10/4/23 Champions League Upsets, Indy 11 Playoff Bound, MLS season wraps up, High School Playoffs have started, CHS Girls host Sectionals this week, boys in Regionals at Zville

Champions League

Man I missed Champions League – So excited to have it back this week.  Huge upsets yesterday at Arsenal and Man United lose on Tuesday.  Here are the Standings as we head to the Wednesday games.  Of course Wed it’s the ALL-AMERICAN game as Dortmund and Gio Reyna host AC Milan and Christian Pulisic and Musah at 3 pm on Paramount plus.  Unimas has Atletico Madrid vs Feyenoord at 12:45 pm Wed while Porto vs Barcelona will be on Univision at 3 pm.  The biggest game is probably New Castle United hosting PSG as the 2 Oil Money teams go head to head at 3 pm on Paramount plus.  CBS Sports Network has the Pregame at 2 pm and post game shows at 5 pm – while they will have Celtic hosting Lazio at 3 pm. 

MLS  

Miami plays at Chicago tonight with 60K on hand – but no one knows if Messi will play or not – as he has been out basically since he got injured with Argentina 2 weeks ago.  Miami needs wins tonight and Saturday if they hope to slip in as the last place team in the Eastern Conference for the playoffs.

Indy 11

Indy Eleven scored three goals at The Mike to defeat Detroit City FC 3-0, and clinched a USL Championship Playoff spot. This will be the third appearance in the USL Championship Playoffs and the first since 2019 for the Boys in Blue. Indy Eleven now sits at 12-11-9 Next up, The Boys in Blue will travel to FC Tulsa on Saturday, October 7, 2023. Kickoff is primed for 8:30 p.m. ET on ESPN+ before wrapping up the season at San Antonio and former GK Jordan Farr next Saturday 8:30 pm on MyIndyTV 23 & ESPN+.

High School Playoffs

At 13-1-2 the Carmel High School Boys are still  #1 in the Nation  on Max Preps and tops in the state with defending champs Noblesville just behind in 3rd.  The Boys are in regional play this week in as they face Zionsville 12-4-1 at Zionsville this afternoon at 5:30 pm. The Carmel ladies are #1 in the state at 13-0-3 with Fishers and Noblesville right behind as Carmel is hosting sectionals this week at Murray Stadium. They beat Attucks 9-0.  Carmel plays Westfield Thurs night at 5:30 pm before possibly facing Zionsville for the Championship on Sat night at 7 pm.  Get out and catch some high school soccer playoffs this week – we have two of the very best teams in the country right here in Carmel.

Champions League

Man Utd, Arsenal rocked in Champions League as Real Madrid edge Napoli

Arsenal’s over-reliance on Saka exposed in Lens loss as Man City clash looms  James Olley

Madrid rally for win in thrilling match with Napoli

Thuram goal hands Inter Milan win over Benfica

Muller turns back clock as Bayern rally for win

Braga stun Union Berlin with last-gasp winner

Oyarzabal and Mendez on target as Real Sociedad win 2-0 at Salzburg
Jude Bellingham stars as Real Madrid defeats Napoli in the Champions League

Galatasaray piles more misery on Erik ten Hag with stunning Champions League win over Manchester United

‘This campaign nosedived from the moment it started’

Manchester United are in crisis and Erik ten Hag is right about only one thing

Man United player ratings: Hojlund 9/10, Onana 3/10 in shock home defeat
‘Improving poor home record is pivotal to Celtic’s Champions League ambitions’

Newcastle’s transformation in two years is extraordinary – now they can shock PSG

‘Electric’ St James’ Park a ‘special place on Champions League nights’

USA

A Standout Week for USMN Players  Stars and Stripes

Analysis, thoughts, & player ratings: The USMNT caps September with 4-0 win over Oman

EPL

Man City’s perfect start to EPL season is over
Liverpool v Spurs VAR: PGMOL releases audio of Luis Diaz’s controversial disallowed goal

Liverpool vs Tottenham VAR Q&A: What do the Reds want? What happens now?

Erik ten Hag and Man United fall deeper into a desperate, dismal mess of their very own making

Arteta: Saka injury a ‘worry’ ahead of City clash

MLS

Fallen star: What’s going on with Lionel Messi?
The Fire hoping to use the “Messi effect” to their advantage

Lionel Messi doubtful to play, so Chicago Fire offer credit to fans for sold-out game

MLS Preview: Before FC Cincinnati lifts the Supporters Shield, it faces New York Red Bulls

Winners and Losers: Vibes reamain high in Cincy

MLS Power Rankings: Cincy clinch Supporters’ Shield Ryan Rosenblatt

MLS thoughts as regular season nears end, Cincy wins Shield, St. Louis wins West

Reffing

VAR proved it isn’t corrupt, but exposed its fatal flaw

VAR transcript of Luis Díaz’s incorrectly disallowed goal  8hDale Johnson
Jurgen Klopp wants Tottenham-Liverpool replay after VAR error

The VAR Review: What went wrong for Luis Diaz’s offside goal  Dale Johnson

Guardiola: Refs, VARs should be more ‘humble’

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Expanded MLS playoff format puts the league at risk of complacency: MLS Weekly

Expanded MLS playoff format puts the league at risk of complacency: MLS Weekly

The Athletic Soccer staffct 2, 2023

Welcome to Week 27 of our staff column collecting news, insights, and highlights from around Major League Soccer

Major League Soccer executives are getting what they wanted.

With just a few weeks left in the regular season, all but two teams remain in the hunt for a playoff spot. By choosing to expand its postseason this year so that 18 of 29 teams make the playoffs — 62% of the league — MLS hoped to engage more of its fan bases for longer. Never mind that the majority of teams were in the playoff picture late into last season, too. The hope was that maybe they could squeeze a few more teams into the picture and, more importantly, a few more games into the playoffs.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

MLS has a new playoff format: our writers offer their thoughts

Is this really what a league should want, though?Playoffs are supposed to be a reward. It’s validation that a team is headed in the right direction, or that it put together a solid roster. The idea is that you earn a chance to win a championship. That is not what MLS is giving us. More importantly, failing to make the playoffs is crucial to increasing competitiveness on the field. It increases the intensity of games and pushes owners to invest more in their teams to ensure they have a playoff-worthy squad.If you went to fans of teams fighting for the eighth and ninth playoff spots, I wonder how many of them would want their teams to sneak into the playoffs rather than face the consequences of poor seasons? How many owners are going to use back-dooring into the eighth or ninth seed as a reason for not changing their investment approach, or for not making needed changes to a front office? How many sporting directors or coaches are going to use finishing in 18th place — or even 19th or 20th place — in a 29-team league as justification for a “satisfactory” approach to the season?“We made the playoffs. We were right there in the end.”The Chicago Fire lost five of seven games since returning from the Leagues Cup break. It is a reflection of the roster it built. The Fire beat a similarly bad New York Red Bulls team, 1-0, on Saturday night and suddenly it’s one point out of a playoff spot.New York City FC went from late April until mid-August winning just one MLS game. A record of 1-8-8 in that stretch. They are seven points out of what would have been the playoffs last season, a reflection of that horrid run of form. But right now they’re the eighth seed and we’re being asked to get excited to watch them in the postseason later this month.Minnesota United has won one of its last eight games. In last season’s format, Minnesota would be five points out of a playoff spot, evidence of an already-forgiving format that would have given the club plenty to play for into the final weeks, even if it still missed the postseason. This year? Minnesota is just one win away from a playoff spot.

The silver lining for MLS is that Inter Miami and Lionel Messi are alive because of the expanded format. But even that spotlights how easy it is to get into the postseason. Inter Miami was in last place before Messi arrived. He played in four MLS games and Miami went 3-0-1 in those games. Now, with its star out due to injury, Miami has been able to stay alive in the race with two draws in its last two games. They are four points out of the playoffs with four games remaining.

There is no doubt that the play-in game will be competitive and fun to watch. Knockout games bring a different sort of energy, as was evidenced at MLS is Back and the Leagues Cup. And we know the knockout games in the MLS playoffs are almost always entertaining. But it seems MLS keeps inventing ways to create do-or-die games without giving enough consideration to how a smaller playoff pool might up the intensity of the bulk of its product: the MLS regular season.ADVERTISEMENT

Are the two knockout games worth decreasing the value of the regular season so much that the 26th and 27th-ranked teams in MLS are still alive for the playoffs with just a couple of games left on the schedule?

MLS execs claim that when you look back on a season, every game matters. Sure. That’s fine. But we don’t watch sports in hindsight. Sporting Kansas City failed to win in its first 10 games of the season. Anywhere else in the world, that form is fatal. In MLS, it’s shrug-worthy. If a fan knows their team can fail to register its first win until May, like SKC, or can win one game from July 8 through Oct. 1, like D.C. United, and still have a playoff shot, why should they bother tuning in or showing up until those final weeks?

Yes, paring back the postseason means you would be forced to sacrifice inventory from the playoffs. But the hope is that in doing so you increase the importance of the entire regular season.The league wants to increase national interest in the product. It needs to find a way to get Portland fans to care about Austin-Real Salt Lake games, or Red Bulls fans to tune in to Orlando CityCharlotte FC games. It has to entice sports fans in Chicago to watch a Fire game in the summer, or New York fans to skip a Mets game to watch NYCFC. Exactly what kind of narrative are they selling that compels those fans to care? The on-field product is behind the top leagues in the world and the stakes don’t feel real until the final few weeks of the regular season.Instead of putting so much focus into developing the Leagues Cup, MLS would be smart to study whether slimming the playoffs down would help the competitiveness of its product by increasing the value of every win and thus enticing owners to invest more in the product to give their teams a better chance of making the cut.  Paul Tenorio


Celebrations for Cincinnati

On Saturday, FC Cincinnati completed a remarkable turnaround that seemed unfathomable two seasons ago. Upon entering the league as an expansion side in 2019, Cincinnati quickly became an MLS laughing stock. In its first three years in MLS, Cincinnati managed just 14 wins from 91 matches. There was consistent turnover within the front office and on the touchline. Instability and a lack of vision left the club languishing in last place.But Cincinnati is now the best team in MLS. They’ve claimed their first Supporters’ Shield and first-ever MLS trophy (that isn’t wooden) after defeating Toronto FC 3-2. Under head coach Pat Noonan and general manager Chris Albright, Cincinnati has erased its previous losing mentality and replaced it with a championship culture. Even with a postseason spot locked up, the team is still chasing records. Cincinnati could overtake New England Revolution’s 2021 points record by winning its final three games and reaching 74 points. In February during the MLS preseason, Noonan spoke with The Athletic and explained why he took the job in the first place.“If you can look past (the previous seasons) you see the infrastructure, and after meeting with ownership you see the ambition,” he said. “You have a great training facility, a world-class stadium and you have the resources. At that point, it’s just a matter of getting the right people in the building to move it in the right direction.”Cincinnati is now headed toward the playoffs as the number one overall seed. They have a league MVP candidate in Lucho Acosta, a reliable center forward in Brandon Vazquez and a balanced style of play that’s perfectly suited for success in MLS. After the win in Toronto, Noonan referred to the Supporters’ Shield conquest as “a special moment for the club.” Asked if he thought it was possible when he took over last season, Noonan flashed a rare smile and revealed what is perhaps the secret to Cincinnati’s change in fortune: confidence.“You think it’s possible,” said Noonan. “Your ego, the belief always has you thinking big. Our entire technical staff, the front office, everybody. Over the two years, we’ve become so strong as a group that this was a possibility. Hopefully, it’s the beginning of more success and more trophies for this club.” — Felipe Cardenas


Sorry, St. Louis. We were wrong.

With a 4-1 win over rival Sporting KC on Saturday, St. Louis City SC broke LAFC’s record for most wins in an expansion season and became the first expansion team to win a conference crown.

With 56 points, St. Louis is just two points away from surpassing the 2018 LAFC team for most points in an expansion season. It’s a remarkable achievement for a team many picked to finish last in MLS in its first year in the league.

“You can check these boxes now, you can check a few things off the list,” head coach Bradley Carnell told reporters after Saturday’s win. “But we wanna keep on going now. We need a couple of more points to make 58 points, I believe, to make our own.”St. Louis started off the year with five wins in its first five games, and that success proved to not be an anomaly. They’ve continued to find ways to win despite having a roster that lacks a bonafide star. João Klauss and Nico Gioacchini have 10 goals apiece, while Eduard Lowen has 14 assists. A huge amount of credit goes to Carnell, who had success as an interim manager with the New York Red Bulls and has shown his high-pressing system translates to St. Louis, as well.It will be interesting to see how St. Louis can continue to push through in the playoffs. Since the midway point of the season, They are 0-4-2 against teams in the top-7 in their respective conference, with wins over San Jose (8th), Colorado (14th), Toronto (14th), Miami (13th), Austin (12th), Dallas (9th), Minnesota (11th) and Sporting KC (10th). In fact, just five of their 17 wins have come against top-7 teams this year — none since June 4. They have taken care of business against other teams, though, at a better pace than any other rival in the West, and they will enjoy home-field advantage in the playoffs. St. Louis is 11-3-2 at home.

History shows that even the best expansion teams haven’t been guaranteed anything once the playoffs start. LAFC went in as a No. 3 seed in the playoffs in that 2018 expansion season but lost to sixth-seeded RSL in the knockout round. Atlanta United was also eliminated in the knockout rounds of its successful expansion season in penalties to Columbus. Will St. Louis City be able to surpass those teams as the most successful expansion team of the modern era? — Tenorio


Galaxy vs. Timbers worthy of #MLSAfterDark

The newly bloated playoff picture has kept several teams in the hunt during the season’s final weeks, as Paul has already mentioned, whether they look like a team deserving of playing into November or not.

This weekend had a few high-stakes games featuring flawed playoff contenders, but LA Galaxy’s match against the Portland Timbers sums the state of the homestretch up nicely. You could forgive the home support congregated in Carson, California if they were surprised to still have a chance at a postseason berth given the team’s maddening form, the number of injuries to key players (including, at present, Riqui Puig) and the summer transfer ban. You could also forgive supporters of visiting Portland for a similar level of shock after a woeful summer swoon led to Giovanni Savarese’s dismissal.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Why the Timbers fired Gio Savarese, and what comes next for both

And yet, the fact that Portland entered Saturday ranked sixth in the West while the Galaxy was only seven points out of the final play-in spot led to a wildly entertaining affair. LA center back Eriq Zavaleta was at the heart of an exciting 3-3 draw. Despite last scoring an MLS goal on April 21, 2017, the El Salvador international managed to net a brace for his team while gifting the Timbers with an own goal in between his intentional tallies. The matchup between Dairon Asprilla and Raheem Edwards featured plenty of technical tricks and back-and-forth springs, with each man netting an assist for their efforts.A tie was ultimately a fair result as neither team looked demonstrably better than the other. The point will be worth far more for Portland’s playoff hopes than the Galaxy’s, who may now need to win three of its last four games to have a hope of surpassing Dallas for ninth place. It also extended the Timbers’ strong response since Savarese’s departure, having won five and drawn two in eight games under interim coach Miles Joseph. In the end, it was another worthy installment of #MLSAfterDark. — Jeff Rueter


Trouble in Austin?

When Rodolfo Borrell left Manchester City to become Austin FC’s sporting director over the summer, head coach Josh Wolff was a big reason why. Speaking to The Athletic’s Pablo Maurer in July, Borrell, who most recently was an assistant under Pep Guardiola, believed Wolff and the positional style of play he has tried to incorporate at the club were ideal fits with his own sporting background.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://9b92712b8f66eb1ebc6c7522500ca6a2.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“If Josh wouldn’t have been the head coach right now I would not be joining Austin FC,” Borrell said. “If I thought the style of play at Austin was too far from what I believe in, I would not have joined. That’s the reality. I am not just trying to play nice with Josh.”

Wolff on the sideline during a game between FC Dallas and Austin FC. (Photo by John Rivera/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

There’s a new reality, however. Austin has not won a match since July 15th. Last week, the hashtag “Wolff Out” was circulating on social media platform X (formally Twitter). Austin’s current winless streak stretched to 10 games after Saturday’s loss to the Colorado Rapids. Their football has become uninspiring after expectations skyrocketed with last season’s success.

Austin was poor in its inaugural season in 2021 but improved radically in 2022. They finished second in the Western Conference and battled for the Supporters’ Shield. Star attacker Sebastián Driussi finished second in the MVP race after scoring 22 goals. Driussi’s output in 2023 exemplifies Austin’s struggles. The Argentine has had a quiet season, scoring 10 goals and adding just three assists.

From the outside, one would assume that Borrell’s confidence in Wolff has been shaken. Borrell comes from Barcelona’s school of football, so anyone who coaches in Austin will have to be a very specific fit. On the other hand, Borrell may view Austin’s talent on the pitch as a bigger problem, and continue to have faith in Wolff. How Borrell chooses to fix Austin will be one of the bigger stories of the MLS offseason. – Cardenas


MLS music to your ears

In September, we ran a survey to see how viewers are consuming MLS Season Pass’ debut campaign. Over 4,000 people took time to answer questions about the new platform, spanning topics from the glossy new visuals to how Messi’s arrival has impacted coverage of their favorite teams. While the full results are still to come, here’s a preview of who viewers’ favorite play-by-play announcers and color commentators were.

Provided a list of the 19 most commonly deployed play-by-play voices, fans deemed Adrian Healey to be their favorite in a fairly balanced contest. Healey was the main voice of ESPN’s MLS coverage from 2011 to 2018 before becoming the voice of Austin FC for the club’s first two seasons. The other seven commentators to garner at least 5% of the vote mainly worked on local, club-specific broadcasts before the Apple deal: Kevin Egan (Atlanta), Callum Williams (Kansas City and Minnesota), Max Bretos (LAFC), Jake Zivin (Portland), Keith Costigan (Seattle), Steve Cangialosi (New York Red Bulls) and Chris Wittyngham (Miami).

The competition was less balanced when it came to color commentators, with the platform’s lead analyst Taylor Twellman commanding 28.6% of the vote. Fellow former United States international Maurice Edu was next, while a quartet of former team-specific analysts rounded out the pack with at least 5% of votes: Danny Higginbotham (Philadelphia), Kyndra de St. Aubin (Minnesota), Brian Dunseth (Real Salt Lake) and Lloyd Sam (Charlotte).

For all the fresh faces and innovation on offer, it turns out that fans may just want to run back ESPN’s main MLS partnership from 2012 through 2018. — Rueter


Three good reads


One weird thing

Fans of teams in England’s pyramid system have been adjusting to a new rule this season which bans the use of towels before a player executes a throw-in. The idea is simple: full minutes were wasted as teams prepared their heaves, and fans seldom buy tickets to check on which linens each team prefers. However, Seattle Sounders midfielder Nicolás Lodeiro showed off the entertainment potential that the FA has cast aside.The Uruguayan was allowed to retake his attempt instead of being charged with a foul throw. His redo’s eventual target? The side netting of Nashville’s goal. — Rueter

(Top photos: Nick Turchiaro and Ron Chenoy, USA Today Sports)

When will Messi play again? Inter Miami’s MLS season hangs in the balance

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA - SEPTEMBER 27: Lionel Messi #10 of Inter Miami watches from the stands against the Houston Dynamo during the 2023 U.S. Open Cup Final at DRV PNK Stadium on September 27, 2023 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. (Photo by Hector Vivas/Getty Images)

By Paul TenorioSep 28, 2023


As the Inter Miami players filtered off the team bus and out to the field at DRV PNK Stadium on Wednesday night and Lionel Messi was not among those to disembark, the reality started to hit: If Miami wanted to win its second trophy of the year, it would have to do so without its biggest star.

Messi, wearing a black, short-sleeved button-down shirt and black jeans, arrived with his family 20 minutes later. But even with the star in the building, Inter Miami fans were left to wonder: Just how long will his absence continue, and exactly how much will the Herons have to accomplish without the transcendent player that turned around the season?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://687b8c440f2425f4deb5947471961d3e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Inter Miami clearly missed Messi on the field in the U.S. Open Cup final against the Houston Dynamo. They lacked bite in the final third for much of the game, and without having to worry about Messi — or left back Jordi Alba, who sat near Messi in a pitchside suite — the Dynamo controlled much of the first hour of the game before surviving Miami’s late push and taking the Open Cup trophy with a 2-1 win.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Dynamo best Inter Miami in U.S. Open Cup final

“It was not prudent for him to play,” Inter Miami coach Tata Martino said of Messi after the loss. “Too risky, even for a few minutes. He will play in league games going forward, but will go game-by-game based on what the medical team tells us.”

That Miami played for two trophies this season and won one — the club’s first in its short history — most definitely is a huge accomplishment and speaks to Messi’s impact. But now, the final and most difficult task lies ahead. Inter Miami must continue its climb from the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings if it wants to make the playoffs. Inter Miami currently sits in 14th place in MLS’ Eastern Conference, 10 points ahead of woeful Toronto FC, but still five points shy of ninth place and a spot in the postseason play-in game, albeit with games in hand on most of the teams ahead of them.

For now, there’s not much information to go off of when it comes to Messi’s health. The team has repeatedly referred to the issue as “muscle fatigue” without ever calling it an injury or indicating the specific muscle that is giving Messi trouble. But Martino said earlier this week that the team was very much focused on fighting its way to the postseason.

“Obviously the league objective was the most difficult one,” Martino said on Tuesday ahead of the Open Cup final. “But where we are right now, we’re going to keep trying (to make the playoffs).”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Inter Miami playoffs tracker: Will Messi play in MLS’s postseason?

Inter Miami has five games remaining in the regular season, including three over the next 10 days, all against Eastern Conference foes. They host NYCFC on Sept. 30, travel to Chicago to play in front of a massive crowd at Soldier Field on Oct. 4 and then host first-place FC Cincinnati on Oct. 7.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://687b8c440f2425f4deb5947471961d3e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

The team will then get a welcome break for the October international window, though as the September break showed, multiple Inter Miami players could be away with their respective national teams. Argentina plays Paraguay and Peru in its qualifiers, though it would be unlikely that they would call Messi if he is unable to play for Inter in those three league games leading into the window.

Miami then closes the season with what is essentially a home-and-home with Charlotte FC: a rescheduled game on Oct. 18 in Fort Lauderdale followed by the season-ending game in Charlotte on Decision Day, the last day of MLS’ regular season, on Oct. 21.

Notably, Miami sits just one point behind Charlotte in the Eastern Conference standings, which means those final two games could determine whether or not Miami makes the playoffs. Adding another layer of intrigue is the fact that Charlotte plays on artificial turf, which means Messi might be forced to play on that surface if Miami needs the points to get into the postseason. (Messi said last month that he would have no issues playing on an artificial surface, but did not play in Atlanta due to the aforementioned muscle fatigue.)

When Messi returns to the field will hold huge sway over the playoff picture.

On Tuesday, Messi’s longtime teammate Sergio Busquets said that every day ahead of the final gave more of a chance for Messi to recover and play a role. That, like Martino’s comments post-match, seemed to indicate that Messi’s injury is not severe enough to limit him long-term. But with the October international break two weeks away, Inter Miami may be tempted to shut Messi down until those final two games of the season to see if they can get a full-strength Messi back for the two Charlotte games, and then potentially a playoff run.

At the bare minimum, Martino said on both Tuesday and Wednesday that the team wasn’t yet contemplating shutting Messi down for the season.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://687b8c440f2425f4deb5947471961d3e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“In reality, it doesn’t occur to us that he wouldn’t play the rest of the year,” Martino said on Tuesday. “If we’re here evaluating whether he can play tomorrow or not, in no way are we thinking that he might miss the rest of the league’s games. Of course, the possibility exists that the medical department tells us that we’d be running a risk, we’d eventually decide not to run those risks. But as of today, we don’t consider that possibility of him missing those games.”

That decision becomes a bit more complicated, though, depending on Miami’s results over the next 10 days. If Miami does opt to shut Messi down until after the October international window, Miami could find itself out of the playoff picture by the time those final two games of the season roll around. And if the playoffs are out of the question, it might not be worth it to risk Messi playing in two meaningless games.

It’s worth noting that Argentina plays two crucial World Cup qualifiers in the November international window, however, visiting Brazil on Nov. 20 and then hosting Chile on Nov. 24. Messi will likely be motivated to get fit and return to the field for those games.

The start of Messi’s time in MLS was a dream: 10 goals in his first seven games to win the inaugural Leagues Cup trophy. That run of so many games in a short amount of time, however, caught up to the 36-year-old.

The hope, now, is that the end doesn’t feel more like a nightmare: the loss in the Open Cup final, Messi potentially missing the majority of the remainder of the season and Inter Miami falling short of the playoffs.

Christian_pulisic_-_asn_top_-_milan_goal_vs._lazio_-_9-30-23
Americans Abroad

Adams suffers reinjury, Pulisic & Balogun enjoy big days, Maloney & Paredes impress

Yes, it was a big weekend for a number of American players including Christian Pulisic, Folarin Balogun, Lennard Maloney, Malik Tillman, and Kevin Paredes. But the latest news on Tyler Adams set a negative tone around everything. ASN’s Brian Sciaretta digs deep for all the news & games involving Americans abroad this weekend and breaks it all down for you. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED OCTOBER 01, 2023 10:05 PM

  • SHARE THIS STORY

THE WEEKEND FOR Americans abroad had a lot of ups and downs. Yes, the big games from Christian Pulisic, Folarin Balogun, and a few others were very good. But there is no getting past the reinjury to Tyler Adams, which left a cloud over everything this weekend. Even as he beings rehabbing, there are now lingering questions moving forward why he can’t stay healthy.

Overall, there are more positive stories to start this season. Pulisic is finally doing well and at a place where he is appreciated. The same is the case for Sergino Dest (who is getting over an illness). But if you go through many of the key players, there is still a lack of playing time. Players like Ricardo Pepi, Brenden Aaronson, Tim Weah, Joe Scally, Tyler Adams, Gio Reyna, and Josh Sargent are either injured or struggling to see the field.

Unfortunately, that was a big theme this weekend.

Here are my thoughts on it all.

ADAMS SUFFERS REINJURY

Big story this weekend was the unfortunate news that Tyler Adams has suffered a reinjury following his 20-minute midweek shift for AFC Bournemouth in a 2-0 win over Stoke City in the Carabao Cup. That was his club debut for Bournemouth and his first performance since his initial hamstring injury in March.

Following Bournemouth’s 4-0 defeat to Arsenal on Saturday, manager

Andoni Iraola spoke to the Bournemouth Echo about Adams, who was not on the matchday roster.

“I don’t know what to call it, a setback, but he is not feeling well,” Iraola said. “He has been out for a lot of time, so we have to reassess, to reset, to take the good decisions, thinking in everything. It is true that he is going to be out for some time, for sure. I think it’s the same area. I couldn’t tell you if it’s exactly the same point, but it’s true that it’s his hamstring that he is not feeling well.”

This is terrible news as Adams had been rehabbing his hamstring for months and there were reports of a setback earlier the summer. Now, following just 20 minutes, he is back on the sidelines for another extended period.

For Bournemouth, this is terrible news because the club could very easily find itself in a relegation battle and Adams is the type of player they need to push towards midtable. His absence at Leeds was a huge reason for the club’s downfall in the final months. But with a reinjury, how cautious will Bournemouth be with him once he is ready?

For the U.S. national team, it is not quite as bad. Yes, the club has Nations League games in November, but the next time the team truly needs Adams will be next summer for the Copa America. There is plenty of time for him to return for that. He is also so familiar with his team that he can walk back into the team after an absence of over a year.

Now the U.S. will be forced to address the always lingering question over who is the backup for Adams? Last cycle it was Kellyn Acosta with Johnny Cardoso in consideration. Recently it has been shifting Yunus Musah deeper. Likely for the remainder of 2023, Gregg Berhalter will need to explore this.

But the long-term worry over Adams is very real. When he first moved to Leipzig, he missed several months with an injury. Then there have been other minor absences. Now there is a hamstring pull and an immediate reinjury. It does hurt his reputation as being unreliable. The worst news would be if Bournemouth goes down after this season. Adams might have to go down with them.

PULISIC ENJOYS BIG OUTING

On Saturday in Serie A, AC Milan cruised to a 2-0 win over Lazio to move to 18 points from seven games (six wins and a loss). Christian Pulisic started and played 82 minutes while Yunus Musah came off the bench in the 29th minute to replace an injured Ruben Loftus-Cheek.

Pulisic scored the opening goal in the 60th minute on a play that was an excellent finish but also an even better reading of the defense.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708173722283028576&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Especially, look at the moment when Pulisic is just outside the penalty area. Lazio left back Elseid Hysaj (#23) clearly thought he had Pulisic figured out. He assumed Pulisic was going to make a direct run to the far post and Hysaj was content he could win that race to the back post and cut off a cross. But that thinking turned into ball watching and Hysaj didn’t bother to pick up Pulisic’s other option to the middle. Pulisic rand towards the middle of the box, behind the defense, near the penalty spot and was wide open for a shot.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-1&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9iYWNrZW5kIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19yZWZzcmNfc2Vzc2lvbiI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZm9zbnJfc29mdF9pbnRlcnZlbnRpb25zX2VuYWJsZWQiOnsiYnVja2V0Ijoib24iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X21peGVkX21lZGlhXzE1ODk3Ijp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRyZWF0bWVudCIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZXhwZXJpbWVudHNfY29va2llX2V4cGlyYXRpb24iOnsiYnVja2V0IjoxMjA5NjAwLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X3Nob3dfYmlyZHdhdGNoX3Bpdm90c19lbmFibGVkIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19kdXBsaWNhdGVfc2NyaWJlc190b19zZXR0aW5ncyI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdXNlX3Byb2ZpbGVfaW1hZ2Vfc2hhcGVfZW5hYmxlZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdmlkZW9faGxzX2R5bmFtaWNfbWFuaWZlc3RzXzE1MDgyIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRydWVfYml0cmF0ZSIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfbGVnYWN5X3RpbWVsaW5lX3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9mcm9udGVuZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9fQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708190976995398051&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

It was an excellent read by Pulisic and another big impact game for him at Milan. He started the season very strong in the first three games, was quiet for a few games, and now has had two more big games in a row. In his first two months at the club, AC Milan are surely happy with their purchase.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-2&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708175354697761270&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



AC Milan are likely very happy with the purchase of Musah as well. He’s a bit more raw than Pulisic and it is a process getting him towards extended minutes, but he’s getting there. His minutes are gradually increasing and the team is playing better when he’s on the field. His dribble is particularly useful in opening up the games for others as he draws defenders towards him to create space which he can either exploit or it gives him more room to find teammates in more dangerous areas.

BALOGUN’S BIG REBOUND

 

I said last week that we were going to learn a lot about Folarin Balogun in the weeks ahead. Last weekend in Monaco’s 1-0 loss to Nice, Balogun missed two penalties and was visibly frustrated. It was the worst game of his young professional career, and we hadn’t seen him tested like this mentally.

On Saturday at home against Marseille, he responded with one of his best performances, so far. The New York-born Balogun, 21, ended up scoring a goal and adding an assist in a big 3-2 win. He was the best player on the field this day.

With Monaco trailing 2-1 in the 23rd minute, Balogun found an equalizer on a fantastic run, move, and finish where he beat three Marseille defenders.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-3&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708202997505777795&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Then in the 52nd minute, he assisted on the winning goal with perhaps an even better effort where he used fantastic control in tight space.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-4&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708214824033804672&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

3-2 Monaco ????

Het doelpuntenfestijn in Monaco duurt voort: Akliouche brengt de thuisploeg weer op voorsprong ????#ZiggoSport #Ligue1 #ASMOM pic.twitter.com/nmwpwv59h7— Ziggo Sport Voetbal (@ZS_Voetbal) September 30, 2023



Overall, the talent and the skill Balogun showed in this game was extremely impressive. But the mentality to quickly move beyond a terrible game and then play at your best was even more important. It is a skill that the best forwards have. They don’t let a bad game put them into a funk.

BROOKS STRUGGLES, GIO UNUSED ON FRIDAY

 

On Friday in the Bundesliga, Hoffenheim dropped a 3-1 decision at home to Borussia Dortmund. Both teams were high in the table entering the day with Hoffenheim in sixth and Dortmund in fifth. In the end, this turned out to be a tough day at the office for three Americans.

First for Hoffenheim’s American manager Pellegrino Matarazzo, this was a winnable game. After starting the season so well, there were hopes Hoffenheim could prevail against a top Bundesliga team at tome.

Second, for John Brooks, he was completely at fault for the opening goal in the 18th minute. The second Dortmund goal was due to confusion among Hoffenheim defenders and Brooks was in position to make a clearance but may have been called off by a goalkeeper. In the end, he went 84 minutes in the loss. Brooks is on the outside of the national team and this won’t help him.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-5&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1707834177834324328&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Then there is Gio Reyna who was an unused substitute again for the third straight game and he is yet to play for Dortmund this season. Dortmund wasn’t great in this game, but thanks to Hoffenheim mistakes, it was a great result and that makes it harder for Reyna to play. Manager Edin Terzic seems unlikely to change a winning formula.

TILLMAN’S NICE DAY AT THE OFFICE

 

It was expected that Eredivisie-leading PSV Eindhoven would have an easy time on Saturday against last-place and winless Volendam. In the end, that happened as PSV won 3-1 to remain perfect with 21 points from seven games, while Volendam now has just one point from seven games.

What was a bit surprising was that American Malik Tillman was the man of the match in this game for PSV with an impressive goal and an assist. It was even more surprising because just last week, he was dropped from the matchday roster due to oversleeping. But Peter Bosz decided not for an extended punishment for Tillman and gave him a surprising start.

In the 47th minute, Tillman delivered a fantastic assist to Guus Til with a lovely chip over the defense for a 2-0 PSV lead.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-6&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708179631050813521&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Then in the last minute of stoppage time with Volendam down to 10 players, Tillman added a goal when he moved into the box and fired a shot past a frozen goalkeeper.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/jZUyyWkG4d4?si=86tYHrPUHAj-S9Nt&start=324

But this was a great outing for Tillman to establish a role at PSV that will include more playing time. Yes, Volendam is bad, but this was a starting point and Tillman showed up.

Sergino Dest returned from missing a midweek game due to illness to make the bench but he did not play. Ricardo Pepi played the final 20 minutes for PSV and it was uneventful for him. Eventually he will play more, but that will only come when Bosz realizes there is a need to rotate Luuk de Jong. That point will eventually come and Pepi has done enough to at least start building positive trust with Bosz.

Another bit of good news on the American front in this game is that Zach Booth was strong for Volendam when he played the final 18 months off the bench. He only had two completed passes ( but was 2/2) but he was also 2/2 in his dribbles, 2/2 in his tackles, and was 6/7 in his ground duels.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-7&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708223274910351803&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

With Volendam struggling so badly, it’s only a matter of time before they give Booth a shot to try something different. He’s at the club on loan from Leicester but if the club wants to make a battle to avoid relegation, they need to mix things up.

Booth, along with his older brother Zach, are eligible for the U.S. Olympic team. Zach is injured at the moment but it will be interesting to see if Zach gets a look with the team in the upcoming camps.

PAREDES SHARP OFF THE BENCH

 

On Saturday, Wolfsburg defeated Eintracht Frankfurt 2-0 and two members of the 2003-born American class came off the bench.

With the score 1-0, Kevin Paredes came off the bench for Wolfsburg in the 79th minute and Paxten Aaronson came off the bench in the 82nd minute.

In the 84th minute, Paredes made a move into the box and drew a penalty which was converted by Jonas Wind for his second of the game and a 2-0 lead.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-8&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708143374241280107&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Paredes has had some very good moments off the bench over the past year and a half but has been unable to earn many starting opportunities. What is going to get him to that point? Will it take a loan, will it just take reps? At what point, what is the plan for Wolfsburg to help Paredes with the next step?

For Aaronson, his eight minutes off the bench were relatively uneventful but he has at least been earning the occasional start. Again, is a loan in the cards for him?

Internationally, both of these players have the talent to be on the U.S. national team but both would benefit tremendously from leading the Olympic team. But the big question is whether their clubs would entertain a release.

MALONEY & HEIDENHEIM STUN UNION BERLIN

 

On Saturday in the Bundesliga, FC Heidenheim stunned Union Berlin 1-0 to move to ninth place with seven points from six games. Entering into this season, few gave Heidenheim a chance to survive in its first ever season in the top flight (and was an amateur club into the mid 90’s). While in some games, the club struggles, it is also managing to pick off some big wins here and there. Saturday against Union Berlin was one of those days.

In the 1-0 win over Union Berlin, American defensive midfielder Lennard Maloney, 23, went a full 90. It turned out to be one of the best performances of his career because he played to his strengths of winning duels, aerials, and shielding the backline.

Maloney was 37/45 in passing over 64 touches with 4/7 in long balls and 2 hots. But his biggest contributions were defensive. He had 13 clearances, covered a ton of ground, and was 7/12 in his aerial duels.

Maloney is getting close to his first USMNT call-up and his first appearance for the United States since a U-20 call-up in 2018. It would make sense to give a look to him given the continued Tyler Adams absence and the lack of options at No. 6.

But it is another question of how he would fit into the team? His runs a lot, he isn’t that fast, it remains to be seen if he has the passing range Gregg Berhalter would want. But Maloney works extremely hard, fights for everything, and is a great teammate by all reports. He is a great fit for Heidenheim, but the U.S. team has a very different approach.

On another note, Brenden Aaronson did not get off the bench for Union Berlin. Union outshot Heidenheim 20-10 but couldn’t hit the back of the net. The team had its most disappointing result of the season without Aaronson, which probably helps his case.

WINGO GOALAZO

 

There isn’t much to add about Ferencvaros and its 6-1 away win over MTK Budapest other than this spectacular 63rd minute goal from Seattle’s own Henry Wingo to make it 4-1.

Wingo is back to starting at right back for the perennial Hungarian champions and is doing his part. This goal was unreal.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/c-i2D4Hmpsw?si=551w4D0UUOG2heFc&start=203

I am curious to see if an team in MLS tries to make a move for Wingo this winter. The former Seattle Sounder turns 28 this week.

YANKS IN ITALY

 

On Sunday in Serie A, Juventus visited Atalanta and played to a 0-0 draw. As has been the norm, Weston McKennie started at right wingback and was replaced late, this time in the 84th minute, by Tim Weah who helped see out the result. At the end, Juventus seemed happy with a draw after being outshot 15-5 (while Juve had the edge in shots on target, 3-2). That is something that you would not have seen with the older Juve teams that won the scudetto nine straight times. Those teams had a mindset to win every game.

This game was very boring. McKennie got on the ball plenty, 54 touches in 84 minutes but had no shots, two passes into the final third, and really wasn’t part of anything dangerous.

There are a lot of questions about Juve’s plans for their American players.

First, when will McKennie get a chance in the middle of the field. McKennie is not perfect, but he is very energetic and the team needs that.

Second, what does the team see in Tim Weah? If McKennie is what the team wants from a right wingback, why did they purchase Tim Weah? Weah is very, very different from McKennie at that position. What were they expecting of Weah?

It’s good that McKennie is a regular starter for such a legendary club. But the entire situation is different for him and for Weah.

In Serie B, Palermo defeated Sudtirol 2-1 thanks to a late winner from Giuseppe Aurelio. U.S. national team left back Kristoffer Lund, 21, started for the City Football Group owned Palermo and played a 60-minute shift. Despite the limited minutes, Lund had a good outing with 36 touches and 17/19 passing. He was 2/2 in his dribbles and was 2/3 with his crosses – one of which created a dangerous chance. He was 5/6 in his ground duels and won his only aerial duel. He also drew three fouls and did not commit a single foul.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/m6iOKZLCOzk?si=UbKPx5Jvdq9JQL4a&start=41

Gradually, Lund has been taking on a bigger role at Palermo. It was always going to take some time given that he missed preseason, but he is getting closer. The next step will be longer outings as Palermo looks for promotion with its CFG backing.

Also in Serie B, Venezia defeated Modena 3-1 away on Saturday to move into third place of Serie B. Tanner Tessmann had a big game where he had 62 touches, was 38/46 in passing, created two chances with 10 passes played into the final third. He was 2/2 on the dribble, was 2/3 on his crosses, was 6/9 in his long balls, was successful in 3/3 of his tackles, won 6/9 of his ground duels, and won 1/3 of his aerials. He also did not commit a single foul.

Gianluca Busio also started and played 80 minutes in central midfield.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/FDi-c2TNifo?si=kc8BM-cqOguNTzpB&start=41

It’s a good experience for both Americans to be part of a promotional race in a tricky Serie B. Internationally, both have spent time with the U.S. national team but are probably strong candidates for the Olympic team where they can start and be difference makers. For Busio, however, the competition to make the Olympic team will be very challenging.

Finally in Serie B, Andrija Novakovich started for Lecco and was effective in his hold-up play during a 66-minute shift away at Cittadella. He left with his team winning 1-0. Unfortunately, he watched his team collapse late, squandering goals in the 87th minute and 89th minute to fall 2-1. Lecco sits last in Serie B with just one point from five games.

YANKS IN ENGLAND

 

On Sunday, Nottingham Forest played to a 1-1 draw with Brentford at home. Matt Turner made three saves on the day and afterward said he felt like the team squandered two points. A win would have pushed them inside the top 10 but now they sit 11th with eight points from seven games.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-9&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9iYWNrZW5kIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19yZWZzcmNfc2Vzc2lvbiI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZm9zbnJfc29mdF9pbnRlcnZlbnRpb25zX2VuYWJsZWQiOnsiYnVja2V0Ijoib24iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X21peGVkX21lZGlhXzE1ODk3Ijp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRyZWF0bWVudCIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZXhwZXJpbWVudHNfY29va2llX2V4cGlyYXRpb24iOnsiYnVja2V0IjoxMjA5NjAwLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X3Nob3dfYmlyZHdhdGNoX3Bpdm90c19lbmFibGVkIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19kdXBsaWNhdGVfc2NyaWJlc190b19zZXR0aW5ncyI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdXNlX3Byb2ZpbGVfaW1hZ2Vfc2hhcGVfZW5hYmxlZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdmlkZW9faGxzX2R5bmFtaWNfbWFuaWZlc3RzXzE1MDgyIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRydWVfYml0cmF0ZSIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfbGVnYWN5X3RpbWVsaW5lX3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9mcm9udGVuZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9fQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708506132799455314&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



For Turner, he is on constant pressure to continue to play at a high level given that sitting behind him is Odisseas Vlachodimos, the Greek national team’s starter who was acquired from Benfica just before the deadline. This effort probably still keeps him in the starting lineup. The goal he conceded was probably savable, but it would have been a huge save.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-10&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9iYWNrZW5kIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19yZWZzcmNfc2Vzc2lvbiI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZm9zbnJfc29mdF9pbnRlcnZlbnRpb25zX2VuYWJsZWQiOnsiYnVja2V0Ijoib24iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X21peGVkX21lZGlhXzE1ODk3Ijp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRyZWF0bWVudCIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZXhwZXJpbWVudHNfY29va2llX2V4cGlyYXRpb24iOnsiYnVja2V0IjoxMjA5NjAwLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X3Nob3dfYmlyZHdhdGNoX3Bpdm90c19lbmFibGVkIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19kdXBsaWNhdGVfc2NyaWJlc190b19zZXR0aW5ncyI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdXNlX3Byb2ZpbGVfaW1hZ2Vfc2hhcGVfZW5hYmxlZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdmlkZW9faGxzX2R5bmFtaWNfbWFuaWZlc3RzXzE1MDgyIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRydWVfYml0cmF0ZSIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfbGVnYWN5X3RpbWVsaW5lX3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9mcm9udGVuZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9fQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708490821593432287&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



On Saturday, Crystal Palace travelled to Old Trafford and came away with a big 1-0 upset win against a struggling Manchester United team that is now in 10th place. Chris Richards came into the game in the 88th minute to see out the win, which he did. He only had two touches but managed to make a nice clearance. He didn’t have to complete a single pass. Overall, this is going to be the norm for him unless there are injuries at the club. He needs to make a move in the winter.

Sheffield United are still without a win following a 2-0 away loss to West Ham on Sunday. Auston Trusty played the final 11 minutes for Sheffield United but didn’t have to do much. At some point, he will probably get chances to start as he has now been with the club for two months and is integrated (after he missed preseason). With the club sitting on just one point, they’ll probably want to try something different.

On Monday, Tim Ream, Antonee Robinson, and 15th place Fulham host their closest geographic rival in Chelsea, which sits in 15th place.

It was an especially tough weekend  for Americans in the Championship.

Stoke City rallied for a 3-2 away win over Bristol City. Lynden Gooch started at right back for Stoke but was pulled at halftime when they were trailing 3-2.

Preston North End fell from first to third following a brutal 4-0 loss at home West Bromwich Albian (with Daryl Dike likely out until December or January. Duane Holmes, who has been having a solid start to the season, started for Preston North End and was subbed out in the 64th minute with PNE trialing 3-0.

Coventry defeated Queens Park Rangers 3-1 away in London on Saturday. Reggie Cannon is still not on the roster year for QPR. U.S. national team forward Haji Wright has been seeing his minutes decrease at Coventry recently and he only played the final 11 minutes in this game (he entered with Coventry up 3-0). He is under a lot of pressure as the club’s record signing. For QPR, American forward Charlie Kelman went as an unused substitute.

Norwich City, managed by former U.S. international David Wagner, defeated Birmingham City 2-0 to end a two-game skid. They moved into seventh place with the result. Josh Sargent remains out for Norwich.

YANKS IN GERMANY

 

Borussia Monchengladbach won their first Bundesliga game this season on Saturday with a 3-1 road win over winless Bochum. Joe Scally was dropped from the starting lineup after a tough start to the season.  He came on in the 72nd minute with all the scoring finished. He ended up with 16 touches and was just 2/5 in passing.

Jordan Pefok started and played 64 minutes in the win. He picked up a generous assist on the team’s third and final goal but was a workhorse up top in his hold up play. He won 5/8 of his ground duels and won 3/10 of his aerials. He connected on 14/16 of his passes. He is slowly getting better after a tough season. But to get back into the national team picture, he needs goals. The forward position on the national team is improving and he needs to score to stand out.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/91SBC71NHQY?si=RmHAlBINpttt0YXS&start=41

Also in the Bundesliga, FC Koln dropped a 2-0 decision at home to VfB Stuttgart to remain with just one point from five games. One week after making his professional debut, Damion Downs made another appearance for Koln – this time playing the final 14 minutes in the loss. Unlike last game, Downs wasn’t dangerous in this one, as Stuttgart held him in check.

Still, Downs is 19 and is slowly getting integrated into a Bundesliga team, albeit a bad one. He should continue to get chances. If they get relegated, he should figure into their plans to get promoted. A German-American, Downs has played for U.S. youth national teams in the past. It will be interesting if he can sneak into a U.S. U-23 team cam to compete for a spot against players like Duncan McGuire or Matthew Hoppe.

In the 2.Bundesliga, it was mostly struggles for Americans.

Hansa Rostock defeated Eintracht Braunschweig 1-0 on Saturday. Johan Gomez started as second striker and went 82 in the loss. Overall, he wasn’t able to generate much offense and Braunschweig has fallen to 17th in the 18-team league to me.

St. Pauli defeated Hertha BSC 2-1 away on Saturday and moved to the top of the table of the 2.Bundesliga. Houston-born head coach Fabian Hurzeler has been a revelation since taking the job last December at the age of 29. Last year, he took them from the brink of the relegation zone and almost had them qualify for the promotional playoffs. Now they are leading the way in the 2.Bundesliga.

On Sunday, Greuther Furth played Elversberg to a 1-1 draw away. Julian Green was suspended for this game for Furth while fellow German-American Maximillian Dietz was subbed into the game in the 82nd minute for Furth – which sits in 13th place.

Also on Sunday, Terrence Boyd was subbed into Kaiserslautern’s 2-2 away draw with Osnabruck in the 76th minute. With Kaiserslautern trailing 2-1, Boyd missed a penalty in the sixth minute of stoppage time but saw his team equalize two minutes later.

YANKS IN SPAIN

 

In La Liga, Celta Vigo visit Las Palmas on Monday but Luca de la Torre will not play as he is suspended for being sent off (for his second yellow card) last Thursday in Celta’s 1-1 draw with Deportivo Alaves. Celta Vigo sits on the edge of the relegation zone with just five points from seven games.

On Saturday in the Segunda, Eibar defeated Tenerife 3-0 but American winger Konrad de la Fuente missed out on the win as he remains out injured with a muscle injury.

On Sunday in the Segunda, Mirandes defeated Real Zaragoza 1-0 on the road, aided by the fact Zaragoza had to play the second half down a man. Jonathan Gomez played the final 23 minutes for Mirandes and was on the field for his team’s winning goal, an own goal.

YANKS IN THE NETHERLANDS

 

On Sunday Agustin Anello, 21, made his first start for Sparta Rotterdam after his first four appearances were all coming off the bench. The winger from Florida ended up going 74 minutes in a 2-1 loss to Excelsior and left shortly after Excelsior equalized the game 1-1. It was a quiet day for him as he only had 33 touches and 11 completed passes in the defeat. Sparta remained in sixth place after the loss.

Still, Anello is eligible for the U.S. Olympic team and might be seen as a potential option for an upcoming camp to give him a chance to compete for a spot on the U-23 team next summer.  

Also in the Eredivisie, Anthony Fontana as an unused substitute for PEC Zwolle in a 2-1 loss to Heracles and he is still looking for his club debut. Taylor Booth remained out injured for Utrecht and missed the club’s ugly 2-0 loss at home to Almere City. Utrecht sits 17th in the 18-team Eredivisie.

On Sunday, AZ Alkmaar defeated Fortuna Sittard 4-0 on Sunday and Djordje Mihailovic played the final seven minutes in the win and he was the fifth and final substitution. Mihailovic was decent in his limited minutes, creating a decent chance, going 6/7 in passing, and being on the field for the final goal. It’s been tough for him, but AZ has been flying with 19 points from seven games. They’re in second, just two points behind a perfect AZ.

In the second tier Eerste Divisie, John Hilton went 90 minutes for Dordrecht in a 1-1 draw with FC Eindhoven. Justin Che played the final two minutes for second-place ADO Den Haag to see out a 3-0 win over MVV Maastricht. Gedion Zelalem played 90 minutes for Den Bosch in a 3-0 away win over Groningen.

YANKS IN BELGIUM

 

On Saturday, Gaga Slonina started for Eupen on Saturday in a 3-1 loss at home to Anderlecht. After a strong start to the season, this was the fourth loss in a row for Eupen as they fell to 11th place in the 16 team First Division A. One of the goals he conceded was an own goal from his right back.

Slonina is doing okay. He occasionally lets in goals he should save, but he’s also letting in some bad goals too. But things are going to get more serious for him soon as the second half of the season will likely be a relegation battle and Slonina will be under pressure to keep his team up.

On Sunday, Genk hosted Westerlo and the two teams played to a wild 3-3 draw. Regarding Americans, Mark McKenzie’s toe injury continues to keep him out of action, and he again had to sit a game out. Griffin Yow also is yet to make his season debut he was out for Westerlo. The one American to play was Bryan Reynolds who played the complete game for Westerlo.

Reynolds has been playing very well defensively in recent games and in this game, he was again very important on that side of the ball. He won 5/7 of his ground duels and was 2/2 in his aerials. He had 10 recoveries and was 3/4 in his tackles. He also created one very dangerous chance for Westerlo in the first half.

Things are not great for Westerlo. They are dead last with three points from nine games. But if they can put forth an effort like this game, they should be able to make a climb soon. As for Reynolds, he’s also improving after a very slow start to the season. He should be in with the U.S. U-23 team in October to begin to make a case to be the team’s starting right back heading into Paris.

Marlon Fossey started and went 70 minutes for Standard Liege in a 2-1 win away at OH Leuven. He left the game when the score was 1-1. Standard Liege is slowly getting their act together with two wins over the last three games. Fossey hasn’t been the explosive contributor that he was last season but with Standard’s gradual improvement, Fossey seems likely to improve as well.

Sam Vines was still injured and did not play for Royal Antwerp in their 0-0 draw at Mechelen. Antwerp remained in fifth place with the result.

Alex Mighten remained injured and did not suit up for Kortrijk in a 2-1 win over Cercle Brugge on Friday. Kortrijk moved out of last place with their first win of the year.

YANKS ELSEWHERE

 

In France’s Ligue 1, Le Havre fell to Lille at home 2-0. Emmanuel Sabbi, 25, came into the game in the 70th minute with his team trailing by two. He made a limited impact with only nine touches over his 20 minutes and was 2/3 in passing.

In Scotland, there was a huge upset as Aberdeen defeated Rangers 3-1 at Ibrox. American midfielder Dante Polvara, 23, started and went 80 minutes for Aberdeen. He left with the score 2-1. Rangers had a 71/29 possession edge and Polvara was chasing the game, along with his teammates. But he still was good enough on both sides of the ball to lift Aberdeen in to seventh place while sinking Rangers into third, seven points from leaders Celtic. Polvara is having a good month as he also scored two weeks ago in the Conference League in an away trip against Eintracht Frankfurt.

Meanwhile in the Premiership, Scott Pittman played the last 21 minutes for Livingston in a 1-1 away draw against St. Johnstone. Pittman is Livingston’s all-time leader in appearances. Finally, Cameron Carter-Vickers remained out for Celtic and missed the 2-1 win over Motherwell.

In the Austrian Bundesliga, George Bello started for LASK against Wolfsberger, but the former Atlanta United left back was pulled at halftime. Overall, that is not a good sign for Bello who is fighting for minutes and is not considered a first-choice starter. LASK remain in third place in the league but are six points behind second place Sturm Graz.

Meanwhile, Sebastian Soto remains out following back surgery and he was not part of Austria Klagenfurt’s 0-0 draw away at BW Linz.

In the Portuguese top tier, Vizela dropped a 3-2 loss at home to Portimonense. Last week, Alex Mendez came off the bench for his season debut and delivered a late equalizing assist off a corner. In this game, he was the fifth and final sub for Vizela in the 69th minute when his team trailed 2-1. With Mendez on the field, Vizela equalized in the 85th via an own goal but squandered the winning goal two minutes later.

Mendez was busy in this game, going 21/24 in passing in his 24 minutes. He had 27 touches and was good in possession, but only managed to create a half-chance for Vizela towards the end. Still, he should continue to get rotational minutes moving forward. Vizela sits 14th in the 18-team league with five points from seven games.

In Norway’s Eliteserien, Bob Bradley and Stabaek dropped a painful 1-0 loss at home to remain four points deep in the relegation battle. This team needs a win – badly.  On Wednesday, they host HamKam and it is almost a must-win.

Also in Norway, Sam Rogers was subbed out just the 34th minute for Lillestrom in a 2-0 loss at home to Brann. Given it was a double substitution, it was likely a major tactical adjustment after Lillestrom fell behind 1-0 and Rogers was already on a yellow card.

Finally in Norway, Christian Cappis made his club debut for Molde on Sunday when he played the final 10 minutes in a 4-0 win over Viking. Cappis is at Molde, on loan from Brondby, for the remainder of the Norwegian season. Molde sit fifth in the Elitserien.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-11&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9iYWNrZW5kIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19yZWZzcmNfc2Vzc2lvbiI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZm9zbnJfc29mdF9pbnRlcnZlbnRpb25zX2VuYWJsZWQiOnsiYnVja2V0Ijoib24iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X21peGVkX21lZGlhXzE1ODk3Ijp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRyZWF0bWVudCIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfZXhwZXJpbWVudHNfY29va2llX2V4cGlyYXRpb24iOnsiYnVja2V0IjoxMjA5NjAwLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X3Nob3dfYmlyZHdhdGNoX3Bpdm90c19lbmFibGVkIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6Im9uIiwidmVyc2lvbiI6bnVsbH0sInRmd19kdXBsaWNhdGVfc2NyaWJlc190b19zZXR0aW5ncyI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdXNlX3Byb2ZpbGVfaW1hZ2Vfc2hhcGVfZW5hYmxlZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdmlkZW9faGxzX2R5bmFtaWNfbWFuaWZlc3RzXzE1MDgyIjp7ImJ1Y2tldCI6InRydWVfYml0cmF0ZSIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfbGVnYWN5X3RpbWVsaW5lX3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRpdF9mcm9udGVuZCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOiJvbiIsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9fQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1708521357862961655&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fadams-suffers-reinjury-pulisic-amp-balogun-enjoy-big-days-maloney-amp-paredes-impress&sessionId=1d185faee5ca449592e3b4be2797fcd4fad72bf6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

In Sweden, Joe Gyau did not play for Degerfors in its 3-2 loss to Sirius. It’s a good thing he didn’t as Degerfors had a 2-0 lead into stoppage time when the conceded three goals to lose and sink four points deep into the relegation hole.

In the Greek Super League, Caleb Stanko came off the bench in the 70th minute to help preserve a 1-0 lead over Panaitolikos. The American defensive midfielder idd his job and the club held on for a 1-0 win. Lamia sits midtable in seventh place in the 14-team league.

Joe Efford recently joined PAS Giannina after his contract with Motherwell was terminated by mutual consent. On Sunday, the 27-year-old from Georgia made his debut in Greece’s top tier when he played the final 29 minutes in Giannina’s 3-0 loss at home to leaders Olympiakos. PAS Giannina have lost three in a row and are in 11th place.

Finally, Erik Palmer-Brown was injured and missed Panathinaikos’ 2-2 draw with PAOK. Midweek, he was forced out of his club’s 4-1 win over Asteras Tripolis at halftime.

In Croatia, Rokas Pukstas remains injured, and he missed out on Hajduk Split’s huge 1-0 win over Dinamo Zagreb in the Eternal Derby. Hajduk remains in first with 21 points through nine games.

In Iceland’s top tier Besta Deild Karla, second place Valur defeated FH Hafnarfjordur 4-1. Former USMNT forward Aron Johannsson, who plays as a midfielder now, scored Valur’s third goal in the 66th minute. He was subbed out in the 76th minute.



In Argentina’s Copa de la Liga Profesional, Huracan played San Lorenzo to a 1-1 away draw. Alan Sonora played 89 minutes for Huracan and was not on the field for San Lorenzo’s late equalizer. Sonora nearly scored on a 55th minute shot that went just wide. But he has found footing with his career back with Huracan after a very difficult move to Club Juarez. His younger brother, Joel Sonora, did not get off the bench for Huracan.

In Mexico’s Liga MX, Club America defeated Pumas 1-0 on Saturday night. Alex Zendejas came into the game in the 65th minute but didn’t contribute much in the win. Through 10 games, Club America sits atop the table with 21 points, one point ahead of Tigres.

After a strong start to the season, Club Juarez is starting to fade and has lost two in a row. On Friday, they dropped a particularly ugly 5-1 loss away to Tijuana. Sebastian Saucedo was subbed into the game for Juarez in the 58th minute with his team down 3-1.

In Brazil, Johnny Cardoso did not suit up for Internacional in a 2-0 loss at home to Atletico MG.

Fan of a Premier League club? Stop laughing at Arsenal and Manchester United…

Fan of a Premier League club? Stop laughing at Arsenal and Manchester United…

By Luke Brown


It was a thoroughly miserable evening for English clubs in European competition on Tuesday.

At Old Trafford, Turkish side Galatasaray took advantage of some truly disastrous Manchester United defending to seal an improbable 3-2 comeback victory.

The result means Manchester United have opened a Champions League campaign with consecutive defeats for the first time in the history of the tournament, after their earlier loss to Bayern Munich.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6db204d814ced2d1a23d6d1c4e15233b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Meanwhile, some 300 miles away in northern France, Arsenal slipped to an unexpected 2-1 defeat at Lens, the side currently 15th in Ligue 1. 

Those results mean that none of the Champions League groups are currently topped by an English team.

Manchester City came from behind to beat Red Star Belgrade 3-1 three weeks ago but are behind RB Leipzig on away goals scored, while Newcastle United drew their opening match 0-0 with AC Milan. They next face Paris Saint-Germain, who saw off Borussia Dortmund in the opening round of fixtures.

Fans of other Premier League teams will no doubt have enjoyed Tuesday’s unexpected results in particular — but there’s a catch.

There are potentially five Champions League spots up for grabs this season for the English top flight, but the fifth and final place is entirely dependent on how sides perform in Europe this season.

The key words in that above paragraph are this season — previous triumphs of Premier League sides, such as Manchester City’s Champions League win last season and Chelsea’s in 2021, count for nothing.

That means rival Premier League supporters would do well to put down their PSG and Leipzig scarves and pull out a St. George’s flag for Wednesday night’s games. Here’s what you need to know.


What’s this new rule I need to know about?

We’ve covered this previously but there was so much mickey-taking in our discussion tabs and on social media on Tuesday night that we thought it was worth recapping.

The Champions League is expanding from 32 to 36 teams next season and one of those additional spots could potentially go to the Premier League side that finishes fifth.

Two of those additional four extra places will be awarded to the two best-performing countries in European competitions, with ranking points are awarded for every match — group-stage and knockout — in UEFA’s three club competitions. The collective performance of all competing nations in this season’s tournaments will be determined by the total number of ranking points obtained by their clubs, divided by the number of participating clubs.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6db204d814ced2d1a23d6d1c4e15233b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

UEFA calls these places the ‘European Performance Spots’. Catchy, we know.

Had the change been made at the start of last season, Liverpool (who finished fifth in the Premier League) and Atalanta (who finished fifth in Serie A) would have made it into the Champions League as teams from England and Italy performed best in European competition.

But the fact that there are eight English clubs playing in Europe this season already makes things more difficult for Premier League clubs — and that was before Manchester United shot themselves in the foot against Galatasaray.

Manchester United have lost both their European games this season (Photo: Getty Images)Manchester United have lost both their European games this season (Getty Images)

How are Premier League clubs currently doing?

It’s been a mixed bag to say the least.

Liverpool and West Ham United both won their opening Europa League fixtures. But Brighton & Hove Albion fell to a surprise 3-2 defeat at home to AEK Athens, and in the Conference League, Aston Villa — who beat Brighton 6-1 last time out — lost 3-2 at Legia Warsaw. 

It means England is currently sat, wait for it, 16th in UEFA’s seasonal rankings, behind member associations including Greece, Iceland and Israel.

UEFA season country coefficients 2022/23

POSITIONCOUNTRYCLUBSTOTAL POINTSAVERAGE
1Turkey3/4317.75
2Belgium5/5244.8
3Netherlands4/5234.6
4Poland2/417.54.375
5Italy7/7304.285
6Denmark2/4174.25
7Germany7/729.54.214
8Greece4/5214.2
9Portugal4/6244
10Czechia3/4164
11Spain7/831.53.937
12Iceland1/311.53.833
13Israel2/4153.75
14France6/621.53.583
15Croatia1/413.53.375
16England8/8273.375

Yes, there is a ridiculously long way to go. It’s only the start of October. And member associations are rewarded with a large number of bonus points if a club from their country goes on to win one of UEFA’s three club tournaments.

But English clubs are already up against it due to the large number of Premier League sides in Europe this season, and clubs crashing out in the group stages will make it far more unlikely that the fifth-place club will be rewarded with a spot in the Champions League come May.

So, if you support a Premier League club who might well finish fifth this season, you’d be wise to stop your sniggering. We’re looking at you, Tottenham fans.  

Where can I find out more?

If that put you in the mood for some more UEFA rules and regulations, click here for a far more detailed look at how the Champions League is changing forever at the end of this season.And if you think this article is a load of nonsense and you want to revel in the hilarity of it all, click below.

Newcastle v PSG and the Saudi-Qatar feud that won’t go away

Matt Slater Oct 4, 2023 Press officers normally have to drag the stars of the show to the media waiting for them in the mixed zone and getting them there does not mean they will actually stop and talk.There was no dragging required, though, for Newcastle United’s ambassadors at the Champions League draw in Monaco at the end of August: sporting director Dan Ashworth and chief executive Darren Eales were delighted to be there and, apparently, even happier with the set of fixtures they had just been given.“It’s amazing,” said Ashworth. “It’s been a 20-year wait to play against the top teams in Europe and we’ve certainly got that in our pot, haven’t we? So, it’s very exciting. Brilliant for the fans, brilliant for the players, brilliant for the staff — it’s what the Champions League is all about.”Group F: Ligue 1 winners Paris Saint-Germain, Bundesliga runners-up Borussia Dortmund, seven-time European champions AC Milan, and 1969 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup winner Newcastle United.

“It’s the supergroup of death,” said Eales, with a huge grin on his face, while Ashworth, bouncing with adrenalin, added: “We’ll embrace the challenge.”And so they have. A highly professional 0-0 draw at the San Siro a fortnight ago was a good start, but it will be the nights under the lights at St James’ Park where we will really see the tightness of that embrace. First up, on Wednesday, PSG.When asked by reporters after the draw if the games against PSG would carry a little more weight than the others, Ashworth was momentarily lost for words. He genuinely did not appear to understand the question.

Mohammed bin Salman (far right) at the World Cup talking to FIFA president Gianni Infantino (Amin Mohammad Jamali/Getty Images)

Qatar versus Saudi Arabia,” we prompted, reminding him that this contest is between two clubs bankrolled by neighbouring Gulf states.“Oh, I hadn’t thought about that,” he said. “I was just thinking about it in a football context.”And that is the only context, isn’t it? Qatar and Saudi Arabia have buried the hatchet after that nasty business with the blockade and are best friends again, right? Weren’t their heads of state (de facto in Saudi Arabia’s case) wearing each other’s football scarves at the World Cup in Qatar last year?“Relations between Qatar and Saudi Arabia have repaired further and faster with the Saudis than with the other states that moved against Qatar,” explains Dr Kristian Ulrichsen, the author of Qatar and the Gulf Crisis, the definitive account of the colossal falling-out that erupted in 2017 between Qatar on one side and Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on the other.“The image of (Saudi crown prince) Mohammed bin Salman draped in a Qatari scarf during the World Cup sent a powerful visual signal that the bad blood of the blockade era was over, at least at the highest political and diplomatic levels.“The World Cup really brought Qataris and Saudis together at a people-to-people level after the strains of the previous few years and the celebrations after Saudi Arabia defeated Argentina showed that most people have moved on from that period.”

That is certainly what it felt like on the ground.

This writer visited Qatar during the crisis, when “the quartet” had cut all diplomatic and economic ties with the country and the small but very wealthy peninsula in the Persian Gulf felt like a place under siege. Everyone talked about how empty the hotels, malls and restaurants were and there was a heavy security presence outside every public building.But there was also a flourishing of Qatari national pride. There were flags and large pictures of Sheikh Tamim, Qatar’s emir, everywhere and everyone seemed confident the country would keep coming up with solutions to the everyday problems thrown up by the dispute.There was a lot of pride on display during the World Cup, too, but it was different. The tournament was a triumph the majority of Arabs could enjoy.“If this match was being played in 2018, then the nature and tone of it would be very different,” says ProfessorSimon Chadwick, an expert on sport and geopolitics at the SKEMA Business School.“Then, Saudi Arabia and Qatar were amid a fractious diplomatic feud, which was being fuelled by the petulance of an inexperienced, though increasingly powerful, Mohammed Bin Salman, a provocative (U.S. president) Donald Trump and his unpredictable interventions in the Gulf region, and a country focused on projecting itself through football, most notably the 2022 World Cup.

Saudi fans enjoy themselves at the World Cup (Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

“Since then, things have changed dramatically and the temperature between the two nations has considerably subsided. Trump is gone, MBS (as Mohammed bin Salman is more commonly known) feels more secure and assured, Qatar has enjoyed its big moment in the spotlight, and diplomatic relations have been re-established.“Nowadays, the two nations are, in general, peacefully co-existing.”James M Dorsey, a senior fellow at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute, agrees with Ulrichsen and Chadwick.“(Qatari-Saudi relations) have gone back to being a friendly rivalry — sport is just another part of the infrastructure of that rivalry,” says Dorsey.Great, we all agree, then: there is no added needle to this contest. All of Newcastle’s new fans in Saudi Arabia — and PSG’s fans there, too — can sit back and enjoy the game on the device of their choice, at home or in a more public space. Just like everybody else.r can they?While Qatar and Saudi Arabia seem to be on the same page with each other when it comes to relations with regional bogeymen Iran, Israel and Turkey, the need to resolve the bitter civil war in Yemen, and keeping tabs on more extreme versions of Islam, there is one area where the Arab brothers are still at loggerheads: who gets to televise or stream elite sport.A full commentary of this dispute would last longer than Wednesday’s game, so here is the edited version.When Saudi Arabia and co declared war on Qatar’s economy in 2017, one of the fronts they opened up was a sophisticated digital piracy operation aimed at beIN Media Group. Based in Qatar’s capital Doha and owned by the state, beIN dominates the sports and entertainment landscape across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, as well as having a significant presence in France, Turkey and a dozen other major markets.The name of this piracy operation was beoutQ and, for more than three years, it stole beIN’s satellite feed and repackaged it, at a fraction of the price, for Saudi customers. Furthermore, beIN was banned in the kingdom, with its staff booted out and equipment pinched.Qatar responded by making a complaint to the World Trade Organisation and also starting arbitration proceedings in London against the Saudi government. In the meantime, beIN’s bosses asked the leagues and governing bodies, to whom they had written large cheques for their media rights, to use their influence in their own countries to force Saudi Arabia to shut down beoutQ.While this was big news in Qatar, as beIN was forced to shed staff and give up some rights, it did not make waves in the United Kingdom until Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) decided it wanted to buy Newcastle United in early 2020. This presented a problem for the Premier League as PIF is the piggy bank MBS is using to modernise Saudi Arabia and diversify its economy, which is fine but not while another arm of the Saudi state is stealing the league’s intellectual property in a proxy battle with Qatar.What followed was months of confusion while beIN stood up for its rights, the Premier League fought its corner, Newcastle United’s past and present owners furiously lobbied the UK government to force the sale of the club through, and the club’s fans wondered what on earth was going on.The Saudis, offended by the suggestion that pirating Premier League content was not very collegiate, stormed off and it looked like the takeover was off.

But, as 2020 ticked over into 2021, the plates were shifting in the Gulf. The blockade had clearly not worked, tempers had cooled, and the problems had subsided. It was time to make up. So the leaders of the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE — met in the desert city of Al-Ula in January 2021 and agreed to call it all off, including Qatar’s arbitration cases (there were more than just beIN’s).Ten months later, beIN was unbanned in Saudi Arabia and — in a remarkable coincidence — PIF’s takeover of Newcastle United was approved.Now, we have already told you that this was not the start of a beautiful friendship for beIN and Saudi Arabia, so we have ruined that surprise, but quite how bad things remain between beIN, one of Qatar’s most famous and successful companies, and its largest potential market is really quite remarkable.

Mohammed bin Salman (left) greets Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Emir of Qatar, ahead of the Arab League Summit in May (Bandar Aljaloud / Royal Court of Saudi Arabia / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

First, there was a long lag between the Al-Ula agreement and beIN being allowed to operate again in Saudi Arabia. Then, in July 2021, The Athletic reported that beIN staff, including its founder and president Nasser Al-Khelaifi, faced “daily cyberattacks”, “malicious hacks” and “commercial sabotage”. BeIN did not point the finger at Saudi Arabia, but it did not need to.Still, things did seem to settle down for a year or so in the run-up to the World Cup, which beIN and Qatar had been building up to for a decade.However, one hour before the opening ceremony on November 20, the same opening ceremony that most experts on the region thought was the clearest signal yet for a return to the natural order in the Gulf, beIN’s new streaming platform, TOD, was blocked in Saudi Arabia.Anyone trying to log on to the service was met with a message that said: “Sorry, the requested page is violating the regulations of the Ministry of Media.

“To unblock the page, you may send an official request to: Ministry of Media — Electronic Publishing. Email: emedia@moci.gov.sa”.

The error message Saudi users receive when trying to log on to TOD

If anyone has received an answer from the ministry, can they forward it to beIN, please? Eleven months on, TOD is still blocked, nobody has explained why, and beIN has given up complaining about it, publicly anyway.

When asked for comment about the impasse, which effectively means the only way for anyone in Saudi Arabia to watch the Champions League, Premier League, La Liga, Wimbledon, the NBA and more is through a now very old beIN set-top box or an illegal stream. In fact, after more than six years of watching illegal streams of sport, an entire generation of Saudi sports fans no longer know the difference.

It is hardly surprising, then, that beIN has very quietly resumed its arbitration case against the Saudi government. It was asking for $1billion in damages last time, as that was the claimed cost of beoutQ’s piracy for the first six months of the blockade. At that rate, we are talking about a claim north of $5billion now.

“The Al-Ula agreement was supposed to end all ongoing legal cases initiated during the blockade, but it can be read as referring to state parties rather than private companies,” says Ulrichsen.

“BeIN probably straddles the two, but it may feel the Saudis have broken the spirit of the 2021 agreement to restore beIN by banning the streaming service.”

The obvious question here is what is Saudi Arabia playing at?

On the one hand, we have MBS justifying the country’s extravagant spending on sport as part of a strategic vision to make Saudi Arabia’s economy less dependent on fossil fuels by massively boosting tourism and attracting foreign investment, while also encouraging Saudi Arabia’s young population to be more healthy.

But, on the other hand, we have a nation that still seems to think all intellectual property is theft… and they’re nicking it. This seems like an incredibly counter-productive approach to a country that is desperate to host more major events and build better links with international broadcasters.

Of course, it did appear to have a plan for resolving this in the run-up to the 2022 World Cup. The plan for Saudi Arabia to buy a stake in beIN, thereby avoiding the high cost of trying to build a rival to beIN, was one of the worst-kept secrets in the media industry.

But that secret has been replaced by one of the best-kept secrets in the media industry: why that deal broke down.

Some believe it was a simple disagreement over price. Others say it was more of an age-old dispute between these two parties about control, as in Saudi Arabia finding it very hard to believe that Saudi Arabia should not be in charge of every pan-regional venture.

Either way, everyone agrees that there are really only two ways out of this embarrassing and potentially expensive situation for Saudi Arabia: take on beIN or buy it.

Dorsey believes it will be the former.

“I would expect the Saudis to launch their own thing,” he says.

“Absolutely. And that goes for every sector. As a matter of principle, Saudi Arabia has to be the regional leader in everything. Why would sports broadcasting be any different?”

