U.S. Soccer and Nike have pulled back the curtain on the kits the USMNT will wear when the FIFA World Cup comes to American soil this summer, and unlike the widely panned designs from Qatar in 2022, these ones have players genuinely excited.
The two jerseys draw directly from the stars and stripes of the American flag. The "Stripes" kit features bold red-and-white horizontal stripes that call back to the beloved "Waldo" jersey worn from 2012 to 2014, a design that players had specifically requested during the collaborative process. The "Stars" kit takes a subtler approach—a rich navy blue shirt with barely visible black stars that only reveal themselves in certain light. Attacker Folarin Balogun, who named it his personal favorite, praised its hidden detail and understated elegance.
The design process was notably player-driven, a direct response to the backlash that followed the 2022 unveiling. Nike held multiple workshops and listening sessions with squad members, consulting them on everything from aesthetic preferences to technical details like fabric weight and seam placement. The jerseys also feature a newly designed "Stars and Stripes" font for names and numbers, along with an "Inner Pride" mark inside the collar representing each player's personal motivation.
Perhaps the most significant aspect of this kit cycle is its scope: for the first time in U.S. Soccer history, all 27 national teams, including the four-time World Cup champion women's side, will wear the same two designs, creating a unified identity across the entire federation.
Fans will get their first look at the kits in action when the USMNT faces Belgium on March 28 in Atlanta, followed by a clash with Portugal days later. The team's World Cup campaign then kicks off June 12 against Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood.
Midfielder Stakes World Cup Claim With Stunning First-Half Display
Sebastian Berhalter produced a Man of the Match performance as Vancouver Whitecaps thrashed Minnesota United 6-0 on Sunday at BC Place, making MLS history in the process. The 24-year-old American midfielder capped a remarkable first half with a goal and two assists inside 45 minutes, putting in the kind of display that demands the attention of USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino ahead of this summer's World Cup.
Berhalter opened the scoring from the penalty spot in the eighth minute before turning provider twice before the break, helping Vancouver establish an emphatic 4-0 halftime lead. The Whitecaps' victory, which was their fourth straight to open the season, made them the first team in MLS history to start consecutive seasons with a 4-0-0 (WDL) record and a plus-13 goal differential. It was a stunning response to their 3-0 midweek defeat against Seattle Sounders in the CONCACAF Champions Cup.
"It doesn't mean we're a bad team losing one game," Berhalter said. "For us, it was just about doing what we do and sticking to our principles."
His underlying numbers backed up the eye test. Across 65 minutes, he completed 32-of-40 passes, drove seven balls into the final third, created two chances, including one big chance, and made six defensive contributions—a reflection of the two-way engine he provides from the base of midfield. Vancouver manager Jesper Sørensen has been unstinting in his praise, noting that Berhalter is the only player to have started every game this season and describing him as the fulcrum around which the team's style is built.
With Pochettino's USMNT squad announcement for the March friendlies imminent, Berhalter is doing everything possible to make himself impossible to ignore.
Striker Continues Stunning Run of Form as Monaco Beat Brest
Folarin Balogun is in the form of his life. The American striker scored for the sixth time in six games in all competitions as AS Monaco cruised to a 2-0 victory over Brest at the Stade Louis-II on Saturday evening, extending the Principality club's unbeaten league run to eight matches.
The 24-year-old's recent run has been nothing short of remarkable. It began with a brace against PSG in the Champions League in February, followed by league goals against Lens and Angers before he scored and assisted in Monaco's stunning 3-0 win at the Parc des Princes against the reigning European champions earlier this month. Saturday's effort made it six goals in six games across all competitions—a streak that has transformed Monaco's season.
Against Brest, Balogun struck in the 19th minute to break the deadlock. After Lamine Camara intercepted a Brest pass and played him in, the forward finished coolly into the corner to give Monaco the lead. It was his eighth Ligue 1 goal of the season and fourth in consecutive league appearances after not scoring in Ligue 1 since early November.
