One nation under Jurgen Klinsmann with dreams of goals for all



Got a tip. comment, criticism, idea, or suggestion email us at redwhiteandbluearmy@gmail.com

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Christian Pulisic (Chelsea) Became The First American To Appear In A Champions League Final

 

    The USMNT still has a ways to go but today was a special moment as its brightest star-Christian Pulisic-became the first American to ever appear in a Champions League Final as Chelsea blanked its Premier League rival Manchester City 1-0 to win its second Champions League title in club history. The 22-year-old from Hershey, PA subbed in for striker Timo Werner in the 66th minute and just missed scoring the insurance goal that would have put Chelsea up 2-0 on the favored Manchester City who won the Premier League this season. In 24 minutes of action off the bench, Pulisic had 19 touches of the ball and made 16 passes while recording one shot. He capped off an up-and-down season personally in the best possible way, as a legitimate contributor to the top club team in the world. 
    In 10 Champions League games this season (which included four starts), Pulisic had two goals and two assists. In 27 Premier League appearances in 2020-21 (18 starts), he had four goals and two assists. He also played in six FA Cup matches (three starts) and two USMNT friendlies where he added a goal in two starts. It's been a very busy stretch for Pulisic who battled a hamstring injury and saw his former manager at Chelsea-Frank Lampard-get fired and be replaced by his old Borussia Dortmund boss Thomas Tuchel. It's easy to get caught up in the frustrating aspects but the bottom line is that there he was smiling from ear-to-ear and lifting the Champions League trophy this afternoon in Porto with his Chelsea teammates so that had to make all the hard times well worth it. 
    For the record, he wasn't the only American there either as Manchester City's backup goalkeeper for most of the season was Zack Steffen-another native of Pennsylvania. He was understandably stuck behind City's star Brazilian goalkeeper Ederson but the 26-year-old still managed to get in the occasional starts in the League Cup, the FA Cup, some USMNT friendlies, the Premier League and the Champions League in this past campaign. This is a guy who was in MLS just a few years ago so I'd say that his future also looks very bright considering how far he's come in his career. More than anything with the next World Cup coming up in 2022, seeing Pulisic and Steffen as key parts of two of the best club teams in the world, as a fan of the USMNT you have to be psyched about the future with so many talented players scattered all around the world.




Monday, March 15, 2021

Happy Day: Valencia Midfielder Yunus Musah Chooses The USMNT Over England, Italy & Ghana

 

    You might not have been aware of it but this morning the USMNT scored one of their most important victories in a long time. No it didn't come on a field, in true 2021 form the message that 18-year-old midfielder Yunus Musah had picked them over the likes of England, Italy and Ghana was relayed over social media. Think about that, a prodigious talent that currently starts regularly in La Liga (Spain) for Valenica on his own free will picked the U.S. men's soccer team over two European powerhouses and the African country where his parents are originally from. 
    I liken this whole process to big-time recruits in high school basketball or football in America picking which juggernaut college program they'll presumably play for during the next few years before hopefully making millions of dollars as a pro. The key difference in Musah's case is that while his future is still unwritten, he has already proven at a young age that he can play in one of the top leagues in the world for a middle table club as a teenager. With all due respect to USMNT manager Gregg Berhalter, I'm pretty sure this decision had very little to do with him since who the hell is he in Musah's mind?
    Nope, while it's great that Berhalter gave Musah his first two USMNT caps in November vs. Wales and Panama, the player is betting on the future of the U.S. being brighter than those three other aforementioned countries. The chance to play with great young American players like midfielders Christian Pulisic (Chelsea), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Giovanni Reyna (Borussia Dortmund) and Tyler Adams (Red Bull Leipzig) was too much for Yunus to pass up and that's something which should give U.S. fans plenty of confidence moving forward. 
    It's one thing for sportswriters and media members to project what countries are going to be on top in the near future but who knows better than the guys who are actually on the field, you know playing in the games themselves? Musah has gotten a taste of U.S. training camps and a few friendlies and he obviously liked what he saw. Keep in mind, he went to Arsenal's academy and he captained England at various levels including the Under-18s in 2019 and he played on the Under-19s team in October of 2020. Musah is following in the footsteps of Barcelona defender Sergino Dest who wisely picked the USMNT over the Netherlands in 2019. 
    A very busy year is about to commence for the USMNT as Olympic qualifying starts later this week, they have a pair of friendlies next week against Jamaica and Northern Ireland then this summer they have the Nations League, the Gold Cup and the Olympics (assuming that they make it there this time). World Cup 2022 qualifying begins in September and that doomed tournament takes place in November and December of next year in Qatar. If it feels like you understandably need a refresher course on who plays for the USMNT these days, don't worry since you'll get plenty of chances to see them (obviously with different rosters depending on the time of the year and the various club schedules) in the coming months.