Chadwick, however, sees a compromise.

“Qatari strategy has moved on from the first-mover advantages it has built after nearly two decades of spending heavily on sport,” he says. “It now faces the challenges of utilising the assets it has created.

“Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has become the archetypal fast follower, spending even more widely and lavishly than its smaller next-door neighbour. In effect, the two countries are playing different games to each other and have therefore found a way to co-exist.

“Saudi Arabia has always been the bigger, bolder, more bellicose of the two, which MBS is learning to filter through soft power strategy and reputation management. Yet its recent sport investments continue to carry the DNA of a nation that believes it plays a crucial role in regional and international affairs.

“Qatar, on the other hand — much smaller, less secure — plays the junior partner who seeks consensus through partnership and diplomacy. This is clearly evident in the activities of Nasser Al-Khelaifi, who is a Qatari strategic archetype.”

Nasser Al-Khelaifi, president of Paris Saint-Germain, is Qatari (Gualter Fatia – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)

He is also the president of PSG and the chairman of the rich clubs’ club, the European Club Association, so you cannot help thinking that Newcastle United’s owners are going to have to come to some sort of accommodation with him and his company at some point.

Wednesday’s big game takes place two days after the fifth anniversary of the grisly assassination of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident and journalist. Intelligence agencies in several countries, including the United States, believe MBS ordered Khashoggi’s death. He denies that but has taken responsibility “because it happened under my watch”.

If MBS truly wants the world to think that buying Newcastle United, men’s golf, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tyson Fury is about putting another one per cent on Saudi’s gross domestic product and not sportswashing, he should probably try to stop his subjects from illegally streaming the world’s best sport and entertainment.

(Top photo: Bertrand Guay/AFP; Evelyn Hockstein/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

American soccer was against artificial turf long before it became a big problem in the NFL

“Hopefully they can eliminate turf, especially for the pros, just because of the injury risk,” said Jim Curtin, whose Union squad will play on artificial turf on Wednesday at Charlotte FC.

Andre Blake (left), Jakob Glesnes, and the Union will visit Charlotte FC and its artificial turf surface on Wednesday night.
Andre Blake (left), Jakob Glesnes, and the Union will visit Charlotte FC and its artificial turf surface on Wednesday night.Philadelphia Union

The debate over artificial turf fields in the NFL has certainly gotten attention in American soccer circles. But across MLS and the NWSL, there’s no debate. No one likes turf, no one wants it, and there had better be a serious reason why a stadium in either league has it.

Alas, there are serious reasons. The biggest is NFL money at four of the six turf venues. Atlanta, Charlotte (where the Union will play Wednesday), New England, and Seattle host America’s and the world’s football. The NFL and MLS teams share ownership in the first three of those cities, and used to in the fourth.

In the other two turf venues, the stadiums are owned by outside entities. Vancouver’s stadium also hosts a Canadian Football League team (and a slew of non-sports events), while Portland’s has some old infrastructure issues and used to host a college football team.

Every other stadium in MLS and the NWSL uses natural grass.

ADVERTISEMENT

» READ MORE: Why worries about forever chemicals and injuries might push the NFL to ditch artificial turf

Charlotte won a MLS expansion team despite playing in a stadium with artificial turf because the owner, multi-billionaire David Tepper, also owns the NFL's Carolina Panthers.
Charlotte won a MLS expansion team despite playing in a stadium with artificial turf because the owner, multi-billionaire David Tepper, also owns the NFL’s Carolina Panthers.Jacob Kupferman / AP

While there’s only so much the leagues and teams can do about it, there’s been no need for a new opinion for years. Remember when a group of star women’s soccer players took FIFA to court in Canada over using artificial turf at the 2015 women’s World Cup? It has been nine years since the suit started and a decade since FIFA first said Vancouver would host the final on fake grass.

And it has been just about as long since anyone with common sense could see through FIFA’s ploy: Surely they’d never force a men’s World Cup to be played on artificial turf.

ADVERTISEMENT

It would be a while before FIFA proved that right, but the time came last year. When FIFA picked the U.S., Canada, and Mexico as cohosts of the 2026 men’s World Cup, it quickly made clear that like in 1994, real grass would be installed in any stadium that currently lacks it.

» READ MORE: FIFA goes to college to study how to grow grass indoors for the 2026 men’s World Cup

Vancouver's BC Place and every other venue at the 2015 women's World Cup hosted games on artificial turf instead of grass.
Vancouver’s BC Place and every other venue at the 2015 women’s World Cup hosted games on artificial turf instead of grass.Elaine Thompson / AP

Nor will they be the kind of short-term grass installations that get used for summer soccer events these days, from Concacaf’s Gold Cup this summer in Charlotte to the many big European clubs that visit the U.S. for friendlies. Most players don’t like those setups, either, because the grass tears up and the ball bounces oddly on seams.

Big soccer cities impacted

It’s no coincidence that U.S. Soccer has deliberately chosen for years now to not play its home games on turf or temporary grass, even if it means staying out of some of the nation’s top soccer hotbeds.

Portland and Seattle have long been deprived of seeing their clubs’ stars play for their country. The men and women have stayed away from Atlanta, even though either could sell out Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The men used to visit New England almost annually but have not since 2015.

ADVERTISEMENT

» READ MORE: The Linc might look different during the 2026 World Cup. Here are some examples of how.

Atlanta United regularly draws huge crowds for games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, one of six MLS stadiums and eight 2026 men's World Cup venues that currently have artificial turf.
Atlanta United regularly draws huge crowds for games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, one of six MLS stadiums and eight 2026 men’s World Cup venues that currently have artificial turf.Michael Zarrilli / Getty Images

Also, some big stars who’ve come to MLS have refused to play on artificial turf, including Thierry Henry and Zlatan Ibrahimović. Newly arrived Lionel Messi has said he will, but Inter Miami manager Tata Martino rested him from Saturday’s visit to Atlanta because of a packed schedule.

Could football and soccer now find common cause over ditching turf? Though the NFL Players Association’s desire to get turf out of the league isn’t new, it got a lot louder after Aaron Rodgers’ Achilles tendon tear last week sent chills through the Jets’ locker room and TV executives’ offices.

ADVERTISEMENT

Coincidentally, MetLife Stadium is one of the two leading candidates to host the 2026 World Cup final. The other is the Dallas Cowboys’ home — which FIFA president Gianni Infantino visited this past Sunday. He took in the Jets’ first game since Rodgers’ season ended with Concacaf president Victor Montagliani, Fox Sports CEO Eric Shanks, and former U.S. Soccer president Carlos Cordeiro.

» READ MORE: The Eagles’ grounds crew chief went to Qatar to prepare for hosting the 2026 World Cup

“I have to say in America you are light years ahead compared to the rest of the world.” FIFA President Gianni Infantino at AT&T Stadium with Jerry Jones before today’s Jets-Cowboys game. @NBCDFW pic.twitter.com/5GfKexoEFK— Noah Bullard (@noah_bullard) September 18, 2023

Both venues, and six others that will host in 2026, currently have artificial turf that will have to be removed. If they’re going to do it anyway, might the NFLPA’s campaign help it happen sooner?

One veteran source with connections in both sports said some quiet talks have already started.

The Union’s turn

“Hopefully they can eliminate turf, especially for the pros, just because of the injury risk — and obviously, if there are health risks as well with the ground-up tires [in the turf], that’s a bad thing,” said Union manager Jim Curtin, who played on turf plenty during his nine years in MLS.

“I think everybody would be in agreement that natural grass is the best way to go across all sports,” he added. “Always easy for me to say because I don’t buy the stadiums or do the maintenance or that type of thing. But certainly the sport of soccer, I believe the sport of football as well, is safest played on natural grass.”

ADVERTISEMENT

For now, Curtin and players across MLS and the NWSL can only hope. And in the shortest term, the Union have to get ready to play on Charlotte’s turf at Bank of America Stadium on Wednesday (7:30 p.m., Apple TV, free), in their first visit since last year’s disastrous 4-0 loss that cost the Union a shot at the Supporters’ Shield.

» READ MORE: Union takeaways: Bad defense turns a potential big win vs. Cincinnati into a disappointing tie

https://youtube.com/watch?v=IDp6coADsWM%3Ffeature%3Doembed%26enablejsapi%3D1%26origin%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.inquirer.com

“I think the U.S. has enough money to fix the fields and make everything grass or substitute grass for turf,” said veteran Union centerback Damion Lowe, who likely will start Wednesday with Jack Elliott suspended. “I don’t like playing on turf. I’ve had a lot of injuries from playing on turf.”

But he will soldier on, he said, with much at stake in the playoff race.

“We get paid to play regardless of the conditions — rain, snow, hail, whatever,” Lowe said. “So we just have to prepare ourselves for whatever obstacles come our way, try to beat adversity, stick together as a team. We’ll go down to Charlotte, be focused, and be ready for anything.”

For the record, there are no storms in the forecast Wednesday night. At least that will take one burden off a night that will have enough of them.

» READ MORE: Ernst Tanner admits Kai Wagner could leave the Union this winter


=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

9/24/23 Rapinoes Final Game today 5:30 pm TNT, Ertz retires Thurs with 3-0 win over South Africa, Madrid Derby 3:30 ESPN+

US Women Set to Face WC QF South Africa Sun on TNT

The US ladies sent off Julie Ertz in style with a solid 3-0 win at Cincy and have a chance to do the same for Megan Rapinoe today at 5;30 pm in Chicago on TNT.  Both of the ladies were instrumental in both the Championships and the Growth of women’s soccer in the US. The US will look to regain their footing as they prepare for the Olympics in France next summer.

US Ladies Roster for South Africa Series

GOALKEEPERS (3): Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars)

DEFENDERS (9): Alana Cook (OL Reign), Tierna Davidson (Chicago Red Stars), Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns FC), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Sofia Huerta (OL Reign), Casey Krueger (Chicago Red Stars), Kelley O’Hara (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign)

MIDFIELDERS (7): Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Savannah DeMelo (Racing Louisville FC), Julie Ertz (Unattached), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon, FRA), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign), Ashley Sanchez (Washington Spirit), Andi Sullivan (Washington Spirit)

FORWARDS (8): Mia Fishel (Chelsea FC, ENG), Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave FC), Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

GAMES ON TV SCHEDULE

Sun, Sept 24

 9am peacock                     Arsenal vs Tottenham

11:30 am USA                    Sheffield U vs Newcastle

12 noon CBSSN                 Bologna vs Napoli

3:30 pm ESPN+                  Atletico Madrid vs Real Madrid

5:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Chicago Rapinoe last game

7:30 pm FS1                        Orlando City vs Inter Miami

9:30 pm FS1                        Austin vs LA Galaxy

Mon, Sept 25

3:30 pm ESPN+                  Man United vs Crystal Palace

Megan Rapinoe talks legacy, future of USWNT, women’s sports: ‘It feels very much like a beginning’

Megan Rapinoe talks legacy, future of USWNT, women’s sports: ‘It feels very much like a beginning’

By Steph Yang and The Athletic StaffSep 23, 202333


Megan Rapinoe took her place in front of a crowd of media members Saturday ahead of her last game for the U.S. women’s national team. While she’s closing the door on a two-decade-long career — which includes two World Cup trophies, an Olympic gold medal and a Ballon d’Or Féminin — Rapinoe is looking at the new beginning rather than an end.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I obviously know that this is an ending of one chapter but it feels very much like a beginning,” she said. “I’m really excited about what’s to come and love where the game is now and where the sport is now. I think women’s sports in general, the landscape around it, is in such an exciting place, and I hope to continue to be a part of that in a really big way, just on the other side of things.”

She didn’t get into the specifics, but the soccer player-turned-global icon made clear she wants to continue working in women’s sports, something she feels especially qualified to do. Rapinoe mentioned the growth of women’s soccer, the WNBA, the new Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) and the dominance of tennis star Coco Gauff among things that excite her about the landscape.

“I feel like I’m uniquely suited and very much know how to talk about women’s sports,” Rapinoe said. “I hope to be a big part of that business building and marketing and branding of women’s sports and I don’t really necessarily want to be tied to one thing or one organization but looking to use my platform and the leverage that I have pretty similar to how I do now. I just will have a lot more free time to do so. ”

Rapinoe answered each question at length as she reflected on her long career, drifting toward her work off the field as standing out, particularly her and the team’s advocacy for issues around gender equity, social justice and trans rights.

“I think we’ve been a big part of pushing, talking about — whether it’s gay rights or racial justice or trans rights — more into every conversation around sports and particularly around women’s sports,” Rapinoe said. “We’ve been such a driver of that and made that just as important as what we are doing on the field. I think we really believe it is just as important.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://12d2450d2bd96cdd3996f4318198528f.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“We understand what it means to not have to sacrifice who you are and what that means for your playing the field. So I’m incredibly proud of everything that we’ve done on the field. Obviously, we’ve been a really special generation of players, but I think it says a lot about us that everything on the field I feel like kind of pales in comparison to what we’ve achieved off the field.

“And where we’ve chosen to sort of throw our weight and the way that we have used what is our greatest gift and all of our talent, and something that’s really special that we were all born with to try to make the world a better place and to try to leave the game in a much better place than where we found it.”

On the field, Rapinoe said she feels that part of the reason she has so much peace retiring is that players like Sophia Smith, Naomi Girma and Trinity Rodman are stepping up and continuing to move the team forward — including the important lessons learned during the early exit from this summer’s World Cup.

She spoke to the pressure that has been on the field and the joy that was also a legacy she feels she will leave.

“I think, particularly for this team, there was so much pressure on it all the time, certainly on the field. But especially for us during the last seven years. So much pressure about everything that we said, everything that we did, whether we were kneeling or talking about equal pay or talking about trans rights, there’s so much pressure,” Rapinoe said. “I was like we have the right to enjoy what we’re doing as well. And I think a lot of times my joy, expressions of joy, was absolutely an act of resistance or a big glaring sort of middle finger to everyone. Like this is my life and this is my career, and I get to do with it what I want to do with it.”

Rapinoe will take the field for the 203rd time on Sunday at Soldier Field in Chicago. It will be her last wearing the crest. There might be a 64th or 65th goal. There will be tears, but there will also be joy. And after a final run in the NWSL next month, there will also be a much-needed break.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://12d2450d2bd96cdd3996f4318198528f.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I’m looking forward to a little bit of rest,” she said.

Julie Ertz on choosing to retire: ‘It’s not because mama can’t play, mama can play’

Meg LinehanSep 21, 2023

Elite athletes don’t always have the power to end their careers on their terms, but no one could have predicted how Julie Ertz’s time as a professional soccer player would close. She made a surprise return to the U.S. women’s national team for the 2023 World Cup following a long injury layoff and the birth of her son. She then essentially announced her intent to retire following the USWNT’s early exit in the round of 16 on live television after playing every single minute as a center back — a position she hadn’t played in years. Then came her formal announcement in August and a send-off match in Cincinnati on Thursday.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://cf351683b5e28a4a38e8f78b8b736eba.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.htmlErtz said in her final press conference that sports take sacrifice, and now time with her family has become irreplaceable.“I learned that after every tournament, very successful or not, it’s always like: ‘What’s next?’ You always want to get better; there’s always the next opportunity,” she said, noting that she never wanted to have regrets about her career but that she had gotten to a point where she felt she could choose to step away.“It’s not because mama can’t play, mama can play,” Ertz said, leaning into her microphone to emphasize her point and earning a good round of laughs. “(I’ve) just adapted my priorities. That just comes with age. I’ve been so blessed to have the career that I’ve had.

“It’s not because Mama can’t play… Mama can play.” @julieertz is retiring on her own terms. pic.twitter.com/CBC409nT8f

— U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team (@USWNT) September 20, 2023

She spoke at length on Wednesday about that career, about the sacrifice of playing in the early days of the NWSL, about her World Cup experience this summer and about the generation following in her footsteps. But her answer about what she’ll remember most of everything off the field reflected the culture of the team best.

“If you ever wear the crest, you are part of a family that nobody really understands, except for the players that have played here with the team,” Ertz replied. That connection, that solidarity, that shared desire to make things better, that’s the thing that Ertz said made the USWNT family special.

“You grow up here. Talking about memories, I think that’s the emotional part that I’m at right now when I step away with a player that I played with for a really long time and you start talking about memories and history and just things that you have together.”

Her time with the USWNT showed her firsthand, the power of the team’s platform. She said it had directly impacted her decision to start the Ertz Family Foundation with her husband Zach.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://cf351683b5e28a4a38e8f78b8b736eba.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I think that it’s just been an incredible space to grow up in, to make you not just a better soccer player, but a better person,” she said.

The emotions on Wednesday in Cincinnati were certainly present, especially for Ertz’s teammates, but from the other side of the press conference room, there was a noticeable comfort around her decision. Five months ago in Austin, when she made her return to the USWNT environment, those emotions — especially around her 100th cap celebration — had been much closer to the surface. Before her return to the team, she had gone over 600 days without appearing in a high-level match, the Bronze medal game in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Ertz had earned her 100th cap in March 2020, but the actual celebration of that was a moment she wasn’t entirely sure she would have. In the mixed zone in Austin before the game, Ertz got unexpectedly emotional — surprising even herself a bit, before managing to hold back her tears for the most part.

“The 100th cap was super emotional in its own way,” she said on Wednesday. This time, she’s had more time to reflect, in fact, “all I’ve been able to do is reflect,” she said.Going through those memories has been hard. “Maybe it’s like an ‘Office’ quote, ‘I wish you knew you’re in the good times when you’re in the good times,’” she said.“You remember all the hardest times of this sport. And in the moment you’re like, ‘This sucks. I want this to be gone.’ Now when you’re older, you’re like, ‘Gosh, I’m so grateful for that time.’ If I just knew at that moment that I was actually in such an incredible time,” she said. “You’re just like, ‘Dang, it goes by so fast.’”Later in the mixed zone, captain Lindsey Horan admitted that she had popped out of the locker room to do media and started crying as soon as she spotted Ertz doing an interview with the broadcast crew for no reason.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I’m not gonna cry,” she promised reporters (a promise she did keep, though it got close), but Horan stressed just how much she respects Ertz as a player, not just for giving her all every single time she stepped onto the field, but for her work she does on and off the field.It’s the small moments Horan’s trying to hang on to this week. They spent plenty of time next to each other in the locker room over the years when Horan wore the No. 9.“Little moments in camp,” Horan said, “like even last night we were just sitting around our little snack room, just talking about random things. Julie was talking about TikTok and I’m just like, ‘I can’t believe it, Julie’s on TikTok.’”

Lindsey Horan held off tears when talking about teammate Julie Ertz. (Photo by Brad Smith/Getty Images).

It was even something as simple as Ertz’s laugh for her. “It always makes me laugh. I don’t even have to be in the conversation, but it always makes me smile and it makes me happy.”

Horan expected tomorrow night’s game to be meaningful and wanted Ertz to enjoy those final moments at TQL Stadium.

Ertz will be missed on the field too, of course. Her partnership alongside Naomi Girma as the team’s center back pairing was the highlight of the USWNT’s World Cup performance this summer — especially considering how quickly that chemistry had to be developed following Ertz’s return in April.“Julie has been such a leader on this team,” Crystal Dunn said on Wednesday. “She’s so tenacious on the field. Everyone who watches her play knows that she is that go-getter, that ball-winner kind of player. Her intensity is going to be greatly missed on the field, just her ability to dominate the zone that she plays in.”

The next generation is ready to step up as Ertz steps away, though. She spoke of Andi Sullivan and Sam Coffey and their readiness to take over the defensive midfielder role for the USWNT. Girma showed this summer that she is the present and future of leadership on the team’s backline — and was a player that Megan Rapinoe (whose final USWNT game is this weekend) had directly compared to Ertz as immediately irreplaceable for the senior national team.

Plenty of players have had plenty of praise for Naomi Girma, but Megan Rapinoe really laid out why she thinks Girma is a generational player for the #USWNT today here in Frisco. pic.twitter.com/EnFfLDF6SB

— Meg Linehan (@itsmeglinehan) February 21, 2023

With one final cap still to earn, Ertz currently has 122 appearances to her USWNT career with a record of 100 wins, 17 draws and only five losses. Seventeen of those games were World Cup matches, all of which she started. While her career stats don’t always reflect the contributions she made on the field for the U.S., her 20 career goals do stand out as one of the team’s favorite set-piece targets. She scored half of those with her head and 16 of the 20 were on set pieces (half from free kicks, half from corner kicks), plus eight were game-winners.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://cf351683b5e28a4a38e8f78b8b736eba.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“There’s so much to learn from her, but I feel like her professionalism and attention to detail are (some) of the top that I’ve seen,” Girma said. “How she’ll break down every play and be like, ‘We could have been one step higher, or we’re one step off.’ Looking at every little detail, and the fact that she’s doing that in one of her last games for us, having that commitment throughout her career. Obviously, I wasn’t part of it for a long time, but seeing a glimpse of it is something that I’ll definitely take away and something that I hope I can continue doing throughout my career.”

For her part though, Ertz didn’t want to name an heir apparent; “comparison is the thief of joy,” she cited on Wednesday.

“Everyone brings their own thing. Having the expectation that someone’s just going to fill in the way someone (else does) takes away from what they have,” she said. “There’s tremendous space for players to grow into, and I think as I’ve been here for, what, 11, 12 years, whatever it’s been, you grow into that position off of adversity, off of experience. So I think every individual player needs to go through their own journey for what that is.”

As Ertz had said herself, she grew up within the USWNT environment. She won a couple of World Cups along the way. On Thursday night in Cincinnati, she’ll close this chapter of her life, and start another, hoping that she did her part to raise the next generation, showing them the DNA of the USWNT team, on and off the field.

(Photo: Meg Linehan/The Athletic)

What did you think of this story?

Meg Linehan is a senior writer for The Athletic who covers the U.S. women’s national team, the National Women’s Soccer League and more. She also hosts the weekly podcast “Full Time with Meg Linehan.” Follow Meg on Twitter @itsmeglinehan

How to watch the friendlies

Thursday’s game in Cincinnati will air at 7:30 p.m. ET on TNT, Universo and Peacock. Action from Soldier Field will air at 4:30 p.m. CT Sunday on TNT, Universo and Peacock.

USWNT schedule

OPPONENTDATETIMEHOW TO WATCH
South AfricaSept. 217:30 p.m. ETTNT, Universo and Peacock
South AfricaSept. 245:30 p.m. ETTNT, Universo and Peacock
ColombiaOct. 269 p.m. ETTNT, Universo and Peacock
ColombiaOct. 295:30 p.m. ETTNT, Telemundo, Universo and Peacock

What’s up with the coaching search?

U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker shed light on the USWNT coaching search after one of the men’s team’s friendlies earlier this month, saying “in an ideal world” the federation hopes to have the position filled by the start of December camp.

Crocker said Kilgore will remain in the interim role through the team’s October friendlies. Crocker added that the federation is looking to hire a coach who “has got the ability to make in-game changes in key moments to improve the performance of the team.”

Andonovski resigned as USWNT coach after a disappointing World Cup campaign that saw his roster and playing time decisions called into question.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ec81fdfcda77c94b5dddc86c23cd567e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Asked what attributes he’s looking for in the next USWNT coach, Crocker said: “If you look tactically, we already know that we’ve got a great group of athletic women and a huge pool to pick from, so things like our ability to transition quickly is a key strength, defensively we’ve been really strong.

“I guess what we’d like to do is maybe develop more in a possession-based style and to have maybe a Plan B and a coach that has got the ability to make in-game changes in key moments to improve the performance of the team is going to be key, and obviously a coach that is a development coach, so a coach that can integrate young players into the team is going to be important. But then probably the final attribute is going to be the human skills, the leadership skills, so a strong communicator, someone that can build fantastic relationships, someone that can drive the program forward is all gonna be key.”

What else is new?

U.S. Soccer announced last week that it will build a national training facility in the Atlanta metropolitan area funded in part by a $50 million donation from Atlanta United owner Arthur Blank.

The federation has not yet finalized an exact location for the facility, but it hopes that construction will begin next year. U.S. Soccer CEO JT Batson is currently leading the search for the site, which will be selected in January 2024.

The organization has also not set a target opening date for the facility, which will serve as headquarters for U.S. Soccer, currently based in Chicago. It will include training fields, facilities for coaching and referee education, recovery and performance analysis and other infrastructure. It will also host youth tournaments and soccer conferences.

“We’re not just erecting a building or facility. This is a once-in-a-generation moment for soccer in the U.S.,” Blank said at an event commemorating the facility announcement Saturday.

Atlanta mayor Andre Dickens said his city is now “the capital of soccer in this nation,” while MLS commissioner Don Garber called the facility “one of the most important projects in the history of soccer in America.”

Megan Rapinoe from those who know her: ‘She makes the tough times easier for everybody’

Megan Rapinoe from those who know her: ‘She makes the tough times easier for everybody’

Meg Linehan and Steph Yang

Sep 24, 2023

8

To have crossed paths with Megan Rapinoe is to have a Megan Rapinoe story.

Back in 2019, following a second World Cup trophy, The Pose, and her breakout into the mainstream, I wrote a long feature about how Rapinoe was one of our Athletes of the Year at The Athletic — it was a collection of short stories about Rapinoe, the human and the player.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://4efb27b27f6deb05a9d8a855109fef40.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

So when my colleague Steph Yang and I started asking teammates, coaches and staff (who have known her for years) for their Rapinoe stories ahead of her final U.S. game on Sunday, the answers didn’t surprise us. Of course they have them. There’s just one small challenge: can they be shared?

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

A decade of Megan Rapinoe shows how far women’s soccer has come

When I asked U.S. women’s national team forward Midge Purce in Cincinnati last week for her best story, she stared back at me for a second. “That’s fit for public consumption,” I clarified.

“Yeah, that’s the key!” She laughed, staring off and rummaging through what must be a pretty good mental file of options.

“I’m thinking about Cabo,” she starts, before a long pause. “No.” Definitely nothing for publication there. What about the White House, when the U.S. teammates appeared with President Joe Biden on Equal Pay Day?

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1374873664902942721&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Ftheathletic.com%2F4892387%2F2023%2F09%2F24%2Fmegan-rapinoe-uswnt-memories%2F&sessionId=2bb037f697faf3f48d5cdd19ae481f1f83bb0cde&siteScreenName=TheAthletic&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

“Oh, that was fantastic,” Purce said. “Pinoe has been one of the most welcoming icons from the very beginning, she’s always been super, super down to earth. It was crazy to go to the White House, and she’s been there before. I mean, I’ve been there, but she’s been there for sports reasons. She was just a friend, walking through the White House with me. But honestly, I don’t have an appropriate story even when I think about the White House. The things that went on behind the scenes, I can not share.”

Purce laughed all over again. There’s probably been a lot of that over the past few days, and there will be a little bit more on Sunday as Rapinoe takes the field one final time for the U.S. at Soldier Field in Chicago. There will be tears too. Taking the field while wearing the U.S. crest for the 203rd time, Rapinoe’s USWNT chapter will come to a close, but the stories are going to live on.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://4efb27b27f6deb05a9d8a855109fef40.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Here are a few of the ones we could get on the record.

– Meg Linehan


Lori Lindsey – USWNT teammate from 2006-2013

This is a story that reminds me of Megan a lot. It makes me laugh periodically and also, whenever we’re together, we reference it and make jokes. It was back in the Algarve (Cup) days when we used to play the championship and then we’d most likely stay up through the middle of the night, or only get a few hours of sleep because we’d have an early, like 2 or 3 a.m. bus ride back to Lisbon from the Algarve to catch an early flight.

Most of us would go to our favorite Indian food place or (get) pizzas and this random year, for some reason, there were all these pizzas delivered and one was like shrimp alfredo or something. To say the least, it didn’t sit well with some people, in particular Aaron Heifetz, our press officer.

(Ed.note: Aaron Heifetz could neither confirm nor deny the cuisine from this story to The Athletic, but was firm that it could not have been shrimp, as he does not consume shrimp.)

Megan and I were on the bus, (Heifetz) was always diagonal from us where we usually sat on the bus. And so all of a sudden we hear this kind of like, ‘blech, blech.’ Heif says, ‘Stop the bus, stop the bus,’ and then vomits everywhere. I mean, it’s a bit of hyperbole, but it did feel like the barf scene from the movie ‘Stand By Me’ because there were other people that were sick as well. Anyway, they did have to stop the bus. They pulled over. (Heif) obviously changes into other windbreaker pants — listen, it was just f—ing hilarious, but also disgusting. Also, everyone felt terrible because people had food poisoning. It wasn’t great. And we were about to go on a transatlantic flight.

Megan and I, per usual, are just full of jokes and shenanigans, and we turned it into a song. I mean, the song isn’t great, but here it goes.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://4efb27b27f6deb05a9d8a855109fef40.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

It’s like (rhythmically) ‘Blech blech, stop the bus, stop the bus, too late, too late.’ Heifetz was I think so embarrassed, but he was like, ‘too late, too late’ after barf was everywhere. And so Megan and I, to this day, still sing the song. It makes us laugh. We crack up, we reference it to Heif all the time.

It reminds me of Megan because as you would know, the environment can be really competitive. It can be mundane, it can be repetitive, and Megan and I were always up for shenanigans. But Megan in particular, I think one of the reasons why she’s been able to have the career that she has is because, yes, she takes the craft seriously; yes, she takes her platform and her voice incredibly seriously; but it’s the shenanigans, these laughs, that she doesn’t take seriously. And that story just makes me laugh. It makes me think of Megan and why she has been so popular amongst teammates, but also just successful within the sport.


Megan Rapinoe addressing the media at the 2019 World Cup. (Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)

Aaron Heifetz — USWNT press officer for more than two decades

In 2019, everyone thought that the stuff with Megan and our former President was so huge. Of course, it was outside the team and in the world, but inside the team, it really wasn’t. So the tweets hit, and I’m like, “What is going on here?” You never panic, I’m not going to go rushing to Megan. We actually went to training and we’re coming back and pulling into the hotel, and Megan finds me and is like, ‘Yeah, I think we need to talk.’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, we need to talk.’

We had her set to do the FIFA press conference the next day. We weren’t even thinking about pulling her from this press conference, and she was also like, ‘No way, I want to do it.’

She just goes, simply, “I’ve thought about it, this is what I want to say. What do you think?” I told her maybe you should say that the swearing was inappropriate. She said, “Yeah, maybe I’ll do that.” Of course, being Megan Rapinoe, she did not apologize for the swearing; she did eventually. But she just went there the next day and was amazing.

But that’s Megan. She makes the tough times easier for everybody. Just because she has such a high level of intelligence, emotional intelligence. She was great.


Merritt Mathias – Reign teammate from 2015-2017

I have to give P so much credit for me really diving into my sexuality. I went to Seattle when I was in my formative 20s. I got there, I was like 25. And I walked in there being like the straight, straight, straight girlie from Birmingham, Alabama and very quickly became friends with P. All of a sudden I’m like looking around. I’m like, listen, all my friends are gay. I’m not gay. Couldn’t be me.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://4efb27b27f6deb05a9d8a855109fef40.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

I was there for a year and Sue (Bird) and P had just started dating. I spent a lot of time at their house and they were like, “Listen, please be a lesbian. Like you’re just gonna absolutely love it. Your life is just gonna be so much better. Just embrace it.” I have to thank P for my coming out story. So thank you for that. I love her. She will never be able to like, take that away, but I will literally never forget them being like, ‘Please, please, just be a lesbian.’


Stephanie Cox – Long-time youth and professional teammate

I grew up playing club soccer with Megan and her twin sister Rachael. I remember long road trips down to Southern California and going to regionals in Hawaii and nationals in Georgia. Prior to our games in Hawaii, we got to tour and visit some beaches which was very exciting because that was my first time in Hawaii. Those were sweet and simple times for us and our youth teammates.

Megan had quite an impact on the field at (the University of Portland) as well as off the field. She had a hard time assimilating to all of the team rules and it impacted one of our road trips to BYU and her involvement. Her strong viewpoint would not be stifled. At the time this was difficult with all of the norms and unity that were stressed in college to create a cohesive team with so many individuals from different backgrounds. I honestly don’t remember the particulars, I would just stress that she wasn’t into conformity.

But over the course of Megan’s career, she has shown a new way of celebrating everyone’s unique personalities and traits that can make a team shine. I can’t help but think that this adversity only served to further galvanize Megan’s resolve into the dominant spokesperson she is today.


Laura Harvey – OL Reign head coach

So the backstory to both of these stories: it’s the early days of the Reign, early days of the league. Whenever we would go to new cities on away games, because of how far we would travel, we’d always end up there early. So if you’re in New Jersey, people would want to go into Manhattan for the afternoon. Going to play Western New York, if the players wanted to go, someone would drive them to Niagara Falls. In year one, a couple of us did it. In year two, a couple of us did it. So it’s 2015, Sam (Laity) the assistant coach takes a group of about five to Niagara Falls, and the rest of us stay back. The plan is to meet for team dinner at six. Around 6:15, our phones just started blowing up in the group chat.

There are these photos of Kim (Little) and Sam, and it looks like they’ve been arrested. And we’re all like, “What the f— is going on, you were supposed to be at team dinner 15 minutes ago.” They were like, “Sam and Kim went beyond the fence, the police arrested them, and they’re just getting a court citation.” And I’m like, “If Sam Laity gets Kim Little deported, I’m gonna kill him.”

One of those photos had Kim and Sam literally on rocks in the Falls. And Sam’s doing this stance where he’s got his thumb up sideways. (Rapinoe) and all those guys are at the World Cup (in 2015), and they’re all like, ‘What the hell is going on?’

ADVERTISEMENT

So fast-forward to the 2021 Olympics. Pinoe scores an olimpico, top corner, there’s no one in the stands. Except me. I’m the coach in the stand. So when she scores, obviously, I’m yelling and she just turned, stands, two feet spread — you’ll have to find the photo — and massive sidewards thumb. And I’m just like, ‘How freaking cool is that?’ This has been going on since 2015, it’s the funniest, dumbest story that just lasted and she took it global. That s— went global, everyone knew about it! I’m texting Sam, ‘You’re in USA Today,’ and he’s like, ‘What do you mean?’ Sidewards thumb. Who does that? She’s got no concept that what she’s done is so funny and so impactful to everyone around her. She just took something that was so Seattle Reign and made it global.

Rapinoe celebrates after scoring at the 2021 Summer Olympics. (Photo by Jack Gruber/USA TODAY Sports)

Sidewards thumb again. Pregame, we’re in the locker room, we’re in Washington, D.C., Maryland, wherever it is. It’s a massive game, I think we needed to win it, it was towards the end of the season. I was really getting into them, ‘We’re setting the tone for playoffs,’ that sort of thing. I’m not really aggressive, that’s not just who I am, but I’m trying to do this motivational speech.

So I’m like, ‘We need to make sure that we win every tackle, that we complete every pass, and we get into it in the final third and all that.’ Then, ‘You need to do it for yourself! You need to do it for the people around you!’ Then I sort of lose track of what I’m saying. ‘You need to do it… do it for… your country!’

And Pinoe just stands up, in the middle of the group, and just gradually brings the sidewards thumb up over her head. And everyone just bursts out laughing. So my aim was to give this really good, motivational, rah-rah, we’re going to go out there and smash them speech, and it ended with everyone absolutely rolling around laughing because I lost my train of thought and Pinoe just… and that’s what sidewards thumb became. This thing that whenever it was a little bit awkward, a little bit funny, but no one was quite sure if you should laugh or not, just raise the sidewards thumb.

Oh my god, I have so many stories. And all of them, I’m like, should I tell that one?

LAFC, Union exemplify why it’s so hard to excel after making it to MLS Cup

LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 5: Carlos Vela #10 of Los Angeles FC during the MLS Cup Final game between Philadelphia Union and Los Angeles FC at Banc of California Stadium on November 5, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rob Ericson/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Elias Burkeep 23, 2023


In 2015, MLS commissioner Don Garber made headlines across the pond by suggesting the league he runs is more competitive than the Premier League. His reasoning: That while just a handful of teams in the Premier League can realistically win the title in any given season, just about every team in MLS begins the season believing they have a chance of winning MLS Cup.

“We see some of the challenges of competing in the Premier League,” he said at a Soccerex conference in Manchester. “We have wealthy owners, but we are very committed to the idea that at the start of every season, every fan can think their team can win a championship. We want someone in Kansas City, even though they are smaller than New York City, to think they can win the title.”

Since 2012, there have been five winners of the Premier League: Manchester City, Liverpool, Chelsea, Leicester City and Manchester United. In Spain’s La Liga, there have been three winners in the same span; in France, PSG has dominated the past decade, winning eight of the last 10 league titles; in Italy, Juventus won nine in a row during the 2010s and in the Bundesliga, the least “competitive” of Europe’s top five leagues at the top end, Bayern Munich have swept every league title since 2013.

By contrast, it’s extremely difficult to repeat as champion in MLS, even once. The 2023 regular season performance of last year’s MLS Cup finalists LAFC and Philadelphia Union, who meet this weekend in league play, proves as much.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Kroenkes in dispute with FIFA over SoFi Stadium deal for 2026 World Cup

Since a team last had repeat success, there have been nine MLS Cup winners. LAFC collected both the Supporters’ Shield (given to the team with the best regular season record) and MLS Cup in 2022, but this year it’s St. Louis City, playing their first season in MLS, that is leading the Western Conference despite many pundits (including most of The Athletic’s writers) predicting they would finish dead last.

For better or worse, it’s by design: MLS is supposed to have an equal playing field. The league sits in the awkward position of aspiring to grow while also making the most of its place in the food chain. When a side wins MLS Cup, for example, they will now almost invariably inevitably spend the winter preparing for bids for their best talent from abroad, and often from Europe’s top five leagues.

After their MLS Cup triumph in 2018, Atlanta United sold star forward Miguel Almiron to Newcastle United in the Premier League, and while they responded with a solid year – finishing second in the Eastern Conference and the semifinals of the playoffs – they have failed to qualify for the postseason in two out of the three seasons since.

More recently, after New York City’s title-winning season in 2021, Valentin “Taty” Castellanos departed for La Liga with Girona. After their 2022 triumph, LAFC has since lost Gareth Bale to retirement, top goalscorer Cristian “Chicho” Arango to Liga MX (only later to return to MLS with Real Salt Lake) and Jose Cifuentes, an important cog of the title-winning midfield, to Rangers in the Scottish Premiership. MLS clubs will naturally find it very challenging to create dynasties if it is more financially viable for them to sell their best players – though in most cases, the clubs do not even receive the full transfer fee.

“We want to develop young players, have them be successful here and then move them on,” Houston Dynamo general manager Pat Onstad told The Athletic. “I think when you do that, everybody in the club benefits. Not just ownership or our salary cap but the players training with that player. When I was in Columbus, and Zack Steffen moved on to Manchester City, the guys in that locker room felt honored to play with the guy that went on to play a bit in the Premier League and now the Championship. I think everybody’s desire is to play in a top-five league, so that’s something we’d like to do.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Atlanta celebrates its incoming, generational status as a U.S. Soccer hub

That’s not to say LAFC has struggled mightily since winning the title last year. No club has posted a more impressive start to the season in over a decade, and only the 2020 Seattle Sounders can match LAFC’s 28 points through the opening 15 games of the regular season. LAFC’s issues have surfaced later on in the year, with performances dropping significantly following their CONCACAF Champions League final defeat to Club Leon.

If you ask LAFC manager Steve Cherundolo, the straightforward reason for his side struggling to maintain that electric early season form is the inability of smaller MLS rosters, limited to 20 senior players along with up to 10 supplemental players (usually draft picks, homegrown products, and other young or developing prospects) to cope with the schedule that qualifying for continental competition brings. By the end of this season, with a deep playoff run, LAFC could have played close to 60 games.

“In tournaments like this, if you want to consistently compete in finals and win them, you have to rethink your roster rules and regulations,” Cherundolo said after losing the two-legged Champions League final 3-1 on aggregate.

“We are at a big disadvantage… money in this game buys quality players. We have a good enough team to win this tournament, but with our scheduling and all of the competitions this year, we had a lot going on. We ended up in the final not at our best moment. Roster building is about that. Having deeper rosters, more players, and more quality players on your team will allow you to extend those periods of play. Every MLS team is at a disadvantage now.”

For the 2023 season, the MLS salary cap is $5.2 million per team, excluding designated players and allocation money that can be used to buy down players’ cap hits. These constraints were once essential to ensure the league remained financially secure. But with clubs like LAFC, Toronto FC and Inter Miami, who have signed Lionel Messi to a monster deal worth over $50 million annually, demonstrating they have the ambition to build rosters with the capabilities to compete consistently in MLS and continental competition, Cherundolo argues the league is directly hurting its team’s chances of success.

Last year, for example, the Seattle Sounders became the first club to win CONCACAF’s premier club competition since 2000. Subsequently, they collapsed to a historically poor 11th-placed finish in the West, the first time the club failed to qualify for the playoffs since joining MLS. It is not the first time a team has experienced success in a continental club competition and was unable to replicate it in the league, but the persistent underperformance for American clubs (who arguably possess more star quality than their Liga MX counterparts) after MLS Cup success is at least partly influenced by the league’s restrictions on building a roster with strength in depth.

Despite losing their primary goalscorer and Bale, whose primary contribution came in the MLS Cup final, LAFC has retained the core of their squad while using the summer transfer window to strengthen their team with versatile players capable of contributing in several positions. As defending champions in this iteration of MLS go, they are about as well placed as possible to fight deep into the playoffs. Well, about as well-placed as you can be in a format that relies on hitting form at precisely the right time.

But a front office should not have to prioritize jack-of-all-trades to compete for silverware. Messi’s arrival brings millions of eyeballs worldwide to a league desperate for coverage in a saturated U.S. sports market. Competitiveness is great within reason, but it should not hinder the franchises that aspire for sustained success.

(Photo: Rob Ericson/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

Advertisements

about:blank

9/15/23 US Men win, Julie Ertz Final game Thur in Cincy, Champs League Tue/Wed, Euro shockers, USWNT plays Thur/Sun TNT

US Men win 4-0

Quite a performance for the USMNT in 4-0 win over Oman.  Yes Oman is 74th in the world – but this was the type of dominance expected by a young but talented US team.  Plenty of goals – as Balogun scored early on a follow, Aaronson scored on a free kick, an Pepi scored his 6th goal in 6 US games with this beauty.    (full highlights).  I thought the centerback play was exceptional – Miles Robinson definitely threw his name back into the mix here as he teamed with Chris Richards in a darn near perfect performance albeit against lower ranked competition.  I thought Kristoffer Lund was also super steady on the left outside back spot where he might have just secured the #2 spot behind Jedi Robinson.  Dest was strong again as normal and his ability to get into the attack – man he’s the perfect Barcelona player – I wish he could have made that go.  Musah was also super strong in the back – man you could argue he actually controls the Dmid better than Captain Adams back there. He is just so smooth in moving the ball forward.  Of course on this night it was the Weston McKennie show – he was electric with his pinpoint passing and complete control of the middle of the field. Moving forward I thought Pepi honestly outplayed Balogun again in this game – for the 2nd straight game – he got off 3 really good shots and I thought was the better target than Balogun most of the night.  Listen Christian Pulisic needs to stop taking corner kicks – period – I have 13 year olds that consistently serve better balls in that he does.   PLEASE STOP NOW!  Speaking of Stop Now – Another half empty stadium when the US Men’s A team is playing at 7:30 pm.  Listen bring these games back to the TRUE Heartland.  If St Louis and Minnesota can’t fill MLS stadiums for these games.  No problem – we’ll take the games to real soccer cities like Cincy and Columbus.  Funny Mexico filed 75K into Atlanta last night to tie the team we beat 3-0 , 3 to 1.  Is disgust me that Mexico is the True home team in America for Soccer.  The US plays within 3 hours of me – I am there.  PERIOD! 

Sorry to see that American Goalkeeper Ethan Horvath has been left out to dry again – this time by Nottingham Forest.  They have cut him from their EPL roster behind the Starter Matt Turner and now 2 other new guys.  All he did was get them to the EPL – same for Luton Town and they didn’t want to keep him either.  I feel like he is really getting the shaft.  Hopefully he lands a last second trade out somewhere.

US Women Set to Face WC QF South Africa next Thur/Sun on TNT

The US ladies return to action with a new interim coach, old asst coach Twila Kilgore She chose a pretty familiar squad adding just 2 player from the squad that had the worse ever showing for a women’s US team in a World Cup. Replacing Sophia Smith with uncapped forwards Mia Fishel and Jaedyn Shaw

I will say anyone who can should head on over and pay their respects and watch American superstar Midfielder/Defender Julie Johnston Ertz in her last game in the Red, White and Blue  – heck her last game playing professionally at all. Read below about all the accolades she has accomplished included player of the year, 2 World Cups and an Olympic Gold Medal.  Tickets are as low as $25 and available here for Cincy’s TQL Stadium- which is a great place to watch a game with ample parking and lots of restaurants and bars near by. Same goes for Megan Rapinoe’s last game next Sunday at 5:30 pm in Chicago.  Both of the ladies were instrumental in both the Championships and the Growth of women’s soccer in the US. The US will look to regain their footing as they prepare for the Olympics in France next summer.

US Ladies Roster for South Africa Series

GOALKEEPERS (3): Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars)

DEFENDERS (9): Alana Cook (OL Reign), Tierna Davidson (Chicago Red Stars), Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns FC), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Sofia Huerta (OL Reign), Casey Krueger (Chicago Red Stars), Kelley O’Hara (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign)

MIDFIELDERS (7): Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Savannah DeMelo (Racing Louisville FC), Julie Ertz (Unattached), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon, FRA), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign), Ashley Sanchez (Washington Spirit), Andi Sullivan (Washington Spirit)

FORWARDS (8): Mia Fishel (Chelsea FC, ENG), Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave FC), Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

Champions League Tues/Wed

Sure is nice to see American’s in Champions League next week as Pulisic & Musah face New Castle on Tuesday on Paramount plus at 12:45 followed by Union Berlin with Jordan Pfuk + Brendan Aaronson traveling to Real Madrid Wed at 12:45 pm on para+.

GAMES ON TV SCHEDULE

Fri, Sept 15

2:30 pm ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Bayer Leverkusen

3 pm ESPN+                        Champ Southampton vs Leicester city

7:30 pm Para+                   Racing Louisville vs Houston Dash  NWSL

9 pm ESPN+                        New Mexico vs Indy 11

Sat, Sept 16

7:30 am USA                       Wolverhampton vs Liverpool

9 am CBSSN                        Juve (Weah, McKinney) vs Lazio

9:30 am ESPN+                  Wolfsburg vs Union Berlin (Pfuk, Aaronson)

10 am USA                          West Ham United vs Man City

10 am Peacock                  Fullham (Ream, Jedi) vs Luton Town

12 noon Para+                   Inter Milan vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

12:30 pm NBC                    New Castle vs Brentford

7:30 pm Apple MLS         Philly Union vs Cincy

10 pm Apple free             LAFC vs LA Galaxy  (el Trafico)

Sun, Sept 17

9 am USA                             Bournemouth vs Chelsea

11:30 am NBC                    Everton vs Arsenal

245 pm Para+                     Roma vs Empoli

8:30 pm FS1                        Austin vs Portland

Mon, Sept 18

2:45 USA                              Nottingham Forest (Turner) vs Burnley  

Tues Sept 19 – Champions League

12:45 pm Para+                 AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah) vs New Castle United

3 pm Para+                         PSG vs Dortmund

3 pm Para+                         Man City vs Crvena Zvezda

3 pm para+                         Lazio vs Atletico Madrid

Weds Sept 20 – Champions League

12:45 pm Para+                 Real Madrid vs Union Berlin (Pfuk, Aaronson)  

3 pm Para+                         Bayern Munic vs Man United  

3 pm Para+                         real Sociadad vs Inter Milan  

3 pm para+                         Arsenal vs PSV

7”30 pm Apple MLS         Miami (Messi) vs Toronto

7:30 pm Apple                   Montreal vs Cincy

Thur, Sept 21

12:45 pm para+                 Lask Linz vs Liverpool

12:45  pm                             Lergia vs Aston villa

3 pm Para+                         West Ham United vs Backa Topolo

3:30 pm Para+                   Brighton vs AEL Athens

7:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Cincy  Ertz Last Game

Sun, Sept 24

5:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Chicago Rapinoe last game

US Men

USMNT player ratings: Weston McKennie 8/10 in win over Oman  Kyle Bonagura

US Wins with Goals from Balogun and Pepi

Gregg Berhalter credits his center backs in USMNT’s 4-0 win

3 Take Aways from the Game – the 18

Berhalter talks USMNT strikers after Balogun, Pepi both score in Oman rout

USA vs. Oman, 2023 Friendly – More excitement and more goals in a dominant USMNT victory

USA vs. Oman, 2023 Friendly: Man of the MatchAnalysis, thoughts, & player ratings: The USMNT caps September with 4-0 win over Oman

Horvath out, Steffen in as Premier League squads announced

USMNT left back Vines left off Antwerp Champions League roster — by mistake

US Women

 U.S. Soccer names 27-player USWNT roster

Crocker: Kilgore to coach USWNT in October, U.S. Soccer aiming for December permanent hire

 

WORLD 

Southgate blasts ‘ridiculous treatment’ of Maguire

Deschamps: We’re not used to losing  
Joao Palhinha & Harrison Reed sign new Fulham deals

Brenden_aaronson_-_asn_top_-_usmnt_vs._oman_-_goal_-_9-12-23

Analysis, thoughts, & player ratings: The USMNT caps September with 4-0 win over Oman

As he does after every game, ASN’s Brian Sciaretta rewatches the performance and offers up his thougths, analysis, and player ratings. For this game, the U.S. received an improved performance to end its September window with a 4-0 win over Oman. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTEDSEPTEMBER 13, 2023 9:05 AM

  • SHARE THIS STORY

THE UNITED STATES national team defeated Oman 4-0 in Minnesota to complete its September international window with two friendly wins over Asian opponents. For 90 minutes, the outing was a significant improvement from the 3-0 win over Uzbekistan on Saturday.

The U.S. took control of the game early and immediately began to create chances. In the 13th minute, the team broke through with some excellent ball-movement. Weston McKennie recovered the ball after Christian Pulisic slipped. McKennie sent a long and accurate pass into the box on the right side to Tim Weah. With his first touch, he teed up Sergino Dest for a shot. His shot was saved by Ibrahim Almukhaini, but the rebound fell to Folarin Balogun for a tap-in.

For the remainder of the half, the U.S. team controlled the game but couldn’t find a second. Eventually the goals started to come. In the second half, the U.S. team put the game with three goals in 21 minutes via the substitutes. It started with a Brenden Aaronson free-kick that featured a number of mistakes from Oman – from the wall to the goalkeeper. Then Ricardo Pepi had the goal of the night in the 79th minute when he took a pass from DeJuan Jones and hit a low driving shot from just outside the box that found the back of the net. The final goal was an own goal when Kevin Pardes broke down the right side and sent a low cross towards Pepi. Before Pepi could tap it in, Oman’s Khalid Al Braiki turned it into his own net.

The U.S. team finished the window with two wins and a combined 7-0 scoreline. Meanwhile, Mexico struggled against Uzbekistan in Atlanta and conceded a late equalizer in a 3-3 draw.

Here are some thoughts on the win.

VERY FEW MISTAKES

Following the U.S. team’s 3-0 win over Uzbekistan that left many underwhelmed, Gregg Berhalter said that the biggest area of concern for him was the careless turnovers. Those turnovers sprung many counter attacks for Uzbekistan which were only bailed out by either missed shots, blocked shots, or saves.

In this game, the U.S. team made a complete reversal and made no dangerous turnovers. Oman had very few chances to spring counter attacks. In particular, the midfield trio of Weston McKennie, Yunus Musah, and Malik Tillman moved the ball around with easy and any missed passes were not costly in terms of gifting Oman anything the other way.

In terms of improvement, this was huge.

CENTRAL DEFENSE IN TRANSITION

Berhalter said after the game that he gave the “game ball” (equivalent of the team’s MOTM) to both central defender – Miles Robinson and Chris Richards – because he felt the defended very well whenever Oman would try to aggressively attack or counterattack. He believed they helped eliminate Oman’s possessions early, and long before they ever amounted to anything dangerous. But there was a lot of talk about transitional defense in this window – both in how it wasn’t great against Uzbekistan and how it was improved against Oman. But moving forward, this will continue to be an important topic and next month the quality of opponents will be significantly raised in Germany and Ghana, so it will be important that positive momentum from this game continue.

Central defense is completely up in the air with this team right now and the truth is that there really aren’t many young options knocking at the door (that’s the topic of a separate article but there is a huge generational gap developing at that position with few 2001-born and younger options). The pool of players in central defense is set but there is a lot of parity and some concerns with this group which include Richards, Robinson, Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie, Walker Zimmerman, Cameron Carter-Vickers, Auston Trusty, Matt Miazga, and Erik Palmer-Brown. Those players comprise of the player pool for central defense. There are opportunities and concerns over each of them.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1701758907511681027&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fanalysis-thoughts-amp-player-ratings-the-usmnt-caps-september-with-4-0-win-over-oman&sessionId=3121636d13cd1c6f8a37e26c8d03f8cde15aea4f&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

Our guys. pic.twitter.com/1toJR61MyZ— U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team (@USMNT) September 13, 2023

In this game, Richards played well and had a nice window. But the concern will be over his lack of minutes at Crystal Palace. Good outings for the national team are certainly possible if a player is on the bench for the club, but consistency is another issue.

Similarly, Robinson had a nice game as well, but he looks set to leave Atlanta United after the season. Mark McKenzie replaced Richards and he is in a good situation at Genk for his minutes, but can he transition that over to consistently playing well for the national team? Then you have Tim Ream. He will soon turn 36 but has been playing incredible soccer over the past year. At some point, his level will drop. He’s doing a great job staying at a top level, but it’s always “proceed with caution” with him.

Leaving this camp, we still don’t have a set order with central defenders.

WEARING OMAN OUT

Another factor that went into the U.S. team winning this game was simply wearing Oman out. The team’s passing was so efficient, and it was equally distributed from the right and left sides of the field.

Here is an interesting statistic. Left back Kristoffer Lund had 85 touches over 90 minutes. The two right backs (Sergino Dest and DeJuan Jones) combined for 88 touches. That presents a clear picture that the U.S. team was comfortable going down either side of the field. Top teams will still defend that well, but against opponents where the U.S. team has a big edge in talent, it will help the U.S. team pick opponents apart throughout the 90 minutes.

It also shouldn’t be discounted that this was a big reason why the U.S. team was so strong in the second half and why the substitutes performed so well. The U.S. was moving the ball from side to side and Oman was chasing. When the fresh legs came into the game, Oman had been chasing for a long time and was both tired, and thrown off its game.

MCKENNIE’S DISTRIBUTION

While Berhalter gave the team ball to central defense, there was a great case that Weston McKennie was the MOTM. His diagonal passing was deadly accurate and he was a huge reason why the U.S. team was able to get the ball from side to side. In total, he was 15/18 in his long range passing (35+ yards) and that was how the U.S. was able to go from side to side.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-1&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1701802219442413985&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fanalysis-thoughts-amp-player-ratings-the-usmnt-caps-september-with-4-0-win-over-oman&sessionId=3121636d13cd1c6f8a37e26c8d03f8cde15aea4f&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

Weston McKennie was 15/18 in long balls tonight #USMNT— Brian Sciaretta (@BrianSciaretta) September 13, 2023



That passing clearly gave the U.S. an edge and it directly resulted in the opening goal in the 13th minute.

McKennie was the best U.S. player over the entire window. Against Uzbekistan, he made some turnovers but was also creating chances. In this game, he was putting it all together.

GETTING BALOGUN ON THE SAME PAGE

 

The center forward hierarchy has always been a big question mark for this team. Every window, there is serious discussion over it. Heading into the World Cup, it was always talked about.

Now there is a little more comfort in the position. Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi are good options for now, but nothing is written in stone either. Pepi has delivered for the team in 2023 but he is likely only going to see limited minutes at PSV if Luuk de Jong is fit.

For Balogun, the issue with this team is chemistry. Most of this core group of the national team has been together for so long that the chemistry is steady. But Balogun is still a step behind in being on the same page as his teammates – or visa versa. As Berhalter noted in the press conference, Balogun made several important runs that were not picked up. It’s still a work in progress but having Balogun fully integrated will stabilize the front six of the national team’s starting XI.

WINDOW’S WINNERS

 

This is not the same thing as saying who were the team’s best players. McKennie was the best player for the U.S. team this window. But McKennie is a starter for the team as long as he’s healthy.

The winners of the window were those who improved their standing within the team.

Ricardo Pepi: Was the team’s most effective forward this window beyond Balogun. But Pepi will not be playing much at PSV and he will have national team competition inside of the coming year when Sargent and Dike are healthy, or if Haji Wright or Jesus Ferreira get hot, or if Brandon Vazquez continues his form now and after he moves, or if Jordan Pefok finds his groove again. But if Pepi continues to produce for the national team, he’s going to continue to get the call.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-2&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1701783195857940859&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fanalysis-thoughts-amp-player-ratings-the-usmnt-caps-september-with-4-0-win-over-oman&sessionId=3121636d13cd1c6f8a37e26c8d03f8cde15aea4f&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

???????????????????????????????????????????????? pic.twitter.com/PTS6GQ0TxB— U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team (@USMNT) September 13, 2023

Brenden Aaronson: hybrid attacking player might have had some luck in his free kick goal against Oman, but he was very good off the bench in both games. There will be young players pushing for him, including his brother, in the years ahead. But he has a big edge.

Kristoffer Lund: The team’s new left back from Palermo made a “good first step” (according to Berhalter) in claiming the role as the team’s backup left back spot behind Antonee Robinson. In this window he played over 100 minutes and showed some qualities while also making few mistakes.

Miles Robinson and Chris Richards: When there is not a lot of clarity in central defense, these two played well together using their athleticism. Both missed the World Cup due to injury and both are in the team now. But when the central defense pool has a lot of parity, good performances are always important. Richards needed this because there were so many questions about his lack of playing time at Crystal Palace.

PLAYER RATINGS

 

THE STARTING XI
 

Ethan Horvath: Horvath had very little to do in this game. What he did do, he did well enough: Rating 5.5

Kristoffer Lund: It was a decent first start for Lund who was eager to get forward, although he wasn’t very successful. Defensively, he did his part and limited his mistakes in possession: Rating 5.5

Miles Robinson: Aside from an early foul which gave Oman a free kick from 30 yards, Robinson did well defensively and stopped Oman when it attempted to push forward. He won 10/14 of his aerials, 4/7 of his ground duels, and 3/4 of his tackles as evidence of his strong defense: Rating 7.0

Chris Richards: like Robinson, he was effective in the backline to break up Oman’s plays before they became dangerous. In his 71 minutes, he won 8/9 of his aerials to limit Oman’s ability to create with balls into the box. Rating 7.0

Sergino Dest: the PSV right back was effective in the attack in the first half. His shot created the first goal. Unfortunately for Dest,  in the second half he missed two very good chances. But overall, he was tough for Oman to stop. Rating 6.5

Yunus Musah: Playing a deeper position, Musah was very comfortable on both sides of the ball – winning possession, dribbling, getting the ball forward. He helped the U.S. command possession and the pace of play: Rating 6.5

Weston McKennie: The Juventus man was the best player on the field. His long-ball accuracy gave the U.S. team multiple points of attack, and he made Oman chase the game for long stretches. He opened up the game for his teammates in an impressive outing: Rating: 8.0

Malik Tillman: Getting the opportunity to start in place of Luca de la Torre, Tillman was smooth with the ball in the attack and helped to facilitate for others: Rating 6.0

Christian Pulisic: It was forgettable game for the U.S. team’s best player, who is reliably good in big games but hit or miss in friendlies. Nothing much came from Pulisic from the run of play and he was taken out at the half ahead of the big Milan derby: Rating 5.0

Tim Weah: The Juventus wingback was at his usual wing position for the U.S. team and he had a good game. He set up Dest’s shot on the first goal. He played the ball to Jones on Pepi’s goal. He set up a chance for Dest, who simply missed. But Weah had a good game and a good window: Rating 7.5

Folarin Balogun: Playing just the first half, Balogun was in the right place at the right time to score the opener. He also was dangerous with his runs, many of which were not picked up by his teammates: Rating 6.5

THE SUBSTITUTES
 

Ricardo Pepi: The PSV forward missed two chances soon after coming on, but grew into the game nicely. He scored a very nice goal in the 73rd minute and he certainly would have scored the team’s fourth goal had it not been turned into the goal by a defender for an own goal: Rating 7.0

Brenden Aaronson: The Union Berlin winger was a step up from Pulisic in this game. Sure, his free kick was lucky but Aaronson brought intensity to the attack and allowed the U.S. team to pull away: Rating 7.0

Benja Cremaschi: The Inter Miami teenager looked a little nervous initially in his first cap but he nearly picked up an assist when he set up Dest, whose shot in the box went wide to the left. He then played a nice ball to Kevin Paredes on the fourth goal, an own goal. Rating 6.0

Mark McKenzie: When McKenzie came into the game in the 71st minute, Oman was tired and chasing leaving McKenzie with little to do defensively. He completed 8/10 of his passes: Rating 5.5

DeJuan Jones: The New England Revolution fullback played the final 14 minutes, completed 16/17 of his passes, with one being an assist on Pepi’s goal: Rating 6.5

Mark McKenzie: When McKenzie came into the game in the 76th minute, Oman was tired and chasing leaving McKenzie with little to do defensively. He completed 8/10 of his passes: Rating 5.5

Kevin Pardes: The Wolfsburg winger made the most of his debut when his attacking run set him up for a final ball in the box that was either going to be an assist to Pepi or an own goal, and it was an own goal: Rating 6.0

USMNT player ratings: Weston McKennie 8/10 in win over Oman

  • Kyle Bonagura, ESPN Staff WriterSep 12, 2023, 11:25 PM ET

The United States wrapped up coach Gregg Berhalter’s first window back as head coach with a dominant 4-0 win against Oman at Allianz Field in Minnesota on Tuesday.Folarin Balogun got the U.S. off to a flying start with a 13th minute goal, before Brenden Aaronson (who replaced Christian Pulisic at half-time), Ricardo Pepi and an Oman own goal rounded out the scoring in the second half.

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga & more (U.S.)

It was clear early on that Oman, ranked No. 73 in the FIFA world rankings, would be completely overmatched by the U.S., which came in at No. 11 in the last version released in July.

Manager rating (scale of 1-10)

Gregg Berhalter, 7 — There’s not much to be overly critical of here. The U.S. won comfortably and mixed in some new faces. It was a good night for the team. From a pure results standpoint, a pair of wins by a combined 7-0 score made this a successful first window back for Berhalter, but considering the level of competition this was, more or less, expected. A much more interesting test will come next month against Germany and Ghana.

USMNT Player ratings (0-10; 10 = best; 5 = average)

GK Ethan Horvath, 6 — Was required to make just one save.

DF Kristoffer Lund, 4 — After making his U.S. debut on Saturday, Lund got his first start and, at times, his lack of familiarity with his teammates showed. He didn’t have to do much defending with the U.S. dominant in possession.

EDITOR’S PICKS

DF Miles Robinson, 7 — It was a quiet night for Robinson, who was largely untested.

DF Chris Richards, 7 — As was the case with Robinson, there was not much defending to do in this game.

DF Sergiño Dest, 7 — A ripped shot led to the first goal and he was consistently involved in the attack until getting subbed off late.

MF Weston McKennie 8 — A fully engaged McKennie is a difference-maker for the U.S. and that’s the version that showed up Tuesday night. A missed chance late was just about all that went wrong.

MF Malik Tillman, 5 — Without Tyler Adams and Gio Reyna involved this window, it opened up an opportunity for him to start in central midfield, but he didn’t threaten in the attacking third like might have been expected against a team of Oman’s caliber.

MF Yunus Musah, 7 — Sat much deeper than he usually does for the U.S. and looked comfortable in the role.

FW Christian Pulisic, 6 — It wasn’t a memorable game — or window — for Pulisic, who didn’t come close to impacting the game like he’s able to. Came off for Aaronson at the half, by design.

FW Folarin Balogun 7 — Right place, right time for Balogun in the 13th minute, when he calmly hammered home a rebound off a strike from Dest to make it 1-0. Was also a planned half-time sub.

FW Tim Weah, 7 — Pushed the game forward and was generally good in possession.

Substitutes (players introduced after 70 minutes get no rating)

FW Ricardo Pepi, 7 — Another goal off the bench for Pepi, who seems destined to make it an interesting competition with Balogun for the starting striker role.

MF Brenden Aaronson, 6 — Good things can happen when you put the ball on frame. Aaronson’s free-kick goal should have been easily stopped by the Oman wall, but it parted just after the ball was delivered and snuck by the goalkeeper.

DF Mark McKenzie — Not much was required of him after coming on the 71st minute,

MF Benjamin Cremaschi — From playing with Lionel Messi in Miami to making his U.S. national team debut. What a year for the 18-year-old. He nearly got an assist after coming on in the 71st minute.

DF DeJuan Jones — Jones assisted on Pepi’s goal shortly after coming on.

FW Kevin Paredes — Straight after coming on in his debut, his cross came off an Oman player for an own goal.

Ricardo Pepi continues hot streak as USMNT routs Oman: What we learned in this international window

Sep 9, 2023; St. Louis, Missouri, UNITED STATES; United States' Ricardo Pepi (9) is congratulated by Sergino Dest (2) and Kristoffer Lund (23) after scoring a goal against Uzbekistan during the match at CITY Park. Mandatory Credit: Scott Rovak-USA TODAY Sports

By Tom Bogert and The Athletic Staff Sep 12, 2023


The United States men’s national team defeated Oman 4-0 in a friendly Tuesday at Allianz Field in St. Paul, Minn. Here’s what you need to know:

  • U.S. striker Folarin Balogun opened the scoring in the 13th minute, marking his second international goal for the Americans since switching allegiances from England earlier this year.
  • Brenden Aaronson and Ricardo Pepi replaced Balogun and Christian Pulisic at the half, with both subs later scoring. Aaronson’s goal came off a free kick in the 60th minute while Pepi’s was his sixth goal in his last six international games.
  • Ethan Horvath started in goal for the USMNT in place of Matt Turner. Ben Cremaschi, the 18-year-old Inter Miami midfielder, and 20-year-old forward Kevin Paredes made their U.S. debuts; the latter sent in a cross that Oman knocked in as an own goal.

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

The first window back under Berhalter

After last coaching the team at the 2022 World Cup before being rehired by new sporting director Matt Crocker after his contract expired, Gregg Berhalter completed his first window back in charge of the national team. It was a pair of overmatched opponents, but with a 4-0 win over Oman following the 3-0 win over Uzbekistan, the road to the 2026 World Cup is underway.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://1b49c82d3c68884d51e8e1730923275c.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

The USMNT dominated Oman and didn’t let up after scoring the first goal early, a critique of their performance against Uzbekistan. Balogun opened the scoring in the 13th minute and the U.S. kept attacking with urgency, finding joy particularly via big switches from Weston McKennie on the left to Tim Weah and the right flank. Kristoffer Lund provided balance on the left, constantly overlapping and allowing Pulisic to drift centrally. Balogun and Pulisic subbed off at halftime to return to their clubs in the best possible fitness.

The Americans added to the lead with three goals in the second half, a better reflection on the scoreline to their dominance.

Cremaschi’s debut in the 71st minute was also a notable moment.

Oman and Uzbekistan are ranked 73rd and 74th, respectively, in the latest FIFA world rankings. The Americans dominated weaker opponents and did their job, but the task wasn’t arduous. More can be learned and analyzed against Germany and Ghana in October. — Bogert

Standouts

McKennie: A stellar performance for McKennie, particularly encouraging in how he dictated the game with passing. That’s not typically the recipe for McKennie’s big impact on games.

Lund: A name few national team fans had on their radar before his surprise inclusion in the camp, Lund had a consistent and strong night at left back. A like-for-like replacement for Antonee Robinson — that is, a left-footed, athletic, overlapping left back — has failed to establish over the last few years, with natural right backs Sergiño Dest and Joe Scally the de facto backup left backs. Lund has firmly entered his name in the conversation now.

Pepi: Another goal off the bench for Pepi, who now has nine goals in 18 caps. Great return for the 20-year-old, including six goals in six appearances this year — all but two of those goals off the bench. — Bogert

Highlight of the game

Key stat

Pepi has scored four goals off the bench for the USMNT this year, equaling the most substitute goals by a player in a single year in team history, per OptaJack.

Why did the U.S. play Uzbekistan and Oman in this window?

As The Athletic first reported back in February, U.S. Soccer was looking to line up friendlies against teams like Argentina and Brazil for the final three international windows of 2023, but when it was announced at the FIFA Congress in March that CONMEBOL World Cup qualifiers would be played at these times, the U.S. federation had to change course and find other opponents. With European teams engaged in Euro 2024 qualifiers and African teams doing Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers, that essentially left Asian sides among the few remaining.

The USWNT’s first roster after the World Cup ends two eras and starts a new one

Jonathan Tannenwald https://www.inquirer.com/soccer/jaedyn-shaw-mia-fishel-uswnt-megan-rapinoe-julie-ertz-20230912.html

I’m the Inquirer’s soccer reporter, covering the Union, MLS, the NWSL, the U.S. men’s and women’s national teams, and Philadelphia’s place in the world’s game. I also pitch in with coverage of college basketball and the WNBA.

As Julie Ertz and Megan Rapinoe depart, young phenoms Jaedyn Shaw and Mia Fishel could make their top-level national team debuts this month. Sam Coffey and Tierna Davidson also return.

The final U.S. national team game for Julie Ertz (left) could be the first for 18-year-old rising star Jaedyn Shaw (right).
The final U.S. national team game for Julie Ertz (left) could be the first for 18-year-old rising star Jaedyn Shaw (right).Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

When the U.S. women’s soccer team gathers next week for its first games since its disappointing exit from the World Cup, many eyes will be on retiring stars Julie Ertz and Megan Rapinoe as they play their final games for their country.

But a lot of people also will be paying attention to the players set to take over the mantle going forward — especially two youngsters with the potential to become superstars soon.

Forwards Jaedyn Shaw, 18, and Mia Fishel, 22, stand out on interim U.S. manager Twila Kilgore’s 27-player roster just as much as the big-name veterans. Fans, scouts, and media have been waiting to see the duo reach the big stage, and here they are.

» READ MORE: Julie Ertz retires from playing soccer after 10 years as a pro and two World Cup titles

𝗦𝗲𝗽𝘁𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿 𝗦𝗾𝘂𝗮𝗱 𝗔𝘀𝘀𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗹𝗲! 🇺🇸

Full Roster Details » https://t.co/aR7rNnmo73 pic.twitter.com/L5sGFSogFy— U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team (@USWNT) September 12, 2023

Big-time prospects

“We’re really excited to have both Jaedyn and Mia in the squad,” Kilgore said in a news conference Tuesday. “They have a lot of talent. We view them as high potentials, but the idea with bringing them into the environment — Mia for her just her second camp and Jaedyn for her first — is just to expose them to the current environment. Help with their onboarding, get them used to what the expectations are, and make sure they have a pathway for the future.”

It’s Fishel’s second career senior-team call-up, the first having come in October 2020, and Shaw’s first. Fishel was a prolific scorer for U.S. youth teams and turned heads when she turned down being drafted by the NWSL’s Orlando Pride to go pro in Mexico at the start of 2022.

ADVERTISEMENT

Fishel signed with Tigres UANL, and scored 38 goals in 48 games in a year and a half. Though the Mexican women’s league isn’t as good as the NWSL or top European leagues, former U.S. manager Vlatko Andonovski drew heat for not inviting her to a U.S. camp to see how she’d stack up. She moved to English power Chelsea this summer for a reported $250,000 transfer fee.

» READ MORE: The USWNT’s salvation lies in youth development. Will the status quo stop it?

https://youtube.com/watch?v=nTcOmxPP-gg%3Ffeature%3Doembed%26enablejsapi%3D1%26origin%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.inquirer.com

Shaw has turned heads repeatedly since turning pro as a 17-year-old with the San Diego Wave last summer, a move that forced the NWSL to change its rules to accommodate a minor. She wasn’t the first player under 18 to join the league, but her arrival launched a leaguewide youth movement. Wave president Jill Ellis, previously a two-time World Cup-winning U.S. coach, led the charge for change and continues to lead it.

Twenty-one of the Americans’ 23 World Cup players will reunite in Cincinnati, Rose Lavelle’s hometown, where the Americans will start a two-game friendly series against South Africa on Sept. 21 (7:30 p.m., TNT, Universo, Peacock). That game will serve as Ertz’s finale. Then it will be off to Chicago for Rapinoe’s finale on Sept. 24 (5:30 p.m., TNT, Universo, Peacock).

ADVERTISEMENT

The two World Cup squad absentees, midfielder Kristie Mewis and forward Sophia Smith, are injured. Mewis has a seemingly minor leg injury that hasn’t been detailed yet, while Smith suffered a sprained medial collateral ligament on Aug. 27 — on a play that left everyone fearing much worse.

» READ MORE: Megan Rapinoe’s USWNT finale is set for September

45′: Jaedyn Shaw & Makenzy Doniak get subbed on 🔛

47′: Jaedyn Shaw & Makenzy Doniak connect to give San Diego Wave the lead ⚽️

Stream the game for FREE on CBS Sports Golazo Network available on the @CBSSports App and @PlutoTV. 📺 pic.twitter.com/L5NvZwfF78— Attacking Third (@AttackingThird) June 4, 2023

Race for the Olympic team

Also on this squad are four players who effectively were the last cuts from the plane to New Zealand: centerback Tierna Davidson, outside back Casey Krueger, midfielder Sam Coffey, and striker Ashley Hatch. All four join the race to make next year’s Olympic team, and there will be extra attention on Davidson and Coffey.

Davidson perhaps was the most notable omission from the World Cup, and 38-year-old Becky Sauerbrunn is still sidelined by a foot injury. Coffey, a Penn State grad, is a leading candidate to Ertz’s throne in defensive midfield. She has strong passing skills to complement her tackling, with seven assists and 38 chances created in 22 games this year for the Portland Thorns.

