IU advances to Sweet 16 Sun 1 pm BTN
The Virginia men’s soccer team (11-3-4, 5-2-1 ACC) will host Indiana (14-4-4, 4-2-2 Big Ten) in the third round of the NCAA Men’s Soccer Championship on Sunday (Nov. 26). Kickoff is set for 1 p.m. at Klöckner Stadium. Unseeded Indiana advanced to the third round after wins over Lipscomb, and 10th-seeded Wake Forest. Virginia is the No. 7 seed in the NCAA Men’s Soccer Championship and advanced to the third round after a 2-1 overtime win over FIU. Indiana (8) and Virginia (7) rank second and third among NCAA Division I programs with the most NCAA titles—only Saint Louis (10) has won more.
US loses to T&T
US loses to Trinidad & Tobago 2-1 again. The last time the US traveled to Port a Prince their 2 -1 loss cost them a World Cup place – this time the 2-1 merely means the US advances to the Copa America this summer and the Nations League final 4 in March. Amazing that this US simply cannot win under GB on the road in CONCACAF – of course this game loss stands on the shoulders of Serginio Dest who blew a gasket and got red carded off midway thru the first half after being an absolute idiot. Listen Dest is a good winger and questionable defender at best – this is now the 2nd game he has lost his mind and been kicked out – which will force him to miss the first game in the Nations League Semis – I for one would simply leave him off the roster until COPA to see if he can straighten his crap out. No wonder no real club keeps him as Barcelona, AC Milan and others have all cut ties with the Dutch right back. Either way the US advances –but lets be real if they play the way they have played since the World Cup – they won’t win 2 games in the COPA this summer.
Games to watch
Saturday gives us a doosie in the EPL at 7:30 am Saturday as Liverpool hosts Man City on Peacock of course. Newcastle will host Chelsea at 10 am – again on Peacock before MLS playoffs get underway @ 5:30 pm on Apple Orlando City vs Columbus & 8 pm Cincy vs Philly. Sunday IU plays Virginia at 1 pm on BTN, then Inter Milan travels to face McKinney & Weah for Juvuentus at 2:45 pm on Paramount plus. Finally the final MLS Semi’s at 7 pm on FS1 Houston vs Sporting KC & Seattle hosting LAFC at 9:30 pm on Apple. Champions League next week Tues/Wed has PSG hosting New Castle United at 3 pm Tues along with Dortmund traveling to AC Milan and Pulisic & Musah also at 3 pm both on Para+.
One of our top Soccer Pubs around –Union Jacks Pub in Broadripple is struggling with all the road closures over the past 2 years – they host the American Outlaws Indy, EPL games on Weekends, Champions League on Weekdays, and of course the EUROS, & World Cups. If you get a chance to swing by and grab a bite and a pint – rather its on gameday or not – I am a sure that would help.
Indiana Referee in need
Our community has been given the heart-breaking news that one of our very own referees, Brian Mitchell, has been diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease). Please read the message below and consider donating to the Mitchell family as they will need our help during this very difficult journey. https://www.gofundme.com/f/friendsofbrianmitchell

Catch Champions League Tues/Wed or EPL Sat/Sun at Union Jacks Pub in Broadripple
GAMES ON TV
Sat, Nov 25
7:30 am Peacock Man City vs Liverpool
9:30 am ESPN+ Dortmund (Reyna) vs Mgladbach (Scally)
10 am Peacock Newcastle United vs Chelsea
10 am USA Nottingham Forest (Turner) vs Brighton
12:30 pm USA Brentford vs Arsenal
5:30 pm Apple TV Orlando City vs Columbus Crew
8 pm Apple TV Cincy vs Philly
Sun, Nov 26
9 am USA Tottenham vs Aston Villa
11:30 am USA Everton vs Man U
12 noon CBSSN Roma vs Udinese
1 pm big 10? Indiana U @ Virgina Sweet 16
2:45 pm Para+ Juventus (Weah, McKinney) vs Inter Milan
7 pm FS1, Apple TV Houston Dynamo vs Sporting KC
9:30 pm Apple TV Seattle Sounders vs LAFC
Mon, Nov 27
3 pm USA Fulham (Ream, Robinson) vs Wolverhampton
Tues, Nov 28 – Champions League
12:45 pm Para+ Lazio vs Celtic
3 pm Para+ PSG vs New Castle United
3 pm Para+ AC Milan (Musah, Pulisic) vs Dortmund (Reyna)
3 pm Para+ Man City vs RB Liepzig
3 pm CBS SN Feyenoord vs Atletico Madrid
3 pm Para+ Barca vs Porto
Wed, Nov 29 – Champions League
12:45 pm Para+ Galatasaray vs Man United
12:45 pm Para+ Sevilla vs PSV (Tillman, Dest)
3 pm Para+ Real Madrid vs Napoli
3 pm CBS SN Benifica vs Inter Milan
Sat, Dec 2
2:30 pm TNT, Max USWNT vs China
Tues, Dec 5
7:30 pm TNT, Max USWNT vs China
IU Advances to Sweet 16
IU defeats Wake Forest to Advance to Sweet 16
IU Digs Deep to Down Deacs, Advance to Ninth Straight Sweet 16
DiPrimio: Mihalic a Catalyst in IU’s Latest Surge
US Men
Hayes’ appointment shows US Soccer’s ambition. So why keep Gregg Berhalter?