Thursday, October 1, 2020

USMNT Defender & Rising Star Sergino Dest Leaves Ajax To Sign 5-Year Contract At Barcelona

 

    It wasn't that long ago that a USMNT player going to Europe to compete for any half decent club-let alone one of the great powerhouses-was big news. 2020 has been a nightmare in basically every way possible but at least thanks to social media and cable TV packages, we are able to watch the best American players compete every week throughout Europe and far away from the mediocrity and utterly boring nature of MLS. Following in the footsteps of Christian Pulisic (Chelsea), Tyler Adams (Red Bull Leipzig), Gio Reyna (Dortmund), Weston McKennie (Juventus) and Chris Richards (Bayern Munich) among many others, today fullback Sergino Dest agreed to a five-year deal with Barcelona.
    I can't pretend that I know all that much about Dest in terms of seeing him compete that often. Ajax matches are hard to find unless they are deep into the Champions League and as we all know, the USMNT has barely had any games this year due to the global pandemic. However, reading about him from many trusted soccer writers around the globe, it sounds like there is much to be excited about for this 19-year-old who grew up in the Netherlands but chose to represent the USMNT rather than the Dutch. Take that Arjen Robben! 
      The rumors started to creep up last week that he was choosing between Barcelona and Bayern Munich for his next destination. What a life, huh? Unless you've been paying close attention this year, you'd probably be surprised to hear that Bayern is actually a notch above Barca at the moment. With yesterday's German Super Cup win over Borussia Dortmund, that gave Bayern five (!) trophies this year. Additionally, their roster is more loaded than Barcelona's. Of course this is not to say that Barcelona is merely a consolation prize. Any chance to count one of the best players in soccer history as a teammate-a still in-his-prime Lionel Messi-you jump at that opportunity.  
    Barcelona has turned some of its aging roster (adios Luis Suarez and Arutro Vidal) over since watching its chief rival Real Madrid win La Liga earlier this summer and then getting absolutely destroyed 8-2 by Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarterfinals. Ajax used to be one of the top clubs in the world and they've started to regain some of that notoriety in the last few years thanks to an incredible development program. Dest is a shining example of what they do in Amsterdam (besides smoke a ton of weed and ride bicycles like they're going out of style): he played in 35 matches with 27 starts for Ajax last season, adding two goals and six assists.
    Barcelona's new manager Ronald Koeman is from Holland as well so that shouldn't hurt Dest's chances of getting on the field soon for Barcelona. Even if it takes some time to be featured frequently by Koeman, he will be getting incredibly valuable experience training every day alongside stars like goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen, defenders Gerard Pique and Jordi Alba, midfielders Sergio Busquets, Frenkie de Jong (his old Ajax teammate) and Philippe Coutinho along with forwards like Messi, Antoine Griezmann and Ousmane Dembele. 
    Despite the last few years being a bit of a mess (by their impossibly high standards), Barcelona's trophy case is still overflowing. This is a team that's won 30 Copa Del Rey trophies, 26 La Liga titles, five Champions League trophies and three FIFA Club World Cup trophies. Dest is obviously not afraid of personal challenges and heading to Spain is a logical next stop for a guy who has tantalizing potential. As if you needed any additional reasons to watch Barcelona matches (other than Messi doing his usual wizardry and Ray Hudson's glorious commentary on beIN Sports), here it is. Let's also hope that the USMNT can get back on the field someday soon because for once, their roster is going to be loaded with legitimate talent not just the usual MLS heroes.




