Saturday, March 28, 2026

The Dream Deferred

On This Day in 1985, the North American Soccer League Suspends Operations, Closing the Book on American Soccer's Most Ambitious Experiment

On March 28, 1985, acting commissioner Clive Toye stood before reporters in New York and announced what anyone paying attention already knew: the North American Soccer League was suspending operations, effective immediately. With only the Minnesota Strikers and the Toronto Blizzard remaining from what had once been a 24-team league, and with neither willing to play a season alone, there was nothing left to save. "We simply ran out of time," Toye said, in the kind of understatement that only makes sense when the full weight of the preceding decade is considered. The league that had introduced Pelé to American stadiums, filled Giants Stadium past 70,000 and dared to imagine soccer as the next great American sport had quietly hemorrhaged franchises, money and credibility until there was almost nothing left to bury.

The NASL had never been a modest enterprise. Born in 1968 from the merger of two rival leagues that had simultaneously overestimated American soccer appetite and underestimated the cost of feeding it, the league spent its first years teetering on the edge of extinction. Attendance cratered to under 3,000 per game in 1969. Five of the original teams folded after a single season. The league's offices relocated to a stadium basement in Atlanta. It was, by any measure, a failure—until it wasn't.

What saved the NASL in the early 1970s was a combination of modest ambition and genuine grassroots momentum, culminating in a 1973 Sports Illustrated cover declaring "Soccer Goes American" after the Philadelphia Atoms won the championship in their inaugural season. Attendance grew steadily. West Coast expansion brought the sport to new markets. And then, in the summer of 1975, the New York Cosmos signed Pelé, and everything changed at once. 10 million viewers tuned in to watch his debut. Home attendance at Cosmos matches tripled. CBS came back. ABC signed on. By the late 1970s, the Cosmos were drawing 40,000 fans per match at their peak, sharing the field with Franz Beckenbauer, and selling out Giants Stadium for the 1978 Soccer Bowl. Johan Cruyff followed Pelé to Los Angeles, doubling that team's attendance in a single season. The Minnesota Kicks averaged over 23,000 fans across four straight division-winning campaigns. For a brief, electric moment, it looked like American soccer had genuinely arrived.

But the boom years contained the seeds of what would become an almost textbook collapse. Chasing the Cosmos became the league's defining pathology. Franchises spent recklessly on aging foreign stars, accumulating payrolls that consumed over 70 percent of team budgets while average attendance never cracked 15,000 across the full league. An ownership committee had warned as early as 1977 that the league needed to slow expansion and shore up existing franchises—advice that was promptly ignored as six new teams paid $3 million each to join for the 1978 season, ballooning the league to 24 teams. Many of those new owners had no particular soccer expertise and even less patience for losses. When the broader American economy turned sharply downward in the early 1980s, unemployment reached its highest point since World War II in 1982, and the financial scaffolding holding up the league gave way almost entirely. The league ran a collective deficit of roughly $30 million in 1980. Every team lost money. And then they did it again in 1981.

The MISL's emergence as a viable indoor alternative accelerated the death spiral, pulling franchises, fans and players away from the outdoor game while also forcing the NASL into a costly indoor competition of its own. By the time the 1984 outdoor season tipped off with nine teams, the Cosmos—the organization that had once defined glamour in American sports—were scrambling to sell their best player, Roberto Cabanas, to a Colombian club just to cover basic operating costs. The league ejected the Cosmos two weeks before the suspension announcement for failing to post a required letter of credit. When the organization that had once signed Pelé couldn't meet a basic financial threshold to play, the end was no longer a question of if.

For the players who had built careers in the league, the announcement carried a particular grief. "You think about all the happy years and all the places you've played," said Strikers midfielder Ray Hudson, a seven-year NASL veteran. "Now it's just evaporated right in front of you." Teammate Alan Willey, who had come over from England in 1976, acknowledged the inevitable logic while still feeling the loss: "I would have liked to have kept playing because you don't know what it's going to be like if they start up again (in 1986). It would have been worse if crowds were still good. But you could tell what was going to happen the way it was going the last few years. What makes it easier to take is that we're in the MISL now. The team is playing well. So I don't think anybody is thinking about the NASL right now."