US coach Berhalter slams ‘inexcusable’ Dest after Trinidad defeat
Sergiño Dest’s meltdown gives USMNT night to forget in Trinidad and Tobago ESPN
USA exits U-17 World Cup after five-goal thriller with …
US exits U17 World Cup after Round of 16 loss to Germany
U.S. Men’s Olympic Soccer Team Draws Iraq 1-1 in First Match of November International Window
USA U17s & U23s
USA exits U-17 World Cup after five-goal thriller with Germany
US Women
U.S. Soccer embracing Hayes’ ‘bold, brave’ vision ESPN Jeff Carlisle
USWNT roster: NWSL champion Jenna Nighswonger receives first call-up Emma HrubyNov 20, 2023
USWNT schedule: U.S. to host China in December friendlies JWS StaffNov 20, 2023
USWNT roster: Rose Lavelle returns for first time since World Cup Emma HrubyNov 20, 2023
USWNT players: Megan Rapinoe’s ‘devastating’ ending doesn’t tarnish career
Copa America in US
Mexico saves itself from free fall, and saves CONCACAF, with a stirring Nations League comeback
Canada Soccer crashes out of CONCACAF Nations League after shocking loss to Jamaica
Mexico pulls off stirring Nations League comeback Despite Nations League turnaround, lackluster Mexico must speed up improvements ESPN Cesar Hernandez GK
MLS
How to Watch the MLS Semi-Finals
Euro’s
Euro 2024 power rankings: Why England are not No 1… yet
Euro 2024: Erling Haaland, Victor Lindelof, Stefan Savic – which stars will not be at the tournament?
Euro 2024 play-offs: Guide to Wales’ potential semi-final and final opponents
Who has qualified for Euro 2024 – and which nations still could?
World
Brazil vs. Argentina: Historic World Cup qualifier is overshadowed by violence and chaos at the Maracanã stadium
Lionel Messi warns Argentina-Brazil fan trouble ‘could have been a tragedy’
Brazil 0-1 Argentina: Lionel Messi after fans and police clash in stands
CONMEBOL 2026 World Cup qualifying schedule, results, table: Argentina flying, Brazil in a rut
Goalkeeping
Great Saves at Champions League Matchday 3
Sacramento Republic FC’s Danny Vitiello is the USL …
2023 USL League One Goalkeeper of the Year Finalists 🧤
Reffing

Great day of Reffing with Ernesto Ruiz at the Girls College Showcase at Grand Parks Sunday (despite his El Tri hat)

With Copa America qualification set, the USMNT must identify players beyond nucleus

By Paul Tenorio Nov 21, 2023 The Athletic
The U.S. men’s national team went into this November window knowing, above all else, it needed to qualify for the Copa America. It would have to do so without key starters Christian Pulisic and Tim Weah, both out with muscle injuries, and World Cup captain Tyler Adams, who is out for the long term after a second hamstring surgery. And while injuries to key starters are never a good thing for a team, the silver lining can be the opportunity they bring to learn more about the overall roster. The U.S. did indeed qualify for the Copa America. But nothing else about the window played out as one might hope in order to get a true evaluation of the team’s depth.In the first leg, the U.S. played against a 10-man Trinidad and Tobago team sitting deep inside its own half for most of Thursday night’s 3-0 win. But even that game yielded more opportunity to learn about the pool than Monday night’s away leg in Port of Spain. The U.S. — now also without starting midfielder Weston McKennie, who left camp due to a knee injury — held a 1-0 lead until right back Sergiño Dest melted down on the field in the 39th minute, picking up two yellow cards inside of a minute to leave his teammates a man down for more than 50 minutes in difficult conditions. Playing with 10 men, the U.S. had to try to grind out a result and lost, 2-1 — the same scoreline as the last time they visited Trinidad, the 2017 loss in Couva that knocked them out of the World Cup. It was enough to qualify for the summer Copa with a 4-2 aggregate win over the two-leg series, but any “plans” for the window felt lost.“I think according to our plan, there were going to be a lot of different things happening, right,” U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter said, cracking a rare smile in the postgame press conference. “And the plan gets thrown out the window a little bit when you’re down to 10 men.”The U.S. is clearly trying to evolve the group. After playing out of a base 4-3-3 formation in the last cycle, they’ve utilized more of a 4-2-3-1 this time around, with Gio Reyna a central figure as the No. 10. And as the playing style changes, the pool is constantly being evaluated, too. The nucleus of this U.S. team is not going to change over the course of the 2026 cycle, nor will the starting lineup when and if everyone is available. Pulisic, Weah, Adams, McKennie, Reyna, Yunus Musah, Matt Turner, Antonee Robinson and Dest are basically locks as starters. (Obviously, Dest’s red card may impact his next few windows, but in the long term, it’s tough to argue he isn’t one of the 11 best players for the U.S.) Chris Richards, Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi are going to be in every camp and in the mix to start. Luca de la Torre, Joe Scally and Brenden Aaronson are locks on the depth chart. Tim Ream is 36 years old, but as long as he’s performing at a high level with Fulham, he will be in the team. That’s a solid core of 16 players to build the roster around. But the depth — the next 14 men who make up the 30-man preliminary rosters around which teams are built — still needs to be built out.