ADVERTISEMENT

» READ MORE: Crystal Dunn looks forward to the USWNT’s next chapter as she returns to the NWSL

Unlike past eras, there was no collectively bargained obligation to call in the World Cup squad for the first games after the tournament. There’s little time before next summer, though, and urgency to redeem the round-of-16 departure from Australia. And no one believes the players are individually as bad as one World Cup showed. So it’s no surprise that the door remains open for the incumbents while new challengers arrive.

South Africa should provide good tests — in fact, better tests than some fans might have expected when the series was set up. Banyana Banyana, as the team is nicknamed, reached the World Cup’s round of 16 this year for the first time. The again team will be led by forward Thembi Kgatlana of Racing Louisville, whose two goals in the World Cup included a 92nd-minute group stage finale game-winner vs. Italy.

ADVERTISEMENT

» READ MORE: The USWNT’s long era of success is over, but a new one could be on the horizon

USWNT roster for South Africa series

Goalkeepers (3): Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars)

Defenders 9): Alana Cook (OL Reign), Tierna Davidson (Chicago Red Stars), Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave), Sofia Huerta (OL Reign), Casey Krueger (Chicago Red Stars), Kelley O’Hara (Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign)

Midfielders (7): Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns), Savannah DeMelo (Racing Louisville), Julie Ertz (unattached), Lindsey Horan (Lyon, France), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign), Ashley Sanchez (Washington Spirit), Andi Sullivan (Washington Spirit)

Forwards (8): Mia Fishel (Chelsea, England), Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave), Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC), Lynn Williams (Gotham FC)

Tierna Davidson, Casey Krueger, more return to USWNT after being left off World Cup roster

NEWCASTLE, AUSTRALIA - NOVEMBER 30: Hayley Raso of the Matildas contests the ball against Tierna Davidson of USA during game two of the International Friendly series between the Australia Matildas and the United States of America Women's National Team at McDonald Jones Stadium on November 30, 2021 in Newcastle, Australia. (Photo by Ashley Feder/Getty Images)

By Steph Yang and The Athletic Staffep 12, 2023


The latest U.S. women’s national team training camp roster marked the return of Tierna Davidson, Casey Krueger, Ashley Hatch and Sam Coffey after they were left off the 2023 World Cup squad. Interim coach Twila Kilgore announced the 27-player roster ahead of this month’s friendlies against South Africa. Here’s what you need to know:

  • This will be the first camp for Kilgore after the resignation of Vlatko Andonovski.
  • Midfielder Kristie Mewis and forward Sophia Smith were the only members of the World Cup roster not called in for the games against South Africa as they recover from injuries.
  • This roster included two uncapped players, Jaedyn Shaw and Mia Fishel, who recently transferred from Tigres to Chelsea
  • The USWNT will play against South Africa twice — on Sept. 21 at TQL Stadium in Cincinnati and on Sept. 24 at Soldier Field in Chicago.

Full USWNT roster vs. South Africa

Goalkeepers (3): Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars)

ADVERTISEMENT

https://e0e5ee11a48adf23aa17830b1fa308e2.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Defenders (9): Alana Cook (OL Reign), Tierna Davidson (Chicago Red Stars), Crystal Dunn (Portland Thorns FC), Emily Fox (North Carolina Courage), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Sofia Huerta (OL Reign), Casey Krueger (Chicago Red Stars), Kelley O’Hara (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (OL Reign)

Midfielders (7): Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Savannah DeMelo (Racing Louisville FC), Julie Ertz (Unattached), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon, FRA), Rose Lavelle (OL Reign), Ashley Sanchez (Washington Spirit), Andi Sullivan (Washington Spirit)

Forwards (8): Mia Fishel (Chelsea FC, ENG), Ashley Hatch (Washington Spirit), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave FC), Megan Rapinoe (OL Reign), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC)

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

Are there any roster surprises?

While this isn’t a total “wave of the future” roster, one eyebrow-raiser is Fishel, a player who had a hard time getting a look under Andonovski. Fishel has also taken a slightly unconventional route, declining to play in NWSL after the Orlando Pride drafted her in 2022, plying her trade at Liga MX club Tigres for about a year and a half, and then leveraging a move to Chelsea, all the while making it clear that her ambitions are aimed at the U.S. national team.

Kilgore may feel more free to start tweaking the player pool in advance of the next four years now that the World Cup is past, a sentiment that could also encompass Shaw, who at 18 years old has been more than ready for primetime at the San Diego Wave. — Yang

What does this roster mean for the Olympics?

While a lot of focus in these two friendlies will, of course, be on saying goodbye to Ertz and Rapinoe, there are also some good indicators that Kilgore has begun the process of evaluating her options, or at least leaving more data in place for her eventual successor.

The returns of Davidson, Krueger, Coffey and Hatch, and even the continued appearance of DeMelo, say that we could see quite a different Olympic roster from the World Cup as the women’s national team tries to truly transition away from the last generation of stalwarts. — Yang

Julie Ertz to play final USWNT match Sept. 21 vs. South Africa: What’s her legacy?

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 6: Julie Ertz #8 of USA pointing the way during a game between Sweden and USWNT at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 6, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Richard Callis/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Meg Linehan and The Athletic StaffSep 7, 2023


U.S. women’s national team legend Julie Ertz will play her final international match with the squad against South Africa on Sept. 21 at TQL Stadium in Cincinnati, U.S. Soccer announced Thursday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Ertz, a two-time Women’s World Cup winner and two-time U.S. Soccer Female Player of the Year, announced her retirement from professional soccer on Aug. 31.
  • She will be honored before the match, her final and 123rd career international appearance for the U.S.
  • The USWNT will play a second match against South Africa on Sept. 24 at Soldier Field in Chicago, where Megan Rapinoe will cap her legendary career with the team.

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

What’s Ertz’s legacy?

Defensive midfielders don’t always get a lot of credit, but Ertz made sure everyone realized how important the role was during the 2019 World Cup. Her shift from center back to DM to center back again for this World Cup showed just how crucial she was to this era of the USWNT, and provided one of the bright spots for the team in New Zealand and Australia alongside Naomi Girma.

Her legacy goes beyond the senior team though, as one of a few players who also won a youth World Cup with the under-20s in 2012. Best known for her physicality, her ability to shut down opposing players with a perfect tackle and her raging competitiveness, Ertz reflects this closing era of the USWNT’s dominance and ruthlessness — in all the best ways. While her return for the 2023 World Cup was a surprise one, her retirement had felt more imminent than most following the last Olympics. — Linehan

What Ertz said

“I expected to just walk away after retirement, but to have the opportunity to say goodbye to my teammates and the fans one last time is something special that many players dream of,” Ertz said in a statement. “I wasn’t expecting this honor so I’m very thankful to (interim head coach) Twila (Kilgore) and to U.S. Soccer for giving me the chance to close this chapter of my life with those who have made this journey so memorable.”

Backstory

Ertz, 31, has recorded 20 goals in her career with Team USA. She was named U.S. Soccer Female Player of the Year in 2017 and 2019, and helped lead the USWNT to World Cup titles in 2015 and 2019. She also spent eight seasons in the NWSL, playing seven years with the Chicago Red Stars and most recently appearing with Angel City FC in 2023.

Ertz was sidelined for 18 months following the 2021 Olympics due to injuries and the birth of her son, but came back in time to play in the 2023 Women’s World Cup. She was named to the USWNT roster for April camp, less than a year after giving birth, and played every minute of the Americans’ four matches in New Zealand and Australia over the summer.

Following captain Becky Sauerbrunn’s injury that kept her off the World Cup squad, Ertz, known as a world-class midfielder, was tasked with playing center back for the Americans. After the team’s loss to Sweden in the round of 16, Ertz alluded to her impending retirement.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I think for me it’s just emotional because it’s probably my last game ever being to able to have the honor to wear this crest, so I think it’s just … it’s just tough,” Ertz said. “I feel like it’s just an emotional time. It absolutely sucks. Penalties are the worst. But it’s an honor to represent this team, and I’m excited for the future of the girls.”

U.S. Soccer hopes to have new USWNT coach in place by December camp, Matt Crocker says

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 06: Lindsey Horan of USA holds the match pennant in the tunnel prior to the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between Sweden and USA at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 06, 2023 in Melbourne / Naarm, Australia. (Photo by Alex Pantling - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

By The Athletic StaffSep 12, 202


U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker shed light on the U.S. women’s national team coaching search Tuesday night, saying “in an ideal world” the federation hopes to have the position filled by the start of December camp. Here’s what you need to know:

  • In an interview with TNT following the USMNT’s 4-0 friendly win over Oman, Crocker said USWNT interim coach Twila Kilgore will remain in the role through the team’s October friendlies.
  • Crocker added that the federation is looking to hire a coach who “has got the ability to make in-game changes in key moments to improve the performance of the team.”
  • Vlatko Andonovski resigned as USWNT coach last month after a disappointing 2023 World Cup campaign.

Crocker expands on USWNT hiring plans

Asked what attributes he’s looking for in the next USWNT coach, Crocker said: “If you look tactically, we already know that we’ve got a great group of athletic women and a huge pool to pick from, so things like our ability to transition quickly is a key strength, defensively we’ve been really strong.

https://a50fa3e3da6e8661ac4afffa2956965e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I guess what we’d like to do is maybe develop more in a possession-based style and to have maybe a Plan B and a coach that has got the ability to make in-game changes in key moments to improve the performance of the team is going to be key, and obviously a coach that is a development coach, so a coach that can integrate young players into the team is going to be important. But then probably the final attribute is going to be the human skills, the leadership skills, so a strong communicator, someone that can build fantastic relationships, someone that can drive the program forward is all gonna be key.”

Crocker added that the role will be based in Chicago.

“(USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter) views his (role) in terms of supporting the overall pathway in the style of play, supporting the youth national coaches. And we want to do exactly the same on the women’s side,” Crocker said. “This is very much a Chicago-based role, someone that’s in and around the office environment 365. We want the men’s teams, the youth teams, the women’s teams and the youth and extended national teams. It’s 27 national teams. You want all of them to feel part of something special.”

U.S. Soccer clarified that there is no requirement for a potential USWNT head coach to live in Chicago. Crocker and the federation are looking for someone who will take a full-time approach to the role, which means they are expecting that person would spend a considerable amount of time in the federation’s offices located in Chicago. A federation employee also clarified that U.S. Soccer has, in general, shifted to a more flexible model on staff members’ locations.

Backstory

Andonovski’s resignation came less than two weeks after the U.S. was knocked out of the World Cup at the last-16 stage by Sweden with a 5-4 defeat on penalties. It was the earliest the USWNT had ever been knocked out of a World Cup and Andonovski’s decisions throughout the tournament had been called into question.Former U.S. women’s national team general manager Kate Markgraf — who oversaw the head-coaching search that brought on Andonovski — also left her role after her contract expired last month.

Kilgore’s first matches as interim coach will come later this month when the U.S. women have two friendlies against South Africa on Sept. 21 and 24. The team is also slated for a pair of friendlies against Colombia on Oct. 26 and 29.

Earlier this year, former U.S. Soccer sporting director Earnie Stewart, as well as men’s national team general manager Brian McBride, departed the federation. U.S. Soccer hired Crocker, the former Southampton director of football operations, to replace Stewart in April, and he oversaw the search for the next USMNT coach that ultimately brought Berhalter back to the team.

The USWNT’s salvation lies in youth development. Will the status quo stop it?

In most big-time women’s soccer countries, elite prospects get pro coaching as teens. The NWSL and U.S. Soccer face pressure to make that happen here. But will old-minded youth clubs block progress?

Alyssa Thompson (center) is a too-rare example of an elite American women's soccer prospect who was able to turn pro as a teenager.
Alyssa Thompson (center) is a too-rare example of an elite American women’s soccer prospect who was able to turn pro as a teenager.Abbie Parr / AP

https://buy.tinypass.com/checkout/template/cacheableShow?aid=HtZYnkXBmA&templateId=OTB550AD8IZF&offerId=fakeOfferId&experienceId=EX39Z83I7IV3&iframeId=offer_a2c3aa23388cfbf5d1ec-0&displayMode=inline&widget=template&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.inquirer.com

SYDNEY, Australia — Though Spain’s women’s World Cup triumph was the nation’s first, it was far from a one-off. It was years in the making, thanks to major investments in youth player development.There’s a lesson in that for the U.S. women, and it has nothing to do with the dreams of those fans who obsess about the team’s playing style.Spain’s most important push in women’s soccer came not from its national governing body, but from its pro teams. Their youth academy setups, especially Barcelona’s, have created a pipeline of players that America currently can’t match.If you’re the parent of a youth or college soccer player, or a coach or administrator of a league, you might have just done a double-take. How is it that a country as big as the United States, with so many players and teams and leagues and scholarships, isn’t producing enough quality?he answer is actually quite simple. In Spain, England, France, Germany and other big-time women’s soccer countries, elite prospects get coaching worthy of their pro potential starting as teenagers. In the U.S., only a tiny handful of players can dream of that.

Most of them play through their high school years for youth clubs that focus on their own interests, then hope to get to an elite-level college team that can launch them to the pros in their early 20s.

» READ MORE: Spain wins the women’s World Cup and arrives as a women’s soccer superpower

No wonder the U.S. under-20 team hasn’t won its age-group World Cup in a decade, and the under-17s never have won theirs. Meanwhile, Spain won last year’s under-20 women’s World Cup and is a two-time under-17 reigning champion.

Some players from those squads were on the field at Stadium Australia on Sunday, including 19-year-old phenom Salma Paralluelo, who won the World Cup’s top young player award.

Pressure on the NWSL

For years, close observers of the National Women’s Soccer League have complained about its lack of a homegrown player rule akin to Major League Soccer’s — a way for young players to sign directly with teams instead of going through a draft. And for years, the NWSL has promised a rule would come.

But the wait has dragged on for so long that it took a lawsuit from then-15-year-old Portland Thorns prospect Olivia Moultrie in 2021 to force the NWSL to drop a ban on all players younger than 18. And it took another year after that for the league to allow its teams to sign two under-18 players to their squads without having to petition the league for special permission.

ADVERTISEMENT

In the NWSL’s early years, some teams didn’t have the internal infrastructure to handle having minors in their squads. But those days are in the past as ever more investment comes to clubs and the league as a whole. Now people who’ve been pushing for bigger change are done waiting, including some of the biggest names in the game.

“I think there’s conversations that are going to happen,” said San Diego Wave president Jill Ellis, the former two-time World Cup-winning U.S. manager who chaired FIFA’s technical committee at this tournament. “I know there’s some fantastic talent. … I think there are opportunities to grow in certain areas, and pull certain levers to continue to accelerate.”

» READ MORE: How America helped build England’s rising women’s soccer powerhouse

Jill Ellis presented the women's World Cup trophy on stage after the final.
Jill Ellis presented the women’s World Cup trophy on stage after the final.Catherine Ivill / Getty Images

Ellis knows firsthand about that fantastic talent, because she has signed quite a bit of it to the San Diego Wave. She drafted Naomi Girma, convinced the league to let Jaedyn Shaw turn pro at 17, and this year brought in 15-year-old Melanie Barcenas.

They’ve rewarded Ellis with impressive play. Girma was on this year’s World Cup team, Shaw was last year’s U.S. Soccer Young Player of the Year, and Barcenas has played in 11 games this year.

Breaking barriers

“I do think allowing the minors to sign now has been a big step,” Ellis said. “We’ve got to make ourselves so attractive [that] people don’t want to go anywhere else. And we’ve got to also commit to the development process.”

On the other end of the Pacific coast in Portland, Thorns general manager Karina LeBlanc is also pushing for reform. The former Philadelphia Independence and Canadian national team goalkeeper joined the club after the Moultrie lawsuit, and ensures no guessing is needed of her opinion.

ADVERTISEMENT

“What [the] Portland Thorns did and Olivia Moultrie did broke a barrier,” LeBlanc said. “I think the pathway of what it was, is going to be different from what it is in the future. And it’s about us sitting at the table and having those honest discussions of, what do we need to do differently?”

She revealed that some meetings have already taken place, with “honest conversations” about focusing on youth development.

“Everything was discussed,” she said, followed by an admission she wasn’t allowed to say what everything meant. “It was an open discussion. And I think it was important because we had owners, GMs, we had across the board — other stakeholders that are not within the league. … We all understand that the game is growing, and we have to grow with the game.”

» READ MORE: Kate Markgraf stepping down as GM of U.S. women’s national team

So the ideas are there, which is a good sign. Now they need executing.

It will take a lot of money, and not every NWSL team has the funds to run its own youth academy. Some already do, and there’s a growing sense they should be allowed to reap the rewards. Those without the resources could be allowed to partner with a local youth club of choice to build a pipeline there, as some MLS teams did before they could fund their own full-fledged academies.

‘Meaningful impact on the pitch’

Proof that the matter has reached NWSL team owners’ suites came from a conversation with Julie Uhrman, president of Angel City FC. The Los Angeles-based team doesn’t just have piles of money, Hollywood fame and a willingness to push boundaries, it has Alyssa Thompson: the 18-year old winger who debuted for the senior U.S. team at England’s Wembley Stadium as a high schooler last fall, was the NWSL’s No. 1 draft pick this past winter, and charged on to the World Cup squad.

“You’re seeing younger and younger players not only enter the NWSL, but have meaningful impact on the pitch.” Uhrman told The Inquirer, name-checking Moultrie, Shaw and Thompson unprompted.

ADVERTISEMENT

“How do we develop the best program for young players to come in, develop and grow, learn the game, mature and have the support necessary to be successful on and off the pitch?” she continued. “We’ve started with Alyssa Thompson, and I think you’re seeing some exceptional players at a younger age. We just have to create a system that can really support them.”

» READ MORE: As the NWSL keeps growing, its draft could become a barrier to progress

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?

The other big stumbling block isn’t about money. It’s about emotions. It took almost a decade for MLS to overcome youth clubs that complained about the pro teams taking “their players.” In some cities, there’s still ample ill will. (Fortunately, Philadelphia isn’t one of them, thanks to the savvy of the Union academy’s leaders.)

How can that status quo be beaten? Former U.S. women’s team and Orlando Pride manager Tom Sermanni has seen a lot of ruffled feathers in his years around the American game, and didn’t hesitate to ruffle a few more.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It is hard to beat that,” he told The Inquirer. “I would say there’s two things. One is that you’re not taking all of your players, you’re only taking a few. The second thing I would say is that from a club perspective, would it not be a big advantage to say that we’ve actually produced players who are getting identified on a level?”

Common sense to an outsider’s ear, but a stick in the chest of the youth soccer-industrial complex.

‘The ideal vehicle’

“For me, it’s selling it to the club in the sense of saying that it’s showing that your club is actually doing a very good job,” Sermanni said. “But ultimately, the state associations, probably in conjunction with the national association, have just got to sort of bite the bullet.”

His vision is state- or regional-level hubs giving players elite training under U.S. Soccer’s supervision. Sermanni added the carrot of allowing players to go back to their local clubs part-time.

» READ MORE: The USWNT’s long era of success is over, but a new one could be on the horizon

Tom Sermanni coached the U.S. women in 2013 and '14. His most recent full-time job was as New Zealand's manager from 2018-21.
Tom Sermanni coached the U.S. women in 2013 and ’14. His most recent full-time job was as New Zealand’s manager from 2018-21.Martin Mejia / AP

“If those programs are run well, players will want to go there and play,” he said. And if those programs are free, some players will want to go there and play. The other thing is that you don’t necessarily then have to take the player all the time — you might take the player in a training program, but they can go back and play for the club.”

The biggest challenge of a U.S. Soccer-run structure, even more than the nature of top-down rule, is the country’s vast size. It’s easier to scout everyone in a European or South American country with a smaller land mass.

That’s where the NWSL comes in, and the new women’s league planned by the USL to join its second- and third-tier men’s leagues. Sermanni called on the pros to lead the way.

“They’re the ideal vehicle to be that elite pathway, if it’s too challenging for it to come through the governing body and the state bodies,” he said.

For decades, the U.S. women’s team’s most prized skill has been its been its decisiveness in big moments. As a consensus forms that change is needed, one can only hope the people in charge act the same way.

» READ MORE: Former USWNT star Briana Scurry has pointed criticism of Vlatko Andonovski’s World Cup failure

View comments

ADVERTISEMENT

Manchester United, Arsenal, Newcastle and City Champions League draw takeaways

Manchester United, Arsenal, Newcastle and City Champions League draw takeaways

By The Athletic Staff

Aug 31, 2023

108


The Premier League quartet of Manchester CityArsenalManchester United and Newcastle United now know their Champions League group stage fates.

There’s a dream tour of Europe’s elite for Newcastle, an easier return to the competition for Arsenal after six years away, a mixed group for United involving difficult away games and holders City were handed a section they should progress from.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6a9884ec66d3fa112f2f51ff72b0ee52.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

But what do The Athletic’s experts think? We’ve asked Laurie Whitwell, Sam Lee, Art de Roche and George Caulkin for their takes on the group draw.


Manchester United

Opposition: Bayern Munich, FC Copenhagen, Galatasaray

What looks like the key game and why?

Bayern Munich loom above the others. Top spot in this group really should come down to a shootout between two of European football’s biggest beasts. There is so much history too. Bayern knocked United out of the competition at the quarter-finals in 2000-01, 2009-10 and 2013-14, and drew both games when they met at this stage in 2001-02. Their only other meetings came in 1998-99, when they couldn’t be separated in the group, and it required Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s toe to do so very late on in the final.

Which opposition player are you most looking forward to seeing?

It might seem strange to suggest someone whose whole career previously has been in the Premier League, but seeing how Harry Kane fares against United for new club Bayern will be fascinating. Kane was Erik ten Hag’s No 1 choice as a centre-forward recruit this summer before changing to pursue (and sign) Rasmus Hojlund — in part due to that deal’s greater feasibility. Seeing Kane performing for one of the competition’s favourites will be fascinating. Hojlund, you imagine, will look forward to facing Copenhagen, the club where he came through and made his senior debut.

Which game are you most looking forward to?

The famous “Welcome to Hell” banner draped by Galatasaray fans as a greeting to United in Istanbul 30 years ago is part of Old Trafford folklore, and though they have been back twice since there remains a mysticism about that fixture. United are yet to score in three away meetings, so seeing if they can break that streak will be interesting. Istanbul is a brilliant city too, so vibrant and cultural, a real treat to visit.

What should the rest of the group expect from your club?

After a slow start, Ten Hag turned United into a solid team in last season’s Europa League, and Barcelona were vanquished in the first knockout round on a special night at Old Trafford. That should give United confidence against Bayern, but they can have a soft underbelly and unravelled badly away to Sevilla in the second leg of their quarter-final. Those trips to Copenhagen and Istanbul could prove tricky.

Laurie Whitwell

Manchester City

Opposition: RB Leipzig, Red Star Belgrade, Young Boys

First impressions of the draw

City would have expected to get through pretty much any group they were drawn in, even a group of death, so obviously this one does not look especially taxing. Guardiola will be especially concerned by Leipzig’s counter-attacks, but an 8-1 aggregate scoreline against them in the round of 16 last season suggests City should be alright.

What looks like the key game and why?

There is not really one that should stand out more than the others because City will be expected to win all six matches, although it is more likely that they will win their games at the Etihad and keep things tight away from home. If there is a key one then it will probably be Leipzig away, as a victory there could help set them up for an early qualification providing everything else goes as planned at home (and as long as Leipzig away is not the group finale!).

(Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)

Which opposition player are you most looking forward to seeing?

Given Matheus Nunes and Josko Gvardiol are joining or have joined City this summer having played against them in the Champions League, there is a decent chance that somebody else will be a member of that club soon. It is not a very adventurous suggestion but they might be a couple of midfield injuries away from signing Dani Olmo from Leipzig in January!

Which game are you most looking forward to?

The game in Belgrade, purely for the opportunity to see a new place and for the fan culture. City were in Leipzig earlier this year and have also played in Switzerland during the Guardiola era so a trip to Serbia is something new for fans and players (and journalists).

What should the rest of the group expect from your club?

Possession and goals. More of the latter at the Etihad and more of the former away. That’s been their blueprint for a few years now and was certainly the winning formula last season, so it would take some wild swings in form for something different.

Sam Lee

Arsenal

Opposition: Sevilla, PSV Eindhoven, Lens

First impressions of the draw?

Arsenal have a very decent group. It is by no means an easy draw, but considering the teams who were in Pot 1, Sevilla are fairly favourable. There should be a fair amount of confidence in north London ahead of the group stage now.

What looks like the key game and why?

The meetings with PSV seem like they will be the deciders, but also matches to gauge how far Arsenal have come. When they faced the Dutch side in the Europe League groups last season, particularly away, it demonstrated just how far a gap there was between their first-choice starting XI and their second string. This will be a good opportunity to test the squad as a whole and understand how good their depth really is.

Which opposition player are you most looking forward to seeing?

From an attacking standpoint, it will be interesting to see how electric Noa Lang is. The winger was highly rated as a youngster at Ajax and is now back in his native Netherlands at age 24 after three years with Belgium’s Club Bruges. Whether or not PSV are the right fit is the most intriguing thing about him. Wuilker Farinez of Lens has also been well-regarded for some time. The goalkeeper will now have a chance to prove himself among Europe’s elite, which could put him in the spotlight before the 25-year-old reaches his prime years.

Which game are you most looking forward to?

The trip to Seville may be the one Arsenal are anticipating most as they will truly be back in historic European stadia. Before we find out when the fixtures will be played, however, that first home matchday will be something to behold. It will be a moment Arsenal have been waiting for since last kicking a ball in the competition in the 2016-17 season’s round of 16, and there will definitely be a moment taken to bask in the Champions League glory back at the Emirates Stadium.

What should the rest of the group expect from your club?

Mikel Arteta has purposely muddied what teams will expect when facing Arsenal this season. Last term, they quickly settled into a way of playing and looked to perfect it. Many of the themes from that campaign have continued into this year, but the Spaniard has aimed to make his side more flexible.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6a9884ec66d3fa112f2f51ff72b0ee52.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Their Community Shield win over Manchester City at the start of this month may be a good barometer for what to expect from them against Europe’s elite, however. Arsenal’s approach was more combative than usual, with a midfield of Martin OdegaardThomas Partey and Declan Rice.

Asked whether that setup may be replicated in the tougher Champions League fixtures, Arteta said: “Yes, for sure. Every game is going to have different demands and require different things from us. That’s why we have top players, to try to accommodate them in the right roles and spaces in relation to the game we play.”

Art de Roche

Newcastle United

Opposition: Paris Saint-Germain, Borussia DortmundAC Milan

First impressions of the draw

BLOODY HELL! I think that probably sums it up, doesn’t it? After 20 years away from the Champions League, this could hardly be a more scintillating, high-profile, glamorous, demanding set of fixtures. Tough yes, but wow, just wow. This is a club that expects to be dining at the top table for years to come — and what a feast to kick things off with.

What looks like the key game and why?

Where to start? Perhaps other teams in other groups could look at individual fixtures and hope to attack a weaker link, but come on. Look at who they’re playing. PSG, whose superstars yearn to win the thing. Dortmund, who should have ended Bayern Munich’s 10-year run of Bundesliga titles in May. AC Milan, fresh from making last season’s semi-finals. Sandro Tonali immediately returning to his old club? Sign me up.

Which opposition player are you most looking forward to seeing?

I could be smart-arse and hipster here, but truly the thought of seeing Kylian Mbappe being shut out by Dan Burn, who watched Newcastle play in this competition as a kid, over two titanic matches is too much to bear. And to be honest, don’t we want all opposition players to have stinkers anyway?

(Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Which game are you most looking forward to?

That first one at St James’ Park. Yes, there are some incredible trips in the offing, but whoever they got in the draw and whatever the circumstances, Tyneside will be alive and abuzz for that opening match on home territory. There isn’t a better atmosphere anywhere in Europe than at Newcastle on matchdays right now — tell me I’m wrong, I dare you.

What should the rest of the group expect from your club?

Black and white mayhem. Geordies travelling in their thousands upon thousands to be part of something special. On the pitch? A front-footed, adventurous and aggressive team who will press and press, who will keep on running, who have guile and cunning in Tonali and Bruno Guimaraes and who are desperate to make their mark. Newcastle may have been among the fourth seeds, but everybody would have wanted to avoid them.

George Caulkin


Mark Carey’s data takeaways

How good was Onana in last season’s Champions League?

To succeed in any cup competition, you need a degree of overperformance along the way, and Andre Onana’s “goals prevented” rate for eventual runners-up Inter Milan was the highest of any goalkeeper in the 2022-23 Champions League, saving 7.8 goals above expectation based on the quality of shots he faced.

As shown by the graphic above, Onana was particularly strong with reaching low to his right side — most memorably making a crucial double save during the last-16 tie with Porto, keeping a clean sheet to help his side progress when the margins were tight.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6a9884ec66d3fa112f2f51ff72b0ee52.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Inter had a lot to thank Onana for as they came so close to landing their first Champions League title in over a decade. If Manchester United are to have a strong campaign in Europe themselves this season, they will be hoping that new signing Onana can have an equally exceptional campaign in 2023-24.

What is Haaland’s trajectory towards the Champions League goal record?

Quite simply, Erling Haaland has been an absolute machine on Europe’s biggest stage. The Manchester City striker currently holds the Champions League records for being the quickest to 15 (12 games), 20 (14), 30 (25) and 35 goals (27).

By contrast, overall top scorer Cristiano Ronaldo had to wait until his 27th game until he netted his first goal in the competition, although he did not waste any time from there with a final (unless he comes back from Saudi Arabia to get some more) all-time leading tally of 140.

The nearest player to his record who is currently competing in the Champions League is Barcelona’s Robert Lewandowski with 91 — so it’s safe to say the record won’t be broken anytime soon. Nevertheless, if you look at the sharp trajectory that Haaland is on, it won’t be too long until Ronaldo starts to look over his shoulder.

Who will be Newcastle’s most important player?

Within a squad that doesn’t have too much Champions League experience, you naturally look towards those who have been there and done it before. Kieran Trippier is one with Tottenham Hotspur and then Atletico Madrid, and a more notable example is Sandro Tonali, who helped Milan to the semi-finals as recently as last season.

Not only that but Tonali was the most creative player for that Milan team, with his 22 chances created being comfortably more than anyone else in Stefan Pioli’s squad.

Sure, there were some set pieces thrown in there, but Tonali’s delivery must not be underestimated as Newcastle return to Europe’s top competition after two decades.


Champions League fixtures

(All games kick-off at 8pm GMT unless otherwise stated)

Tuesday, September 19

AC Milan vs Newcastle (5:45pm)

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6a9884ec66d3fa112f2f51ff72b0ee52.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Young Boys vs RB Leipzig (5:45pm)

Shakhtar Donetsk vs Porto

Feyenoord vs Celtic

Lazio vs Atletico Madrid

Barcelona vs Royal Antwerp

Manchester City vs Red Star Belgrade

PSG vs Borussia Dortmund

Wednesday, September 20

Real Madrid vs Union Berlin (5:45pm)

Galatasaray vs FC Copenhagen (5:45pm)

Sevilla vs Lens

Arsenal vs PSV Eindhoven

Braga vs Napoli

Benfica vs Red Bull Salzburg

Bayern Munich vs Manchester United

Real Sociedad vs Inter Milan

Tuesday, October 3

Union Berlin vs Braga (5:45pm)

Red Bull Salzburg vs Real Sociedad (5:45pm)

FC Copenhagen vs Bayern Munich

Lens vs Arsenal

Napoli vs Real Madrid

Inter Milan vs Benfica

Manchester United vs Galatasaray

PSV Eindhoven vs Sevilla

Wednesday, October 4

Royal Antwerp vs Shakhtar Donetsk (5:45pm)

Atletico Madrid vs Feyenoord (5:45pm)

RB Leipzig vs Manchester City

Celtic vs Lazio

Porto vs Barcelona

Borussia Dortmund vs AC Milan

Newcastle United vs PSG

Red Star Belgrade vs Young Boys

Tuesday, October 24

Galatasaray vs Bayern Munich (5:45pm)

Inter Milan vs Red Bull Salzburg (5:45pm)

Union Berlin vs Napoli

Manchester United vs FC Copenhagen

Braga vs Real Madrid

Sevilla vs Arsenal

Lens vs PSV Eindhoven

Benfica vs Real Sociedad

Wednesday, October 25

Feyenoord vs Lazio (5:45pm)

Barcelona vs Shakhtar Donetsk (5:45pm)

Young Boys vs Manchester City

Newcastle vs Borussia Dortmund

Royal Antwerp vs Porto

RB Leipzig vs Red Star Belgrade

PSG vs AC Milan

Celtic vs Atletico Madrid

Tuesday, November 7

Shakhtar Donetsk vs Barcelona (5:45pm)

Borussia Dortmund vs Newcastle (5:45pm)

Manchester City vs Young Boys

Lazio vs Feyenoord

Porto vs Royal Antwerp

Atletico Madrid vs Celtic

AC Milan vs PSG

Red Star Belgrade vs RB Leipzig

Wednesday, November 8

Real Sociedad vs Benfica (5:45pm)

Napoli vs Union Berlin (5:45pm)

FC Copenhagen vs Manchester United

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6a9884ec66d3fa112f2f51ff72b0ee52.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Bayern Munich vs Galatasaray

Real Madrid vs Braga

PSV Eindhoven vs Lens

Red Bull Salzburg vs Inter Milan

Arsenal vs Sevilla

Tuesday, November 28

Shakhtar Donetsk vs Royal Antwerp (5:45pm)

Lazio vs Celtic (5:45pm)

PSG vs Newcastle

AC Milan vs Borussia Dortmund

Feyenoord vs Atletico Madrid

Barcelona vs Porto

Young Boys vs Red Star Belgrade

Manchester City vs RB Leipzig

Wednesday, November 29

Sevilla vs PSV Eindhoven (5:45pm)

Galatasaray vs Manchester United (5:45pm)

Real Madrid vs Napoli

Arsenal vs Lens

Benfica vs Inter Milan

Braga vs Union Berlin

Real Sociedad vs Red Bull Salzburg

Bayern Munich vs FC Copenhagen

Tuesday, December 12

Lens vs Sevilla (5:45pm)

PSV vs Arsenal (5:45pm)

Union Berlin vs Real Madrid

FC Copenhagen vs Galatasaray

Inter Milan vs Real Sociedad

Red Bull Salzburg vs Benfica

Manchester United vs Bayern Munich

Napoli vs Braga

Wednesday, December 13

Red Star Belgrade vs Manchester City (5:45pm)

RB Leipzig vs Young Boys (5:45pm)

Celtic vs Feyenoord

Atletico Madrid vs Lazio

Porto vs Shakhtar Donetsk

Royal Antwerp vs Barcelona

Newcastle vs AC Milan

Borussia Dortmund vs PSG

What Arsenal can expect from Lens, PSV and Sevilla in Champions League Group B

What Arsenal can expect from Lens, PSV and Sevilla in Champions League Group B

By Jordan Campbell

Aug 31, 2023

45


After six seasons without Champions League football, there are only two types of draw that Arsenal fans would have been longing for this afternoon: a group full of legacy clubs and mega-rich teams (the kind Newcastle got) or a favourable one that positions you as one of the favourites to progress into the knockout phase early next year.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://a9453220be8c9f0e5600b65748242953.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Arsenal landed very much the latter by drawing Lens, PSV Eindhoven and Sevilla. On paper, it looks more like a Europa League group, but there are fewer pushovers in UEFA’s elite club competition, and Arsenal are unlikely to rotate as much as they did in its second-tier cousin last season.

Under Arsene Wenger, Arsenal qualified for the Champions League for 17 years in a row between 2000 and 2017. The closest they came to winning it was in 2005-06 when they lost 2-1 to Barcelona in the final, after an early red card for goalkeeper Jens Lehmann. In the last seven years of that run of getting to the party, they failed to get beyond the last 16.

That was a period when Arsenal were fading. Mikel Arteta’s current side, on the other hand, are building, and they will fancy their chances of not just making it through from Group B but finishing top of it.

This is what to expect from the teams Arsenal will face…


Lens

Arsenal are going back to the start when they travel to northern France to face Lens. In 1998, their very first Champions League match was away to the French club, a 1-1 draw in which a Marc Overmars goal was cancelled out by an equaliser in the final minute. Arsenal lost the home game, 1-0. Two years later it was a bigger occasion when they met in a UEFA Cup semi-final. Arsenal won both legs, but were then beaten by Galatasaray as the final went to penalties.Having spent five years in Ligue 2, Lens won promotion in 2019-20 under current manager Frank Haise. The Frenchman, who had only been a youth coach at Rennes and Lorient before being promoted from Lens B to their senior side, oversaw two seventh-place finishes and then last season’s runners-up spot, a single point behind a team boasting Kylian Mbappe, Lionel Messi and Neymar.

Franck HaiseLens’ head coach Franck Haise giving instructions this season (Francois Lo Presti/AFP via Getty Images)

Since then, however, they have lost two key players in striker Lois Openda, who has joined RB Leipzig, and midfielder Seko Fofana, who joined the Saudi Arabian exodus with a move to Al Nassr. Openda scored 20 league goals last term to equal Roger Boli’s record goal tally in a season so he is a miss, but Lens have reinvested the money in quality young players, spending around €40million on 20-year-old Elye Wahi from Montpellier and Andy Diouf, also 20, from Switzerland’s Basel.This may be Lens’ first appearance in the competition in 21 years, but their 3-4-2-1 formation provided them with the best defence in Ligue 1 last season.

Elye Wahi is presented to Lens fans earlier this season (Francois Lo Presti/AFP via Getty Images)


PSV Eindhoven

Arsenal do not need much introduction to the Dutch side, having met them in the Europa League group stage last season. PSV proved that they were a force at home by beating visitors Arsenal 2-0 in October. It made the head-to-head one apiece as Granit Xhaka had got the only goal a week earlier at the Emirates, but just as Arsenal have changed, including Xhaka no longer being at the club, the PSV team that Arteta’s men take on will also look different.

Former Manchester United striker Ruud van Nistelrooy led PSV to a second-place finish in the Eredivisie but then stepped down and was replaced by ex-Ajax and Borussia Dortmund boss Peter Bosz this summer. There has also been a sizeable squad turnover, with potentially more outgoings coming on deadline day tomorrow, too.

The biggest exits from last season’s team are Cody Gakpo, who signed for Liverpool in January, PSG loanee Xavi Simons, who moved on to Leipzig this term, and Thorgan Hazard, who returned to his parent club, Dortmund. Six other 2022-23 first-team players are no longer there. They could also be without two of their star players in playmaker Ibrahim Sangare and right winger Johan Bakayoko, who are in talks over last-minute moves to Nottingham Forest and Brentford respectively at time of writing.

PSV are not without other attacking talent, though. In 33-year-old Luuk de Jong, they have a throwback striker who gives them immense physicality and aerial ability. When they overcame Scotland’s Rangers 7-3 on aggregate in the play-off round to decide who qualified for the group stage, they were a force from set plays, scoring two across both legs.Bosz is known for a fluid, possession-based style, which is pleasing to the eye but has faced the common criticism at all his most recent clubs (also including Bayer Leverkusen and Lyon) that it can leave his defence exposed. Against Rangers, it was clear that elite opponents can get at the heart of PSV’s defence and that pace will cause them problems on the break.Offensively, 22-year-old midfielder Ismael Saibari was the standout. He has just received his first call-up to the senior Morocco squad and it looks inevitable that he will go on to play at a bigger club than PSV, given he combines a stocky build and powerful running with tremendous dribbling ability.

Ismael SaibariIsmael Saibari earlier this season (Maurice van Steen/ANP/AFP via Getty Images)


Sevilla

If Real Madrid are Europe’s Champions League specialists with a record 14 titles then fellow Spaniards Sevilla are their little sister, with seven UEFA Cup/Europa League trophies under their belt since 2006, the latest coming in May when they beat Jose Mourinho’s Roma on penalties.This won’t be a knockout tie, though, and the last two times Sevilla have been in the Champions League group stage they have failed to progress to the round of 16.Manager Jose Luis Mendilibar replaced Jorge Sampaoli in March when the team were flirting with La Liga’s relegation zone. He immediately improved results, losing only one of his first 10 league games. In Europe, they defeated PSV, Fenerbache, Manchester United and Juventus on the road to the final.They showed again how resilient a team they can be when they took treble winners Manchester City to penalties in this month’s Super Cup, on a night when the aerial ability of striker Youssef En-Nesyri was a major threat.

Yousseff En-NesyriYoussef En-Nesyri scores against Manchester City in the Super Cup (Photo: Milos Bicanski via Getty Images)

Elsewhere, there are some names that will be familiar to Arsenal fans, with a 37-year-old Jesus Navas at right-back, fellow veteran Ivan Rakitic, 35, in midfield and Tottenham old boy Erik Lamela on the wing.However, Morocco international goalkeeper Yassine Bounou moved to Saudi’s Al Hilal this summer and they have started their domestic season poorly, losing all three games at a cost of eight goals (though they scored five in reply) to sit bottom of La Liga.

Jordan Campbell reports on Arsenal and the Scotland national team for The Athletic. He spent four seasons covering Rangers where he was twice nominated for Young Journalist of the Year at the Scottish Press Awards. He previously worked at Sky Sports News and has experience in performance analysis. Follow Jordan on Twitter @JordanC1107

USMNT goalkeeper Ethan Horvath left out of Nottingham Forest’s 25-man Premier League squad

USMNT goalkeeper Ethan Horvath left out of Nottingham Forest’s 25-man Premier League squad

By Omar Garrick Sep 13, 2023


USMNT goalkeeper Ethan Horvath has been left out of Nottingham Forest’s 25-man Premier League squad.England’s top-flight clubs are required to submit their squad lists for the first half of the season following the end of the summer transfer window. Each team is allowed no more than 17 players who do not fulfil the homegrown category. Under-21 players do not count towards the total.Horvath’s exclusion from Forest’s list means that he is ineligible to play in the Premier League for Steve Cooper’s side until at least the January transfer window.His absence now ensures that he faces several months without domestic football, unless a late transfer to another club materialises.Horvath joined Forest in 2021 from Club Brugge but has only made 11 appearances. He spent last season on loan at Luton Town, featuring 44 times in the Championship as they secured promotion to the Premier League. The Athletic reported in July that Luton declined their option to sign Horvath permanently following his spell on loan with them.The 28-year-old is a regular in the USMNT squad, although more often than not as a reserve goalkeeper. He has only played nine times for his country since making his senior debut in 2016.Forest, meanwhile, are next in action on Monday, September 18 when they face Burnley at the City Ground.


Nottingham Forest 25-man Premier League squad

Goalkeepers: Matt TurnerOdysseas VlachodimosWayne Hennessey.

Noel Buck: The American in the England U-19 team who may still have a USMNT future

FOXBOROUGH, MA - APRIL 25: New England Revolution midfielder Noel Buck (29) during a third round Lamar Hunt US Open Cup match between the New England Revolution and Hartford Athletic on April 25, 2023, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

By Tom Bogert and Greg O’Keeffeep 13, 2023


Noel Buck is the new kid in the England U-19 locker room. As is typically the language of love in these environments, he’s been welcomed into the group with jokes aplenty. Born and raised just outside of Boston, with a soft accent to constantly remind you of that, Buck knew he was going to be ribbed for sounding different.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b9f4cae668c4e77c08723f5153d40333.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“Obviously they make fun of me for being American. It’s been good,” Buck told The Athletic with a laugh. “We play some games, eat meals together. A lot of good lads there. I knew I was going to be made fun of for being American and my American lingo, even though I’ve been trying to not say too much of it.”

Buck is one of only two players in the group not currently based in England. The other, Adrian Blake, only left England this summer to sign for Utrecht in the Netherlands. The squad is filled with players from Liverpool, Arsenal, Manchester City, Tottenham, and now… the New England Revolution.

It didn’t take long to fit into the England group and it didn’t take long for him to stand out on the pitch. Buck started and scored in England’s 4-2 over Switzerland on Saturday after debuting with 24 minutes off the bench in a loss to Germany on Wednesday.

The 18-year-old breakout midfielder is eligible for England through his father, who was born in London and raised in Cambridgeshire. He moved to the United States a couple years before Noel’s older brother was born. Noel is also eligible for Wales through his grandmother. Buck and his family routinely return to England and the family are well immersed in English culture, even in Massachusetts. 

“I feel connected (to England),” Buck said. “I have family over there I visit very frequently and my dad brings the culture in the house. Though I grew up in America, I still have parts of English culture.” 

Buck was identified by English scouts this spring, who came to visit with him and his family during the summer. Although Buck was left out of the current USMNT senior squad, he had been part of the U.S. youth national teams recently. Buck was last involved with the U.S. youth national team via a U-19 camp in the summer of 2022 and wasn’t included in the U.S. squad at the U-20 World Cup this spring, though Buck is eligible for the next U-20 World Cup in 2025.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b9f4cae668c4e77c08723f5153d40333.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“It was great, a nice bit of support and confidence boost,” Buck said of England taking an interest in him. “It means a lot to me. To put in the effort and show I’m valued is an important thing, it really helps.”

Buck made waves last weekend by wearing a retro England kit to the stadium ahead of his final club game with New England before joining up with the England U-19 squad.I didn’t mean to throw off the U.S., it’s just that I was proud to be called into England,” Buck said. “England is a football nation, it’s a big honor to play for the national team. This is a great experience for me, it’s different. Change of pace, change of culture, change of people. I can use all of these experiences to grow as a player. Obviously I didn’t get called into the (U.S.) senior team. Maybe I should have, maybe I shouldn’t have. I don’t know. I’m just here trying to get better.”

USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter recently said Buck is still very much in the picture for the U.S. long-term, though.

“He’s been great. He’s been really strong,” said Berhalter. “I have spoken to him. There has been interest from England, which I think is great. Great achievement, when you have a country like England looking at you.

“I’ve communicated with him, told him that we see him as a player that can compete to make the World Cup team in 2026, based on what he’s doing now.”

With England, Buck linked up with a group of players that boasts a wealth of midfield talent, most notably 17-year-old Jobe Bellingham, the younger brother of England and Real Madrid sensation Jude Bellingham.

The younger Bellingham followed his brother’s career path by leaving boyhood club Birmingham City this summer, although instead of moving abroad — Jude honed his immense talent in the Bundesliga at Borussia Dortmund — Jobe joined English second-tier outfit Sunderland.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b9f4cae668c4e77c08723f5153d40333.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Like Buck, Bellingham is flexible and can play a conventional midfield role or further forward; the latter played up front in Sunderland’s 5-0 thrashing of Southampton on September 2. On his debut for England U-19 earlier this month, he was in a three man midfield for a 1-0 defeat by Germany.

If edging into the England U-19 team ahead of Bellingham proves difficult, Buck can try to supplant either Brighton’s Jack Hinshelwood, who made his first Premier League appearance last season in a brief cameo against Aston Villa on the final day of the campaign, or Southampton’s Kamari Doyle, who also made one Premier League appearance last season and is adept at taking free kicks with either foot. He can play as a No. 6, No. 8 or behind a striker.

Bellingham, Hinshelwood, and Doyle started against Germany, but with three games in six days next month (England U-19 play Montenegro on October 10, Wales on October 13 and Austria on October 16), manager Simon Rusk may shuffle his midfield pack to give everyone minutes.

Buck is one of nine players capable of operating in central midfield, making it a well-stocked position for the team — other talents include Liverpool’s Bobby Clark and Newcastle’s Lewis Miley — but the boy with the Boston accent is likely to get a chance to show he can mix it.

Buck is calm and confident on the ball — qualities in demand in the England youth setup, as exemplified by the U-21s European Championship success in July.

Buck looked comfortable in the games, even though his introduction to training wasn’t easy.

“Well, I was severely jet-lagged with no sleep for the first session,” Buck said. “It was a bit rough, to be honest. But on Tuesday, without jet lag, I had a hold of the timing. It’s intense and competitive. Being able to integrate into this group, it’s been really good.”

Buck’s international future is still very much undecided. The United States made it clear he’s still in their plans and he is likely to receive more calls from them. Now integrated with England, he’ll firmly be on their radar, as well. Buck is eligible for the 2024 Summer Olympics, a U-23 national tournament, and may have a decision to make by then. 

“I’m just taking it as it comes,” Buck said. “I just don’t know. Who knows what I will get called into, who knows what I won’t get called into. I’ll have to make these decisions when they come.”

Tata Martino on what he tells Lionel Messi, working for David Beckham and his love for Atlanta

CINCINNATI, OHIO - AUGUST 23: Gerardo Martino  of Inter Miami and Lionel Messi #10 of Inter Miami celebrate the win over FC Cincinnati in penalties at TQL Stadium on August 23, 2023 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Trevor Ruszkowski/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Felipe Cardenas

4h ago

5


“I’m watching Argentina on mute,” Inter Miami head coach Tata Martino said over the phone on Tuesday afternoon. “There’s no need to hear the broadcast to enjoy it.”

Martino lived at a hotel near Inter Miami’s training complex in Fort Lauderdale for over a month after joining the club in late June and stayed there at the start of their remarkable 11-game unbeaten run. The move to a new apartment has been a welcome change. Martino is now more settled in the city, living with his wife and son Gerardo, 27, who’s also an assistant on the Inter Miami coaching staff. 

Before Argentina kicked off their World Cup qualifier against Bolivia, Martino and his son watched Inter Miami central defender Sergii Kryvtsov start against Italy in a Euro 2024 qualifier. They then became fans and turned their attention to the current world champions as they outclassed a listless Bolivia side in La Paz. 

Lionel Messi, Argentina and Inter Miami’s captain, was on the bench for the Albiceleste, but not part of the match-day squad. The 36-year-old was a game-time decision leading up to the game after admitting that he was fatigued after Argentina’s 1-0 win over Ecuador on September 7. He’s been very busy since he started playing for Miami in late July. 

Messi and Martino will travel together to Atlanta this Saturday for a pivotal Eastern Conference clash with Martino’s former club, Atlanta United. It’s been a year of reunions for Martino. In Miami, he was reunited with Messi, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba, three players who he managed at FC Barcelona from 2013-2014. He last worked with Messi in 2016 as Argentina manager during the Copa América Centenario that was held in the United States. 

Martino also reconnected with former MLS MVP and Atlanta United star Josef Martínez at Miami, and now the two leaders of Atlanta United’s 2018 MLS Cup success will return to Mercedes-Benz Stadium in rival colors. 

Martino spoke to The Athletic about his emotions ahead of the match, Messi’s availability against Atlanta United, the stadium’s artificial turf field, and what Messi, Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant and other sporting greats have in common. 

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.


Did you have a conversation with (Argentina manager) Lionel Scaloni about Messi’s fitness? Was there a plan in place for him during this FIFA window?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://00fec80c5fa9b76166c9372fa2aa9d04.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

There wasn’t a plan for Leo. The last time Scaloni and I spoke was after we won (Leagues Cup). This is the start of Argentina’s World Cup qualifying campaign and we had a series of important games to play and I didn’t think it was wise to have any type of conversations (with Scaloni). It was best to let Argentina begin qualifying calmly. Surely Leo and (Scaloni) have spoken about the situations that they were in and what’s the most convenient outcome. We’ll do the same thing once (Messi) is back here, but obviously with all of the information about what occurred over the week. 

So you’ll wait before deciding how much Messi plays against Atlanta United and whether he starts the match?

Yes because regardless of anything, there’s nothing more important than the health of the players. In this case it’s Leo. It could be another player, too. Regardless of how important a match is, we have to make sure that all of the players are fit, not take risks with them or make an injury worse. We’ll evaluate him as soon as he arrives and decide what is the best course of action for our upcoming games. 

You’re obviously familiar with the turf at Mercedes Benz Stadium. Knowing the surface is usually a competitive advantage for Atlanta United. But surely you saw NFL star Aaron Rodgers tear his Achilles tendon playing on turf on Monday night. Are you concerned about risking Messi’s health on Saturday?

Yes, (Rodgers) suffered that Achilles injury. My experience with Atlanta’s turf has always been positive. From the time that we made our debut with Atlanta (United) on that field, the way our players adapted to the surface. They adapted immediately and we didn’t have to continue to train on grass. And the same thing happened when we played in Atlanta with Mexico. The players adapted quickly. 

It’s a very cushioned type of artificial surface. Up until now I haven’t heard any negative opinions about the surface from players that I’ve coached. That doesn’t mean that we’re not addressing the fact that we’ll play on artificial turf but it isn’t anything that’s driving us crazy. We hope to play a good game no matter what. 

What’s it been like for you to have your son Gerardo as part of your Inter Miami staff?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://00fec80c5fa9b76166c9372fa2aa9d04.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

He left home just six months ago so it hasn’t been too long since we’ve lived under the same roof. Because of the nature of our job now we spend a lot more time together talking about football, our training sessions and our opponents. It’s been good. I’m very happy to be able to work with him and share this experience together. 

What’s Gerardo’s role on the staff? During games the camera often catches him next to you with a tablet in front of him.

He’s our third assistant behind me and Jorge (Theiler). He provides scouting on our opponents and compiles reports on our squad. We take advantage of his language skills during training sessions whether he runs the session himself or as a translator. Every staff member has a corresponding role to play. 

A lot has been said about Messi finding happiness in MLS and in Miami, but you look a lot happier these days, as well. 

Yes, yes. Six years ago I confirmed what it was like to work in MLS. I really enjoyed it. I enjoyed that project. It was different (than Inter Miami) because in Atlanta we had to build an entire squad and we started with plenty of lead time. That dynamic of building a team, from talking and convincing players to come, leaning on (former Atlanta United vice president) Paul (McDonough) for knowledge about the American players. He knew them much better than me. In that sense, we really enjoyed all of that. We enjoyed the process once we began competing and we liked living in Atlanta. Those were two wonderful years. With the opportunity to come to Miami, yes it’s a different city, and the exposure is greater now with Leo, Busquets, Jordi and the tremendous careers that they’ve had. 

It’s a league that we like and we like living in the United States. We adapt right away. And now the results have come right away. That always helps. We work calmly here. The players’ reception towards us was positive and we have a very good relationship with the club’s owners and front office. There’s no reason why this moment shouldn’t be one that we enjoy. 

I ask because we saw images of you and Messi embrace rather emotionally after some of Inter Miami’s cup victories. What does that say about your relationship with him after reuniting, and about the culture of the club?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://00fec80c5fa9b76166c9372fa2aa9d04.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

I like that he’s enjoying himself. But more so that he hasn’t lost that will to compete. That’s the most important aspect. There are many ways that one can enjoy playing. But without a doubt, when there’s a will to compete, when there’s a will to continue to prove that he’s the best in the world, to help the team and earn results, well, it’s all much more valuable. His happiness is contagious and we end up demonstrating that. His will to work, to improve and to have a closer relationship with his teammates… that says everything about his state of mind. 

Martino and Messi embrace after winning Leagues Cup on August 19. (Christopher Hanewinckel-USA TODAY Sports)

The impact of Messi, Busquets and Alba on this team has been incredible. The players are much more confident and the 11-game unbeaten streak proves that. But Messi has also said that your philosophy of play has been a big part of the turnaround. How would you describe the team’s evolution?

Something that’s very important to note is how the team has responded to the arrival of these three players. Because the outcome could’ve been completely different. It could’ve become an enormous responsibility for the other players and affected their production. Or they could’ve felt supported and confident enough to show the best versions of themselves, which is what I believe has happened. That makes all of us better. The group understands that the more experienced players, and those with longer career paths, take on more responsibility. They’ve understood their role and how to move forward. They’ve all adapted very well. 

And from my position, I have three exceptional footballers. We’ve added pieces around them sensibly and based on a way of playing. We’ve realized that our style of play is still a work in progress. There’s a lot that we can improve. We needed results. That’s what this moment in time demanded from us. 

Right now we’re not training our way of playing and then going home to rest. Training isn’t the only thing that we’re doing. We have to play games and we have to win. That requires a greater commitment from everyone because if the results aren’t there, there’s a risk that people will lose confidence in the tactics. We’re getting results so it’s been easier to refine our tactics. 

There are eight games to play and clearly qualifying for the playoffs is the priority. But ahead of 2024 you’ll have a full offseason with this team. You must be thinking about making improvements.

We knew that our first task was to solve what was in front of us and to compete well in the tournaments that were upcoming. Even though our immediate priorities are short term, it’s also true that we cannot forget what’s coming in the mid-term. We have ideas. When these players arrived we had conversations with (Miami sporting director) Chris (Henderson) and (director of soccer operations) Niki (Budalic) about the future, and the future is next season. Now that this season’s transfer windows are closed, we’re focused on playing with an eye on next season. Everything falls within the scope of the league’s (roster) rules and how we can continue to improve our team. 

Player recruitment and finding the right talent for your system was a big part of your success at Atlanta United. What has working with Chris Henderson and his team been like? 

I have to say that it’s been very, very good. Like I’ve said before, and I’m not talking about Leo, Busquets and Jordi, but Diego (Gómez), Tomás (Avilés) and Facundo (Farías) are players who we wanted to sign. They were our names that we put on the table from the beginning. There’s a lot of communication (with the sporting office) and we all participate. That’s the best way to work. There’s a lot of respect. We listen to each other. No one is the owner of the truth. And we’re all responsible for the good and the bad. 

After Diego Alonso was fired as Inter Miami coach in 2021, David Beckham told reporters that he would oversee every single player acquisition. That came during a time of turmoil at the club. What’s Beckham’s involvement now?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://00fec80c5fa9b76166c9372fa2aa9d04.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

In our first month at the club, David was at our side the entire time. He was at every training session. He was at every game. He was very close to the team. He’s very friendly and respectful. And there’s a really nice dynamic between him, the players and the staff. I can’t comment on his involvement regarding player signings because I typically had those conversations with Chris and Niki. They kept David abreast of those conversations. But because of who he is and what he represents, he commands a lot of respect, he’s approachable and polite with the entire group. 

Inter Miami co-owner Jorge Mas is hands on, too. 

Jorge and Jose (Mas) are different from one another, but they’re both very involved. They’re always supporting us. They embody the commitment and hope that runs through the club. They’re very happy with everything that’s occurred thus far. They’ve backed us. That’s why I’ve said that we work calmly here. We all listen to each other. It’s a very pleasant place to work. It’s not just about the results and whether the team is playing well or not. In the day to day, they make it all worthwhile. 

I’ve seen you have a word or two with Messi mid-game or off to the side during a stoppage in play. What does a coach say to the best player in the world?

The types of conversations we have center on the opponent and their characteristics. And how we’re going to approach a match. The aspects of the game in which we’d like to be more polished, the way we’ll try to get him the ball. But we never talk about his individual role. What I believe we need is for him to have the freedom to move into the spaces where he can find the right conditions to play. What we have to do as a team is adapt to his movements, not limit his movements. I think that’s been part of Argentina’s secret to success. Have the right pieces in place as he moves about the pitch. That’s what a lot of our conversations focus on. 

When we were in Rosario we spoke extensively about the league and the types of situations I faced in Atlanta, the league’s characteristics, the teams we’d face, the cities we’d visit, the amount of travel, the cold, the heat, the snow, storms and matches that are postponed until the weather clears. Flights that may or may not get off the ground, the physicality of the opponents. That’s what we discussed at that time and now it’s much more specific about who we’re playing and how we’ll approach the game. 

The greatest players across sports mature and change their game later in their careers. Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Lebron James, Zinedine Zidane all remained top players into their 30s. Would you say that Messi has evolved similarly?

ADVERTISEMENT

https://00fec80c5fa9b76166c9372fa2aa9d04.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

I think so because all of those athletes have a similar mentality. It’s a mentality that he hasn’t changed since he was 17 years old up to this stage of his sporting career. So in that sense that’s what these athletes all have in common. The way they compete. The way that they’re always trying to be the best. In some cases it’s individual sports and also team sports. But they’re always trying to be the best, to make their teams better and to make their teammates better. 

Then there’s their intellectual capacity to interpret each stage of their life and give their best in those moments. They notice how they can maximize those facets because one isn’t the same player at 20, 25, 30 or 35 years of age. No one reaches these privileged heights without having top-level intellectual capacities. They realize on their own where they are, how they can contribute, what they need to do to be the best. They do that easily throughout their careers. 

Those types of athletes, like Messi, also have an unquenchable thirst for winning. 

Leo was visibly frustrated after our scoreless draw against Nashville. I had to tell him “relax, we’re not going to win every game. We can’t allow draws but we have to continue to find ways to grow.” He was very bitter. It was as if we had lost the game. We’re still trying to find ourselves (as a team), but he’s on a permanent quest to win and it’s very difficult to change that mentality. I would never want to change that mentality either. That’s what makes him better. 

You’ll return to Atlanta for the first time this weekend as an MLS head coach. You’ll likely receive a warm welcome from the fans. Describe your emotions.  

I spent two great years of my life in Atlanta. We all enjoyed it. I felt comfortable at the club and I had a group of players that I truly valued, and I still do in a very special way. I have a different type of relationship with them. 

The Latino players, the American players, the players from other nationalities. When I run into Jeff (Larentowicz), when Parky (Michael Parkhurst) texts me, when Kevin Kratz updates us on his career as a youth coach in Atlanta. Leandro (González Pírez), Tito (Villalba), Miguel (Almirón), Josef (Martínez), all of them. That marked an important part of my life. I’m very grateful for it. 

No matter what happens on Saturday, Atlanta will want to continue to win. And all of our games are important for our playoff qualification, but that won’t diminish the love that I have for the club, for the city and for those two wonderful years. 

It’s a completely different Atlanta United team from when you were the manager in 2017 and 2018. What do you like about Gonzalo Pineda’s side?

I’ve noticed that this Atlanta team is evolving. The new players are adapting well. I may mispronounce their names, but the French player (Tristan Muyumba) in the middle has settled in well. (Luis) Abram is now more comfortable as a center back. The Greek center forward (Giorgos Giakoumakis) is very dangerous as is the Portuguese winger (Xande Silva), the new signing who typically plays on the left. 

Thiago (Almada) remains their star player and their creator. Miles Robinson’s abilities, their fullbacks… honestly it’s a team that I really like. I see them as a team that’s going to make a run during the playoffs. I have a lot of respect for their continued evolution. 

Will Sancho return? Are Spurs the real deal? Key questions as Premier League starts again

Will Sancho return? Are Spurs the real deal? Key questions as Premier League starts again

By The Athletic UK Staff Sep 14, 2023


When the Premier League resumes on Saturday after a two-week international break, there will be lots of fascinating stories to look out for.

Will Manchester United’s Jadon Sancho and Erik ten Hag put their public dispute behind them? Can Tottenham, who are unbeaten and second in the table, cement their exciting start and show they have the capacity to flourish this season as they adapt well to life without Harry Kane? There are subplots to watch at lots of the other clubs aspiring to qualify for the Champions League, too, with Liverpool appearing revitalised but Chelsea still searching for a winning formula under Mauricio Pochettino.Our writers address the key issues heading into the weekend.


Is there a way back for Sancho at Manchester United?

Sancho has struggled to reproduce his Dortmund form for United (Stu Forster/Getty Images)

In the aftermath of Manchester United’s 3-1 defeat by Arsenal in their final game before this international break, manager Erik ten Hag said Jadon Sancho had been left out of the squad owing to “his performances in training”. That Sunday evening, Sancho hit back.Posting on Twitter, he said: “Please don’t believe everything you read! I will not allow people saying things that is completely untrue, I have conducted myself in training very well this week. I believe there are other reasons for this matter that I won’t go into, I’ve been a scapegoat for a long time which isn’t fair!”This public falling-out raised questions about the player’s long-term future at the club, as well as the shorter-term issue of what happens next. Will he feature when Brighton & Hove Albion go to Old Trafford on Saturday?

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Sancho, Ten Hag and a relationship breakdown that left Man Utd prepared to sell

Ten Hag’s current shortage of options in wide attacking areas means it is unlikely a door will be shut on Sancho returning to the matchday squad.United’s current manager has shown, most obviously with Cristiano Ronaldo, that you should cross him at your peril. But nearly a year on from the Ronaldo episode, the picture is somewhat different.Antony, the manager’s preferred option to play on the right, will not return to work “until further notice” as he continues to address allegations of assault, which he denies.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Antony allegations and leave of absence: What happened, what’s been said, what next?Ten Hag could opt to shoehorn Bruno Fernandes into the right-wing position, although Facundo Pellistri will be hoping for a chance to feature. Alejandro Garnacho could also be used on the right.If there is to be a way back for Sancho, you would expect it to involve an apology to Ten Hag and then a significant improvement on his performance in training. Deleting his pinned Twitter post on Tuesday was surely a step in the right direction.

Dan Sheldon


Are Tottenham the real deal?

Spurs may be second in the table but after a couple of years of watching them play mostly pragmatic, underwhelming football, their fans are just delighted for the time being to “have our Tottenham back”, as they keep singing. Any apathy that developed under previous managers has gone.

ADVERTISEMENT

They certainly look the part — Tottenham are vibrant, clinical and fun going forward and new signing James Maddison has been a creative revelation. But they’re also better at the back. This isn’t just gung-ho football. Summer appointment Ange Postecoglou is an attack-minded head coach but he’s also a winning one, steering South Melbourne, Brisbane Roar, Australia, Yokohama F Marinos and Celtic to titles, and there is a defensive plan to complement the forward forays.

The squad looks a little light in parts, left-back Destiny Udogie and midfielder Pape Matar Sarr have made exceptional starts but are very young and will have dips in form for sure, plus Richarlison can’t score for toffee at the moment.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Richarlison to see psychologist after emotional Brazil camp

The much more evident deficiencies of some of their anticipated rivals for a top-six finish, though, offer hope that Spurs are in this season’s European spots to stay. Anything higher remains to be seen, but serial winner Postecoglou is their trump card.

Either way, expect it to be fun finding out.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

‘The mood has been transformed’ – what Postecoglou changed in first 100 days at Spurs

Tim Spiers

Play: Video

Have Liverpool solved their midfield problems?

The early form of Alexis Mac Allister suggests so, but it would be too soon to answer with a definitive “yes” or “no”.

Only Liverpool’s final Premier League standing next May 19 will tell us whether the decision to recruit multi-functional midfielders this summer rather than specific experts in individual roles has paid off.

With no Champions League football to divert attention and energy after last season’s fifth-place finish, the focus for the months ahead is very much on chasing the title.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Traps, Salah and substitutes: Liverpool’s 2019-level pressing intensity might well be back

Can that be achieved with the midfield players Liverpool have at their disposal?

Mac Allister has certainly impressed in the handful of games so far following his transfer from Brighton, showing both maturity and versatility. There was a clear need for a new No 6 following the exits of FabinhoJordan Henderson and Naby Keita from midfield over the close-season, and Argentina’s 2022 World Cup winner already looks the part. He may be used in a deeper role more often than first expected.

Mac Allister has joined on a five-year deal (Simon Stacpoole/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)

The surprise signing of Wataru Endo will also bring some resilience in games where Liverpool need to sit deeper and soak up pressure. Whether the Japan captain is good enough for the games that really matter will only be revealed in time.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://513ef4133f2876d0f9e595dcb74ed1ae.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Liverpool have plenty of other options and look well-equipped to create and cause problems going forward. Young players Curtis Jones and Harvey Elliott have talent in abundance, while Dominik Szoboszlai is already turning into a star following his big-money move from RB Leipzig. The late addition of Ryan Gravenberch, a player Jurgen Klopp has tracked for some time, will bring both guts and guile to a midfield blessed with so many qualities.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Liverpool Reloaded: How an Ironman, Alisson deal and triple sessions sparked flying start

A quick, tough-tackling, tall midfielder who can sit and protect the defence while also playing out comfortably from the back may still be missing, but those players are few and far between, and very expensive.

Liverpool might not even need one, though. They already looked well stocked.

Gregg Evans


Do Newcastle have issues or was it just a particularly tough start?

All looked rosy for Newcastle after the opening weekend’s 5-1 win over Aston Villa. The subsequent three games have quelled that optimism — but this is not a case of them turning bad again overnight after finishing fourth in May. Their start to the season was more difficult than any other side in the league — facing Villa (seventh last season), Manchester City (champions), Liverpool (fifth) and Brighton (sixth).

A new-look midfield is still gelling as head coach Eddie Howe attempts to tweak his style of play. Summer signing Sandro Tonali has been asked to subtly change his role in each game, but with team-mates Bruno Guimaraes and Joelinton out of form, there has been plenty of space left in midfield. Given the quality of Newcastle’s opposition in the fixtures so far, this is asking for trouble.

They were also without centre-back Sven Botman for the 3-1 defeat in Brighton — the poorest performance of the campaign so far — while goalkeeper Nick Pope is going through a slump of his own. When Botman returns, Pope gets back to his usual standards and the midfield begins to hum, this is still a side who should be able to compete for European football again come the spring.

Gregg Evans


How long will it take Pochettino to turn Chelsea into a winning team?

There are signs that Chelsea 2023-24 should be a winning team already; according to FBref.com data, they have the fourth-best expected goal difference in the Premier League after their first four matches, rank fifth in the division for expected goals (xG) and are third behind only Manchester City and Arsenal, last season’s title winners and runners-up, in expected goals against (xGA).

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Chelsea and Everton might be better than you think

Chelsea have been failing to take their chances but their expected goal difference is among the best in the league

ADVERTISEMENT

https://513ef4133f2876d0f9e595dcb74ed1ae.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

The problem is they have scored 3.3 fewer goals than expected, while conceding one more than the analytics suggest they should have. Enzo Fernandez’s saved penalty away to West Ham United contributes to that, as well as Nicolas Jackson’s gilt-edged miss at home to Nottingham Forest — Chelsea lost both games.

It may be tempting to look at last season’s scoring problems and conclude this is simply who Chelsea are, but summer appointment Mauricio Pochettino is building his team from virtually a brand-new squad. His attacking options do look a little thin without injured forwards Christopher Nkunku and Armando Broja but newcomer Jackson is a livewire presence and Raheem Sterling has started the season well.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Why Pochettino thinks Jackson ‘can be one of the greatest strikers in the Premier League’

Despite the injury issues, there does appear to be scope for Chelsea’s finishing to improve enough for Pochettino to make them a winning team soon.

Liam Twomey


Can anyone stop Manchester City?

Teams can definitely beat Manchester City this season, but it’s probably not advisable to play them at their own game in trying to do so.

Sheffield United showed it is possible to bunker in and hang on, even if they did need seven saves from Wes Foderingham to keep them in the game, and ultimately lost out to a thumping finish from Rodri. City will struggle to break down low blocks if they are solid enough, particularly without the incision of the departed Ilkay Gundogan and injury victim Kevin De Bruyne in these early months.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Are Manchester City stronger or weaker this season?

Teams such as Brentford and West Ham — so geared towards efficient, counter-attacking play and able to squeeze every last drop out of set pieces — can certainly cause a threat if they hold out for long enough.

In terms of the title, it’s more a question of another side keeping up an 85-point pace. Only three other teams have broken that threshold since Pep Guardiola came to Manchester in the summer of 2016 — City have done it in all but one of his past six seasons in charge.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://513ef4133f2876d0f9e595dcb74ed1ae.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Barring a disaster, City will end up there again.

Contenders almost have to ignore the Guardiola juggernaut, and focus on picking up the points for themselves.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Manchester City know what they’re doing – it can just take a little time to get there

Thom Harris


Are Everton better than their results suggest?

Marginally, yes. Against Fulham and Wolves, two home fixtures where they lost 1-0, Everton should have taken more.

Despite injuries and (before signing Beto three games into the season) having no proven striker, they managed to create enough chances to win those matches.

Ifs and buts will not prevent another dismal season of looking over their shoulders at the trapdoor to the Championship, yet the Portuguese striker’s arrival from Udinese has had a galvanising effect.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Chelsea and Everton might be better than you think

At Sheffield United, the only league game Beto has been involved in so far, Everton took their first point of the campaign, scoring their first league goals too, and the big centre-forward’s presence was pivotal in that 2-2 draw.

They must still erase the flashes of defensive fragility that let opponents such as Wolves take full advantage and, against better teams, as seen away to Aston Villa, there is still a tendency to implode. But Sean Dyche and the long-suffering fanbase will cling to the dual positives of a return to fitness of last season’s top scorer Dwight McNeil, along with Beto’s bright start.

If another new signing, Jack Harrison, can hit the ground running when he is fit, they can claim their poor start was not reflective of their overall quality.

Greg O’Keeffe


Played 10, won none — are the promoted clubs out of their depth?

It has been an ominous start for the three newcomers, with Burnley, Sheffield United and Luton Town all yet to win.

There are extenuating circumstances for Luton, with work on Kenilworth Road meaning they have only played three games and just one at home.

After losing 4-1 to Brighton and 3-0 away to Chelsea — there were glimpses of hope at Stamford Bridge, particularly in the performance of former Manchester United midfielder Tahith Chong — manager Rob Edwards then watched his side put in their best shift to date, against West Ham. Their 2-1 loss felt inevitable, which is problematic, but when Mads Andersen brought it back to 2-1 with four minutes of stoppage time to play, there was a mood shift. Maybe Luton can pick up points. Had James Ward-Prowse’s late handball given them a penalty, they might have got off the ground. It does feel like their biggest chance of picking up points will be at home.

Given the fashion in which Burnley stomped back into the Premier League at the first time of asking, it seemed like they would have the best chance of staying up of the three promoted teams. But a tough start, with games against champions Manchester City, European qualifiers Aston Villa and second-placed Tottenham, has left them pointless and looking vulnerable at the back.

Burnley have already lost as many times in the league this season as they did across the 46 games of the previous one, but manager Vincent Kompany is sticking to his principles.

As for Sheffield United, they at least have something to show for their return to the top flight, a single point earned in their most recent game against Everton. It could, and probably should, have been more but they came up against some Jordan Pickford heroism in the dying seconds.

United have come close to more too. After a narrow 1-0 opening-weekend defeat to Crystal Palace, the unlucky theme of losing by a single goal continued. Chris Wood scored a Nottingham Forest winner in the last minute of normal time and then, just as United clutched at a point against imperious Manchester City, Rodri struck in the 88th minute to quickly cancel out Jayden Bogle’s equaliser.

They are getting closer and will hope for an upturn in fortunes at Spurs on Saturday. No easy feat.