Toye held out cautious optimism for a restructured league in 1986, and he wasn't alone—Strikers general manager Tim Robbie spoke of using the dormant summer to rebuild public awareness and scout new cities, noting that markets like San Jose, Seattle, and Calgary had already expressed interest. But that optimism proved hollow. The NASL never returned. What it left behind was a complicated legacy: a league that had genuinely popularized soccer among American youth, introduced the game to cities that would eventually sustain MLS franchises, and proven, through both its heights and its collapse, exactly what American professional soccer could and could not sustain.

For a generation of players, that pragmatic pivot to indoor soccer was the only lifeline available. For American soccer itself, the NASL's failure would become the cautionary tale that shaped everything that followed—MLS's salary caps, its single-entity structure, its deliberately conservative growth—a sport that had finally learned that building something durable required patience the NASL never had.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Richards, Robinson Both Out

Both Center Backs to Miss the Belgium Match, Causing Some Lineup Issues

The USMNT heads into Saturday's friendly against Belgium at Mercedes-Benz Stadium already undermanned at center back, with both Chris Richards and Miles Robinson ruled out of the contest due to injury.

Robinson, the FC Cincinnati defender, suffered a groin injury during training earlier this week and has been ruled out of both the Belgium match and Tuesday's follow-up friendly against Portugal. The 29-year-old is in the mix for a starting spot at right center back in Mauricio Pochettino's three-back system—a position that carries enormous importance with the World Cup roster announcement on the horizon.

Richards' situation is somewhat more complicated. The Crystal Palace defender played 75 minutes in his club's Europa Conference League match in Larnaca on March 19, but began experiencing knee discomfort after reporting to camp. He was able to participate in portions of training earlier this week before being unable to finish a session on Wednesday. Pochettino confirmed Richards is out for Saturday and expressed doubt he would be available for Tuesday's Portugal match either.

"We hope that it is nothing important," Pochettino said of Richards, "but for tomorrow he is out, and I don't believe that he can arrive Tuesday."

The absences put significant pressure on the remaining center back options. Tim Ream, who has served as captain for much of the past year, is expected to slot in at left center back, with Mark McKenzie and Auston Trusty the most natural partners. Pochettino also floated Joe Scally and Tanner Tessmann—neither a conventional center back—as possible options on the right side of the backline.

Pochettino acknowledged the disruption, but framed it as valuable preparation for the unexpected challenges a World Cup run can bring.

Pochettino's "Why Not Us?" Mentality

Manager is Ready For the Final International Break Before the World Cup

With fewer than 100 days until the World Cup kicks off, Mauricio Pochettino is using this March window as both a final audition and a moment to reinforce the identity he has been building since taking over in September 2024.

The Argentine drew inspiration ahead of camp—the 2004 Disney film Miracle, based on the 1980 U.S. hockey team's stunning run to Olympic gold. Pochettino admitted he was moved to tears watching it, and the parallels he drew to his own group were clear when he addressed his players in training this week.

"Why not us?" he asked his squad, in words that echoed the film's famous pre-game speech. "If I don’t believe in you, it’s difficult, and if we don’t believe in you, it’s difficult to compete. Why not us?"

That rallying cry sits at the center of Pochettino's philosophy. The USMNT enters the Belgium match riding a five-game unbeaten streak against World Cup-bound opponents, and while oddsmakers give the U.S. long odds for tournament glory, Pochettino believes home advantage and the emotional charge of playing on American soil can be equalizers.

Off the field, his methods have been equally deliberate. Players describe a coach who is simultaneously demanding and deeply personal — one who pushes hard in training but also takes time to learn about players' families and lives away from the game. The word that keeps surfacing among the squad is "family."

"He's wanting to have personal conversations," veteran Tim Ream said. "He's wanting to know about your family. He's wanting to understand and know everybody on a much deeper connected level."

Crucially, Pochettino has stressed that this World Cup roster will be built around the right 26 players—not simply the best 26—prioritizing chemistry, coachability and character alongside raw ability.

Reyna Embraces the Opportunity

Playmaker Given Another Chance Despite Club Struggles

Few selections on Mauricio Pochettino's roster for this window raised more eyebrows than Giovanni Reyna's, and the 23-year-old was candid enough to acknowledge it himself.