The underlying numbers tell a mixed story. He registered eight touches inside the opposition area, but he also missed two big chances and managed only a 17% dribble success rate. Nevertheless, when the moment counted, he delivered. Monaco manager Sébastien Pocognoli was full of admiration, describing Balogun as a player reaping the rewards of his dedication and professionalism, and noting how much he has to play for between now and the summer — a pointed reference to World Cup ambitions.
With Lyon and Marseille on the horizon, Monaco's European push is gathering real momentum. And Balogun, in this kind of form, looks central to everything they're building.
Midfielder Picks Up New Injury Scare as Elite Clubs Circle
Tyler Adams' injury troubles are far from over. The Bournemouth and USMNT midfielder was a surprise absentee from the Cherries' matchday squad for Saturday's 0-0 draw at Burnley, having picked something up in training the previous day. Reports suggest the issue is purely precautionary and nothing serious, but the timing is far from ideal given that the 27-year-old returned to action so recently.
Adams had only just recovered from an MCL sprain sustained back in mid-December—a lay-off that kept him sidelined for two months. He had started three consecutive games upon his return, including the full 90 minutes in Bournemouth's previous outing against Brentford on March 3. Manager Andoni Iraola had said on the eve of the Burnley trip that there were no fresh injury concerns in the squad, making Adams' late withdrawal all the more unexpected.
The concern now shifts to the international stage. USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino is set to name his squad shortly for friendlies against Belgium and Portugal in Atlanta on March 28 and 31, respectively, and Adams' fitness will be closely monitored ahead of that announcement. Missing those matches would be a significant blow for a player still working his way back into full rhythm.
Adding another layer of intrigue to Adams' situation is the growing transfer speculation surrounding him. According to reports, Manchester United, Liverpool, and Chelsea are all keeping close tabs on the midfielder, with United currently leading the race for his signature. Bournemouth are under no pressure to sell, with his contract running until 2028, but could reportedly consider offers in the region of £45 million.
For now, all eyes are on Adams' recovery. If the injury is as minor as suggested, he should be back quickly. Whether he stays at Bournemouth long-term, however, is a very different question.
Midfielder Plays Well Despite Boro's Late Heartbreak Against Bristol City
Aidan Morris turned in another commanding midfield display for Middlesbrough, but his individual brilliance couldn't prevent a gut-wrenching 1-1 draw against Bristol City at the Riverside on Saturday, as Adam Randell's 96th-minute header snatched a point for the visitors in devastating fashion.
The 24-year-old American racked up 104 touches across the 90 minutes, completing 72 of his 78 passes for an accuracy rate of 92%, numbers that reflect just how central he was to everything Boro tried to build. He also drove 12 passes into the final third, won 8-of-12 ground duels, and made 10 recoveries, demonstrating the relentless work rate that has made him such a vital component of Kim Hellberg's side.
Morris came closest to breaking the deadlock before the opener, forcing a sharp save from Radek Vitek that rebounded to Alan Browne, who wastefully fired straight at the goalkeeper from close range. It was one of several moments where Boro's afternoon could have taken a very different shape. He also created two chances and completed both of his attempted dribbles, underlining his confidence and composure in tight spaces.
His performances haven't gone unnoticed. Hellberg has been effusive in his praise, highlighting how Morris presses intelligently, always demands the ball, and brings a bravery to it that the head coach actively encourages. Alongside captain Hayden Hackney, Morris has helped form arguably the best midfield partnership in the Championship this season.
Morris himself has spoken about the importance of staying focused on the present rather than getting distracted by promotion speculation—a mentality that has clearly served him well. His numbers against Bristol City were, frankly, outstanding. The frustration is that on a day when he delivered, Boro's afternoon still ended in agony.