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

9/12/23 US wins faces Ohman tonight 7:30 TNT, Indy 11 6 game streak on line Sat 7 pm @ home, Euro Upsets, Champs League next week

US Tues- tonight vs Oman 8:30 pm on TNT

So the USMNT won but it wasn’t very convincing as they needed extra time to add insurance goals 2&3 on the afternoon. The US dominated possession scoring in the first couple of minutes on this fantastic goal from McKinney to Weah.  Then it took this series of great saves – from Turner who was named Man of the Match – he’ll be headed home to see the birth of his second child.  It took some late subs and Uzebecstan going down to 10 men late to score our 2nd and 3rd goals as Pulisic converted a penalty, then Pepi scored his 5th in 5 games. Full highlights  I am excited to see some of the new guys in the mix for this next game – Horvath will be in goal, and I am hoping Mark Mckensie in at CB for Tim Ream.  Luca de la Torre broke his nose, so I would assume Malik Tlllman will get some time at the Dmid spot and hopefully at least some sub time for the Miami man Cremaschi,  Johnny Cardoso, Cade Cowell, and Lund.

Stats Summary: USA / UZB

Shots: 13 / 15

Shots on Goal: 6 / 3

Saves: 3 / 3

Corner Kicks: 5 / 3

Fouls: 10 / 11

Offside: 2 / 2

Shane’s Starters vs Oman

Pulisic. Pepi, Weah

Musah, McKennie

Tillman

Robinson, McKensie, Chris Richards, Dest

Horvath

US Roster (new players bolded)

GOALKEEPERS (3): Drake Callender (Inter Miami), Ethan Horvath (Nottingham Forest),

DEFENDERS (9): Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Genk), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg), Tim Ream (Fulham FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham FC), Miles Robinson (Atlanta United),

MIDFIELDERS (6): Johnny Cardoso (Internacional), Ben Cremaschi (Inter Miami), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

FORWARDS (6): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin), Folarin Balogun (Arsenal FC), Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Tim Weah (Juventus)

Indy 11 Unbeaten Streak Extends to 6 games @ New Mexico United 9 pm ESPN+

Indy Eleven defeated The Miami FC, 1-0, on Saturday night at home to extend their unbeaten streak to six games. The Indy win moves the team to 11W-9L-8D, and moves them clearly into playoff contention. Next, Indy Eleven will travel to New Mexico United for a 9:00 p.m. ET kickoff on Friday, September 15 on ESPN+ for the first game of their two-game road trip. The next home game for Indy Eleven is Sunday, September 24 against Rio Grande Valley Toros FC. 

Huge congrats to the 2013 Boys White team Pike Fest Semi-Finalist – Coach William Graff.

GAMES ON TV

Tues, Sept 12 –

12 noon FS2                        Spain vs Cyprus

2:45 pm FS2                        Scotland vs England

2:45 pm ??                          Italy vs Ukraine

4 Tele, UNIVERSO TUDN Argentina vs Bolivar

7:30 pm TUDN, Univision Mexico vs Uzbekistan

8:30 pm TNT, Tele            USMNT vs Oman 

10 pm                                    Peru vs Brazil

Fri, Sept 15

2:30 pm ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Bayer Leverkusen

3 pm ESPN+                        Champ Southampton vs Leicester city

7:30 pm Para+                   Racing Louisville vs Houston Dash  NWSL

9 pm ESPN+                        New Mexico vs Indy 11

Sat, Sept 16

7:30 am USA                       Wolverhampton vs Liverpool

9 am CBSSN                        Juve (Weah, McKinney) vs Lazio

9:30 am ESPN+                  Wolfsburg vs Union Berlin (Pfuk, Aaronson)

10 am USA                          West Ham United vs Man City

10 am Peacock                  Fullham (Ream, Jedi) vs Luton Town

12 noon Para+                   Inter Milan vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

12:30 pm NBC                    New Castle vs Brentford

7:30 pm Apple MLS         Philly Union vs Cincy

10 pm Apple free             LAFC vs LA Galaxy  (el Trafico)

Sun, Sept 17

9 am USA                             Bournemouth vs Chelsea

11:30 am NBC                    Everton vs Arsenal

245 pm Para+                     Roma vs Empoli

8:30 pm FS1                        Austin vs Portland

Mon, Sept 18

2:45 USA                              Nottingham Forest (Turner) vs Burnley  

Tues Sept 19 – Champions League

12:45 pm Para+                 AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah) vs New Castle United

3 pm Para+                         PSG vs Dortmund

3 pm Para+                         Man City vs Crvena Zvezda

3 pm para+                         Lazio vs Atletico Madrid

Weds Sept 20 – Champions League

12:45 pm Para+                 Real Madrid vs Union Berlin (Pfuk, Aaronson)  

3 pm Para+                         Bayern Munic vs Man United  

3 pm Para+                         real Sociadad vs Inter Milan  

3 pm para+                         Arsenal vs PSV

7”30 pm Apple MLS         Miami (Messi) vs Toronto

7:30 pm Apple                   Montreal vs Cincy

Thur, Sept 21

12:45 pm para+                 Lask Linz vs Liverpool

12:45  pm                             Lergia vs Aston villa

3 pm Para+                         West Ham United vs Backa Topolo

3:30 pm Para+                   Brighton vs AEL Athens

7:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Cincy  Ertz Last Game

Sun, Sept 24

5:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Chicago Rapinoe last game

US Men Play Tonight vs Ohman 7 pm

USA MEN

How does U.S. Soccer keep winning over dual nationals? Noah Davis
USMNT coach Berhalter: ‘There’s tough and there’s Minnesota tough’

USMNT’s win over Uzbekistan can’t disguise attacking shortcomings
Jeff Carlisle

USMNT player ratings: Turner shines with 8/10, Pulisic struggles Jeff Carlisle

Turner Says Stick to the Process in Win

US Soccer Stats

WORLD

Germany sack coach Flick after Japan thrashing
Scotland v England: Gareth Southgate ‘not too harsh’ on players after draw with Ukraine

Scotland v England preview: Steve Clarke says match will help test progress of side

Portugal 9-0 Luxembourg: Roberto Martinez’s side move closer to qualifying for Euro 2024

Latvia 0-2 Wales – Ramsey and Brooks strike in Euro 2024 qualifier to ease pressure on Page

Darge calls for renewed focus after South Africa defeat

Juventus midfielder Pogba provisionally suspended for doping

REFFING

Dan Degnan and HS ref newbie Jesicca Smith with me at University High for a girls game Sat.
Love this from weekend Charity game in England the player shows a Uno Reverse card to being shown a yellow card. 😛

Check out this Spread from Nate BARBQ Sinders from last weekend’s Puma Cup. Best Brisket around.

Who Knew Landon Donovan was the #1 Assist guy of all time world Wide?

Ethan Horvath to start for USMNT vs. Oman; Berhalter talks Tillman, Cremaschi

ST. LOUIS, MO - SEPTEMBER 6: Ethan Horvath of the United States makes the save during USMNT Training at City Park on September 6, 2023 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/Getty Images for USSF)

By Jeff RueterSep 11, 2023


Ethan Horvath will start in goal for the United States men’s national team on Tuesday against Oman, head coach Gregg Berhalter said at a press conference at Allianz Field in Saint Paul, Minn. After naming ten of his eleven starters ahead of last week’s friendly against Uzbekistan, Berhalter stopped short of naming his lineup aside from Horvath.“Ethan’s gonna play in goal tomorrow,” Berhalter said. “That’s pretty clear. We’re gonna mix up some players, but it will be a very similar lineup to what we saw last time.”The United States played to a 3-0 win over Uzbekistan in a friendly on Saturday, a scoreline that flattered the hosts as they struggled to consistently break lines and create chances in front of goal in the first game of Berhalter’s second cycle at the helm. There has been some minor adjustment to the roster since that match in St. Louis, as goalkeeper Matt Turner and defender Joe Scally departed, both for family reasons. They were replaced on the roster by Inter Miami goalkeeper Drake Callender and New England Revolution left back DeJuan Jones, who was already in Minnesota thanks to the Revolution’s 1-1 draw against Minnesota United at Allianz Field on Saturday. Jones played all 90 minutes of that match. 

Tillman, Cremaschi in the picture

Although he stopped short of naming a lineup, Berhalter did single out midfielder Malik Tillman for praise when asked how the new PSV signing fits into his plans.“I think he’s a fantastic player, I really do,” Berhalter said. “That’s why we were so keen to have him commit to the United States a couple years ago. He’s a dynamic player, sees the game ahead of time. He can speed up the game, make final actions. He’s calm in the penalty box. He’s got a lot of strong attributes. For us, it’s, okay: how does he take all those qualities to the next level when he gets opportunities? I think the other day, he did a good job. He’ll get an opportunity tomorrow, so we’ll see how he can do, but the coaches are high on him.”Berhalter added separately that he hopes to give Miami midfielder Benjamin Cremaschi a senior national team debut off the bench on Tuesday, depending on game state and what substitutions prove necessary throughout the match. Cremaschi is eligible for both the United States and Argentina, and has seen his stock soar in the wake of Lionel Messi joining the 18-year-old’s boyhood Inter Miami this summer. “He fits in really well, Benja,” Berhalter said. “He’s a great kid. He learns really quickly, adapting well to the speed of the game. It’s been great having him in camp. He’s not going to start the game. We’d love to get him a debut; we just have to see how the substitutions work. You have six subs in the game, so it becomes challenging to get everybody on the field even though you’d like to.” 

GO DEEPER

What Miami’s Ben Cremaschi brings to the USMNT

The matchup vs. Oman

Berhalter also addressed the USMNT’s struggles to create against Uzbekistan, citing the opposition’s low defensive block as preventing clear passing lanes into the area. While Oman is ranked just above Uzbekistan in the current FIFA ratings (73 and 74, respectively), Berhalter projected a different kind of challenge ahead of Tuesday’s match.“Oman is completely different than Uzbekistan,” Berhalter said. “Uzbekistan was a 5-3-1, at times a 5-2-3, but a very difficult block to break down. Defending with four players on the wing, very compact. Oman has played a 4-4-2 diamond and they have a very, very dynamic counterattack. Part of the emphasis in this camp was finishing attacks against the low block of Uzbekistan, and now preventing transitions against Oman.”Berhalter specifically praised Oman for a tough match it gave Germany last fall ahead of the 2022 World Cup. In the final days before the tournament, Germany struggled to pull off a 1-0 win with an 80th minute goal despite largely playing a first-choice lineup. Oman managed to take seven shots — although none were on-target — despite seeing just 28% of possession, with the majority of chances coming through Salaah Al-Yahyaei at the top of midfield.Oman has played seven games in 2023, reaching the final of the Gulf Cup with a campaign that included a 2-1 win over a Saudi Arabia side that won its World Cup opener against eventual champion Argentina. Oman notched a 2-1 win over Palestine on Wednesday in a match played at their national stadium in the capital city, Muscat. “It’s going to be a great test for us,” Berhalter said. “We watched the game against Germany where Germany won 1-0, but (Oman) absolutely battered Germany with their transition moments. They were all over (Germany) in that game, so it’s gonna be important for us.”

In Gregg Berhalter’s first game back, USMNT starts another new era with higher expectations

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - SEPTEMBER 09: Ricardo Pepi #9 of the United States celebrates scoring with Kristoffer Lund #23 during the second half of a match between Uzbekistan and the United States at CITYPARK on September 09, 2023 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Paul Tenorio Sep 10, 2023


Throughout his first cycle as manager of the U.S. men’s national team, Gregg Berhalter opened camps by showing a timeline of what the team had in front of them to get to the World Cup.With each camp, the timeline got shorter and shorter. It hammered home the idea of how close the team was to its ultimate goal, the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, but it was also a reminder of what the team had already accomplished together.th delay, during which U.S. Soccer investigated Berhalter and the U.S. men played under two interim managers, the team is moving forward under Berhalter, who was re-hired as manager in June. The new three-year timeline has fewer roadblocks — as co-hosts of the 2026 World Cup the destination is already secured — but the expectations around this team going into that tournament have them racing toward a new finish line.“For us, it’s continuing to build on the foundation of what we’ve had in the last four years,” Berhalter said on Friday. “Keep improving, and really target 2026 as an opportunity to change soccer in America forever.”The foundation was, for the most part, on the field on Saturday against Uzbekistan in Berhalter’s first game back on the sideline. The starting lineup included eight starters from last November’s World Cup. The U.S. played in a familiar 4-3-3 formation, but there were also signs of how this group is changing.

Folarin Balogun, who recently committed to the program, started up top. Chris Richards, who was out injured ahead of Qatar, started in the backline. Ricardo Pepi, one of the final cuts from the 2022 World Cup team, scored to give the U.S. the cushion it needed to see out the game. The U.S. needed just four minutes to score its first goal and, despite a sleepy pace to the game, pulled away from a 3-0 win.

It was an imperfect performance, for sure, and one that emphasized how this U.S. team still has plenty of room to grow. Players said after the game that they were working out new ways to build out. Defender Tim Ream described it as players using different movements and changing positions to alter the team’s shape and trying to pull the opponent out of position.“It’s a learning process for sure, but one that we’re working on every day,” Ream said, “and going to try to perfect and get it to where we want it to be.”The game on Saturday was a chance to tinker. It was also a sign that the process of evolving is already underway.“I think we use this game as a learning tool,” Berhalter said postgame.The team’s overall dissatisfaction with the performance, however, is also a sign of the increasing expectations around this group. The aim Berhalter laid out at the start of camp was to advance in the World Cup to a round the U.S. men have never played in before — at least in the modern history of the game. That means surpassing the quarterfinal appearance in 2002 and playing in a semifinal or World Cup final. It’s a lofty objective, but one befitting of a group many have labeled a “golden generation” for this national team. If they are to live up to that moniker, they have to set new standards.

The team that went to Qatar was the second-youngest in the tournament. That won’t be the case in three years. The key leaders of this team must mature into star players. During training last week, Berhalter said the team broke into three teams of seven — old, medium and young. Christian Pulisic, 24, and Weston McKennie, 25, were on the old team. There is still plenty of youth in the group, but a core of players — led by Pulisic, McKennie, Tim Weah, 23, and Tyler Adams, 24 — will be in its prime when the World Cup kicks off in 2026.Their individual growth, along with that of the team, is paramount.“For us, it’s really the work we can do the next three years to build a group that when we go to the World Cup, we’re confident that we can beat the elite of international soccer because that’s what it’s going to take to do what we’re talking about doing,” Berhalter said. “If we want to go to rounds that we’ve never been to before, we have to beat those teams. And we’ll use the next three years to build the team up, to gain experiences (so) that we’re confident that we can actually do that.”

(Photo by John Dorton/Getty Images for USSF)

The efforts to improve will come on several different levels within the program. First, Berhalter must find a way to build a working relationship with Gio Reyna. That is a complicated task after the events of the last year, which included Reyna nearly being sent home from Qatar, Berhalter’s comments about those events at a leadership conference being published, and Reyna’s parents, Claudio and Danielle, eventually reporting a three-decade-old incident involving Berhalter and his then-girlfriend, now wife, Rosalind, to U.S. Soccer leadership. Berhalter has not yet spoken to Gio Reyna, and the Dortmund attacker is not in this camp as he regains fitness following a leg injury he suffered in the CONCACAF Nations League final, but that task will be a vital one in maximizing a talented young prospect.

As far as the team is concerned, Berhalter said he met with sporting director Matt Crocker over three days to evaluate every part of the program to see what worked well and what didn’t and to make changes accordingly. They put every aspect of the program into “buckets,” Berhalter said and evaluated how they could be successful in those areas. He also evaluated every phase of the game with the team to search for improvements, from set pieces to mid-block defending to efficiency in the final third.“It’s literally everything,” Berhalter said. “Every aspect. … We want to be in the state of evolving because we know it’s going to lead to improvement.”Saturday night’s result showed some hints at that evolution. When it worked, the subs who came on late in the second half played with the right level of aggression and broke Uzbekistan down, it was effective. When it didn’t, the game felt too slow. But evolution isn’t about a singular performance, and Saturday was only the very first step in the process.Change is coming. The last cycle taught us as much when losses to Mexico early in Berhalter’s tenure helped shape the identity of a team that now hasn’t lost to Mexico in its last six games. This U.S. team must show consistency and that it can be aggressive and assertive in the right moments.“We like what’s been built, but we want to keep getting better,” Berhalter said. “Then it was, ‘OK, we have three years to keep improving. What phases do we need to improve and what wrinkles do we need to put in that are going to help us get there? How do we need to sort of support the players in a way that they can keep improving with their clubs?’ But overall, for us, it’s just how do we keep moving forward and not being happy with where we were.”

USMNT Player Ratings: Weah, McKennie & Robinson impress vs. Uzbekistan 

22MLS_player_ratings_usmnT_USAvUZB

Ben Wright

Saturday, Sep 9, 2023, 08:25 PM

The US men’s national team weren’t nearly as sharp as they would have liked to be, but still managed a 3-0 win over Uzbekistan on Saturday night at St. Louis CITY SC‘s CITYPARK.

Against an opponent who put up a much tougher fight than their 74th FIFA world ranking would suggest, the USMNT lacked sharpness in Gregg Berhalter’s first game back in charge, looking wobbly until two goals in second-half stoppage time put the game to bed.

The Yanks close out the September window against Oman Tuesday at Allianz Field, home of Minnesota United FC.

7.5

USMNT_Matt_Turner_HEAD

Matt Turner

Goalkeeper · USA

Turner made more saves than he probably expected coming into the match. The Nottingham Forest shot-stopper had a pair of saves to bail out his teammates after really sloppy first-half turnovers and made another key one in the second half to keep Uzbekistan off the board.

7.0

USMNT_Antonee_Robinson_HEAD

Jedi Robinson

Defender · USA

Robinson dealt well with the brunt of Uzbekistan’s attack, as well as providing plenty of output at the other end of the pitch. It was the type of showing we’ve become accustomed to from the Fulham man despite getting cut short in the 80th minute with a knock.

6.5

USMNT_Tim_Ream_HEAD

Tim Ream

Defender · USA

Ream was typically solid in his return to St. Louis. He was strong defensively and generally composed in possession, although he did have an uncharacteristically sloppy giveaway towards the end of the first half that nearly gave Uzbekistan a goal.

6.0

USMNTU20DAM032019243

Chris Richards

Defender · USA

Richards was fine overall. He picked off a few dangerous passes and was positionally solid. He was composed, albeit unambitious, in possession, but showed moments of rust after going as an unused substitute for Crystal Palace’s first four matches of the English Premier League season.

7.0

USMNT_Sergino_Dest_HEAD

Sergiño Dest

Defender · USA

Dest improved significantly as the match went on, growing in influence in the final third. The PSV man was involved in the buildup play for the US’s second goal and nearly had one of his own, freezing his defender with a stepover before his shot was blocked at the last second.

6.5

USMNT_Yunus_Musah_HEAD

Yunus Musah

Midfielder · USA

Musah was generally composed in possession and carried the ball through pressure well, but he wasn’t consistently able to find the breakthrough pass the US needed. At just 20 years old, though, he’s already such an integral part of how this team plays.

7.0

USMNT_Luca_de-ka-Torre_HEAD

Luca de la Torre

Midfielder · USA

The Celta de Vigo midfielder was energetic from the start, playing at the base of midfield in the Tyler Adams role. He completed 39 of his 40 attempted passes, and mixed things up with a couple of marauding runs through the White Wolves‘ defense. He was unfortunate to come off with a broken nose after half an hour, cutting a standout performance cruelly short. His withdrawal coincided with a noticeable drop in form from the home side.

7.0

USMNT_Weston_McKennie_HEAD

Weston McKennie

Midfielder · USA

McKennie was sharp in midfield throughout the afternoon, especially on Weah’s opening goal. He took down a cross from Pulisic with a world-class touch before laying it off to Weah, and he continued to find cracks in Uzbekistan’s armor throughout the night.

6.5

USMNT_Christian_Pulisic_HEAD

Christian Pulisic

Forward · USA

It was by no means a vintage showing for Pulisic, who couldn’t translate his sparking club form with AC Milan to the international level. He struggled to connect effectively in the final third and his delivery from set pieces was subpar. However, he did have a hand in the opening goal and scored from the penalty spot deep in second-half stoppage time to make it three.

6.5

USMNT_Folarin_Bolugan_HEAD

Folarin Balogun

Forward · USA

The newly-signed Monaco forward had a few flashes, showing good close control around the box and hitting the post with a header that could have put the US 2-0 up. He still doesn’t look quite on the same page with the rest of the attack, though, and struggled to make a consistent impact. He was taken off at the half in a pre-planned sub.

https://5c73d8b00b71f8ae899deaebda02ba8b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

8.0

USMNT_Tim_Weah_HEAD

Timothy Weah

Forward · USA

Weah was the biggest bright spot of the afternoon for the Americans. He was direct and dynamic every time he got on the ball, combined well with Dest and McKennie in particular, and had a couple dangerous looks at goal. The Juventus man also scored what proved to be the winner after just four minutes, absolutely thumping the ball into the far corner.

5.0

Gregg Berhalter

Head Coach

It wasn’t the statement win Berhalter would have liked in his first game back in charge of the USMNT since their World Cup Round-of-16 loss to the Netherlands 280 days ago. Uzbekistan were surprisingly stout defensively and threatened the home side on the break on multiple occasions. Berhalter tweaked a few things in possession, including shifting from a 4-3-3 to a 4-2-3-1 in the second half, but, as a whole, his side looked rusty and ponderous. No reason to panic after one game, but the team could use a bounce-back performance on Tuesday against Oman.

Substitutes

5.5

tessman_hi.png

Tanner Tessmann

Midfielder · USA

It was a mixed bag for Tessmann, who came on in the 35th minute to replace de la Torre. He had good ideas in the final third and probed Uzbekistan’s defense, but had a pair of really poor giveaways in his own half that nearly resulted in goals for the visitors.

6.5

Pepi, Ricardo-480.png

Ricardo Pepi

Forward · USA

Pepi was overall less involved in the match than Balogun, who he replaced at halftime. However, the FC Dallas product capped off his 45-minute shift with a well-taken goal, coolly finishing to the near post to give the Yanks a bit of breathing room.

6.0

mckenzie-hi.png

Mark McKenzie

Defender · USA

McKenzie replaced Richards for the final 30 minutes and looked a tad sharper, stepping to the ball with strength and completing all 18 of his passes.

6.0

USMNT_Brenden_Aaronson_HEAD

Brenden Aaronson

Forward · USA

The Union Berlin attacker brought a spark of energy off the bench, picking up good spots to receive the ball and asking questions of Uzbekistan’s backline. He notched the assist for Pepi’s goal with a tidy little pass on the edge of the box.

N/A

Malik Tillman USMNT

Malik Tillman

Forward · USA

Came on too late to receive a rating, but got immediately involved in the final third and drew a penalty in second-half stoppage time to make it three for the US.

N/A

Kristoffer Lund

Defender

The Palermo left back didn’t really have time to make an impact on proceedings, but earned his first minutes for the US after filing a one-time switch from Denmark.

Ben Wright –

@benwright

Berhalter admits USMNT has much to improve after friendly win

  • Jeff Carlisle, U.S. soccer correspondentSep 9, 2023, 10:00 PM ET

ST. LOUIS — Gregg Berhalter praised the mindset of his U.S. men’s national team in the last 10 minutes of the 3-0 win over Uzbekistan, but admitted that there was plenty of room for improvement after his first game back as head coach.The U.S. jumped on top in the fourth minute thanks to Tim Weah‘s goal, but then labored for much of the match, as Uzbekistan’s five-man backline proved difficult to break down.

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)
– Carlisle: Player ratings from USMNT’s win over Uzbekistan

It took a goal in the first minute of second-half stoppage time from substitute Ricardo Pepi to make the game safe, before Christian Pulisic scored from the penalty spot four minutes later to complete the scoring. Both of the late goals came with Uzbekistan reduced to 10 men after Khojiakbar Alidzhanov was forced to leave the match with an injury, and with the visitors out of substitutes.

“I think we use this game as a learning tool,” Berhalter said. “We can improve and we need to improve and we will.”

“I really, really liked the mindset in the last 10 minutes of the game,” he added. “You could see the guys still wanted to push. It wasn’t about holding onto the 1-0. It was about getting aggressive. As they moved to a back four, we had more space and I liked that the guys wanted to attack it.

“I think that it’s a good baseline for us to start and say this is what international competition from other regions looks like and so that we use as we go.”

The U.S. was made to work hard for its victory. Both Alijonov and Eldor Shomurodov had some clear chances to pull Uzbekistan level, but both were undone by the combination of wayward finishing as well as some stellar goalkeeping from Matt Turner.

Berhalter explained that he instituted a tactical wrinkle to try and draw Uzbekistan out of its low block, but that his team didn’t play quickly enough once the first line of pressure was broken.

“We gave the ball away in some tough spots. That was the first thing,” he said. “The second thing is when we were building, we were methodical about our buildup trying to attract the opponent. I thought then we lacked the speeding up the attack once we broke through that front five and that could have been better.

“A back five is always difficult to break down. You saw that they just dropped and we wanted to get behind ’em. We didn’t do that often enough.

“And then the other thing I’d note is that our press after [losing possession], defensive transition, needs to get better. I think we gave them too many opportunities to get behind us when we could have been positioned better to win the ball immediately after we lost it.”

Berhalter added that he didn’t mind his side playing with a slower rhythm as long as it’s accompanied by a change of pace.

“If we had to take our time to draw out their defense, and then find someone once we break their top five, then we need to speed up the attack,” he said. “We need to have numbers getting forward, we need numbers entering the penalty box, we need runs behind the backline and I thought that’s what we lacked at times.”

Saturday’s match was the first for Berhalter since last December’s World Cup in Qatar. Shortly after the tournament, a public feud with the family of midfielder Gio Reyna resulted in the revealing of a domestic violence incident from 1992 that involved Berhalter and his now wife Rosalind. An investigation by an outside law firm largely cleared Berhalter, allowing him to still be a candidate to manage the USMNT. He re-signed with U.S. Soccer in June.

Berhalter said that he only allowed himself a brief moment to reflect on all that transpired over the last nine months.

“At the anthem you reflect on it a little bit that you’re back, he said. “And then it’s back to work, and you’re on the sidelines and you’re coaching, trying to help the team win a game.”

Ben Cremaschi’s rise: Starring with Messi, a USMNT call-up and Argentina interest

ST. LOUIS, MO - SEPTEMBER 6: Ben Cremaschi of the United States moves with the ball during USMNT Training at City Park on September 6, 2023 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/Getty Images for USSF)

By Felipe Cardenas ep 8, 2023


Benjamín Cremaschi is living a dream. The 18-year-old Miami native has earned valuable minutes at club level with Inter Miami of MLS, playing alongside Messi since the superstar’s arrival in July. In doing so, the promising youngster has become an integral part of Inter Miami head coach Tata Martino’s tactics.Last week, things got even better: Cremaschi earned a call-up to the senior U.S. men’s national team for U.S. manager Gregg Berhalter’s first camp back in charge. The U.S. plays a friendly against Uzbekistan this Saturday in St. Louis, then plays Oman in Minnesota on Tuesday.hough he’s been seen for some time as a promising youth prospect, Cremaschi’s call-up was still something of a surprise. He’s still a teenager who has only played in 20 official MLS  matches, though he has proven capable of playing at the MLS level. Cremaschi has developed important chemistry with Messi in the final third, evidenced by his assist during Inter Miami’s 2-0 win over Red Bull New York. Messi created the chance on his own, but Cremaschi’s quick decision-making in a tight space was impressive.

The question is whether Cremaschi has shown enough to be called into a senior national team camp, or whether that’s even necessary. Youth and inexperience are often overlooked in international football, especially for dual-national players. Spain, for example, included 16-year-old Barcelona winger Lamine Yamal in its squad for two European Championship qualifiers versus Georgia and Cyprus. Yamal could become Spain’s youngest-ever international, but he is also eligible to represent MoroccoFor Cremaschi, the other nation in the picture is Argentina – a fact that has made his name well-known far beyond Fort Lauderdale. He has done several interviews with Argentina’s biggest news outlets, saying plenty about Messi and the whirlwind experience that he’s currently living. “This has all been crazy for me,” Cremaschi told ESPN Argentina on August 13.In that interview, Cremaschi revealed that he has had conversations with both the U.S. and Argentine federations.“Obviously, I’m going to have to make a decision later,” he said. “Having Messi can influence a bit. But there’s time.”

Indeed, even if Cremaschi appears for the U.S. in this upcoming window, he could still choose to represent Argentina if they call him – appearances in friendlies like the ones upcoming for the U.S. do not cap-tie a player to a certain nation.For now, if only from a media perspective, having Cremaschi in camp is a good play by Berhalter and U.S. Soccer. It’s an opportunity to hear Cremaschi talk about representing the U.S. across all of the program’s social media channels while wearing USMNT gear.“All we try to do is put our best foot forward,” Berhalter said in regards to recruiting Cremaschi as a dual-national. “We try to let the environment speak for itself. We try to let the staffing and the player pool speak for itself and what we can offer the player. We talked to Ben about being able to come into the group and fit into what we’re doing to represent the United States of America, which is a wonderful honor.”

The reality on pitch is quite clear. Cremaschi has plenty of work to do in order to be seriously considered by any of Argentina’s men’s teams. He was part of an Argentina U-20 training camp in 2022 as a 17-year-old, but he didn’t make the final roster for the South American U-20 Championships or the U-20 World Cup. He reportedly turned down a chance to join the U.S. U-20 World Cup team in that same time, according to Apple TV’s Taylor Twellman.Cremaschi was also not in the squad selected by Argentina U-23 coach Javier Mascherano for an upcoming friendly against Bolivia on Sept. 9. He faced stiff competition. The players on Mascherano’s U-23 list who also train under World Cup-winning manager Lionel Scaloni during the upcoming FIFA window include Manchester United’s Alejandro GarnachoFC Dallas’ Alan VelascoThiago Almada of Atlanta United, Facundo Buonaotte of Brighton, newly signed Fiorentina striker Lucas Beltrán and Chelsea’s Enzo Fernandez, who became a starter under Scaloni since the World Cup group stage in Qatar.All that said, Cremaschi’s place in the Argentina pecking order could change if he performs well under Berhalter. His most sensible pathway should include meaningful games at the U-23 level, since he is age-eligible for the 2024 Summer Olympics, where men’s soccer is run as a U-23 tournament. Perhaps that will be the competition that forces him to make his first serious decision about his national team loyalties.Regardless of where he ends up, Cremaschi will have truly arrived when coverage in Argentina and elsewhere becomes more about his ability and less about his international future, or his relationship with Messi.


Cremaschi is a confident player who has improved over this season, benefiting from the swagger that Messi, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba have brought to Inter Miami. With his age and profile, he is trending towards an opportunity to eventually play abroad. The Athletic asked Cremaschi in July if playing with Messi trumped a move to Europe.“It’s a good question,” Cremaschi said following Inter Miami’s 2-1 win over Cruz Azul. “For now I’m focused on my day-to-day and I’m really involved with the club. If an opportunity arises to go to Europe I’ll obviously consider it. I’ll think about it, but for now I’m enjoying playing with our No. 10.”Cremaschi likens his profile to that of Argentina and Atletico Madrid midfielder Rodrigo De Paul. “He’s a player who I really admire because of the way he plays,” Cremaschi told ESPN Argentina.De Paul is one of the world’s most tenacious midfielders. He has also been dubbed as Messi’s personal chaperone on the pitch. Cremaschi told ESPN that he wants to help Inter Miami and protect Messi like De Paul. He sounded like a starstruck Messi fan when he said that, but the sentiment was genuine.Cremaschi is a selfless player with incredible stamina. He also occupies a lot of the same areas on the field as De Paul, but that’s where the comparison with De Paul should end. The 29-year-old De Paul is valued at €40 million ($42.7 million) according to a June report on Transfermarkt. While both players are box-to-box midfielders, Cremaschi excels as an advanced playmaker in a central role, where he usually plays for Miami under Martino.

In Martino’s 4-3-3, Busquets and Dixon Arroyo hold their positions, while Cremaschi, when he starts centrally, has the freedom to find the ball and attack vertically. In fact, it’s more accurate to compare Cremaschi to the type of player that Martino was at Newell’s in the 1980s and ‘90s. Martino was a midfield playmaker who was constantly around the ball. He would likely admit that he didn’t run nearly as much as Cremaschi, however, Martino’s experience in that role bodes well for his young starlet.

Cremaschi is comfortable playing between the lines and in half-spaces. He’s also confident in his passing ability close to the opponent’s goal. He has four regular season assists this season and two more in cup play. He has also scored the winning penalty in two shootouts. First against FC Dallas in Leagues Cup round of 16 and again to defeat FC Cincinnati in the U.S. Open Cup semifinal.Furthermore, Cremaschi grew up playing rugby which explains why he doesn’t shy away from physical challenges. He can press, defend in open space and play in transition. During his first MLS season, Cremaschi has proven to be highly versatile, too. He has played on both wings and as a right fullback when Inter Miami suffered a rash of injuries earlier in the year – that much is clear from his touch map from this season involving every Miami game pre-Messi as well.

On a call with reporters on Wednesday, Berhalter said that Cremaschi’s “tenacity” and “relentless” caught his attention during a pre-World Cup camp last October. Berhalter, like Martino, plays in a preferred 4-3-3 setup.

“He was playing out of position during that camp,” said Berhalter. “As a winger sometimes as a forward, but he never quit. He never gave up, he kept running. I mean, he was running himself silly. It really showed me what his mindset was like and I was really impressed with that. And now watching his progress with Inter Miami. He’s done a great job and this it’s not only post-Messi. I think it’s even pre-Messi. I think he’s a very talented player.”

No matter what his future holds, at present, Cremaschi is in dreamland. Few players of age are given opportunities like the one that he has taken full advantage of. To coexist with Messi, Busquets and Alba in a competitive environment is simply too good to be true.

“This is the best thing that could’ve happened to me,” said Cremaschi last month. “Having Tata and those three players, people with a lot of experience who have been at elite levels. To absorb everything from them is great not just for me but for every young player at the club.”

(Photo: John Dorton/ISI Photos/Getty Images for USSF)

Bruce Arena’s outspoken MLS coaching career ends, for now, with an apology

Pablo Maurer and Tom Bogert Sep 11, 2023

On Saturday night, in the moments after the New England Revolution’s 1-1 draw against Minnesota United, the club announced the resignation of Bruce Arena, its decorated, embattled and now-former head coach and sporting director.Arena, a two-time former USMNT coach, had been on administrative leave and under league investigation for over a month for alleged inappropriate remarks. The Athletic reported on Saturday that complaints lodged by his longtime assistant Richie Williams were part of the investigation. In a statement that accompanied Arena’s resignation, MLS said that “certain” allegations had been confirmed.In announcing his resignation, Arena spoke publicly for the first time about the investigation and what drove him to call time on his spell with the Revs – and perhaps in MLS as a whole (the league said the 71-year-old will need to submit a petition to the commissioner to be employed in MLS again).“I know that I have made some mistakes,” Arena said, “and moving forward, I plan to spend some time reflecting on this situation and taking corrective steps to address what has transpired. And while this has not been an easy decision, I am confident that it is in the best interest of both the New England Revolution organization and my family that we part ways at this time.”In a sense, Arena’s conciliatory tone feels familiar; a common approach in statements where a powerful person is forced to step away. But the words also feel alien coming out of Arena’s mouth. The 71-year-old may be American soccer’s bluntest and most defiant major figure, known as much for his brash, no-nonsense nature as he is for his lengthy list of honors and accomplishments. He is not a man known for apologizing, even after major failures.Arena was at the helm on the day the U.S. men’s national team failed to qualify for the World Cup in 2018, probably the highest-profile fiasco in the program’s history. He had taken over during the latter stages of a tumultuous qualifying campaign, and a year after the U.S. failure he balked at the idea that his next job as head coach of the Revolution might help redeem him in the eyes of American soccer fans.“I’ve had a very good career. If somebody wants to surpass it, they’re welcome to,” he told The Athletic. “We fell short (with the U.S.). No excuses there. That’s the way it is. I don’t know if you follow sports, but at the end of the day, not everyone wins. It’s unfortunate, certainly, but I feel really good about what we did.”Arena’s accurate self-assessment (“I’ve had a very good career”) combined with an unveiled disdain for those who question him (“I don’t know if you follow sports,” said to a sports reporter) more or less sums up his place in the American soccer landscape.


More from The Athletic


Many consider Arena the greatest coach in the history of the American men’s game. His 81 wins as U.S. men’s national team coach are easily the most in program history. He won five MLS Cups, four Supporters’ Shields, a U.S. Open Cup and a CONCACAF Championship over 17 seasons as an MLS head coach. A four-time MLS coach of the year, Arena helped craft two of MLS’ most legendary sides — D.C. United and the LA Galaxy.Before joining MLS, Arena was a dominant college coach, leading the University of Virginia to five NCAA College Cups and six ACC championships in an 18-year college coaching career. During that span he helped raise some of the most influential American players of the 90s and early 00s, including Claudio Reyna, John Harkes, Jeff Agoos, Tony Meola and Ben Olsen. A former college and professional goalkeeper himself who earned a single cap with the USMNT, Arena got his first college coaching gig in a far humbler setting: The University of Puget Sound, in 1977.Hired as D.C. United’s first head coach in MLS’s inaugural season, Arena helped assemble and coach a collection of talent that dominated the league in its infancy. They played with a flair and finesse uncommon to the league’s early teams and quickly established themselves as the league’s first dynasty. They won the league’s inaugural championship in 1996 and won the U.S. Open Cup that same year, then repeated as MLS Cup champs in 1997, then made it to the final again in 1998 while becoming the first team to win the CONCACAF Champions Cup.Yet even as Arena rose in prominence, he continually unleashed the brash, arrogant side of his persona that so many within the game eventually came to recognize as standard-issue Bruce.“The way our league is operating, this is the worst coaching job in the world,” he told the Washington Post in 1997 of his position at D.C. United, one of many criticisms of MLS commissioners over the course of his career. In 1996, when coaching the U.S. at the Atlanta Olympics, he famously said the U.S. Olympic officials were “too stupid to fix a draw” after his team was matched up against Argentina. A Sports Illustrated article from around that time described him as “amazingly graceless,” and quotes Williams, then a D.C. United midfielder, as saying “Yeah, he’s arrogant.”“The perception is that he’s a bastard,” longtime Arena assistant Dave Sarachan told Sports Illustrated for that piece. “If you talk to almost anyone in our business, they will say that.”

Arena took over the U.S. in 1998. (JORGE SILVA/AFP via Getty Images)

Arena left United in 1998 to join the USMNT, which had just finished dead last at the World Cup in France. In 2002, Arena’s no-nonsense approach helped earn the USMNT its best World Cup finish since 1930, a memorable run to the quarterfinals of the tournament that included upsets over Portugal and Mexico and a near-upset of eventual finalists Germany. He coached the team again in the 2006 cycle and through a disappointing appearance at that year’s tournament. Arena also led the USMNT to three continental championships during his national team career. He joined the LA Galaxy in 2008, arriving in Los Angeles not long after English legend David Beckham in 2007 and inheriting a roster in shambles and a divided locker room. Arena eventually led that club to glory as well, winning three MLS Cups in a four-year span. Several of Arena’s Galaxy sides were among MLS’ greatest-ever teams, squads built around Beckham, USMNT legend Landon Donovan and Irish international Robbie Keane. Flying high, Arena’s continued to push MLS officials into uncomfortable water. Long before criticisms of the league’s single-entity structure became commonplace, Arena was lobbing grenades at the league office over what he perceived to be a potential overreach. In 2014, when the Galaxy tried and failed to sign USMNT midfielder Sacha Klestjan, Arena raged at the league office in an interview with the Washington Post, calling them “children.” The comments drew a fine from MLS commissioner Don Garber. “Bruce has the opportunity to be our Tom Landry,” Garber told SI.com at the time, referring to the legendary Dallas Cowboys coach. “Or our Pat Riley. And he continually puts himself in a position where he acts unprofessionally and he emotionally misstates the facts. And I think that’s a shame.” Though his gruffness had become well-known by this point, Arena had simultaneously earned a reputation as an excellent man-manager who is largely beloved by his players – many of whom spoke out on his behalf during his absence and investigation. He had a shrewd eye for role players at the Galaxy and helped foster the careers of MLS stalwarts like Omar Gonzalez, Mike Magee, A.J. DeLaGarza and many more. He was usually fiercely protective of his players’ individual and collective performances, except in those instances where they were very clearly not up to snuff. And player after player who worked under him will say that they could count on Arena for a straighforward, honest assessment.“Bruce lets you know where you stand,” said then-U.S. striker Clint Mathis in 2002. He was, and is, also the last of a dying breed. As the game has progressed and more focus has been laid on tactical details, film study and analytics, Arena has often balked at those changes — sometimes to the chagrin of certain players and, more recently, assistant coaches.“Actually, analytics in soccer, if no one here has figured it out, doesn’t mean a whole lot,” he said in a postgame press conference in 2016. “Analytics and statistics are used for people who don’t know how to analyze the game. I’ll be very honest with you; this isn’t baseball or football or basketball. We have a very important analytic, and that’s the score. That distorts all the other statistics.”Occasionally, Arena’s barbs betrayed a kind of old-school conservatism that was mostly out of line with prevailing sentiment among American soccer fans. Perhaps nothing revealed that more than his controversial comments about the direction of the U.S. men’s national team under German head coach Jurgen Klinsmann.“I believe an American should be coaching the national team,” Arena said in 2014. “I think the majority of the national team should come out of Major League Soccer. The people that run our governing body think we need to copy what everyone else does, when in reality, our solutions will ultimately come from our culture.”He espoused a similar philosophy on foreign-born players for the national team, during the very time that many were being recruited to play for the U.S.“Players on the national team should be — and this is my own feeling — they should be Americans,” Arena said in 2013. “If they’re all born in other countries, I don’t think we can say we are making progress.”Arena walked back these comments when he took the reins of the U.S. again in 2016 and was suddenly faced with the prospect of having to coach some of those players. But notably, he didn’t apologize.“If I made those comments, I certainly don’t believe that that’s my attitude,” Arena said in 2016.

Arena and Beckham at MLS Cup 2009 (Harry How/Getty Images)

Even after the U.S.’s disastrous qualifying campaign in 2018, Arena continued to throw elbows. In 2018, Arena hit out at U.S. Soccer and a host of others in “What’s Wrong With Us?,” a book he co-authored with commentator and author Steve Kettmann.“Basically, the same people have remained in control of the sport over the past twenty years,” wrote Arena. “This should not happen. The landscape of the sport has changed drastically, and there is a need for new leaders with technical experience who can bring fresh ideas to the table. There need to be some new blood and new ways of doing things.”Arena seemed to contradict his own words by taking the Revolution job a year later, but by the same token, the list of current and former MLS coaches who played for or coached under Arena is long and distinguished. Among them: former LAFC, Chicago FireToronto FC and U.S. head coach Bob Bradley was one of Arena’s original assistants at D.C. United. Current USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter played for and coached with Arena in LA. Houston Dynamo head coach Ben Olsen was a player for Arena at Virginia and again in D.C..Arena took over New England during the 2019 season and guided the team to the playoffs after inheriting a poor start. The club then set a new single-season points record en route to winning the Supporters’ Shield in 2021. Arena was named 2021’s MLS Coach of the Year.The combativeness remained. Arena served a three-game suspension during the “MLS is Back” tournament during the COVID-19 pandemic for using abusive language against a match official. He initially received a red card and a standard one-game suspension but Garber extended that penalty by an additional two games.Earlier this season, he was issued a fine for criticizing VAR and calling the fourth official in a match “pretty useless for the entire game, and for some reason, she then voiced her opinion 98-and-a-half minutes into the game.”Amid it all, Arena continued to win. This year, New England is among the best teams in the Eastern Conference. They will be among the favorites to make it to MLS Cup. Behind the scenes, though, the tension Arena brought to outsiders had found its way into his circle. On Saturday, that tension led to Arena, so often the victor in the world of American soccer, issuing an unusual apology as he made an abrupt exit.(Top photo: Ira L. Black – Corbis/Getty Images)

Howard Webb: ‘Decision to let Manchester City goal against Fulham stand was an error’

Howard Webb: ‘Decision to let Manchester City goal against Fulham stand was an error’

By Philip Buckingham Sep 5, 2023 123


Howard Webb has accepted the decision to let Nathan Ake’s goal stand in Manchester City’s 5-1 win over Fulham was an “error” from referee Michael Oliver and his VAR team.Ake’s header in first-half stoppage time became a point of controversy on Saturday after Manchester City defender Manuel Akanjistood in an offside position, jumped over the ball in the eyeline of Fulham goalkeeper Bernd Leno.

Marco Silva said afterwards it had been a “huge mistake” to let Ake’s goal stand and he now has sympathy of Webb, who admits it should have been disallowed.Webb, the chief refereeing officer for PGMOL, admitted the lapse from his team this weekend during an appearance on “Match Officials: Mic’d Up”, the first in a regular series of programmes this season that will dissect VAR calls and replay the audio of discussions between the officials.Ake’s goal was reviewed by the video assistant referee Tony Harrington, who concluded that Akanji had not impeded Leno. Oliver, as a result, was not sent to the pitchside monitor to review the decision.“From the outset I want to say I think this should have been disallowed, this goal,” Webb told Mic’d Up, a half-hour show hosted by Michael Owen.“It certainly appears that Akanji has an impact on Bernd Leno who seems to hesitate.“The officials on the field gave the goal. They didn’t see an obvious action that impacted Leno’s ability to play the ball. They see Akanji moving slightly away from the ball to let it past him. There’s a flick out of the foot but that’s after the ball has passed.“They didn’t feel that that was clearly impactful on Leno’s ability to play the ball. But you can see that hesitation by the goalkeeper, who is waiting to see if the ball makes contact with Akanji, which would have deflected the ball.“So we think it’s a clear situation of offside. Unfortunately, it wasn’t identified on the day, and, of course, the learning from this one will also be shared amongst all of our group because we’re always looking to do better each and every week, and this was an error.”

Webb also revisited the foul by Manchester United goalkeeper Andre Onana after he jumped into Wolverhampton Wanderers defender Craig Dawson late in the opening weekend game at Old Trafford.

That ought to have given Wolves the opportunity to equalise from the penalty spot and Webb accepted it was a “clear error” missed. Again it was a decision not recommended for a VAR review and brought an apology to Wolves from Webb.

Six incidents from the opening four weekends of the Premier League season were reviewed in all during the new programme designed to increase transparency among the PGMOL, with Webb highlighting that VAR had helped reach the correct decisions elsewhere, including an overturned penalty in Arsenal’s 3-1 over Manchester United on Sunday when Kai Havertz fell in the box.

“It was a good use of VAR,” said Webb, who saw onfield referee Anthony Taylor overturn his original decision upon advice from the VAR. “The referee believed that Wan-Bissaka had tripped Havertz, but the video shows something quite different that there’s no actual contact initially.

“Another step by Havertz, his leg goes into Wan-Bissaka. The VAR, really calm and concise, recognises all of that, thinks it’s a clear and obvious error. I agree. Recommends a review. We get to the right decision.”

Webb also took a thinly-veiled swipe at Manchester United Erik Ten Hag following his post-match comments that questioned the offside decision to rule out Alejandro Garnacho’s late strike that briefly appeared set to give United a victory.

Lines drawn on to the pitch showed Garnacho to be narrowly offside yet Ten Hag had claimed the “wrong angle” had been used.

“I was surprised by some of the comments,” added Webb. “It was a clear offside decision. The technology was used quite rightly. The calibrated cameras showed Garnacho to be ahead of Gabriel and it was quite rightly disallowed after initially being awarded incorrectly.”

Champions League group stage draw analysed: Best games, breakout stars and tough groups

Champions League group stage draw analysed: Best games, breakout stars and tough groups

By The Athletic Staff

Aug 31, 2023

50


Europe’s elite sides now know who they will face at the first hurdle as they look to capture the continent’s most prestigious prize this season.

The draw for the group stage of the competition took place on Thursday, allowing fans to start getting excited for the start of the competition. And clubs can now make plans as they look to take the trophy away from Manchester City.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b602297dfb6874d3b4a7bcbc47d04ef4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

The Athletic asked our European experts James Horncastle, Raphael Honigstein, Mario Cortegana, Pol Ballus and Peter Rutzler to analyse the draw and give us their key takeaways.


Which group gets you most excited?

James Horncastle: Group F should be fun. Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Gigio Donnarumma will face AC Milan, the club he supported as a boy and ditched for the lucre of Ligue 1. It’s a reunion tour as Sandro Tonali, who claimed he wanted to captain and finish his career at Milan, faces his old team too. Then the Dortmund game pits Pulisic against USMNT teammate Gio Reyna with the backdrop of the Yellow Wall paling in comparison with everything that went down at the World Cup in Qatar. As geopolitics goes, the Saudi v Qatar angle to Newcastle against PSG is hotter than a summer’s day in Riyadh or Doha.

Raphael Honigstein: It has to be Group F, of course. But don’t sleep on Group E, with one of the best up-and-coming coaches in Feyenoord’s Arne Slot, Maurizio Sarri’s Lazio, a more attacking-minded(?) Diego Simeone at Atletico and Brendan Rodgers back in the saddle at Celtic. Not the biggest quality line-up but it should be lots of fun.

Pol Ballus: Group F, by a mile. There is an outstanding ’90s football vibe in this group, apart from it being clearly the only one in which you can see all four teams being real options to go through.

Mario Cortegana: I’m not going to be original: F is the group I’m going to pay most attention to, after C, Real Madrid’s group. It would be a surprise for them to go out because they are building a more balanced and hungry team, but I am very curious about what would happen if PSG were knocked out in the group stage of the Champions League. This would follow two editions in which they were eliminated in the round of 16. They have been unlucky this year at the first stage of reaching their eternal goal, winning the Champions League. Dortmund always offer spectacle, Milan are a giant awakening in recent years and Newcastle are a nouveau riche club that is doing things very well: they have not just got money, but also intelligence.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b602297dfb6874d3b4a7bcbc47d04ef4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Peter Rutzler: Group F obviously catches the eye. Historic stadiums, famous clubs, and it really does feel like an open group. PSG are still a little bit of an unknown entity following so much change during the summer. It may feel despairing for Newcastle fans on the face of it but opportunities may knock…

Which big teams might struggle?

Horncastle: Arsenal are back in the competition after what feels like ages. The group feels like a trap. Lens 1-0 at the Emirates, the ghosts of ’98 suddenly apparate.

Honigstein: All of the teams in Group F will have a hard time qualifying, for obvious reasons. Beyond that, it’s a relatively benign draw for the big guns, who should all qualify with a degree of ease.

Ballus: I’d say PSG. The group is tough and Luis Enrique’s project is still at an early stage of development. Plus, there’s always in pressure in Paris when it comes to the Champions League… this is going to be fun to watch.

Cortegana: Following on from my previous answer, the biggest club that I sense may struggle the most is PSG. Although there are always surprises, the rest should have it under control.

Rutzler: This will not be a walk in the park for PSG, nor anyone else in Group F. The rest of the ‘elite’ sides seem to have safe draws, though. Arsenal might find a few potholes in the way of progress with Lens and PSV eager to bloody some noses. But they should come through that relatively unscathed.

If you could have a ticket to one match, which would it be?

HorncastleNapoli against Real Madrid. I believe this fixture is why the European Cup became the Champions League. A group stage was introduced precisely because Madrid knocked out Maradona’s Napoli so early. Another reason to buy a ticket is the narrative around Ancelotti. Rarely for him, a player mutiny at Napoli led to his dismissal and appointment by Everton. He was supposed to be finished. He then won the Champions League with Madrid. Legend

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b602297dfb6874d3b4a7bcbc47d04ef4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Honigstein: Napoli vs Real Madrid at the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona would be a dream to go to. All of Newcastle United’s home matches should be sensational as well.

Ballus: Manchester United vs Bayern Munich. A big European night at Old Trafford, the Harry Kane narrative and Thomas Tuchel expected to go to the next level in Europe after investment in the summer. It’s a similar thing for Erik ten Hag too. There’s loads of pressure on that game.

Cortegana: Real Sociedad against Inter Milan.

Rutzler: Lens’ first home game at the Stade Bollaert-Denis. The Ligue 1 side had a fantastic record at home last year, winning 18 of their 19 matches. But the atmosphere will be electric. Franck Haise has his team channeling the spirit of this old mining town, with a high-tempo style of play, and after 21 years without Champions League football, the blood will be pumping on opening night. A very tough away day for anyone.

(Enrico Locci/Getty Images)

Which group doesn’t seem glamorous but will be good to watch?

Horncastle: Group C feels novel. The Champions League group stages serve up the same old same old (City-Leipzig! Again!) So the idea of Madrid going to Braga and playing in the quarry is great. I also can’t wait to see Leonardo Bonucci’s Union Berlin take on Napoli at the Olympia Stadion. Bonucci has trash-talked Napoli in the past. He must now face Osimhen. Get the popcorn out.

Honigstein: There’s a slight lack of glamour — it’s all been hoovered up by Group F — but both Groups D and E promise plenty of entertaining football between evenly-matched opponents. Roger Schmidt’s Benfica taking on his former club Red Bull Salzburg will deliver fireworks.

Ballus: I’d go for Group D. Last year’s finalists Inter Milan will face three teams full of young exciting talent. I think Real Sociedad have a chance to go through. Keep an eye on Japanese winger Takefusa Kubowho is some footballer.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b602297dfb6874d3b4a7bcbc47d04ef4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Cortegana: It would be Group D. Benfica always play to win and try to be the protagonist in the Champions League; Inter showed what they can do in last season’s final; Salzburg are one of those teams that try to entertain and, although perhaps in Europe they are not so well known; in Spain we know how beautifully Real Sociedad play.

Rutzler: Group E should be interesting. A cool mix of styles, with Slot’s Feyenoord and Simeone’s Atletico and Sarri’s Lazio all on show. Not enough groups look competitive enough on paper — hopefully a few shock results avoid too many soulless processions.

What makes you feel happy when you look at this draw?

Horncastle: Manchester United being welcomed back to hell by Galatasaray, like in 1993. What a time to be alive that was.

Honigstein: Seeing Union Berlin take on Real Madrid and Napoli in the Champions League will never not be a wonderful thing. The east Berlin club have made it to Europe’s elite competition from the fourth division without a sugar daddy or state ownership, and they serve as an important reminder that for all the talk about football becoming a close shop, the system is still permeable enough to allow minnows to become heroes.

Ballus: Barcelona being the absolute favorites of their group — and at the same time having no excuses for failing to qualify for the knock-out stages. It’s the moment for them to start leaving past traumas behind.

Cortegana: In addition to Real Madrid’s manageable group, the competitiveness of the aforementioned Group D. We are going to see matches involving perhaps lesser names but very entertaining ones.

Rutzler: An English coach in the Champions League is a rare thing. So it’s pleasing to see Eddie Howe deservedly on the European stage. His work at Bournemouth was outstanding and didn’t always receive the plaudits it deserved. From Boscombe to Milan. Not bad.

(THOMAS COEX/AFP via Getty Images)

Which player could break through and become a star of the group stage?

Horncastle: Milan have finally balanced out their attack. It is no longer so left-sided and dependent on Rafael Leao. The impact of Pulisic has been instant but I can’t wait to see Samuel Chukwueze skate past players on the right. Tijjani Reinjders, the silky midfielder signed from AZ, is another player to follow closely.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://b602297dfb6874d3b4a7bcbc47d04ef4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Honigstein: It almost feels too easy to pick a Red Bull Salzburg or RB Leipzig player considering their great success in developing stars such as Erling HaalandSadio ManeChristopher Nkunku and countless others. But I’ll pick one anyway. Belgian forward Lois Openda, Leipzig’s €38.5m signing from Lens, has already made a big impression in the early weeks of the Bundesliga. Watching him take on Europe’s best defences will be hugely exciting.

Ballus: Lamine Yamal. A 16-year-old winger who is not just capable of earning a spot in Barcelona’s starting line-up, but to be named MVP of La Liga games. Yamal has this kind of personality that makes him thrive in big stages, so welcome to the Champions League.

Cortegana: Harry Kane. He had several suitors this summer, but the team who really bet on him was Bayern and he will prove from the group stage that the Germans were not wrong. There is also the added bonus of him playing against Manchester United, who are long-time admirers of the striker.

Rutzler: This feels like the breakthrough season for PSG’s Warren Zaire-Emery. The 17-year-old looks to be a key part of Luis Enrique’s plans this year, regularly starting games since pre-season. He is a complete midfielder who can do a bit of everything and will impress on a European stage. Forward Elye Wahi, 20, was also excellent for Montpellier last season and should stand out for Lens, too.

Name the last 16 qualifiers

Horncastle: Man City, Real Madrid, Bayern, Lens, Arsenal, PSG, Lazio, Man United, Napoli, Inter, Benfica, Milan, Leipzig, Barcelona, Porto, Atletico.

Honigstein: Bayern, Man Utd, Sevilla, Arsenal, Napoli, Real Madrid, Benfica, Inter, Lazio, Atletico, PSG, Newcastle, Man City, Leipzig, Barcelona, Porto.

Ballus: Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Arsenal, PSV, Real Madrid, Napoli, Inter, Real Sociedad, Atletico Madrid, Lazio, PSG, Milan, Manchester City, Leipzig, Barcelona and Porto.

Cortegana: Bayern, United, Arsenal, Lens, Real Madrid, Napoli, Inter, Benfica, Atletico, Lazio, PSG, Dortmund, City, Leipzig, Barcelona, Porto.

Rutzler: Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Arsenal, Lens, Napoli, Real Madrid, Benfica, Inter, Atletico, Feyenoord, PSG, Newcastle, Man City, Leipzig, Barcelona, Porto.


Mark Carey’s data takeaways

Which are the hardest and easiest groups based on team strength?

Using Opta’s Power Rankings, Group E looks to be the easiest group among the four teams, with Lazio, Atletico Madrid, Feyenoord and Celtic all vying for a place in the knockout stages.

Elsewhere, Group F looks to take the title of the annual “group of death” as PSG and Borussia Dortmund had a tough draw from Pots three and four — drawing AC Milan and Newcastle United.

Interestingly, according to Opta’s Power Rankings, it is Newcastle who come out with the highest team strength despite being the least experienced on the European stage in recent years.

Do not take your eyes off Group F.

Which team are the biggest stylistic outliers in this season’s Champions League?

Union Berlin enter into the Champions League group stages for the first time in their history, and their style of play might be a surprise to some teams.

Their low-block, counter-attacking style focuses on width from their wing-backs — with 115 open-play crosses into the penalty area more than any other Bundesliga side last season.

Elsewhere, Haise’s Lens will be an interesting watch, setting up in a 3-4-3 (or 3-5-2) with a strong defensive foundation last season. Their focus on deep circulation with good off-ball running and strength in wide areas will be interesting to see, although they have lost their most valuable attacker in the summer as Openda made the move to RB Leipzig.

Who’s an up-and-coming player to keep an eye on this season?

RB Leipzig have invested their money wisely with an influx of young talent including Openda, Benjamin Sesko, Castello Lukeba, and Christoph Baumgartner — with a shrewd loan move for PSG’s Xavi Simons also catching the eye.

Simons arrived in Germany off the back of a stellar campaign for PSV Eindhoven in 2022-23, with 27 goal contributions (19 goals and eight assists) only bettered by Ajax’s Dusan Tadic.

The 20-year-old has already hit the ground running this season, netting a goal and providing two assists as Leipzig thrashed Stuttgart 5-1 in their second game of the Bundesliga campaign. The early signs suggest that he, and Openda, can fill the attacking void vacated by Dominik Szoboszlai and Christopher Nkunku.

Milan, Mbappe, Dortmund: Newcastle’s Champions League famous rivals are flawed

MONACO, MONACO - AUGUST 31: Former professional footballer Joe Cole shows Newcastle United during UEFA Champions League 2023/24 Group Stage Draw at Grimaldi Forum on August 31, 2023 in Monaco, Monaco. (Photo by Marcio Machado/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

By Jacob Whitehead Sep 1, 2023


Newcastle United are in a Champions League group with 422 years of history, 39 league titles, and 31 appearances in the competition’s knockout stages in this century.When they were drawn alongside Paris Saint-Germain, Borussia Dortmund, and AC Milan in Group F, Newcastle completed arguably the toughest group in recent memory.Last season, PSG won Ligue 1, Dortmund should have won the Bundesliga (finishing second after failing to win on the final day), and Milan reached the Champions League semi-finals, having won Serie A one year before.There are narratives everywhere. Newcastle prised shiny new midfielder Sandro Tonali away from Milan, his boyhood club, for £55million. They already beat the Italian giants to the signing of Sven Botman the previous summer. Starting striker Alexander Isak failed to make the grade at Dortmund, but is now flying in black and white. And in Qatar-owned PSG, this is a geopolitical clash writ large given Newcastle’s majority owners are Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.

As Newcastle’s group was revealed, some supporters experienced a sickening lurch. One day after being drawn against Manchester City in the Carabao Cup, they thought that Newcastle were now looking destined to exit two cups early. After waiting 20 years to return to the Champions League, this draw looked more like a kicking than a competition, with Newcastle the betting favourites for an early exit.

But let’s be frank. During last season’s run-in, it was the prospect of fixtures like these that meant players battled through injuries, staff pulled all-nighters, and fans rescheduled surgeries. When Joelinton screamed the Champions League anthem, it was not Serbian champions Crvena Zvezda who inhabited his waking dreams; when CEO Darren Eales repeated the chant, “Have you ever seen a Mackem in Milan”, it is not solely for alliterative reasons that the lyrics are not, “Have you ever seen a Mackem in Antwerp”.

Since the takeover, the long-term vision has always been to see Newcastle dining with European royalty. This draw is just another example of how rapid that rise has been. That comes with challenges, but also with it huge opportunities. Commercially, the prestige of this group is extremely good news for Newcastle’s need to comply with financial fair play regulations.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://45819c5fd911c14c5fc42cb90126f1be.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

But that is not to write off their chances on the pitch. The club has a record of making it through tough groups — back in their last campaign in 2002-03, under Sir Bobby Robson, they emerged from their pool with three consecutive wins after losing their first three games.

This Newcastle side have to believe they could do it again. Just as they have been guilty of dropping their levels against weaker opposition — such as cup exits to Cambridge United and Sheffield Wednesday under Eddie Howe — they have also raised it against the ‘Big Six’. Think of last season’s 3-3 draw over Manchester City, the win over Manchester United at St James’ Park, the demolition of Tottenham Hotspur with the top four at stake.

And while these are three excellent teams, Newcastle have the capability to hurt them.

Milan are possibly the greatest enigma, making eight additions to a much-changed squad from last season — headlined by Tonali’s shock departure. With Newcastle having beaten Milan to Botman’s signing, as well as signing the Italian giants’ captain, this is a sign of the Premier League’s power, and the new footballing order. They were overrun in midfield at times last season, even with Tonali, and much depends on how new additions Yunus Musah, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, and Tijjani Reijnders settle — this part of the pitch is Newcastle’s great strength.

Dortmund’s mental state after choking in last season’s Bundesliga race remains to be seen. They were insipid against Bochum at the weekend, outplayed by a team expected to be relegated and fortunate to draw 1-1. They will improve, but the sale of Jude Bellingham to Real Madrid means their squad got weaker over the summer. In the last 10 years, their squads have contained world-leading young talents — Bellingham, Erling HaalandOusmane Dembele and Jadon Sancho — but this side has no player of that ilk. There are worries over whether head coach Edin Terzic can create an attacking structure rather than rely on counter-attacking football.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://45819c5fd911c14c5fc42cb90126f1be.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

PSG appear the strongest side in Group F, and given the resources they have thrown at this competition, it is almost remarkable that the competition has eluded them. But they laboured to last season’s French title, pushed by a surprise challenge from Lens, and have lost Lionel Messi and Neymar this summer, two of this generation’s outstanding players. Having drawn their first two league matches, head coach Luis Enrique is trying to impose structure on an individualistic culture — the starkest contrast to Howe and Newcastle.

Make no mistake, this is not saying Newcastle should be expected to progress — it is still an exceptionally strong group. When the takeover happened, the lines about Kylian Mbappe walking out at St James’ Park were only partially made in jest — instead, the world’s best player will now be Newcastle’s opponent. Dortmund are filled with top-level European experience. If Milan’s squad gels, they have a higher ceiling than last season’s semi-finalists.

But it is pointing out that, just like Newcastle, these teams do have flaws and are beatable.

The main disadvantage that Howe’s side face is their lack of European experience. This is not in terms of quality of opposition — Newcastle have shown they can compete with the top Premier League sides — but in terms of scheduling, how to balance league matches with continental commitments while remaining both focused and competitive in both.

But aside from that, the strength of Newcastle’s group should not be used as an opportunity to make excuses. With the possible exception of PSG, at least for now, Newcastle are their financial equals. Their tactical system is arguably more deeply embedded by their opponents, and recruitment over the summer has provided squad-wide depth. This is a team who named a stronger bench than Manchester City when they played last month.

Newcastle earned their place in the Champions League in Europe’s toughest league, and do not need to rely on an underdog narrative. Any semblance of an inferiority complex should be swept away on the breaths of St James’ Park.

There is an oft-quoted line, originally written by Marianne Williamson, that appears in the 2005 basketball film Coach Carter as student Timo Cruz stands behind his convictions. It risks saccharine sweetness, maybe, but it also encapsulates Newcastle’s new reality.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://45819c5fd911c14c5fc42cb90126f1be.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate,” he says. “Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us.”

Newcastle need to take the same attitude into the Champions League. This is a side who wanted an opportunity, who wanted to be tested. These are the brightest and most exposing of lights. They cannot be afraid.

(Top photo: Marcio Machado/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

Hansi Flick sacked as Germany national team coach

09 September 2023, Lower Saxony, Wolfsburg: Soccer: Internationals, Germany - Japan, Volkswagen Arena. Germany national coach Hansi Flick. Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa (Photo by Federico Gambarini/picture alliance via Getty Images)

By Omar Garrick and Seb Stafford-Bloor

Sep 10, 2023

145


Hansi Flick has been dismissed from his position as coach of Germany men’s national team.

It comes following Germany losing 4-1 to Japan in an international friendly at the Volkswagen Arena on Saturday.

Supporters jeered the hosts at the full-time whistle, and Flick’s fate was sealed just one day later.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://0ddbd6c5c8914221572a6d0635161f23.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

A statement from German FA (DFB) president Bernd Neuendorf read: “The committees agreed that the senior men’s national team needs a new impulse after the recent disappointing results. We need a spirit of optimism and confidence with a view to the European Championship in our own country.

“For me personally, it is one of the most difficult decisions in my tenure so far because I value Hansi Flick and his co-coaches as football experts and people. However, sporting success has top priority for the DFB. Therefore, the decision was inevitable.”

Germany were heavily defeated in Wolfsburg on Saturday (Photo: Getty Images)

Flick’s assistants, coaches Marcus Sorg and Danny Rohl, have also been relieved of their duties with immediate affect.

Rudi Voller, Hannes Wolf and Sandro Wagner will take charge of Germany’s match against France in Dortmund on Tuesday. They are aiming to find a replacement for Flick as soon as possible.

Flick underwent training with the national team on Sunday morning.

He was appointed Germany coach in August 2021 after replacing Joachim Low following the 2021 European Championships, where they were knocked out by England. He had previously enjoyed a hugely successful spell at Bayern Munich, where he won the treble in 2019-20.

The 58-year-old’s position, however, had come under scrutiny following a desperate run that stretches back to before the World Cup last year.

Germany have won just four of their last 16 matches, a run which included a group stage exit in Qatar, the second consecutive World Cup in which they had been eliminated at that period. They have also conceded 11 goals in their last five matches to leave them in crisis less than a year before they host the European Championships.


What comes next for Germany?

Analysis by Sebastian Stafford-Bloor

The first objective is to get through the game against France without suffering any more damage to the collective ego; Germany are fragile and were completely humiliated by Japan in Wolfsburg. They have the players to attain respectability and Rudi Voller remains popular with the public, so – short term – that should be achievable.

Beyond that, Germany need to settle on a new direction. One of the great flaws of Hansi Flick’s time was their inability to adopt any sort of identity. Nearly every game featured an experiment of sorts and nearly all of those failed to produce any sort of dividend. Playing Nico Schlotterbeck as a left-sided full-back was the latest and last on Saturday night.

Maybe what Germany need more than anything else is conviction. They must settle on a way of playing and find a reliable means of creating chances and preventing goals being scored against them. Flick never knew how to cure either of those issues and, eventually, that seems to have had impacted the players and corroded their self-belief.

A good change now – a start at least – would be the appointment of someone who stands for something. Nobody can immediately solve some of the technical shortcomings within this generation – no No 9, the dearth of outstanding centre-backs or full-backs – but meaningful philosophical change would help restore an identity and recapture the hearts of a country disillusioned with its football team.

Ukraine 1 England 1: Tedious tempo, quarterback Kane, Henderson fails to spark

WROCLAW, POLAND - SEPTEMBER 09: Kyle Walker of England scores the team's first goal past Georgiy Bushchan of Ukraine during the UEFA EURO 2024 European qualifier match between Ukraine and England at Stadion Wroclaw on September 09, 2023 in Wroclaw, Poland. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

By Tim Spiers and Sebastian Stafford-Bloor

Sep 9, 2023

246


England may already have one foot in next summer’s European Championship but the scrappy draw against Ukraine still counted as a frustrating night for Gareth Southgate.

The game — which was staged in Wroclaw, Poland due to the ongoing war in Ukraine — felt like a missed opportunity as Southgate tries to regenerate momentum after England’s fine finish to last season.

Our experts debate the big talking points from the 1-1 draw.


England’s pedestrian pace

England are moving in quite a troubling direction. Ever so slightly, they are regaining the characteristics that made previous eras such a slog.

The pitch in Poland was not a good one. It is only fair to acknowledge that. But this was still a stale performance that depended on individual quality to retain its modesty and lacked support from a cohesive system. The European Championship is still almost a year away, but disjointed England away games that follow a week of grumbling about selection patterns feels very familiar and not in a welcome way.

There is plenty of merit to Southgate’s stance regarding the players he picks. Tactical familiarity matters in international football and not everything within it should be dictated by who has and who has not had a good six weeks in the Premier League. At the same time, those ends have to justify the means; there has to be evidence that players afforded special status within this squad are worth their hall pass.

(Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

On this evidence, the critics have it right. England’s terrifying lack of confidence in defence mirrored the struggles of its centrepiece, Harry Maguire, and their physical difficulties in midfield were suggestive of the fact that one of its key components, Jordan Henderson, is an ageing player intent on seeing out his career in a second, or third-tier league.

Yes, there was more to this than that; clearly so. But in the abstract, what made people buy-in to this team was the meritocratic basis of its construction. That seems to be ebbing away.

The window to achieve something is closing all the time. At the moment, England’s biggest impediment to crossing that threshold appears to be their inability to recognise their own flaws.

Sebastian Stafford-Bloor


Kane the Quarterback is back

Once more, England reaped the benefit of Harry Kane’s vision and his long-range passing.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://f2fcb26ff6340c34a3bb41f198e6f40d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Kane attracts so much defensive attention and causes such defensive displacement, that it seems almost unfair that he should also have that kind of ball in his armoury.

The pass from which Kyle Walker equalised was the most vivid example of just how much value there is to that part of Kane’s game. It was not just a looping ball pass over the top, nor one knocked into an obvious space. Instead, it was well-timed enough to survive VAR inspection, but also disguised in a way that gave Vitalli Mykolenko little hope of covering Walker’s run.

This is how it broke down:

Walker signals where he wants the ball played…

Kane spots him and times the pass to perfection as Walker stays (just) onside…

Mykolenko knows he is in trouble as he realises Walker is behind him…

Too late, he is stranded as Walker curves his run to collect the ball and now just needs a good first touch…

… and that is exactly what he gets, allowing him to finish with ease.

Condensed and turned into a YouTube compilation, you could make the case that Kane is a world-class player without even featuring one of his goals; his quarterback-style playmaking is really that good.

This evening it was also timely. England looked a little lost at 1-0 down and their equaliser owed everything to attacking diversity and an element of surprise. Particularly so on a bad pitch, and against a team who were proving a physical and technical match for them, and who were enlivened by an emotional crowd.

Nevertheless, whenever Kane drops deep, complaints follow. Even now. Even when it is obvious that the trait is a response to the state of a game and his willingness to adapt to become relevant within it.

Sebastian Stafford-Bloor


Henderson’s ho-hum night

All eyes were on Jordan Henderson after his controversial move to Saudi Arabia and the, in many people’s eyes, inflammatory interview he gave The Athletic earlier this week.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://f2fcb26ff6340c34a3bb41f198e6f40d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

It was a distraction Gareth Southgate, who was asked more questions on Henderson in the build-up than any other subject, could have done without, but a man as intelligent as him will have surely have anticipated a reaction when he called Henderson up.

There was no booing of Henderson from the away end and no obvious protests either, but Jill Scott reflected the feelings of many when she said on Channel 4 before the match: “In terms of the morals and values, I’m a really big Jordan Henderson fan, he’s a Sunderland lad and really hard-working. But for me, the fact that I couldn’t go and watch him represent his team, that’s what doesn’t sit well for me. Football for me is for everyone and the fact that I don’t feel like I would be welcome (to watch him play), that’s a very sad situation.”

(Eddie Keogh – The FA/The FA via Getty Images)

After all the talk, what of the football? How did Henderson play? Well, he was typically busy and aggressive, he made a couple of important clearances in his own box and he popped up sporadically in the Ukraine third without doing anything of real note, with one shot comfortably clearing the bar. His fitness levels — which will come under scrutiny in the coming months depending on the pace of the Saudi Arabian league — were fine, and he was still darting around in the closing stages.

Like the team, it was all a bit meh, very safe, nothing to really write home about.

Basically, leaving the Saudi argument aside, whatever you thought of Henderson before the match (i.e. a good team player doing the dirty work for others to thrive, or a bit of a jack-of-all trades, master of none), you won’t have changed your mind after this.

