was committed, Spearing winning the ball cleanly with his right foot, but his momentum carried him forward, studs raised, catching the Fulham midfielder in the follow-through. Friend reached for his red card without hesitation. The Liverpool contingent erupted in protest, Bellamy leading the charge, arguing that Spearing's tackle – aggressive but arguably not malicious – merited at most a yellow card.

The sending-off transformed Craven Cottage. What had been a tight, tense affair suddenly opened up as Fulham sensed opportunity. They poured forward toward the Hammersmith End with newfound urgency. Liverpool, meanwhile, refused to retreat into their shell. Stewart Downing bent a strike onto Fulham's post, and Charlie Adam repeatedly drove forward, trying to drag his 10 men level through sheer will.

Then came the 85th minute, and with it, the kind of error that haunts goalkeepers through sleepless nights. Murphy, drifting down the left channel, cut inside Glen Johnson and unleashed a speculative effort from distance. It was hardly unstoppable—the kind of shot Reina had dealt with countless times in his Liverpool career. But this time, inexplicably, the Spanish keeper's hands failed him. The ball squirmed free, spilling directly into the path of Dempsey, who had positioned himself exactly where a natural goalscorer should be. From close range, the American couldn't miss. He tapped home, wheeling away in celebration as Craven Cottage erupted.

The goal meant more than three points. With his 37th Premier League strike, Dempsey had surpassed Brian McBride to become the most prolific American goalscorer in English top-flight history. McBride, a Fulham legend who had captained the Cottagers and embodied what Americans could achieve in the Premier League, had set a standard that seemed untouchable. Now his former teammate had eclipsed it, writing another chapter in the story of American players conquering English football's highest level.

Liverpool threw everything forward in the dying minutes, desperate to salvage something from their evening. Adam charged upfield repeatedly, and Schwarzer was forced into a late scramble to repel a final bombardment. Andrew Johnson nearly sealed it on the counter but fired wide. When Friend's whistle finally sounded, Jol thrust his arms skyward while Dalglish stood stone-faced on the touchline, lamenting the marginal decisions that had gone against his side—Suárez's disallowed goal that replays showed was onside, Philippe Senderos escaping a second yellow card for hauling down Carroll, and Adam potentially denied a penalty.

For Fulham, the victory provided more than just breathing room in the table, lifting them to 13th and six points clear of danger. It offered validation of Jol's faith in his experienced core. The Cottagers would ride this momentum into the Christmas period, Dempsey adding another header against Bolton twelve days later before equalizing in the West London derby against Chelsea on Boxing Day.

As December unfolded and Fulham's season found steadier footing, Dempsey's winner against Liverpool stood as the pivotal moment—the night when individual brilliance, controversy, and a goalkeeper's mistake combined to make history. One tap-in from five yards might not have possessed the technical magnificence of some goals. Still, it carried the weight of legacy, moving Dempsey past an American icon and reminding everyone at Craven Cottage why he remained the player they looked to when all seemed uncertain.

Moore's Four-Goal Game

On This Day in 1993, Four Goals From an Unlikely Source Couldn't Mask the Deeper Questions About American Readiness

The week after Fullerton had provided temporary relief—eight goals against the Cayman Islands on November 14, the most in American soccer history since 1885, a deluge that washed away months of finishing frustration in a single afternoon. Dominic Kinnear and Joe-Max Moore had each scored twice. Mark Chung added two more. The scoreline felt like vindication, proof that the Americans could finish when given space to operate. But the opposition—a Caribbean nation playing its first match against the United States, missing its best players, overmatched from the opening whistle—made the performance impossible to evaluate. It was goal-scoring therapy, not preparation.

The mathematics had improved marginally: 8-11-12 (WDL) after the Jamaica win, 9-11-12 after the Cayman Islands. But the pattern remained unchanged. Against organized defenses willing to concede possession and pack numbers behind the ball, the Americans struggled to create quality chances. Against overmatched opponents who couldn't maintain defensive shape, they could score freely. The World Cup would feature neither scenario exclusively. It would demand the ability to break down teams that would sit deep and force the issue. The composure to withstand pressure from teams that would attack with technical quality was something the Cayman Islands couldn't imagine.