Defender Provided the Setup for Gladbach's Second Goal in their Victory
American right back Joe Scally played a key role as Borussia Mönchengladbach claimed a vital 2-0 victory over fellow relegation-threatened side St. Pauli at Borussia-Park on Friday evening in the Bundesliga.
With Gladbach sitting just one point above the relegation playoff spot coming into the match, the stakes could hardly have been higher. Kevin Stöger's stunning free-kick broke the deadlock just before halftime, but it was Scally's contribution in the second half that put the result beyond doubt.
12 minutes after the restart, the 23-year-old United States international drove forward and delivered a precise cut-back into the box, which substitute Franck Honorat converted, with a slight deflection off Adam Dźwigała helping the ball over the line. It was the decisive moment of the match, and one that underlined Scally's ability to contribute at both ends of the pitch.
The New York-born defender was industrious throughout the 90 minutes, recording 50 touches and completing 23 of his 32 passes. He also showed his defensive reliability, making two tackles and two clearances while winning four of his six ground duels, ensuring St. Pauli found no joy down his flank.
Scally finished the match with that one assist, one chance created, and two successful dribbles from four attempts—a well-rounded performance that reflected his growing importance to Eugen Polanski's side. His expected assists figure of just 0.04 highlights how much better the actual delivery was than the underlying numbers might have anticipated.
The victory lifts Gladbach to 28 points and 12th place in the Bundesliga table, opening up a more comfortable gap above the relegation zone. For Scally, it was another solid showing as he continues to establish himself as one of the more reliable performers in a squad fighting hard to secure their top-flight status.
On This Day in 2025, the American Forward Delivered a Masterclass to Fire Coventry Back Into the Play-Off Places
The story of Haji Wright at Coventry City has never been a straight line. It has been a tale written in bursts of brilliance, interrupted by setbacks, and defined by the moments that matter most. By the time March 15, 2025, arrived, Wright had endured nearly four months on the sidelines after sustaining an ankle ligament injury in a November away trip to Sunderland—the very club that would now arrive at the CBS Arena as his next victims.
That November meeting felt like a lifetime ago. Wright had been in fine form before the injury, finding the net against the Black Cats in that earlier encounter, only to limp out of the contest and disappear from Coventry's matchday picture for the best part of the winter. In his absence, Frank Lampard had been appointed head coach at the end of November, inheriting a side that was drifting and rebuilding simultaneously. What followed was one of the Championship's most compelling mid-season surges.
Coventry's 2024-25 campaign had been a study in inconsistency before Lampard steadied the ship. The early months under Mark Robins had seen the club oscillate between genuine promise and damaging slumps, their league position fluctuating with each passing week. By the time Robins departed in early November, his nearly eight-year tenure had ended with the club languishing in the lower half of the table, and Coventry had won just six of their opening 19 Championship matches.
Lampard's arrival triggered an almost immediate transformation. Eight wins from nine league games through the turn of the year and into the spring had propelled Coventry into the top six, with the CBS Arena becoming something close to a fortress, with one defeat in 11 home Championship matches, and three consecutive home victories heading into the Sunderland fixture. That most recent home win, a dramatic 3-2 comeback against Stoke City, settled by Bobby Thomas's stoppage-time header, had summed up the new energy running through the club. Only two teams in the Championship had scored more home goals than Coventry's 31 from 18 games.
Yet the week leading into the Sunderland match had introduced a note of anxiety. Coventry had travelled to Pride Park on Tuesday, where Lampard came up against his former club, Derby County, and came off second best. A 2-0 defeat had ended a five-match winning run and left the Sky Blues just two points clear of Bristol City in seventh. The very next day, Bristol City leapfrogged them by beating Norwich, nudging Coventry out of the play-off places entirely. The Sunderland game had gone from a chance to cement their position to an urgent mission to reclaim it, all within 48 hours.