In the 2022 cycle, Berhalter found players he could trust for key minutes during qualifiers. Kellyn Acosta, Jesus Ferreira and Paul Arriola played important roles both as starters and off the bench, and others like De la Torre, Jordan Morris, Aaron Long, Reggie Cannon and Josh Sargent were regulars.This time around, there are spots on the depth chart up for grabs. The U.S. is looking for a left back behind Robinson and a No. 6 who can fill the role Acosta did in the last cycle as the backup to Adams. They need wingers on each side of the formation and likely one more central midfield option. The backup goalkeeper job behind Matt Turner remains unsettled. The competition at center back is very real.As part of the turnover in this cycle, Berhalter is clearly giving players opportunities to grab those roles. Call-ups in the last three months have included newcomers like Lennard Maloney, Kristoffer Lund, Kevin Paredes, Drake Callender and Benjamin Cremaschi, as well as players who have fewer than 10 caps like Malik Tillman, DeJuan Jones, Tanner Tessman, Alex Zendejas, Gaga Slonina and Johnny Cardoso. In the first leg, Tillman and Paredes got starts on the wing in place of Pulisic and Weah, but neither overwhelmed with their performances. In the end, it was Pepi off the bench who changed the game, with Robinson and Reyna sealing the outcome.After McKennie departed camp with his knee injury, Monday’s game saw the U.S. try a new formation, one they came up with the day before the game and had not trained at all. Berhalter said the team talked through the formation, but didn’t even walk through it as they were concerned it might be scouted in Trinidad.“In general, for the first 35 minutes, it was working as planned,” Berhalter said. “One (forward) was coming, one was going, nice interactions with the 10s in the pocket, fullbacks getting forward. Our goal was actually (attacking) fullback (matching up) to (opposing) fullback, which we always like, which showed that the guys were getting nice and aggressive. We’d had a number of chances with Brendan Aaronson, with (Balogun), with (Pepi), so overall pleased with it. But, I wish we would have had a bigger body of work to go on because after the red card it was more challenging.”
The plan was to substitute Zendejas for Reyna at halftime, a planned sub after Reyna had gone 90 minutes on Thursday in Austin — his first 90-minute outing for the U.S. since Sept. 2021 and his first for club or country since March 2022. Joe Scally was a planned substitution for Dest. Zendejas never got in the game. When Dest was red-carded, Scally subbed in for Reyna, who was set to come off three minutes later, at halftime. Tillman entered in the 65th minute for Pepi and Maloney entered in extra time to see out the game. There wasn’t much to be learned about any of the subs, or really too much to go off of on the performance or the two-striker formation itself.“Overall (the red card is) a complete lack of respect for the guys that are playing, for the guys that are on the bench,” Ream said. “A lack of respect for the game itself, for the referees. … For me, just a feeling of disrespect to be completely honest with you, and that’s something that he needs to understand. Because it completely changes the game, but then it completely changes any type of potential plan of guys coming in and subs off the bench, throws that completely out of whack. So yeah, just disrespectful overall.”This window felt a bit like a lost opportunity to gather more information, but there will be more chances to evaluate the pool. The U.S. typically has a January camp for MLS-based players. It will be a good chance for players like Jones, John Tolkin, Eryk Williamson, Cade Cowell and others to try to prove themselves. That this is an Olympic cycle, too, means those camps give windows for players like Tanner Tessmann, Jack McGlynn, Booth, Cremaschi and Gianluca Busio, among others.The hope is that some of those players emerge as bigger contributors for the senior team in the coming months. And while the U.S. will hope they can rely on their nucleus in next summer’s Copa America, the process of building out the depth chart will extend out two years beyond that to the ultimate goal: a 2026 World Cup on home soil. (Photo: John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)
USMNT qualify for 2024 Copa America despite Sergiño Dest red card vs. Trinidad

By Paul TenorioNov 20, 2023 THe Athletic
The U.S. qualified for the 2024 Copa America on Monday night despite a 2-1 loss to Trinidad and Tobago.
The Americans held an early one-goal advantage in the first half in Port of Spain, Trinidad, and seemed firmly in control of the game before Sergiño Dest was red-carded inhe 39th minute after picking up two yellow cards inside of a minute in a bizarre sequence.Dest was yellow carded for picking up the ball and drop-kicking it away after the ball was called out of bounds by the linesman. Dest then turned and started talking to the center referee, covering his mouth as he did so and gesturing toward the linesman. Dest seemed to be upset that an earlier foul committed on him was not called.Multiple teammates, including Gio Reyna, Yunus Musah and Tim Ream, tried to pull Dest away, but he continued talking to the referee and eventually blew a kiss. At that point, he was shown a second yellow card, and therefore the red, and was ejected.Both Ream and goalkeeper Matt Turner yelled at Dest as he walked off the field and eventually into the locker room. U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter immediately subbed right back Joe Scally into the game for Reyna, but four minutes after Dest was sent off, Trinidad equalized the game on a goal from Reon Moore.
“I want to apologize to my teammates, staff, fans and whole nation for my behavior,” Dest said in an Instagram post after the game. “It was unacceptable, selfish and immature. I let my team down! It’s something I have to learn from and it won’t happen again!”The U.S. held a three-goal lead entering the away leg and after Antonee Robinson’s diving header opened the scoring Monday. They held a four-goal advantage with an away goal, which meant Trinidad and Tobago would need to score five unanswered goals to knock the U.S. out of the Nations League.T&T took the 2-1 lead on Alvin Jones’ knuckling free kick in the 57th minute that somehow found its way through Turner’s hands. It was a familiar scoreline for the U.S. in Trinidad. They lost 2-1 in Couva, Trinidad, in 2017, their last visit to the island nation, in the game that knocked them out of the 2018 World Cup. The U.S. was able to limit the damage at that point, however, and held on to secure their spot in the Copa America.With the win, the U.S. also advances to the CONCACAF Nations League semifinals in March. The U.S. won the first two editions of the Nations League and has the opportunity to make it three straight.