By December, two matches remained before the calendar turned. El Salvador would arrive at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on December 5, presenting another opponent more interested in survival than competition. Then came Germany at Stanford Stadium on December 18—the real test, the defending World Cup champions arriving to deliver the lesson the Americans desperately needed before roster decisions hardened into World Cup reality.

The El Salvador match unfolded exactly as the coaching staff expected and secretly feared. The visitors fielded a makeshift squad featuring just two players from their World Cup qualifying team, filling the rest of the roster with under-21 players who lacked the international experience to trouble organized opponents. Before 7,618 spectators, the Americans controlled possession completely, created chances with maddening regularity, and finished with clinical efficiency that had been absent against legitimate competition.

Moore, a 5-foot-8 midfielder being deployed at center forward for just his third international start, dismantled El Salvador's loose defensive shape with four goals—the first American to accomplish that feat since Archie Stark scored four times against Canada in 1925. Moore's first two came in the opening half, capitalizing on space that simply wouldn't exist against competent defenders. His positioning was intelligent, his finishing assured, but the opportunities themselves revealed more about El Salvador's disorganization than American attacking sophistication. "I had a lot of opportunities in the box today," Moore acknowledged afterward, the understatement capturing both his performance and its limited significance. "I'm just so happy we could score seven goals. This should give us a boost going into our game against Germany."

The boost felt hollow even as it materialized. Kinnear added two more goals, continuing his recent scoring form. Hugo Perez—born in El Salvador, now representing the country that had granted him opportunity—scored once against his homeland, the personal narrative more compelling than the tactical insight. The final tally reached 7-0, the Americans registering 27 shots to El Salvador's solitary effort on goal. The statistics documented dominance without revealing readiness. "I am proud with the score and nothing more," Bora Milutinovic admitted, his candor cutting through any temptation to celebrate. "We do not play a good game."

The coach understood the trap these mismatches created. The team desperately needed to solve its finishing crisis, but scoring seven against El Salvador's under-21 squad provided no evidence they could break down the Swiss at the Silverdome or the Romanians at the Rose Bowl. The European-based players who might elevate the attack—Roy Wegerle, Earnie Stewart, Eric Wynalda—remained with their clubs, training at levels these domestic exhibitions couldn't replicate. The Americans were refining a formula without access to their best ingredients.

One genuine positive emerged from the December afternoon: Marcelo Balboa returned. The veteran sweeper, who had suffered a catastrophic knee injury on April 17 and wasn't expected to recover until sometime in 1994, entered in the 61st minute. His mere presence on the field represented a triumph over medical projections, as his 76th international appearance tied him with Tony Meola for second on the all-time American list. "It felt fine," Balboa said of his reconstructed knee. "I had butterflies, but it was fun. Great."

The butterflies mattered more than the scoreline. With Fernando Clavijo and Cle Kooiman still recovering from their own knee surgeries, with Paul Caligiuri and Peter Vermes sidelined, Balboa's return stabilized a defensive corps that had been improvised by necessity. If the Americans were going to advance from their World Cup group, they needed Balboa's experience and positioning. His return timeline, accelerated beyond reasonable expectation, provided the coaching staff one fewer crisis to manage.

The record improved to 10-11-12, a symmetry that captured American soccer's position: balanced precariously between competence and mediocrity, capable of neither sustained success nor complete collapse. Two blowout victories did not answer the essential questions about finishing against organized opponents. The injury crisis had been partially resolved, but the European-based players remained unavailable. Time was running out, and the final test of 1993 would reveal exactly how unprepared the Americans actually were.