Sunderland, meanwhile, arrived in good recent form of their own. They were three unbeaten, sitting fourth in the table with automatic promotion still mathematically possible, though the eight points separating them from the top two with nine games remaining made it an increasingly steep climb. Regis Le Bris's side had won three of their previous four away league games, bringing genuine quality to a fixture that carried weight at both ends of the table. Into this pressure-cooker context stepped a man who hadn't started in nearly four months and who was about to remind everyone exactly what he was capable of.
From the first minute, Coventry went at Sunderland in a way that felt different from the Derby defeat. The Sky Blues moved the ball with purpose and tempo, pressing high and winning it back almost immediately after losing possession. Victor Torp, deployed in an advanced central role he made entirely his own across the 90 minutes, was pulling the strings. His early free-kick was flicked towards goal by Bobby Thomas, a warning shot that Sunderland struggled to heed.
The opener arrived in the 21st minute, and it was Torp again at the heart of it. His through ball found Wright running onto the right channel, and what followed was a demonstration of a striker fully in command of his craft. One touch to receive, another to turn the defender and shift the ball onto his left foot, and then a low, clean strike into the bottom corner past Anthony Patterson. The CBS Arena erupted. Wright himself later reflected on the simplicity of it. "I struck it clean enough," he said, "and it glided over the pitch and went in." But there was nothing simple about the movement and confidence required to produce it after months away from the game.
Sunderland barely had time to regroup before Wright had his second. Skipping past Chris Mepham with a directness that left the defender no option, he was brought down inside the area. The penalty was inevitable. Wright placed it straight down the middle, Patterson committed to his right, and the ball was in the net before the goalkeeper had time to reconsider. "I'm always confident when it comes to penalties," Wright said afterward. "I know what I can do." Two goals in nine first-half minutes, and the CBS Arena was rocking.
The second half brought intermittent Sunderland pressure. Eliezer Mayenda and Wilson Isidor both sent efforts off target in quick succession after the hour mark, but Coventry absorbed it with the composure of a side that believed in themselves completely. "In general, you could see they didn't want to play against us," Wright would reflect. "When they got the ball off us, we had it back almost immediately."
The hat-trick arrived in the 73rd minute, and it was the best goal of the three. Torp, producing a performance of genuine excellence throughout, threaded a pass into space behind the Sunderland defence with the precision of a man reading the game three moves ahead. Wright ran onto it in full stride and, with Patterson rushing off his line, produced a delicate dinked finish with his left foot that arced over the keeper and nestled in the net. The stadium rose as one. It was Wright's first hat-trick since August 2021, which was for Antalyaspor in Turkey, and his first for Coventry City.
When Lampard withdrew him in stoppage time, the crowd gave him a standing ovation that filled every corner of the ground. Wright, for his part, looked like a man rediscovering something he had feared he might have lost. "I felt great today," he said. "After being out for so long, I felt quick, I felt fresh and light on my feet. I was itching to play again after so long, and I'm just happy to be back."
Lampard was unequivocal in his assessment. He told BBC CWR it was the best performance he had seen from his Coventry side since taking charge—the level of the opponent taken firmly into account. "Today was an outstanding individual performance from him," the head coach said of Wright. "To have success, you want those players at the top end of the pitch, so to have that confidence and to be able to play the way he played was brilliant." Le Bris offered no excuses for his Sunderland side, acknowledging with candour that his team had simply been outclassed: "When we are at that level, we are punished."
The Sunderland hat-trick proved to be more than a moment; it was a springboard that validated everything Lampard had been building. Wright finished the 2024-25 season with 12 goals in 29 appearances across all competitions, a remarkable return given the four months lost to injury. The hat-trick took his Championship tally to 10 from 19 league starts, numbers that would have been considerably higher had the ankle held up through the winter.
Coventry's late-season form carried them all the way to fifth place in the Championship, accumulating 69 points and securing a play-off spot with wins over West Bromwich Albion and Middlesbrough in the final weeks. The CBS Arena atmosphere that had roared Wright through his hat-trick became a recurring theme. A season-high crowd of 31,452 turned out for that final home game against Middlesbrough, a testament to a fanbase that had reconnected with its club through the highs and dramas of the second half of the campaign.