Saturday, August 29, 2020

Weston McKennie Leaves Schalke For Juventus Where Cristiano Ronaldo Will Be A Teammate

 

    If you've been paying attention lately, this end result wasn't a surprise by any means since European soccer rumors are covered almost as extensively as U.S. presidential elections stateside but it is still enormous news for the U.S. men's soccer national team that one of their top talents-midfielder Weston McKennie-has been loaned from FC Schalke (Germany) to Juventus (Italy) until June 30, 2021. If things go well for the 22-year-old Texan at one of the world's top clubs, he could in line for 18.5 million Euros paid over three years. He will be the first American to ever play for Juve. Wow!
    It's been a meteoric rise for McKennie who started with his local MLS club's (FC Dallas) youth program before making the prudent move to head to Schalke and the Bundesliga in 2016. He spent part of his childhood growing up in Germany so there wasn't a huge culture shock for him once he returned. In fact, he made his first team debut the next year. Over the past three seasons, he's become a fixture for Schalke playing in multiple positions and therefore in the same time frame he got his first USMNT call-up under his belt (memorably scoring vs. Portugal in his U.S. debut) and since then he's become enough of a star that he was a captain for them as a 20-year-old.
    Christian Pulisic rightfully gets most of the headlines which makes sense with his insane career trajectory but with McKennie at Juventus now along with Tyler Adams at Red Bull Leipzig and Giovanni Reyna at Borussia Dortmund just to name a few, the US men's national team shouldn't miss any more World Cups in the near future-assuming that those are still a thing despite the Covid-19 pandemic. Besides their ages and limitless potential, my favorite part about all of these guys is that they are not afraid to go to Europe where they can train and compete against the best players from around the globe. They are not the coddled players from previous USMNT generations that mostly preferred to stick around here where they could dominate without putting in much effort.
    Moreover, they are not scared to make the leap to even bigger (ie. more pressure-packed) clubs. With five goals in 91 career appearances for Schalke (including a Champions League game-winner) and six goals in 19 appearances for the Red, White and Blue, McKennie realized that Schalke will never be more than a mid-tier club in the Bundesliga at best. Their glory days have long passed and they'll never be better than the juggernaut Bayern Munich or Dortmund who is also becoming a budding powerhouse in their own right. Juventus on the other hand is a lock to win Serie-A every year (9 in a row and counting!) not to mention the fact that they are always a contender for the Champions League crown as well. Oh and one of the greatest players in soccer history-Cristiano Ronaldo-plays there along with another absurd attacking talent in Argentine Paulo Dybala. You can't expect McKennie to have an immediate impact with Juve, remember that even Pulisic had some bumpy moments in his first Chelsea campaign, but you can't find a much better environment in every possible way (players, coaching, fans, worldwide attention) to maximize his abilities.




Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Samantha Mewis Goes to Man City Which is Great For Her & USWNT but Bad News for the NWSL

 

    Hello friends, I thought that I should check in after over a year since my last post. Haha so what have you been up to lately, are you enjoying the pandemic as much as I am? With no Olympics this summer (maybe next summer?) plus all USMNT and USWNT matches cancelled due to the coronavirus, there has not been a whole lot going on with our best men and women's soccer players. Yes, our top men like Christian Pulisic (Chelsea) and numerous guys in the Bundesliga gave us something to watch this spring/summer when European leagues returned to action. Similarly, many of the top women's players were in the successful NWSL Challenge Cup tournament in Utah which concluded in July. 
    Still, there are so many question marks in all of our lives these days, so imagine if you were a professional athlete in the prime of his or her career. What a nightmare. Whitman-Hanson alum (shoutout to that Massachusetts high school) and UCLA star Samantha Mewis has improved by leaps and bounds the last few seasons to become one of the best midfielders in the world. As such, she wants to challenge herself and the fact that there is no certainty if the NWSL will even have anymore games this year, she made the prudent decision to head to England to play for Manchester City. 
    I have always taken the opposite view to our USWNT players than the USMNT guys (who I always want to go abroad) since they are in the mix every year for the best national team in the world so you would hope that the United States could sustain a top-flight women's professional soccer league. Turns out, no matter how many World Cups (four) or Olympic gold medals (also four) that they win, all that love and positive momentum that they gain in the brightest spotlight, without fail always fades a bit too much when they return home. 
    That's why more and more of the USWNT's top stars head to Europe like Carli Lloyd or Alex Morgan (before she got married and had a baby) to play for powerhouse clubs like Man City or Lyon. Rose Lavelle is also rumored to be going to Man City any day now. There are only eight teams in the NWSL and even though Mewis' club-North Carolina Courage-is one of the best, she needs more certainty in her professional life. Women's soccer is slowly getting more popular overseas and it's no wonder that the juggernaut men's clubs can also field a women's team in its own backyard. 
    I will never lecture anyone on what to do with their time but with that said, this is my personal feeling on the subject of women's soccer in the U.S.: if you enjoy the USWNT, please support them at their club teams as well and make the NWSL or whatever women's league is around in the United States more stable so that our best players don't have to compete elsewhere to stay in top shape for the World Cup, Olympics, She Believes Cup, friendlies, etc. Rant over. 