Germany arrived at Stanford Stadium on December 18 with the defending World Cup champions determined to erase recent disappointing results against Brazil and Argentina, and they delivered the physical lesson the Americans needed. Before 52,397 spectators, Stefan Kuntz grounded Jeff Agoos with an elbow in the opening minutes, establishing terms the Americans rarely experienced in domestic exhibitions, and their legs accumulated bruises that told stories statistics couldn't capture. The Americans held through grit and German inefficiency, trailing just 1-0 through 78 minutes before two German corner kicks produced two headed goals—the set-piece vulnerability that tactical adjustments couldn't eliminate—and a late breakaway completed the 3-0 defeat. "You should see our legs," Alexi Lalas said afterward, his voice mixing admiration with resignation. "If this is what they do in a friendly game, it's tenfold in the World Cup. They were kicking us all over the field. That's why they're the best in the world."

The day after the Stanford Stadium match, the World Cup draw convened in Las Vegas, a 90-minute extravaganza featuring James Brown and Barry Manilow that would determine whether the Americans' year of troubled preparation would prove sufficient. When the selections concluded, the United States found itself grouped with Colombia—which had demolished Argentina 5-0 during qualifying—with Switzerland, which had defeated and tied Italy, and with Romania, possessing all the threat of higher-profile European teams without the glamour.

"Believe me, if this thing was fixed, it wouldn't be fixed with Colombia in the U.S. group," Alan Rothenberg admitted, his dark humor acknowledging the draw's severity. The Americans would open against Switzerland at the Silverdome on June 18, return to the Rose Bowl for Colombia on June 22, and then face Romania on June 26. Advance to the round of 16, and the year's struggles would be forgiven. Exit after three matches, and every finishing crisis, every injury, every missed opportunity for European-based players to train together would be catalogued as failure.

Standing in Las Vegas, processing the draw that would define American soccer's future, the coaching staff understood their peculiar inheritance from 1993. They had integrated European training principles at the Mission Viejo facility. They had survived catastrophic injuries that would have devastated teams with less organizational depth. They had scored seven against El Salvador and eight against the Cayman Islands, proving they could finish when given space to do so. They had held Germany to 1-0 through 78 minutes, proving they could defend when motivated by desperation.

What they hadn't discovered was whether any of this mattered. Whether set-piece reliability and defensive organization could compensate for finishing inconsistency. Whether physical resilience could overcome technical limitations. Whether a team that had spent the year preparing separately—European-based stars with their clubs, domestic players at Mission Viejo, injured veterans in rehabilitation—could cohere into World Cup competitiveness when assembled in June.

The answer would determine whether the United States merely participated in their home World Cup or actually competed for advancement. As the closing days of December approached, they reflected on a year that had stripped away the romanticism of international preparation, revealed both systematic progress and persistent problems, and left the essential question unanswered: Were they good enough? June would tell.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Cremaschi's First Parma Start

Midfielder Played 86 Minutes in Parma's Coppa Italia Defeat

Benjamin Cremaschi's journey from Inter Miami's academy to Serie A reached a significant milestone when he earned his first start for Parma in their Coppa Italia clash against Bologna, representing another step forward for the promising American midfielder.

The 20-year-old joined Parma on loan through June 2026 with a purchase option reportedly valued at five million dollars, departing Miami after making 107 appearances and winning both the 2023 Leagues Cup and 2024 Supporters' Shield. His transition to Italian football began with a brief Roma debut in November, when he entered as a substitute in the 77th minute of a 2-1 defeat. However, he managed just one completed pass in limited involvement.

However, Cremaschi's early weeks at Parma were dominated by international duty rather than club integration. Shortly after completing his loan move, he linked up with the United States for the U-20 World Cup, where he delivered a breakout performance, winning the Golden Boot as the tournament's leading scorer with five goals. Despite the Americans falling to eventual champions Morocco in the quarterfinals, Cremaschi's individual success raised his profile considerably.

His first start for Parma came in Thursday's Coppa Italia match against defending champions Bologna, where he played 86 minutes before being substituted. While Parma ultimately lost 2-1 to Santiago Castro's late winner, Cremaschi showed flashes of his potential, completing 10-of-17 passes, winning half his duels, and making two tackles. His statistics revealed a player still adjusting to Serie A's intensity but willing to engage physically and contribute defensively.