The play-offs, though, would bring heartbreak familiar to Coventry supporters. Sunderland—the very side Wright had dismantled on that March afternoon—awaited them in the semi-finals. The first leg at the CBS Arena ended in a 1-2 defeat, and despite a valiant 1-1 draw in the second leg at the Stadium of Light, Coventry were eliminated 3-2 on aggregate, their promotion dream extinguished once more in the most painful of fashions.
For Wright, however, the season's conclusion carried a different meaning. On the day of that hat-trick, he had sent a message not only to the Championship but to Mauricio Pochettino, the United States national team manager preparing his squad for the CONCACAF Nations League in March and the Gold Cup in June, without his first-choice forwards. Ricardo Pepi was sidelined, Folarin Balogun was only just returning from a shoulder problem, and Wright—once firmly on the outside—had planted himself back at the centre of the conversation. The World Cup on home soil was less than a year away, and the man who had scored against the Netherlands in Qatar, who had struck twice in extra time against Jamaica in Arlington, had reminded everyone that the story was far from finished.
Coventry remained in the Championship. But Wright's afternoon against Sunderland, the power of the first, the nerve of the second, the artistry of the third, had written another chapter in a career built on exactly these kinds of days: the ones where the lights are brightest, the pressure is highest, and the man from Los Angeles refuses to look away.
On This Day in 2009, The American Midfielder's Two Goals Against Köln Proved a Turning Point in Gladbach's Relegation Battle
When Michael Bradley signed a four-year deal with newly promoted Borussia Mönchengladbach in the summer of 2008, the move raised eyebrows. Birmingham City had wanted him, contingent on their survival from relegation from the Premier League. They didn't, and Bradley landed instead in the Bundesliga—a step up in competition, but at a club that was already wobbling.
The early months did little to quiet the skeptics. Manager Jos Luhukay was sacked in October after just one win in seven league matches, including a humiliating 5-1 defeat to mid-table Hannover. Gladbach were dumped from the DFB-Pokal by Energie Cottbus, and Bradley, lining up as a defensive midfielder in an unsettled team, looked, as one German paper would later put it, like "an ordinary role player."
Then came November 15th. With Gladbach trailing Bayern Munich 2-1 deep into injury time at the Allianz Arena, Bradley got on the end of a delivery and powered a header into the net to earn his side a 2-2 draw. It was his first goal for the club and a sign of something stirring.
The winter break brought organizational change. New manager Hans Meyer, who had taken the reins following a one-match interim stint by Christian Ziege, moved decisively in the transfer window. Belgian goalkeeper Logan Bailly arrived from Genk, Czech veteran Tomáš Galásek from Baník Ostrava, and Canadian defender Paul Stalteri from Tottenham. The reinforcements steadied a club that had spent the better part of December through early March anchored to the bottom two. By the time the second half of the season resumed, Gladbach had something resembling a spine.
Bradley was central to the revival. On February 14, he scored in a 1-1 draw with Werder Bremen, earning a hard-fought point against one of the Bundesliga's traditional powers. Two weeks later, he found the net again in a 2-1 defeat to Hertha Berlin. It was a loss, but further evidence that the American was growing into the role Meyer needed him to play. German football magazine Tor Fabrik was already taking notice, writing that Bradley was becoming the "heart of the team" alongside Galásek, combining what they described as remarkable tenacity and work rate with genuine tactical intelligence.
Still, as March 14 approached, Gladbach sat 17th, inside the relegation zone on goal difference, tied with Bochum. The derby at Köln, their fiercest regional rival, felt less like a fixture and more like a referendum on the club's future in the Bundesliga.
"The game is incredibly important—not just for the clubs, but also for the fans," Stalteri would later recall. "You can really feel how much the pride of both sets of supporters is at stake."