What they’re saying
“It’s crazy, it’s unacceptable,” former USMNT star DaMarcus Beasley said on the TNT broadcast at halftime. “This is unacceptable. What he did just now to put his team, put the U.S. team under that kind of pressure going into the second half, going into a real game that matters. And now he misses the semifinal. I would love to know what made him that upset for him to kick a ball out of the stadium and then start yelling at his teammates as you’re going off the field.”Beasley was asked what Dest’s teammates would say to him at halftime.“I’m just going to my O.G.s. If this was Gregg Berhalter when he was a player and he was going to meet Sergiño Dest in the locker room, all hell would break loose,” Beasley said. “Same thing with Clint Dempsey. Same thing with Carlos Bocanegra. The captains of the national team. They are not going to let this slide.”“I understand kicking the ball out of the stadium, you’re upset, but then you keep going and then you keep going, you blow kisses at the referee,” Beasley said. “For what? Because you didn’t get (a foul called on you). That’s baby behavior. I don’t understand that and I’m still upset about that.”After the game, Berhalter spoke about Dest’s red card.“He apologized to the group; he said it’s not going to happen again,” Berhalter said. “As a team, the players, the staff, we need to hold him accountable, because it’s inexcusable, it really is. We were very firm with our words after the game. He put a number of guys in jeopardy, made a number of guys do a lot of extra work in this weather. And it’s inexcusable.”Berhalter faced several questions about Dest before saying he did not want it to be a “witch hunt” and said that the team would work to move forward from Monday’s red card.“Serge has done a great job of maturing and growing over the years that he’s been with the group and, for him, this has to be a learning experience,” Berhalter said. “It will be a learning experience. How we work, we give people second chances, we work with people, we help them overcome instances like this. So, we’ll do the same with Sergiño. He’s a talented player, an important part of our team. And we need to have good conversations with him (and) make sure we get him on the right track.”Ream called Dest’s actions a “complete lack of respect for the guys that are playing, for the guys that are on the bench.”“A lack of respect for the game itself, for the referees,” the veteran back said. “For me, just a feeling of disrespect to be completely honest with you, and that’s something that he needs to understand. Because it completely changes the game, but then it completely changes any type of potential plan of guys coming in and subs off the bench, throws that completely out of whack. So yeah, just disrespectful overall.”
What’s next?
The U.S. ‘A’ team won’t be together again until March, when they meet for the Nations League semifinal on March 21. The teams joining them in those games are yet to be determined.Panama beat Costa Rica later Monday night to advance with a 6-1 aggregate lead. Canada holds a 2-1 lead over Jamaica, and Honduras has a 2-0 advantage over Mexico. Those games are scheduled to be played on Tuesday.The U.S. traditionally holds a January camp for MLS-based players, though that camp has not yet been announced. It could be a prime opportunity, however, to bring in Olympic-eligible players and, as it traditionally does, build out the depth of the pool.

USMNT analysis
Analysis and Player ratings: A Dest meltdown sees the USMNT lose to T&T but still advance
The 2023 year is over for the USMNT and it ends with a disappointing loss to Trinidad & Tobago that saw Sergino Dest meltdown, get sent off, and the U.S. team never recover. The U.S. team still qualified for the Nations League and Copa America, but not in the way it wanted. ASN’s Brian Sciaretta breaks it down
BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED NOVEMBER 20, 2023 9:10 AM
THE UNITED STATES national team concluded its 2023 calender year in disappointing fashion with a 2-1 loss to Trinidad & Tobago in Port of Spain on Monday night. The result was enough for the team to advance 4-2 on aggregate to qualify for both the Nations League semifinal and the 2023 Copa America, but the performance left a lot to be desired – specifically with Sergino Dest who was sent off in the 39th minute.The United States opened the scoring in the 25th minute off a nice diving header from Antonee Robinson who got on the end of a well-delivered cross from Dest.
But the game became unglued in the 39th minute when Dest was sent off following an call from the officials and afterward the PSV fullback punted the ball into the crowd and continued to argue. A yellow card was followed by a red card. Dest’s U.S. teammates including Gio Reyna and Yunus Musah were trying to calm Dest down. Captain Tim Ream then proceeded to yell at Dest on the field as he slowly left. Matt Turner was also harsh with Dest.Once Dest left the field, Trinidad & Tobago almost immediately equalized when former Forward Madison fullback Alvin Jones played Reon Moore into the box in transition. Moore was able to beat Cameron Carter-Vickers on speed. Turner lost his footing on Moore’s shot from a tight angle which found the back of the net.Then in the 57th minute, Jones put T&T in front with a well-struck free kick that was savable but dipped and swerved off the fingertips of Turner for a 2-1 lead.
From there, T&T continued to have the better of chances but the U.S. team was able to settle down and see out what was a one-goal loss but an overall aggregate win.Some thoughts.