As Inter Miami's most prominent academy product, Cremaschi's development in Italy represents an important pathway for American talent. With Parma battling near the relegation zone in 17th place in Serie A, the young midfielder will have ample opportunities to prove his worth and potentially secure a permanent move to European football.

McKennie Making Waves

McKennie Marked His 200th Juventus Appearance With an Assist in the Coppa Italia

Weston McKennie marked a significant personal milestone during Juventus' comfortable Coppa Italia victory over Udinese on Tuesday, making his 200th appearance for the club in a performance that once again demonstrated his enduring value to the Bianconeri.

The American midfielder proved instrumental in the 2-0 triumph, creating the opening goal when his delivery into the box was turned into his own net by teenage defender Matteo Palma. McKennie's influence didn't end there—he later won a penalty after being fouled by the same defender, allowing Manuel Locatelli to seal the victory from the spot. His statistical output told the story of another industrious display: leading the match with three chances created, completing 84% of his passes, and winning the majority of his duels over 90 minutes.

Reflecting on reaching 200 games in Turin, McKennie expressed genuine appreciation for his journey. "It's been a long journey, but one I wouldn't trade for anything," he shared on Instagram, adding that the club has given him so much.

McKennie's achievement comes amid uncertainty about his future, with his contract expiring in June and extension talks reportedly stalled since the summer. Despite earning €3 million annually and seeking a modest increase, Juventus management has yet to meet his expectations. Premier League clubs and MLS sides are monitoring the situation, though the club plans to reject January offers.

The 27-year-old's recent form under Luciano Spalletti has been exceptional, starting 10 consecutive matches and scoring his first goal against Bodo/Glimt in the Champions League. His versatility across midfield positions has proven invaluable, allowing him to adapt to various tactical requirements while maintaining consistent energy levels and reliability—qualities that have made him indispensable to successive managers despite periodic attempts by club officials to explore his sale.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Berhalter Hired

On This Day in 2018, Berhalter Appointed to Lead USMNT After Historic Failure

On December 2, U.S. Soccer officially announced the hiring of Gregg Berhalter as head coach of the Men's National Team, ending a painful 14-month search that had become a symbol of the federation's dysfunction. The appointment came more than a year after Bruce Arena's resignation following the team's catastrophic failure to qualify for the 2018 World Cup — a loss in Trinidad and Tobago that represented the program's darkest moment in three decades. What should have been a straightforward hiring process had instead devolved into a protracted saga, delayed by a contentious presidential election, the 2026 World Cup bid, and the creation of an entirely new organizational structure that left the program adrift while rivals moved swiftly to rebuild.

Berhalter's path to the national team job had been forged not in Europe's elite leagues but through a methodical career that blended international playing experience with tactical education across multiple continents. The former defender had represented the United States at two World Cups, earning 44 caps during a 17-year playing career that took him through the Netherlands, England, Germany, and MLS, where he won both the Supporters' Shield and MLS Cup with the LA Galaxy in 2011. After becoming the first American to manage in Europe with an 18-month stint at Sweden's Hammarby IF—where he was ultimately dismissed for fielding teams deemed too defensive—Berhalter had rebuilt his reputation over five seasons with the Columbus Crew. Despite operating with one of the league's smallest payrolls, he guided the team to four playoff appearances and an MLS Cup final, developing a reputation for possession-based, attacking football that maximized limited resources through superior organization and preparation.

The journey to Berhalter's appointment had been anything but direct. After Arena stepped down in October 2017, U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati announced he wouldn't seek reelection, leaving the coaching search for his successor. The federation then created a new general manager position specifically to oversee such decisions—a structural change that added months to the timeline. Carlos Cordeiro won the presidency in February 2018 but immediately focused on securing the 2026 World Cup bid rather than hiring personnel, further delaying progress. Earnie Stewart, Berhalter's former national team teammate, wasn't hired as general manager until June and didn't officially start work until August 1. By the time Stewart began his search—consulting with former national team captains who had earned 100 caps, developing detailed candidate profiles, and evaluating 33 potential coaches—Spain, Egypt, and Tunisia had all hired new managers within six weeks of their World Cup eliminations.