In front of 50,000 at the RheinEnergieStadion, Gladbach came out with purpose. Bradley opened the scoring in the 25th minute, converting a close-range finish assisted by the young German talent Marko Marin. It was a composed, decisive finish, exactly the kind of contribution that had become his calling card. Karim Matmour doubled the lead just before halftime off a through ball from Alexander Baumjohann, and for a moment it looked like Gladbach might coast.
Köln had other ideas. Miso Brecko pulled one back in the 64th minute, and suddenly the traveling support grew nervous. But three minutes later, in a moment that would earn its own footnote in Bundesliga history, Stalteri found compatriot Rob Friend in close quarters and Friend slotted home to restore the two-goal cushion. It was the first time two Canadians had combined for a Bundesliga goal.
Köln made it 3-2 in the 82nd minute, but Bradley had the final word. Four minutes later, Gal Alberman drew a foul in the penalty area, and Bradley stepped up to the spot. Goalkeeper Faryd Mondragón dove the right way, but couldn't keep out the penalty at the bottom right corner. Final score: 4-2.
The German press, the following week, was effusive. Bild, the country's largest daily, dubbed Bradley the "Marathon Man" and suggested that while Jürgen Klinsmann's experiment bringing Landon Donovan to Bayern had fallen flat, Gladbach had found something genuinely special in their American. Kicker magazine awarded Bradley its highest grade for his performance.
The victory lifted Gladbach out of the bottom two for the first time since matchday 14. It proved to be the turning point. The club collected 11 points from their final six matches of the season, which was the same total they had managed from their first 18 games, and survived by a single point, avoiding the drop to the 2. Bundesliga on the final day. Bradley had arrived in the Rhineland as an afterthought. He left the season as the reason they stayed up.
On This Day in 2002, a Bruising Win Over Ecuador Further Sharpened the Americans' World Cup Credentials
Eight days after Clint Mathis announced his return to form with a brace against Honduras in Seattle, the U.S. Men's National Team headed to Birmingham, Alabama, for another World Cup tune-up, and found themselves in anything but a friendly.
Legion Field had become something of a sanctuary for Bruce Arena's side. The venue had hosted the national team in 1996 during the Atlanta Olympics and again in 2000 against Tunisia, and Arena had specifically pushed for the Ecuador match to be played there. The reason was simple: in too many American cities, the home team wasn't really the home team. "There's nothing worse than playing at home against some of these Latin American, South American and Central American teams and having more of their fans," midfielder Chris Armas said before the match. "Soccer is a sport in which the home crowd makes a difference, and sometimes that works against us." Birmingham, Arena believed, wouldn't have that problem. He was right. A crowd of 24,133 turned out, waving flags in the post-September 11 atmosphere that gave the fixture a charge beyond the usual pre-tournament tune-up. "It's always an honor to represent your country," Armas said, "but now there is something a little bit extra because we're at war."
The stakes for individual players were just as pointed for this March 10 match. With Arena set to finalize his 23-man World Cup roster by the end of April, every minute of every match carried roster implications. 12-to-14 of those spots were expected to go to Europe-based players when the squad traveled to Germany on March 27, leaving a handful of MLS players fighting for the remainder. "Everybody's still fighting for jobs here," Brian McBride said, "and I think that transfers on to the field in games like today."
Ecuador arrived in similar circumstances—making their first-ever World Cup appearance that summer, their own players equally desperate to impress. The result was a match that had, as Arena would later put it, "the look and smell of a World Cup qualifier." There were 36 fouls called and, by some estimates, 36 more that weren't. Ecuador midfielder Edwin Tenorio shoved the referee in the first half without consequence. Late in the game, McBride took a two-footed challenge to the chest from goalkeeper Jose Francisco Cevallos while chasing a long ball. And after the final whistle, Tenorio inexplicably struck Landon Donovan in the head. Arena, somehow, was smiling.
