Tag Archives: USMNT

CONCACAF Nations League finals: USMNT blanks Canada 2-0 for another trophy – Yahoo Sports

  1. CONCACAF Nations League finals: USMNT blanks Canada 2-0 for another trophy Yahoo Sports
  2. Concacaf Nations League Final: USA vs. Canada – Lineup, Schedule & TV Channels | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  3. USMNT vs. Canada Concacaf Nations League final: Stream and TV info USA TODAY
  4. U.S.-Mexico is still the main rivalry, but U.S. and Canada are now ‘the two premier teams’ in CONCACAF Yahoo Sports
  5. USA vs Canada score, result, highlights as Reyna stars, Balogun scores for USMNT to win CONCACAF Nations League title Sporting News
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USMNT vs. Canada: USA lineup, starting XI for 2023 Concacaf Nations League final, live stream, time – CBS Sports

  1. USMNT vs. Canada: USA lineup, starting XI for 2023 Concacaf Nations League final, live stream, time CBS Sports
  2. Concacaf Nations League Final: USA vs. Canada – Lineup, Schedule & TV Channels | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  3. USMNT vs. Canada Concacaf Nations League final: Stream and TV info USA TODAY
  4. U.S.-Mexico is still the main rivalry, but U.S. and Canada are now ‘the two premier teams’ in CONCACAF Yahoo Sports
  5. ULTIMATE CanMNT vs. USMNT Preview (ft. Atiba, Alistair Johnston, Scott Kennedy & Ismael Kone) 🎙️ OneSoccer
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Balogun: Southgate comments didn’t impact USMNT choice – ESPN – ESPN

  1. Balogun: Southgate comments didn’t impact USMNT choice – ESPN ESPN
  2. ‘No better way to introduce myself’ – Folarin Balogun on USMNT decision, first impressions against Mexico and his expectations for himself Goal.com
  3. Balogun: Southgate comments had no impact on USMNT decision Pro Soccer Wire
  4. Folarin Balogun breaks down ‘long process’ to commit to USMNT: ‘I just went with my heart’ The Athletic
  5. Ricardo Pepi relishing USMNT competition with new recruit Folarin Balogun: ‘It’s going to make me better’ Goal.com
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Inside Folarin Balogun’s USMNT reveal: Years of discussions and a late push from England – The Athletic

  1. Inside Folarin Balogun’s USMNT reveal: Years of discussions and a late push from England The Athletic
  2. Is Folarin Balogun the USMNT’s missing piece? | Pro Soccer Talk | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. What will Arsenal striker Folarin Balogun bring to USMNT? – ESPN ESPN
  4. Folarin Balogun chose USMNT due to ‘arrogance’ of England and Gareth Southgate as Eric Wynalda reflects on allegiance battle Goal.com
  5. Thierry Henry sends transfer message to Arsenal star Folarin Balogun as fans divided over starlet’s f… The US Sun
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Folarin Balogun set to represent USMNT over England after FIFA approves switch – The Athletic

  1. Folarin Balogun set to represent USMNT over England after FIFA approves switch The Athletic
  2. Balogun eligible for USMNT after FIFA approve request – ESPN ESPN
  3. Folarin Balogun picks USMNT over England, and instantly becomes a top U.S. striker Yahoo Sports
  4. Forward Folarin Balogun Commits To Represent The United States In International Competition | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  5. A HUGE win for USMNT as Folarin Balogun allegiance battle with England appears to be over as FIFA approves striker’s eligibility request Goal.com
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U.S. Soccer Matt Crocker: USMNT coach interviews won’t start with, ‘What do you offer us’ – The Athletic

  1. U.S. Soccer Matt Crocker: USMNT coach interviews won’t start with, ‘What do you offer us’ The Athletic
  2. U.S. Soccer’s new sporting director Crocker to begin coach search immediately – ESPN ESPN
  3. US Soccer’s new sporting director tells CNN Gregg Berhalter is a candidate for the USMNT opening CNN
  4. Roundtable: Was Matt Crocker the right hire as U.S. Soccer sporting director? The Philadelphia Inquirer
  5. Who is Matt Crocker? From Southampton academy manager to US Soccer’s new sporting director The Athletic
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Concacaf Nations League: USMNT vs. Grenada – Lineup, Schedule & TV Channels | U.S. Soccer Official Website – U.S. Soccer