Yet for all the procedural delays, Stewart's search moved decisively once it began. After narrowing his list to 11 candidates and conducting just two formal interviews, with Berhalter and former FC Dallas coach Oscar Pareja, Stewart settled on the man he had known for decades. Berhalter traveled to Chicago for meetings with Stewart and U.S. Soccer's technical staff, then delivered a four-hour presentation in Miami to Cordeiro and chief executive Dan Flynn outlining his tactical philosophy and vision for the program. The process raised questions about potential conflicts of interest — Berhalter's brother Jay served as U.S. Soccer's chief commercial officer, though Stewart insisted Jay had no involvement in the coaching search. Critics also questioned whether Stewart's personal connection to Berhalter had narrowed the candidate pool too severely, noting that respected coaches like Tata Martino, Peter Vermes, and Julen Lopetegui were never formally interviewed.

The appointment represented a generational shift in American soccer's tactical identity. Where previous coaches had often relied on counterattacking football, physical superiority and a never-give-up mentality, Berhalter championed a philosophy built around possession, pressing and systematic attacking play. His Columbus teams had been renowned for building attacks methodically from the goalkeeper, playing through opponent pressure rather than going direct, and creating scoring opportunities through coordinated movement rather than individual brilliance. Cordeiro framed this approach as distinctly American—aggressive, proactive, and uncompromising—while Stewart emphasized Berhalter's commitment to continuous learning and player development. The hope was that this style would unlock the potential of an emerging generation led by Christian Pulisic, Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie, all 20 or younger, who possessed the technical quality to execute a more sophisticated tactical system.

When Berhalter was introduced at a press conference in New York, he acknowledged the weight of stepping into a program still reeling from failure. He had initially doubted his readiness for the position—in October 2017, just after the Trinidad loss, he'd said he had "a lot of coaching to do" before being prepared for the national team job. But the months between that statement and Stewart's phone call in late August had crystallized his thinking. He spoke about creating a team with a clear identity, one where circulation and line-breaking would become defining characteristics. He emphasized his unique understanding of both MLS-based and European-based players, having experienced both environments during his playing career. Most importantly, he framed the opportunity not as a burden but as a chance to build something special with players searching for direction after more than a year under caretaker Dave Sarachan.

Berhalter's mandate extended beyond tactical adjustments. With the 2022 World Cup qualifying cycle set to begin in less than two years, he faced the challenge of integrating veterans into a roster that Sarachan had deliberately made youth-oriented, giving 23 players their international debuts during his interim tenure. He would need to establish a captain, decide whether to deploy Pulisic centrally or wide, and build the kind of winning culture that had been conspicuously absent during the final stages of the previous cycle. 

His first training camp would come in January with mostly MLS-based players, followed by friendlies against Panama and Costa Rica that would offer only a glimpse of what the full-strength team might become. The real test would arrive with the Gold Cup in June and, ultimately, with the high-stakes qualifying matches where American soccer would discover whether 14 months of waiting had been justified—or whether the program had simply traded one set of problems for another while the rest of the world moved on without them.

A Draw to End 1984

On This Day in 1984, the U.S. Had a Steep Learning Curve to Close Out the Year, Which Culminated in This 2-2 Draw with Ecuador

The Columbus Cup trophy sat in some office at the U.S. Soccer Federation headquarters, tangible proof that October 11 had happened—that Ade Coker's late goal against Colombia at the Los Angeles Coliseum had delivered silverware, that the Americans had conquered a four-nation tournament featuring World Cup-caliber opposition. The victory over El Salvador three days earlier, Jeff Hooker's breakthrough, and Rick Davis's conversion from twenty-two yards felt like momentum building toward something larger. Mayor Tom Bradley had declared it "International Soccer Week." For a brief moment, American soccer felt like it belonged in the conversation.