Tim Spiers


Bellingham-Maddison axis didn’t work – but was worth a go

As is being shown by Real Madrid’s early season displays, the key to extracting the most from Jude Bellingham is to allow him freedom. He has to able to roam and interpret within a game and Carlo Ancelotti’s privilege is to have midfielders who allow that to happen — and without the team’s structure suffering.

For England the quality is not the same, but the selection of James Maddison did help to create a similar dynamic. By playing Maddison on the left of midfield and Bellingham ahead of him in the attacking line — and then allowing them to switch throughout the game — England always possessed quality of distribution in that area.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://f2fcb26ff6340c34a3bb41f198e6f40d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Bellingham is a superior player with broader ability, but Maddison has more similarities with him then, say, a wide midfielder or a more vertical, driving midfielder like Phil Foden.

Jude Bellingham (Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

Within the first 15 minutes, Bellingham had been spotted in central midfield, wide on the left, in the No 10 corridor behind Harry Kane and at the base of England’s midfield. Maddison rotated in much the same way and yet England always retained that precious ability on the ball in deep positions.

It was a good idea, it just did not work that well. Bellingham probably tried too hard to bend the game to his will. At times, Maddison seemed to have too many options around him and too often made the worst decision available. Both had trouble with their touch and with the pitch.

But that’s okay; nights like tonight are necessary. If England are to see the best of Bellingham, then they will have to suffer some risks of discovery.

Sebastian Stafford-Bloor


Nervous Guehi

With John Stones injured — and with Eric DierConor CoadyTyrone Mings and Ben White all unlikely to get back in the squad before the Euros for one reason or another — England’s defence needs new faces, especially if Harry Maguire is barely going to get a minute of football at Manchester United.

Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi is the next cab off the rank (ahead of Levi ColwillFikayo Tomori and Lewis Dunk) and he took a while to settle here, perhaps understandably given the occasion, the stage and the atmosphere.

His passing was very safe and he didn’t drive forward in possession or show the calmness or composure he does at Palace. Guehi had a 98 per cent pass accuracy in the first half but only a couple of the 78 passes he made were forward, the rest were sideways or backwards and it was similar for Maguire, reflecting a tempo that was often far too sedate, albeit Ukraine defended deep and well.

As for the goal, this was the first shot on target England have conceded since they beat Italy 2-1 in March, let alone the first goal (2-0 v Ukraine, 4-0 at Malta and 7-0 v North Macedonia since then) and no one really escaped blame as Ukraine doubled up down the right and no one tracked Zinchenko’s burst into the box. Maguire and Guehi almost ended up colliding as they both got nowhere near cutting the ball out.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://f2fcb26ff6340c34a3bb41f198e6f40d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

At least they were untroubled in the second period.

Tim Spiers


At least the occasion was memorable

For a game played at a neutral venue, this was some occasion. It is estimated that around 250,000 Ukrainians have settled in Wroclaw since the war started last year and many of them helped pack out the 45,000 capacity Tarczynski Arena.

There were, as ever, a few thousand travelling England fans, most of whom had set up camp in the city’s beautiful Market Square for the previous 24 hours, all in fine voice and with no trouble reported.

The stadium, a couple of miles out of town, was a sea of yellow and blue and to all intents and purposes this was a home game.

(Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

It was played in a respectable atmosphere (the Ukraine fans applauded the England players out for their warm-up and there was absolutely no booing of either anthem) which was no surprise given the UK’s support for Ukraine during the war and the emotional occasion these teams played out in March at Wembley. Southgate also spoke politely and courteously (not that you would expect anything less) about Ukraine before the match.

The ‘home’ fans generated a terrific, vociferous noise with an incessant chant of “Oo-kry-ee-naa” throughout and they almost lifted the roof of the place for Oleksandr Zinchenko’s goal.

Tim Spiers

(Top photo: Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

9/8/23 US Men play Sat 5:30, Tues 8:30 pm TNT, Euro Qualifiers, Indy 11 Win Again in playoff contention, Julie Ertz last game in Cincy Sept 21, Carmel Boys #1 in Nation-Pack the House night Tonight

US Men vs Esbekistan Sat 5:30 pm, Tues vs Oman 8:30 pm on TNT

Excited to see our US boys – as the US plays friendlies Sat and Tues while Europe has Euro’s Qualifications, Africa has the African Cup and South America does World Cup Quals over the next week.  Can’t wait to see Paredes and Cardoso and Malik Tillman along with newcomers Drake Callender & Ben Cremaschi from Inter Miami.  It will be interesting to see if GB starts the regulars or mixes in some of the kids in the starting line-up.  I like Tillman or Johnny Cardoso to slide into the midfield while Adams is still out hurt, while I think Scally slides in on the right back slot as he’s starting in Germany.  Here’s my line-up for Sat evening. 

Of course Pulisic has been killing it for AC Milan since arriving – he has 2 goals and an assist and is a vital cog in the attack – Milan sits tied with Inter at the top of the table in Italy after their huge win over Roma and Mourino.

US Roster (new players bolded)

GOALKEEPERS (3): Drake Callender (Inter Miami), Ethan Horvath (Nottingham Forest), Matt Turner (Nottingham Forest)

DEFENDERS (9): Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Genk), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg), Tim Ream (Fulham FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham FC), Miles Robinson (Atlanta United), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

MIDFIELDERS (6): Johnny Cardoso (Internacional), Ben Cremaschi (Inter Miami), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

FORWARDS (6): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin), Folarin Balogun (Arsenal FC), Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Tim Weah (Juventus)

US Ladies – Ertz & Rapinoe to Play last games Sept 21 in Cincy/Sept 24th in Chicago

Julie Ertz announces she will retire from soccer at the Sept 21st game in Cincy vs World Cup Quarterfinalist South Africa. Tix are still avail for that game down in Cincy on a Thursday night 7:30 pm.

MLS – Messi

How about the scene last Sunday night in LA – as all the stars came out to see the GOAT and he did not disappoint as Miami beat the defending Champs 3-1. Can Miami really come back from 11 points back to make the playoffs now that Messi is there? He thinks so  they are closer to the top of the MLS  power rankings?  Now the real champ of Miami might be Messi’s personal bodyguard – check this out.  Of course Messi scored the lone goal for Argentina vs Ecuador last night.  Read more Messi below.

Indy 11 Unbeaten Streak Extends to 6 games

Indy Eleven defeated The Miami FC, 1-0, on Saturday night at home to extend their unbeaten streak to six games. The Indy win moves the team to11W-9L-8D, and moves them clearly into playoff contention. Next, Indy Eleven will travel to New Mexico United for a 9:00 p.m. ET kickoff on Friday, September 15 on ESPN+ for the first game of their two-game road trip. The next home game for Indy Eleven is Sunday, September 24 against Rio Grande Valley Toros FC. 

At 6-0-1 the Carmel Boys are up to #1 in the Nation now on Max Preps and tops in the state while the Carmel ladies are #2 in the state, #6 in the Nation at 8-0-2.  The Boys host Pack the House night Friday night and all Carmel FC and Carmel Dad’s Club players get in free when you wear your jersey. 

Congrats to the 2011 Girls Gold Team Premier Cup Tourney Champs. Great job ladies and coaches (Left Matt Sinex, Right Paul Cullington. Good luck to all the Carmel FC teams in Pike Fest this weekend – see you on the fields.

Former Carmel FC player Ellie Cirrincione after her 2nd assist of the season for Huntington University.  Ellie, a sophomore, is the daughter of former longtime Carmel FC and Current Carmel High School Freshman Coach Jen Cirrincione.

GAMES ON TV

Fri, Sept 8   – Euro Qualifying

12 noon FS2                        Georgia vs Spain

12 noon beIN sport         Egypt vs Ethiopia  African Cup

2:45 pm FS2                        Turkey vs Armenia

7 pm                                      Uraguay vs Chile

Sat, Sept 9  – Euro Qualifying

9 am FS2                              Azerbaijan vs Belgium 

12 noon FS2                        Ukraine vs England 

2:45 pm Fox Soccer+       Romania vs Israel 

5:30 pm TNT, Telemundo   USMNT vs Ezbekistan

7:30 pm MLS Pass ATV   Inter Miami vs Sporting KC

8:45 pm Apple TV             Minn United vs New England

10 pm TUDN                       Mexico vs Austraiia

10:30 pm Apple TV MLS Portland vs LAFC

Sun, Sept 10 – Euro Qualifying

9 am FS2                              Kazahstan vs Norhern Ireland 

12 noon FS2                        Finland vs Denmark  

2:45 pm FS2                        Albania vs Poland 

3 pm beIN sport               Gambia vs Congo

10 pm                                    El Salvador (Eric Zavaleta) vs T&T 

8 pm Apple TV MLS         LA Galaxy vs St Louis City

Mon, Sept 11 – Euro Qualifying

12 noon FS2                        Armenia vs Croatia 

2:45 pm FS2                        Portugal vs Luxembourg 

Tues, Sept 12 –

12 noon FS2                        Spain vs Cyprus

2:45 pm FS2                        Scotland vs England

8:30 pm TNT, Tele            USMNT vs Oman 

10 pm                                    Peru vs Brazil

Fri, Sept 15

2:30 pm ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Bayer Leverkusen

3 pm ESPN+                        Champ Southampton vs Leicester city

7:30 pm Para+                   Racing Louisville vs Houston Dash  NWSL

9 pm ESPN+                        New Mexico vs Indy 11

Sat, Sept 16

9 am Para+                          Juve vs Lazio

12 noon Para+                   Inter Milan vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

Thur, Sept 21

7:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Cincy  Ertz Last Game

Sun, Sept 24

5:30 pm TNT, Uni, Cock  USWNT vs South Africa Chicago Rapinoe last game

US Men

From no Reyna to surprise picks, USMNT roster shows new reality  Jeff Carlisle EPSN le

Scouting Uzbekistan

Just a number: Age doesn’t bother U.S. vet Ream Jeff Carlisle

American’s Overseas – Turner Shines, Pulisic wins again, Aaronson assist

McKennie has ‘point to prove’ in Juventus return

USMNT forward Pefok joins Gladbach on loan

Indy 11

Recap – IND 1:0 MIA

Boudadi Named to USLC Team of the Week

Quinn Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

MLS

MLS  power rankings
MLS Power Rankings: Cincy retakes top spot, Miami marches on
yan Rosenblatt
Can Messi lead Inter Miami to MLS Cup Playoffs?

International break could disrupt Inter Miami’s good vibes
Lionel Messi grabs 2 assists as Inter Miami beats reigning champions LAFC in Los Angeles

How good is Lionel Messi? He may lead Inter Miami from worst to first in one season

Lionel Messi and Inter Miami put on a show in stunning victory over LAFC

10 games, 11 goals: is Messi still brilliant or is MLS defending terrible?

Riqui Puig and new Galaxy players return to action with shutout of Fire

Sounders Give Game to Portland with Red Card
Landon Donovan’s San Diego Loyal to shut down after 2023 season

American Gen-Z Soccer Fans Like MLS More Than Other Soccer Leagues

World

Ukraine vs England: When is Euro 2024 qualifier and how to watch
Cristiano Ronaldo declares his rivalry with Lionel Messi ‘is over’

World Cup qualifying: Why Brazil look shaky, and Messi & Co. better than ever
Luis Miguel Echegaray

US Women, Ladies World Cup, NWSL 

Spain coach Vilda fired amid Rubiales scandal
‘I can walk away with no regrets’: US soccer great Julie Ertz announces retirement

Julie Ertz, a two-time World Cup champion, announces retirement from professional soccer

Spain coach Vilda fired amid Rubiales scandal
Racing Louisville, North Carolina Courage advance to NWSL Challenge Cup final on Saturday

Wave move into first place in NWSL with 1-0 home win against Dash

Why Laura Ricketts jumped at the ‘opportunity to have a culture change, to really write a new chapter’ as owner of the Chicago Red Stars

Goalkeeping

Miami’s Calender with the Save vs LAFC

GK How to Throw the Ball

Is it Fractured or Broken?  YourVeryOwnAthleticTrainer.com

Reffing

Bad calls in Man United game?  

Become a Licensed High School Ref

Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

Listen to the Ref Anthony Taylor mic’d up talking to VAR

Can Berhalter really lead the USMNT to its best World Cup?

  • Jeff Carlisle, U.S. soccer correspondentSep 6, 2023, 09:44 AM ET ESPN FC
  • In Gregg Berhalter’s first big interview since he was rehired as U.S. men’s national team manager, he put down a lofty marker for the 2026 World Cup. His goal, he told Vanity Fair, “is for us to go to a round that no U.S. team has ever gone to.”Wishing for it is one thing, but getting there will be a massive undertaking.Technically, reaching a new frontier at the World Cup would mean reaching the final, given that the U.S. made it to the semifinals of the inaugural edition of the tournament in 1930, where it was routed by Argentina 6-1. If one limits his statement to the modern era — loosely defined as starting in 1990, when the U.S. men qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 40 years — that means reaching the semifinals.For the sake of argument, let’s say that was what Berhalter meant, and reaching the semifinals is certainly possible for this U.S. team. It’s arguably as talented a group as the USMNT has ever had, and it’s not unheard of for a wild card to reach the semifinals of a World Cup. Turkey and South Korea did it in 2002. Morocco did it last December in Qatar. The U.S. will also benefit in 2026 from what will undoubtedly be some vociferous home support at American stadiums.

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga & more (U.S.)

There is certainly nothing wrong with Berhalter stating such a lofty aim — it fits with the culture of the team and the country. But possible doesn’t mean likely. A number of things will have to line up for the U.S. to reach that goal, some of which Berhalter can’t control, such as player health and a favorable path through the tournament.So, the question remains: What can Berhalter do now to give the U.S. a better chance of getting there?


Berhalter said he has met with U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker to work on a plan to move the team forward. Yet this query is especially pertinent when it comes to the team’s attack.Reaching the round of 16 in Qatar, where the U.S. fell 3-1 to the Netherlands, was a respectable showing, but it was not a tournament in which the Americans showcased a sufficient level of attacking prowess. There was little to quibble about in terms of the U.S. team’s approach work — the U.S. averaged 187.75 touches in the attacking third per 90 minutes in the tournament, good for sixth place among World Cup teams — but in terms of creating quality chances, the U.S. was lacking.

The U.S. team’s xG, or expected goals, per 90 minutes of actual playing time (which includes stoppage time) was 0.91, a mark that ranked 22nd in the tournament among all 32 teams, and 12th out of the 16 teams that reached the knockout stages. The fact that the U.S. under-performed that mark by scoring just 0.67 goals per 90 minutes of actual playing time didn’t help. We’re talking about a small sample size against some of the world’s best teams, but even when the eye test is applied, the U.S. couldn’t be confused with an offensive powerhouse.

EDITOR’S PICKS

When asked how Berhalter and the staff will move the U.S. attack forward, assistant coach B.J. Callaghan said one way to do that is play a variety of opponents.

“I think each challenge that the opponent brings is going to dictate sort of how you can create chances,” he said on a conference call with reporters. “So the more experience that we can give these core group of players playing against a diverse schedule of opponents, I think will teach us and give us ideas on how to advance that attack against different types of setups.”

With no World Cup qualification for the U.S. during this cycle, the schedule is bound to be less Concacaf-heavy. That will be in stark contrast to the 2022 cycle — from the start of 2019 onward the U.S. played 43 of its 56 matches against Concacaf opponents. In particular, the U.S. team’s participation in next year’s Copa America, against the best of South America, will offer the kind of competition outside of the USMNT’s home region that it rarely sees.

But that will take the Americans only so far. Of greater benefit will be a couple of personnel switches — including some new players coming in and moving familiar names into new roles.The arrival of Folarin Balogun amounts to an immediate upgrade in the striker position. The expectation is that the threat provided by his mobility, and runs off the ball will open up space for the likes of Christian Pulisic and Tim Weah, and his 21 goals in Ligue 1 last year with Stade de Reims shows he’s capable of scoring in a highly competitive league (though he did underperform his xG last season of 27.2). A move to a bigger club in AS Monaco is the next step in his development.Jeff Carlisle reflects on the notable additions and absences to the USMNT roster heading into the September international window.That said, Balogun alone won’t solve the USMNT’s issue of creating quality chances. In the aftermath of the defeat to the Dutch at the World Cup, Berhalter said, “We don’t have a Memphis Depay right now, who is scoring goals in the Champions League, and playing at Barcelona and has been an international for years and years.” The U.S. also didn’t have a Denzel Dumfries, who had a goal and two assists on that night, either.

The U.S. still doesn’t, but there is upside to the attack by positioning Gio Reyna in a central attacking role, instead of out wide, where he was for almost the entirety of the 2022 cycle. It was a move that Callaghan made during the Concacaf Nations League last June, and the U.S. looked much more dynamic in attack.

The next step is to see how it works against higher quality opponents, but even that seemingly obvious move carries with it some uncertainty.

First, there is the thawing of the relationship between Berhalter and Reyna that needs to take place. It’s easy to think they’ll agree to put the past aside and move on, but what transpired, and as public as the fallout was, will leave scars for both individuals. The extent to which healing will take place is still an unknown at this point. Berhalter said recently he still hasn’t spoken to Reyna since the ordeal unfolded.

Then there is the question of whether Berhalter will actually move Reyna to a central attacking role once the latter is back to full fitness. During the past week’s conference call with reporters in which the current roster was announced, Berhalter called the midfield triumvirate of Tyler AdamsWeston McKennie and Yunus Musah “a tremendous engine that we were able to take advantage of” during the past cycle. Reading the tea leaves, it doesn’t sound like continuing with that trio in midfield — when they’re all healthy, it should be noted — is something that Berhalter has moved on from just yet.

Switching the team’s formation to a 3-5-2 could alleviate that issue in that it would allow Reyna to play as a second forward off Balogun. It suits some of the team’s other personnel as well. Antonee RobinsonSergiño Dest and Weah have the skill-set to play as wing backs, and Chris RichardsMiles Robinson and Tim Ream are comfortable enough on the ball to play in a three-man back line.”For us, I think it’s more about just the general philosophy of how we want to be playing, and what we’re trying to do,” Berhalter said. “We want to be aggressive. We want to be high pressing. We want to be able to control the ball. And I won’t really get caught up on the formation. If it means that one can’t [play a certain way] because this is the personnel that we have, we need to play with three in the back, then we’ll do that.”I think that’s the beauty of the time between camps: you have the opportunity to plan what’s most effective for this given opponent. Ideally, I’d like to go into the next World Cup having a back three system and a back four system in place.”

https://5d531ef5a260a0dd6b893b42c2182325.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Such an approach would require Reyna to enjoy something that’s has eluded him for much of his professional career: an extended period of durability and health. And even if he can, it might not be enough. Other players like Adams and Pulisic will need to stay healthy as well, all of which speaks to the small margins that separate success and failure at the international level.Progress is also rarely linear. Expectations were high back in 2006 coming off the U.S. run to the quarterfinals in 2002, but a difficult draw that saw the U.S. grouped with the Czech RepublicGhana and eventual champions Italy — coupled with key players like DaMarcus Beasley, Landon Donovan and John O’Brien not reaching the heights of 2002 — saw the U.S. get eliminated in the group stage.This U.S. team is deeper now than that 2002 edition, but the rest of the world hasn’t been standing still either. So, while Berhalter’s stated goal is clear, the pathway isn’t. The onus will be on Berhalter to find a way.

U.S. Soccer names Marko Mitrović coach of U-23 men’s national team for 2024 Olympics

LAS VEGAS, NV - JUNE 15: Marko Mitrovic of the United States  during a game between Mexico and USMNT at  Allegiant Stadium  on June 15, 2023 in  Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by John Dorton/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Tom Bogert and The Athletic StaffSep 6, 2023


Marko Mitrović has been named coach of the U.S. under-23 men’s youth national team for the 2024 Olympics in Paris, U.S. Soccer announced Wednesday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • The 2024 Games will mark the American men’s first appearance at the Olympics since 2008 in Beijing.
  • Mitrović first joined U.S. Soccer in April 2022 as the under-19 men’s youth national team coach.
  • Michael Nsien, who has led the U-16 squad since November 2022, will replace Mitrović as the U-19 coach.

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

Who is Mitrović?

Finally back in the Olympics for the first time since 2008, the United States men’s soccer program has finally, officially, named a U-23 coach ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics. Mitrović will be well familiar with the player pool as he joined U.S. Soccer 15 months ago as the U-19 coach. His first U-23 camp will kick off next month during the October international break.

ADVERTISEMENT

The 45-year-old was an assistant for Serbia’s U-20 World Cup-winning side in 2015 and then spent four seasons as an assistant for the Chicago Fire under Veljko Panuovic. Mitrović also served as an assistant to interim USMNT coaches Anthony Hudson and B.J. Callaghan this spring and summer. — Bogert

Top players for the squad

Crafting an Olympic squad is tricky. Clubs aren’t mandated to release players and often the top age-eligible players have already graduated into the senior national team. Federations can also call three overage players to the roster. Senior USMNT regulars like Gio Reyna, Folarin Balogun, Yunus Musah, Ricardo Pepi and Joe Scally are all eligible, but it remains to be seen which (if any) will be called and released.

Likely options behind the established stars include standouts from the previous U-20 World Cup cycle, including Chelsea’s Gaga Slonina, Frankfurt’s Paxten Aaronson, Philadelphia’s Jack McGlynn, Wolfburg’s Kevin Paredes, Atlanta’s Caleb Wiley, Salt Lake’s Diego Luna, LA Galaxy’s Jalen Neal, Benfica’s Josh Wynder and Hajduk Split’s Roksas Pukstas. Aaronson wasn’t released for the World Cup itself.

New York’s John Tolkin, though not eligible for the previous U-20 World Cup, is likely to be among the first-choice options for the Olympics. The same goes for Taylor Booth, Malik Tillman and Bryan Reynolds if released.

Other players have established themselves in the picture this year as well, like New England’s Noel Buck, Orlando City’s Duncan McGuire, Venezia’s Tanner Tessmann and Columbus’ Aidan Morris— Bogert

What they’re saying

U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker said Mitrović “was instrumental in guiding our rising talents” during his time with the U-19s.“We’re looking forward to him now leading our Under-23 Men’s Youth National Team as this age group provides these players with an incredible opportunity to continue their development by facing elite opposition on the world stage and competing for an Olympic world title,” Crocker said. “We’re also confident that Michael is ready to lead our U-19 age group, a critical level for our young players aiming to take the next step in their careers for club and country.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://28dd845fbdf7e0963697149192f77a98.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“It’s been an honor working for U.S. Soccer and I’m tremendously proud of the opportunity to lead the USA at the Olympics,” Mitrović said. “I’ve gotten to see first-hand the high-potential players rising through our development system and I’m excited for them to represent their country proudly on such an important stage. The Olympics will be a special platform for our players and I can’t wait to continue the preparations.” 

Mitrovic hired to lead the Olympic team and faces inherent challenges building his team

U.S. Soccer has announced the head coach for the men’s 2024 Olympic team and it will go to Marko Mitrovic, who previously was the U.S. U-19 head coach. ASN’s Brian Sciaretta writes about the hire and the task at hand for the Serbian-American coach. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED SEPTEMBER 07, 2023 2:05 AM

  • SHARE THIS STORY

THE UNITED STATES U-23 Men’s Olympic head coaching vacancy has been filled as U.S. Soccer formally announced that it has hired Marko Mitrovic for the position. The Belgrade native previously served as the head coach of the U.S. U-19 team.

Mitrovic, 45, rose through the coaching ranks working extensively with Veljko Paunovic. He was Paunovic’s assistant in 2015 with the Serbian U-20 team when it won the U-20 World Cup (narrowly defeating the U.S. team on penalties in the quarterfinals). He then was Paunovic’s assistant with the Chicago Fire and then Reading. In April 2022, he was hired as the U.S. U-19 head coach.

This will be the team’s first time in the Olympics since 2008. The 2012 failed to qualify under Caleb Porter. The 2016 team failed to qualify under Andi Herzog, and the 2020 team failed to qualify under Jason Kreis. This team qualified by virtue of the U.S. U-20 team’s performance at the CONCACAF Championships in 2022, led by coach Mikey Varas who is now a USMNT assistant.

In addition, U.S. Soccer announced that U.S. U-16 coach Michael Nsien would be elevated to the U-19 head coaching position. 

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1699513670697373965&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fmitrovic-hired-to-lead-the-olympic-team-and-faces-inherent-challenges-building-his-team&sessionId=2103a35e1bba985cadf1788702f6220bf7c443e2&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

THE OLYMPIC RULES

 

FIFA has already published its regulations for the tournament and here is what we know about it in terms of the rules.

  • The age limit is for players born in 2001 or later. Essentially these will be players from the pool of the 2023 U-23 team and the 2021 U-20 team (which had its cycle canceled due to Covid).
  • Releases for players are completely voluntary.
  • Teams will be allowed to select three overage players, as has been historically allowed.
  • The roster size will be 22 players, including three goalkeepers. Historically it had been 18 but FIFA expanded it to 22 for the games in Tokyo and will continue with that in Paris.
  • The tournament will take place from July 24 through August 10.
  • Venues will be in Paris, Nantes, Bordeaux, Lyon, Saint Etienne, Nice and Marseille.

CLUB COORDINATION IS KEY

Mitrovic will have several challenging tasks ahead of him. For one, the Olympics is not a tournament where player releases are mandatory. Typically, releases are more difficult the older the age group because players assume bigger roles within clubs as they get older. As a result, U-23 releases are harder than U-20 releases, U-20 releases are harder than U-17 releases.Mitrovic will not have a lot of time with his group either. Gregg Berhalter said there are U-23 camps set for October and November. In 2024, there will likely be camps in January and March before final preparations in the summer.

Mitrovic will most likely have to be very proactive with engaging with clubs to see which players are in positions where they will be released. Are some players at clubs which won’t even consider a release? Are some players likely to move in January or next summer and it’s completely up in the air? Are some clubs taking a wait and see approach to releases?

USMNT COORDINATION

Then, Mitrovic will also have to coordinate his roster plans with USMNT manager Gregg Berhalter because there will be significant overlap in the player pools for both teams. The U.S. team, of course, hosts and plays in the Copa America earlier in summer 2024 and that takes priority. It is hard to see any overlap between the rosters for the Olympics and the Copa America.Age-eligible players like Giovanni Reyna and Yunus Musah will almost certainly be focused on the Copa America and not the Olympics because they are big players with the U.S. team when healthy. But there are a significant number of players who could play with the USMNT but would be backups. If they were with the U.S. U-23 team, however, they would be starters. Some of the many examples would be Joe Scally, Kevin Paredes, Paxten Aaronson, Tanner Tessman, Ben Cremaschi, Cade Cowell, Johnny Cardoso, Taylor Booth, or even Ricardo Pepi.

Mitrovic will have to coordinate with Berhalter as to which players are focused with the USMNT and which players are available for the U-23 team.As a side note, two top age-eligible American players are not allowed to participate – Malik Tillman and Folarin Balogun.

FIFA has a rule that states: “A player who receives a favorable change of association decision is ineligible to participate for their new [national team] in any competition (qualifiers or finals) in which they already represented their [former national team].” Tillman and Balogun represented Germany and England, respectively, in U-21 games that were part of UEFA Olympic qualifying. That prohibits them from playing for the United States in the 2024 Olympics.

OVERAGE PLAYERS

Once Mitrovic understands his player pool for players born 2001 and younger, he will have to decide on overage players based on where there are weaknesses from the age-eligible group. The overage players will also be looked to provide leadership. Release issues will be especially difficult for older players but typically this group is chosen from players who are established in their clubs and can miss preseason or midseason games.

Historically, the overage spots have been used on a goalkeeper, a central defender, and a striker. This team, however, could be in great shape for goalkeeping from young players. Central defense, however, is thin and two picks could be used there. Center forward is also a likely pick given the growing number of older options.

BOTTOM LINE

U.S. Soccer made a smart and pragmatic pick with Mitrovic. He is coming from within the organization, but he’s also done well with the U.S. U-19 team and was popular with the players. His teams generally achieved solid results and prepared players well for the U-20 team.

Given that the tournament is less than a year away and there will only be limited camps, Mitrovic has the benefit of knowing the player pool given his work with U.S. Soccer.But it’s a great opportunity for Mitrovic to lead the team in the Olympics for the first time in 16 years. Historically, the Olympics have been a very useful tournament for the men’s side of U.S. Soccer in terms of bridging the gap between youth and senior national team levels. Many players have used the Olympic cycle to springboard from being part-time USMNT players to becoming members of the team’s core.In 2000, Josh Wolff, Landon Donovan, and John O’Brien went from being occasionally used young USMNT players and into a core group for the 2022 World Cup. In 2008, Maurice Edu, Benny Feilhaber, Charlie Davies, Stuart Holden, Jozy Altidore, and Brad Guzan all took on bigger roles within the USMNT after the Olympics in Beijing.If Mitrovic is successful, we could see many players he works with in the coming months take on important roles with the USMNT as it prepares to host the World Cup in 2026.

Can Kristoffer Lund challenge Antonee Robinson for USMNT’s left-back role?

Kristoffer Lund

By Greg O’Keeffeep 6, 2023


He is a Dane who played in Sweden before moving to Italy and becoming American.

Kristoffer Lund’s story sounds like a riddle. Now, he hopes he can be the answer to Gregg Berhalter’s search for competition in the USMNT left-back slot.

The 21-year-old formally switched international allegiance last week, having represented Denmark through the youth international ranks.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://3f936f64d19a84cc0c7dd654fea3c069.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

He has a Danish father and an American mother, allowing him to choose the U.S. as the country he wants to represent at senior level.

It is all change for Lund. He left Swedish club Hacken last month to join Palermo in Serie B and was included for the first time on the USMNT roster for the team’s forthcoming friendlies against Uzbekistan and Oman in St Louis and Minnesota this month.

“He’s been on our radar for the last two years,” Berhalter said. “We’ve been watching him play for his club, but before the last World Cup, I just didn’t think he was ready. Since then, he’s gone on to win a Swedish league, he’s got the transfer (to Palermo), and we think he could fill the void that we had at the left-back position, in terms of our depth.”

KRISTOFFER-LUND-PALERMOLund, right, in action for new club Palermo (Emmanuele Ciancaglini/Ciancaphoto Studio/Getty Images)

Berhalter said that while Antonee Robinson has been the clear starter and a “fantastic player” for the U.S., “no one’s really grabbed that second position and we’re seeing what he can do and if he can challenge for that spot”.

Truly challenging Robinson, a regular in big USMNT games for the past five years, is no easy task.

With his surging runs down the left, impressive attacking output and growing defensive nous refined by the experience gained from Fulham’s assured return to the Premier League last season, he is Berhalter’s clear first choice.

But Lund will hope he can do enough to prove himself an able deputy for the man five years his senior.

According to the Total Football Analysis website, he is “an attack-minded full-back who looked eager to drive forward and played some excellent crosses into the opposition box”. It notes his strength during build-up play and ability to “do a decent job of carrying the ball forward”.

“Lund seemed fairly sound on the defensive front, although he does show some frailties now and then,” the site’s analysis (based on tracking since 2022) adds. “He can be a little sluggish to close down opponents in the vicinity of his box, while he also gave away some cheap fouls on the flank. Despite this, he was excellent during most of his one-on-one duels and looked to make the most of his challenge inside the opposition half, which negated the danger of conceding free kicks close to his box.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://3f936f64d19a84cc0c7dd654fea3c069.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Then there is The Athletic’s analysis, which further underlines Lund’s appetite for getting forward as an attacking threat — highlighted in the Smarterscout pizza chart below.

Smarterscout gives players’ games a series of ratings from zero and 99, a bit like the player ratings in the FIFA video games but powered by real data and advanced analytics. These ratings relate to how often a player performs a given stylistic action (for example, volume of shots per touch), or how effective they are at it (for example, how well they progress the ball upfield) compared with others playing in their position.

His standout numbers are his 99 score for receptions in the opponents’ box, showing how he likes to get forward compared to other full-backs (although, this is an exceptional jump on seasons before, when he scored 50 and 39), so a larger sample size of games for his new club Palermo would be required before assessing just how consistently attacking he is. Lund has played eight games this season – six European qualifying ties for Hacken and two Serie B fixtures.

In his two years in the Allsvenskan, Sweden’s top flight, Lund registered 12 assists in 59 games.

His numbers suggest he is quite involved in build-up play (link-up volume of 84). Defensively, he is moderately active for such an attacking full-back (defending intensity of 45) but the data suggests he could be exposed.

Lund is on record about how he hopes to bolster that aspect of his game through the move to Italy.

“I’m here to improve and become a better player,” he told Italy 24 at his official unveiling in Sicily, the Italian island on which Palermo play. “Italy is famous for tactics and for the defensive phase.

“I have strength and speed and Palermo will help me improve the tactical part. I’m ready, I feel I’ve played well in Sweden and I’m in good shape. It’s difficult to find space in such a competitive team, but I want to prove my worth.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://3f936f64d19a84cc0c7dd654fea3c069.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

He could just as well have been referencing the task he faces at international level, too, with that surprise call-up offering the previously little-known defender a chance to carve a place in the squad before the Copa America next summer and a World Cup on home soil in three years.

But if there were any nerves or jet lag this week as Lund tried to acclimatise before training sessions with Berhalter’s squad, a calming nightcap would not have been on the agenda. His nickname at Hacken may have been Tuborg, after the Danish beer brand, but that is as far as it goes.

“I’m not a big beer person,” Lund said. “I think it’s for my Danish — and then we’re good at drinking beer in Denmark.”

At least, as he settles in with his new USMNT team-mates, he has a track record for good first impressions.

“An opportunity arose in a young and inexperienced left-back from Denmark who had just changed clubs,” Hacken’s sporting director Martin Ericsson, told the club’s official website.

“After a meeting with the player, we made the decision to make the transfer rather quickly.”

Lund will hope his early exchanges this week with his latest new coach have a similarly convincing effect.

Greg O’Keeffe is a senior writer for The Athletic covering US soccer players in the UK & Europe. Previously he spent a decade at the Liverpool Echo covering news and features before an eight-year stint as the paper’s Everton correspondent; giving readers the inside track on Goodison Park, a remit he later reprised at The Athletic. He has also worked as a news and sport journalist for the BBC and hosts a podcast in his spare time.

Inter Miami & Lionel Messi: Can they make MLS Cup Playoffs?

23MLS_MIA_Playoff_Contenders

MLSsoccer staff Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023, 12:48 PM

Will Inter Miami CF and Lionel Messi actually pull it off?

We’re talking about reaching the Audi 2023 MLS Cup Playoffs, a feat that’s looking more likely by the day (though by no means is guaranteed) as the GOAT has North America by storm since his mid-July debut.

Whether you’re an MLS expert or experiencing MLS for the first time (welcome!), let’s break down perhaps the question shaping the stretch run.

What are the playoffs? How do they work?

While most professional soccer leagues crown their champion via the overall table/standings, MLS utilizes a postseason tournament called the Audi MLS Cup Playoffs.

The top nine teams in each conference – Eastern and Western – qualify for the playoffs. Seeds get locked in after Decision Day, aka the last regular-season matchday on Oct. 21.

Once the bracket is set, teams compete to make MLS Cup presented by Audi on December 9 at a to-be-determined stadium (highest remaining seed hosts).

What do Miami & Messi need to do?

IMCF must climb to ninth place (or higher) in the Eastern Conference table, which would see them compete in the Wild Card round (held Oct. 25-26).

  • Messi & Co. have nine games remaining to make up an eight-point gap, surpassing nine teams along the way.
  • Current projections indicate the club will need roughly 18 points (six wins) from the remaining 27 available.

Helping Miami, they have anywhere from one to three games in hand on teams above them. That affords them some room for error, but not much. Somewhere around 43 points is historically good enough for ninth place (a playoff spot in this year’s expanded field).

International breaks and the jampacked nature of the schedule could hurt Miami, though. Head coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino has noted Messi could miss up to three games as well, so depth will be tested.

When do Miami & Messi play?

Lionel Messi: MLS Regular Season games in 2023

DateWatchResult
Aug. 26 at New York Red BullsMLS Season Pass2-0 win
Aug. 30 vs. Nashville SCMLS Season Pass0-0 draw
Sept. 3 at LAFCMLS Season Pass3-1 win
Sept. 9 vs. Sporting Kansas CityMLS Season Pass(7:30 pm ET)TBD
Sept. 16 at Atlanta UnitedMLS Season Pass(5 pm ET)TBD
Sept. 20 vs. Toronto FCMLS Season Pass(7:30 pm ET)TBD
Sept. 24 at Orlando City SCMLS Season Pass, FS1 (7:30 pm ET)TBD
Sept. 30 vs. New York City FCMLS Season Pass(7:30 pm ET)TBD
Oct. 4 at Chicago Fire FCMLS Season Pass(8:30 pm ET)TBD
Oct. 7 vs. FC CincinnatiMLS Season Pass(7:30 ET)TBD
Oct. 18 vs. Charlotte FCMLS Season Pass(8 pm ET)TBD
Oct. 21 at Charlotte FCMLS Season Pass(6 pm ET)TBD

https://ae657837e992707dc018d2f99468850a.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Schedule fast facts

  • Miami have gone 2W-0L-1D in league play with their new-look roster, a pace that may just see postseason dreams come true.
  • Of their nine remaining regular-season games, five are home at DRV PNK Stadium and four are away.
  • All but one match is against an Eastern Conference team, creating a bunch of so-called six-pointers (i.e. big swings in the standings).
  • Atlanta United away (Sept. 16), Orlando City SC away (Sept. 24) and FC Cincinnati home (Oct. 7) project as their hardest tests.

What happens if Miami & Messi qualify for playoffs?

They would likely slot into the Eastern Conference Wild Card matchup, either as a No. 8 or No. 9 seed. It would be a sensational turnaround, as Miami sat last (15th place) in the Eastern Conference before Messi joined and needed to make up a 12-point gap.

Check out the playoff schedule below, with a new Round One Best-of-3 series entering the mix in 2023.

  • Wild Card matches: October 25-26
  • Round One Best-of-3 series: October 28-November 12
  • Conference Semifinals and Conference Finals: November 25-December 3
  • MLS Cup presented by Audi: December 9

Full playoff details

Wait, what about the Supporters’ Shield?

After the 34-game regular season (17 home, 17 away), the team with the most points is awarded the Supporters’ Shield. Note: This is different from MLS Cup and rewards longevity rather than the tournament-style playoffs.

Both trophies – MLS Cup and the Supporters’ Shield – have their merits, but the league title tends to carry more weight historically and in fans’ eyes. It’s also quite difficult to complete a Supporters’ Shield-MLS Cup double; only eight squads in league history have accomplished that.

Messi Mania goes to Hollywood | Messi Rewind presented by adidas

Messi Rewind presented by adidas has all the sights and sounds from Messi’s two-assist performance in Los Angeles.

https://imasdk.googleapis.com/js/core/bridge3.588.0_en.html#goog_1980764031Play VideoPlayMute

Current Time 0:00

/

Duration 2:45

Loaded: 5.97%CaptionsFullscreen

Can Miami do it?

The odds aren’t in Miami’s favor – FiveThirtyEight, based on their statistical model, gives them a 4% chance of making the playoffs.

But the club’s transformational summer window – headlined by Messi, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba – has turned them from looking destined for last place to storming up the table. Some stats that only bolster Miami’s case:

  • Record with Messi: 7W-0L-4D across all competitions in regulation time, with the four draws turning into PK wins
  • Messi’s production: 11 goals & 8 assists in 11 games

All that’s to say it’s a daunting task. But one or two losses, especially while players are away on international duty, wouldn’t be a death knell.

Don’t forget about…

Miami have already won their first-ever trophy this season, beating Nashville SC for the Leagues Cup 2023 title – a match that booked their 2024 Concacaf Champions Cup spot. Miami will also play for a second trophy on Sept. 27, hosting Houston Dynamo FC for the US Open Cup Final.

Even without playoffs, and mindful of where Miami started pre-Messi & Co., that has to be considered a success.

MLSsoccer staff –

@mls

Julie Ertz to play final USWNT match Sept. 21 vs. South Africa: What’s her legacy?

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 6: Julie Ertz #8 of USA pointing the way during a game between Sweden and USWNT at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 6, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Richard Callis/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Meg Linehan and The Athletic StaffSep 7, 2023


U.S. women’s national team legend Julie Ertz will play her final international match with the squad against South Africa on Sept. 21 at TQL Stadium in Cincinnati, U.S. Soccer announced Thursday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Ertz, a two-time Women’s World Cup winner and two-time U.S. Soccer Female Player of the Year, announced her retirement from professional soccer on Aug. 31.
  • She will be honored before the match, her final and 123rd career international appearance for the U.S.
  • The USWNT will play a second match against South Africa on Sept. 24 at Soldier Field in Chicago, where Megan Rapinoe will cap her legendary career with the team.

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

What’s Ertz’s legacy?

Defensive midfielders don’t always get a lot of credit, but Ertz made sure everyone realized how important the role was during the 2019 World Cup. Her shift from center back to DM to center back again for this World Cup showed just how crucial she was to this era of the USWNT, and provided one of the bright spots for the team in New Zealand and Australia alongside Naomi Girma.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://1cc1932aa4eab27553763865ee7780a6.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Her legacy goes beyond the senior team though, as one of a few players who also won a youth World Cup with the under-20s in 2012. Best known for her physicality, her ability to shut down opposing players with a perfect tackle and her raging competitiveness, Ertz reflects this closing era of the USWNT’s dominance and ruthlessness — in all the best ways. While her return for the 2023 World Cup was a surprise one, her retirement had felt more imminent than most following the last Olympics. — Linehan

What Ertz said

“I expected to just walk away after retirement, but to have the opportunity to say goodbye to my teammates and the fans one last time is something special that many players dream of,” Ertz said in a statement. “I wasn’t expecting this honor so I’m very thankful to (interim head coach) Twila (Kilgore) and to U.S. Soccer for giving me the chance to close this chapter of my life with those who have made this journey so memorable.”

Backstory

Ertz, 31, has recorded 20 goals in her career with Team USA. She was named U.S. Soccer Female Player of the Year in 2017 and 2019, and helped lead the USWNT to World Cup titles in 2015 and 2019. She also spent eight seasons in the NWSL, playing seven years with the Chicago Red Stars and most recently appearing with Angel City FC in 2023.

Ertz was sidelined for 18 months following the 2021 Olympics due to injuries and the birth of her son, but came back in time to play in the 2023 Women’s World Cup. She was named to the USWNT roster for April camp, less than a year after giving birth, and played every minute of the Americans’ four matches in New Zealand and Australia over the summer.

Following captain Becky Sauerbrunn’s injury that kept her off the World Cup squad, Ertz, known as a world-class midfielder, was tasked with playing center back for the Americans. After the team’s loss to Sweden in the round of 16, Ertz alluded to her impending retirement.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://1cc1932aa4eab27553763865ee7780a6.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I think for me it’s just emotional because it’s probably my last game ever being to able to have the honor to wear this crest, so I think it’s just … it’s just tough,” Ertz said. “I feel like it’s just an emotional time. It absolutely sucks. Penalties are the worst. But it’s an honor to represent this team, and I’m excited for the future of the girls.”

Required reading

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 6: USA fans dressed up in red, white and blue wave a USA flag to show support for their team during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between Winner Group G and Runner Up Group E at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 6, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Joe Prior/Visionhaus via Getty Images)

56% of USWNT fans surveyed say team has fallen behind, 55% disagree with Carli Lloyd

Meg LinehanAug 22, 2023

It’s a nervy time for USWNT supporters. Vlatko Andonovski is out as head coach, Kate Markgraf is out as general manager — and there’s not much else actually known about the strategic plan for the women’s program under the guidance of U.S. Soccer technical director Matt Crocker at this time. Last week, we asked for your thoughts and opinions around the team following their round of 16 exit in the World Cup and your level of concern about the NWSL, youth national teams and more. Over 2,000 of you voted, and plenty of you had even more to say when we asked for your thoughts in your words. Here are the results of our USWNT survey.


So who’s the next USWNT head coach? We’re probably not going to know the answer for at least a month or two. Unfortunately, the leading choice for most of you — Sarina Wiegman — is very unlikely to depart her role with the Lionesses. And despite the loss in the final, her name is being linked to plenty of roles. 

“I’m staying out of it,” Wiegman said last week. “I’ve heard it (from the press officer) but no, I’m with England and I’m really happy with England, and I have a contract until 2025.” 

Laura Harvey, who has U.S. Soccer experience and just signed a contract extension with OL Reign, earned 27.5% of the votes, and 21.7% of those who took the survey either left this one blank or wrote in a name. Write-ins obviously didn’t pick up a ton of consensus, but San Diego Wave FC head coach Casey Stoney led this category with 11 votes, followed by Nigeria WNT manager Randy Waldrum with seven.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://0f17606737f2bf7db5518a7b919f1cb2.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Some of you also used the write-in to provide more specific plans, such as Laura Harvey coaching through the Olympics, then running a coaching search. It’s an interesting premise – figure out a short-term solution with a coach that most players know, considering the tight timeline until the next major tournament, then determine if it could also be a longer-term solution through the 2027 World Cup or if a fresh search is necessary. Is a plan like that fair to Harvey, who’d have to give up the Reign job for a far less secure role? Ultimately, a decision like that is up to her.

Our next question became a bit of a moot point by the time the survey went up, with general manager Kate Markgraf and U.S. Soccer announcing that she’ll depart her role at the end of the month. It’s clear from the survey results that most of you won’t mind that decision, with 73.8% of the respondents (1,945 for this question) voting that she should not remain as the head of the women’s national team program.

Markgraf’s departure is just another piece of the turnover across the federation’s sporting side. Crocker was hired earlier this year, following the departure of Earnie Stewart, but USMNT general manager Brian McBride also left the program. It should allow Crocker to design the sporting side in his vision, but one problem that this survey might reveal is that many of you have some questions about his ability to lead.

Now, we didn’t give folks the opportunity to write-in why that might be, but considering the number of strays USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter picked up in the final write-in question on the survey, there’s definitely some influence from the end result of the coaching search on the men’s side that appears to be carrying over.

Next up: the biggest problem for the USWNT right now — and while this was a write-in, there were three clear threads that you all agreed on: development, coaching and tactics. Many of you simply picked one of those three options and wrote it in as a single word. Injuries also got plenty of nods, but the big three came through time and time again, no matter if it was a single word or a whole paragraph of thoughts.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://0f17606737f2bf7db5518a7b919f1cb2.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Many of you also focused on the idea of the team’s identity. Here’s a sample of some comments from this question:

“No team identity in how they play. No structure, no system.” 

“Playing style vs. identity. Who are they trying to be on the field vs. who they truly are.” 

“They’re rudderless.”

And there were the big-picture thinkers, too. One person wrote, “U.S. Soccer/infrastructure. It isn’t a talent issue.” Another: “Fractured youth landscape.” 

But maybe this one sums it up best: “Oof. I think the biggest problem is that there isn’t one thing.”

When it comes to leadership voices you want in the mix, regardless of roles, of the 945 write-ins we received, the ‘99ers and other former players absolutely led the way. We’ve seen their influence start to grow within the NWSL, especially across the ownership ranks of teams like Angel City FC and Bay FC, but it’s clear that there’s some real trust there on their voices at every level of the game. Brandi Chastain was the most common name across the board, but Julie Foudy and Mia Hamm also got numerous name-checks. Of the more recent generation of players, everyone from Megan Rapinoe, Alex Morgan, Becky Sauerbrunn, Tobin Heath and so on earned at least 25+ write-ins, but Carli Lloyd proved another popular pick. Lloyd had a number of people specifically saying she should not be a former player in the mix, however, unlike most others.

In terms of coaches, Laura Harvey got the most write-ins here with over 70, followed by former USWNT head coach Jill Ellis with over 60.

Back to Carli Lloyd for a moment. Her comments on the USWNT turned out to be one of the biggest storylines of the tournament, for better or worse, and the team pushed back on them during the tournament itself. Over 2,000 of you voted on this one, and it was a close vote — but 55.3% decided that they did not agree with her assessment. 

On the matter of U.S. players needing to play their club soccer abroad to better challenge themselves, it seems like the public sentiment is turning here — a majority of you think that they should be looking overseas. USWNT captain Lindsey Horan is staying in Lyon, and midfielder/forward Catarina Macario made the move to Chelsea, alongside forward Mia Fishel with her transfer from Tigres.

ADVERTISEMENT

The competition for top talent is only going to get more heated, but in reality, this won’t be a one-size-fits-all approach for the U.S. talent pool.

Onto the NWSL — and yes, there’s some concern here about the league following this World Cup. It’s more than just the USWNT exiting in the round of 16 that should be ringing some alarm bells: other NWSL-heavy national teams like Brazil and Canada also underperformed in this tournament. Germany crashing out in the group stage helps prove that it’s not just about a single league or a single root cause, but 69.1% of you think that the NWSL should be considering its global standing moving forward.

And if the NWSL should be worried, there’s even more concern about the state of the youth national teams. 

As a reminder, here’s what I wrote about the U-17s and the U-20s following the 0-0 draw between the USWNT and Portugal in the group stage:

The last time the U-20s won their World Cup was in 2012. Over the next three tournaments, their final placement got worse with each successive tournament: fourth place in Papua New Guinea in 2016 (losing to Japan), ninth in France 2018, 11th in Costa Rica 2022. The last two times, the U.S. failed to advance from their group.

It’s even rougher for the U-17s. Their best performance in the World Cup was in the inaugural one for the age group, in 2008 — held in New Zealand. The U-17s finished second there, but failed to advance from their group in 2016 and 2018 (finishing 10th and 13th place, respectively), and in the most recent U-17 World Cup, they lost to Nigeria in the quarterfinal for a sixth place finish.

Finally, the big one: has the U.S. fallen behind other nations when it comes to the performance of the women’s program? A slim majority voted yes. 

Is it as clear-cut as a yes/no question on a survey? No, probably not. But this is a clear reflection of some of the nervousness surrounding the USWNT right now, whether that’s the performance of the team, the coaching, the tactics, or the pathway of development. As we’ve been saying for a while, there’s a lot on the table when it comes to fallout and fixes, and with England and Spain making the final, there are some easy comparisons to be made.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://0f17606737f2bf7db5518a7b919f1cb2.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

And finally, we let you have the mic for any final thoughts, and most of you used it as a chance to push back on some of the yes/no nature of the questions, especially the last one.“The rest of the world is catching up AND the U.S. has fallen behind — it can be two things,” read one answer. On the same theme: “The rest of the world catching up is a good thing for the sport as a whole, and to me, that is much more important than the USWNT’s failure.” Another pushed back that this should even be considered a failure on that level: “USWNT dominated the world for 20 years. That’s DONE. Quit obsessing about it! This is NOT a failure. The women’s game is now just like the men’s — anyone can win. Good! This is sport.”

There were a number of comments here about youth development, particularly the pay-to-play model. “The system needs more openness,” one person wrote. 

And some expressed frustrations with the lack of communication at this time from the federation. For instance: “Tired of the federation being invisible when the going gets tough… Crocker and (Cindy) Parlow Cone (U.S. Soccer president) should be doing a media tour right now talking about the ‘next stage’ for both the men’s and women’s program. Instead crickets.” As someone who wrote about the vacuum of information, timelines and process right now, I agree. And some of you left us with new questions to ponder. “The performances from 2011-2019 were the (outstanding) aberration here. The USWNT performed as expected this World Cup, and a loss in penalties is heartbreakingly normal for elite teams. The real question is: what took so long for the rest of the world (i.e. England, Spain), whose soccer institutions for men far out-date ours, to catch up to a country who mainstreamed soccer in the 1990s?”Over 2,000 votes later, we’re not any closer to knowing most of the true answers to these big-picture questions around the USWNT and the program as a whole, but the survey was revealing in showing how supporters and fans are thinking about the team in this moment, a few weeks out from the loss to Sweden. 

(Photo: Joe Prior/Visionhaus via Getty Images)

Meg Linehan is a senior writer for The Athletic who covers the U.S. women’s national team, the National Women’s Soccer League and more. She also hosts the weekly podcast “Full Time with Meg Linehan.” Follow Meg on Twitter @itsmeglinehan

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

9/1/23 US Roster Drops, Champs League Groups Set, Ertz Retires, Indy 11 Home Sat on 5 gm unbeaten streak,

Indy 11 plays Miami FC Sat 7 pm on 5 Game Unbeaten Streak

Look who has themselves back in the playoff picture. The Boys in Blue stay at home looking to extend their five game unbeaten streak in a match-up against The Miami FC this Sat night at 7 pm. The Eleven are coming off a 2-1 win vs Loudoun United FC and are 4-0-1 in their last five games. With a 10-9-8 record, Indy is sixth in the USLC Eastern Conference. Miami is 3-2-0 in its last five matches and is coming off a 2-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rowdies. MIA is 10th in the Eastern Conference at 7-11-8.

American’s Overseas  

Captain America Christian Pulisic had a great second weekend at AC Milan as he scored this blistering goal (Italian Call) and the Italian fans are loving him. Yanus Musah also played the last 25 minutes or so and had some good moments.  AC Milan will travel to defending league Champ Roma in a early season match-up at 2:45 pm on Paramount plus.  Fulham American’s Tim Ream and Jedi Robinson had a solid tie last weekend with Arsenal and will travel to Man City Sat at 10 am on Peacock. Notingham Forest and American keeper Matt Turner almost stole a win last weekend in a 3-2 loss with a some great saves @ Man United before losing in ET – they will travel to Chelsea at 10 Sat on USA. Josh Sargent was off to a great start for Norwich scoring 3 goals in 3 games before this goal & Injury which might put him out for months.  Loved this clip on young American GK Gaga into the stands to celebrate his clean sheet   (see all the US players oversea’s games below)

MLS & Messi

Messi didn’t check in to his game in New York City vs the Red Bulls until the 60th minute – but he did not disappoint the majority Messi Crowd with this spectacular pass before his goal in Miami’s 2-0 win as seen here in Time’s Square. Here was the Messi cam from his visit to Cincy for the Open Cup win.  Of course the 11 game winning streak did come to an end Wed night at home vs Nashville in a 0-0 tie.  Sunday night its Miami @ LAFC 10 pm on Apple TV MLS Season Pass & Serius XM. (the Miami home radio crew is hilarious with their Spanglish coverage of the game).  Another huge match this weekend has Seattle hosting Portland for the Cascadia Cup – at 10:30 pm Sat on Apple TV Free. 

US Men Name Sept Friendly Camp & Team for Sept 9 & 12

Impressive roster for the Sept friendlies next weekend – as the US plays friendlies while Europe has Euro’s Qualications, Africa has the African Cup and South America does World Cup Quals starting Thursday – next Tues.  Cool to see Paredes and Cardoso and Malik Tillman along with newcomers Drake Callender & Ben Cremaschi from Inter Miami. 

GOALKEEPERS (3): Drake Callender (Inter Miami), Ethan Horvath (Nottingham Forest), Matt Turner (Nottingham Forest)

DEFENDERS (9): Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Genk), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg), Tim Ream (Fulham FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham FC), Miles Robinson (Atlanta United), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

MIDFIELDERS (6): Johnny Cardoso (Internacional), Ben Cremaschi (Inter Miami), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

FORWARDS (6): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin), Folarin Balogun (Arsenal FC), Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Tim Weah (Juventus)

Games to Watch

Friday is the American must see game with Pulisic & Musah traveling to Roma at 2:45 on Para+ (why no CBSSN?  Who knows).  Sunday its Liverpool hosting Aston Villa at 9 am on USA Network, while the feature game is at 11:30 am Man United traveling to Arsenal.  Spanish leagues Atletico Madrid vs Sevilla follows at 12:30 pm on ESPN+, while Philly hosting the NY Redbulls wraps up the evening on FS1 @ 7:30 pm.

Carmel Boys stay atop the Boys Soccer Poll for Indiana, while Hamilton SE edges Carmel for the top slot on the girls side. 

GAMES ON TV

Fri, Sep 1

2:30 pm EPSN+                  Dortmund vs Heidenheim

2:45 pm Para+                   Roma vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

3 pm USA                            Luton Town vs West Ham 

8 pm Para+                         KC Current vs Angel City

Sat, Sept 2

7:30 am USA                       Sheffield vs Everton

10 am USA                          Chelsea vs Nothingham Forest (Turner)

10 am Peacock,SiriusXM Man City vs Fulham (Ream, Jedi)

12:30 pm NBC                    Brighton vs New Castle  

12:30 pm ESPN+               MGladbach (Scaley) vs Bayern Munich

2:45 pm CBSSN                  Napoli vs Lazio

7 pm TV 8                            Indy 11 vs Miami FC

10:30 pm Apple TV Free Seattle Sounders vs Portland Timbers                 

7:30 pm Para+, Galazo   NC Courage vs NY/NJ Gothem NWSL

7:30 pm Para+                   Racing Louisville vs Portland Thorns NWSL

Sun, Sept 3

9 am USA                             Liverpool vs Aston Villa

11:30 am USA,Serius      Arsenal vs Man United

11:30 am ESPN+                Union Berlin (Aaronson, Pfuk) vs RB Leipzig

12:30 ESPN+, ESPND       Atletico Madrid vs Sevilla 

12:30 pm CBSSN               Inter Milan vs Fiorentina

2:45 pm Para+                   Empoli vs Juventus (Mckinney, Weah)

3 pm ESPN+                        Osasuna vs Barcelona

5 pm CBSSN                        Washington Spirit vs Chicago Red Stars (Naher) NWSL

8 pm Para+                         San Diego (Morgan) vs Houston Dash (Campbell) NWSL                

7:30 pm FS1                        Philly vs NYRB 

10 pm Apple MLS,Serius LAFC vs Inter Miami (Messi)

Wed, Sep 6

8 pm Para+                         KC Current vs NC Courage NWSL

10 pm CBSSN, Para+       OL Reign (Rapinoe) vs Racing Louisville NWSL

Thur, Sept 7   – Euro Qualifying

10 am FS2                            Kazahhstan vs Finland

12 noon FS2                        Lithuania vs Montenegro

12 noon beIN Sport         Ghana vs Central Africa Rep  African Cup

2:45 pm FS2                        France vs Ireland

7 pm                                      Colombia vs Venezuela

8 pm                                      Argentina vs Ecudor

Fri, Sept 8   – Euro Qualifying

12 noon FS2                        Georgia vs Spain

12 noon beIN sport         Egypt vs Ethiopia  African Cup

2:45 pm FS2                        Turkey vs Armenia

7 pm                                      Uraguay vs Chile

Sat, Sept 9  – Euro Qualifying

9 am FS2                              Azerbaijan vs Belgium  

12 noon FS2                        Ukraine vs England  

2:45 pm Fox Soccer+       Romania vs Israel  

5:30 pm TNT, Telemundo   USMNT vs Ezbekistan

7:30 pm MLS Pass ATV   Inter Miami vs Sporting KC

8:45 pm Apple TV             Minn United vs New England

10 pm TUDN                       Mexico vs Austraiia

10:30 pm Apple TV MLS Portland vs LAFC

Sun, Sept 10 – Euro Qualifying

9 am FS2                              Kazahstan vs Norhern Ireland  

12 noon FS2                        Finland vs Denmark  

2:45 pm FS2                        Albania vs Poland  

3 pm beIN sport               Gambia vs Congo

10 pm                                    El Salvador (Eric Zavaleta) vs T&T  

8 pm Apple TV MLS         LA Galaxy vs St Louis City

Mon, Sept 11 – Euro Qualifying

12 noon FS2                        Armenia vs Croatia  

2:45 pm FS2                        Portugal vs Luxembourg  

Tues, Sept 12 –

12 noon FS2                        Spain vs Cyprus

2:45 pm FS2                        Scotland vs England

8:30 pm TNT, Tele            USMNT vs Oman  

10 pm                                    Peru vs Brazil

Fri, Sept 15

2:30 pm ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Bayer Leverkusen

3 pm ESPN+                        Champ Southampton vs Leicester city

7:30 pm Para+                   Racing Louisville vs Houston Dash  NWSL

9 pm ESPN+                        New Mexico vs Indy 11

Sat, Sept 16

9 am Para+                          Juve vs Lazio

12 noon Para+                   Inter Milan vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

Indy 11

Preview #INDvMIA

USL Race to the Playoffs

Quinn Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Indy Eleven Acquire Goalkeeper Eric Walker on Loan

Recap – IND 2:1 LDN

US Men friendlies Sept 9 & 12

3 takeaways from Gregg Berhalter’s first USMNT roster back as head coach

Pulisic Scores Again for AC Milan

Brenden Aaronson gets sent off for time wasting… in the 21st minute

Yanks Abroad last Weekend

US Women & World

USWNT to face Colombia in October pair of friendlies

Two-time World Cup champion Julie Ertz retires from professional soccer

USWNT Great Julie Ertz Announces Her Retirement From Soccer

USWNT star Julie Ertz announces retirement
Julie Ertz, a two-time World Cup champion, announces retirement from professional soccer

USWNT Announces Megan Rapinoe’s Final International Appearance

Megan Rapinoe to play final USWNT match on September 24th

Dunn Talks World Cup and Coach A
Luis Rubiales news LIVE: Spain manager Jorge Vilda set for sack as family turns on Spanish FA president

FIFA president finally breaks silence, says World Cup kiss ‘should never have happened’

Spain’s Aitana Bonmati Wins EUFAs Best Player Award

Champions League

Champions League predictions: Arsenal, Man Utd, Man City and Newcastle’s fates assessed
Champions League draw: Paris Saint-Germain in ‘group of death’ and Harry Kane to return to England

Champions League draw: Newcastle face Paris St-Germain, Borussia Dortmund & AC Milan in Group F

A lot to like about Group E – Analysis

Bayern to face Man Utd in Champions League group stage, Newcastle draw PSG

EPL &  WORLD

England squad to face Ukraine and Scotland includes Jordan Henderson and Harry Maguire
Raheem Sterling misses out as Eddie Nketiah handed debut England squad call-up

Arsenal face Man Utd test as Nunez targets Liverpool start

Predictions for every PL match in Matchweek 4
10 things we learned from the Premier League – Week 3

Mancini eyes Asian Cup as he seals lucrative Saudi move

Haaland & Bonmati win Player of the Year UEFA Awards

MLS

FC Cincinnati has its playoff berth. Now, it’s closing in on MLS history.
Pat Noonan, two FC Cincinnati players named to MLS Team of Week following Atlanta win

Inter Miami CF Breaks Ground on New Stadium Amid Messi Madness

 Watching Messi’s latest goal in slow motion is the most satisfying thing ever

Messi’s TV Schedule

Messi’s perfect start with Miami comes to an end
Lionel Messi will miss one Inter Miami game in September for 2026 World Cup qualifying

Goal Keeping

Matt Turner Great Save vs Arsenal

Jacen Russell-Rowe  Crew GK Assist

Save of the Week USL
Palace sign England goalkeeper Henderson from Manchester United

Florida’s GK Alexa Goldberg is SEC Defensive Soccer Player of the Week

Golden generation Dutch keeper Jongbloed dies aged 82

Reffing

Man check out these goodlooking Refs for the tourney at North Central last Saturday
my first visit to Brebeuf for a Soccer game -great to see Coach Carlos Zavelta – here with Jason Wubu (r)

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ====================== 

US Men

USMNT to play Nations League quarterfinal home leg in Austin on November 16th  By Donald Wine II

Champions League group draw 2023-24: Man Utd vs Bayern, Newcastle face PSG

Bayern Munich's English forward #09 Harry Kane celebrates his 2-0 during the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and FC Augsburg in Munich, southern Germany on August 27, 2023. (Photo by CHRISTOF STACHE / AFP) / DFL REGULATIONS PROHIBIT ANY USE OF PHOTOGRAPHS AS IMAGE SEQUENCES AND/OR QUASI-VIDEO (Photo by CHRISTOF STACHE/AFP via Getty Images)

By The Athletic Staff6h ago


Manchester United will face Harry Kane’s new Bayern Munich side in the group stage of the 2023-24 Champions League, while Newcastle United will meet Paris Saint-Germain.United, who memorably beat Bayern in the 1999 final, will also take on Copenhagen and Galatasaray in Group A, while champions Manchester City will face RB Leipzig, Red Star Belgrade and Young Boys in Group G.PSGBorussia Dortmund and AC Milan have been drawn in a heavyweight Group F, alongside Newcastle United — returning to the competition for the first time in two decades.

The 32 teams were drawn from four pots into eight groups at a ceremony in Monaco, with sides from the same country unable to face each other until the knockout rounds.Real Madrid, 14-time winners, will take on Napoli, Braga and Union Berlin, while Barcelona have been drawn against Porto, Shakhtar Donetsk and Antwerp.The group stage runs from September to December, with UEFA set to confirm the full fixture list and kick-off times by Saturday morning at the latest.Wembley Stadium in London will host the final on June 1, 2024.

Champions League groups in full

Group A: Bayern Munich, Manchester United, Copenhagen, Galatasaray

Group B: SevillaArsenal, PSV, Lens

Group C: Napoli, Real Madrid, Braga, Union Berlin

Group D: Benfica, Inter Milan, Red Bull Salzburg, Real Sociedad

Group E: Feyenoord, Atletico Madrid, Lazio, Celtic

Group F: Paris Saint-Germain, Borussia Dortmund, AC Milan, Newcastle United

Group G: Manchester City, RB Leipzig, Red Star Belgrade, Young Boys

Group H: Barcelona, Porto, Shakhtar Donetsk, Antwerp


When are the Champions League group games?

The full fixture schedule will confirmed in due course.

  • Fixture 1: September 19/20, 2023
  • Fixture 2: October 3/4, 2023
  • Fixture 3: October 24/25, 2023
  • Fixture 4: November 7/8, 2023
  • Fixture 5: November 28/29, 2023
  • Fixture 6: December 12/13, 2023

How does the Champions League group stage work?

Teams in each group play each other twice, home and away, with the top two advancing to the round of 16.The third-placed sides in each group transfer to the Europa League knockout round play-offs, where they will face the Europa League group runners-up for a place in the last 16 of that competition.


Other key 2023-24 Champions League dates

Wembley will host the 2023-24 Champions League final (Justin Tallis/Getty Images)

  • Round of 16 draw: December 18, 2023
  • Round of 16 first leg: February 13, 14, 20 & 21, 2024
  • Round of 16 second leg: March 5, 6, 12 & 13, 2024
  • Quarter-final and semi-final draw: March 15, 2024
  • Quarter-final first leg: April 9 & 10, 2024
  • Quarter-final second leg: April 16 & 17, 2024
  • Semi-final first leg: April 30, 2024 & May 1, 2024
  • Semi-final second leg: May 7, 2024 & May 8, 2024
  • Final: June 1, 2024
USMNT analysis

Red Hot Pulisic & Weah highlight USMNT roster. Cremsachi earns big callup

The new USMNT roster is out and ASN’s Brian Sciaretta breaks it down for you. Gregg Berhalter will make his return to the team and his roster includes many mainstays, some big dual national news, and some surprises. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED AUGUST 30, 2023 12:10 PM

IN HIS RETURN AS THE head coach of the United States national team, Gregg Berhalter today announced his 24 player roster for the upcoming camp that will include friendlies against Uzbekistan (September 9 in St. Louis) and Oman (September 12 in Minnesota). The roster contains surprise inclusions and a long list of players who are missing due to injury.

Specifically, the following players are listed as out due to injury

  •        Tyler Adams
  •        Taylor Booth
  •        Cameron Carter-Vickers
  •        Sean Johnson
  •        Gio Reyna
  •        Josh Sargent
  •        Zack Steffen
  •        Walker Zimmerman

Here is the roster along with some thoughts.

DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (CLUB/COUNTRY; CAPS/GOALS)

GOALKEEPERS (3): Drake Callender (Inter Miami; 0/0), Ethan Horvath (Nottingham Forest/ENG; 8/0), Matt Turner (Nottingham Forest/ENG; 32/0)

DEFENDERS (9): Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 26/2), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo/ITA; 0/0), Mark McKenzie (Genk/BEL; 11/0), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg/GER; 0/0), Tim Ream (Fulham/ENG; 51/1), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 10/1), Antonee Robinson (Fulham/ENG; 36/2), Miles Robinson (Atlanta United; 25/3), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 6/0)

MIDFIELDERS (6): Johnny Cardoso (Internacional/BRA; 7/0), Ben Cremaschi (Inter Miami; 0/0), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo/ESP; 16/0), Weston McKennie (Juventus/ITA; 44/11), Yunus Musah (AC Milan/ITA; 27/0), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 4/0)

FORWARDS (6): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin/GER; 32/7), Folarin Balogun (Arsenal/ENG; 2/1), Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes; 8/1), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 16/7), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan/ITA; 60/25), Tim Weah (Juventus/ITA; 31/4)

FORM WATCH

In terms of form, the players will arrive at a mixed level.

Pulisic and Weah are playing terrific soccer right now to start the season. It will be very interesting to see both arrive in camp again under Berhalter as both players publicly expressed support for him. Robinson also played well at Fulham and Turner has been strong to start his time at Nottingham Forest.

What is interesting too is that 12 players on this roster are with different clubs than where they were at the start of 2023. The player pool is largely in flux. Many players such as Brenden Aaronnson at Union Berlin or Weston McKennie at his return to Juventus are still getting their feet wet. Ricardo Pepi is also transitioning to a backup role but one where PSV will want to bring him along gradually.

DUAL NATIONAL NEWS

But the roster also includes significant dual national news is that Inter Miami’s Benja Cremaschi has been selected as he has emerged as one of the most impressive teenagers in MLS and is also a dual national with options. Last winter, he was playing with Argentina’s U-20 team and lately has stood out playing alongside Lionel Messi. In recent interviews (including to ASN in March), he has said that he is in contact with both federations.

Kristoff Lund, meanwhile, is in the process of making his one-time switch from Denmark. He has been playing with Denmark’s youth teams as a left back but has fallen out of the picture there. Recently he sealed a transfer from Hacken in Sweden to Palermo of Serie B. He is Olympic eligible.

Lund appears to be more of a wild card pick. Last season he helped guide Hacken to the Allsvenskan title and now he is in Serie B with Palermo (but he has yet to play). But the U.S. team has several players competing for the backup left back spot behind Robinson – including Caleb Wiley, Jonathan Tolkin, DeJuan Jones – and even youth options like Noah Allen. Did Lund quickly surpass these players?

YOUTH IS SERVED

Of the 24 players on the roster, nine would be age-eligible for the U.S. U-23 Olympic next year with the birth year cutoff of 2001 and younger (Lund, Paredes, Scally, Cardoso, Cremaschi, Tillman, Musah, Cowell, Pepi).

Not every player will make the Olympic team. Some will play with the full national team next year instead and some have eligibility issues for the Olympics given that they played with another country in Olympic qualifying. But nine players being born in 2001 or later shows a youthful twist.

PAREDES & CALLENDER

Aside from Lund, two players who are looking for their first national team caps are Kevin Paredes and Drake Callender. Both have earned their way here.

Paredes is coming off the U-20 World Cup and last season was a regular off the bench for Wolfsburg. He is listed as a defender but typically he plays more left wing than left back. But he has been among the most exciting players of the 2003/04 birth years. His national team inclusion always seemed as if it was a matter of time.Callender, meanwhile, has raised his game in 2023 with Miami. Even before Messi’s arrival he was making inroads into the U.S. team. But with Zack Steffen no-man’s land with his club situation and Ethan Horvath also no playing, it is important to have a goalkeeper who is playing.

REYNA/BERHALTER REUNION ON PAUSE

Gio Reyna was not expected to be part of this roster. While he just returned to training at Borussia Dortmund, he has still not played a game since the Nations League Final.We know through Vanity Fair that Gregg Berhalter is still yet to sit down and speak with Reyna and he has sought the advice of mediators. But that reunion will be a huge story and one that will still have to wait.

NOTABLE OMISSIONS

There is an interesting list of players who are healthy and not on this list.Caleb WileyJohn Tolkin, and DeJuan Jones have all been important left backs for the U.S. team and youth national teams over the past year. Tolkin and Wiley, in particular, are eligible for the U.S. Olympic team. But Berhalter instead went with Lund.

Gaga Slonina is also expected to be an Olympic option but for this camp, Berhalter went with Callender and Horvath as backup options. Slonina has made three starts with Eupen in Belgium since arriving on loan from Chelsea.

Brandon Vazquez is one of the top center forwards in MLS and is poised to make a move abroad. With Josh Sargent suffering a serious injury, it might have opened the door but Berhalter has instead kept with two center forwards in Pepi and Balogun.

Brenden Aaronson called up, Mark McKenzie returns to the USMNT for September friendlies

McKenzie got his first call-up since late March, after being left out of the Nations League final four and Gold Cup rosters. by Jonathan Tannenwald Philly Published Aug. 30, 2023, 11:34 a.m. ET

Union alum Mark McKenzie is back with the U.S. men's soccer team for the first time since March.
Union alum Mark McKenzie is back with the U.S. men’s soccer team for the first time since March.Christof Koepsel / Getty Images

Though the opponents are relatively minor, U.S. men’s soccer team manager Gregg Berhalter has called in his major players for his first games back in charge of the program.Hershey’s Christian Pulisic, Medford’s Brenden Aaronson, and fellow attacking stars Weston McKennie, Yunus Musah, Tim Weah, and Folarin Balogun are among the 24 players on the squad for games against Uzbekistan on Sept. 9 and Oman on Sept. 12.The defense includes Antonee Robinson and Bear, Del.’s Mark McKenzie, who got his first call-up since late March. McKenzie was left out of the Nations League final four and Gold Cup rosters, the marquee events of the year so far. Starting goalkeeper Matt Turner also is on the roster.“He’s always been playing at a top level in Belgium,” Berhalter said of McKenzie. “For us, when we’re looking at this centerback pool in particular, with a couple guys out, we think this is a great opportunity for him. It was a decision we made between him and Auston Trusty, and we felt like this is a good moment for Mark, a good opportunity for Mark to show that he belongs with this group.”Trusty, a Media native and fellow Union alumnus, recently joined England’s Sheffield United after it was promoted back to the Premier League.