DEST’S MELTDOWN
Sergino Dest’s behavior in the events which saw him sent off was baffling. There is a lot of talk on this team about second chances and maturing. But lost in this red card is the note that it was his second red card for the national team of 2023 after he was sent off late in the team’s 3-0 win over Mexico in the Nation’s League semifinal in June. Dest might be young. But this is a player who has played in Champions League games for Ajax, Barcelona, AC Milan, and now PSV Eindhoven. He’s also played in the World Cup. This was not a “heat of the moment” reaction. He punted the ball away and contnued to argue with the officials despite pleas from his teammates. It’s not a matter of apologizing and moving beyond it. Dest apologized and that’s fine. But there are now “trust issues” with him. Does he run the risk of putting his team in bad situations again? This wasn’t strike one. This was strike two. Afterward, Berhalter admitted it “was a concern” given that this wasn’t a first-time incident for Dest. Berhalter said it was inexcusable but also shot down hints of an extended absence from the team. After the third question about Dest, Berhalter said he doesn’t want to turn it into a “witch hunt.””Sergino has done a great job of maturing and growing over the years that he’s been with the group,” Berhalter said. “For him, this has to be a learning experience. It will be a learning experience. We give people second chances. We work with people, we help them overcome instances like this. We’ll do the same with Sergino. He’s a talented player, an important part of our team, and we need to have good conversations with him to make sure we get him on the right track.”
Ream chimed in and spoke of the disappointment in Dest but also said he will need to show improvement beyond words.”Words with him would be putting it nicely, to be completely honest with you,” Ream said. “And there were a lot of choice words at halftime.””We are a pretty forgiving group,” Ream added. “We understand that we’re a young group. People can make mistakes and it’s just a big mistake. There’s not really any excuse for it. The only thing I think Sergino can do is hold his hand up, hold himself accountable, and when he is inevitably called upon again to be a part of this group, he has got to show with not just words saying sorry, but show with his actions that we can trust him to be someone we can rely on and off the pitch.”Of course, this is not the first time the U.S. team has had to deal with a lack of maturity and decision-making. There obviously was the Gio Reyna incident at the World Cup and then there was Weston McKennie’s incident in qualifying.
But both of those incidents were off the field. Dest now has two ugly incidents on the field in competitive games.“I want to apologize to my teammates, staff, fans, and whole nation for my behavior,” Dest wrote on Instagram after the game. “It was unacceptable, selfish, and immature. I let my team down! It’s something I have to learn from, and it won’t happen again.”As Ream said, it’s more than words. Dest will eventually be put in a frustrating moment on the field when emotions will be strong. Only by keeping his cool in those situations will this be put behind him.Dest is now suspended for the Champions League semifinal. It remains to be seen if Berhalter will call him up in March or whether the next time we see Dest is in the summer.
THE PERFORMANCE
As for the team’s performance, the team started off well and was dominant for at least the first 30 minutes, and probably until Dest’s red card. The only thing that was missing was finishing. But the chances were there and the U.S. team started off the game well. But the team did not respond well after the red card. The backline became a mess and T&T started to generate real chances quickly.Matt Turner could have prevented both goals, with the second goal having been more savable. In the second half, the U.S. team needed players to step up with big individual efforts since they were down a man. But unfortunately, no one rose to the occasion. It was a tough game for Luca de la Torre and Brenden Aaronson, Yunus Musah, and Malik Tillman who couldn’t feed the attack much in the second half.Even down to 10 players, the U.S. still had a lot of talent on the field but they weren’t able to do much with it.
A NEW FORMATION
One of the more interesting takeaways from this game that is lost in the discussion due to Dest was the return of the 4-4-2 formation. This is a formation that used to be preferred years ago under Bob Bradley and the first Bruce Arena tenure but hasn’t been tried since.There is plenty of reason to think it would be useful in certain situations for the U.S. team when it is short on wingers – like this camp. Balogun and Ricardo Pepi could benefit from being on the field together.
Apparently Berhalter agreed and he was willing to try this formation despite never having practiced with it (something he admitted after the game in the press conference). In reality, it looked more like a 4-2-2-2 with Musah and de la Torre behind Aaronson and ReynaThe U.S. team was very dangerous and was on the front foot the first 30 minutes. The team benefitted from having an extra midfielder and the fullbacks were able carry the attack from the wide positions. It was working well but Dest’s red card really made relearning this formation on the fly an impossibility.It raises the question whether the 4-4-2 is still optimal when Weah and/or Pulisic are healthy. Then the U.S. team would have wingers for a 4-3-3. The answer is probably no. But it’s very good for the U.S. team to be able to have different formations it is comfortable with.