Then came the education. Three days after lifting the Columbus Cup, the Americans walked into Guatemala City's Mateo Flores Stadium carrying the confidence of champions. They left carrying the humiliation of a 4-0 defeat, outshot 13-to-7 by a Guatemalan side that picked them apart methodically—one goal in the first half to establish control, then three in the final 17 minutes to hammer home the lesson. Eddy Albures and Eduardo Estrada each scored twice before 20,000 fans who watched their team dismantle the Columbus Cup champions with the ease of professors correcting undergraduates who'd gotten ahead of themselves.

Three days after Guatemala, Mexico City came. Neza Stadium—one of 12 venues being prepared to host the 1986 World Cup—held 27,000 for what should have been a mere exhibition but felt like an examination the Americans weren't ready to take. Dante Juarez gave Mexico the lead in the 39th minute. Perry Van Der Beck equalized with a header from 10 yards, Greg Thompson providing the service, offering brief hope that the collapse in Guatemala had been an aberration. Then Gonzalo Farfan's shot deflected off Kevin Crow's left thigh in the 65th minute, the ball rolling past Winston DuBose to make it 2-1. Second consecutive defeat.

Captain Rick Davis, preparing for the Major Indoor Soccer League season, was among the starters absent. That detail mattered more than anyone wanted to admit. The MISL—where most of America's best players earned their livelihood—had become a scheduling adversary, its winter season creating impossible choices between club obligations and national team duty. The squad would disband after Mexico until the following May, when Trinidad & Tobago and Costa Rica awaited in the second round of qualifying. Five months between meaningful matches.

Alkis Panagoulias needed to see who could play when the veterans weren't available. The exhibitions against Ecuador—back-to-back matches scheduled for November 30 at Hofstra University and December 2 in Miami—would serve as a laboratory for experimentation. Six players would earn their first international caps Friday night on Long Island. Four more would debut Sunday in Florida. The overflow crowd of nearly 10,000 at Hofstra saw promise without production. The Americans outshot Ecuador 11-to-6, creating quality chances that forced goalkeeper Israel Rodriguez into diving saves. Steve Sharp struck from inside 10 yards in the first half. Paul Caligiuri did the same. Both times, Rodriguez denied them. The final whistle blew on a 0-0 draw that felt more like artistic frustration than tactical success.

Two days later, 4,000 spectators filed into Tamiami Stadium in Miami, wondering if this young American side could convert chances into goals. They received their answer almost immediately. 44 seconds into the match, Sharp stole possession deep in Ecuador's end and struck from 20 yards. The shot deflected off defender Elias DeNegri's left leg, the change of direction catching Rodriguez completely wrong-footed. The ball skipped past his outstretched hands and into the net. The Americans had scored faster than most teams complete their opening possession.

They doubled the advantage at 3:30. Jeff Hooker's cross found Jacques Ladouceur, whose initial shot bounced off Rodriguez. Ladouceur collected the rebound and finished. Two goals in the opening four minutes. "We made things happen at the outset," Panagoulias said afterward, the satisfaction in his voice already tempered by what followed. "The problem was that Ecuador kept the ball in our end for the rest of the half, and we seemed unable to do anything about it."

The 2-0 lead became a psychological trap. Ecuador pressured Winston DuBose—the former Tampa Bay Rowdies and Tulsa Roughnecks goalkeeper—for the remainder of the first half, probing for weaknesses in an American defense trying to protect its advantage rather than extend it. In the 39th minute, Carlos Cuvi found space and finished, cutting the deficit in half just before halftime.

Two minutes into the second half, the fragility became a catastrophe. Goalkeeper Jamie Swanner, who'd replaced DuBose at the break, collided with defender Mike Windischmann in the penalty area. The defensive miscommunication left Hermen Benitez alone with an open net. He didn't miss. The match was level at 2-2, Ecuador having erased a two-goal deficit through persistence and American errors. "You cannot allow goals of that nature," Panagoulias said, the frustration evident.