» READ MORE: Gregg Berhalter’s return as USMNT manager is official

Mark McKenzie (center) working out in a practice with Genk earlier this month.
Mark McKenzie (center) working out in a practice with Genk earlier this month.Virginie Lefour / Belga Mag / AFP via Getty Images

The roster features two notable newcomers. The highest-profile is midfielder Benjamin Cremaschi, an Inter Miami academy product, now a teammate of Lionel Messi, and the son of Argentine parents. Cremaschi, 18, has been part of the U.S. under-19 team and Argentina’s under-20 team. Messi has joined the latter’s recruiting effort, and the senior U.S. invitation is a loud countermove.Playing in these games wouldn’t tie him to the U.S., because they’re just friendlies. But if he does play, it will be notable.“We’re excited about the prospect of bringing him into camp; we’re excited to see what he can bring to our team and to our formation because we believe in him and we think he’s an excellent player,” Berhalter said. “And then it’s just going to be about the environment and him feeling comfortable with everyone.”

Benjamim Cremaschi (left) plays with Lionel Messi at Inter Miami.
Benjamim Cremaschi (left) plays with Lionel Messi at Inter Miami.Lynne Sladky / AP

The second newcomer is left back Kristoffer Lund. He was born to a Danish father and American mother, grew up playing for Denmark’s youth teams, and has filed a change of nationality application to play for the United States. The 21-year-old plays for Italian second-division club Palermo, and if he’s good enough to stick, he’ll be welcome depth.A long list of injured absentees includes captain Tyler Adams, Downingtown’s Zack Steffen, Gio Reyna, Josh Sargent, and Walker Zimmerman.

Lower-ranked opponents

Why are Uzbekistan, ranked No. 74 by FIFA, and No. 71 Oman the opponents? Because there were barely any better options. Europe’s nations have qualifiers for next summer’s European Championship, Africa has qualifying for this winter’s Cup of Nations, and South America has the start of its qualifying marathon for the 2026 World Cup. Traditional Asian powers Japan and South Korea are playing friendlies in Europe, and Australia is playing Mexico at the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium on the same night as U.S.-Uzbekistan. Canada was available, but the U.S., currently ranked 11, has seen enough of Canada for a while — and the Canadian federation is in turmoil.

» READ MORE: For Zack Steffen, coming home to Downingtown still means a lot to the USMNT goalkeeper

Gregg Berhalter (center) will be back on the sidelines as U.S. manager next month.
Gregg Berhalter (center) will be back on the sidelines as U.S. manager next month.Ashley Landis / AP

This year’s biggest games are yet to come. In October, the Americans will host two big-time opponents: Germany in East Hartford, Conn., and Ghana in Nashville. November will bring a Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal series that also will serve as qualifying for next year’s Copa América tournament that the U.S. is hosting. (Though it’s the host, it agreed to qualify because it’s officially guest-hosting South America’s event.)The Nations League opponent will be determined by qualifying games played this month and next month. The U.S. earned a bye to the quarterfinals by reaching the previous tournament’s semis.

Same as the old boss?

Berhalter hasn’t been on the U.S. bench since last fall’s World Cup. His contract expired at the end of the year, and the final months of his tenure were consumed by the scandal over his broken relationship with Reyna and parents Claudio and Danielle. He officially was rehired in June.In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, Berhalter admitted that while he has spoken with many U.S. players since regaining the job, he hasn’t spoken with Gio Reyna yet. And when asked whether he could repair ties with the parents, who’d been close with Berhalter and his wife for decades, he answered after a long pause: “I don’t think that’s a subject I’m comfortable talking about.”

» READ MORE: A timeline of the Reyna-Berhalter scandal that rocked U.S. soccer

Gregg Berhalter admitted he hasn't spoken directly with Gio Reyna since regaining the helm of the U.S. men's soccer team.
Gregg Berhalter admitted he hasn’t spoken directly with Gio Reyna since regaining the helm of the U.S. men’s soccer team.John Locher / AP

There undoubtedly will be a lot of noise around Berhalter’s return, whether from scandal-seekers or fans who didn’t want him back for on-the-field reasons. But it’s no longer questionable that a lot of players backed his return, and that might help the diplomatic side of Reyna’s return.“I look forward to having conversations with him, I look forward to watching his progress, and hopefully him getting back on the field,” Berhalter said. “And then for us, hopefully being able to include him in the October camp against two good opponents.”

USMNT roster for September games

Goalkeepers (3): Drake Callender (Inter Miami),Ethan Horvath (Nottingham Forest, England), Matt Turner (Nottingham Forest)

Defenders (9): Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven, Netherlands), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo, Italy), Mark McKenzie (Genk, Belgium), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg, Germany), Tim Ream (Fulham, England), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace, England), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Miles Robinson (Atlanta United), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach, Germany)

Midfielders (6): Johnny Cardoso (Internacional, Brazil), Benjamin Cremaschi (Inter Miami), Luca de la Torre (Celta de Vigo, Spain), Weston McKennie (Juventus, Italy), Yunus Musah (AC Milan, Italy), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven, Netherlands)

Forwards (6): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin, Germany), Folarin Balogun (AS Monaco, France), Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Tim Weah (Juventus)

» READ MORE: Medford’s Brenden Aaronson is enjoying his new home with Union Berlin

The USMNT’s autumn schedule

Saturday, Sept. 9: vs. Uzbekistan at St. Louis, 5:30 p.m. (TNT, Telemundo 62, Universo, Peacock)

Tuesday, Sept. 12: vs. Oman at St. Paul, Minn., 8:30 p.m. (TNT, Universo, Peacock)

Saturday, Oct. 14: vs. Germany at East Hartford, Conn., 3 p.m. (Telemundo 62, Peacock, English broadcast TBD)

Tuesday, Oct. 17: vs. Ghana at Nashville, 8:30 p.m. (Universo, Peacock, English broadcast TBD)

Thursday, Nov. 16: vs. opponent TBD at Austin, Texas, Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal first leg, 8:30 p.m. (TNT, Universo, Peacock)

Monday, Nov. 20 or Tuesday, Nov. 21: at opponent TBD, Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal second leg, time TBD (broadcast TBD)

How Miles Robinson and Cade Cowell can maximize USMNT call-ups for future transfers

Feb 25, 2023; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; San Jose Earthquakes forward Cade Cowell (44) and Atlanta United FC defender Miles Robinson (12) battle for the ball in the second half at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

By Jeff RueterAug 31, 202323


On Wednesday, Gregg Berhalter announced the first roster of his second tenure as manager of the United States men’s national team. Among the 24 players selected, only four ply their trade in Major League Soccer. While uncapped Inter Miami duo Drake Callender and Ben Cremaschi have stayed in the headlines thanks to their new iconic club teammates, the other two, Cade Cowell and Miles Robinson, enter with something to prove as many European transfer windows close on Friday until January.When Cowell made his MLS debut in 2020 as a 16-year-old, the conversation was about his potential. The discussion remains the same today. The San Jose Earthquakes homegrown broke through two years ago, notching five goals and six assists across 1,663 MLS minutes, an impressive return for a teenage winger. At the time, head coach Matías Almeyda praised his breakout season but pointed to specific areas Cowell needed to improve to make the professional leap.“We can’t settle on his power,” Almeyda told The Athletic in 2021 amidst a solid stretch for Cowell. “We can’t settle on his pace. He has to aspire to play in Europe, and we’ve talked about this. And for that, one needs to have so many small technical skills. He still has to learn those. He’s young.”Almeyda highlighted a need for greater precision with both feet, sharper movement off the ball and development into more of an aerial threat. However, it was the coach and not the teenage sensation who first made his debut for a European side. Almeyda led AEK Athens to a 2022-23 Super League Greece title before getting the club to the brink of UEFA Champions League inclusion — Athens fell in the final playoff round against Royal Antwerp on Wednesday.In Atlanta, Robinson plays a very different role than Cowell and is at a very different stage of his career, but the center back is also waiting for a career-changing move abroad. Robinson was a staple of Berhalter’s rosters throughout World Cup qualifying, starting 11 of the team’s 14 qualifiers and forming a steady partnership with Walker Zimmerman. However, he suffered a torn Achilles tendon playing on Atlanta United’s turf, ending his hopes of a World Cup debut and opening the door for Tim Ream’s reintegration into the team sheet.

“It was definitely tough at some moments, more mentally than physically,” Robinson told MLSsoccer.com in March regarding his recovery. “Watching the World Cup was also mentally pretty tough. I use it for motivation at this point.”Although he watched the team’s run to the round of 16 from his sofa, he returned in time for Atlanta’s season opener — ironically enough, against Cowell’s Earthquakes.Diving into the data, here’s what the two players, at crucial moments in their careers, bring to the USMNT and what they can show to prospective teams.

Cowell looks to push past potential

In Almeyda’s San Jose stead came head coach Luchi Gonzalez, who played a key role in developing several FC Dallas homegrown players who turned into U.S. internationals, including Ricardo Pepi, Reggie CannonBryan Reynolds and Tanner Tessman. Each earned moves abroad after debuting with the MLS side, giving plenty of reasons why Gonzalez could similarly impact Cowell’s development.

But that potential hasn’t come to fruition in the box scores. Cowell has not scored a goal this year and has three assists in 1,347 minutes of play across the regular season and Leagues Cup. Of the 19 U.S.-eligible wingers who have played at least 500 minutes for an MLS team this year, none have a lower rate of combined shots on target and chances created per 90 than Cowell’s 0.71 output. He has remained in his usual post on the left wing for Gonzalez, whose Quakes most often play as a 4-3-3 or a 4-2-3-1. Of the 188 U.S.-eligible players of any position who have logged 500 minutes or more, only two have a worse xG performance than Cowell’s -3.53 return (Tom Barlow and Teal Bunbury, at -3.81 and -3.65, respectively).

He hasn’t been any less willing to play with the ball at his feet, though. Cowell has averaged 58.1 take-ons per 90 minutes, an impressive rate considering his average of 38.3 touches per 90. On ten occasions across the regular season and Leagues Cup, he has collected the ball and dribbled at least 13 feet before taking a shot. None of those resulted in a goal.

“Cade is a physical specimen,” Gonzalez told The Athletic during San Jose’s preseason in Coachella Valley. “He’s one of the fastest and most explosive players in the league. It’s about him evolving and growing in terms of his timing, in terms of his decision-making, in terms of his pressing, in terms of his crossing and his finishing, his combination. He’s got such a high ceiling, and he’s had a great attitude and openness to learn and get better. His training habits have been very good.”

It may not be a great sign that, 18 months after Almeyda’s observation, Gonzalez had a similar prognosis for Cowell’s prospects. Nonetheless, the winger did garner genuine interest from Serie A side Bologna during this summer window. According to the Athletic’s Tom Bogert, the Italian club put forward a loan with a purchase proposal. The purchase option involved “an automatic trigger that was very likely to be met” and was set at $3 million before possibly rising to $5.5 million with add-ons.

Cowell was keen on the move, but San Jose countered by asking for more. Bologna said it was their final offer, instead signing Swedish left winger Jesper Karlsson from AZ Alkmaar. Cowell is now expected to finish the year with the Earthquakes, who dropped to eighth in the West after Wednesday night’s MLS slate and added fellow U.S. prospect Matthew Hoppe on loan earlier this month.

That said, it makes sense why Cowell is in this U.S. camp. The pool of wingers is relatively thin for this specific group. Gio Reyna and Taylor Booth are missing due to injury, while Alejandro Zendejas has left much to be desired from his first seven U.S. caps. The main alternatives are two veterans whose roles in Berhalter’s system aren’t in question, namely Jordan Morris and Paul Arriola.

Instead, 19-year-old Cowell will get a chance to train with the United States’ top attackers after his previous call-ups came among a heavily rotated roster. Perhaps taking reps alongside Christian Pulisic, Tim Weah and Folarin Balogun will give him another chance to reflect on his approach and find room for improvement. Now, it’s a matter of turning this opportunity into further progress towards garnering another European suitor.

Robinson working on his comeback

Robinson has logged 1,917 minutes across the regular season and Leagues Cup, also making a trio of starts for the U.S. during the Gold Cup and another in the Nations League semifinal against Mexico. Fortunately for club and country, he has recovered remarkably well from his pre-World Cup injury and is getting back to his previous form.

Be it in the air or against an opponent with a ball at their feet, Robinson has been difficult to get past. Of the MLS center backs ranked near or ahead of him in terms of winning tackles or stopping opponents on the dribble, none come close to his imperious aerial ability.obinson played one of his old hits this past weekend, rising to head a corner kick home for his first goal since November 7, 2021.Robinson is in the final months of his contract with Atlanta. PSV is considering signing a pre-contract agreement with the defender to bring him over at the start of the January window. Clubs in Germany and England are also weighing that option, according to Bogert. As he has less than half a year remaining on his pact, Robinson can legally discuss a possible free transfer at this stage.His salary could make it tricky for Atlanta or another MLS team to sign him as a free agent this winter without using a designated player slot. Robinson is currently the third highest-paid center back in the league, with his $1.4 million base salary trailing only Zimmerman and Matt Miazga of FC Cincinnati. At 26 years old, he may feel pressure to earn a move to Europe before those opportunities begin to close.Whatever comes next, both he and Cowell will hope their inclusion on Berhalter’s first roster of 2023 alerts another team or two to their quality and potential.

Berhalter ‘looking forward’ to conversations with Gio Reyna; more USMNT notes

LAS VEGAS, NV - JUNE 16: Gregg Berhalter speaks to the media after being announced as the head coach of the U.S. Mens National Team for U.S. Soccer during a USMNT Press Conference on June 16, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by John Todd/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Paul TenorioAug 30, 2023


Though Gio Reyna’s recovery from injury has prevented him from joining the U.S. men’s national team for its upcoming camp, coach Gregg Berhalter said he hopes to be able to bring Reyna along in October for friendlies against Germany and Ghana, and that he expects to speak with him ahead of that camp.

“Those are conversations that I look forward to and it’s just understanding sensitivities around it,” Berhalter said. “I mean, he’s a young player, I think for everyone involved it’s been a lot for the last six months. And we just want to do it in the best possible way to put him in position to help the team in a way that we know he can. And unfortunately, he was ruled out for this camp, but I look forward to continuing to monitor his progress at Dortmund and hopefully getting him back into camp in October.”Reyna was one of several players held out of this camp due to injury or fitness concerns as they work back from injury. Reyna has not played since picking up a calf injury in the CONCACAF Nations League final on June 18 and only started full-team training with Borussia Dortmund this week.


More from The Athletic


In a Wednesday press conference, Berhalter was asked if he felt he needed to explain to the team why he made comments at a leadership conference about issues within the locker room during the World Cup. In those comments, which were expected to be off the record under Chatham House rules and were an answer to a question after his presentation, Berhalter spoke about how he nearly sent a player home from the World Cup, but that the team culture overcame the issues at the tournament. The Athletic later reported the player in question was Reyna and detailed the issues with Reyna’s effort in training ahead of the opening game against Wales.Berhalter said he “immediately” communicated with team members after his comments were published by the Charter newsletter.“I sent a note to each and every one, every player and apologized for this getting out in the way that it did,” Berhalter said. “It was never about names, it’s more about an example of our strong team culture, and I felt that if it hurt one player, then it’s worth apologizing to the entire group. And that’s what I did.”Berhalter seemed to imply that the federation has been in touch with Reyna since Berhalter’s appointment — Reyna was a part of the team that played in the CONCACAF Nations League final shortly after Berhalter was officially reintroduced as manager of the team — and that Reyna has been “responding” but that they are being measured in when the coach and player sit down to talk.“For us, it’s understanding the sensitivity around the issues, understanding the right time, in the right way,” Berhalter said. “We’re committed to every single player in this player pool. And for us, it’s about how do we maximize communication with them and target it in a way that we’re getting the most out of each and every player. So for this, it’s just being a little bit more thoughtful, a little bit more sensitive to the past. And I look forward to having conversations with him. I look forward to watching his progress and hopefully him getting back on the field, and then for us hopefully being able to include him in the October camp against two good opponents.”Berhalter touched on several topics ahead of his first camp back with the national team for September friendlies against Uzbekistan in St. Louis on Sept. 9 and Oman in St. Paul, Minnesota on Sept. 12. Berhalter noted that the two countries rank ninth and tenth in the Asian Football Confederation and could be opponents in the 2026 World Cup, for which eight AFC teams will qualify.Berhalter also spoke about Lionel Messi’s impact on MLS and the busy transfer window involving Christian Pulisic, Folarin Balogun, and several other USMNT players.Here are some other topics Berhalter covered on Wednesday:


Crocker started in his role full-time on Aug. 2 (Brad Smith/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Working with Matt Crocker

Berhalter was named manager of the national team in between the Nations League semifinals and final in June, but he did not coach the Nations League final nor in the Gold Cup after that. Instead, he has been working with new U.S. soccer sporting director Matt Crocker to establish a staff and a “strategic plan” within the program and federation working toward the 2026 World Cup.“We spent three days together and really dissected every area of the USMNT, whether it’s scheduling, player pool, programs they want to implement,” Berhalter said. “Basically working on creating a strategic plan on working back from what we want to achieve, and then saying, ‘OK, here are some buckets that we’re gonna look to exploit and let’s think of programs in each of these buckets and let’s work on how we’re going to be successful in all these areas.’ So it was a really good time and I think productive, especially when now I can start and we can start unveiling this to the staff and to the players.”Asked about approaching a second cycle with the team, Berhalter said there is a freshness that the national team allows that’s different from the “boredom” that can occur with club soccer just because the team isn’t together all the time.He said the focus has been on building off the foundation of the 2022 cycle.“There’s been a lot of good work in building our identity both on and off the field,” Berhalter said. “And we want to continue that. … We want to basically acknowledge that, ‘OK, there’s been good work, but now we can take it to a different level. And here’s how we’re going to take it to a different level.’ And part of that is a player ownership model where they have more ownership in what’s happening. They are already empowered, and the leadership council has been very effective in communicating the voice of the team, but really we’re guides here and we all — the player pool, the staff — we all want the same thing, to be successful in 2026. That’s what we’re trying to achieve. And it’s just working together to do that.”

(John Todd/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Formation changes?

Toward the end of the last cycle, Berhalter’s U.S. teams functioned mostly in a 4-3-3 formation that looked to emphasize the strengths of its midfield. In Qatar, it was a system clearly built around a midfield trio of Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Yunus Musah.Under the two interim managers, Hudson and Callaghan, that formation started to shift some, and in the Nations League it was Reyna who stood out as a No. 10 in front of two defensive midfielders. But notably, that roster was missing Adams (and, in the final, McKennie).On Wednesday, Berhalter was asked if he was looking to use wingbacks or if he had given thought to moving out of the 4-3-3.

“I have always thought that this team could play in a system with wing backs,” Berhalter said. “Especially Antonee Robinson is a guy that could definitely do that. Lund can do that as well. On the right side, you see there’s players that have the ability to do that. For us, I think it’s more about just the general philosophy of how we want to play and what we’re trying to do. We want to be aggressive. We want to be high-pressing. We want to be able to control the ball, and I won’t really get caught up on the formation.”

Berhalter said the time between international windows allows the team to plan for opponents and adjust tactically for those teams.“Ideally, I’d like to go into the next World Cup having a back-three system and a back-four system in place,” Berhalter said. “And we’ll see how that develops over these next couple of years. But I think the biggest difference has been what we’ve been able to do in midfield, with the dynamic players that we have in midfield. When you have guys like Tyler and Weston and Yunus, it’s a tremendous engine that we are able to take advantage of.”

Balance with the 2024 Olympic team

Berhalter said that the U.S. is close to announcing an Olympic team coach, who will come from outside the U.S. senior team staff. With the men’s Olympic soccer tournament functioning as U-23 competition, the U.S. Olympic team could feature significant overlap with the senior team — nine players on this September roster are eligible. The Olympic team will have camps in September and October, but clubs are not obligated to release their players for Olympic duty.“We know how important that international experience is in terms of building a successful group and we expect to be working hand in hand with the Olympic group, especially when we’re talking about rosters because there is a lot of overlap in the rosters,” Berhalter said. “So really trying to figure out okay, what does game time look like in the senior team versus the Olympic team and trying to coordinate those efforts.”

New coaches and absentees

Berhalter announced his coaching staff would include his longtime assistant and former interim manager B.J. Callaghan, who guided the U.S. to the Nations League title, as well as U.S. under-20 coach Mike Varas. Berhalter said the team also hired Borussia Monchengladbach goalkeeper coach Fabian Otte and was finalizing a deal to hire Isaac Guerrero, who worked with Barcelona and Venezia.

Berhalter also noted that several players were not included due to injury, including Tyler Adams, Reyna, Cameron Carter-VickersZack Steffen, Taylor Booth, Walker Zimmerman, Sean JohnsonJosh SargentDeJuan Jones and Erik Palmer-Brown.

Paul Tenorio is a senior writer for The Athletic who covers soccer. He has previously written for the Washington Post, the Orlando Sentinel, FourFourTwo, ESPN and MLSsoccer.com. Follow Paul on Twitter @PaulTenorio

The USMNT’s Folarin Balogun on swapping Arsenal for Monaco: ‘I expect to produce here’

Greg O’Keeffe and Matt Slater Aug 31, 2023

He arrived hungry in every sense.Folarin Balogun had been unable to eat for hours due to medical blood tests ahead of a transfer he hopes will take his career to the next level. Once they were out of the way, he tucked into a plate of salmon and rice in the plush first-team dining room of his new club, Monaco.Earlier, on a whistle-stop tour of his new home, he visited the Jardin Exotique de Monaco — the best spot for views of the principality’s famously glittering harbour.“It’s like a painting,” he told the club staff accompanying him on the journey.The move is another bold stroke on the canvas for a 22-year-old who is no stranger to bold decisions. Having switched international allegiance from England to the USMNT in May, he has now chosen a permanent shift from the Premier League to France’s Ligue 1 after last season’s impressive loan spell there with Stade de Reims.“I believe that you get the best results in life when you’re not comfortable,” he told The Athletic at his unveiling on Thursday. “So that’s why I’ve taken myself out of my comfort zone, away from my family and friends, to improve as a player.”

Balogun takes in his new home (AS Monaco)

What does the €40million (£34.4m; $43.4m) move mean for the striker? Why have Monaco compromised their new policy of transfer austerity to bankroll his move? And what could it mean for his future with club and country?The Athletic examines the next step for one of European football’s, and the USMNT’s, most exciting young prospects.


Balogun joins an unusual club, in exotic surroundings, which is bidding to once again challenge Paris Saint-Germain’s supremacy in the French top flight.There are some links with his former team, Arsenal — Arsene Wenger led Monaco to the title in 1988 and another Arsenal legend, Thierry Henry, also played for and coached the club that play in red and white.Yet, in some notable ways, north London and Monaco are very different. For starters, Arsenal are a club from England’s capital that play in the English Premier League. The principality of Monaco is the world’s second smallest sovereign state, an enclave on the northern coast of the Mediterranean, sharing its land borders with France. It has its own royal family, dialect (Monegasque) and has become a major global banking hub and tax haven.Monaco have always played in the French football league, though, where they have enjoyed historic success, even if their games do not attract the same significant following as those of PSG, Marseille, Lyon and Lille.It is little wonder Balogun was impressed by his first views of the opulent harbour — luxury mega-yachts are regularly moored outside Monaco’s Stade Louis II ground — but it may take him time to adjust to the small crowds that attend matches.According to statistics site Transfermarkt, the stadium’s capacity is 18,523, but average attendances last season were just 7,095 — fewer than any other Ligue 1 club. By comparison, Stade de Reims’ was 13,602 and Marseille’s 62,623.Monaco’s owner, Dmitry Rybolovlev — the Russian oligarch and billionaire who arrived in 2011 and funds the club via a trust under his daughter Ekaterina’s name — wants to change that, although Balogun’s high-profile arrival is no longer typical of the way he wants to do it. In 2013, Monaco were one of Europe’s biggest spenders, signing James Rodriguez for €45million and paying even more for Radamel Falcao. But they also have a reputation for elite recruitment.This is the club that lured Kylian Mbappe from Paris to southern France and offered him his first taste of senior football. Monaco have leaned more heavily on their fine-tuned recruitment model over the past few seasons as the big fees have made way for even smarter value buys.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Inside Monaco: Paul Mitchell, their revamped talent factory and a team that runs and runs

At the end of last season, Englishman Paul Mitchell signalled his intention to stand down as the club’s sporting director (he remains in post for now) and Thiago Scuro, formerly of the Red Bull group, was named as the new director of football. Although Balogun had been on the club’s radar for some time, landing his signature was a major aim of the new man and his staff, along with head coach Adi Hutter, who replaced Philippe Clement in July.

Monaco’s sparkling new training centre (Matt Slater/The Athletic)

Monaco’s training ground is at the end of a twisting road in the mountains, back over the border in France, in a small village called La Turbie. If you thought places like Manchester United’s Carrington training ground were off the beaten track, this is on another level.There were still three fans sitting on the wall outside the modern six-floor facility when The Athletic arrived on Friday for the new signing’s first press conference as a Monaco player.Twelve camera operators and reporters waited for Balogun to arrive and, when he did, the forward was man-marked by the Brazilian Scuro. Scuro and Balogun spoke mainly in English (a quick “merci” from the player to his audience aside), translated for the French journalists present, and the New York-born player was relaxed, polite and thoughtful with his responses.In his opening remarks, Scuro conceded that Monaco had been “chasing Balogun for a while — it’s a long story — but we’re delighted to have him now”.In fact, Monaco had been tracking Balogun since before last season, when he scored 22 goals in all competitions for Reims, a mid-table club based in the north east of Paris in France’s Grand Est region. Such was his fine form that they began to fear his value was inflating beyond their means.They are a club going through change, with the need for a new spearhead to their attack becoming more apparent. Despite scoring 25 goals in all competitions himself last term, their first-choice striker Wissam Ben Yedder is 33 and less able to do what the team demands.The France international is also beset with off-field problems. Last month, Ben Yedder was accused of rape, attempted rape, and sexual assault. He spent 48 hours in custody with his younger brother, who faced the same accusations, where they were questioned by police in the Mediterranean resort of Nice.On August 11, prosecutors in Nice said the brothers, who deny any wrongdoing, had been charged and the pair were now subject to a judicial inquiry. If the outcome of that inquiry concludes there is enough evidence against them, they will stand trial.ADVERTISEMENT

In April, a Spanish court also gave Ben Yedder a six-month suspended prison sentence and fined him €133,799 for tax offences during his time as a Sevilla player.

Ben Yedder playing against RC Strasbourg earlier this month (Jonathan Moscrop/Getty Images)

Ben Yedder remains Monaco’s captain and scored again in their 3-3 draw at Nantes last week, but is also in the final year of his contract.Balogun is the future.The club’s recruitment team noted his prowess in a less attack-minded team last term and firmly believed he would flourish further under Hutter’s attacking, front-foot style, which requires a centre-forward to lead from the front. For them, that starts out of possession with a high-intensity press they no longer believe Ben Yedder can consistently perform.The latter will leave big shoes to fill. He is a fan favourite, but again, Monaco are confident Balogun can handle the expectations — as is the man himself.“There was competition at Arsenal and I wouldn’t expect to come to another top club and not face competition,” he said. “But for me, (Ben Yedder) is a legend and I’m looking forward to playing alongside him and learning from him.“I expect to produce here and a lot of the pressure is internal. Obviously, the price tag brings expectations, but I’m not afraid of that.”Over the last six transfer windows, Monaco’s most expensive signing was Dutch forward Myron Boadu, signed for €17million, so at nearly twice that fee, Balogun is a sign of renewed intent.It is also partly symbolic as well as practical. Next year is the club’s 100th anniversary and owner Rybolovlev wants the team back in the Champions League. Ligue 1’s top three clubs will qualify for that competition this season and, without any European football to detract focus from the league, the addition of Balogun is seen as the best way to achieve that return for 2024-25.“This is a statement signing,” said a club official, granted anonymity in order to protect their job. “We don’t spend this money anymore with this new management team. It’s not the Monaco of old.“But it’ll be a big year for the club and we want to get it right and have a quality team, so the signing of Denis Zakaria (the hugely experienced Swiss midfielder who spent last season on loan at Chelsea from Juventus) and Balogun are intent from the owner. Doing things right.“It’s us saying we know what Rennes and Marseille are spending so we need to be competitive.“Lens are giving it a go as well with their signing of Elye Wahi (from Montpellier) — a statement signing. It’s getting more crowded at the top of Ligue 1 with the other investment groups that have come in. Nice and Lyon want to be up there. This season, without Europe, we will be able to focus on the league and need strong performances, especially at the start of the season.”

Balogun and Scuro pose for the cameras (Matt Slater/The Athletic)

There is a lot riding on the deal.“But it’s not about gambling,” said Scuro. “It’s about trusting the character and skills of the player you’ve identified. I’ve often said that the signing is just one day. The development is just as important and it takes longer, but we have the people and the resources at Monaco to do that.”The skills they have identified were showcased at Reims last term, but less so during his previous loan spell in the English second tier with Middlesbrough in 2021-22, when Balogun scored just three goals in 21 appearances.“I was playing as the central striker at Reims last season, so it was easier for me as it was more familiar,” he explained. “At Middlesbrough, I played a different role, just behind the striker. It was a different focus but it was part of the plan to develop me as a player.”Monaco want to play to his strengths, which the club official identified as “running and attacking the depth very well”.Balogun’s impressive last-ditch counter-attack equaliser for Reims in a 1-1 draw with PSG last season is a case in point. The searing pace to burst through, round the goalkeeper and remain composed to hit the back of the net grabbed the attention of recruitment teams across Europe.For Monaco, he is not a one-dimensional sprinter, though. They see a player who can also come to the ball, link the play and allow team-mates to run in behind. In the 3-4-2-1 formation Hutter favours, Balogun’s presence should serve to liberate the likes of Takumi Minamino, Eliesse Ben Seghir and Breel Embolo.Where Ben Yedder’s physical decline means he only comes to the ball, Balogun is also expected to make clever runs off the back shoulder of defenders and find spaces with his movement.

Balogun’s stint on loan at Middlesbrough was part of his education (Alex Dodd – CameraSport via Getty Images)

Club staff are also excited by the potential of his link-up with their Brazil international full-backs Caio Henrique and Vanderson, who like to get forward and play strikers in but can also come inside and combine with Balogun if he drops to the ball.“We see him as a really good fit for our style; proactive on the front foot,” added the Monaco official. “We have 10 goals in three games already this season. He’ll be a really big part of scoring even more.“He scored against us here late in the season while a few of us were watching and it really emphasised how he can turn the game in an instant.”

GO DEEPER

‘It felt like we were going into a zombie apocalypse’ – Folarin Balogun’s lively Ligue 1 loan spell


If all this makes Balogun sound like a player Arsenal may have wanted to retain, then that does not reckon for Mikel Arteta’s singular vision and the club’s willingness to sell highly-rated academy graduates when they feel the time is right. Balogun joined Arsenal in 2012 as a 12-year-old and, come scholarship decision time, he was a winger who felt he was among the weakest players in his age group. “I told myself I only had two options: go hard or go home,” he said. “And, at 16, I had my best season ever. I was the top scorer in the team — I must have scored 40 goals. Even I was shocked at the transformation.”

Despite last season’s Ligue 1 heroics, the question of whether he could do it at the sharp end of the Premier League, or even be allowed the chance to demonstrate his quality, remained earlier this summer when he returned to Arsenal.Gabriel Jesus is first choice at the Emirates Stadium, while fellow academy graduate Eddie Nketiah had an impressive spell during the Brazilian’s absence last season in which he proved he had adapted his game to be the all-rounder Arteta desires. Nketiah’s progress was rewarded with a first call-up to the senior England squad on Thursday.Then there is Leandro Trossard, who performed a false nine role at times, and the arrival of Kai Havertz from Chelsea to add further competition in that area.Balogun made it clear he had no interest in another loan or reverting to life as a squad player.That left only two options: playing at Arsenal or leaving permanently. Arsenal accepted the latter provided they would be protected in the deal. Indeed, the influx of funds would help offset heavy spending earlier in the summer.

Balogun during Arsenal’s pre-season tour of the United States (Jose L Argueta/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

In the end, a fee of €30million was struck, with €10million in potential add-ons — payments that kick in if he achieves certain challenging milestones, whether that be scoring 35 goals or making a certain number of Champions League appearances. The two clubs have also negotiated a sell-on clause.In terms of the player’s future on the international stage, the move is seen as positive by USMNT head coch Gregg Berhalter.“He’s familiar with the French league, he’s already performed at a really high level with a French team and now he’s going to a bigger club in the French league — I think it’s a really strong move,” he said earlier this week.“They’re paying a lot of money for him and Monaco is a club that is really thoughtful and smart with who they bring in. I think it’s a fabulous move for him.“We expect him to be able to score goals and continue to score goals, like he’s done. And having met him and spoken to him, he’s a really humble guy. He’s a guy who’s focused on the process and continuing to improve and he sees this as the next step for him on his way as he climbs the ladder in European soccer.”Monaco checked in with Berhalter during the latter stages of their pursuit of the forward and were given similarly positive soundings. The USMNT manager told them he wanted the striker to get regular starts.If that gave their chances of landing him a boost, then so, too, did the intervention last season of Henry.Balogun said the France World Cup winner “planted the seed” of a move to Monaco in his head when they spoke last season.“After we (Reims) played here he contacted me to congratulate me on my game,” he said. “I knew he had played here and he told me a bit about the club and that it’s a beautiful place.“That was it, really. But even after my first training session here (yesterday), he texted to say congratulations on the move. It’s a good feeling to have the support of someone like him.”

Henry playing for Monaco against Marseille in 1998 (AFP via Getty Images)

For their part, Monaco are privately pragmatic about the deal. At his unveiling, he held up a shirt with 2028 — when his contract is due to expire — on the back under his name.But while they want him to provide short to mid-term success, they would be unlikely to keep him for five years if his rise exceeds French football. They are proven at buying from and selling to the biggest clubs in the world. Their sales pitch was to come to the principality and prove what he can do.If he stays hungry, and his appetite appears big, they could be celebrating a €30million bargain in one of the wealthiest corners of the world.

Julie Ertz retires from playing soccer after 10 years as a pro and two World Cup titles

“I got to live out a dream I wish for everyone,” Ertz said, “falling in love with a sport you have played your whole life and getting to share it with your son.”

Julie Ertz has called time on her playing career after making a third U.S. women's World Cup team in her 10 years on the field.
Julie Ertz has called time on her playing career after making a third U.S. women’s World Cup team in her 10 years on the field.Andrew Cornaga / AP

Julie Ertz announced her retirement from playing on Thursday, ending a 10-year pro career that included two World Cup titles and a return from injury and childbirth to make this year’s tournament.“With immense emotion and processing, I’ve decided it is time to hang up the boots,” she said in her announcement on social media. “These past 6 months have been a dream come true. After pregnancy, I never knew if I had a chance to play the beautiful game again, let alone another World Cup.”Ertz, 31, rose to prominence at the 2015 World Cup, three years after captaining the U.S. under-20 team to an age-group World Cup title. She was a centerback at the start of her career, and she was Julie Johnston before the Mesa, Ariz., native married former Eagles star Zach Ertz in 2017.They would go on to make Philadelphia a home, even though Julie never played for a team here. She famously played a game for the U.S. the night the Eagles won the NFC championship in 2018, and broke down in tears when informed of the news after the final whistle.

ADVERTISEMENT

» READ MORE: Megan Rapinoe’s USWNT finale is set for September

By the 2019 World Cup, she had moved up to defensive midfield, where she became an all-time U.S. great. Her ferocious work ethic, snarling tackles, and big aerial presence on set pieces made her not just a written-in-ink starter, but just about irreplaceable. On a 2019 championship squad full of big-name stars, Ertz was as important as any of them.Though she never lost her tenacity, she lost a lot of the next quadrennial cycle. Ertz suffered a MCL tear in May 2021 and made it back just in time for the Olympics in August, but she wasn’t her full self. She didn’t play again for the rest of the year, for her club — the Chicago Red Stars — or country.The following April, she announced her pregnancy, and in August she gave birth to son Madden.

» READ MORE: Crystal Dunn looks forward to the USWNT’s next chapter as she returns to the NWSL

Julie Ertz brought the World Cup trophy off the plane when the U.S. women returned from France in 2019.
Julie Ertz brought the World Cup trophy off the plane when the U.S. women returned from France in 2019.YONG KIM / Staff Photographer

‘You chase greatness every day’

By the start of this year, it was getting to the point where a return to playing made sense. But when the NWSL season started, she wasn’t on a team. So it was a surprise when Ertz got called up to the U.S. squad for a pair of April friendlies, some 600 days since her last game.And it was even more notable when then-manager Vlatko Andonovski made it clear that Ertz’s return wasn’t just because the U.S. women’s team’s collective bargaining agreement mandated that players return post-pregnancy if they or the coaches wanted it.

Andonovski wanted her on the World Cup team and wasn’t shy about it. If it boxed out other players who’d been on the field more, so be it.

» READ MORE: Julie Ertz makes stunning return to USWNT in last games before World Cup roster is set

Julie Ertz (right) goes in for a trademark tackle in the April game against the Republic of Ireland that marked her return to the U.S. national team.
Julie Ertz (right) goes in for a trademark tackle in the April game against the Republic of Ireland that marked her return to the U.S. national team.Eric Gay / AP

“If she comes anywhere near her best, that she will certainly help us win a World Cup,” he said. “If somebody’s 80 or 90% is still better than somebody else’s best, then too bad.”In mid-April, Ertz signed with Angel City FC. She played seven games for the club before heading to the World Cup — where Andonovski had another big move up his sleeve. Instead of playing her in midfield, he returned her to centerback. This upended not just players who weren’t on the team, but some who were.Yet while Andonovski flunked his test, Ertz passed hers with flying colors. She was one of the Americans’ best players in their four games, marshaling a defense that allowed just one goal. It wasn’t her fault that the attack failed to finish at the other end of the field.“Representing this country on the national team has been the greatest honor,” she said. “To play for the USWNT means you chase greatness every day while you wear the crest. I hope that I was able to leave an impact that reflects that.”

» READ MORE: Julie Ertz was grateful for a chance to return to the USWNT, even if the timing is awkward

Julie Ertz (center) played seven games for Angel City FC.
Julie Ertz (center) played seven games for Angel City FC.Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

‘A truly beautiful game’

Ertz admitted after the Americans’ early elimination that her national career was likely over. She hadn’t returned to the field for Angel City when she announced her full retirement, and now she won’t. But she made it clear that the club was “a huge reason” why she was able to do what she did this year.“The support from the staff and players can’t be put into words to help me get back,” Ertz said. “I’m crushed to not be able to continue the push to [the] playoffs and that made this decision incredibly difficult. The logistics of not living in an NWSL market is challenging, and I know the sacrifices it takes to be the best you can be.”Once the short-term frustrations of this World Cup recede, Ertz’s legacy will be clear: one of the U.S. team’s all-time greats, a surefire Hall of Famer, a champion and off the field, and the latest in a lineage of athlete mothers.“As I have gotten older and become a mom, it’s clear the sacrifices of time away from my family no longer seem doable with so many factors at play,” she said. “These girls gave me a gift I could never repay and I got to live out a dream I wish for everyone: falling in love with a sport you have played your whole life and getting to share it with your son.”

» READ MORE: Sinead Farrelly looks back at playing in the World Cup as she returns to Gotham FC

Julie Ertz (center) with Naomi Girma and Alyssa Naeher during the U.S-Vietnam World Cup gamee.
Julie Ertz (center) with Naomi Girma and Alyssa Naeher during the U.S-Vietnam World Cup gamee.Andrew Cornaga / AP

She thanked the fans, and she knows there are a whole lot of them around here. Though Zach now plays for the Arizona Cardinals, the Ertzes still maintain a connection to Philadelphia through their vast and heartfelt charity work.

“To the fans, you have made this journey remarkable, life-changing and so fun,” she wrote. “When playing at the highest level you never truly think about retiring, and often that choice is forced upon you. However, it truly is a blessing to walk away from this game knowing l’ve given everything I possibly had to being the best player I could be. … Thank you for showing up, for buying our jerseys and making the atmosphere unbelievable.”

Ertz concluded by reflecting on the fleeting nature of life as an athlete. Age 31 is rather young to call it quits in soccer. But as she wrote, she has greater priorities in life now.

“It’s a sad thing to reflect and know the game just moves on without you,” she wrote. “The game doesn’t owe you anything but it has given me so much. What a truly beautiful game it is. I’m just grateful for the time we had.”

» READ MORE: The USWNT’s salvation lies in youth development. Will the status quo stop it?

Julie Ertz signed lots of autographs for fans when the U.S. women played at Lincoln Financial Field in 2019, and set a team attendance record that still stands.
Julie Ertz signed lots of autographs for fans when the U.S. women played at Lincoln Financial Field in 2019, and set a team attendance record that still stands.STEVEN M. FALK / Staff Photographer

https://www.instagram.com/p/CwnU8HtrfPf/embed/captioned/?cr=1&v=14&wp=648&rd=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.inquirer.com&rp=%2Fsoccer%2Fjulie-ertz-retires-uswnt-angel-city-fc-20230831.html#%7B%22ci%22%3A0%2C%22os%22%3A5413.5999999940395%2C%22ls%22%3A5236.19999999553%2C%22le%22%3A5402.79999999702%7D

Indy riding five-game unbeaten streak into Saturday’s match

#INDvMIA Preview 
Indy Eleven vs The Miami FC
Saturday, September 2, 2023 – 7:00 p.m. ET 
Carroll Stadium – Indianapolis

Follow Live
WISH-TV
Streaming Video: ESPN+ (click to subscribe)
Spanish Radio: Exitos Radio 94.3 FM & exitos943.com
In-game updates: @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed
Stats: #INDvMIA MatchCenter at USLChampionship.com

2023 USL Championship Records
Indy Eleven: 10W-9L-8D (5), 38 pts; 6th in Eastern Conference
The Miami FC: 7W-11L-8D (-3) 29 pts; 10th in Eastern Conference

Community Health Network Sports Medicine Indy Eleven Injury Report
OUT: Y. Oettl (ankle)
SETTING THE SCENE
The Boys in Blue stay at home looking to extend their five game unbeaten streak in a match-up against The Miami FC.The Eleven are coming off a 2-1 win vs Loudoun United FC and are 4-0-1 in their last five games. With a 10-9-8 record, Indy is sixth in the USLC Eastern Conference. Miami is 3-2-0 in its last five matches and is coming off a 2-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rowdies. MIA is 10th in the Eastern Conference at 7-11-8.

INDMIA
27Games26
34Goals33
29Goals Conceded34
23Assists17
91SOT99
99Shots Faced111
9Clean Sheets6

SERIES VS. MIAMI
Saturday marks the fourth meeting between the two teams, with the series even 1-1-1 in USL Championship action. This is the second match up of the 2023 season with the Boys in Blue taking the first meeting 1-0 on the road.

IND: 1-1-1 | GF 2, GA 2
50/50 CLUB
Solomon Asante and Aodhan Quinn became the first two players in USL Championship history to reach both 50 regular season goals and 50 regular season assists. Asante (51G/53A) and Quinn (54G/50A) have combined for 104 goals/assists each, placing them in a tie for fourth on the USL Championship’s all-time list.

  1. Dane Kelly – 132 (106 goals & 26 assists)
  2. Enzo Martinez (BHM) – 113 (69 goals & 44 assists) *
  3. Jorge Herrera – 107 (72 goals & 35 assists)
  4. Aodhan Quinn (IND) – 104 (54 goals & 50 assists) *
    Solomon Asante (IND) – 104 (51 goals & 53 assists) *
    *Denotes active player

20,000 AND BEYOND…
Aodhan Quinn became the USL Championship’s leader in regular-season minutes played against Tampa Bay on July 22.

Minutes | 20,816 | 1st
Appearances | 250 | 6th
Assists | 50 | 4th

Quinn has 54 goals, and was the 24th player in USL Championship history to hit 50. He is one of only seven players to have a combined 100 career goals and assists with 54 goals and 50 assists, and is the second player to join the 50 goals/50 assists club.Quinn has recorded 25 penalty kick goals in 28 attempts in his career in the league, the most of any individual player on record in league history.

LAST TIME OUT
IND 2:1 LDN
AUGUST 26, 2023

After trailing early, Indy Eleven battled back for a 2-1 victory at home against Loudoun United FC.This win moves the Eleven to 10-9-8 extending their unbeaten streak to five games. Meanwhile, Loudoun’s record changes to 7-18-3.Starting quickly, Loudoun’s Tommy Williamson found the back of the net scoring in the match’s opening minute. Indy Eleven looked to answer back possessing most of the ball which created chances in their attacking third.Kicking off the second half, the Eleven fired back after an Aodhan Quinn penalty kick was slotted home to equalize the game at 1-1 in the 73rd minute. As a result of this penalty, Quinn adds to his USL career league lead with a 25th penalty kick goal.
Not long later in the 81st minute, Solomon Asante assisted Sebastian Guenzatti who scored to give Indy Eleven the winner at 2-1. This goal moved Guenzatti to sole possession of eighth in career goals rankings for the USL Championship. Asante’s assist gives him 53 across his career. As the final whistle sounded, the Eleven led possession with 53.6% and had the shot advantage with 13 to Loudoun’s six.

USL Championship Regular Season
Indy Eleven 2:1 Loudoun United FC
Saturday, August 26, 2023
Carroll Stadium, Indianapolis

Scoring Summary
LDN – Tommy Williamson (Cole Turner) 1’
IND – Aodhan Quinn (penalty) 73’
IND – Sebastian Guenzatti (Solomon Asante) 81’

Discipline Summary
IND – Jake Blake (caution) 22’
IND – Solomon Asante (caution) 42’
LDN – Houssou Landry (caution) 45’
IND – Stefano Pinho (caution) 90+4’

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

8/25/23 Messi’s Miami Beats Cincy at rocking TQL, Pulisic scores in 1st AC Milan game, US players abroad, Spain Fed Director refuses to Resign, 

EPL off to Roaring Start for American Players

What a start for Captain America Christian Pulisic at AC Milan as he scored a blistering goal (in Italian) and had an assist in his first official game becoming the first American to score in the German, English and Italian leagues.  Yanus Musah is expected to join him in the line-up as they face Torino at home Saturday at 2:45 pm on Paramount plus, then next Friday @ League Champ Roma at 2:45 pm on Para+.   Fulham American’s Tim Ream and Jedi Robinson will look to bounce back from a bad loss last weekend at they travel to Arsenal Sat at 10 am on USA.  Of course American Captain Tyler Adams how now officially signed with Bournemouth where he expects to return to the field in early October after leaving relegated Leeds United. It appears Bologan has finally signed with Monaco from Arsenal – his return to the French League 1 costing Monaco $50 million.  (see all the US players oversea’s games below)

Miami & Messi win Leagues Cup in Penalty’s then defeat Top Rated Cincy @ home in Penalties again to advance to the US Open Cup Finals in Sept.   

After going 10 rounds deep in an amazing shootout win@ Nashville on Saturday night  including this goal / from behind goal and this miss at the buzzer to win the first ever Leagues Cup Inter Miami and Lionel Messi came back to  beat league leading FC Cincinnati in an amazing 5-4 win on Penalty kicks after a 3-3 finish in extra time.  It was my first visit for a Cincy game and we had standing room only seats in the Baily.  I have to admit this was a solid supporters section – rivaling the 3252 @ LAFC – the issue was the STANDING ROOM only for us old guys.  We spent the first half watching Messi coming our way – wearing my Cincy Jersey before bailing to the other endzone – and unleashing my Miami Messi Jersey down 2-0 at the half.  All Miami did was come back with 2 spectacular assist from the GOAT – one in the 93rd minute to send it to extra time.  Miami scored first before Cincy tied it up late in ET sending us to another shootout – right in front of us.  Where Miami won it 5-4 on PKs- as they move on to the US Open Cup Finals in Sept – after winning their first ever trophy and Messi’s World Leading 42nd in the Leagues Cup @ Nashville.  It was there than Messi – gave the captains band to  the former captain American Defender Deandre Yedlin – allowing him to lift Miami’s first ever trophy with Messi’s help.  Messi is the Best player I have ever seen play – no questions asked – and now I am fully a member of the crazy Messi Fan club.  Miami games have become must watch TV – No wins in the 11 games before he arrived – and now 8 in a row, 1 trophy with a home date in mid-Sept for another vs Houston.  I still don’t think Miami can make the playoffs this year-the Barcelona trio needs rest on these next MLS regular season games like at New York Sat night – hopefully Messi will go at least a half – but we’ll see. 

I paid a little more than I should have for Tickets to see Messi in Cincy but wow was it worth it with my long time buddy and my former stopper to me the sweeper in high school John Hoge!!

GAMES ON TV

Sat, Aug 26

7:30 am USA                       Bournemouth vs Tottenham

9:30 am ESPN+                  Darmstadt vs Union Berlin (Aaronson, Pfuk)

10 am USA                          Arsenal vs Fulham (Ream, Jedi)

10 am Peacock                   Man United vs Nothingham Forest (Turner)

12:30 pm NBC                    Brighton vs West Ham  

12:30 pm ESPN+               MGladbach (Scally) vs Bayer Leverkusen

2:45 pm Para+                   AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah) vs Torino

2:45 pm CBSSN                  Hellas Verona vs Roma

7 pm MyIndy TV              Indy 11 vs Loundon United

7:30 pm Apple TV free   Atlanta United vs Nashville SC

7:30 pm Apple TV Free DC United vs Philly

7:30 pm Apple MLS Pass Miami (Messi) vs NY red Bulls

8:30 pm Apple TV Free Dallas (Matt Hedges) vs Austin

8:30 pm Para+, Galazo   Houston Dash vs KC Current NWSL

9::30 pm ESPN2                 San Diego Loyal vs New Mexico United USL

Sun, Aug 27

9 am USA                             Sheffield United vs Man City

11:30 am USA                    New Castle vs Liverpool  

11:30 ESPN+, ESPND       Villareal vs Barcelona

2:45 pm Para+                   Bologna vs Juventus (Mckinney, Weah)

4:30 pm FOX                       Minn United vs Seattle Sounders  

5 pm Para+                         Washington Spirit vs Portland Thorns NWSL

8 pm Para+                         Angel City vs OL Reign   

Tues, Aug 29

2:45 pm ESPN+                  Fulham (Ream, Jedi)   vs  Tottenham (Leagues Cup)

3 pm para+                         Young Boys vs Maccabi Haifa

Wed, Aug 30

2:45 pm ESPN+            Doncaster Rovers vs Everton (Leagues Cup)

3 pm Para+, TUDN      PSV vs Rangers

7 pm Apple MLS pass  Inter Miami (MESSI. Busquets, Alba) vs Nashville  

8 pm ESPN+                        Rio Grand vs San Antonio (Farr)  

Fri, Sep 1

2:30 pm EPSN+                  Dortmund vs Heidenheim

2:45 pm Para+                   Roma vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

3 pm USA                            Luton Town vs West Ham  

8 pm Para+                         KC Current vs Angel City

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ====================== 

US Men

USMNT to play Nations League quarterfinal home leg in Austin on November 16th  By Donald Wine II

USMNT film room: Pulisic and Dest make their debuts

Christian Pulisic makes a statement with his AC Milan debut By Parker Cleveland
Sources: U.S.’s Cowell target of new Bologna bid
dJeff Carlisle

ASN’s 2023/24 European season preview: a detailed look at each American player in Europe

MLS

Lionel Messi in MLS is a dream come true for American sports  Luis Miguel Echegaray

Messi, Miami survive wild U.S. Open match
The price to watch Lionel Messi play live keeps going up

Messi’s brilliance in U.S is unsurprising and amazing all at once

American Gen-Z Soccer Fans Like MLS More Than Other Soccer Leagues

Messi-Led Inter Miami Projects MLS Record $200M Revenue in 2024

US Women + World Cup + NWSL

It took Rubiales Public Behavior to Validate Spanish Player’s Concern’s for Years  
Spain’s Women’s World Cup winners refuse to play until Luis Rubiales is removed

FIFAopens disciplinary case against Luis Rubiales over forced kiss

Spanish soccer president refuses to resign after kissing player

Megan Rapinoe: Rubiales’ kiss of Hermoso displays ‘deep misogyny’

Everything you need to know about Spain’s controversial coach Jorge Vilda — and the feud with his players that’s tainted their World Cup run
Spain players boycott as Rubiales refuses to quit
Alex Kirkland and Rodrigo Fae

Spain FA boss won’t quit; govt seeks suspension Alex Kirkland and Rodrigo Faez

USA

USWNT falls to 3rd in FIFA world rankings  By Donald Wine II

Andi Sullivan on USWNT coach search: ‘The future is uncertain for all of us’

Ashley Sanchez’s World Cup role did not match her expectations  Kate Yanchulis August 24, 202 

USWNT’s Savannah DeMelo signs extension with Racing Louisville

Megan Rapinoe, Midge Purce ‘concerned’ about USWNT youth system

Sam Mewis places USWNT among 2024 Olympic contenders

Megan Rapinoe: USWNT wants equality even ‘at expense of dominance’

U.S. and Mexico still in contention to host 2027 World Cup

NWSL Golden Boot race: Sophia Smith extends lead in Thorns return

How Ashley Hatch responded to USWNT snub in the NWSL

Benjamin girls soccer star Lily White enjoys perfect debut as football kicker

Goalkeeping

How’s this for Taking out a Player?  

amazing LEagues Cup shootout

Top Saves Women’s World Cup

Ballwork GK  

Washing Gloves

Return to Play after an Ankle Sprain  YourVeryOwnAthleticTrainer.com

Reffing

Ref Pay in top leagues

Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

It was Steven Smith’s first game running the middle at Grand Park Sun (Tyler Fleischmanm L, Shane (R)

FIFA WOMEN’S WORLD CUP

😡 Expect the unexpected

If this Pig assaulted my Daughter on stage like this – I’d kick his a$$.

SOURCE: LEYLA HAMED/X

Content warning: This section contains mention of sexual misconduct.

The GIST: Amid repeated calls for his resignation after he forcibly kissed Spain’s captain Jenni Hermoso as she accepted her FIFA Women’s World Cup (WWC) medal on Sunday, Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) president Luis Rubiales announced early this morning that he is not stepping down, insteading vowing to fight for his post. You can’t make this sh!t up.

The background: Following swift backlash to the kiss (among other lewd gestures), Rubiales released a bullsh!t “apology” earlier this week, apparently eager to brush all criticism aside and ignore the calls for his removal, even as Hermoso herself urged action.

The latest: Still, in an impassioned speech at today’s RFEF extraordinary general assembly, Rubiales said the kiss was “mutual and with consent.” He shared that he would not be forced out of his role due to a “witch hunt” and “false feminism” and called the last five days a “social assassination” of his character.

The pattern: Unfortunately, women’s soccer and misogyny go hand in hand. In the past year alone, an investigation uncovered widespread misconduct within the NWSL, CanWNT played under protest as they fought for equal treatment from their federation, and Zambia’s head coach was accused of sexual misconduct by his players.

  • And after all that, last week, FIFA president Gianni Infantino had the audacity to say that the onus is on female footballers to “convince us, men, what we have to do” when speaking about equality in the game.

Zooming out: Women’s soccer has never been more popular, yet players are still fighting for protection on the field, in the locker rooms, and even in moments of glory. When will it end?

Casey Stoney blasts Spain federation: ‘What goes on behind closed doors?’

Emma Hruby August 24, 2023

San Diego Wave head coach Casey Stoney again called out Spanish soccer federation president Luis Rubiales for his forced kiss of star player Jenni Hermoso at the World Cup, which she described as “completely inappropriate.”“If you are prepared to do that on the world stage in front of millions, what goes on behind closed doors?” she asked of the Spanish federation before asking the sport’s governing bodies to intervene.Rubiales has come under fire for his actions following Spain’s 1-0 win over England in the World Cup final, which included the kiss and also grabbing his crotch in celebration. While Hermoso initially downplayed the kiss, the 33-year-old midfielder has since called for action against Rubiales in a statement released in conjunction with her agency and the Spanish players’ union.FIFA has opened an investigation into Rubiales’ actions, it announced in a statement released Thursday.

Stoney, who already had condemned the Spanish soccer federation president’s kiss of Hermoso, weighed in again Wednesday, drawing a line between the gesture and the broader issue of player-staff relationships. Team staff members “should not be having relationships with players at all,” she said, calling such relationships something that she “absolutely despises” despite having seen them happen repeatedly in the sport,“You shouldn’t be socializing with players anyway,” she said. “You shouldn’t even be putting yourself in that position. … Don’t come into work and prey on vulnerable women who you are responsible for their contracts or medical or whatever it is, whatever role you play. Don’t have a relationship with players.”The controversy surrounding Rubiales comes on top of a longstanding dispute between Spanish players and the national federation. Last September, 15 players protested the national team environment and the management style of head coach Jorge Vilda, and just three of those players were selected for the World Cup roster. There is “a reason players were on strike,” Stoney said of the Spanish federation.And while she made clear that the issue of power imbalance in relationships extends beyond sports, she wants to see the issue addressed within women’s soccer.“I’m completely against anything that puts a player in a vulnerable position. … So I think the governing bodies, FIFA, UEFA, anybody who’s involved, step in because it’s not acceptable,” Stoney said. “These women get treated like this far too often, far too many times, and something needs to change.

Christian Pulisic begins life in Serie A with a goal and a renewed sense of purpose

BOLOGNA, ITALY - AUGUST 21: Christian Pulisic of  AC Milan during the Serie A TIM match between Bologna FC and AC Milan at Stadio Renato Dall'Ara on August 21, 2023 in Bologna, Italy. (Photo by Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

By James HorncastleAug 21, 2023


As AC Milan’s bus wound through Bologna, passing the porticos and red and orange buildings, the colour of the fat and tomato of the ragu that makes this city world famous, Christian Pulisic prepared for his debut in Serie A.When the Stadio Renato Dall’Ara’s iconic brick tower came into view, the American could have been forgiven for thinking it was one of the fortresses that make the region of Emilia Romagna feel like one of those far-off lands in Game of Thrones.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://6995770c16169619c0cbdd688900f858.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Visiting teams have tried and failed to break its walls in Thiago Motta’s time in charge of Bologna. Since replacing the late Sinisa Mihajlovic in September last year, Bologna’s defensive record at home has been the best in Serie A along with that of Champions League finalists Inter.

(Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

Pulisic’s new coach, Stefano Pioli, found that out in April when a 1-1 draw almost cost Milan their place in this season’s Champions League. Some of the starters that day, Aster Vranckx, Charles De Ketelaere and Ante Rebic are no longer at the club. Others, Alexis Saelemaekers and Fode Ballo-Toure, are on the way out.

Pioli was rotating his team in between Milan’s Champions League quarter-final with Napoli. But the last visit to the Dall’Ara underlined Milan’s all too frequent struggles in breaking teams down — not to mention the shallowness of a squad which has been comprehensively overhauled this summer. Pulisic was bought in to help ensure that more frustrating draws in places like Bologna and other Italian cities where championship contenders can’t be seen to be dropping points are a thing of the past.

On a night sweatier than a slice of mortadella in one of those steaming Schiacciata sandwiches they sell around here, Pulisic could have found the going tough. Playing on the right in a 4-3-3, he has in effect replaced De Ketelaere, the €36million (£30.7m; $39.3m) present Milan gifted themselves for winning the league in 2022.The Belgian underwhelmed in his first season and opinions on what to do with him this time around were split. Now on loan at Atalanta, De Ketelaere scored on his debut in a 2-0 win against Sassuolo in Reggio Emilia, a short drive down the road from Bologna. If Pulisic had stumbled on Monday night, it would have been a story in itself, not much ragu about nothing. A fickle online response along the lines of “Milan should never have let De Ketelaere go” was easy to predict.

ADVERTISEMENT

But, on a night when Milan’s owner Gerry Cardinale had flown over to Italy especially to see the game, Pulisic didn’t allow that to happen.

Pulisic opens his Serie A account (Emmanuele Ciancaglini/Ciancaphoto Studio/Getty Images)

In this university town with its 11th-century red brick college, the 24-year-old turned out to be a model student for Pioli. He’s a quick learner and it was abundantly clear how much Pulisic has benefited from a full pre-season. During Milan’s tour of the U.S., Pulisic built up his fitness and reconnected with old Chelsea team-mates in a way that has facilitated his integration and effectiveness.For instance, Ruben Loftus-Cheek plays on Pulisic’s side. The pair warmed up together and covered for each other on the pitch. But it was Pulisic’s ability to activate Olivier Giroud and vice-versa that got the Milan fans in the away end so hot under the collar they were shirtless before long.First, an angled ball from Pulisic to the far post found fellow Milan debutante Tijjani Reijnders who cut it back for Giroud to open the scoring.

Then Pulisic introduced himself in the best way possible to his new league. There have already been some sumptuous goals in Serie A over the opening weekend. Antonio Candreva’s curler against Roma for Salernitana was good enough to be an installation at the next Venice Biennale. Nadir Zortea’s clincher at the Mapei Stadium was the kind of dart best fired from a bamboo shoot. One of the best, however, came in the last match of the first round.Pulisic cut inside and exchanged a one-two with Giroud as he had done when he won a penalty against Monza in the Trofeo Silvio Berlusconi friendly a fortnight ago. Only this time, rather than carry on his run, Pulisic took aim and fired a shot past Lukasz Skorupski, silencing the Bologna ultras standing behind the Pole in the Curva Andrea Costa.The Athletic reported earlier this week that 45 per cent of all Milan jerseys sold since Pulisic’s arrival have his name and number on the back. More will no doubt be sold in the wake of a debut that more than delivered. Which isn’t to say it was perfect.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Pulisic in Milan – it’s make or break

Bologna almost scored the quickest goal of the weekend when Charalampos Lykogiannis burst down Pulisic’s side and forced Milan goalkeeper Mike Maignan to tip a shot destined for the top corner onto the bar. The lively Lewis Ferguson and direct Dan Ndoye tried to create overloads on the same flank, causing Milan problems. But Maignan, arguably the best goalkeeper in the world when fit, was up to whatever came his way and Milan boarded the bus back to Lombardy with a 2-0 win.

(Emmanuele Ciancaglini/Ciancaphoto Studio/Getty Images)

Withdrawn by Pioli with a quarter of an hour to spare, Pulisic couldn’t have wished for a better start in Italy. “I knew Pulisic was a talent when I was on the phone trying to convince him to join us,” said Pioli.“I was sure we’d signed a player of great quality. He’s very versatile. He allows us to give other players a breather. He can play very well in Leao’s place on the left or off the striker.”Pulisic was delighted with how his debut had gone. “For sure, I’m very emotional, it was great to score a goal so early on my debut, great to help the team win and get a clean sheet. It was just the perfect night,” he said after the game.There’s a song they play at the Dall’Ara, typically when Bologna win, by the city’s greatest songwriter Lucio Dalla. It’s called L’anno che verrà. The year to come. These may still be early days for Pulisc in Italy but, on the basis of his showing in Bologna, the year to come could be a very good one for him.(Top photo: Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Full slates

Lots of action around the globe this weekend.

By jcksnftsn  Aug 25, 2023, 11:41am PDT   Stars & Stripes

Fulham FC v Brentford FC - Premier League

There look to be matches involving USMNT players all across the top five leagues in Europe as well as in MLS this weekend. Saturday in particular has over a dozen matches spread throughout the day that can be access relatively easily on a variety of platforms. There are a couple matches on Friday as well so let’s start there.

Friday

Nantes v Monaco – 3p on beIN Sports

Folarin Balogun looks set to join Monaco, but will be a spectator as his new side take on Nantes Friday afternoon. Balogun will be joining a side that has scored seven times in their first two matches, winning both. Meanwhile, Nantes are looking for their first points this season.

Celta Vigo v Real Madrid – 3:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+

Luca de la Torre started and went 84 minutes last weekend in Celta Vigo’s 1-1 draw with Real Sociedad. This weekend, things will get tougher as they face league leading Real Madrid, who have been predictably dominant in their opening two matches.

https://d25f3ee5d69ab346ca6b461b9a6a4a4e.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Saturday

Bournemouth v Tottenham Hotspur – 7:30a on USA Network

Tyler Adams has officially joined Bournemouth ,but remains out with a hamstring injury that seems likely to keep him sidelined through the upcoming international break. Bournemouth are looking for their first win on the season and taking on a Spurs side that have top six aspirations coming off a 2-0 win over Manchester United.

Koln v Wolfsburg – 9:30a on ESPN+

Kevin Paredes was a time wasting sub for Wolfsburg last weekend in their 2-0 win over Heidenheim, coming on in the 89th minute. The good news is he looks recovered from a hamstring pull that had sidelined him in the preseason.

Bochum v Borussia Dortmund – 9:30a on ESPN+

Gio Reyna has only just returned to training and also seems likely to be out through the upcoming international break. His Dortmund teammates picked up a late goal last weekend to win 1-0 and will now face Bochum.

Heidenheim v Hoffenheim – 9:30a on ESPN+

John Brooks and Hoffenheim lost their opener 2-1 to Freiburg last weekend and will look to pickup their first points of the season Saturday against newly promoted Heidenheim. Brooks started and went the full 90 last weekend.

Darmstadt v Union Berlin – 9:30a on ESPN+

Brenden Aaronson started and played 76 minutes of Union Berlin’s 4-1 win over Mainz last weekend, but Jordan Pefok was an unused substitute in the match. The team will look to keep things rolling against a Darmstadt side that lost their opener 1-0.

Arsenal FC v Fulham FC – 10a on USA Network

Tim Ream received a rather harsh red card last weekend in Fulham’s 3-0 loss to Brentford and will miss the match this weekend as Antonee Robinson and the rest of the squad take on Arsenal. Arsenal have won their first two matches though both were decided by just a goal.

Brentford v Crystal Palace – 10a on Peacock

Chris Richards has not made it off the bench for Crystal Palace in their first two matches and could be in for a long season if things don’t change. The club has split their first two and face a Brentford side coming off a 3-0 win over Fulham.

Manchester United v Nottingham Forest – 10a on Peacock

Matt Turner and Nottingham Forest picked up their first points of the 2023-24 campaign with a 2-1 win over Sheffield United last weekend and now face Manchester United. Man U are coming off a 2-0 loss to Tottenham after an opening weekend win over Wolverhampton.

Borussia Mönchengladbach v Bayer Leverkusen – 12:30p on ESPN+

Joe Scally and Borussia Mönchengladbach escaped with a draw with Augsburg last weekend. After jumping out to a 3-1 lead, ‘Gladbach allowed Augsburg to score three unanswered to take the lead themselves before picking up a tying penalty kick goal in the dying minutes of the match.

PSV Eindhoven v Go Ahead Eagles – 12:45p on ESPN+

Sergino Dest stepped right into the starting lineup for PSV on Tuesday following his transfer from FC Barcelona. Dest got the start at left back in PSV’s 2-2 draw against Rangers in the away leg of their Champions League qualifier. Dest played 81 minutes for PSV while Ricardo Pepi and Malik Tillman were unused substitutes for their side. The team returns to league action this weekend where they have won their first two matches and are facing a Go Ahead Eagles side that lost their opener 5-1 to AZ Alkmar and then defeated FC Volendam 4-1 despite playing the second half of the match down a man.

AC Milan v Torino – 2:45p on Paramount+

Christian Pulisic scored a screamer in AC Milan’s opener last weekend as the team went on to win 2-0. Yunus Musah, who also joined the side this summer, was ineligible to play due to a red card picked up in last season’s finale with Valencia. Milan’s opponent this weekend played to a scoreless draw with Cagliari last weekend.

Free MLS matches on Apple TV:

  • Miles Robinson and Atlanta United face fellow centerback Walker Zimmerman and Nashville SC at 7:30p.
  • DC United host the Philadelphia Union’s Quinn Sullivan and Jack McGlynn at 7:30p.
  • CF Montreal and New England kick off at 7:30p.
  • Jesus Ferreira and FC Dallas take on in state rival Austin FC at 8:30p.
  • Sporting Kansas City play host to Cade Cowell and the San Jose Earthquakes at 8:30p.

Sunday

Mainz v Eintracht Frankfurt – 9:30a

Paxten Aaronson was held out due to illness last weekend as Eintracht Frankfurt defeated Darmstadt 1-0. Aaronson also missed the previous weekend’s DFB-Pokal match due to illness so it sounds like he must have had something pretty rough. Hopefully he will be recovered and available this weekend as Frankfurt travel to Mainz.

Juventus v Bologna – 12:30 on Paramount+

Tim Weah started for Juventus and played the opening 45 minutes coming off at halftime for USMNT and club teammate Weston McKennie. Weah had picked up a knock in the first half and it seems like the substitution may have been precautionary as his side was up 3-0 at the half.

Minnesota United v Seattle Sounders – 4:30p on Fox

Jordan Morris and the Seattle Sounders are coming off a 2-0 loss to Atlanta United and will look to get back to their winning ways against a Minnesota side that sit just five points back in ninth place, holding on to the final playoff spot in the Western Conference.Which matches are you watching? Hit the comments and discuss.

Breaking down Miami’s classic win, CCV Shelved, Cannon’s saga, Balogun update, & more

ASN’s Brian Sciaretta walks you through an epic night in the Open Cup, a big breakthrough with Folarin Balogun where he seems likely to join Monaco, tough news for Cameron Carter-Vickers, the latest with Reggie Cannon and Caden Clark. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED
AUGUST 24, 2023
1:00 PM

  • SHARE THIS STORY

THE U.S. OPEN CUP final is set after a classic between Inter Miami and Cincinnati saw Messi and CO. advance yet again while Houston deserved its win over Real Salt Lake. Meanwhile, there is plenty of news to unpack abroad with big updates on Folarin Balogun and Cameron Carter-Vickers.

Let’s start in Ohio.

MIAMI WINS CLASSIC OVER CINCY

 

Inter Miami defeated Cincinnati on penalties after a wildly intense and entertaining 120 minutes ended in a 3-3 stalemate. This game had everything you would want. It started with Luciano Acosta nabbing the opener early off a deflection. Things got crazy in the second-half and Lionel Messi was front and center.

U.S. national team forward Brandon Vazquez, 24, was terrific on the day and his 53rd minute goal put Cincy up 2-0.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694506526109507956&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



But that is when Messi took over and provided a masterclass on what makes him great. Like all great players, when he is down, he has a response. It requires an effort that goes from the opening whistle to the final whistle. Messi will expose even the slightest of lapse, particularly at the end of the games.

In the 68th minute, Messi’s free kick found Leo Campana to pull it back. Then Messi made his play of the game deep into stoppage time with a pass for the ages – again to Campana for the finish.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-1&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694517634669162693&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

As Tata Martino put it: Messi was “more as a conductor and not a finisher” on the night. And that is sometimes when he is at his best.

When the game went to extra time, it seemed as if Miami would win. Four minutes into extratime Ben Cremaschi, 18 assisted to Josef Martinez to move in front. Even when Cincy equalized towards the end, it always felt Miami had the edge.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-2&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694520041490804799&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Sure enough, in penalties it turned over two a pair of Americans who are breaking out. In the 5th round, goalkeeper Drake Callender made a save on Nick Haggelund and Cremaschi won it with the final take.

Here are a few thoughts

Miami wins in Cincy: To show you just how good Miami is right now, they became the first team to win in Cincinnati this season after Pat Noonan’s team had a 15-0-3 record before last night’s game. If Miami can win Leagues Cup and then roll into Cincy and win, who exactly is going to beat them now.

Miami heads to NJ: It’s important to note that Lionel Messi still hasn’t played an MLS game. Once that happens, Miami has a huge climb to make the playoffs. It’s still unlikely and it requires no off days. But now they head to New Jersey to face the Red Bulls on Saturday after going 120 minutes on Wednesday. It’s yet another tough test for Messi and Co.

Martino’s doing a great job: Tata Martino has done a great job. “A lot of our wins have been more due to our character than our game and, obviously, due to having the best player in the world playing with us,” he said after the game. He’s right. Messi is one thing. But making it all work is on Tata. What he’s done in a short time frame is impressive.

Cremaschi and Callender: Both of these players are likely on Berhalter’s list to get into camp. Cremaschi is a top duel national and the obvious ties to Argentina are becoming stronger with him in Miami. Argentina wants him for their U-20 team. The U.S. will have to work harder to keep him in the system. A September call-up won’t ensure Cremaschi stays with the U.S., but it would be a nice signal of confidence. Meanwhile, Callender has been very strong over the past few months and the lack of playing time with Zack Steffen and Ethan Horvath have opened the door for him.

HOUSTON GETS PAST RSL

 

While the game took 120 minutes, Houston clearly deserved its 3-1 win over Real Salt Lake on Wednesday. It was a disappointing performance from RSL who badly misses the injured Pablo Ruiz. For long stretches, it seemed as if RSL was trying to hold on, maybe muster a chance off a counterattack, and try to get the game into penalties. Houston was clearly better.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-3&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694562879985291281&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Ben Olsen
 has had a great season and he’s surpassed my expectations. Getting into the Open Cup final also helps because Inter Miami is already in the Concacaf Cup due to the Leagues Cup. As a result, Houston is now assured of entry next year.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-4&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694571183826411747&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Houston is going back to the playoffs this year. They’re going to the CONCACAF Cup next year. Things are trending in the right direction. But does anyone really think they’re going to go to Miami and win the Open Cup final?

CARTER-VICKERS SHELVED

 

According to Scottish journalist Gavin McCafferty, Cameron Carter-Vicker will be out longer than expected with his hamstring and is now expected to be shelved for eight weeks. That means the next two international windows. Even worse, he will miss key Champions League games for Celtic (who are now scrambling for centerbacks in the remaining days of the window).

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-5&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694724910751625356&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



It’s unclear who Berhalter will call-up in central defense next month. Carter-Vickers is out but there is a long list of players who are not playing including Chris Richards, Auston Trusty, and Erik Palmer-Brown. It is also unclear how long Berhalter will continue with Tim Ream, who turns 36 in the fall.

BALOGUN TO MONACO?

 

Sky Sports is now reporting that U.S. national team forward Folarin Balogun is nearing a transfer from Arsenal to Monaco.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-6&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694687821016043832&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Monaco is not in Europe this year after a late three-game collapse to end 2022/23 saw them tumble to sixth. But the club is expected to contend for Ligue 1 this year and has six points from the first two games of the season.

Balogun, 21, scored 21 goals last year on loan with Stade de Reims. Keeping him within Ligue 1 makes this a safer bet for Monaco as he has proven himself within the league.

