Friday, October 17, 2025

Bradley's First Goal

On This Day in 2007, Bradley's First International Goal Ended America's Spiral and Validated His Father's Faith

The question confronting Bob Bradley as his United States team prepared for their October 17 friendly against Switzerland in Basel was no longer whether they could win, but whether they remembered how. The euphoria of Gold Cup triumph had dissolved into something approaching crisis—five consecutive defeats, the longest American losing streak in 13 years, each loss stripping away another layer of the confidence that had characterized Bradley's first months in charge.

The descent had begun almost immediately after Soldier Field's celebrations concluded. The Copa America in July had exposed the limitations of regional supremacy when measured against South American quality. The Americans failed to win a single group stage match, their ambitions reduced to damage control against opponents who treated CONCACAF champions with the casual dismissiveness reserved for continental interlopers. Paraguay, Argentina and Colombia had inflicted defeats that suggested tactical naïveté.

The return to friendly action had offered no respite from this pattern of diminishing returns. Sweden's narrow victory in August marked Bradley's first European assignment, a 1-0 defeat that revealed how American confidence wilted when transplanted to unfamiliar soil. The 4-2 thrashing by Brazil in September had been more concerning still—not for the margin against superior opposition, but for the defensive disorganization that allowed the Brazilians to score with such embarrassing ease. Bradley's record now stood at 10-1-5 (WDL); those five losses compressed into a span that threatened to redefine his tenure from promising beginning to premature unraveling.

Switzerland arrived at St. Jakob-Park carrying the confidence of co-hosts preparing for the following summer's European Championship. Their recent form—victories over Austria, Chile, and the Netherlands—suggested a team discovering its identity at precisely the moment when the Americans were losing theirs. The contrast in trajectories could hardly have been starker: one nation ascending toward continental prominence, the other struggling to arrest a slide that had transformed defending Gold Cup champions into a team whose European record read like an extended exercise in futility. Just three victories in 17 matches on the continent since 1998, the Americans had become tourists in a region where credibility was earned through results they seemed incapable of producing.

Yet Bradley's selection decisions for Basel suggested a coach whose faith in his philosophy remained unshaken by recent evidence. The inclusion of Freddy Adu—making only his second national team appearance 21 months after his debut—carried particular resonance. The 18-year-old prodigy had become American soccer's most visible symbol of unfulfilled potential, his transfer to Benfica yielding just 64 minutes across two substitute appearances in 2.5 months. The Portuguese club's coaching change had left Adu further marginalized, a talent languishing behind established stars while the weight of premature expectations threatened to calcify into permanent disappointment.

The first half unfolded with the sodden inevitability of a contest between teams uncertain of their own identities. Rain transformed St. Jakob-Park's surface into an unpredictable canvas where technical ambition repeatedly dissolved into agricultural clumsiness. Both sides were booed from the field at halftime, the Swiss fans' frustration matching that of the traveling American supporters who had watched their team struggle to construct anything resembling coherent possession. DaMarcus Beasley's departure after 31 minutes with an ankle injury had deprived the Americans of their most experienced European-based player, leaving them even more susceptible to Swiss physicality that seemed designed to expose American technical inadequacy.

Bradley's introduction of three debutants—Maurice Edu, Robbie Findley, and Danny Szetela—reflected either desperation or the conviction that fresh legs, unburdened by the losing streak's psychological weight, might discover solutions that experience had failed to provide. Szetela's entry in the 84th minute appeared to represent tactical surrender disguised as personnel management, a recognition that the match was drifting toward the kind of scoreless stalemate that would extend the Americans' winless streak.

What followed was the kind of moment that transforms both careers and narratives through a combination of persistence and fortune. Szetela's cross from the flank found Clint Dempsey, whose deflection sent the ball looping into the Swiss penalty area with the randomness that rain-soaked conditions encouraged. Michael Bradley, arriving at the back post with the timing that reflected instinct rather than design, met the loose ball from close range. His finish carried none of the technical brilliance that had characterized Benny Feilhaber's Gold Cup winner, but its significance transcended aesthetic considerations. This was Bradley's first international goal, arriving in his 13th appearance, and it was scored in the 86th minute to give the Americans their first victory in six matches.