Another note from this match was the international debut of Eddie Hawkins, who started in defense. He became the first American-born black player to play with the U.S. national team. Ecuador finished the match outshooting the Americans 13-to-6, the statistical disparity telling the same story Guatemala had told in October: the United States could compete in spurts but couldn't dictate 90 minutes against competent international opposition. Sharp's deflected goal and Ladouceur's opportunistic finish were gifts as much as achievements.

"We have to acquire the skill of dictating the flow of a match," Panagoulias explained, articulating the central problem. "What that means is we have to be able to run and attack when we're ready to do so, and we must learn how to slow the pace down when the attack is put to us. We didn't do a good job of that today."

The coach understood what the results demanded he acknowledge: the Columbus Cup victory had been real but limited in its meaning. Guatemala and Mexico had exposed technical deficiencies. The two matches against Ecuador had revealed tactical immaturity—the inability to manage a match psychologically, to recognize when to press and when to consolidate.

DuBose, who'd recorded three saves before giving way to Swanner, offered a more nuanced assessment. "We can easily reach the third round," he said, referring to the May matches against Trinidad and Tobago and Costa Rica. "To go beyond that, we'll need the players with professional experience. Our young guys have done well, but to reach the finals, you have to play teams more skilled than Ecuador."

The United States hadn't reached the World Cup final round since 1950, when that legendary team had shocked England in Belo Horizonte. 34 years had passed. The Columbus Cup trophy sitting in some federation office couldn't change that history, couldn't bridge the gap between American ambition and international reality.

But 1984 ended with clarity about what needed to happen in 1985. The second round awaits—Trinidad and Tobago on May 15 and 19, Costa Rica on May 26 and 31. A round-robin format where the winner would advance to the third round, one step closer to Mexico. The Americans would need Davis and the other MISL veterans available. They would need Panagoulias to solve the tactical puzzle of dictating matches rather than surviving them.

Five months remained until the next meaningful match. Five months to turn the education delivered by Guatemala, Mexico, and Ecuador into wisdom. The 2-2 draw in Miami closed the book on 1984—a year that had begun with promise, delivered both triumph and humiliation, and ended with the most dangerous thing American soccer could possess as it looked toward 1985: hope tempered by reality, ambition chastened by experience, and the faint outline of a path forward through the Caribbean heat awaiting them in May.

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Pepi's Acrobatic Brilliance

The Striker's Flying Scissor Kick Doubled PSV's Lead in Dominant Win

Ricardo Pepi continued his impressive form for PSV Eindhoven on Sunday, contributing both a goal and an assist in a commanding 3-0 victory over FC Volendam. The American striker's highlight came in the 23rd minute when he produced a stunning acrobatic finish to extend PSV's lead.

Describing the spectacular effort afterward, Pepi explained his quick thinking: "It was just a ball high up in the air, and my back was facing the goal, and I was just like, 'Okay, this is a perfect opportunity to try it.' So, I just tried it, and it worked out." The improvised technique allowed him to work the ball past goalkeeper Kayne van Oevelen, effectively sealing the match well before halftime.

Pepi's performance went beyond the eye-catching goal. Despite recording the fewest touches among outfield players who completed the full 90 minutes—just 43—he made them count. His 14 touches in the opposition box and five total shots demonstrated his clinical presence in dangerous areas. He also registered an assist, helping Joey Veerman open the scoring in the sixth minute when the American laid the ball back to the Dutchman near the top of the box.

Fellow USMNT international Sergino Dest provided solid support from right back, completing the whole match with typically efficient distribution. The 25-year-old defender maintained a 94% pass accuracy rate, completing 61-of-65 passes while creating opportunities with eight passes into the final third. Defensively, Dest contributed four tackles and won five of nine ground duels, though his three crossing attempts failed to find teammates.

The victory capped a remarkable week for the reigning Eredivisie champions, who had stunned Liverpool 4-1 in the Champions League just days earlier. With this result, marking their ninth win in 10 matches across all competitions, PSV continue to demonstrate the form that makes them title favorites once again.