  1. Concacaf Nations League: USMNT vs. Grenada – Lineup, Schedule & TV Channels | U.S. Soccer Official Website U.S. Soccer
  2. USA vs. Grenada, Concacaf Nations League: Time, TV schedule and lineups Stars and Stripes FC
  3. USMNT enter “complicated” Grenada match as Folarin Balogun recruitment lingers | MLSSoccer.com MLSsoccer.com
  4. PRE-MATCH PRESS CONFERENCE: Christian Pulisic & Anthony Hudson | USMNT vs. Grenada | March 23, 2023 U.S. Soccer
  5. Grenada vs USMNT, live! Score, updates, how to watch, videos NBC Sports
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USMNT roster projection: Who could be called up for Concacaf Nations League? | MLSSoccer.com – MLSsoccer.com

  1. USMNT roster projection: Who could be called up for Concacaf Nations League? | MLSSoccer.com MLSsoccer.com
  2. USMNT roster prediction: Gio Reyna returns, Alex Zendejas commits FOX Sports
  3. USA roster for March 2023 CONCACAF Nations League games: Projected USMNT squad players vs Grenada, El Salvador Sporting News
  4. USMNT squad announcement: Christian Pulisic and Matt Turner update, new head coach, date and time Football.London
  5. Chelsea star Christian Pulisic and USMNT given new coach timeframe as Gregg Berhalter call made Football.London
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USMNT reflects on World Cup performance

Comment

RAYYAN, Qatar — As the American soccer players took their sadness and their hope and exited this World Cup on Saturday night, they passed through the mixed zone, a strange and familiar maze of padded barricades and ad-rich walls at global sporting events where athletes sometimes stop in front of gaggles of reporters and share insights or non-insights on what just happened.

The Americans stopped, one by one by one, and unwittingly built a sort of staccato chorus that told of their pain at their 3-1 shooing from the Netherlands, their sense that they might have done more, and their sense that they might do more.

They offered a bit of What I Learned At The World Cup, as when goalkeeper Matt Turner said, “The biggest thing is the margins of success or failure in this tournament are just so paper-thin,” or when the youngest captain at this World Cup, Tyler Adams, said, “If there’s anything this team will take away from it, it comes down to the margins,” or when veteran DeAndre Yedlin said, “The biggest thing is the group learned what it feels like to lose in a World Cup, and that goes a long way,” or when Christian Pulisic said, “We don’t want to feel like this again.”

USMNT’s hopeful World Cup run fizzles out with loss to the Netherlands

First came Turner, 28, who began with: “The silence is deafening [in the locker room]; everyone’s disappointed.” He told how the Dutch seemed to have an “expectation” about the cutback crosses that wreaked the first two goals, said it “came down to both boxes” where “they finished their chances,” said it had been an honor, and said he hoped boys and girls would watch and aspire to emulate.

“There’s a tremendous potential,” he said. “If you don’t see that, I don’t know. … The potential is clear.” He did not want that “to be our M.O.,” and said, “That’s part of changing the expectations of our fans, changing the expectations of the players in the locker room, not just feeling like we won a trophy because we made the round of 16.”

Next came Adams, 23, who spoke about those “margins” — they’re everywhere, actually, across the 32-team event — and how the center backs “did really well,” and how he wasn’t around for 2010 and 2014 when the United States reached the same juncture, so he doesn’t know, but this does feel “special.”

World Cup bracket and knockout round schedule

Soon came Walker Zimmerman, the 29-year-old center back. He analyzed the Dutch puncturing of the American airtightness that had carried through Group B but could not hold against Denzel Dumfries’s first-half cross-backs. “Right,” he said, “you never know if it’s something that they maybe saw on tape. I mean, I’d have to go back at the group stage to see if those spaces were even open. Obviously we weren’t hurt by those chances in the group stage. Maybe it’s something that they saw. Maybe it’s just the execution in that moment, but again, certainly that second one, we’ve got to be able to mentally stop that play from happening.”