Monday, July 8, 2019

With a Chance to Bring Positive Energy Back, USMNT Fall Flat On Their Face in Gold Cup Final

I'll keep this brief because first of all this team-the USMNT-really doesn't deserve much attention (at least in a positive manner) and likewise, especially on today of all days when the USWNT just captured their fourth World Cup title. However, let it be noted that the U.S. men fell 1-0 tonight in the Gold Cup 2019 Final to Mexico at a sold-out Soldier Field in Chicago. The Americans were bidding for their seventh Gold Cup title but they were outdone by their most bitter rival the Mexicans who earned their record eighth Gold Cup crown in front of what must have felt like a home game to them. Oh and did I mention that Mexico improved to 5-1 against them in the Final? The only U.S. win vs. Mexico in the Final remains from 2007.

The U.S. had two great scoring chances early in the match as midfielder Christian Pulisic had a breakaway stopped by Mexico's goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa (I'm the biggest Pulisic honk I know but he should have done better with that shot). That was frustrating but not even in the same galaxy as striker Jozy Altidore's pathetic breakaway that started off so well with him putting a Mexican defender on skates but that ended with him shooting the ball wide of the net. When you don't score on either opportunity like that in soccer, you have a sense of impending doom that hits you right away when you are playing a team that is better than you to begin with.

Sure enough while it was 0-0 at halftime, Mexico turned up the pressure in the second half and was rewarded in the 73rd minute with a beautiful goal (part of me just died inside admitting that). The sequence began when midfielder Rodolfo Pizarro (who earlier in the 1st half appeared to hyper-extend his elbow) passed to forward Raul Jimenez in the box who back-heeled a pass to midfielder Jonathan dos Santos whose left-footed shot rose enough to hit the crossbar but bounce in past U.S. goalkeeper Zach Steffen.

One goal shouldn't automatically mean that you are cooked but with Altidore already subbed out and the other veteran American Michael Bradley (why is he still on the team?) giving away the ball in the midfield left and right, you knew that the USMNT was in dire shape down 1-0. They finished with only two shots on goal and despite having four more corner kicks than Mexico (7-3), they did nothing but waste them all.

I'm not going to say that he was exposed since I didn't think much of him to begin with but I can't say that I'm overly impressed with the latest U.S. vanilla head coach Gregg Berhalter. His roster decisions for the Gold Cup were puzzling (no Josh Sargent?) and while I admit that he was understandably hamstrung a bit by a Tyler Adams injury right before the tournament started, that's no excuse for making such bizarre decisions like putting in something called Daniel Lovitz in the 83rd minute this evening down a goal. Huh? I understand that winning a Gold Cup doesn't mean all that much in the grand scheme of things but to get this program back on track, shouldn't they focus on tasks that they can excel at like this while building to those more pipe-dream thoughts (ruling CONCACAF, winning a group stage and competing for a World Cup, etc.)?

This could have been a change of pace from their last few years of painful irrelevance, a rare good development for the USMNT. However, instead they continue to spin their collective wheels despite possessing a ton of young talent (Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Tyler Boyd who somehow didn't play tonight) that thank god, choose to play in leagues outside of average MLS.








Sunday, July 7, 2019

U.S. Becomes 2nd Women's Team to Win Back-to-Back World Cups After 2-0 Win vs. Netherlands

The U.S. women's soccer team was the best squad in France over the past month and they put a bow on their latest unforgettable run with a 2-0 shutout of the Netherlands this afternoon in Lyon for their second straight World Cup title and record fourth overall (1991, 1999, 2015 and 2019). The Americans outscored their opponents 26-3 (sure half of those goals came against Thailand but who's counting?) and they never trailed as they became the second women's team to win back-to-back titles-joining Germany from 2003 and 2007. Head coach Jill Ellis is the first person to lead a team to back-to-back Women's World Cup crowns.

