Friday, October 24, 2025

Sarachan Hired

On This Day in 2017, the Former Assistant Becomes Manager After World Cup Qualifying Disaster

The office chair Bruce Arena had occupied for nine months sat empty on October 24, 2017, a physical reminder of American soccer's most catastrophic failure in a generation. Just days earlier, Arena had resigned following the United States' stunning elimination from World Cup qualifying—a 2-1 loss to Trinidad and Tobago that sent shockwaves through the sport. The position had become toxic overnight—whoever stepped into that role would inherit not a team but a crime scene, tasked with sifting through the wreckage of missed opportunities and shattered expectations. Into this void stepped Dave Sarachan, Arena's longtime assistant, accepting an appointment that seemed designed more for administrative convenience than ambition.

The United States Soccer Federation's announcement framed Sarachan's role with careful precision: he would serve as interim head coach for the upcoming friendly against Portugal on November 14, making him less a temporary leader than a one-match caretaker. It was an appointment born of expediency rather than vision. Sarachan and the rest of Arena's staff remained under contract through year's end, and with only a single fixture on the calendar, the federation saw little reason to complicate matters. The search for Arena's permanent successor would begin in earnest after Portugal. However, the timeline remained murky at best—dependent on an organizational autopsy of what went wrong, a presidential election in February 2018, and the availability of candidates who might be coaching other nations through the World Cup.

For Sarachan, the appointment represented a curious full circle in a coaching career defined by loyal service rather than individual glory. The 63-year-old had spent decades in Arena's shadow, first at the University of Virginia, then through various MLS stops, and across Arena's two stints with the national team. His lone opportunity as a head coach came with the Chicago Fire in 2003, when he guided the team to the league's best record, a U.S. Open Cup triumph, and earned Coach of the Year honors. But the Fire had struggled in subsequent seasons, and Sarachan was dismissed midway through 2007. A year later, he had reunited with Arena at the LA Galaxy, where he helped orchestrate eight consecutive playoff appearances and three MLS Cup titles before both men returned to the national team in late 2016.

The path Sarachan inherited was unlike anything previous American coaches had faced. With no World Cup to prepare for and no competitive matches on the horizon, his tenure would unfold entirely through friendlies—a year-long exhibition season with no tournament at the end, no qualification campaign to validate his methods. It was a blank canvas, but one nobody particularly wanted to paint on. Other candidates who had expressed interest in the national team job, notably Tab Ramos, the former American midfielder coaching the under-20 team, had been unwilling to accept such a tenuous commitment.

What emerged from this unusual circumstance was a mission fundamentally different from any modern American coach's mandate. Without the pressure of results, Sarachan made a decisive choice: he would use his time to identify and develop the next generation. The approach was radical in its youth orientation. Over 12 matches, he handed out debuts to 23 players—more than any American coach in a comparable timeframe in the modern era. 20 of those debuts came in 2018 alone, tying with 2007 for second-most in a calendar year, despite Sarachan's team playing far fewer matches than those earlier squads had.

The numbers told only part of the story. More significant was the age at which these opportunities arrived. 13 of Sarachan's debutants were 22 or younger, with 11 eligible for the 2020 Olympics. Tyler Adams earned his first cap at 18. Weston McKennie and Tim Weah followed at 19. Josh Sargent at 18. These were players who reached their prime precisely when the United States co-hosted the World Cup in 2026. "Dave has done an incredible job of giving us the experiences we need now for the future," Adams explained. "When we look forward, whether it's in the Olympics, which a lot of us can play in or towards the 2022 and 2026 World Cups, we're going to be in our prime ages to go out and perform."

Sarachan's boldness extended to team selection, rewriting American records. Against Bolivia in May 2018, he fielded a lineup averaging 22 years, 160 days—the youngest in modern U.S. history at the time. Two weeks later, facing World Cup-bound France in Lyon, he sent out an only slightly older group that drew 1-1 with the eventual world champions. In his final match against Italy, he set a new benchmark: 22 years, 71 days. "It's not easy to throw teenagers out on the field, and there could have been guys that came in and already had a bunch of caps," Adams noted, "but he's trusted us and given the confidence to go in and be fearless to do our jobs."

The results themselves painted an ambiguous picture—three wins, five losses, four draws across 12 matches. But context mattered. Seven of his opponents had qualified for the 2018 World Cup. The victories included a 1-0 win over Mexico in Nashville—the Americans' first against their rivals since 2015—achieved days after the team toured Ground Zero in New York on September 11. The draws came against Portugal, France, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Peru. The losses, while disappointing, arrived against formidable opposition: Ireland, Brazil, Colombia, England and Italy.

When Sarachan's tenure officially ended on November 20, 2018, following that loss to Italy, the federation was ready to announce his permanent successor. Gregg Berhalter would be named on December 2, inheriting a program that looked vastly different from the one Sarachan had taken over thirteen months earlier. Where Arena had left behind aging veterans and tactical confusion, Sarachan handed over a player pool brimming with international experience gained against elite competition. Five players had scored their first international goals under his guidance. Five more had recorded their first assists. Two goalkeepers had earned their first wins and clean sheets.

The immediate verdict on Sarachan's tenure was necessarily incomplete. His legacy wouldn't be measured in wins and losses but in whether those 23 debuts translated into meaningful careers, whether those teenagers he had trusted would mature into the core of a successful World Cup team. It was groundwork, not glory—the unglamorous work of building foundations while others waited to design the house that would sit atop them. He had accepted an impossible job that nobody else wanted. He transformed it into something purposeful, turning a year that could have been lost to mourning and recrimination into one of deliberate preparation for 2022 and beyond.

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