"That's soccer sometimes," Bradley reflected afterward, his words carrying the practical wisdom of someone who understood that championships were not always claimed through beauty. "It's not always beautiful. It's not always that you can play pretty all over the field."

The goal's familial dimensions added layers of meaning that statistics alone could not capture. Bob Bradley's decision to feature his son throughout the losing streak had invited accusations of nepotism, and each defeat had amplified questions about whether the coach's judgment regarding personnel had been compromised by paternal loyalty. Michael's winner provided vindication that extended beyond the immediate result, offering evidence that the father's faith in the son had been rooted in assessment rather than sentiment.

Adu's late substitute appearance—entering in the 77th minute—provided its own subplot to the evening's narrative. His near-goal in the match's final minutes suggested flashes of the talent that had prompted Benfica's investment, even as his limited minutes reflected the reality that potential remained theoretical until converted into consistent performance. The teenager's post-match reflection that joining Benfica had changed him, making him better, carried the optimism of youth confronting the harsh education of European football.

The victory's statistical significance extended across multiple dimensions of American soccer's ongoing identity crisis. The five-game losing streak—their longest since 1994—had been arrested before it could reach the catastrophic 12-match winless run that defined the program's nadir in the mid-1970s. Their European record improved to 3-3-14 (WDL) since that distant victory in Austria in 1998. This tally suggested that the Americans remained fundamentally uncomfortable when competing outside the hemisphere, where their regional dominance provided psychological armor against technical inadequacy.

Switzerland's fans booed their team from the field at the final whistle, their disappointment reflecting expectations shaped by recent success and upcoming continental competition. For the Americans, such disappointment represented luxury—they had arrived in Basel hoping merely to remember how winning felt, to arrest a spiral that threatened to transform Bob Bradley's tenure from promise into cautionary tale.

The broader implications stretched toward World Cup qualifying, scheduled to begin the following June. Bradley's post-match emphasis on the importance of European competition—regardless of results—reflected understanding that American credibility would ultimately be measured beyond CONCACAF's familiar confines. The Gold Cup trophy provided regional bragging rights, but global ambition required demonstrating the capacity to win in environments where technical quality and tactical sophistication were assumed rather than aspirational.

Michael Bradley's assessment captured the evening's essential truth with the clarity that often accompanies relief. His acknowledgment of the team's spirit, their collective refusal to fracture under the weight of accumulated defeats, suggested that the losing streak had revealed character even as it had exposed technical limitations. The rain-soaked pitch, the physical Swiss pressure, the long stretches of disjointed play—these were the conditions under which championships were ultimately forged, where teams discovered whether their ambitions could survive contact with adversity.

As the Americans departed Basel with a victory that had seemed improbable during most of the 90 minutes that preceded it, the 2007 campaign had acquired a different narrative arc. The Gold Cup remained their defining achievement, but this late October night in Switzerland—unglamorous, aesthetically impoverished, decided by a scrappy goal from the coach's son—had provided evidence that even teams in crisis could locate the resilience necessary to arrest their own decline. Whether this represented genuine recovery or merely a temporary reprieve would be determined by matches yet to come. However, in Basel's rain-soaked aftermath, the Americans had at least proven they still remembered how to win when nothing else seemed to be working.

Richards vs Adams in the Premier League

American Duo Expected to Start Against One Another

Two United States Men's National Team stalwarts will face off in the Premier League on Saturday when Chris Richards' Crystal Palace hosts Tyler Adams' Bournemouth in a clash between two of the league's surprise packages this season.

Both clubs have enjoyed exceptional starts to the campaign, with Palace fourth and Bournemouth sixth. Each side has suffered just one defeat, setting the stage for what promises to be a compelling encounter between two in-form teams boasting strong American contingents.

Richards, who played the full 90 minutes in both of the USMNT's October friendlies against Ecuador and Australia, has been a pillar of Palace's defense this season. The 25-year-old center back made headlines before the Australia match when he urged his teammates to adopt a more aggressive mentality. "For too long, we kind of knew we were outplaying teams, but we're trying to do it the pretty way. And no, it's not always pretty," Richards told Fox Sports. "So I think making sure that you're able to be nasty when you have to be, I think that's something that we kind of try to adapt to our game."