He summarized. “That’s what makes it the hardest,” he said, “just to go out knowing how special this team was, how hard we worked.” He thought they arrived with the goal of winning the whole thing and “showed that we can compete with anyone,” and ran off a list of promising attributes including “the youth of the team,” the “bond,” the “love that we have for each other.” He said this World Cup had been “something that a lot of American fans can look at and be proud of — the way that we play, the way that we went about our work. So I think we’ll be back hungrier than ever, a lot of the guys in their what we’d considered their prime, we have a lot of guys coming through the pipeline that I think can contribute. So it’s an exciting time to be an American soccer fan, and I just wish that the legacy — that’s what hurts is we thought this was a group that could have done something no American team had done.”

USMNT’s Walker Zimmerman is a very good soccer player. He might be a better teammate.

Andries Noppert popped by. He’s not American but Dutch, and a goalkeeper, and he took a few questions and chimed in with this: “They go like crazy, like hell. They’re working together. They don’t give up.”

Yunus Musah, just 20 somehow, was brief but said, “The team we are, we could have done much better.”

Brenden Aaronson, 22, was somewhat less brief and said: “Sad and a lot of emotions. It’s just tough.” And, “I mean, listen — we had just as many chances as they did.”

The Dutch won the game 3-1 on Dec. 3, eliminating the Americans from the World Cup. (Video: The Washington Post)

Antonee Robinson, still just 25, walked through and said of the two early goals: “I don’t know. Can’t tell you. Maybe they pulled our team apart a bit, in terms of positioning.” He said he hopes Coach Gregg Berhalter stays on and said: “He’s given a lot of boys a chance to develop with this group. You look at the whole campaign, and pretty much everyone’s played their first World Cup.”

He said he felt “like I’ve given everything I could have,” and that, “A whole lot of these players can be together for years and years now.”

Brewer: Don’t view the USMNT’s loss as the end. It’s a down payment on the future.

Here came Weston McKennie, 24, who proactively defended Pulisic for his miss in the third minute: “For anyone who may try in the future, ‘Oh, if Christian would have scored that,’ we all have seen the things he’s done for U.S. soccer. We all know it’s a collective here. We all try to support each other.”

He told of “a common goal four years ago” after missing the previous World Cup, and said: “This tournament has really restored a lot of belief, a lot of respect. We showed we can be giants. We may not be there yet, but we’re definitely on the way.”

“There was plenty in the tank,” he began, to a question wondering about fatigue.

“It’s going to hurt for a while,” he said of the early miss.

“We’ve definitely come a long way,” he said.

He said the Dutch seemed early on to have two real chances but also two real goals. “Felt like we were down 2-nil, but it didn’t feel like it should be that way. That’s what good teams do, they punish you.”

Yedlin, 29, the only player left from Brazil 2014, stopped and said: “I mean I think we gave a lot of people hope. People see the talent of this team, they get excited. The camaraderie of the group is exciting.”

“Now it’s a whole different story,” he said. “They know that feeling of what it’s like to lose after putting so much into it.”

Tim Ream, the USMNT’s ‘grandpa’ at 35, never gave up on his World Cup dream

Finally, there came Tim Ream, the 35-year-old defender. The evening, the World Cup and his U.S. career had waned, on a night when, as he told it from so much experience: “Sometimes, you know, good players get the jump on you. They anticipated. Those two players [Dumfries and Memphis], they were a little quicker. It was probably something they had worked on.”

“Yeah,” he said, “I mean, I’ve tried to convey to the guys: You’re never guaranteed anything in this game. I’ve been in the program for 12 years, never guaranteed anything. A lot of these guys are guaranteed another World Cup. For me, that’s not going to happen. … I’ve given it everything, and I hope these guys take that advice. I’ve seen them take that advice in the three weeks we’ve been together so I hope they continue to do that.”

With that, the mixed zone concluded for the night.

World Cup in Qatar

The latest: The knockout stage continued at the World Cup on Saturday with Argentina beating Australia, 2-1, in the round of 16. Argentina, featuring global star Lionel Messi in what is probably his final World Cup, is among the favorites to win the tournament and managed to finish first in Group C and move on to the quarterfinals despite a shocking loss to Saudi Arabia in its first game.