CANNON’S SAGA

 

What is going on with Reggie Cannon? He’s still without a club after terminating his deal with Boavista when he claimed lack of payment. But that issue is apparently unresolved legally and that makes Cannon a difficult player to sign on a free deal since it is not clear.

On top of that, FC Dallas still claims it has not been paid any money from selling Cannon to Boavista. The Portuguese club might be short on funds, but they’re still buying players. Dallas has taken its case to CAS (Court of Arbitration and Sports) and won. But Boavista still continue to ignore the ruling and are continuing to operate business as usual.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-7&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694500790952399158&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



The entire matter is strange.

CADEN CLARK SIGHTING

Former New York Red Bull and U.S. U-20 midfielder Caden Clark is training close to home with Minnesota.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-8&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1694464691261620543&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fbreaking-down-miami-s-classic-win-ccv-shelved-cannon-s-saga-balogun-update-amp-more&sessionId=1a6bb5b048945ce2ddc61641787a29c20af4c708&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px



Clark, 20, is still owned by RB Leipzig after a weird start to his career that involved him starting his career with the Red Bulls (who had to pay Minnesota for his rights), getting sold to Leipzig, and getting loaned back to Red Bulls. At the end of the 2022 season, the Red Bulls decided not to exercise its option to extend his loan for 2023 and he moved to Leipzig where he made the bench for a few Bundesliga games but didn’t play. Clark ended up not making the U.S. U-20 World Cup team and wasn’t part of the important March camp and instead he went back to the USA. Now, it appears he hasn’t been with Leipzig at all in preseason and now he’s training with Minnesota. He was set to join Colorado earlier this month, but Leipzig couldn’t’ seal the paperwork in time.

Clark hasn’t played a game in over 11 months. It is fine he is training with Minnesota, but he can’t sign for them since it’s past the MLS transfer window and he’s not a free agent. It now looks as if he is going to go all of 2022 without playing.

What level he will be at when he returns is anybody’s guess.

Tyler Adams and Andoni Iraola’s Bournemouth are a perfect tactical match

Tyler Adams and Andoni Iraola’s Bournemouth are a perfect tactical match

By Thom HarrisAug 23, 2023


From Leeds United to Chelsea to Bournemouth. On the face of it, Tyler Adams’ dramatic week of transfer twists and turns in English football might look to have fizzled out into a slight anti-climax.

The 24-year-old USMNT midfielder sealed a move worth around £23million ($29.1m) from Yorkshire down to England’s south coast on Sunday, as Andoni Iraola’s side swept in to sign him following a failed switch to the capital. As reported by The Athletic, concerns about a hamstring injury caused negotiations with Chelsea to stall.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://95a56e48049a3a505189bce3affbda0f.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

In Bournemouth, however, Adams has not only found an exciting project, but one that specifically needs a player like him for it to flourish.

With a forward-thinking head coach at the helm, one seeking to implement a fearless, high-intensity style of play, Adams’ energy and defensive tenacity will make him an essential part of a promising, new-look side.

“He’s a really good player,” Iraola said of the American last week, “he has performed in the Champions League, has national-team experience, but I don’t want to go too far because right now he’s not our player.”

Well, now he is.

And you can be sure that his new coach will be going into every possible detail with the player himself.

This is what Adams can expect at Iraola’s Bournemouth…


First and foremost, Iraola will be delighted to get his hands on a high-quality ball-winner to play in the centre of midfield, particularly after the departure of Jefferson Lerma to Crystal Palace as a free agent earlier this summer. Only Philip Billing averaged over 2.0 tackles a game among Bournemouth central midfielders to play more than 900 minutes in the league last season, while up at Leeds, Adams was the third-most prolific tackler among the 20 clubs in the division, averaging 3.7.

Drilling into some more advanced defensive metrics shows us that Adams brings quantity and quality in terms of defensive actions.

Using the true-tackles metric — a combination of successful tackles, failed challenges and fouls committed while attempting a tackle — we can see he was one of the more aggressive midfielders in the 2022-23 Premier League, attempting to make a tackle 8.8 times per 1,000 opposition touches. His true-tackle win rate was only bettered by four Premier League midfielders who played a minimum 900 minutes, and his capabilities in the air were similarly strong.

It’s a gung-ho approach to defending that Adams has developed during a career under some of the sport’s most demanding coaches.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://95a56e48049a3a505189bce3affbda0f.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I always err on the side that I’m going to win every single ball,” he said in an interview with The Athletic’s John Muller in February 2022 (see below), “so I tend to be aggressive and go for it.

“In the Red Bull DNA (Adams played for New York Red Bulls in MLS and then their German sister club RB Leipzig before going to Leeds, where he worked under Jesse Marsch, who had previously managed Red Bull Salzburg and Leipzig), counter-pressing is such an important thing. We try to win the ball as quickly as possible and aren’t afraid to make mistakes because we’re confident in our pressing as a team.”

Words that will be music to Iraola’s ears.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

My game in my words. By Tyler Adams


Before taking charge at Bournemouth, Iraola led Madrid club Rayo Vallecano to La Liga promotion in the summer of 2021, before launching two unprecedented pushes to qualify for European football.

Despite perennial off-field turbulence and a shoestring budget, Rayo’s fearless approach under their young coach saw them beat Barcelona three times in four meetings, while also catching Real Madrid, Villarreal and Sevilla off guard with their high-pressing football. No side in Spain’s top flight won back possession in their attacking third more often than Rayo did last season, in a system that encouraged risk-taking in advanced areas on the pitch.

Adams will rarely be the player tearing after opposition defenders, looking to win the ball back in Bournemouth’s attacking third, nor will he be busting a lung to join in every attack. Instead, his ability to defend the width of the pitch will provide the assurance for his team-mates to push on, knowing he will work tirelessly to maintain the side’s defensive shape.

His role is likely to be similar to the one played for Iraola’s Rayo by Oscar Valentin, a similarly tenacious ball-winner at the heart of midfield, and the player who attempted the most true tackles in La Liga last season.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://95a56e48049a3a505189bce3affbda0f.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

As we can see from the comparison chart below, the two profile remarkably similarly in regards to their defensive tenacity, while their attacking contributions are minimal.

One of the principal ways Iraola teams attack you is via their full-backs, so Valentin’s role was about positional discipline to cover the spaces those wide men left behind.

Here against Real Valladolid in January, for example, Valentin sprints over to the left side of the pitch as he sees full-back Fran Garcia carry the ball forward, making sure he is in a good position to deal with any counter-attack if the ball is lost.

And here he is on the right against Getafe last October, as Ivan Balliu charges forward, ready to plug the gap should Rayo’s marauding right-back lose the ball.

Whether provided with a midfield partner or not, Valentin was always prepared to put out fires across the width of the pitch.

Hungarian left-back Milos Kerkez and English right-back Max Aarons are among Iraola’s other signings this summer, transfers that certainly suggest Adams will be expected to play a similar role for him to Valentin at Rayo: the facilitator who allows high-flying full-backs to get forward.

Kerkez profiles similarly to Garcia, a high-volume tackler who looks to get forward and cross the ball often, while Aarons is a relentless dribbler, having attempted the most take-ons of any full-back (97, 2.6 per game) in England’s top four leagues with Norwich City in 2022-23 — 42 more than any other full-back in the Championship.

And, looking at Adams’ tackles and interceptions map from last season, it’s clear he is comfortable dropping in to defend wide spaces, with the majority of his ball-winning actions taking place on the flanks.

He looks to be the perfect midfield sweeper who can allow his team’s wide players to attack without fear of what is going to happen behind them if it goes wrong.

On the ball, Adams won’t need to be the principal creator, particularly with Alex Scott also joining the club.

ADVERTISEMENT

Valentin completed an average of just 33.7 passes and created less than a chance per game for Rayo last season, with a pass completion rate of 81.9 per cent.

Adams offers an upgrade on all of these figures, having completed 46.2 passes per game for Leeds last season with an accuracy of 82.4 per cent and moving the ball particularly well into the attacking third, so he should have no problems adapting to Iraola’s stringent possessional demands.

With a need for solidity rather than creativity, Adams’ role in this Bournemouth team won’t need to be as expansive as it might have been if he had signed for Chelsea, allowing the USMNT star to focus on what he does best — winning back the ball.

(Top photos: Getty Images)

USMNT player tracker: Weah impresses, McKennie gets a chance, Sargent shines

USMNT player tracker: Weah impresses, McKennie gets a chance, Sargent shines

By Greg O’KeeffeAug 21, 2023


Fresh starts and second chances — it was a positive weekend for USMNT duo Timothy Weah and Weston McKennie as Serie A got under way.Welcome to the USMNT player tracker where, each week, we will be bringing you updates on our U.S. players in various leagues around Europe.With the Copa America next year, and a home-soil World Cup on the horizon, we’ll be tracking how they perform every weekend.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8b68362594196a2cbe4d25d23b8ce31b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

For Weah, who joined Juventus from Lille in July, it was a lively league debut as he helped the Turin giants to an impressive 3-0 win at Udinese. Playing as a wing-back, he completed two out of three duels and 3.97 progressive passes per 90 minutes in the half he played. Weah, son of AC Milan’s legendary striker George, was withdrawn at half-time with a slight foot injury.But his exit meant a chance for compatriot McKennie. The midfielder has been facing an uncertain future under manager Max Allegri, with rumours rife that he was not in his plans this season.It had even been uncertain whether the former Leeds United loanee would be taken on Juve’s pre-season U.S. tour. In the end, he did fly out with the squad and did enough to convince Allegri to give him 45 minutes on Sunday.McKennie won five of the six duels he attempted, made three successful tackles and made one key pass in an encouraging run out.If you want to keep up with this column each week you can follow Greg here.


Issue of the weekend

After some head-spinning twists and turns, Tyler Adams is a Premier League player again. The midfielder signed for Bournemouth, owned by American businessman Bill Foley, on Sunday following a week when he appeared to be on the brink of joining Chelsea, only to be left in limbo when the west London club’s interest abruptly fizzled out as they pursued other targets.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Tyler Adams: A Chelsea collapse, legal drama with Leeds and a move to Bournemouth

Then came the drama over whether Bournemouth’s initial approach had triggered the £20million ($25.4m) release clause in his contract, with Leeds denying they had and the south-coast outfit insisting otherwise.

A compromise was reached eventually, with Bournemouth paying over that amount, and the 24-year-old got his return to one of Europe’s big leagues along with the chance to become a fixture in Andoni Iraola’s team ahead of next summer’s Copa America.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8b68362594196a2cbe4d25d23b8ce31b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

If that was encouraging news for USMNT supporters, then so too was right-back Sergino Dest finalising his loan switch from Barcelona, where he had been deemed surplus to requirements, to PSV Eindhoven in the Netherlands on Monday. It is a chance to reset his European career and get vital minutes at another big club.


Player of the weekend

Name: Josh Sargent
Club: Norwich City
Position: Striker
Appearances: 4
Goals/assists: 2/1

Norwich had a big hole to fill when Finnish striker Teemu Pukki called time on his illustrious Carrow Road career to head for MLS and Minnesota United in June. After 88 goals in 210 appearances for the club, supporters may have wondered who would be able to even begin to plug that gap.

Well, it’s provided an opportunity for USMNT forward Josh Sargent and, so far, it’s one he’s taken with both hands. The 23-year-old was no slouch last season, with 13 goals in 40 Championship games, and he seems set to continue that form with two in his club’s first three league games.

He was on target again with a header as Norwich beat Millwall 3-1 on Sunday, and completed three dribbles, with four shots, before his replacement on 80 minutes. Sargent’s bright start to the season has brought with it speculation that Leeds United are coveting him as they bid for their own return to the top flight.

(Kevin Hodgson/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The visualisations in the Graphics of the Weekend section below hint at Sargent enjoying the additional space in the box and scoring responsibility afforded by Pukki’s departure, with a trend of coming off the left and cutting on to his right foot.


Quote of the weekend

Former Inter Milan and Udinese manager Andrea Stramaccioni was impressed with Weah’s contribution in Juventus’ win over the latter.

“Juventus have caught an interesting player with potential to be expressed,” said Stramaccioni during Sunday Night Square on DAZN. “He knows how to attack and has a modern open-mindedness because he is able to defend.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8b68362594196a2cbe4d25d23b8ce31b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“The U.S. national team coach had pointed him out to me as a player with huge potential for growth. He has to have time to adapt, but he’s a futuristic player and Juve are right to bet on him.”


Graphics of the weekend


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Matt Turner
Club: Nottingham Forest
Position: Goalkeeper
Appearances: 2
Clean sheets: 0
Save Percentage: 70%

Turner experienced his first win as a Nottingham Forest player when he helped his new side to beat Sheffield United. The 29-year-old will have prioritised playing regularly in his next step after it became apparent Arsenal wanted David Raya to compete with Aaron Ramsdale at his expense.

Enter Steve Cooper’s side, who continue to be linked with a move for Manchester United’s Dean Henderson as well. But Turner has started his first two games with Forest and, although he hasn’t kept a clean sheet yet, he made several important saves against Sheffield United, including one on 78 minutes that felt pivotal with the scores level. Eleven minutes later Chris Wood got the winner which ensured smiles for Turner and his new team-mates.

(Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images)

Name: Tim Ream
Club: Fulham
Position: Defender
Appearances: 2
Tackles/Interceptions per 90mins: 0.81/1.17

Last weekend, Ream was celebrating an impressive performance as Fulham ground out a win at Everton on the opening day. This time he was heading for an early bath after being sent off in the 64th minute as Brentford inflicted an emphatic 3-0 defeat on his team at Craven Cottage.

The penalty he conceded with the challenge that earned him his second booking allowed Bryan Mbuemo to score but incensed the home fans, who felt it was a harsh decision by referee Darren Bond.


Further reading…

Look out for Christian Pulisic and Yunus Musah’s Milan kicking off their Serie A campaign at Bologna on Monday evening in Italy (2.45pm ET, Paramount+). Plus keep your eyes peeled for The Athletic’s interview with USMNT and Eintracht Frankfurt prospect Paxten Aaronson later this week. 

(Top photos via Getty Images)

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, GERMANY - APRIL 29: Paxten Aaronson of Eintracht Frankfurt reacts during the Bundesliga match between Eintracht Frankfurt and FC Augsburg at Deutsche Bank Park on April 29, 2023 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. (Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

Paxten Aaronson exclusive: Cheetah runs, stir fries and staying power

Greg O’KeeffeAug 25, 2023

It was a moment that made it all worthwhile: moving nearly 4,000 miles from home, the gruelling training, the lonely nights when you miss your family, your girlfriend and a home-cooked meal.Thrust into the action as a 59th-minute substitute, Paxten Aaronson did not have time to stop and pinch himself.There was a job to be done. His team, Eintracht Frankfurt, needed to beat Freiburg on the last day of the 2022-23 Bundesliga season to ensure a seventh-place finish.But nearly three months later, as the 19-year-old describes helping Frankfurt over the line to European qualification, his eyes light up and the excitement in his voice is still palpable.“We needed a win and we needed two other teams to lose,” he says. “I was lucky enough to be on the pitch and it was just unreal, you know. The stadium, the atmosphere and the passion. Every game kicked off at the same time so, on the scoreboard, you would see the scores every time someone across the league scored.“The fans would be cheering and you didn’t always know which team had scored, but you just know that you had to get the job done. It was a surreal moment.”In front of 50,500 supporters, Frankfurt scored an added-time winner to clinch a spot in the Europa Conference League to cap a memorable season that had already seen them compete in the Champions League, reaching the last 16.It’s why Aaronson feels justified in making the move to Germany, where he made seven appearances (all from the bench) in his debut season, instead of remaining in MLS with Philadelphia Union where he played 23 league games the previous campaign. For the self-confessed football nerd, the threat of relegation or the promise of European qualification, and all the associated drama, gives everything an edge.“Every game means something (here),” he says. “If you’re past the line, you’re fighting against relegation. If you’re above it, you’re fighting to get a European spot.“The fans and the players put their hearts on the line to either stay in the league or clinch Europe next year. So I think that’s the biggest difference, in terms of the two competitions and in terms of the league. If you’re ambitious and you don’t want to stay too complacent, then Europe’s definitely the way because the competitions, the atmosphere, all of it is… yeah, it’s different.”

Aaronson tussles with Borussia Dortmund’s Emre Can (Fantasista/Getty Images)

The player, whose brother Brenden will also play in the Bundesliga this season after joining Union Berlin on loan from Leeds United, feels the high of being involved on that triumphant final day fuels his desire to play a more significant part for Frankfurt this term and made the initial homesickness worth it as he adapted to life in Germany.Aaronson is from a close family and went from living with parents Janell and Rusty and sister Jaden to following his brother into a move to Europe.“I live by myself in an apartment,” he explains. “There are perks to it, you know. It’s enjoyable at times because you have your freedom. You can just go at your own pace. And then sometimes it’s not as enjoyable — when you’re sitting there at seven or eight o’clock at night and you don’t know what to cook and there’s nothing on the table, so you have to make some really bad pasta or something like that.“And, of course, some days it’s more difficult than others. When you have two days off and everybody in Europe wants to fly home because it’s so close here, but you can’t fly back to America because it’s six or seven hours (away). But you keep yourself occupied. And I have.“I have visitors a lot. My grandparents, my girlfriend flies out a lot.“So I’m always keeping busy and honestly, with the amount of effort and work you have to put in every day in training, the days go by fast. It’s an adjustment. It’s a part of my character development — not even in football but outside, too. Being able to mature in a new country and learn different things all around the world. It’ll only make me a better person in the long run.”He’s improving at cooking, too, and becoming a selfless team-mate on and off the pitch as he builds friendships that extend beyond the dressing room.“My go-to is probably stir fry,” he smiles. “My girlfriend actually taught me how to make it. It’s just vegetable and chicken stir fry. I always love rice with everything and, yeah, it’s broccoli, peppers, chicken, rice and carrots.“Jesper Lindstrom (Frankfurt’s Danish midfielder) is a good friend. We sometimes go out to dinner. When he hurt his foot, I actually had to go over every morning at like 8am — he lives a 23-minute walk from me — to walk his dog because he was on crutches.“But I have a strong connection with everybody because they were all just super welcoming and it’s a good group of guys. Especially when you’re a young guy coming in nervous and stuff — it’s just important that you feel welcomed.”

Brenden Aaronson playing for Union Berlin against Mainz earlier this month (Boris Streubel/Getty Images)

They may be two of the U.S.’s brightest young footballing talents, but the Aaronson brothers had to overcome early rejection back home due to their slight frames and height.

Their parents encouraged resilience, though, and the brothers’ natural ability won through. That is why the younger Aaronson remains keen to embrace his attributes rather than trying to match older and more physical opponents in Europe.

“I’ve always said the two attributes I like most about my game are my quick acceleration and how fast I can be with the ball,” he says. “And I always explain to the lifting coaches that I never want to lose that.

“I wanted to build healthy muscle. Muscle that wouldn’t get me so bulky that I turn into a player that’s not as explosive as I am.

“And they understood that. We do exercises, of course, in pre-season. But after that, you can’t do these heavy exercises because it just weighs you down.

“So they do a lot of exercises that are built for the player like me, like squatting and jumping, which is for explosiveness. And focus on the core. For every athlete, it’s super important because they always preach that if you have a strong core, it’s injury prevention number one.”

He has had to step up his level of stamina since returning for pre-season training after a trip back to New Jersey with Brenden to spend time with family and friends.

“There’s a difference here in terms of training and demand on the body; a lot of double sessions. Usually in America, when we would have double sessions, it would be maybe one on the field and one in the gym,” he says.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://246f2aa83f888ea577085f4b683763f9.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“So I’d say, intensity is definitely the biggest challenge. Here, if you have a double session in pre-season, it’s two on the field and it’s not like in the morning it’s hard in the afternoon it’s easy — it’s like two really hard sessions. That definitely took some adapting to get used to, but I’m enjoying it.”

(From left) Marcel Wenig, Ellyes Skhiri, Aaronson and Timothy Chandler in training (Arne Dedert/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Opposition midfielders could well have a hard time keeping up this season. The pre-season work is likely to have enhanced the pace and endurance of a player who credits his willingness to run (and run and run) to his early days on his elementary school yard.

“They had something every day at recess called ‘cheetah running’,” he explains. “You would run around the track all recess until they blew the whistle and you would collect popsicle sticks. So every time you ran around the track, you would get one popsicle stick. You’d try to get the most popsicle sticks out of everybody in the class.

“And then at the end of the year, you would see how many popsicle sticks you had. They had a ceremony and stuff for whoever won. So me and my brother would always gun for number one on the cheetah-running list.

“My dad always jokes, ‘This is what built your endurance’ because every day, right before lunch, I would be itching. I would be telling my teacher, please let me out early so I can get more popsicle sticks.

“It seems silly now. But yeah, that’s kind of where the endurance and running started.”


Like anyone connected with the Bundesliga, Aaronson is excited at the impact of England captain Harry Kane’s move to Bayern Munich and feels it will only make the division stronger.

“It’s massive for the league having someone of his calibre and what he’s done in England,” he says. “It will boost the level and recognition of the league even higher.

“I think the Bundesliga is definitely up there with one of the best.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://246f2aa83f888ea577085f4b683763f9.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“Every league has their differences. When you think about Serie A, it’s known for the defending. When it’s La Liga, it’s ball possession and the very good passing. And then the Premier League has its calibre. For me, the Bundesliga is a league that’s very fast-paced and a lot of the games are frantic. It’s man-to-man defending. Nobody really drops off.

“If you get the ball in the middle, someone’s coming from behind and hitting you. Everybody runs forward and it’s all about the pressing. Being an American and having so many Americans in the league, it kind of suits our playing style. We have strong endurance, we’re usually always quick.

“It’s a big transition game and it’s a big transition league. And if you win the ball, most of the time you’re going in on a three versus two. If you can capitalise on the moment, that can win you games.”

Aaronson loves the energetic nature of the Bundesliga (Ulrik Pedersen/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

He hopes stepping up in this league will also boost his USMNT career. Aaronson has one senior cap and hopes to play for the under-23s in next summer’s Paris Olympics after the U.S. qualified for the first time since 2008.

“It’s a major event,” he says. “When you think about the Olympics, you just kind of get this feeling. It would obviously be very good to represent my country in such a big tournament.

“So getting to be on a team that helped qualify and then hopefully playing in the tournament would be a good honour.”


Before that will come another season of learning his craft at Frankfurt and soaking up more experiences.

He has already tasted the fervour of a game against Borussia Dortmund at Signal Iduna Park. “It was a difficult game for us (Frankfurt lost 4-0 in April). It’s always difficult going there,” he recalls. “But for me, I just remember walking onto the field and seeing the Yellow Wall (Dortmund’s famously imposing single-tiered stand).

“You speak about watching it on TV, but it’s not the same as when you’re on the pitch.

“All those 80,000 people are just stacked above you and they’re all shouting down at you. When I was warming up to go into the game, I got four beer bottles just launched on me.

“It’s an incredible stadium and getting onto the field, playing against the likes of Marco Reus and guys I’ve watched since I was a youth was an exciting moment.”

The Yellow Wall at Signal Iduna Park (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

There should be plenty of equally exciting moments for both brothers this season and their father has already booked his trip to Berlin in November — Frankfurt travel to the capital raising the prospect of his boys going head to head.

Although it is over four hours by train between the two cities, or an hour’s flight, Aaronson is glad to have his brother relatively near and sought his older sibling’s advice before agreeing the switch to Europe last November.

But this season he is preparing to make his own mark on the league; Aaronson was named as one of the top five youngsters to watch in 2023-24 by the Bundesliga’s website along with Nelson Weiper, Kevin Paredes, Julien Duranville and Mathys Tel.

Can this be his year?

“I think so, definitely. If I take my moments and I take my opportunities, every minute I’m on the pitch, whether it’s training or in a game,” he says.

“I want to show I’m here to stay. If I always keep working and doing what I’m supposed to, for sure I can have a good season.”

Some players may feel pressure at the heightened expectations but Aaronson’s enjoyment of football always supersedes the sense of tension.

“For me, it’s never felt real, you know? It still just feels like I’m just playing for fun. Sometimes it doesn’t even feel like it’s my job. So it’s just enjoyable. I’m like a big nerd with that stuff. If there’s a game on, it doesn’t really matter what it is: I’m putting it on.

“First weekend of the Premier League with Burnley versus Man City on the Friday, I was on my couch watching it. It’s entertaining for me and that’s always been the same, even when I was a little kid.

“There are the occasional players that you talk to and they’re like, ‘I’ve never watched the game’ and that always amazes me. You play the game, you love the game. Like, isn’t it interesting for you to watch other players and other teams?”

Aaronson playing for Philadelphia Union in May 2021 (Kyle Ross/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The adventures continue for Aaronson and European football is another prospect that has the wide-eyed football fanatic excited for the new season.On Thursday, he was an unused substitute as Frankfurt drew 1-1 with Bulgarian side Levski Sofia in the first leg of their Europa Conference League qualifying play-off.“Getting to play against teams from different countries like France, or even occasionally the teams you might not have heard of — that’s amazing,” he says. “They’re always gonna come in and fight, so embracing this competition and getting to play against these different styles and these different tactics is exciting.“The fans always get behind it because when you play in Europe and you have a trophy that you can win, it always puts a pump on your chest.”In May, Frankfurt parted company with Oliver Glasner, the manager who signed Aaronson, but his replacement Dino Toppmoller was quick to reassure the youngster he values him as highly as his predecessor.“He told me about the importance of staying hungry,” he says. “He thinks that this season can be as good as I make it.“And I think that, too — if I never get complacent. It is a big thing for me because, at a young age, you can kind of see some players who get a lot of spotlight or a lot of success too early and then, later on, it kind of affects them.

Toppmoller has taken Aaronson under his wing (Arne Dedert/picture alliance via Getty Images)

“I always try to tell myself not to ever get too high or too low. Just always be hungry.“And I think that sets a tone. It sets the mood for always wanting to accomplish more.”He might be running for more valuable prizes than popsicle sticks this season, but Aaronson’s enthusiasm remains just as unbridled as it was as a young boy tearing around the playground in Medford. And as back then, rewards are sure to follow.

(Top photo: Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

Greg O’Keeffe is a senior writer for The Athletic covering US soccer players in the UK & Europe. Previously he spent a decade at the Liverpool Echo covering news and features before an eight-year stint as the paper’s Everton correspondent; giving readers the inside track on Goodison Park, a remit he later reprised at The Athletic. He has also worked as a news and sport journalist for the BBC and hosts a podcast in his spare time.

Drake Callender’s rise from Inter Miami’s third-choice keeper to Leagues Cup hero

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE - AUGUST 19: Drake Callender #1 of Inter Miami celebrates with his teammates after blocking a penalty kick from Elliot Panicco #30 of Nashville SC to win the Leagues Cup 2023 final match between Inter Miami CF and Nashville SC at GEODIS Park on August 19, 2023 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

By Matt Pyzdrowski Aug 23, 2023


It was the 86th minute and Atlanta United had just won a penalty kick. Inter Miami goalkeeper Drake Callender stood tall in goal with his chest puffed out and his hands at his sides, waiting for the approach from Thiago Almada. Though Miami led 4-0, and the result was all but guaranteed, Callender remained unfazed in goal. He was approaching the spot kick as if the game was on the line. As Almada made his approach, Callender was focused — he waited and waited, refusing to move too early. He had studied the Atlanta United attacker and knew that he liked to shoot to his right, but he couldn’t move in advance of the kick and risk exposing that he already knew where Almada was going to shoot. If he did, Almada would just tuck the ball into the other side of the goal. It wasn’t until Almada virtually made an impact with the ball that Callender finally moved and threw himself to his right to make the save. As the ball was cleared out of play, Callender jumped up onto his feet, clenched his fists together, grinned cheek to cheek, and let out a child-like scream of joy. It was the first penalty kick stop of his professional career. You could see by his reaction how good it felt to get over that mental hurdle and finally save one. Even though it might not have had a major on the result of the game, or been the most difficult of saves to make, it would turn out to be incredibly valuable for his psyche, and a positive memory he would be able to rely on in the future. As it would turn out, he wouldn’t have to wait too long for his next opportunity to put into practice what he had learned from that valuable experience. Less than a month later, Callender would be required to step up again when Inter Miami’s match against Nashville SC in the Leagues Cup final went to penalty kicks on Sunday. His previous stop, certainly still fresh in his mind. This time, the situation was more tense, though.After five saves in regulation, and one already earlier in the shootout, Callender would save his best for last when he stepped up to the spot in the 11th round of the penalty shootout. With the game on the line, and every outfield player having already attempted their kicks, it was now the goalkeeper’s turn. Once again unfazed by the moment, Callender looked calm as could be — you could hardly tell he’d never been there before, as he rocketed the ball into the roof of the net with the confidence of someone who’d scored hundreds of goals in their career. But his job was not done yet, he still had one more shot to face, from fellow goalkeeper Elliot Panicco. As Panicco made his approach, Callender danced on his line, waving his arms and legs about, but just like against Atlanta, he waited until the moment right before impact to finally make his move. With the ball headed toward the upper left half of his goal, the Inter Miami keeper pushed off with all his might and expertly redirected Panicco’s attempt far away from goal. Fully aware of what this stop meant to him and his team, Callender jumped to his feet and immediately took off on a dead sprint for his teammates, who were running toward him from the center circle. It was Inter Miami’s first trophy in team history. Though the 25-year-old Callender had a tough and inconsistent start to the year, his game has improved remarkably since the arrival of Messi, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba. His performances during the Leagues Cup have been on another level and were often marked by heroic displays, including his saves against Nashville, and impressive performances against both Cruz Azul in the group stage and the Philadelphia Union in the semifinals. It would be hard to argue that without his big-time stops, often in the game’s most crucial moments, Miami would have never ended up lifting the Leagues Cup trophy this season. It should hardly be surprising that his impressive play earned him the title of best goalkeeper at this summer’s tournament. What makes Callender’s story even more inspiring is his journey from being Miami’s third-choice goalkeeper to now becoming a vital piece of arguably the most exciting team in the league. After playing college soccer for the California Golden Bears, Callender had his homegrown rights traded from San Jose to Miami ahead of the latter club’s inaugural MLS season. After spending a majority of that season outside the game day squad, Callender knew that in order to develop it was crucial for him to get playing time in 2021. With the encouragement of his then head coach Phil Neville, he spent a majority of 2021 with the reserve team in USL League One. That year, Callender gained invaluable experience as a No. 1 goalkeeper, playing 17 games for Fort Lauderdale, and learning what it takes to make it at the next level. He returned to preseason in 2022 a changed goalkeeper. It didn’t take long to see that the decision to go down a level for playing time was a wise one. Callender started the beginning of preseason as third choice, but got his first chance in MLS in March 2022 during a 3-1 loss to FC Cincinnati after injuries to both goalkeepers in front of him. Despite the loss, he showed glimpses to his coaches in that game of what he could be if he put it all together. Though his promotion would be short lived and he was once again relegated to the bench the following match, it wouldn’t take long for Callender to get another opportunity, this time in the U.S. Open Cup against local rivals Miami FC. That match would turn out to be a springboard for Callender that season, and proved to his coach and to the rest of the team that he ultimately had what it took to make it at the MLS level.By July 2022, after a string of impressive performances in league play, Callender’s evolution from third-string goalkeeper to first choice at Inter Miami was complete. In total, he started 24 league games last season and consistently got better as the year progressed.This season, despite that slow start in MLS, Callender has been a constant in the starting lineup and gradually impressed along the way — even in the face of adversity when his team struggled on the way to Neville’s departure. His performances haven’t just been noticed within MLS circles either, as he’s now being called into USMNT camps (twice so far), including when the USMNT beat Canada to lift the CONCACAF Nations Leagues Cup this past summer.Even though Callender’s rise has been impressive, the reality is he still has some work to do if he wants to permanently etch his name as one of the three goalkeepers called into USMNT camp on a consistent basis. While Matt Turner has locked down the No. 1 spot, both Ethan Horvath and Zack Steffen have made a case over the past 12 months that they still have a valuable role to play for their country, and at just 19-years-old, Gabriel Slonina has the inside track to become Turner’s eventual successor. Though not impossible, it will be difficult for Callender to knock down that door without some things going his way over the coming months and years, considering who is in front of him, and that each of those other keepers are under 30-years-old — the prime age for the position. That being said, the USMNT goalkeeper position has been more unpredictable in recent years than it traditionally has been. As for his skill set, like many Americans before him, Callender is very explosive, has exceptional reflexes and is often able to save shots that appear to be guaranteed goals. He is quick in his decision-making and direct to the ball, which allows him to make a lot of saves and through a variety of methods. His stop in the Leagues Cup semifinal against Philadelphia is a perfect example of this. Callender’s ability to shoot his right hand down, while keeping a strong and stable barrier behind the ball, was special, and not a save every goalkeeper makes under the circumstances. Callender’s positioning is also impressive for a younger goalkeeper, usually only requiring small and minimal movements in order to consistently get into the correct shape to make the save. His excellent hands and ability to catch the ball is also how he gives off the allure that everything is easy, and makes so many difficult stops look routine. That’s not to say that he always gets things correct — he would surely be the first to admit that he’s a work in progress, but it is encouraging to see him often rely more on the fundamentals than his athleticism to make saves.Callender is blessed with height and long arms and knows how to use his reach and wingspan to his advantage. His size and advanced starting position can also be seen in how effectively he deals with and claims high balls lifted into his box, even when his box is busy. It’s one of his biggest strengths as a goalkeeper. One area of his game that has occasionally come into question is his positioning when dealing with long and direct balls played in behind his back line. Though often confident in his actions, it is in these moments where he sometimes hesitates, unsure of how to best handle the situation. It’s also one of the hardest things for goalkeepers who like to stick closer to their line, like Callender often does from open play, to get comfortable doing. Against the Union in the Leagues Cup semifinals, Callender nearly got punished when he got the timing of his attempted sweep outside the box all wrong. 

Play: Video

As the ball was played from within Philadelphia’s own half, Callender was far too low in his starting position and hesitated, unsure whether to come for the ball or stay closer to his line, before eventually rushing off his line at the final moment to try to win the ball off the foot of Chris Donovan. Luckily for Callender, after Donovan beat him to the ball and rounded him, the Union attacker became unbalanced and launched the ball with his left foot over the net and into the stands. It wasn’t the first and it won’t be the last time it happens — he also had a similar moment against FC Dallas before that — but it will be key for him to learn from the moments when things go wrong, make improvements, and put things right the next time.Callender does have this skill set in him and it appears he has already started to make adjustments to his approach, though. In the final against Nashville, just five minutes into the game, he made a great sweeping header, clearing the ball nearly to the center of the field. This time his positioning was higher, and his thought process clear. Though it’s encouraging to see, it’s definitely an area he will want to improve upon and get more comfortable and consistent doing. 

Another area of his game that he will have to improve if he wants to take the next step and work his way into a consistent spot with the USMNT and potentially earn a mve to a bigger league in Europe, is his ability with the ball at his feet. Though Callender is secure in his passing, and able to use both feet out of the back, the range of passes that he is consistently able to play are often limited. He’s primarily been used as the pivot at the back to slowly move the ball out wide to his center backs, or clear the ball long and away from danger rather than as someone who can break lines with his passing. The accuracy of his medium to long distance passing in particular is where he will need to improve if he wants to take that next step in his career. It will be interesting to see how this area of his play develops now that Miami has a new coach in Tata Martino and new players who want and demand their team play out of the back. On Wednesday, Callender and Inter Miami already have their sights on their next trophy when they meet MLS leaders FC Cincinnati in the semifinals of the U.S. Open Cup at TQL Stadium. It was the Open Cup last season where everything started to take off for Callender, and the fact that Wednesday’s match will be played against the same team and at the same venue of his first start for an MLS team couldn’t be more symbolic and meaningful. 

(Photo: Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

A Women’s World Cup Best 11 with NO American’s – first time ever.

USWNT knocked off FIFA world rankings top spot for first time in six years

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 6: Alex Morgan of USA looks dejected after missing a goalscoring opportunity during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between Winner Group G and Runner Up Group E at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 6, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Joe Prior/Visionhaus via Getty Images)

By Nnamdi Onyeagwara4h ago10


The U.S. women’s national team (USWNT) have been knocked off the top spot of FIFA’s world rankings for the first time since March 2017.They were replaced by Sweden, who moved up from third to the summit for the first time in their history. World Cup winners Spain sit in second after rising from sixth place, with the USWNT in third.England, the losing finalists in Australia and New Zealand and European Championship winners a year ago, remain fourth.The U.S.’ fall follows their disappointing World Cup campaign, which saw them be eliminated in the round of 16 after a penalty shootout defeat to Sweden. It was the first time the team had failed to at least reach the semifinal in a Women’s World Cup.latko Andonovski resigned as coach of the team last week. Assistant coach Twila Kilgore was named interim head coach while sporting director Matt Crocker leads the search for a new head coach.

There are implications for the program as a whole, for the NWSL, for the youth national teams, for the role of NCAA and elite club soccer in player development.his World Cup has raised massive existential questions about America’s ability to keep up moving forward.As much as U.S. Soccer has always said it’s set the bar for international women’s soccer, the bar has been raised on them — and while that state of affairs is something they have acknowledged in the past, there’s a big difference between acknowledgement and the harsh reality of their World Cup campaign ending in the round of 16 for the first time ever.

USWNT captain Lindsey Horan on World Cup exit, more: ‘We did not get the best out of every single individual’

Jul 22, 2023; Auckland, NZL; USA midfielder Lindsey Horan (10) reacts against Vietnam in the second half of a group stage match in the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup at Eden Park. Mandatory Credit: Jenna Watson-USA TODAY Sports

By Meg Linehan and The Athletic StaffAug 22, 2023184


U.S. women’s national team midfielder Lindsey Horan discussed the team’s Women’s World Cup exit, captaining the squad and more, saying Tuesday, “We did not get the best out of every single individual.” Here’s what you need to know:

  • Speaking with former USWNT players Tobin Heath and Christen Press on their podcast, “The RE-CAP Show,” Horan said, “I don’t think everyone was fully prepared, and that’s on us as well.”
  • Horan also addressed feeling like the USWNT was not set up to succeed, and she suggested the players came together to adapt during the Sweden game.
  • The USWNT exited this year’s Women’s World Cup after losing 5-4 on penalties to Sweden in the round of 16. It marked the first time the program failed to at least reach the semifinal in the tournament.

What else Horan said

“At the end of the day, you’re set up in a structure to do this, and your opportunity individually (is) just go play within the structure,” Horan said. “But if you’re not set up — like the game against Sweden, I don’t think we were necessarily set up to play the way that we played. That was just us, finally coming together and being like, this is what we’re gonna do. And then it worked. Then it’s like, ‘Okay, keep doing it.’ Could that have happened earlier? Maybe.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Horan also spoke about finding joy at the World Cup, saying, “I think it’s such a hard one because it’s a tournament.”

“You’re going into each game, where all you want to do is win, and it doesn’t really matter how you play,” she said. “It’s about winning, and it’s each game at a time. The joy is winning, you look at it in that kind of way. (In) the first game, there were bits and pieces of joy, but we still weren’t at our best.“Looking at those three group stage games, and you felt it in the team. You felt this tense feeling, and people were just not enjoying their football or they weren’t enjoying individually playing, and there’s so much going on in their head. I had a press conference, and that was the first thing that came to my mind: there was no joy. I haven’t truly enjoyed enough moments on the field where I came off the field and I was like, ‘Oh, I loved that game.’ That’s hard to say a lot in the World Cup. So that’s where I was finding it very difficult to be like, yeah, we just need to find the joy again and then we’re gonna be great. That’s a very hard thing to do.”

Horan also discussed her pregame speeches with the team throughout the tournament.

“I remember going to the Sweden game, and I was just like, ‘Guys, we are so good. Every single one of us is so good. When we’re confident, when we’re brave, when we’re actually enjoying football, we are at our best.’ The one thing I said was, ‘Every time someone gets the (ball), each person should have three or four options. That’s always a thing you say in football, but when you have that, when you see that everyone wants that ball. One of my other main points was (for) everyone (to) sit in their heads right now and say, ‘I want the ball at all times in this game. I’m not hiding. I want the ball. If I’m going to make a mistake, I want the ball again.’ I remember, actually, Tobin saying that to me in the Olympics, she kept saying to me, ‘I don’t care if you make a mistake, get on the ball again.’ So that was my main message to the team in that game.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It just all came together. Maybe the first 10 minutes, we were under a little bit of pressure, but once we started being confident, everyone wanting the ball, there was bravery. You saw it in every single player. You saw the joy.”“It comes and goes in so many ways after the World Cup,” Horan said. “You’re disappointed, you’re upset, you’re angry. Then you sit there and you think, especially as a captain, you’re just like, ‘I had so much responsibility. What more could I have done to help the team?’ I sit there and I’m just like, ‘Maybe that speech that I had before the Sweden game, that could have been before the Netherlands game or before the Vietnam game or whatever.’ I think it’s so hard. There’s always little things that you can fix and you can look back on, but I think individually I tried to do that as much as possible with each of the players.”The captain continued, speaking about how she attempted to alleviate pressure from her younger teammates.“I remember I made it a point, I want to help Sophia Smith as much as possible in this tournament because I think she has a lot of pressure on her back and I want to make sure she’s in a good place, that some of the younger players are in a good place because they’re going to have massive roles. So it’s like, could I have done more to help those players? Because I don’t think we got the absolute best out of some of them because of the way that we were set up and some of the things that we did in the game. But at this point, you’re just killing yourself. I’m killing myself for the last two weeks, like, what the heck could I have done to help or to push or to push our playing style or to push this bravery?”

Horan also spoke about the team’s failure to win in specific moments, compared to the 2019 team.

“When I think about a World Cup, you win a World Cup in moments, moments in every single game,” she said. “There had been moments in every single game for us to win. There are moments in the Netherlands game that we could have won. There are moments in the Vietnam game, where we could have made it a seven or eight (to) nothing game, and then you look back and you’re like, ‘Oh, we could have been playing South Africa in the round of 16.’ We didn’t win those big moments.

“I think back to 2019, and we won every single one of those big moments. They came in every single game with the route that we had, which was so difficult. We won those moments. … How did we prepare for those moments? We were put in a place — that’s usually on the individual like Pinoe (Megan Rapinoe) scoring every single PK that we had throughout the tournament. She was prepared to win that moment. We were put in a place to be prepared for those, and how did the coaching staff do that? That’s such a hard, hard thing for me. We actually were fully prepared for that back in 2019.”

Horan continued, “With this team — with a new coach coming in and Olympics very quickly — and now leading into another four-year cycle, what’s the main goal here?”

“Do we just prepare for a four-year cycle leading into the next World Cup, or do you focus on, ‘Hey, we want to go win gold?’ Don’t ask me that, because I’m a player that hasn’t won a gold medal at the Olympics. For me, it’s just like how can you prepare for the next four-year cycle but also in your mind, winning a gold medal, that’s what this team is about.

“When a coach comes in, it’s like, hey how do we get the best out of every single individual player putting the most simplicity into a 10-day camp every few months and getting the best out of your team, and without overcomplicating everything? Because yes, I could talk about the last four-year cycle, and we don’t need to get into every single thing, but that’s not what we did. We did not get the best out of every single individual. I don’t think everyone was fully prepared, and that’s on us as well.”

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

What to make of Horan’s comments

While some of the highlights of Horan’s comments are provoking strong reactions on social media already, for me, it’s the entirety of what Horan said about the World Cup experience and the last four-year cycle that feels particularly damning.The general consensus around the team’s lackluster Olympic performance was that they were missing a fundamental joy when playing the game — so to hear that the exact same problem occurred two years later under the same technical staff shows that this could have been prevented.And while Horan’s right that she’s just a player and not in charge of the decision, her own questions about what the next coach might bring to the role illuminates that not even the players quite know what U.S. Soccer is prioritizing at this moment in time — the next four-year cycle leading up to the 2027 World Cup, or the immediate challenge of the 2024 Olympics.

The interview does help show how Horan grew into her role as captain, and her own frustrations about not being able to fully succeed in that role, on or off the field. Her honesty should be appreciated, not just by those on the outside looking in, but by the federation’s leadership. — Linehan

Backstory

Vlatko Andonovski resigned last week as head coach of the USWNT, and assistant coach Twila Kilgore was named interim head coach while U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker leads the search for a new head coach.Andonovski succeeded Jill Ellis in October 2019. The U.S. did not win either of its major tournaments under Andonovski, taking bronze at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. The team won four of 10 matches with Andonovski at the helm at the Olympics and World Cup combined. The coach went 51-5-9 overall with the U.S. team.Kilgore’s first matches as interim head coach will come next month when the U.S. women have two friendlies against South Africa on Sept. 21 and 24.

(Photo: Jenna Watson / USA Today)

The USWNT’s salvation lies in youth development. Will the status quo stop it?

In most big-time women’s soccer countries, elite prospects get pro coaching as teens. The NWSL and U.S. Soccer face pressure to make that happen here. But will old-minded youth clubs block progress?

Alyssa Thompson (center) is a too-rare example of an elite American women's soccer prospect who was able to turn pro as a teenager.
Alyssa Thompson (center) is a too-rare example of an elite American women’s soccer prospect who was able to turn pro as a teenager.Abbie Parr / AP

YDNEY, Australia — Though Spain’s women’s World Cup triumph was the nation’s first, it was far from a one-off. It was years in the making, thanks to major investments in youth player development.There’s a lesson in that for the U.S. women, and it has nothing to do with the dreams of those fans who obsess about the team’s playing style.Spain’s most important push in women’s soccer came not from its national governing body, but from its pro teams. Their youth academy setups, especially Barcelona’s, have created a pipeline of players that America currently can’t match.If you’re the parent of a youth or college soccer player, or a coach or administrator of a league, you might have just done a double-take. How is it that a country as big as the United States, with so many players and teams and leagues and scholarships, isn’t producing enough quality?

The answer is actually quite simple. In Spain, England, France, Germany and other big-time women’s soccer countries, elite prospects get coaching worthy of their pro potential starting as teenagers. In the U.S., only a tiny handful of players can dream of that.Most of them play through their high school years for youth clubs that focus on their own interests, then hope to get to an elite-level college team that can launch them to the pros in their early 20s.

» READ MORE: Spain wins the women’s World Cup and arrives as a women’s soccer superpower

Spain's 19-year-old rising star Salma Paralluelo turned pro at age 15.
Spain’s 19-year-old rising star Salma Paralluelo turned pro at age 15.Abbie Parr / AP

No wonder the U.S. under-20 team hasn’t won its age-group World Cup in a decade, and the under-17s never have won theirs. Meanwhile, Spain won last year’s under-20 women’s World Cup and is a two-time under-17 reigning champion.Some players from those squads were on the field at Stadium Australia on Sunday, including 19-year-old phenom Salma Paralluelo, who won the World Cup’s top young player award.

Pressure on the NWSL

For years, close observers of the National Women’s Soccer League have complained about its lack of a homegrown player rule akin to Major League Soccer’s — a way for young players to sign directly with teams instead of going through a draft. And for years, the NWSL has promised a rule would come.But the wait has dragged on for so long that it took a lawsuit from then-15-year-old Portland Thorns prospect Olivia Moultrie in 2021 to force the NWSL to drop a ban on all players younger than 18. And it took another year after that for the league to allow its teams to sign two under-18 players to their squads without having to petition the league for special permission.

ADVERTISEMENT

In the NWSL’s early years, some teams didn’t have the internal infrastructure to handle having minors in their squads. But those days are in the past as ever more investment comes to clubs and the league as a whole. Now people who’ve been pushing for bigger change are done waiting, including some of the biggest names in the game.“I think there’s conversations that are going to happen,” said San Diego Wave president Jill Ellis, the former two-time World Cup-winning U.S. manager who chaired FIFA’s technical committee at this tournament. “I know there’s some fantastic talent. … I think there are opportunities to grow in certain areas, and pull certain levers to continue to accelerate.”

» READ MORE: How America helped build England’s rising women’s soccer powerhouse

Jill Ellis presented the women's World Cup trophy on stage after the final.
Jill Ellis presented the women’s World Cup trophy on stage after the final.Catherine Ivill / Getty Images

Ellis knows firsthand about that fantastic talent, because she has signed quite a bit of it to the San Diego Wave. She drafted Naomi Girma, convinced the league to let Jaedyn Shaw turn pro at 17, and this year brought in 15-year-old Melanie Barcenas.They’ve rewarded Ellis with impressive play. Girma was on this year’s World Cup team, Shaw was last year’s U.S. Soccer Young Player of the Year, and Barcenas has played in 11 games this year.

Breaking barriers

“I do think allowing the minors to sign now has been a big step,” Ellis said. “We’ve got to make ourselves so attractive [that] people don’t want to On the other end of the Pacific coast in Portland, Thorns general manager Karina LeBlanc is also pushing for reform. The former Philadelphia Independence and Canadian national team goalkeeper joined the club after the Moultrie lawsuit, and ensures no guessing is needed of her opinion.“What [the] Portland Thorns did and Olivia Moultrie did broke a barrier,” LeBlanc said. “I think the pathway of what it was, is going to be different from what it is in the future. And it’s about us sitting at the table and having those honest discussions of, what do we need to do differently?”he revealed that some meetings have already taken place, with “honest conversations” about focusing on youth development.“Everything was discussed,” she said, followed by an admission she wasn’t allowed to say what everything meant. “It was an open discussion. And I think it was important because we had owners, GMs, we had across the board — other stakeholders that are not within the league. … We all understand that the game is growing, and we have to grow with the game.”

» READ MORE: Kate Markgraf stepping down as GM of U.S. women’s national team

So the ideas are there, which is a good sign. Now they need executing.It will take a lot of money, and not every NWSL team has the funds to run its own youth academy. Some already do, and there’s a growing sense they should be allowed to reap the rewards. Those without the resources could be allowed to partner with a local youth club of choice to build a pipeline there, as some MLS teams did before they could fund their own full-fledged academies.

‘Meaningful impact on the pitch’

Proof that the matter has reached NWSL team owners’ suites came from a conversation with Julie Uhrman, president of Angel City FC. The Los Angeles-based team doesn’t just have piles of money, Hollywood fame and a willingness to push boundaries, it has Alyssa Thompson: the 18-year old winger who debuted for the senior U.S. team at England’s Wembley Stadium as a high schooler last fall, was the NWSL’s No. 1 draft pick this past winter, and charged on to the World Cup squad.“You’re seeing younger and younger players not only enter the NWSL, but have meaningful impact on the pitch.” Uhrman told The Inquirer, name-checking Moultrie, Shaw and Thompson unprompted.“How do we develop the best program for young players to come in, develop and grow, learn the game, mature and have the support necessary to be successful on and off the pitch?” she continued. “We’ve started with Alyssa Thompson, and I think you’re seeing some exceptional players at a younger age. We just have to create a system that can really support them.”The other big stumbling block isn’t about money. It’s about emotions. It took almost a decade for MLS to overcome youth clubs that complained about the pro teams taking “their players.” In some cities, there’s still ample ill will. (Fortunately, Philadelphia isn’t one of them, thanks to the savvy of the Union academy’s leaders.)ow can that status quo be beaten? Former U.S. women’s team and Orlando Pride manager Tom Sermanni has seen a lot of ruffled feathers in his years around the American game, and didn’t hesitate to ruffle a few more.“It is hard to beat that,” he told The Inquirer. “I would say there’s two things. One is that you’re not taking all of your players, you’re only taking a few. The second thing I would say is that from a club perspective, would it not be a big advantage to say that we’ve actually produced players who are getting identified on a level?”Common sense to an outsider’s ear, but a stick in the chest of the youth soccer-industrial complex.

‘The ideal vehicle’

“For me, it’s selling it to the club in the sense of saying that it’s showing that your club is actually doing a very good job,” Sermanni said. “But ultimately, the state associations, probably in conjunction with the national association, have just got to sort of bite the bullet.”His vision is state- or regional-level hubs giving players elite training under U.S. Soccer’s supervision. Sermanni added the carrot of allowing players to go back to their local clubs part-time.

» READ MORE: The USWNT’s long era of success is over, but a new one could be on the horizon

Tom Sermanni coached the U.S. women in 2013 and '14. His most recent full-time job was as New Zealand's manager from 2018-21.
Tom Sermanni coached the U.S. women in 2013 and ’14. His most recent full-time job was as New Zealand’s manager from 2018-21.Martin Mejia / AP

“If those programs are run well, players will want to go there and play,” he said. And if those programs are free, some players will want to go there and play. The other thing is that you don’t necessarily then have to take the player all the time — you might take the player in a training program, but they can go back and play for the club.”The biggest challenge of a U.S. Soccer-run structure, even more than the nature of top-down rule, is the country’s vast size. It’s easier to scout everyone in a European or South American country with a smaller land mass.That’s where the NWSL comes in, and the new women’s league planned by the USL to join its second- and third-tier men’s leagues. Sermanni called on the pros to lead the way.“They’re the ideal vehicle to be that elite pathway, if it’s too challenging for it to come through the governing body and the state bodies,” he said.For decades, the U.S. women’s team’s most prized skill has been its been its decisiveness in big moments. As a consensus forms that change is needed, one can only hope the people in charge act the same way.

» READ MORE: Former USWNT star Briana Scurry has pointed criticism of Vlatko Andonovski’s World Cup failure

Premier League team news, injury latest, fixtures, referees – matchweek 3

Premier League team news, injury latest, fixtures, referees – matchweek 3

By Ali RamplingAli Humayun and more6h ago10


The Premier League action continues, with three sides hoping to maintain perfect starts in matchweek three.Brighton, who have hit eight goals in their first two games, will aim to continue to impress against West Ham, while Arsenal host Fulham in a London derby and champions Manchester City head to Sheffield United hoping to compound the promoted side’s early misery.ADVERTISEMENT

https://8d4163eee8e50cc12d51b6c86d4af93d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Click or tap the match headings for more, including team and player stats, officials and pre-match reading.


Chelsea vs Luton Town

Friday, August 25 (8pm BST)

Chelsea team news: Head coach Mauricio Pochettino confirmed that Mykhailo Mudryk will miss the Luton game, as will new signing Romeo Lavia. The west London club also have a number of long-term absentees including, Carney Chukwuemeka, who faces a spell on the sidelines after having surgery on a knee injury. Benoit BadiashileArmando BrojaTrevoh ChalobahWesley FofanaReece James and Christopher Nkunku are all also unavailable for first-team action due to injury.

Luton team news: Former Chelsea midfielder Ross Barkley is in contention to face his old side. Rob Edwards said: “He’s been training with us now for a couple of weeks, I’ve been delighted with him, so he’s certainly in the mix. I just know he’s hungry and he wants to play football.” Another new signing, goalkeeper Tim Krul, is also available, but defenders Gabe Osho and Dan Potts remain sidelined.

Referee: Robert Jones

Opta omen: Pochettino has won 85 per cent of his Premier League games in charge against promoted sides (W34 D4 L2), the joint-best win rate of any manager with 10+ such games. Both of his defeats have come in home games, however (1-3 v Wolves in December 2018, 0-1 v Cardiff in April 2014).


Bournemouth vs Tottenham Hotspur

Saturday, August 26 (12.30pm BST)

Bournemouth team news: Head coach Andoni Iraola said on Friday that neither of his new summer signings, Alex Scott and Tyler Adams, were “close” to playing, but the latter should return earlier than the former. Lewis Cook will not be available against Spurs but could return next week. Marcus TavernierAdam SmithRyan Fredericks and Dango Outtara are all nursing injuries.

Tottenham team news: James Maddison is available for selection after doubts over his fitness last weekend when he left the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on crutches. But Spurs head coach Ange Postecoglou told reporters on Friday that the England international trained fully and “looks like he will be available”. “His ankle was a bit sore after that but the medical team looked after him,” he said. “People would have seen him in a moon boot but it was more precautionary. He has felt good and probably could have trained yesterday.” Rodrigo BentancurRyan Sessegnon and Bryan Gil remain out.

Referee: Tim Robinson

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8d4163eee8e50cc12d51b6c86d4af93d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Opta omen: Early days, but under Postecoglou, Tottenham are averaging 63 per cent possession, 18 shots, 533 successful passes (174 ending in the final third), 18 sequences of 10+ passes, and 18 pressed sequences per game, all increases on their Premier League game averages under Antonio Conte (51 per cent possession, 14 shots, 425 successful passes – 91 ending in the final third – 12 sequences of 10+ passes, and 12 pressed sequences per game).


Arsenal vs Fulham

Saturday, August 26 (3pm BST)

Arsenal team news: Takehiro Tomiyasu is suspended after being sent off in the win over Crystal Palace. Oleksandar Zinchenko made a late cameo in that game after returning to the bench following a calf issue. Jurrien Timber (ACL) is a long-term absentee. Gabriel Jesus, who was ruled out for a “few weeks” at the beginning of August, returned to full training on Thursday.

Fulham team news: Willian is a doubt for the visitors, but the biggest miss in their squad is how they cope with life after Aleksandar Mitrovic. The Serbia international departed west London for Saudi Pro League club Al Hilal last week, leaving Marco Silva’s side with less than two weeks to find a replacement up front before the summer transfer window closes.

Referee: Paul Tierney

Opta omen: Arsenal have never lost a home league game against Fulham, winning 24 and drawing six of their 30 such meetings. It’s the most one team has faced another at home without ever losing in English league history.


Brentford vs Crystal Palace

Saturday, August 26 (3pm BST)

Brentford team news: Josh Dasilva (hamstring) is still sidelined, while Ben Mee was deemed still not ready last time out against Fulham due to a calf injury. Striker Ivan Toney is banned.

Crystal Palace team news: Roy Hodgson has reported no fresh concerns but Michael Olise is still recovering from a hamstring injury. Hodgson also said that Jean-Philippe Mateta will be part of the Palace squad, with the French striker linked with a move away from Selhurst Park.  Will Hughes could return from injury next week but new signing Matheus Franca requires another scan on a back problem that will happen “hopefully before the end of the month”.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8d4163eee8e50cc12d51b6c86d4af93d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Referee: Peter Bankes

Opta omen: All four Premier League meetings between Brentford and Crystal Palace have been draws – no pair of sides has ever drawn each of their first five meetings in the competition before.


Everton vs Wolves

Saturday, August 26 (3pm BST)

Everton team news: Everton manager Sean Dyche confirmed that striker Dominic Calvert-Lewin will miss out after suffering a facial injury, while midfielder Alex Iwobi will be out for “a few weeks” with a hamstring issue. New signing Jack Harrison has not trained with the group since joining on loan from Leeds but is “back out on the grass”.

Wolves team news: Matheus Nunes — subject of Manchester City interest — is suspended.

Referee: Craig Pawson

Opta omen: Despite losing their opening two games, only Brighton (43) have attempted more shots across the opening two Premier League matchdays than Wolves (39), netting just a single goal from an xG of 4.48 (-3.48, the biggest negative differential in the division so far).


Manchester United vs Nottingham Forest

Saturday, August 26 (3pm BST)

Man Utd team news: Left-back Luke Shaw is expected to be sidelined for an extended period after sustaining a muscle injury. Midfielder Mason Mount could be out until after the September international break due to an injury picked up against Tottenham. Christian Eriksen and Scott McTominay could step in. Harry Maguire missed the defeat to Spurs with a knock, while fellow defender Tyrell Malacia is still out. Rasmus Hojlund has been building up his fitness after a back injury but remains unavailable for this weekend’s fixture, although he is expected to return to full training next week.

Nottingham Forest team news: Gonzalo Montiel could make his debut after signing from Sevilla.

Referee: Stuart Attwell

Opta omen: Manchester United have won their last 10 meetings with Nottingham Forest in all competitions by an aggregate score of 36-3. They won all four meetings last season without conceding a single goal.


Brighton vs West Ham

Saturday, August 26 (5.30pm BST)

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8d4163eee8e50cc12d51b6c86d4af93d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Brighton team news: Roberto De Zerbi is expected to provide an update on Julio Enciso on Friday, after reports from Paraguay said the player had suffered a knee injury.

West Ham team news: Nayef Aguerd is suspended after picking up two yellow cards in the win over Chelsea. New signing Konstantinos Mavropanos was pictured in training on Thursday. Fellow newcomer Edson Alvarez will be pushing for his first Hammers start after coming off the bench.

Referee: Anthony Taylor

Opta omen: Having netted four goals in each of their first two Premier League games this season, Brighton are looking to become only the fourth side in English top-flight history to score 4+ goals in their first three games of a season, after Everton in 1890-91, Sheffield Wednesday in 1931-32 and Blackburn in 1958-59.


Burnley vs Aston Villa

Sunday, August 27 (2pm BST)

Burnley team news: Anass Zaroury is suspended, while Michael Obafemi is sidelined after hamstring surgery. Jordan Beyer could return after a knock. New signings Hannes Delcroix and Aaron Ramsey may be involved.

Aston Villa team news: Unai Emery made only one midweek change in the Europa Conference League, with Diego Carlos replacing Matty Cash in the 5-0 win over Hibernian, but goalkeeper Emi Martinez was substituted at half-time and is a doubt. Àlex Moreno (hamstring) and Jacob Ramsey (ankle) are likely to miss out again, as are Philippe Coutinho and Leander DendonckerTyrone Mings and Emi Buendia are longer-term absentees but Nicolo Zaniolo could be involved for the first time.

Referee: Michael Salisbury

Opta omen: The two longest total match times in the Premier League this season have both involved Aston Villa (108:03 vs Everton on MD2 & 107:39 vs Newcastle on MD1). Indeed, their average game length of 107:51 is 3 minutes & 26 seconds longer than any other side (Chelsea, 104:25).


Sheffield United vs Manchester City

Sunday, August 27 (2pm BST)

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8d4163eee8e50cc12d51b6c86d4af93d.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Sheffield United team news: Gustavo Hamer is set for his home debut. Striker Oli McBurnie and right wing-back George Baldock missed out through injury in the narrow defeat to Nottingham Forest, as did midfielder Anis Slimane.

Man City team news: Pep Guardiola will watch on from Spain after undergoing back surgery in Barcelona, with assistant Juanma Lillo taking charge. John Stones and Kevin De Bruyne are sidelined but Bernardo Silva — fresh from signing a new contract — should return.

Referee: Jarred Gillett

Opta omen: Sheffield United are winless in their last eight league games against Manchester City (D2 L6) since a 1–0 home win in January 2000 while in the second tier.


Newcastle United vs Liverpool

Sunday, August 27 (4.30pm BST)

Newcastle team news: Eddie Howe has confirmed that Joelinton is fit, despite limping off against Manchester City last time out and missing training in the early part of the week. New signing Lewis Hall could be involved in some capacity.

Liverpool team news: Ibrahima Konate is a fitness doubt. The France international has not trained this week due to a muscle problem he suffered in last weekend’s 3-1 win over Bournemouth. Joel Matip is on standby to deputise at centre-back alongside captain Virgil van Dijk.
Trent Alexander-Arnold has been passed fit but Thiago (hip) and Curtis Jones (ankle) will not return to full training until Monday. Alexis Mac Allister is available after his red card against Bournemouth was overturned.

Referee: John Brooks

Opta omen: In his top-flight league managerial career, Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp has beaten Eddie Howe more times than he has any other manager (11), winning each of his last 10 Premier League games against him. No manager has ever registered 11 consecutive Premier League wins against another, with Klopp’s 10 against Howe the joint-longest, along with Alex Ferguson against Gordon Strachan and Pep Guardiola also against Howe.

(Top photo: Getty Images)

Indy looking to extend four-match unbeaten streak

#INDvLDN Preview 
Indy Eleven vs Loudoun United FC
Saturday, August 26, 2023 – 7:00 p.m. ET 
Carroll Stadium – Indianapolis

Follow Live
MYINDY-TV
Streaming Video: ESPN+ (click to subscribe)
Spanish Radio: Exitos Radio 94.3 FM & exitos943.com
In-game updates: @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed
Stats: #INDvLDN MatchCenter at USLChampionship.com

2023 USL Championship Records
Indy Eleven: 9W-9L-8D (4), 35 pts; 7th in Eastern Conference
Loudoun United FC: 7W-17L-3D (-16) 24 pts; 11th in Eastern Conference

Community Health Network Sports Medicine Indy Eleven Injury Report
OUT: Y. Oettl (ankle)
QUESTIONABLE: TBD

SETTING THE SCENE
The Boys in Blue return home after a three-match road swing to host Loudoun United FC on Saturday.

The Eleven are coming off a 0-0 draw at Memphis 901 FC and are 3-1-1 in their last five games. With a 9-9-8 record, Indy is seventh in the USLC Eastern Conference. Loudoun is 1-3-1 in its last five matches and is coming off a 3-1 loss to Sacramento Republic. LDN is 11th in the Eastern Conference at 7-17-3.

INDLDN
26Games27
32Goals30
28Goals Conceded46
22Assists19
85SOT115
99Shots Faced119
9Clean Sheets4

SERIES VS. LOUDOUN
Saturday marks the seventh meeting between the two teams, with Indy holding the 4-2-0 all-time advantage in USL Championship action. This is the second match up of the 2023 season with the Boys in Blue coming from behind to take the first meeting 2-1 on the road.

IND leads: 4-2-0 | GF 8, GA 7

Recent Meetings
5.6.23 | at LDN | W, 2-1
9.17.22 | home | W, 1-0
3.12.22 | at LDN | L, 1-0
8.18.23 | at LDN | L, 4-1
7.20.19 | home | W, 2-0

USL Championship Regular Season
Loudoun United FC 1:2 Indy Eleven
Saturday, May 6, 2023
Segra Field – Leesburg, Va.

Scoring Summary
LDN – Kalil ElMedkhar (Santos) 6’
IND – Sebastian Guenzatti (Boudadi) 73’
IND – Juan Tejada (Martinez) 90’

LAST TIME OUT
MEM 0:0 IND
AUGUST 23, 2023

Indy Eleven successfully defended a 0-0 draw at Memphis 901 FC, playing a man down for a half-plus of action.

A scoreless first half saw the teams even with three shots apiece with one on target each. In true form, Indy topped the possession battle at 55%-45%, but perhaps the most significant stat that carried into the second frame was a Harrison Robledo ejection that put the Eleven down a man for the remainder of the match.

The second half saw a brilliant defensive effort from the Boys in Blue, led by Tim Trilk in goal. Trilk registered three saves for his third clean sheet in six games in 2023, and ninth overall for Indy.

Sebastian Guenzatti led the Indy attack with a pair of shots, with Jack Blake having the lone shot on target. Defensively, Robby Dambrot won a team-high three tackles and Mechack Jerome had a match-high seven clearances.

USL Championship Regular Season
Memphis 901 FC 0:0 Indy Eleven
Wednesday, August 23, 2023
AutoZone Park – Memphis, Tenn.

2023 USL Championship Records
Memphis 901 FC: 10W-6L-8D (3) 38 pts Eastern Conference
Indy Eleven: 9W-9L-8D (4), 35 pts Eastern Conference

Scoring Summary
None

Discipline Summary
MEM – Aiden McFaddden (caution) 44’
IND – Harrison Robledo (ejection) 44’
MEM – Carson Vom Steeg (caution) 54’
IND – Callum Chapman-Page (caution) 67’
IND – Douglas Martinez (caution) 67’
MEM – Nighte Pickering (caution) 80’

50/50 CLUB
Solomon Asante and Aodhan Quinn became the first two players in USL Championship history to reach both 50 regular season goals and 50 regular season assists. Asante (51G/52A) had three assists in the 4-0 win over Birmingham (8.9) to push himself over the plateau. Quinn (53G/50A) added his 50th assist in the 1-0 win at Miami (8.12).

20,000 AND BEYOND…
Aodhan Quinn became the USL Championship’s leader in regular-season minutes played against Tampa Bay on July 22.

Minutes | 20,726 | 1st
Appearances | 249 | 6th
Assists | 50 | 4th

Quinn has 53 goals, becoming the 24th player in USL Championship history to hit 50 goals. He is one of only seven players to have a combined 100 career goals and assists with 53 goals and 50 assists, and is the second player to join the 50 goals/50 assists club.

Quinn has recorded 24 penalty kick goals in 27 attempts in his career in the league, the most of any individual player on record in league history.

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

8/19/23 MLS Leagues Cup Final Miami/Nashville Tonight, World Cup Finals Sun 6 am England vs Spain, #1 CHS Boys tie #2 Noblesville 2-2, CFC GK Mon

MLS Leagues Cup Finals Sat 8 pm  – Miami & Messi @ Nashville FC 8 pm  Apple TV MLS Network

Man this guy is something 9 goals in 6 games and along with Sergio Busquets has turned this Miami team from the worse team in MLS – 11 games no Wins before the GOAT Arrived – to a team that might just be the best team in MLS right now.  Check out this goal and these cheecky moves – man Messi and Miami have become MUST WATCH TV.  I haven’t watched an entire MLS game since last year’s finals – but I have plopped down by $39 and watched the last 2 Leagues Cup wins for Miami.  And I am headed to Cincy on Wednesday night to hopefully see Messi in person as they face Cincy in the US Open Cup.   I for one have enjoyed this Leagues Cup with MLS kicking Mexico’s Liga MX buts.  Sure Liga MX was on the road in this first ever competition between the full leagues – but it was fun to watch.  I even caught myself sort of rooting for Mexican Giant Monterrey to win setting up a Monterrey vs Messi showdown that would have certainly broken the Record for an MLS game if non any Club team in US TV history.  Already close to 1 million tuned in to watch Miami and Messi beat Top 4 MLS contender Philly Union at their place.  Miami blanked them 4-0  – goal and assist for Messi. (Highlights)  Over 1.3 million have purchased Apple’s MLS Season Package to see.

WORLD CUP Finals Sun 6 am England vs Spain on FOX – All European Final

Man I was sad to see the home team bow out to England with Sam Kerr going the whole game – she had her chances to tie the game up 2 or 3 times in the 2nd half before England pulled off the win 3-1. (Highlights) Any won’t it be funny if England Finally BRINGS IT HOME (the World Cup Trophy) and no dignitaries are there to see it – as the King is sending no one to watch.  I struck out on my picks last week – missing both games – here goes my thoughts on the final – I like this dysfunctional Spain team 2-1 win over Sweden (highlights) – who obviously hates their coach – winning despite him – in a hard fought 2-1 win in extra time.  I like Sweden over the Aussies in the 3rd place game Sat @ 4 am on Fox. 

American’s Make World Cup Final After All – The Refs

Four Americans, including center referee Tori Penso, will be officiating Sunday’s Women’s Finals of the World Cup.  This marks the first time U.S. Soccer referees will lead the officiating crew in a senior FIFA World Cup final. In addition to Penso, who will be in control of the match, Brooke Mayo and Kathryn Nesbitt will be on the field as assistant referees while Armando Villarreal will serve as a video assistant referee. None of that would have been possible had the U.S. made the final, as it had in the last three women’s World Cups, since FIFA prohibits referees from working a game if they come from the same country as one of the teams.

Well I asked for a cleaning of the house and that’s what’s happening for the US Ladies – as both Coach Vlatko and Women’s GM Kate MarkGraf have resigned.  I will be interested to see who they bring in – you know the Australian Coach Tom Gustavsson was the US Assistant for 2 World Cup’s under Jill Ellis – many think he should have been offered the job rather than a guy with ZERO international experience in Coach A. Either way – it’s a start.  But many things need to change if the US Ladies are going to turn this around.  (see stories below along with great WC GK Saves).

World Games To Watch – Serie USA starts

Excited to see how Pulisic and Musah do for AC Milan this weekend (Monday actually at 2:45 pm on Paramount Plus as the Italian Serie A (USA) gets underway this weekend.  Lots of Stories below about Serie A predictions, Pulisic and Germany predictions as they both kickoff their European seasons.  Great interview with Pulisic on Men in Blazers.  Also excited to see McKinney and Tim Weah work together at Juventus they face Udinese Sunday at 2:45 p on Para+.  Sat Fulham America hosts Brentford on Peacock, while Man City hosts New Castle at 3 pp on USA, right after The Spurs host Man United at 12:30 pm on NBC.  Sunday Germany has Union Berlin and American’s Aaronson & Jordan Pfuk facing Mainz.

Carmel Boys Recap 2-2 vs Noblesville  Carmel Ties Noblesville 2-2 on this last second score at home.  The Top ranked Carmel Ladies beat Westfield @ Pack the House Night at Murray Stadium Friday night  3-2 with a whole bunch of Carmel FC and Carmel Dad’s Club kids on hand in their jerseys.  Great turn out folks ! 