The goal that settled it came in the 21st minute and was a product of the partnership that had been building all camp. Mathis, dangerous and direct on the left, stretched Ecuador's defense and drove a precise through ball into the path of Eddie Lewis, who had ghosted into space inside the area. Lewis didn't need a second touch as he buried it left-footed into the far corner.
It was a finish that likely did more than just put the Americans ahead. Lewis, a reserve for Fulham in the English Premier League, had been teetering on the edge of Arena's roster plans. The goal, combined with his bending service and defensive discipline, may have pushed him off that bubble and onto the plane to South Korea. "Clint did a good job breaking off wide," Lewis said afterward. "There was quite a bit of space inside. Clint did a good job setting me up on my left foot."
Mathis, for his part, would not finish the match. Warned once in the 39th minute, he received his second yellow card in the 58th after retaliating to an uncalled foul on McBride. "Clint wanted someone to stick up for me," McBride said, "and unfortunately, he was the closest man, and he had a yellow already." The ejection left the U.S. to defend for 32 minutes with 10 men. And defend they did, limiting Ecuador to three shots on goal and surrendering nothing.
With Brad Friedel on club duty at Blackburn and Keller recalled by Liverpool, the goalkeeping assignment had fallen to 23-year-old Tim Howard. He was chosen ahead of veterans Zach Thornton and Tony Meola for his first senior international appearance. He had been here before in some sense: the youth camps, the Under-23 setup, an Olympic campaign, but this was different. "You walk out to the music at the youth level and then for the MetroStars, and those are amazing experiences," Howard said, "but it's a little different when it's for your country on the senior team."
He made the most of it. Ecuador's best chance came in the 33rd minute when Carlos Tenorio got in behind the U.S. defense. Howard came out and made a strong kick save. Minutes later, Tenorio's header from a corner drifted wide. Three saves in total, a clean sheet, and a composure that belied the occasion. "I was really pleased with Tim Howard getting a shutout in his first game," Arena said. MetroStars coach Octavio Zambrano, who had watched Howard develop for years, put it plainly: "He's the goalkeeper of the future for the United States national team. It might as well be now that he gets the chance to experience what it's all about."
Howard was careful not to overplay his hand. With Friedel and Keller firmly established as the top two options, he understood he was competing for the third spot, but he also understood what a debut shutout meant. "It certainly didn't hurt my chances," he said. "I was given the opportunity yesterday, and I took it. Hopefully, it's good enough to get me selected."
The final scoreline—1-0, the Americans' first-ever victory over Ecuador after four losses and four draws —told only part of the story. The U.S. had been shut out in seven of those previous eight meetings. Now they had broken through, kept their opponents to three shots, and won with 10 men for the final half-hour.
The record now stood at 6-1-1 (WDL), with the squad having outscored opponents 14-2. Germany away was next on March 27, then Mexico at home in Denver on April 3, before final preparations against Uruguay, Jamaica, and the Netherlands in May. The World Cup, with Portugal, South Korea, and Poland in the group stage, was less than three months away. For Lewis, for Howard, for every MLS player who had spent 90 bruising minutes in Birmingham proving themselves, the window was narrowing. But it was still open.
On This Day in 2005, an All-MLS Lineup Routs Colombia Before the U.S. Eyes History in Mexico
Coming off the gritty road win in Port-of-Spain, the Americans had precious little time before their next test, and an unusual one at that. With European-based stars like Landon Donovan, Claudio Reyna and Brian McBride still locked into their club schedules through late March, Bruce Arena turned to his domestic pool for a pair of exhibitions that would double as auditions. The first, on March 9 against Colombia, would be played at Titan Stadium on the Cal State Fullerton campus—a peculiar setting, made more peculiar by the fact that Mexico was playing Argentina at the Los Angeles Coliseum that same evening, 40 miles up the freeway.