Reyna has managed just 26 minutes of playing time for Borussia Mönchengladbach in all of 2026, failing to appear in eight consecutive league matches—first due to a muscle injury picked up in late January, then as an unused substitute in the games that followed. It is a difficult club situation that stands in stark contrast to Pochettino's typical preference for players who regularly feature at the club level.

Yet Pochettino made an exception, and Reyna was quick to express his gratitude. "I guess you could say it was sort of one of his more difficult decisions, or I guess controversial decisions to maybe bring me in," Reyna said. "I can't appreciate it enough. Love this team, love this staff, love this group of people. So just always honored to be here."

The faith isn't entirely blind. Reyna was one of the standout performers during November's international window, scoring the opener in a victory over Paraguay before adding an assist off the bench in a dominant win over Uruguay. That kind of impact in a national team shirt has clearly left an impression on Pochettino, who called Reyna a "very special player" and suggested his quality could prove useful even without consistent club minutes.

Christian Pulisic echoed that confidence. "He looks good in training," Pulisic said. "Off what he's done for this team and in big moments, he deserves to be here."

Reyna himself remains undaunted. "So if the chance comes up in the next two games, I have confidence in myself and the team that I can do some good things and make good impact," he said.

Belgium Ahead of Saturday's Match

Belgium Arrives Undermanned but Still Dangerous

Saturday's opponent brings a rich footballing tradition to Mercedes-Benz Stadium, even if Belgium's famed golden generation has given way to a transitional squad still finding its identity under first-year manager Rudi Garcia.

Garcia, who took charge in January 2025 after previous club stints at Lille, Roma, Marseille, Lyon and Napoli, has his work cut out for him in assembling a cohesive unit ahead of this summer's World Cup. Belgium qualified comfortably from their group but arrived in Atlanta facing a notable injury crisis. All-time leading scorer Romelu Lukaku, who has an extraordinary 89 goals in 124 international appearances, is sidelined with a thigh injury, a significant blow to a side that has long relied on him as its focal point up front. Club Brugge midfielder Hans Vanaken and Arsenal winger Leandro Trossard are also absent due to physical issues, leaving the squad notably lighter than originally planned.

Even so, the talent on hand remains formidable. Kevin De Bruyne, returning to the squad after his own injury absence, anchors a midfield that also features Amadou Onana, Youri Tielemans and Nicolas Raskin. That is a group capable of controlling any game at the international level.

Up front, Garcia has no shortage of options to replace Lukaku. Jeremy Doku, Charles De Ketelaere, Alexis Saelemaekers and Lois Openda all offer pace, creativity and goal threat. De Ketelaere has been a consistent presence leading Belgium's attack and figures to do so again here.

In goal, Nottingham Forest's Matz Sels is the likely starter with first-choice keeper Thibaut Courtois not in the squad. Belgium's World Cup group, which features Egypt, Iran and New Zealand, is navigable, but Garcia will want answers from these two North American friendlies before June arrives.

USA-Belgium: A Soccer History

History Favors Belgium, But the USMNT Knows How to Make It Memorable

The all-time series between the United States and Belgium is lopsided, with the Americans holding a 1-5-0 (WDL)  record against the Red Devils. But what the history lacks in American victories, it more than makes up for in dramatic moments, including one of the most memorable individual performances in World Cup history.

The lone U.S. win came in the most significant setting imaginable: the inaugural FIFA World Cup in Uruguay in 1930. On July 13 of that year, Bart McGhee, Tom Florie and Bert Patenaude each found the net as the Americans cruised to a 3-0 victory—the first World Cup match in the history of both nations.

What followed was a run of five consecutive defeats spanning two decades, beginning with a 1-0 friendly loss in April 1995. Belgium won again in February 1998, 2-0, courtesy of a brace from Nico Van Kerckhoven, then claimed another 1-0 friendly result in September 2011. The only previous meeting on American soil took place in Cleveland in May 2013, when Belgium prevailed 4-2, with Clint Dempsey and Geoff Cameron netting for the U.S.

The series's most storied chapter arrived on July 1, 2014, in the Round of 16 in Brazil. The match went scoreless through 90 minutes before Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku struck in extra time to put Belgium up 2-0. Julian Green pulled one back for the U.S., but it wasn't enough, and Belgium advanced 2-1.