Adams, meanwhile, missed the October international window for family reasons as he and his wife, Sarah Schmidt, welcomed their second child. The Bournemouth midfielder has been instrumental in the Cherries' impressive form, starting all seven Premier League matches and helping Andoni Iraola's side establish themselves as genuine top-half contenders.

After battling injuries that limited his availability in recent years, Adams has reestablished himself as a crucial player for both club and country, earning 10 caps in 2025, including four starts during the Gold Cup. Saturday's meeting represents more than just a Premier League fixture—it's a showcase of American talent thriving at the highest level of English football, with both players expected to play pivotal roles for the USMNT at the 2026 World Cup.

U17 World Cup Roster Released

 Sullivan, Albert, Among Others, Headline World Cup Team

The United States Under-17 Men's National Team roster for the 2025 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Qatar features some of American soccer's most exciting young talents, headlined by Philadelphia Union prodigy Cavan Sullivan and Borussia Dortmund winger Mathis Albert.

Sullivan, who made history last year by becoming the youngest player in MLS history at just 14 years and 293 days, represents the squad's most high-profile selection. Now 16, the midfielder has primarily featured for the Union's reserve side this season, making 13 first-team appearances. His inclusion underscores the pathway from youth national teams to professional success that U.S. Soccer continues to emphasize.

Albert, also 16, has established himself as one of Germany's premier prospects at Dortmund, with head coach Niko Kovač already facing questions about potentially giving the American teenager his first-team debut. His development in one of Europe's top youth academies highlights the growing number of young Americans thriving abroad.

Head coach Gonzalo Segares selected 21 players for the tournament, with 14 returning from the successful qualifying campaign in Costa Rica, where the U.S. topped their group. "We're excited to bring together this group of young men that have worked so hard to get to this point," Segares said. "Representing our country at the World Cup is an honor and a privilege and will be an experience they will never forget."

The roster includes several players who have already tasted senior-level action, including Chicago Fire defender Christopher Cupps, New York City FC midfielder Maximo Carrizo, and Charlotte FC forward Nimfasha Berchimas, who returns for his second U-17 World Cup after leading the team with three goals in 2023.

The U.S. begins group stage play on November 5 against Burkina Faso, followed by matches against Tajikistan and Czechia. This marks America's 19th appearance in the U-17 World Cup in the newly expanded 48-team format.

Pulisic Out For At Least Three Weeks

Winger Injured His Hamstring Against Australia, MRI Says the Injury is Low Grade

Christian Pulisic's injury during Tuesday's friendly against Australia has sparked controversy and concern, with AC Milan reportedly frustrated over Mauricio Pochettino's handling of their star player. The American captain was forced off in the 31st minute after suffering a hamstring injury, and subsequent medical scans revealed a low-grade lesion in his right biceps femoris.

Italian outlet Tuttosport reported that Milan officials are "annoyed" with Pochettino's decision to start Pulisic, particularly since the forward was already dealing with an ankle injury that had limited him to a substitute appearance in Friday's match against Ecuador. The club believes the risk was unnecessary given the match was merely a friendly with nothing at stake.

Pulisic will miss at least two weeks of action, ruling him out of Milan's fixtures against Fiorentina and Pisa. AC Milan plans to reevaluate his condition in 10 days, with the possibility of his return for the away match against Atalanta. If cleared, he might also be available for the USMNT's November fixtures against Paraguay and Uruguay.

The injury represents a significant blow for Milan, as Pulisic had been their standout performer this season with six goals and two assists through the club's first seven matches. Pochettino acknowledged the challenging circumstances surrounding the injury, suggesting the drastic climate change from Texas to Colorado may have contributed. "I think it's a thing that is a massive risk," Pochettino told reporters. "I think the [temperature] difference [between Austin and Colorado] and that can affect your body and everything. That is difficult."

The incident has raised questions about player management during international windows, especially when club players are dealing with minor injuries. For Pulisic, who had been enjoying a career-best start to the season with Milan, the timing couldn't be worse, as he risks missing crucial Serie A matches during his absence.