PLAYER RATINGS

Matt Turner: The U.S. goalkeeper could have done better on both goals. Rating: 4.0
Antonee Robinson: scored the only goal and was by far the best U.S. player over both games this camp. Rating: 7.0
Tim Ream: Was exposed for pace a little bit when the game was open in the first half and when T&T had more space in the second half. Still, he wasn’t at fault for either goal. Rating: 5.0
Cameron Carter-Vickers: Was beaten for pace on Moore’s first goal. Rating: 4.5
Sergino Dest: Nice assist but clearly put the U.S. team in a game-changing and bad spot with his tantrum. Rating: 3.0
Yunus Musah: The AC Milan midfielder couldn’t break down T&T’s defense and create much. T&T did a good job containing him. Rating: 5.0
Luca de la Torre: Was slightly more effective than Musah, but not by much in terms of creating dangerous chances – which is what this team needed with two forwards up top. Rating: 5.5
Gio Reyna: He was moving the ball well and was a boost to the attack before being sacrificed for a defender after Dest’s meltdown. Rating: 6.0
Brenden Aaronson: Worked hard, drew four fouls, but was also 0/5 in his tackles – one of which gave T&T the free kick on the winning goal. He had two shots saved and was effective early in creating chances before the team went down a man. Rating: 5.5
Ricardo Pepi: It was a tough game for Pepi, even when the teams were even 11v11. Pepi didn’t have a shot and had just one touch in the T&T box. He had a few nice moments in hold-up play and some good passes, but it wasn’t what he wanted or what the team needed. Rating: 5.0
Folarin Balogun: Forced a big save early in the game and narrowly missed two other times. It was frustrating for him, but at least he was in a dangerous position multiple times. Rating: 5.5
SUBSTITUTES
Joe Scally: Came into the game earlier than expected for Dest and never seemed at ease – caught out of position a few times. Rating: 4.5
Malik Tillman: A few nice moments here and there came up empty. Rating: 5.0
Lennard Maloney: an uneventful outing cap-tied him to the U.S. program. Rating: NR
USMNT advances to Concacaf Nations League Semifinals after battle with Trinidad

PORT-OF-SPAIN, TRINIDAD – The U.S. Men’s National Team lost to Trinidad and Tobago 2-1 in the second leg of the 2023-24 Concacaf Nations League Quarterfinal at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, advancing to the tournament’s semifinals with a 4-2 aggregate win over two legs. It also earned the USMNT a place in next summer’s Copa America, which will be played in the United States.The U.S. now moves on to contest the Semifinal Round of the 2023-24 Concacaf Nations League on March 21 in Arlington, Texas against one of the following regional rivals: Costa Rica, Panama, Jamaica, Canada, Honduras or Mexico.Hosts Trinidad and Tobago – down 3-0 after the USA’s first leg win in Austin, Texas on Nov. 16 – were pinned back in their own defensive third early in the second leg. An early spinning shot from midfielder Brenden Aaronson from close range in just the third minute was followed a minute later by another good effort from forward Folarin Balogun – both of which forced T&T goalkeeper Denzil Smith into awkward saves. Those chances were a hint of things to come as the USMNT took a lead in the 25th minute via the head of defender Antonee Robinson who scored in back-to-back games for the first time in a USA shirt.
With a 4-0 lead on the aggregate, it should have been clear sailing for the U.S., but a self-inflicted wound in the 39th minute complicated matters. Dest, whose pinpoint cross set the table for the opening goal, picked up the ball and punted it away after the referee blew his whistle to call a throw-in for the hosts. That earned the U.S. defender a yellow card. His continued arguments earned him a second yellow, from Guatemalan referee Walter Lopez as the U.S. were reduced to 10 men for the rest of the game. Dest will also be suspended for March’s Nations League Semifinal.
With confidence bolstered by the man advantage, Trinidad & Tobago pulled level just before halftime after a long ball from Alvin Jones ball sent Reon Moore into the right side of the penalty area in the 43rd minute. The Trinidadian striker shrugged off a challenge from center back Cameron Carter-Vickers before hitting the ball past U.S. goalkeeper Matt Turner inside the near post for his eighth goal in 25 caps. It was the host side’s first shot on goal.
Tension continued to ramp up for the U.S. after the interval. Jones went from provider to scorer in the 57th minute when his knuckling free kick from 25 yards screamed past the U.S. defensive wall and off Turner’s fingertips before nestling in the back of the net. That put the hosts into the lead 2-1 on the night, but still down 4-2 on the aggregate. It was a lead Trinidad and Tobago held – but could not increase — until the final whistle as the U.S. dropped a result to the Soca Warriors for only the fourth time in history.
GOAL SCORING RUNDOWN:
USA – Antonee Robinson (Sergiño Dest), 25th minute: Dest collected the ball on the right side after a sequence of sharp U.S. passes carved open a gap in the hosts’ midfield. Robinson – lurking at the back post – slipped in front of his marker to meet Dest’s accurate cross with a diving header from eight yards out. The Fulham defender drove his shot off the slick surface and inside of Denzil Smith’s near post. TRI 0, USA 1
TRI – Reon Moore (Alvin Jones), 43rd minute: Domestic-based defender Alvin Jones hit a long, searching ball up the right side from deep in the Trinidad & Tobago defensive third. It picked out Rean Moore – an unused sub in the first leg – who muscled the inside track on U.S. center back Cameron Carter-Vickers before hitting his shot from the right side of the penalty area just inside the near post. TRI 1, USA 1