The enduring image from that afternoon was goalkeeper Tim Howard, who made a World Cup-record 15 saves and earned the unofficial title "Secretary of Defense" from an adoring internet. Saturday offers the U.S. a chance to rewrite a bit of that history on home soil.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Storm Clouds and Second Thoughts

On This Day in 1995, U.S. Lets Two-Goal Lead Slip Against Uruguay in Dallas

The summer of 1994 had been a triumph. The United States had hosted the World Cup, advanced to the second round, and introduced soccer to millions of new American fans. But the months that followed were a reminder that success is fleeting.

The post-tournament friendly schedule had been sobering—a 2-0 loss to England in September, a 2-1 defeat to Saudi Arabia in October, a 1-0 setback at Trinidad and Tobago in November, before a 3-0 win over Jamaica provided some relief and a 1-1 draw with Honduras closed out the year. Four games, one win, and mounting questions about where this team was headed.

Those questions had grown louder by March 25, 1995, when the U.S. arrived in Dallas for a friendly against Uruguay at the Cotton Bowl. Coach Bora Milutinovic, whose contract had expired three months earlier, had yet to sign a new deal with U.S. Soccer. Rumors linked him to the Colombian national team, while former Portugal manager Carlos Queiroz was reportedly due in the country in late April to discuss a possible role with the federation.

The roster reflected a program in genuine transition. Tony Meola had retired, for now, to pursue an acting career on Broadway. Fernando Clavijo had hung up his boots to coach indoor soccer in Seattle. Eric Wynalda was sidelined with a broken ankle. Three key veterans from the World Cup run we gone.

What remained was a mix of proven names and promising youth. Alexi Lalas, the first American to play in Italy's Serie A, was back. Cobi Jones, now at Coventry City in England, was in the lineup. So was Earnie Stewart, whose winning goal against Colombia had been one of the defining moments of the American World Cup. Among the younger players was 19-year-old Jovan Kirovski, who had scored in each of the U.S. team's final two matches of 1994 while netting 15 goals in 30 reserve games for Manchester United.

Several key midfielders were unavailable—John Harkes, Tab Ramos, and Thomas Dooley all absent, along with forward Roy Wegerle. Milutinovic was using the occasion to assess his options ahead of a consequential summer featuring the U.S. Cup in June and Copa America in July. Uruguay arrived without their own stars. Daniel Fonseca, Ruben Sosa and the elegant Enzo Francescoli all occupied with club commitments, but remained a legitimate top-25 ranked side known for physical, quick-passing soccer.

"With success comes added pressure," Lalas said. "We can't rest on our laurels. We had some success this summer and now we want to keep going."

From the opening whistle, the Americans played with an energy that briefly silenced the doubters. In the eighth minute, Jeff Agoos launched a long ball forward, Jones ran onto it with pace and centered it across goal, and John Kerr arrived to slam a shot from 25 feet into the net. It was Kerr's second international goal and his first appearance in a U.S. shirt since June 1988, a gap of 147 games that set a national team record for the longest stretch between caps.

The Americans continued to dominate, with Uruguay collecting four yellow cards in the first 70 minutes as Jones pulled the strings in midfield. The second goal came in the 67th minute when Jones delivered a left-footed cross and Stewart met it crisply—two-nil, and the United States looked fully in control.

"Considering how many new guys we had on the field, I thought we played well," Lalas said at halftime, his trademark candor on full display during an ESPN interview in which he compared his unlikely journey to Serie A with buying a questionable pair of shoes at K-Mart.

With 15 minutes remaining, Uruguay began to find their footing. In the 75th minute, Omar Otero flicked a shot that slipped through the legs of goalkeeper Juergen Sommer. American players erupted in protest, insisting Otero had been offside. Stewart was blunt: "That was a joke. The linesman was blind."

Eight minutes later, a loose ball bobbled free in the American area, and Sommer fumbled it directly to Uruguay captain Gustavo Poyet, who slid the rebound into the open side of the net. Two-two, and then the sky itself intervened. Driving rain and 40 mph winds ripped through the Cotton Bowl, blowing advertising boards onto the field and sending the crowd of 12,242 scrambling for cover. Referee Antonio Marrufo halted play with seven minutes remaining and, after a ten-minute delay, abandoned the match entirely—the first time on record a U.S. national team game had been cut short by weather.