After missing the semifinal match vs. England, icon Megan Rapinoe returned from her hamstring injury to score one last goal (another successful penalty kick) that turned out to be the game-winner on the way to the double award sweep of the Golden Ball (best player) and Golden Boot (top scorer with 6 goals and 3 assists). At 34, this more than likely was her last World Cup match (same for Carli Lloyd who came on for the last 3 minutes as a substitute) so what a way to go out after an absolutely brilliant stay in France. Midfielder Rose Lavelle had the highlight of what was truthfully a rather boring Final as she blasted in the insurance goal for a 2-0 U.S. lead after one of the best goals of the tournament.

Coming into this matchup, I felt like there was a good chance that the Netherlands wouldn't be ready for this type of moment and what do you know, I was right! Let's not forgot that although they won the 2017 Euros, this was only their second ever appearance in the World Cup following 2015's loss in the Round of 16. They also had never trailed in France and held the U.S. scoreless in the first half thanks to some incredible saves by their goalkeeper Sar Van Veendendaal. The Dutch surprisingly made it this far playing in low-scoring, defensive struggles but that is not exactly the recipe to defeat a true juggernaut like the U.S.

Possession was relatively even (54%-46% in favor of the Americans) but the U.S. outshot them 17-5 with 10 times as many (!) of those on goal (10-1). Van Veendendaal (who won the Golden Glove) was forced to make eight saves while U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher might as well have taken a nap since she only had to make a lone save in over 90 minutes of "action." Finally, the U.S. had four times as many corner kicks (8-2) so it is probably an upset that the Netherlands were able to hold the line at 0-0 for that long.

The first half wasn't a classic by any means (much like the match itself) but the U.S. should have been up by at least a goal or two if it wasn't for Van Veendendaal's heroics. She knocked away Julie Ertz's quick turnaround shot that came from a loose ball in the box, a header by Samantha Mewis hit her in the ribs, she stopped a shot from Alex Morgan that also hit the post and yet again she stoned Morgan who took a curling shot from outside the box. The Americans also suffered an injury to defender Kelley O'Hara in the closing minutes of the opening 45 minutes: she went up for a header and hit her head very hard against her Dutch opponent. She lay on the field barely moving (knocked out?) but eventually got up and walked off so it wasn't shocking to see Ali Krieger replace her to start the second half since she undoubtedly had to have concussion-like symptoms.

Like Rapinoe, Morgan finished with six goals and three assists (in more time so I guess that was the tiebreaker) in France and you could make a valid case that she worked harder for those numbers since she seemed to get physically beat up during every single game. Haha well maybe not against Thailand where she scored a whopping five goals but that's besides the point. She drew the penalty kick that was taken by Rapinoe in the 61st minute and Lavelle put this to bed eight minutes later after an assist from Mewis. Rapinoe's goal was the 50th of her U.S. career and I'm comfortable saying that Lavelle has never scored a bigger goal in her life.

It's easy to acknowledge it now after the fact but France, England and even Sweden (you could argue) all gave the U.S. a tougher test than the Netherlands. It was clear from the beginning today that the Dutch were probably just happy to be here and knew in their heart of hearts that they didn't have a true shot to win the crown barring something crazy going down. That's not to say that they didn't deserve to be here or that they weren't a worthy opponent, just that the Final was not close to the most exciting of the seven matches that the Americans had in the past month.

Finally the hard truth for U.S. soccer fans: just like in 2015, this World Cup journey for the USWNT has been an utter joy to witness on many levels. However, we can't bury our collective heads in the sand and pretend that all that matters for women's soccer is this event which only happens every four years. Nope, for the sport to continue to build off of this incredible momentum, they need the NWSL (National Women's Soccer League) to be way more relevant.

That means that if you liked what you saw at the World Cup, you should check out the league that many of these players compete in. ESPN picked up many of its games to broadcast for the remainder of the season culminating with the playoffs. The NWSL has lost money for years, hence why so many of the top players (Americans and beyond) have gone to play in Europe to rightfully earn bigger paychecks. We have to do a better job of supporting this product day-to-day rather than year-to-year, otherwise we'll be stuck in purgatory having these same frustrating conversations about wage inequality forever.