TRI – Alvin Jones, 57th minute: While the direct free kick initially looked to be outside shooting distance, Alvin Jones decided to have a go anyway. His powerful free kick swerved and spun in the heavy Port of Spain air before dipping dramatically and going off the fingertips of a diving Matt Turner and into the U.S. net. TRI 2, USA 1
– U.S. MEN’S NATIONAL TEAM MATCH REPORT –
Match: Trinidad and Tobago vs. United States Men’s National Team
Date: November 20, 2023
Competition: 2023-24 Concacaf Nations League – Quarterfinal, Leg Two
Venue: Hasely Crawford Stadium; Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Kickoff: 7:07 p.m. ET (8:07 local)
Weather: 82 degrees, clear
Scoring Summary: 1 2 F
USA 1 0 1
TRI 1 1 2
USA – Antonee Robinson (Sergiño Dest) 25th minute
TRI – Reon Moore (Alvin Jones) 43
TRI – Alvin Jones 57
Lineups:
USA: 1-Matt Turner; 2-Sergiño Dest (39, Ejected), 3-Cameron Carter-Vickers, 13-Tim Ream (Capt.) 5-Antonee Robinson; 7-Gio Reyna (19-Joe Scally, 42), 6-Yunus Musah, 14-Luca de la Torre (22-Lennard Maloney, 91), 11-Brenden Aaronson; 9-Ricardo Pepi (17-Malik Tillman, 65), 20-Folarin Balogun
Substitutes not used: 18-Ethan Horvath, 21-Gaga Slonina, 4-Chris Richards, 10-Alex Zendejas, 12-Miles Robinson, 15-Paxten Aaronson, 16-Kevin Paredes, 23-Kristoffer Lund
Head coach: Gregg Berhalter
TRI: 22-Denzil Smith; 14-Shannon Gomez, 16-Alvin Jones, 2-Aubrey David (Capt.), 17-Justin Garcia, 6-Andre Raymond; 13-Reon Moore (19-Malcolm Shaw, 77), 12-Daniel Phillips (23-Kristian Lee-Him, 77), 18-Andre Rampersad, 10-Real Gill (7-Ryan Telfer, 61); 9-Nathaniel James (8-Duane Muckette, 77)
Substitutes not used: 1-Christopher Biggette, 21-Jabari St. Hillaire, 3-Ross Russell, 4-Jesse Williams, 5-Michel Poon-Angeron, 15-Kevon Goddard, 20-Kaile Auvray
Head coach: Angus Eve
Stats Summary: USA / TRI
Shots: 10 / 10
Shots on Goal: 5 / 5
Saves: 3 / 4
Corner Kicks: 6 / 2
Fouls: 14 / 19
Offside: 1 / 0
Misconduct Summary:
USA – Sergiño Dest (Caution) 39th minute
USA – Sergiño Dest (Ejection) 39
USA – Joe Scally (Caution) 79
TRI – Duane Muckette (Caution) 80
Officials:
Referee: Walter Gomez (GUA)
Assistant Referee 1: Keytzel Corrales (NCA)
Assistant Referee 2: Raymundo Feliz (DOM)
4th Official: Oliver Vergara (PAN)
VAR: Guillermo Pacheco (MEX)
AVAR: Erick Miranda (MEX)
Man of the Match: Antonee Robinson
USA vs. Trinidad & Tobago, Concacaf Nations League Quarterfinals: Staff Man of the Match
While we wait for the community, we give our picks.
By Donald Wine II@blazindw Nov 22, 2023, 12:30pm PST
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The United States Men’s National Team once again fell to Trinidad & Tobago on the road Monday night, this time a familiar 2-1 loss in the second leg of the Concacaf Nations League Quarterfinals. Despite the loss, the USMNT won the aggregate 4-2, advancing to the Concacaf Nations League Finals as well as qualifying for the 2024 Copa América.
Normally, we would have the SSFC community rate each player to see who they thought played the best on the evening and would earn the community’s Man of the Match award. However, due to a mixup, the wrong form was originally placed into the Community Ratings article on Monday night. That form has been corrected, and now you have the chance to vote below.
Meanwhile, the SSFC staff cast their vote for one player that they thought was the Man of the Match for the USMNT. Antonee Robinson, who scored the lone goal for the United States, received 3 votes to win the Staff Man of the Match award. Yunus Musah received 1 vote as well.
The staff votes:
Donald – Antonee Robinson
Rob – Antonee Robinson
Justin – Yunus Musah
Adnan – Antonee Robinson
Now, you’ll have your chance to rate each of the players from Monday’s match, as well as Gregg Berhalter and the referee. We’ll post the results on Friday. In the meantime, hit the comments to discuss the staff votes for Man of the Match.
USMNT’s Weston McKennie says Leeds loan failure spurred him on at Juventus

By The Athletic Staff5m ago
USMNT and Juventus midfielder Weston McKennie believes he has emerged stronger from a loan spell at Leeds United during which he felt he “let people down”.McKennie spent the second half of last term in England, but registered just one assist in 19 Premier League appearances in a campaign that ended with Leeds being relegated.The 25-year-old has become increasingly important this season for Juventus under Massimiliano Allegri and thinks the experience meant he returned to Italy with fresh intent to prove himself.
He told Sky in Italy of his time at Leeds: “I didn’t have the best performances. I felt I let certain people down.“But at the end of the day, when I came back, I think it was important for me in general to have an experience like that, to have that happen to me at this moment of my career, because when I came back it felt like I was coming back here for the first time again.“When I first came to Juventus, nobody knew who I was, everybody doubted me, everybody was against me, and I think it was important for me because it put chips back on my shoulder. That’s when I perform best and prove that I can do it and that I belong, so it was nice to come back and have that feeling again.”McKennie — who had to pull out of international duty with what the U.S. said was an “aggravated” knee issue — has made 10 starts in 12 Serie A games so far in 2023-24, and drew praise from Allegri after Juventus maintained the pressure on league leaders Inter Milan with a 2-1 home win over Caligari before the international break.“Wes is having a good season,” Allegri said. “He is maturing.”The top two meet on Sunday, with visiting Inter two points ahead, and McKennie is eyeing an opportunity to put the “Scudetto in our sights”.“It’s too early to say at this point in the season,” he said of the game’s significance, but added: “Juventus is ready for this challenge, to try and win”.