USMNT: The U.S. men’s national team fell to the Netherlands, 3-1, on Saturday in the opening match of the round of 16. The Netherlands, winners of Group A, had finished the group stage without a loss, conceding just a single goal. Its winning streak continues, while the U.S. run is over.

Knock out round schedule: A World Cup group stage filled with shocking upsets and dramatic turnarounds will now give way to a knockout round that promises more surprises.

Today’s WorldView: Ishaan Tharoor, The Post’s foreign desk columnist, chronicles his week at the World Cup in Qatar.

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USMNT knocked out of World Cup in round of 16 by clinical Netherlands



CNN
 — 

The United States Men’s National Team (USMNT) was defeated 3-1 by the Netherlands and knocked out of the World Cup in the round of 16, despite a spirited performance.

The Netherlands had been underwhelming during the group stages but showcased its quality and clinical edge on Saturday, with three well-taken goals from Memphis Depay, Daley Blind and Denzel Dumfries.

Haji Wright pulled one back for the USMNT late in the second half with his team trailing 2-1, but any comeback hopes were snuffed out by Dumfries’ 81st minute goal to all but confirm the Dutch victory.

US President Biden expressed pride in the USMNT’s performance in the World Cup following the team’s defeat , making a nod to the next World Cup in 2026, which will be held in the US as well as Canada and Mexico.

“Fellas, you made us proud. We get up and keep going,” Biden tweeted. “Here’s to a bright future and 2026 back here at home.”

The USMNT had more shots on goal than the Netherlands but once again, the lack of a proven goalscorer proved costly for Gregg Berhalter’s young team.

This was the USMNT’s youngest ever starting XI for a World Cup knockout match who lined up to face the Netherlands, aiming to reach the quarterfinals for just the second time in the modern era.

Berhalter’s side controlled the opening exchanges, finding space in behind the Dutch defense and Christian Pulisic had an early chance, going one-on-one with Oranje goalkeeper Andries Noppert who deflected the Chelsea forward’s shot away from goal.

Having soaked up that early pressure, the Netherlands then counterattacked with lethal precision.

After carving through the USMNT midfield, Cody Gakpo found Dumfries on the edge of the box who pulled the ball back to Depay perfectly positioned in front of the goal. The Barcelona forward finished off a sweeping move, firing the ball into the net.

The USMNT continued to press – a strike from Timothy Weah was batted away by Noppert and Sergiño Dest went on several mazy runs – but just could not find a way past the Dutch defense.

And then, on the stroke of halftime, the Netherlands doubled its lead as Blind rifled in Dumfries’ cross in an almost identical move to its first goal.

Immediately after the break, the USMNT almost pulled a goal back as the ball bobbled about in the box from a corner and Tim Ream guided it inches from the goal-line but the Netherlands cleared.

USMNT goalkeeper Matt Turner prrevent an almost certain goal as he made a double save, stopping two strikes in quick succession to keep his side’s fading hopes of reaching the quarterfinals alive.

His quick reflexes proved even more crucial minutes later when the USMNT finally scored as Wright latched onto Pulisic’s cross, with his effort looping over Noppert’s head.

The noise in the stadium, seemingly filled with American fans, briefly became deafening but just minutes later Dumfries hammered in Frenkie de Jong’s cross to confirm the Netherlands’ victory.

With that goal, Dumfries became the first Dutch player to be directly involved in more than three goals in a single World Cup match since 1978, according to the statistics website OptaJoe.

USMNT star Christian Pulisic said he was “really proud” of the team’s performances at the World Cup.

“I hope we showed a lot of people what we can do,” Pulisic told FOX’s Jenny Taft. “We deserved more from this tournament. End of the day, we couldn’t get it done, but I think there’s a lot we can be proud of.

“It hurts a lot right now,” added Pulisic. “We thought we could have advanced and done a lot more this time around, but I love these guys, and it’s a really special group that we have.”

The Netherlands now advances to the quarterfinals where it will face either Argentina or Australia on Friday.

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