"It was really wet and the ball got away from me," Sommer said. "I should have held on."

Uruguay coach Hector Nunes made no secret of his frustration. "When the storm came in we were rolling. If play had continued, I thought we had a good chance to win."

For Milutinovic, whose animated presence on the touchline suggested a man still very much invested in his job, the evening offered genuine encouragement alongside the late disappointment. His team had controlled the game for 70 minutes, blooded valuable young players, and shown real technical quality. Four starters had fewer than five international caps.

"We're in a different situation than other countries," Milutinovic said. "When some of these guys get more experience over the summer, there will be better results."

The goalkeeping question remained open, with Sommer's errors offset by several excellent saves and Brad Friedel, Meola's backup at the World Cup, now at Danish club Brondby, waiting in the wings. With Belgium next on April 22 in Brussels, followed by the U.S. Cup and Copa America, the summer would provide sharper answers. The 1994 World Cup had given American soccer something to build on. As the storm-swept Cotton Bowl had reminded everyone, the work of building it was just beginning.

Dest's First International Goal is a Stunner

On This Day in 2021, the Defender's Strike From Distance Sets the Tone in Friendly Win Over Jamaica

The last time the United States Men's National Team had played a full senior international with the first-team players, it was November 2020—a pair of matches in Austria that had snapped a long pandemic-enforced silence with a goalless draw against Wales and a 6-2 dismantling of Panama. Four months later, Gregg Berhalter's squad returned to the same Austrian city with a roster that carried the weight of genuine expectation.

Christian Pulisic, the face of American soccer's new generation, was back in camp for the first time in 526 days after a difficult stretch at Chelsea under new manager Thomas Tuchel. Alongside him was Sergiño Dest, the Barcelona fullback who had just scored twice in a La Liga rout days earlier. And Yunus Musah, the 18-year-old Valencia midfielder, was making his first appearance since permanently committing to the United States over England earlier in the month. The talent was undeniable. Whether it could click together after four months apart was the open question.

"The chemistry is good right now, off the field and on the field," Dest said. "But if you play more often, it's only going to get better."

Jamaica arrived as a team with their own complications—missing several regulars due to a financial dispute with the Jamaican Football Federation that had lingered since 2018 World Cup qualifying. But Berhalter wasn't interested in scheduling gifts. With a CONCACAF Nations League semifinal against Honduras looming in June and eight World Cup qualifiers on the fall schedule, every minute in Austria was preparation for something bigger.

Against a disciplined Jamaican defensive block on March 25, the Americans spent much of the opening half circling for an opening. Pulisic and Dest found pockets of chemistry on the left side, and Gio Reyna came close to breaking through early when he found Josh Sargent near goal, only to see the effort deflected wide.

The breakthrough came from an unexpected source, and in spectacular fashion. In the 34th minute, Dest collected the ball near the midfield stripe from Musah and drove forward with purpose. He cut inside off the left flank, created space with a sharp touch to his right, and from 28 yards out, lashed a curling right-footed shot that sailed past a diving Jeaden White and into the corner of the net. His first international goal, coming days after his brace for Barcelona, announced his arrival as a genuine attacking weapon for the national team.

Berhalter brought Brenden Aaronson on for Pulisic at the break, and the Red Bull Salzburg forward wasted little time making his mark. Just past the hour, Sargent drove into the penalty area, turned his marker, and rolled a low cross to Aaronson arriving at the near post. The finish was clinical and it was his second goal in as many matches.

"Sergiño's sick, he's so good," Aaronson said afterward, characteristically deflecting credit.

Jamaica pulled one back in the 70th minute when Jamal Lowe caught the American defense on a counterattack and chipped a soft shot over Zack Steffen—a moment of genuine danger that briefly tightened the scoreline. But Sebastian Lletget had the final word. The LA Galaxy midfielder, a model of quiet consistency through three different coaching regimes, put away a one-timer from the top of the area in the 83rd minute and added a second in stoppage time to seal a 4-1 final.

It was Lletget's first international brace, and his fourth goal in the previous four matches.

"I'm pretty low key," he said of playing alongside the sport's rising American stars. "I hope they keep getting in the limelight — they deserve it."