Keyrol Figueroa: The Liverpool and U.S. starlet with the world at his feet

By Andy JonesNov 20, 2023
Keyrol Figueroa only turned 17 at the end of August but he is used to the spotlight.Already in his nascent career, Figueroa has coped with the pressure of being the son of a famous footballing father and uprooting his life in the United States following a move to Liverpool. By contrast, his current mission of helping the U.S. progress in the Under-17 World Cup — which continues with a last-16 game against Germany tomorrow — probably seems simple.Figueroa has always been the subject of scrutiny. In 2017, as part of the FC Dallas under-12 squad, the striker took part in the Prospects Cup in Florida alongside teams such as Real Madrid, Manchester City and Borussia Dortmund.The tournament was hosted by Univision, a Spanish-speaking media outlet in the U.S. and South America. As the son of former Premier League defender and Honduras international Maynor Figueroa, he got plenty of attention.
“He took it all in his stride. He was getting a lot of interviews, but he was never saying, ‘This is all about me’,” says former FC Dallas under-12s manager John Gall. “He was always talking about his team-mates, his club, the situation that he was in. But he scored some incredible goals in that tournament. He had something a little bit different.”
Keyrol Figueroa has made a big impression with the U.S. (Christian Hofer/Getty Images)
Born in Honduras but raised in England — he qualifies to represent those countries as well as the U.S. — Figueroa has no shortage of admirers. One of the more renowned ones is France international and Atletico Madrid striker Antoine Griezmann, who has offered words of encouragement via WhatsApp messages and Instagram
Before he arrived at Liverpool in 2018, Figueroa was part of the FC Dallas Academy, joining after his father signed for the senior team in January 2016. It was an odd scenario as he was not a player on the FC Dallas academy radar, or someone they had been scouting. His talent, though, was quickly evident.
He began in the shadow squad to develop his game understanding and learn standards and expectations, but he made it impossible for Gall to ignore him.
“It was clear from day one, he was a super competitive kid,” says Gall. “I remember many times when my under-12 team would play friendlies against the team he was on and he was always the kid that you didn’t want to play against. He was always dangerous.
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“He was always trying to push and to be the best that he could be so he was constantly knocking on the door. We moved him up and he blossomed into the group I was working with and it was a pretty quick transition.”

Nicknamed ‘Young Figgy’, Figueroa was a big personality but Gall insists he was polite, hard-working and humble — albeit ferociously competitive.
“He wanted to be the best player that he could be and he wasn’t afraid to voice opinions,” says Gall. “There were times when we lost games and his shirt was over his head, upset and frustrated. Losing wasn’t in his repertoire.”
There was no ego because his father was in the first team. Maynor was a regular watcher of Keyrol’s training sessions and matches and offered advice to his son on areas to improve such as composure, beating players one-on-one and shot placement.
“Maynor was absolutely fantastic, always supportive,” says Gall. “His dad had an incredible technique for striking the ball — Figgy inherited the same power, same quality. There are not many kids that strike the ball like that.”
Keyrol Figueroa moved to Liverpool in 2018 (Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)
Blessed with natural speed, Figueroa scored every type of goal, and did so with regularity. He arrived as an individual player, trying to prove he deserved to be there, but learned to be his team’s focal point, holding up the ball, linking play and making good decisions in possession.
He featured in an under-13s tournament at St George’s Park against teams including Birmingham City, Nottingham Forest and Derby County. He continued to stand out in friendlies against Manchester United and Aston Villa.
“You could tell that was his element, he wanted to be in professional environments,” says Gall. “He didn’t care who he was playing, his mentality was the same.”
Liverpool’s attention was alerted and they moved quickly to bring him to Merseyside as an under-14 player and he excelled. In an interview with Honduran newspaper La Prensa, his mother Sandra Norales said he had scored 90 goals in his first season.
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He earned his first appearance with the under-18s aged just 15, coming off the bench in a 4-0 mini Merseyside derby against Everton in October 2021.
There were three brief appearances during the 2021-22 season before he stepped up to become a more prominent figure in Marc Bridge-Wilkinson’s under-18s setup as a first-year scholar last season.
His breakout came not at the academy, but at this February’s CONCACAF Under-17 Championship. Figueroa scored seven goals in seven games as he spearheaded the U.S.’ run to the final, where they lost 3-1 to Mexico.
He returned to Liverpool with confidence high and began to earn himself a place in the starting XI, operating as a striker or right-winger. It was from the latter position where he netted a 13-minute hat-trick for the under-18s against Wolverhampton Wanderers in April.
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Gall remains in contact with Figueroa and his family, exchanging the occasional text message and has been watching him in the World Cup, where he is Liverpool’s only representative.
“It’s great. You always want to see your former players do well,” says Gall. “We’re just delighted he’s doing well and hopefully it continues and we will be watching in the Premier League one day.”
That may still be a distant dream for Figueroa, but for now, his focus is simply on the Under-17 World Cup in Indonesia and tomorrow’s meeting with Germany.
The U.S. progressed comfortably out of their group, winning their opening two games, with Figueroa scoring the first goal in the second game — a 2-1 victory over Burkina Faso — but Germany will pose a stronger test
Whenever he arrives back in Merseyside, he’ll be aiming to make himself impossible to ignore again.
(Top photo: Alex Caparros – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)
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