Arena didn't pretend the situation was ideal. "It's basically our first game with this domestic group, so it's important that we play regardless of the location," he said. He had a team to assemble, altitude conditioning ahead, and a date at the Azteca looming on March 27. It would be the Americans' shot at their first-ever qualifying win in Mexico City, where they were 0-1-21 (WDL) all-time.
The Colombia game had been hastily patched together after the labor dispute between U.S. Soccer and its players wiped out planned friendlies against Sweden and South Korea. Arena's 18-man roster contained only one survivor from the 2002 World Cup, Pablo Mastroeni, with Eddie Pope and Frankie Hejduk also absent due to injury. Four players would earn their first caps. Six would make their first starts. It had the makings of a developmental exercise. Colombia didn't get the memo.
What unfolded before 7,086 near-capacity spectators was a performance that turned heads. New England midfielder Pat Noonan, in just his second national team appearance, opened the scoring in the 25th minute when Steve Ralston's chip from the right struck the crossbar and bounced invitingly into his path. Noonan drove it into the roof of the net before the goalkeeper could recover. Eight minutes later, the Americans doubled their lead in the fashion Arena coveted most: set piece quality. Ralston again delivered from the right, this time a hard cross that the 6-foot-3 Chad Marshall—making his debut, already being talked about as the center back of the future—met with a diving header. Two-nil at halftime, without a European boot on the pitch.
Colombia showed more life after the break, but fell further behind in the 66th minute when Clint Mathis, the squad's most capped player with 45 appearances and a man who hadn't scored for the national team in over two years, curled a corner kick directly into the net past goalkeeper Juan Henao. It was the kind of goal that looks effortless and isn't. The final scoreline, 3-0, and it could have been more, prompted a pointed summary from the coaching staff: next time, bring your first team.
Arena was careful not to get baited into a broader argument about opponent preparation. The depth was the story, he insisted. "If we had to play our best 1,000 against Brazil's best 1,000, we'd never have a chance," he said. "But when you get it down to 11 against 11, the odds are a little bit more favorable for us."
Eddie Johnson, chasing a fifth straight goal-scoring game, was held at bay. His sharpest chance cleared off the line in the 23rd minute, but Arena waved off any concern. "I think the more important statistic for Johnson is that it's another game he's been with us that we've won," he said. "Since Eddie's been with us, we're winning." A late red card to Taylor Twellman, who had entered as a substitute, left the Americans a man short for the final 14 minutes, but by then the result was long decided. The unbeaten run stretched to 15 games.
10 days later, the caravan deliberately moved to Albuquerque. The United States had been altitude training in Colorado Springs at 7,400 feet, and Arena wanted a competitive match at University Stadium's 5,300-foot elevation as a literal stepping stone toward Mexico City. The European contingent wouldn't arrive until the following day. This was still the MLS group's show.
And Johnson made it his. On the stroke of halftime, Mathis launched a thunderbolt from 30 yards that rattled the crossbar; the rebound fell to Johnson in acres of space, Honduras goalkeeper Junior Morales still scrambling to recover. It was, by Johnson's own admission, the type of finish that isn't as simple as it looks. "The hardest ones are when the goal is that open," he said. "You're already thinking about celebrating before you kick it." His seventh goal in six appearances made him the most prolific scorer in U.S. history at that stage of a career. The Americans held on 1-0, out-shooting Honduras 12-2, and extended their CONCACAF unbeaten run to 31 straight.
Together, the two results accomplished exactly what Arena had designed them to do. The domestic players had made their cases—Noonan, Marshall, Mathis, and Johnson especially. Altitude acclimatization was underway. And with the European stars rejoining the squad the day after the Honduras win, the full complement of American talent was finally gathering for the moment Arena had been building toward all spring.
"This is every young American kid's dream," Johnson said of the Mexico City match ahead. "I have to tune out the crowd and play like I've been playing." The crowd at the Azteca would be approximately 110,000. The record looked woeful, and the United States had never left that stadium with a win. Maybe this was the time