For Berhalter, it was a promising but incomplete performance. The victory extended the Americans' unbeaten run to eight matches, with seven wins and a draw over that stretch, outscoring opponents 23-3 across four straight friendly victories, which also included a 7-0 win over Trinidad and Tobago during the January MLS camp.

Four days later in Belfast, the Americans completed a successful international window with a 2-1 victory over Northern Ireland at Windsor Park. It was the United States' first win on European soil since a comeback victory at Germany in June 2015.

Berhalter kept faith in Pulisic, starting him alongside Reyna for the second consecutive match. It was a decision that paid dividends. Reyna broke the deadlock just before the half hour when his shot from the top of the area took a wicked deflection and wrong-footed Northern Ireland keeper Conor Hazard. Steffen did his part before halftime, getting down sharply to deny a stinging drive from Shayne Lavery and preserve the lead at the break.

Pulisic put the result beyond doubt shortly after the hour, drawing a penalty when Danny Ballard tripped him across the area, then stepping up to convert it himself. The goal—his first since returning from injury—felt like a statement of intent after a difficult stretch at club level.

Northern Ireland pulled a late consolation back through Niall McGinn, who crashed home a volley over Steffen to deny the keeper a clean sheet, but it wasn't enough to disturb the final result.

Bryan Reynolds earned his senior debut off the bench, and Musah, playing his fourth match, became officially cap-tied to the United States, closing the door permanently on his eligibility for England.

“We think it’s important for us to continue to challenge this group,” Berhalter said. “It was a good opportunity to do so tonight.

With Switzerland next in May, followed by the Nations League semifinal against Honduras in June, and World Cup qualifying set to open in September, the direction of travel was clear. This group was building toward something. In Austria and Belfast, they had taken another confident step forward.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Balogun's Streak Continues

Striker Scores in His Fifth Straight League Match in Victory Over Lyon

Folarin Balogun continues to cement himself as one of Ligue 1's most dangerous forwards, and Sunday's victory over Lyon was another statement performance from the 24-year-old American.

With Monaco trailing at half-time, it was Balogun who delivered when it mattered most. After Maghnes Akliouche drew the sides level and won a clear penalty, Balogun stepped up with composure and slotted home to make it 2-1—his ninth Ligue 1 goal of the season and 15th across all competitions. Manager Sébastien Pocognoli had praised Balogun's work in the build-up play throughout the contest, and his clinical finishing ultimately proved the difference at the Groupama Stadium.

The goal extended an impressive scoring streak of five consecutive Ligue 1 matches, with standout contributions against top sides such as PSG and Lens. Add five Champions League goals to his Ligue 1 tally, and the picture of a striker hitting peak form becomes impossible to ignore.

With the 2026 World Cup on home soil fast approaching, those numbers are drawing serious attention. Competing for the USMNT starting spot alongside Ricardo Pepi, Balogun's current trajectory gives him a compelling case to lead Mauricio Pochettino's attack and he shows no signs of slowing down.

Tillman Back on the Scoresheet

 Midfielder Finishes Off Splendid Cross in Draw With Heidenheim

Malik Tillman heads into the international break with a timely confidence boost after getting on the scoresheet for Bayer Leverkusen in a dramatic 3-3 draw with Heidenheim on Saturday.

The 23-year-old American midfielder broke the deadlock in the 22nd minute, finding space at the back post to slot home first-time from Aleix García's cross from the right. It was a composed, well-timed finish and a welcome one, ending a nearly two-month scoring drought for Tillman since his goal against Eintracht Frankfurt back in January.

The strike was his fifth in his debut Bundesliga season, adding to two more in the Champions League, and it came with a 76% pass accuracy across his 82 minutes on the pitch. Despite his contribution, Leverkusen ultimately had to settle for a point after Heidenheim twice fought back from behind to deny Kasper Hjulmand's side three points they desperately needed.

That dropped point stings for Leverkusen, who remain sixth in the Bundesliga and now sit four points behind third-place RB Leipzig with Champions League qualification hanging in the balance. For Tillman personally, though, the timing couldn't be better. He now joins the USMNT riding a wave of form ahead of what promises to be a pivotal stretch for the program, with a home World Cup on the horizon.