WORLD CUP IN NEW ZEALAND

My Girlie – Courtney (middle) with her Angel City Buddies at the Women’s World Cup in NZ. Spain game

GAMES ON TV

Sat, Aug 19

4 am FOX                             WORLD CUP 3rd pl Sweden vs Australia

9 am ESPN+                        Leverkusen vs RB Leipzig

10 am PEacock                    Fulham (Ream, Jedi) vs Brentford  

10 am USA                  Liverpool vs AFC Bournemouth (Adams)

12:30 pm NBC                    Tottenham vs Man United 

3 pm USA                            Man City vs New Castle United

8 pm Apple MLS Pass Nashville vs Miami (Messi, Alba, Bisquets) Leagues Cup Final

9::30 pm ESPN2                 San Diego Loyal vs New Mexico United USL

Sun, Aug 20

6 am FOX                             England vs Spain WORLD CUP FINALS   

9 am USA                             Aston Villa vs Everton

9:30 am ESPN +                 Union Berlin (Pfuk, Aaronson) vs Mainz

11:30 am USA                    West Ham United vs Chelsea

1:30 pm ESPN+                  Barcelona vs Cadiz

2:45 pm Para+                   Udinese vs Juventus (Mckinney, Musah)

3:30 pm ESPND                 Real Betis vs Atletico Madrid

7:30 pm Apple TV             Columbus Crew vs Cincy   

7:15 Apple TV Free NY Red Bulls vs DC United    

Mon, Aug 21

2:45 pm Para+                   Bologna vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

3 pm USA                            Crystal Palace vs Arsenal

Wed, Aug 23

7 pm Para +                Cincy (Vasquez) vs Inter Miami (MESSI. Busquets, Alba)

8 pm ESPN+                        Memphis vs Indy 11

US Women + World Cup

US bred coach Twila Kilgore Named Interim USWNT Coach

USWNT GM Kate Markgraf steps down as U.S. Soccer shake-up continues
The USWNT needs big changes before the 2024 Olympics. Here’s the to-do list
Caitlin Murray

Top Candidates to Lead the US Women

Andonovski steps down as USWNT head coach after World Cup failure

Jill Ellis to U.S. Soccer: If you need a USWNT coach, I know just the guy

Carli Lloyd: I was the only one brave enough to say it how it is

England to USWNT: Don’t even think about approaching Weigman

When do World Cup Players Return to NWSL?     I will start posting NWSL TV games again

U.S. makes World Cup final after all as referee Penso gets England vs. Spain
American women will have a historic moment after all at the Women’s World Cup

WORLD CUP

                                              

The top five Women’s World Cup Golden Ball candidates

England’s head honchos are sitting out the World Cup final
Spain’s rapid rise to Women’s World Cup final, in spite of its coach and federation, is ‘just the beginning’


Spain’s World Cup run to final makes no sense. Or does it?
am Marsden and Sophie Lawson

England’s head ruled over Australia’s heart in FIFA Women’s World Cup Joey Lynch

2023 Spain Women’s World Cup roster

2023 England Women’s World Cup roster

Mind the grass: Meet the man in charge of every 2023 Women’s World Cup pitch

Chloe Kelly’s full bladder inspired England penalty heroics

A look at all eight previous Women’s World Cup finals

Fans react to England’s big win over Australia in World Cup semifinals

Ruthless England ruins Australia and Kerr’s big party

Fans react to Spain’s stunning win over Sweden in World Cup semifinals

The odd ambivalence of watching Spain smash this World Cup

The five biggest disappointments of the 2023 Women’s World Cup

Kerr Goal in Spanish
First Nations soccer advisers threaten to quit if the Women’s World Cup doesn’t free more funding

MLS–Leagues Cup Final Miami @ Nashville

Sat 8 pm  

Miami plays tonight for the League Cup title @ Nashville 8 pm on Apple TV


Leagues Cup winners, losers: Messi rules over MLS, Liga MX
Cesar Hernandez

League Cup Final Miami vs Nashville
Inter Miami soar to Leagues Cup final and confidence has followed with them

Messi aims to end magical month with Miami’s first trophy

Lionel Messi scores 9th goal in 6 games as Inter Miami rolls to Leagues Cup final

Wildest Moments in the Leagues Cup so Far

League Cup Next Round

Leagues Cup Bracket

WORLD

Pochettino warns Chelsea’s big-money buys over selection battle
Werder Bremen 0-4 Bayern Munich: Harry Kane scores and assists on Bundesliga debut

‘Very, very smart’: Tuchel toasts Kane’s ‘impressive’ Bayern debut

Serie A 2023-24 predictions, superlatives: Christian Pulisic, Marcus Thuram, among those set to star in Italy

AC Milan Serie A 2023-24 season preview, predictions: Rossoneri might be favorites to win Scudetto

 Serie A 2023-24 Preview: What to expect from Osimhen and

Conti to stand in for Mourinho on Roma bench

Bundesliga preview: What you need to know about all 18 teams, key transfers, prospects in 2023-24
Pochettino warns Chelsea’s big-money buys over selection battle

Werder Bremen 0-4 Bayern Munich: Harry Kane scores and assists on Bundesliga debut

‘Very, very smart’: Tuchel toasts Kane’s ‘impressive’ Bayern debut

Signing Kane: How Bayern Munich finally replaced Lewandowski

Aaronson, Tel, Duranville lead Bundesliga breakout U23 stars

Indy 11

Preview #ELPvIND

Indy Eleven Place Four On USLC Team of the Week

RECAP – MIA 0:1 IND

Recap – IND 4:0 BHM

Goalkeeping

Top Saves Women’s World Cup

England GK Mary Earps Can Cement Place as Worlds Best GK  

Great Saves Mary Earps

Top GK at the WWC

GKs Steal the Show at WWC

GK Former US GK US Timmy Howard Back in the Day for Everton

Good Warm Up Goalkeepers

Tape or Brace after an Ankle Sprain?  YourVeryOwnAthleticTrainer.com

Return to Play after an Ankle Sprain  YourVeryOwnAthleticTrainer.com

Reffing

U.S. makes World Cup final after all as referee Penso gets England vs. Spain
American women will have a historic moment after all at the Women’s World Cup

Claudia Vasconcelos: How this trailblazer referee unexpectedly made history at the first Women’s World Cup

Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

Got to do the Guerin vs North Central game w/ (L-R) Marco Lopez and Mark Sinders, the ole ballcoach Thur. night.
How’s this for a blown Call as MAn U’s GK punches 2 guys and misses the ball with no call?

=======RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ===========

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ====================== 

Women’s World Cup Daily: Final and third-place previews

  • ESPN
    • Aug 18, 2023, 07:30 AM ET

The final for the 2023 Women’s World Cup is almost here, and these daily files give you the latest reporting from around the tournament as well as betting lines, what-to-watch-for information and best reads. Check in with ESPN throughout the tournament as we bring you the latest from Australia and New Zealand.


The lead: Two games left; one winner to be crowned

Australia vs. Sweden, Lang Park, Brisbane, Australia; Saturday, Aug. 19: 6 p.m. local / 4 a.m. ET / 9 a.m. BST

Odds via Caesars Sportsbook: Australia +185, Draw +230, Sweden +135

BRISBANE, Australia — For Australia, Saturday’s third-place playoff with Sweden represents an opportunity to send off a magical home World Cup on a high, to shrug off the disappointment of a heartbreaking 3-1 loss to England in the semifinals and secure a first-ever podium finish for any senior Australia national team — men’s or women’s — on football’s biggest stage. Tony Gustavsson indicated on Friday that no quarter would be spared and that his strongest line-up would be selected, while the players were in a bullish mood as well.

ADVERTISEMENT

“You want to win, 100%,” Clare Polkinghorne declared. “We don’t want to walk away with nothing from this. We’ll recover like any other game — we’ve got third place to win.” At just 21 years old, midfielder Kyra Cooney-Cross will likely feature in several future World Cups in green and gold, but she echoed a similar, defiant desire to take something from the coming game. “We’re not leaving here empty-handed,” she said. “We’re definitely going for third place.”

– Women’s World CupLanding page | Bracket | Schedule | News

For the Swedes, victory on Saturday would secure them their fourth third-place finish at the World Cup — their third in the past four tournaments — to go along with silver medals at the previous two Olympics. They’ve become experts of a sort on coming so close yet so far, leading to captain Kosovare Asllani declaring after their semifinal loss to Spain that she was “tired of crying big-tournament tears.” Nonetheless, third place is better than fourth, and coach Peter Gerhardsson said the joy of beating England in a playoff four years ago is something they want to experience again — Joey Lynch

Could Wiegman replace Southgate as coach of the England men’s side?

Gab Marcotti & Julien Laurens debate whether Sarina Wiegman could replace Gareth Southgate.

Spain vs. England, Stadium Australia, Sydney; Sunday, Aug. 20: 8 p.m. local, 6 a.m. ET, 11 a.m. BST

Odds via Caesars Sportsbook: Spain +160, Draw +200, England +190

SYDNEY — England have a fully fit squad as they look to complete a remarkable double. Last summer they broke the nation’s long wait for a major trophy when they won Euro 2022, but now they’re looking to add the World Cup title. Coach Sarina Wiegman switched formation midtournament to 3-5-2, and they’ll look to that system to see off Spain. Star forward Lauren James is back in the mix after returning from suspension, but Wiegman faces a selection dilemma over keeping faith with Ella Toone in the No. 10 role or bringing back James.

Leah Williamson, England’s injured captain from the Euros, will be in the stands supporting the Lionesses, and retired legends Jill Scott and Ellen White will also be in Stadium Australia, but this is a new-look England team from the one that won the Euros. England are fully aware of Spain’s threat and have the local knowledge of Barcelona‘s Keira Walsh and Lucy Bronze as the Lionesses look to make it two major trophies in 13 months. — Tom Hamilton

Spain coach Jorge Vilda also has some big decisions to make. Vilda has not named the same side twice at the tournament so far, but he might be tempted to stick with the XI that beat Sweden. However, that would mean leaving out Salma Paralluelo once again. The Barcelona teenager started the first four matches at the finals but has starred off the bench in the past two games. She netted the winner against Netherlands in extra time and scored the opener against Sweden. There is no doubt she deserves to start, but will Vilda want to lose her impact off the bench?

The other dilemma centres around Alexia Putellas. The back-to-back Ballon d’Or winner returned to the team against Sweden only to be taken off after an hour. She has not completed 90 minutes since recovering from an ACL injury. Forward Jenni Hermoso could drop into a deeper midfield role, allowing Paralluelo or Esther González to come in if Vilda decides Putellas is not ready. There are also decisions to make at the back, with full-back Oihane Hernández returning from suspension and captain Ivana Andrés fit again. They are all welcome problems for Vilda, though, and demonstrate the depth La Roja have.

Given their star names and success at youth level in recent years, perhaps the biggest surprise is that Spain had never won a knockout game at a major tournament before this World Cup. They feel their time is now and are seeking revenge for last year’s quarterfinal elimination to England at the Euros. — Sam Marsden


Marsden: Salma Paralluelo pivotal in Spain’s semifinal win vs. Sweden

Sam Marsden praises Salma Paralluelo’s influence after coming off the bench to score in Spain’s 2-1 win over Sweden.

Final predictions

Spain 2-1 England. It will be a real clash of styles in the final. European champions England are tough, organised and predictable under Wiegman, and they know how to win. But Spain are the team with the flair and individual brilliance of Paralluelo and Putellas, who is still searching for top form after a long-term cruciate ligament injury. England have the winning pedigree, but Spain are the developing team, and if Paralluelo shines, La Roja will win. — Mark Ogden

England 2-0 Spain. An all-European World Cup final in Sydney to determine the champions of the world. The technical brilliance of Spain against the resourcefulness and adaptability of England. Looking at the way the two teams have played in this tournament, something has got to give with both being ball-dominant sides. I can’t see Spain giving up possession and playing on the counter. Wiegman, though, is one of the best managers in the world, and I fully believe she’ll have a plan ready that can come through. — Lynch

Spain 2-1 England. The team I’ve picked to win has lost ever since the knockout rounds started: the United States, Sweden, now Australia. Based on that alone, it seems Spain will win. The players are incredible to watch, but knowing about the issues the players have had with manager Vilda and the lack of support from their federation makes it hard to fully back them. That said, the Spanish team’s ability to dictate play and score at will is undeniable. La Roja have two of the very best players in the world in Aitana Bonmatí and Putellas, and they play like it. I think it’ll come down to execution, and the Spanish players are just better. — Caitlin Murray

England 2-1 Spain. England have the difference-maker in this final: Wiegman. She knows what it takes to win these tournaments and is the best coach in the world. England will look to take the tempo out of the Spain passing system and control the balance of the match, with Alessia Russo and Lauren Hemp the threats up front. — Hamilton

England 2-1 Spain. It will be close, just as almost all the knockout games have been this tournament, but England will edge it. The Lionesses have found some much-needed momentum (and goals) over the past few games, growing into the World Cup, and have shown incredible calm throughout. Experience will be a factor on Sunday, and, against a Spain side who don’t always make the best decisions, England will find their way through. — Sophie Lawson

England 2-1 Spain. England will make it a Euros-World Cup double on Sunday. Wiegman’s tactical genius has so far gotten England through every obstacle at this tournament and they have found a way to win even when they haven’t looked convincing. Throw in the fact that the Lionesses appear to be getting into a groove at exactly the right time, and their finals experience, and England look the goods. That being said, Spain will be no easy beats and goals should come from both sides. La Roja’s best is exceptionally good, but England will find a way to crush Spanish dreams. — Marissa Lordanic


Lordanic: Devastation for Matildas after semifinal loss to England

Marissa Lordanic reacts to Australia’s 3-1 loss to England in the semifinal of the 2023 Women’s World Cup.

Sights and sounds

TV ratings a winner despite Matildas’ heartbreaking loss

MELBOURNE, Australia — The Matildas’ efforts to secure a fairy-tale World Cup win on home soil came to a heartbreaking end on Wednesday evening, but Australia continued to smash records in support of them nonetheless. Yet again, television rating records were smashed as the nation rallied around its women in green and gold: free-to-air broadcaster the Seven Network has declared that its broadcast of the Matildas’ 3-1 loss to the Lionesses was the most-watched television program in Australia since 2001, when the current rating system was established.

Per the broadcaster, the semifinal clash reached 11.15 million Australians at some point during its broadcast (approx. 41% of the total population), with an average audience of 7.13m (approx 26.7%).

The Matildas have already smashed the previous benchmarks in Australian ratings history, such as Ash Barty’s win at the 2022 Australian Open, Lleyton Hewitt’s loss at that same event in 2005, and England’s win over the Wallabies in the 2003 Rugby World Cup. Given that the Seven Network figures don’t include those watching the contest on Optus Sport — who on-sold the rights to select games, including Matildas’ matches, to the free-to-air network — or those watching at pubs, clubs and the dozens of live sites across the country, the number of viewers for the game could even surpass the record set when more than 8 million Australians watched as Cathy Freeman won gold at the 2000 Sydney Olympics under the previous rating scheme.

Given that several members of the squad, including Sam Kerr, cite Freeman as their childhood inspiration, the Matildas breaking that mark would represent a piece of romantic serendipity. — Lynch

Early USWNT exit a motivating force?

SYDNEY — Former two-time Women’s World Cup-winning coach Jill Ellis said the failure of the United States women’s national team at this year’s tournament should galvanize leaders to make changes and be a turning point in the sport in the country.”Do I see it as a step back? No, I see it as a motivating force,” Ellis told reporters at the FIFA Women’s Football Convention on Friday. “People need to come to the table. We can spur more collaboration. Maybe this is a moment and reflection point for us to get together and for stakeholders to work out a bigger plan.”Such discussions should include changes at the U.S. youth development level, she added.”At the end of the day, you want the best players to train with the best players,” Ellis said. “I mean, the ECNL had a 6-0 semifinal. There’s so much disparity in that league, and it’s the best.”The Elite Clubs National League, or ECNL, is the premier youth developmental league in the United States for girls.”The beauty of the smaller countries is they get the best to train with each other, so how do we look at that environment?” Ellis added. “How do we get the best coaches in the youth environment? The training environment matters.” — Murray

Alessia Russo ready for World Cup final ‘dream’ vs. Spain

Alessia Russo speaks about playing in a World Cup final and whether England are treating the game any differently.


News of the day

– Former Ballon d’Or winner Ada Hegerberg led the backlash against Gianni Infantino on Friday after the FIFA president said women need to “pick the right battles” and “convince men” to enforce change. The Norway and Lyon striker responded to Infantino on X (formerly Twitter) after his speech, which came ahead of Sunday’s Women’s World Cup final between England and Spain in Sydney. She wrote ironically: “Working on a little presentation to convince men. Who’s in?” Infantino had earlier hit back at critics at the FIFA Women’s Football Convention, saying that expanding the tournament to 32 teams has turned out to be a success and that “FIFA was right” to do so.- Australia coach Gustavsson said there will be no room for sentimentality at the selection table in the World Cup third-place playoff against Sweden, with it his intention that the strongest possible side will take the field. Alanna Kennedy was ruled out with delayed onset concussion symptoms on Friday morning, but the rest of the squad trained, albeit Katrina Gorry, her left leg encased in a pressure bandage, was on an individualised, lighter load during the portion of training open to the media. “If it was emotional, those players would play because they deserve to play,” he said. “But I can’t pick based on emotions. This is a third-placed game, we’re playing for a medal. I’m gonna make sure we have a line-up there that is the strongest starting line-up we can have but also the strongest finishing line-up. I’m just going to plan what I think is best for the team in this one game and not look at it as a bigger picture than that. It’s not about giving players experience just for the sake of giving experience. This is a game to win.”

– England’s determination to host the FIFA Women’s World Cup could be on hold until 2035 at the earliest due to the English FA opting against an attempt to bid to stage the 2027 competition. UK government Sports Minister Stuart Andrew said last month “it is a matter of when not whether” the country would submit a bid to host the competition, but the situation facing England is more complex than simply entering the bidding race. The FA has already accepted that a joint bid involving GermanyBelgium and the Netherlands will be Europe’s sole submission for 2027, with South AfricaBrazil and a U.S.-Mexico effort also aiming for the hosting rights. A decision on the hosts will be made in May 2024.

A successful Germany-Belgium-Netherlands bid would rule out a European host nation in 2031, so the English FA, although keen to capitalise on the accelerated growth of women’s football and last year’s successful staging of Euro 2022, are now prepared to play the long game to win hosting rights in the future.”In terms of bidding, we’re obviously conscious we’ve had a lot of tournaments,” English FA CEO Mark Bullingham said. “We’ve put a bid in for Euro 2028, and that’s obviously a big commitment. We would love to host the Women’s World Cup one day, don’t get any doubt on that, but if you look at the landscape, you’ve got Germany, Belgium and Netherlands bidding for 2027, so potentially be the one after that [2035].”England hasn’t hosted a men’s World Cup since 1966, and a proposed joint UK bid for 2030 has been dropped. There are no existing plans to bid for a subsequent Men’s World Cup, but the women’s event is a more likely target. “There are 211 countries in FIFA, and the fact is we’ve had the women’s Euros so recently, we’ve had the men’s Euros final, we’re hopefully going to secure the men’s Euros for 2028; that’s actually a lot of Euros in our country at one time, clearly the next step would be to get a World Cup, men’s or women’s,” Bullingham added. “And I think a Women’s World Cup could be brilliant for us and brilliant for the game.” — Ogden

– Seeking to attach itself to the momentum that has seen the Matildas break attendance and rating records across Australia, the A-League Women (ALW) competition will launch before its men’s counterpart for the first time in 2023-24, attempting to break domestic attendance records in a stand-alone opening round this October. The coming season will mark the first time the ALW features 12 teams and a full home-and-away season — the only major footballing code in Australia to do so — and commissioner Nick Garcia said the league wants to see “more fans in bigger venues cheering on our stars” across its first week. The ALW has consistently battled for mainstream recognition in Australia, magnified in recent years as members of the Matildas squad struck out to play in European leagues — Lynch


Features of the day

Meet the man in charge of every 2023 Women’s World Cup pitch
Arguably the most important, yet ignored, figure at the World Cup is the man responsible for every single pitch used in Australia and New Zealand.

‘Mystic Meerkats’ predict England Women’s World Cup final run
England’s run through the Women’s World Cup knockout phase to the final has been predicted, game by game, by meerkats at Drusillas Park.

Five things the USWNT must do before the 2024 Olympics
After a disastrous Women’s World Cup, the USWNT needs serious reform with destination Paris less than a year away.


And finally …

SYDNEY — Alex Chidiac‘s hopes of reaching the final were dashed when she and her Australia teammates suffered a 3-1 defeat to England in their semifinal, but there’s still one major prize she’s after: teatime with Women’s World Cup mascot Tazuni.A longtime appreciator of the mascot arts, Chidiac has taken a particular affinity to Tazuni — a Eudyptula penguin native to Australia and New Zealand. Ever since Tazuni’s reveal ahead of the tournament, Chidiac has gone as far as to don a penguin outfit when she and other Matildas met the mascot last November.The talented midfielder has owned an Emperor penguin plush since her childhood, a toy that follows her on her travels around the world as an emotional stand-in for her mother, who also owns a small penguin plush representing Chidiac. With the tournament almost over, Chidiac is becoming slightly concerned that Tazuni hasn’t been returning her calls.”Is there anything we get, like a Tazuni plush toy?” Chidiac asked. “[Tazuni] leaves after the game. The live one leaves after the game, and I’d like to celebrate with her. Just to hang out. I’ve been wanting to get a cup of tea with her since I met her; she’s been ghosting me.”More seriously, Chidiac’s continued dearth of minutes this World Cup has become a significant point of consternation in the Australian fanbase.One of the Matildas’ most technically proficient players, one who is willing to embrace risk and possesses the talent to slice open a defence, the 24-year-old has featured just twice this tournament off the bench and, on both occasions, was thrown on with her side down 3-1 and the game largely settled.”It’s always up to the coach at the end of the day,” Chidiac told reporters when asked what she felt she needed to do to play. “So it’s tough for me to say what else I need to do — it’s not up to me. I’m just trying to do my best every session and put myself forward in any way possible.” — Lynch

England have lost once in 38 games under Wiegman – why are they so hard to beat?

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 16: Sarina Wiegman, Manager of England, and players of England huddle following the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Semi Final match between Australia and England at Stadium Australia on August 16, 2023 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Naomi Baker - The FA/The FA via Getty Images)

By Michael Cox and Charlotte Harpur15m ago The Athletic


Winning a major tournament is not about your ceiling, it’s about your floor.ngland have rarely played exhilarating football at this Women’s World Cup, with the exception of the 6-1 victory over China in the final group game. Against knockout-stage-quality opposition, Sarina Wiegman’s side haven’t offered a performance as majestic as, say, Japan in their 4-0 thrashing of Spain, or Sweden in the first half of their 2-1 win over Japan, or even Nigeria in the second half of their 3-2 win over Australia.

ADVERTISEMENT

All those victorious sides, however, have now been eliminated. England have not and, over the course of two years under Wiegman’s management, we have seen how difficult they are to beat, having lost once in 38 games.

The list of managers who have tried and failed to beat England during her time in charge is growing by the week. Brazil’s Pia Sundhage watched her side draw the Finalissima at Wembley in April before losing on penalties, and she was impressed with what she saw.

“They are so good, whatever they do,” she said. “If you look at the passing patterns, we know them but we’re one step behind and there they are. England are so comfortable in the way they play — just look at the Euros. Even if you and I know exactly how it is going to go… the ball is played there, I should be there and everybody knows. But England will be successful.”

The Lionesses’ solid base has helped them become an excellent tournament side, not because they always play well, but because they never play terribly. But how?

Few managers know how to get through major tournaments quite like Wiegman. This is, remarkably, her fourth straight European Championship or World Cup where she’s reached the final — two with the Netherlands and two with England. The common theme has been a fine defensive record. Her Netherlands side conceded once in five matches before a 4-2 win over Denmark in the Euro 2017 final and three times in six matches before a 2-0 loss to the USWNT in the 2019 World Cup final.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Vivianne Miedema: Wiegman has evolved but this is how she will handle World Cup final

With England, it was two concessions in five matches before a 2-1 win over Germany in the final of Euro 2022 and this year there have been three concessions in six matches so far. Of those three goals, one was a penalty and two were unstoppable long-range efforts. Overall, in the 22 matches leading up to the final, Wiegman’s sides have kept 13 clean sheets. In nine matches, they’ve conceded once. Never have they conceded twice. Wiegman’s sides don’t always sparkle, but they never collapse.

Wiegman on the touchline against Australia (Ane Frosaker/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

Despite her teams being defensively strong, they are never defensive. They generally take the game to the opposition. They are patient in their build-up play, asserting control in the opposition half. They usually defend with a high line. And yet England are rarely caught out, despite — or because of — a major system change midway through the tournament, from 4-3-3 to 3-5-2. We also have to take into account the absence of Leah Williamson, Beth Mead and Fran Kirby — three surefire starters.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ae0ec3393f1d9e626bc1f5f753cdaa97.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I think Sarina Wiegman is exceptional,” says Jill Ellis, who coached the U.S. to success at the previous two World Cups. “She’s made big adjustments within the tournament. And from the Euros to now, you’ve got players like Alessia Russo starting, you had Lauren James starting. These were players that weren’t starting. So she’s not only brought that talent on to be starters a year later, but they’ve shone; they’ve done exceptionally well.

“I think she’s managed this tournament close to perfect. She’s done a remarkable job and her staff have done a remarkable job, as well as the players they’ve brought in. They adjusted during the tournament when they played China. They found ways to win at times. They’ve come back from being behind. And it’s tough to go out and play in front of 75,000 people that are not cheering for you. So we’ve got to give full credit to England and their staff. Sarina has managed an incredible tournament.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

How Sarina Wiegman manages – by those who’ve experienced it

Those tactical changes over the past month have been instrumental in taking the team to the World Cup final. “In April we had meetings with the technical staff,” said Wiegman. “We had the last camp and said, ‘Where are we now? What can we do?’. We tried to find ways to be unpredictable for our opponents. At that time the squad still had lots of wingers so we thought we’d stick with what we wanted to do, stick with the same shape.

“Then, during the tournament, the first two matches we were struggling a bit and we had moments where we played really well but we also had moments where we were a little vulnerable. After the second match Arjan (Veurink, Wiegman’s assistant) came to me and said, ‘Sarina, let’s sit down. Isn’t this the time to go to a 3-5-2?’. I said. ‘You’re completely right, this is the right setting’.

“Now, how the squad is built and with the players available, we can get more of their strengths in this shape, so then we changed.”


Belief is an abstract concept which is hard to measure, but the England players have an aura about them. It is not an arrogant swagger but a gentle breeze of unwavering belief.

“Sarina makes you feel on top of the world and confidence can go a long way for a footballer,” Beth Mead tells The Athletic.

Despite the challenges England have encountered in this World Cup, they have never crumbled. Prior to Wiegman’s reign, they would have done.

The manager has created a collective who really know each other. One of her buzzwords is “connections” and that is why when she first came in as England boss in September 2021, she created a safe environment so each player and staff member could express themselves.

The England manager sent players off in pairs to find out more about each other, the theory being the connections would transcend to the pitch.

In high-pressure moments, you need calm heads. Wiegman and her assistant, Veurink, do not yell. The players feel their reassurance on the sidelines and in team talks. Wiegman knows that if she prepares well and has planned for different scenarios, then she’ll feel calm, but, most importantly, she has learned how to conduct herself from experience.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Dutch duo are quick to recognise what to do in various situations. Veurink, a very good tactical reader of the game, will spot minor details that can have a big impact. They keep instructions simple and to the point.

Wiegman and Veurink in training (Photo: Naomi Baker – The FA/The FA via Getty Images)

Wiegman is also a master of creating a tight-knit team, especially in tournaments. She keeps her squad focused on themselves and never gets carried away with the noise or added pressure from the outside. “She will not leave an opening for anyone who is outside the team,” Arvid Smit, who was Wiegman’s assistant coach with the Netherlands, says. “That’s impossible. That’s what makes her team so strong. You are together with staff and players and there’s nothing going out and in. She manages that really well.”

Although they have not hit top form, England players have a licence to play with freedom and enjoy their football. It sounds simple, but a happy person is a happy footballer. There are patterns of play but it’s not overly prescriptive. Players under Wiegman express themselves.

“That’s one thing I’ve really loved about her coming in,” said Millie Bright last year. “You don’t feel pressured to play a certain pass — whatever you see it’s your decision and the team goes with it. If it’s wrong, you learn to make a better decision next time. I feel really free to be able to play like that and it gives me confidence. Football changes in every second of the game. You can’t be predictable. We have game plans but being able to express ourselves has taken us to another level.”


When Wiegman was asked why Russo and Lauren Hemp are playing so well together up front in the aftermath of the 3-1 win over Australia, she was keen to stress it is because they have “complementary” qualities.

The same might be said of her defence. Last year’s centre-back duo of Bright and Williamson worked so effectively because they offered completely different skills. Bright was the aerially dominant centre-back who was impossible to beat, while Williamson was the reader of the game who distributed the ball forward intelligently.

This year’s balance at the back works even better. Now using a back three, Wiegman is fielding three completely different players in defence. Bright remains in position in the middle, always there to clear the ball. To her right, Jess Carter is England’s best one-on-one defender and good at covering ground quickly. On the left, Alex Greenwood offers a left-footed option, particularly important considering that left wing-back Rachel Daly is right-footed.

Carter in action against Australia (Andy Cheung/Getty Images)

England also protect the defence very well, regardless of whether Keira Walsh is on her own with two midfielders ahead or Georgia Stanway is positioned alongside her. They have an excellent understanding and England seldom leave space between the lines.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ae0ec3393f1d9e626bc1f5f753cdaa97.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Consistency of selection was a key tenet in Wiegman’s approach last year. Things have varied more at the World Cup with that major system alteration, chopping and changing to find her best XI in the group stage and the absences of James and Walsh through injury and suspension respectively. But since settling on the 3-5-2, Wiegman has kept the same XI together when possible. She’s retained faith in Russo, who was slightly misfiring in the group stage. She’s stuck with Daly at left wing-back, despite concerns about her against the trickery of Nigeria and Colombia.

Most interestingly, Wiegman has used substitutes very sparingly. In the age of five substitutes, she has used just 2.7 per game, the joint-lowest in the competition. She’s introduced a substitute 17 times in total at this tournament, a significant difference from the approach of Spain boss Jorge Vilda, who has used 29.

That’s partly because England’s games have been tighter going into the final stages, whereas Spain’s first four were all over at an early stage. But Wiegman isn’t looking to turn to fresh legs to restore a lead. In the aftermath of the 2-1 win over Colombia, she indicated she was reluctant to use substitutes unnecessarily because they might take time to adjust to the tempo of the game. She believes a consistent XI is more solid.

Consideration must also be given to England’s set-piece defending. They are yet to concede from a dead-ball situation in tournament football under Wiegman, although Lucy Bronze’s handball against China that led to England’s only concession of the group stage from the penalty spot did come from a corner. Bright and Bronze are England’s best defenders in that sense — Carter and Greenwood are reliable too — while Russo and Daly effectively both bring the aerial power you expect of No 9s.

If either side are to put on a true footballing exhibition in Sunday’s final, it is likely to be the tiki-taka specialists from Spain. But great football rarely wins tournaments. Wiegman’s way often does.

Five things the USWNT must do before the 2024 Olympics

  • Caitlin Murray, ESPNAug 17, 2023, 03:39 PM ET

When it comes to the future of the U.S. women’s national team, there’s a lot to do and not a lot of time to do it.Vlatko Andonovski has finally resigned as head coach after steering the USWNT to its worst Women’s World Cup finish in program history. His decision to step down was as necessary as it was inevitable, but it doesn’t automatically fix anything.The USWNT still needs serious reform, but with another major tournament coming up in less than a year in the form of the 2024 Olympics, there’s not a lot of time to spare. The U.S. Soccer Federation is now in a situation where it’ll be making decisions soon that will have big impacts in the short term and for years to come.Here is a look at the biggest items on the to-do list for U.S. Soccer and whoever becomes the next USWNT coach.


Step 1: Pick a coach (and make sure they have the qualifications Andonovski lacked)

U.S. Soccer has announced that new sporting director Matt Crocker will be leading the search for a new coach. It’s perhaps notable that USWNT GM Kate Markgraf is not leading that search, but we’ll get to that in a moment.Crocker’s background is not in women’s soccer — before joining U.S. Soccer full time earlier this month, he headed football operations for Southampton in the Premier League — but it shouldn’t be difficult to hire someone qualified. Andonovski had no international experience — not as a player, not as an assistant coach, and not as a head coach — which should’ve disqualified him for the job.If U.S. Soccer is willing to pay for the best coaches in women’s soccer, poaching another international coach is a no-brainer. Coaches such as England‘s Sarina Wiegman and Australia‘s Tony Gustavsson should be at the top of U.S. Soccer’s list, but with the 2024 Olympics around the corner, some of these proven coaches might not be available yet.

That leaves U.S. Soccer with two ways to approach this:

1. Hire someone on a multiyear contract through the next World Cup-Olympics cycle, and settle if the best candidates are still committed to their current teams, or
2. Bring on someone for the Olympics only, then make a permanent hire afterward when more candidates become available.

If U.S. Soccer wants to look short term at the Olympics only, former USWNT coach Jill Ellis makes an intriguing option, too. She wasn’t on the list of USWNT head-coach candidates ESPN’s experts put together because, over the long term, it doesn’t seem as if it would make sense for Ellis or for U.S. Soccer. But in the short term, if no long-term candidates are available, maybe U.S. Soccer can convince her?

Ellis stepped down after winning back-to-back World Cups in 2015 and 2019, the ultimate high note to leave on. But the part of her legacy no one talks about anymore is the disappointing quarterfinal exit at the 2016 Olympics. A retry at the next Olympics is a chance for her to find success in the one tournament where she didn’t win. In her favor is the fact that, even if it goes poorly, it still won’t tarnish her double-World Cup-winning legacy.

EDITOR’S PICKS

(I interviewed Ellis for a piece I did about Gustavsson, where she said U.S. Soccer ought to look at Gustavsson as a candidate, and I didn’t have time to ask her whether she’d be interested in the USWNT job herself. She’s leading FIFA’s technical study group for this World Cup and was pressed for time as she spoke to me between meetings. This is another reason I doubt she’s looking to go back into coaching full time right now: plenty of opportunities keep coming her way, beyond her president role at San Diego Wave FC.)

Whatever U.S. Soccer does, the struggles of Andonovski raise the stakes to get this hire right. Maybe there was a time when the USWNT had such a differential in talent, fitness and/or resources — you name it — that it could overcome a bad coach, but the Andonovski era proved that time has passed.


Step 2: Decide whether the USWNT needs a GM at all (and whether it should be Markgraf)

When Markgraf was hired as general manager for the U.S. women’s national team in 2019, it was a new position. It also seemed, at least on paper, as if it might be an unnecessary position.

U.S. Soccer added a general manager on the men’s side after the men’s team failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup. Whether this was a move that has provided extra support for the men’s team or was intended to add a buffer layer of accountability for people at the top of U.S. Soccer is something fans and pundits continue to debate. But once the men’s team added a GM, the women’s team had to have one too.

U.S. Soccer then added another layer of oversight when Markgraf’s hire was announced: men’s GM Earnie Stewart was promoted to sporting director — becoming Markgraf’s boss in large part, sources told me, because his salary was so much higher than Markgraf’s as GM that the optics were seen as a problem within U.S. Soccer. Brian McBride was later hired as the new men’s GM.

Vlatko Andonovski steps down as USWNT head coach

Cristina Alexander details Vlatko Andonovski deciding to step down as head coach of the USWNT.

Stewart, a sporting director for various men’s teams, did not have relevant experience in women’s soccer (just like Crocker), and Markgraf, while an intriguing hire for a lot of reasons, had no experience in sports administration herself — and then she hired an inexperienced coach, too. In short, two people were apparently directly responsible for overseeing what Andonovski did — Stewart and Markgraf — but in the end it didn’t seem to help much.

U.S. Soccer has not replaced McBride as the men’s GM since he stepped down in January, and maybe the federation won’t. If the federation doesn’t have a men’s GM anymore, does it need a women’s GM? In May, Oguchi Onyewu was hired in a new role called “VP of sporting” that directly reports to Crocker. That role, which U.S. Soccer said doesn’t replace the men’s GM role, oversees everything U.S. Soccer does despite, again, Onyewu having no background in women’s soccer.

For years the USWNT didn’t have a GM and everything worked out just fine. This isn’t cause-and-effect, of course — the timing might be incidental as much as anything because women’s soccer is getting much more competitive, which we’ve seen during this World Cup. But U.S. Soccer changes its organizational chart seemingly as often as the U.S. national teams change their kit designs, so the federation’s top brass are probably in the midst of deciding not only whether Markgraf should remain as the USWNT’s GM but whether the USWNT needs a GM at all.


Step 3: Retool the USWNT roster (and cut players without sentiment, as hard as it is)

The USWNT’s World Cup roster is full of players who have had previous success on the international stage or have been outstanding in the National Women’s Soccer League. But that clearly didn’t always translate to the 2023 World Cup.

Rather than hoping they’ll come good, the players who have performed well in the NWSL but not for the USWNT need to be cut loose. In some cases it might be clear — Andonovski loaded his World Cup roster with successful NWSL players he apparently didn’t think were good enough to see the field — but others will be tough. Look, for instance, at the case of Savannah DeMelo. We don’t know whether she can hack it at the USWNT level because she made the roster as an uncapped player and was thrown into a role without much of a chance to succeed.

For the players with outsized reputations, the next coach must shed any reverence for the past. That job is made a bit easier by the retirement of Megan Rapinoe — she was sensational for the USWNT for about a decade but, at this World Cup, didn’t look like the world-class player she once was. The USWNT needs to invest in finding its next great game-changing winger instead of hoping it can still be Rapinoe.

Other evaluations of veterans won’t be as easy. Alex Morgan has been the face of the USWNT for years now, but she also had a very rough World Cup. There needs to be a serious examination about whether she wasn’t put in the right position to succeed or whether she just isn’t at the level to contribute to the USWNT.

This is the sort of tough decision-making that must happen with every player before settling on an Olympic squad.


Step 4: Make the system and the tactics fit the USWNT player pool

Andonovski’s tactics were a failure at the World Cup, full stop.

His attacking line, for instance, was full of redundant parts. Morgan needs service to thrive as a striker, but the so-called wingers on either side of her were actually strikers who wanted to dribble and shoot, not pass the ball. Why play a 4-3-3 that can’t score goals in the way a 4-3-3 is meant to score goals?

His midfield was also a mess. That was proved by the fact that switching to a double pivot with Emily Sonnett — in her first start in the midfield for the USWNT — seemed to fix a lot of the USWNT’s problems. Unfortunately, that switch came far too late in the World Cup.

So what’s the next coach to do? Well, it should depend on how the roster looks once the coach finishes Step 3.

The system needs to fit the players, not the other way around. This isn’t club soccer, where you can go out and sign players for the system you want and then work on it every day for months at a time. This is national team soccer, where the players in your pool are the only players you have and the system should be relatively turnkey and easy for them to execute with limited prep time.

On top of that, the next coach needs to make sure the players are comfortable with different systems based on different scenarios. Andonovski seemed to have an idea about how the USWNT should play, and he never really deviated from it. The wacky tactical experiments and surprise formations former coach Ellis tried (and got criticized for) in friendlies? Andonovski never did that, and because of that the players could not adapt or solve problems on the field in the World Cup.

Can USWNT land ‘dream’ hire after Andonovski’s resignation?

Ali Krieger answers a question about the possibility of the USWNT luring England manager Sarina Wiegman or Australia manager Tony Gustavsson to replace Vlatko Andonovski.


Step 5: Make team chemistry and player mentality a focus to bring back USWNT swagger

If U.S. Soccer nails the previous four steps, the USWNT will be in much better shape, but there is something else that has been missing from this team. It’s harder to put your finger on, and it could’ve been because of the bad tactics the players were saddled with, but the mentality was off during the World Cup.

LIVE ON ESPN+ (SELECTED GAMES

The beautiful game lives here. Stream top leagues, tournaments and teams.
Sign up for ESPN+

FRIDAY, AUG. 18 (all times ET)
• Mallorca vs. Villarreal (1:30 p.m.)
• Werder Bremen vs. Bayern (2:30 p.m.)
• Valencia vs. Las Palmas (3:30 p.m.)

SATURDAY, AUG. 19 (all times ET)
• Bayer Leverkusen vs. Leipzig (9:30 a.m.)
• Excelsior vs. Ajax (10:30 a.m.)
• Dortmund vs. Cologne (12:30 p.m.)
• Vitesse vs. PSV Eindhoven (12:45 p.m.)
• Almería vs. Real Madrid (1:30 p.m.)
• Osasuna vs. Athletic Bilbao (3:30 p.m.)

Lindsey Horan and Lynn Williams, in their final media availability before the fateful round-of-16 match against Sweden, volunteered that the players had discussed with one another wanting to play with more joy. That they admitted that confirms a lack of confidence that didn’t help the USWNT either. After all, through four games, the USWNT’s expected goals, or xG, was 9.14, per Opta calculations, and the team took 85 shots but scored only four times. A team with more swagger was probably going to score more off those chances.Although Sweden got knocked out in the semifinals, the Swedes looked much better than the USWNT did at every point. The Sweden players also discussed how much fun they were having and how much they were enjoying each other’s company. They held cornhole tournaments and played games with each other to decompress. Compare that to a USWNT group that, from outside, didn’t appear to be having fun.(I personally asked multiple players how they spent their downtime, and the response I always got was that recovery and meals were their downtime. If they did any team-bonding activities, they kept it a secret.)The Swedish players talked throughout the tournament about the importance of their team psychologist — indeed, the cornhole tournament was the psychologist’s idea. But it could be as simple as allowing the players to take their mind off soccer — at past tournaments, players took team field trips to zoos and landmarks together. In Auckland, New Zealand, they said their days were filled with training and recovery “modalities.”Or maybe there’s something else that needs to be addressed. Whatever it is, the USWNT needs its mojo back.

Leagues Cup winners, losers: Messi rules over MLS, Liga MX

  • Cesar Hernandez Aug 17, 2023, 11:55 AM ET

After 70-plus matches featuring 47 teams from North America’s MLS and Liga MX, the first-ever fully expanded edition of the Leagues Cup tournament is set to conclude Saturday.

The World Cup-style competition, kicked off by a dramatic game-winning goal from Argentina superstar Lionel Messi in his Inter Miami CF debut last month, has been exceedingly entertaining and at times bizarre. We’ve seen thrilling high-scoring results, an outcome flipped on its head after players were called back to retake a final round of penalties, lengthy weather delays, stunning golazosa raccoon storming through a press box, and of course, a goalkeeper literally doing magic tricks in the middle of a penalty shootout.

ADVERTISEMENT

It’s been a highly enjoyable few weeks and on Saturday, we’ll see who will lift the interleague trophy when Nashville SC host Messi’s Miami in the blockbuster championship match. Earlier in the day, as an appetizer, the Philadelphia Union will host Monterrey in the tournament’s third-place game.

Summarizing the competition is no easy task, especially when you consider the constant supply of fireworks and eccentricity that has been on display. That said, clear talking points and lessons have been gained and ahead of the weekend’s conclusion, here are a few winners and losers of the lively 2023 edition of the Leagues Cup.

Winners

Messi mania in Miami and MLS

Who would have guessed that the greatest player of all-time would have been a success both on and off the field?

From the minute Messi first stepped onto the pitch in the tournament’s opener between Miami and Cruz Azul, to the buildup to Saturday’s championship match, the World Cup winner has been a massive triumph for Miami and MLS. With nine goals and four assists in just six games played, the 36-year-old (along with new teammates such as Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba) has helped transform the worst team in MLS to an immediate powerhouse that has now qualified for the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup.

Whether it be in the stands, with celebrities like LeBron James and Kim Kardashian in attendance, or on TV screens, attention on MLS has soared. Ticket prices are through the roof for Messi’s games and according to a social media post from Miami owner Jorge Mas last week, subscribers to MLS Season Pass on Apple TV have more than doubled since Messi’s arrival.

By Saturday, the Messi spotlight could grow even brighter with a possible first trophy with his new team.

Liga MX optimists

Living in the shadow of Messi and his MLS impact, Liga MX clubs are dealing with a mixed bag of feelings with no representation in the final.

If we’re looking at the glass half-empty, Mexican media and fans will feel justified by their complaints that Liga MX teams have been falling behind in recent years. For those looking for examples of stagnation, arguments have been made that no Liga MX teams in the final and just two overall in the quarterfinal stage point to an ongoing mismanagement of the Mexican top flight.

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

However, if we crunch the numbers for individual Liga MX vs. MLS results at the Leagues Cup, the glass does tend to look half-full. Playing as the constantly traveling visitors, Liga MX teams have so far gone 17W-12D-17L (90 minutes only, not including penalties). MLS teams at home only won those Liga MX matchups outright 36.9% of the time.

That’s actually a fantastic sign for the competitiveness of Liga MX that isn’t talked about enough. Even when you take away Mexican title favorites like Club America, Monterrey and Tigres, Liga MX’s middle-to-lower-tier teams held a 9W-10D-15L away record vs. MLS clubs.

As an aside, in a recent exclusive interview with ESPN, Liga MX president Mikel Arriola did leave the door open to the possibility of hosting Leagues Cup matches in Mexico.

Nashville

Keeping the previous section in mind, what Nashville have done looks all the more impressive. With the caveat of their home-field advantage, the Tennessee club found knockout-round success against both America and Monterrey, two Mexican clubs that were pre-tournament favorites to win it all.

EDITOR’S PICKS

Earlier in the round of 32, Nashville also had to surpass rivals FC Cincinnati.

“To be able to come through this tournament beating Cincinnati, beating Club America, beating a good Minnesota team handily [5-0 in the quarterfinals] and then obviously beating Monterrey, we should be full of confidence,” club captain Dax McCarty told the league’s website after defeating Monterrey 2-0 in Tuesday’s semifinal. “I can tell you right now, there’s no one in that locker room right now that’s afraid or scared of the moment and scared to play this Miami team.”

While most of the American soccer world has been focusing on Messi’s every move, Nashville deserve a huge amount of credit for their run to the final. This is a team that joined the league alongside Miami in 2020 to much less fanfare, and yet they’re now on the cusp of a first-ever trophy, led by the two goals and five assists from game-changing attacker Hany Mukhtar.

And at the very least, like Miami, they’ve officially qualified for next year’s CONCACAF Champions Cup for the very first time.

Queretaro‘s Cinderella run

On paper, Queretaro shouldn’t have even been included in the Leagues Cup conversation. Were it not for the ongoing pause on promotion/relegation in Mexico’s top flight, Los Gallos Blancos would currently be playing in the second division.

Heading into the tournament as the team with the lowest market value in Liga MX and MLS, according to Transfermarkt, Queretaro not only made it out of the group stage, but somehow finished in the quarterfinals. In fact, they made things difficult for 2022 MLS Cup finalists Philadelphia Union last week, narrowly missing a semifinal spot after a 2-1 loss after an injury-time goal for the hosts.

Playing a defensive-minded approach from manager and former player Mauro Gerk, as opposed to the typical intense attack-heavy style championed by most Liga MX clubs, Queretaro found success on their own terms as they outpaced all but one Mexican team.

Losers

Canadian clubs

Often overlooked in the U.S. vs. Mexico rivalry that encompasses both clubs and national teams, Canada can at times feel like a third wheel in North American soccer. And yet when handed a chance to steer the narrative in their direction at the Leagues Cup, MLS’s three Canadian sides didn’t do much to steal headlines.

Toronto FC, with zero points, were knocked out in the group stage. CF Montreal, with two points, also suffered a group-stage exit. Only the Vancouver Whitecaps made it through to the next round after a second-place finish in their group, but once there, they were quickly pushed out after a round-of-32 penalty shootout with Tigres.Barring an unexpected title push this season in MLS (Vancouver as long shots?), Canadian teams will need to wait until at least 2024 to get top billing over the U.S. and Mexico focus.

Mexico’s cuatro grandes

The largest fan bases in Liga MX and likely in all of North America? Check. Long-heralded histories that could provide a boost in the Leagues Cup? Check. Silverware or progress made in that Leagues Cup tournament? Well, about that …Mexico’s traditional “big four” of America, Chivas, Cruz Azul and Pumas will probably want to quickly move on from their summer performances. With a chance to show MLS clubs and new Liga MX powerhouses like Monterrey and Tigres that they could thrive in an international competition, all four teams ultimately fell short of their own expectations.For Chivas, who entered the Leagues Cup with a promising 3W-0D-0L start to the Liga MX season, the Guadalajara giants collapsed with two consecutive losses and a group-stage exit. Things only went slightly better for Pumas and Cruz Azul, both of whom were rapidly knocked out in the round of 32. Cruz Azul, facing behind-the-scenes turmoil with ownership and staff, later fired coach Ricardo “Tuca” Ferretti after falling to Charlotte FC.Club America went a step further into the round of 16, but for a team and organization that prides themselves as being consistent title contenders, anything short of a final appearance is a failure. Sure, part of their exit was due to a controversial retaking of a penalty shootout that had initially gone in their favor, but they only have themselves to blame for putting themselves in that position to begin with.

Austin FC and the LA Galaxy

Teams could be forgiven for being knocked out in the group stage. With the countless variables coming into play for a tournament that was expanded to all Liga MX and MLS clubs for the first time, it wasn’t a surprise to see the occasional upset or shocking result.But when you finish last in your group with zero points, and also with the added advantage of hosting all of your group-stage matches, that’s a different conversation. Austin and the Galaxy were the two teams to do that this summer.While the Galaxy imploded in spectacular fashion after scoring a late own-goal and allowing an injury-time winner from Vancouver that ended the California club’s group-stage run, Austin were embarrassed twice in a row at home in losses to Liga MX minnows Mazatlan and FC Juarez.”This is disappointing, this is really disappointing, there’s no other way to put it,” Austin’s Ethan Finlay said after his side were eliminated from contention. “We had to win one game out of two.”

Tired, out-of-form clubs returning to regular seasons

With both Liga MX and MLS returning to regular season play this weekend (for clubs not involved in the final or third-place matches), time will tell who the Leagues Cup will hurt more: teams who were knocked out early, but subsequently had longer breaks, or teams who are more in rhythm but with more mileage in their legs.For struggling teams in both leagues such as the Colorado Rapids, Toronto, the Galaxy, Puebla and Necaxa, it’s tough to imagine that poor performances this summer will provide a boost in the return to regular-season play. On the other end of the spectrum, it’ll also be interesting to see what group-stage exits mean for Liga MX league-leaders Chivas and Western Conference leaders St. Louis City SC.Also of note are Monterrey and Philadelphia, both of whom will be gutted that they won’t be fighting for silverware on Saturday. Although the Union still have a CONCACAF Champions Cup spot that’s up for grabs for the third-place finisher, could the extra minutes and exertion in the Leagues Cup hurt their regular-season run? Will Monterrey’s constant traveling and injuries gained in the competition drop their morale in the returning Apertura season?

Bournemouth agree Tyler Adams deal with Leeds; USMNT midfielder set for £23m transfer

LEEDS, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 25: Leeds players Tyler Adams and  Weston McKennie applaud the fans after the Premier League match between Leeds United and Southampton FC at Elland Road on February 25, 2023 in Leeds, England. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

By Adam Leventhal and Phil Hay Aug 18, 2023 The Athletic


Bournemouth have agreed a deal with Leeds to sign USMNT midfielder Tyler Adams for a fee in the region of £23million plus add-ons.The south coast club made the breakthrough on Friday after protracted negotiations.Adams is set to undergo a medical on Friday afternoon and, if all goes to plan, the 24-year-old will sign a five-year deal.


The Athletic reported on Thursday that a potential deal was proving complicated, with Bournemouth believing they had met a time-limited relegation release clause of £20m, but Leeds maintaining that it had expired.Talks continued, despite the apparent impasse, and Adams is now set to return to the Premier League with Androni Iraola’s side.Adams had last week travelled to London to finalise a proposed move to Chelsea, only for the deal to fall through. The west London club have since signed midfielder Moises Caicedo from Brighton and Romeo Lavia from Southampton.Adams has been recovering from a hamstring injury that saw him undergo what the club described as “non-invasive” surgery at the end of March. He had stepped up his training programme in recent weeks and is scheduled to return after next month’s international break.He has 36 caps for the USMNT and captained them at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Getting things rolling

The EPL is already in its second matchday, while things kick off in Germany and Italy.

By jcksnftsn  Aug 18, 2023, 11:30am PDT  

AC Milan Training Session

After an extended summer break, we’re back with fall action as the European leagues are kicking off. We also have a number of USMNT players making moves and looking to settle in at new clubs. Let’s see what we’ve got:

Saturday

Wolfsburg v Heidenheim – 9:30a on ESPN+

Wolfsburg welcome newly promoted Heidenheim to the Bundesliga on Saturday morning. Kevin Paredes suffered a hamstring injury during the preseason, and it does not appear that he will be ready for the opener. Once fit, he’ll be looking to build on the 554 minutes he saw with Wolfsburg last season.

Hoffenheim v Freiburg – 9:30a on ESPN+

John Brooks looks to keep his Bundesliga career rolling as Hoffenheim and Freiburg open their season. Justin Che has moved on following the end of his loan to Hoffenheim, and he was sold by FC Dallas to Danish side Brøndby and subsequently loaned to AO Den Haag in the Dutch second division.

Augsburg v Borussia Mönchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN+

Still just 20 years old, Joe Scally signed a four year extension with Borussia Mönchengladbach in April and will look to build on the 4,100 minutes he has already logged in the Bundesliga. ‘Gladbach finished last season in 10th place, seven points out of qualification for European competitions.

Fulham FC v Brentford – 10a on Peacock

Tim Ream, Antonee Robinson, and Fulham far exceeded expectations last season and will do well to see a repeat performance in the EPL this year. Robinson signed a long term extension with Fulham in July and is now under contract through the end of the 2027-28 season.

Liverpool FC v Bournemouth – 10a on USA Network

There have been solid rumors over the last couple of days that Tyler Adams will complete a physical and move to Bournemouth over the weekend, though likely not in time for the club’s match with Liverpool on Saturday morning. Bournemouth finished last season just five points out of relegation while giving up a third worst 71 goals, so it looks like Adams will once again have his work cut out for him.

Borussia Dortmund v Köln – 12:30p on ABC

Gio Reyna is once again injured to start the season, this time with an ankle injury that looks like it will keep him out of Dortmund’s opener on Saturday against Köln. Dortmund had a fantastic chance to break Bayern Munich’s league title domination last year, but choked away the opportunity in the final matchday and lost the league on goal differential. Reyna saw just 600 minutes of playing time last season, and another injury is a poor start to the new campaign.

Vitesse v PSV – 12:45p on ESPN+

Ricardo Pepi picked up his first goal for PSV this week, a penalty kick in the team’s 3-1 Champions League qualifying victory over Sturm Gratz. PSV opened their season last weekend with a 2-0 win over Utrecht, with Pepi seeing 7 minutes off the bench late.

Nashville SC v Inter Miami – 9p on Apple TV

Walker Zimmerman and Nashville SC will need to keep Lionel Messi in check if Nashville is to defeat Miami and lift the Leagues Cup. Miami have scored four goals in four of their six Leagues Cup matches, scoring 2 and 3 in the other two matches. DeAndre Yedlin even added an assist in the team’s most recent match, a 4-1 win over the Philadelphia Union.

Sunday

Norwich City v Millwall – 7a on ESPN+

Josh Sargent picked up a goal and an assist last weekend for Norwich City in the team’s 4-4 draw with Southampton. Norwich probably should have won the match, but gave up a penalty 7 minutes into second half stoppage time.

Union Berlin v Mainz – 9:30a on ESPN+

Jordan Pefok saw 22 minutes off the bench last weekend for Union Berlin in the team’s 4-0 win over FCA Waldorf in DFB-Pokal play. After a strong start to the 2022-23 campaign, Pefok really cooled off and was used exclusively as a substitute for the last two months of the season.

Eintracht Frankfurt v Darmstadt – 11:30a on ESPN+

Paxten Aaronson joined Eintracht Frankfurt in January and saw 165 minutes for the club through the end of the season. Aaronson wasn’t included in the squad for last weekend’s DFB-Pokal match.

Udinese v Juventus – 1:45p on Paramount+

Weston McKennie has rejoined Juventus after his loan to Leeds, and as of this moment, it looks like he will be trying to break back into the minutes distribution with the club. Joining him this season is Tim Weah, who has joined the side from Lille. Speculation is that Weah will see significant time as a wingback, where he’s expected to be heavily involved in the attack as well.There is a full slate of MLS action on Sunday evening as well, with the Columbus Crew-FC Cincinnati and New York Red Bulls-DC United matches being the free offerings from Apple TV for the weekend.

Monday

Bologna v AC Milan – 2:45p on Paramount+

The biggest shift on the USMNT radar for the upcoming season is both Christian Pulisic and Yunus Musah joining title contending AC Milan in Serie A, Pulisic transferring from Chelsea and Musah joining the side from Valencia. Milan finished last season in fourth place and qualified for Champions League play, though they were 20 points back of Napoli, who ran away with the league. Early indications are that Pulisic is expected to feature on the right wing, but there are fears that Musah will be in a backup role.Hit the comments section below and let us know what you’re following this weekend and what you’re looking forward to for the upcoming season.

USWNT GM Kate Markgraf follows coach with exit

  • Jeff Carlisle, U.S. soccer correspondentAug 18, 2023, 05:39 PM ET

The U.S. women’s national team‘s leadership shakeup will continue with general manager Kate Markgraf set to leave her role at the end of this month, the U.S. Soccer Federation confirmed Friday.Markgraf’s contract expires at the end of August and the USSF said she would “provide support through the end of the month to assist in the transition.”Sources told ESPN that her decision not to return was made prior to the Women’s World Cup.The news that Markgraf, 46, will depart came a day after manager Vlatko Andonovski resigned.”Kate has been an instrumental part of Women’s National Team both on and off the field for many years, and we’re very thankful for the tireless work she has given to the USWNT and all our Youth National Teams,” U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker said.”We wish her all the best in her future endeavors and look forward to building on the foundation she helped establish over the past several years.”The Americans were eliminated in the round of 16 by Sweden via a penalty shootout, though conversations continued with U.S. Soccer about Markgraf possibly staying. The World Cup exit was the earliest in U.S. team history and appeared to seal her decision.”It has been an incredible honor to work with the players, coaches and staff at U.S. Soccer on the mission of keeping our program at the top of the women’s game,” Markgraf said.”I am proud of the foundation we have built, and even more proud of the character and commitment demonstrated by our players as they represent the United States on and off the field. I look forward to supporting all of our programs and have every confidence that we will maintain our standards of excellence moving forward.”Markgraf was the first person U.S. Soccer appointed to the position of general manager of the team in 2019, and her first decision was the hiring of Andonovski. That was followed by two substandard performances in major tournaments, starting with a bronze medal finish at the Tokyo Olympics.In an interview with ESPN prior to the World Cup, Markgraf said that, while she didn’t explicitly tell Andonovski which players to take to the tournament, she had a part in shaping the roster. Andonovski confirmed that was the case.”We have to make so many tough decisions in different times, whether it’s on the field or off the field,” Andonovski said prior to the tournament. “But the questions that [Markgraf] is posing is in such a professional and respectful way, help us think deeper, help us think different, outside of the box, and in a way prepare ourself for even more stressful moments and be ready for it.”It is unclear if the GM position will continue going forward.”We are grateful to Kate for the tremendous work she has done in helping guide our Women’s National Team and the transformative work on our youth Women’s National Team programs,” U.S. Soccer president Cindy Parlow Cone said.”Her knowledge and experience have been incredibly valuable, and we are poised to build on that foundation as we look to the future.”In announcing Andonovski’s resignation, the federation reiterated that Crocker had already started an in-depth analysis of the women’s national team program and would develop a long-term strategy “to ensure U.S. Soccer can continue its success on the women’s side of the game. The comprehensive approach will establish the operational roadmap that will guide the women’s program forward.”Markgraf was a decorated player for the U.S. team, making 201 appearances and being part of the 1999 side that won the Women’s World Cup as well as gold medal-winning squads at the 2004 and 2008 Olympics.Following her playing career, she earned master’s degrees in kinesiology and educational psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She also worked as a broadcaster for ESPN.

Losing this World Cup doesn’t make the U.S. women’s national team a failure

The U.S. women’s national soccer team is still the most successful team in the history of the women’s game.

Staff illustration/ AP Images/ Getty Images

Earlier this month in Melbourne, Australia, the U.S. women’s national soccerteam lost to Sweden in penalty kicks, sealing their elimination from the World Cup. Two-time World Cup winners Tobin Heath and Christen Press, both sidelined with injuries, described the team’s early exit from the World Cup, respectively, as “traumatic” and “a nightmare.”

Yes, the U.S. women had their earliest major tournament exit ever, but that loss doesn’t take away from all that the national team has achieved.

This World Cup will have 31 losers — the most ever — as FIFA expanded the field of national teams competing from 24 to 32. The winner, either Spain or England, will be decided at 6 a.m. Eastern on Sunday.

And this was a World Cup of firsts. The first World Cup in my lifetime where all the teams that had previously won the tournament were eliminated before the semifinal round, meaning that a new champion will emerge. The first World Cup where 1.77 million tickets were sold for the tournament’s first 60 games. The first World Cup where an openly trans and nonbinary person — Quinn, of Canada — played, fresh off their victory in the Tokyo Olympics. And Nouhaila Benzina, of Morocco, was the first player to wear a hijabin a major tournament.

hose players (and fans) are losers, too. But losing is a part of sports. Or, as my 85-year-old grandfather — himself a former Ironman triathlete and ultramarathoner — so eloquently put it when I described this op-ed to him: “Someone has to lose.”

And losing doesn’t make them a failure.

Since the Women’s World Cup was first played in 1991, the U.S. women have won four times — in 1991, 1999, 2015, and 2019 — making them the most successful national team in the world. (Germany is in a distant second place, with two World Cup wins in 2003 and 2007.) The way I see it, the U.S. women deserve more than pay equity with the men’s team — which they achieved only last year. How many times have the U.S. men won a World Cup? Zero.

Many of the critiques against the U.S. team are gendered and homophobic. Some people — including Fox News hosts Laura Ingraham and Jesse Watters, former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly, and former President Donald Trump — seem more excited about the loss than their wins.

ADVERTISEMENT

Watters called star player Megan Rapinoe “abrasive and self-centered.” On Truth Social, Trump wrote, “Many of our players were openly hostile to America – No other country behaved in such a manner, or even close. WOKE EQUALS FAILURE. Nice shot Megan, the USA is going to Hell!!! MAGA.” And users on social media piled on.

This is a woman who has won two World Cups and two Olympic medals, largely due to her brilliant passes and set pieces. Last year, President Joe Biden awarded Rapinoe the Presidential Medal of Freedom, our nation’s highest civilian honor.

And yet, it often felt like many people were cheering for her demise.

President Joe Biden awards the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, to Megan Rapinoe at the White House in Washington, Thursday, July 7, 2022.
President Joe Biden awards the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, to Megan Rapinoe at the White House in Washington, Thursday, July 7, 2022.J. Scott Applewhite / AP

Clearly, the criticisms stemmed from her politics, not her performance on the field. Rapinoe was one of the first openly LGBTQ soccer players, and she has spoken out for trans kids’ right to play sports. She was also one of the first athletes to take a knee during the national anthem in support of Colin Kaepernick in 2016.In 2019, Rapinoe refused to visit the White House after the team’s World Cup win and encouraged her teammates to do the same, angering then-President Trump.

Rapinoe has played for our country in international matches 202 times. This World Cup was her last, but she’s still the cofounder of two companies: re—inc, a fashion brand, and A Touch More, a production company. At 38 years old, she has already had an incredible career, and I’m excited to see what she does next.

ADVERTISEMENT

As my colleague Will Bunch noted in these pages, cheering against players like Rapinoe because you disagree with their politics is simply un-American.

The 13 coloniesrebelled against Britain and America was founded — right here in Philadelphia — so that we could enjoy free speech. We should all be taking pride in the fact that these players are able to use their voices — even if FIFA refused to allow them to wear rainbow armbands in support of LGBTQ rights without incurring a yellow card.

Rapinoe and the other U.S. players are among the best in the world, and these women represent us on an international stage. Rooting for them is patriotic.

Other countries get it. In Australia, “Matilda Mania” — a reference to the nickname given to the women’s team — has swept over the continent, selling out stadiums, breaking viewer records, and prompting kids to sign up to play soccer in droves.

ADVERTISEMENT

I was once one of those girls. In 1999, after watching the U.S. women best China in the World Cup final, I proudly hung a Mia Hamm poster in my bedroom. I looked up to the U.S. players then, and I still look up to them now.

The U.S.'s Brandi Chastain reacts to her winning penalty kick that won the 1999 World Cup for the U.S. national team in their game against China in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on Saturday, July 10, 1999.
The U.S.’s Brandi Chastain reacts to her winning penalty kick that won the 1999 World Cup for the U.S. national team in their game against China in the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif., on Saturday, July 10, 1999.Read moreANACLETO RAPPING / AP

I cheer for the U.S. women because I can’t get Abby Wambach’s 2011 World Cup quarterfinal goal — dished out by the most incredible assist by Rapinoe — out of my head. I cheer for the team because I think Megan Rapinoe and Sue Bird are the best couple in sports, and because I grew up without LGBTQ role models. I cheer for theteam because Naomi Girma has nerves of steel, and she plays with heart to honor Katie Meyer, a friend she lost from suicide. I cheer for the teambecause Rose Lavelle always surprises me, and because Alex Morgan, Crystal Dunn, and Julie Ertz are all moms.

Once the World Cup is over, I’m excited to cheer for the National Women’s Soccer League, because it is the best soccer league in the world. And don’t get me started on how Philly needs a professional women’s sports team — basketball or soccer — stat. In a city of sports fans, surely that team would thrive. Dawn Staley, come through? Maybe even Carli Lloyd could get behind the idea.

I cheer for women’s sports because when one of us succeeds, we all succeed. Surely that is worth celebrating.

Carli Lloyd: USWNT lacked confidence in Women’s World Cup, ‘didn’t think this team was fit’

Jun 25, 2023; Harrison, New Jersey, USA; Carli Lloyd  before the game between the Chicago Red Stars and NJ/NY Gotham FC at Red Bull Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dennis Schneidler-USA TODAY Sports

By The Athletic Staff1h ago The Athletic


Carli Lloyd said she “didn’t see the confidence” in the U.S. women’s national team during its 2023 Women’s World Cup run while speaking to reporters at the FIFA Women’s Football Convention on Saturday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Lloyd said she “didn’t think this team was fit.”
  • She added that the training sessions at the end of her career — which concluded in November 2021 —  “were very easy and barely competitive and barely training. I can’t speak to how they were in the last year and a half and I wasn’t there, but it’s everything.”
  • When asked about what Spain and England’s presence in the final indicates about their domestic leagues, Lloyd said the NWSL isn’t on the same tactical level as its international counterparts right now.

What Lloyd felt was lacking

“I think developing players at the youth level, mentally being able to persevere. I think you saw a group of players that maybe needed to be taught a little bit more about adversity or have a coach that could motivate, that could allow them to believe in themselves.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I mean, I just looked at that team, and you didn’t see the confidence. You didn’t. You didn’t see the the aura, in any interviews in any postgame remarks that we’ve generally had over the last several decades, where you just feel like the players are confident. So I think from a development standpoint, from a technical standpoint, from a tactical standpoint, I didn’t think this team was fit.”

What Lloyd said about NWSL

“I just think that we’re seeing these leagues around the world really put pressure on the NWSL. Because I firmly believe the NWSL is one of the best leagues in the world from a transitional standpoint. From a tactical standpoint, not up there yet. From a tactical standpoint, probably not up there that much,” she said. “So it’s going to be interesting and you’re not seeing a lot of players coming overseas into the NWSL whether that is the pay structure, the caps, all of that.”

Backstory

Following the USWNT’s 0-0 draw with Portugal, Lloyd criticized the Americans for dancing and smiling after the final group stage match, adding “you’re lucky to not be going home right now.”

USWNT captain Lindsey Horan said the comments were “kind of frustrating for me to hear, especially knowing this team and how much we put into every single game” during a news conference at the tournament before the team was eliminated. When asked about the remarks, Horan said, “I always want to defend my team and say like, you have no idea what’s going on behind the scenes, you have no idea every single angle, every single training, like what we’re doing individually, collectively, et cetera.”

Required reading

After Andonovski: What went wrong for the USWNT, and what should come next

USA's coach Vlatko Andonovski gives instructions during the Australia and New Zealand 2023 Women's World Cup round of 16 football match between Sweden and USA at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in Melbourne on August 6, 2023. (Photo by WILLIAM WEST / AFP) (Photo by WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)

By Kimberly McCauley 8h ago The Athletic


Vlatko Andonovski has resigned from his post as United States women’s national team manager. He was, in many ways, extremely unlucky, but his downfall was also very much of his own making.Andonovski was a popular hire whose tenure started spectacularly before poor performances at the Tokyo Olympics led to his competence being called into question. What followed felt like a slow but steady two-year decline of the former best team in the world, culminating in an early World Cup exit. He couldn’t handle the team’s numerous injury issues, and eventually, his decisions stopped making sense entirely.U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker is now tasked with finding Andonovski’s replacement. His timeline for that is short, with the 2024 Paris Olympics less than a year away. But before he starts interviewing candidates, it’s important that he reaches some sound conclusions about why Andonovski’s tenure went sour.

USWNT Survey: How do you feel about the team after the 2023 World Cup disappointment?


Andonovski was supposed to be a slam-dunk hire

The USWNT players asked for Vlatko Andonovski. During the hiring process, general manager Kate Markgraf consulted several players about who they thought should take over from Jill Ellis, and Grant Wahl reported that “Andonovski was by far the preferred choice.”

In 2016 and 2017, several FC Kansas City players told me that having the opportunity to play for Andonovski was the only thing keeping them from retiring from NWSL or pursuing a move overseas.

The manager Andonovski replaced was a two-time World Cup winner, but still a relatively unpopular coach. Jill Ellis faced a player revolt in 2017, requiring then-U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati to hold a meeting where he informed the squad she wouldn’t be fired. Following Ellis’s departure, Ali Krieger, Sydney LerouxMegan Rapinoe and Carli Lloyd all shared public criticism of their former coach.

It’s notable that Ellis had not been an international or professional club head coach before starting the USWNT job. She was a successful college coach, as well as a long-time assistant and youth team coach for the USWNT program. But by current standards, she would be considered underqualified for the post.

Andonovski, by contrast, entered the position with an impressive NWSL resume. Two championships with FC Kansas City. Two playoff appearances with an OL Reign team that had failed to make the playoffs in the season before he took over. The latter top-four finish was achieved while he was forced to utilize a league record 33 different players due to injuries and international call-ups. The players and federation had every reason to believe he would be an upgrade over Ellis.Early returns were good. Between Andonovski’s appointment and the 2021 Olympics, the USWNT had a record of 22 wins, 1 draw, 0 losses. That run included an Olympic qualifying tournament where the team won by at least 3 goals in every match and did not concede once. It also included shutout wins over England, Spain, the Netherlands, Brazil, and France.In the sendoff friendlies before the team headed to Tokyo, the USWNT recorded a pair of 4-0 wins over Mexico while playing the most stylish soccer the team has ever played. The second game featured the famous Christen Press Phantom Goal, disallowed for an erroneous early whistle for an offside call that shouldn’t have happened.

There was no reason to lack optimism about the USWNT’s chances of competing for the Olympic gold medal.

And then the Sweden game happened.

The Olympics were a warning sign

It was obvious something was wrong from the first second of the USWNT’s opening group stage game at the Olympics. The team looked completely disjointed. They couldn’t string three passes together. When Sweden finally scored in the 25th minute, it had felt like it was coming for a very long time.

Starting slow and having to mount a comeback wasn’t new territory for this U.S. squad. Sweden was also a good team that regularly gave the USWNT problems — they handed Andonovski his only draw before the tournament. What was shocking, though, was the complete lack of a response. The Americans didn’t battle to get back into the game. They just continued to get comprehensively outplayed for the rest of the match, a 3-0 victory for the Swedes.

The USWNT bounced back with a 6-1 trouncing of New Zealand, but its remaining 4 games were less than impressive: A staring contest 0-0 draw with Australia, a 2-2 draw with the Netherlands where they advanced on penalties, a 1-0 loss to Canada where their attack was stagnant, and a 4-3 win in a clown fiesta of a rematch with the Australians to salvage a bronze medal.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://8bd1e5421df6d956e12d691bda4d350c.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

To this day, I fail to understand how a team that looked so impressive in the build-up to the Olympics simply forgot how to play soccer. I’m sure Andonovski felt similarly. I’ve been waiting for the story about player infighting, or a food poisoning incident, or anything that would cause the extreme downturn to make sense, and it just hasn’t come.

Markgraf clearly put more stock in the 23 games that came before the Olympics than the 5 poorly played ones at the tournament, and Andonovski kept his job for the next two years. The situation was reminiscent of 2007, when Greg Ryan’s first and only regular-time defeat as USWNT manager was a 4-0 loss to Brazil in the World Cup semifinals. The main difference, of course, is that Ryan was fired.

The wrong solutions for large problems

Andonovski has, in many ways, been dealt a bad hand. Eight players he’s clearly indicated he’d like to have as part of his main rotation, if not as first-choice starters — Christen Press, Tobin Heath, Becky SauerbrunnSam MewisMallory Swanson, Catarina Macario, Abby Dahlkemper and Tierna Davidson —  were unavailable for selection in this World Cup squad or nowhere near full speed due to recent injuries. One could reasonably argue he needed to have succession plans for the former 3 due to their age, but he was certainly counting on having the latter 5. With all of these players available, who knows if coaching mistakes are even noticeable?

But Andonovski still had plenty of talent at his disposal without those players. His tactical ideas in the 0-0 draw with Portugal were nonsensical. His roster and rotation decisions were poor.

Savannah DeMelo went from being unable to get a camp invite to the starting lineup in the blink of an eye. Alana Cook went from clearly first-choice to withdrawn from consideration just as quickly. Sophia Smith — ostensibly the team’s most talented attacking player — was shifted from right wing, to left wing, to center forward, without any clear consideration for opposition matchups or how best to get her the ball in dangerous positions. Emily Sonnett’s surprise start in defensive midfield actually worked out very well, but it came out of nowhere. It was another action in a pattern that screamed “A coach who’s not sure what to do is making stuff up.”

It’s a stunning downfall for the coach who figured out that NAIA goal machine Bethany Balcer would make a better second striker than out-and-out No.9, or that dribbly winger Christina Gibbons would make an even better box-to-box midfielder, or that Allie Long had the ability to resurrect her career as a holding midfield general in the mold of Sergio Busquets. At NWSL level, Andonovski was a master of solving roster issues by correctly identifying which underutilized skills his bench players possessed and repurposing them into new roles. At the international level, he couldn’t make it work.

(Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Variance can be cruel

Andonovski didn’t do a great job, and the USWNT players are ultimately responsible for not putting the ball in the back of the net. But it wouldn’t have taken much positive random variance for the World Cup to have gone a different way for the Americans.

ADVERTISEMENT

Like facing Sweden goalkeeper Zećira Mušović on the average form she showed against Japan and Spain, rather than the white-hot form she had against the USWNT. Or Alex Morgan, scorer of 121 international goals, converting one of her 17 shots for 3 xG. Or Megan Rapinoe, Ballon d’Or winner, converting a penalty. If any of those things happen, we might be talking about Andonovski doing a respectable job rather than calling him one of the most unsuccessful coaches in the program’s history.

GO DEEPER

As Andonovski departs USWNT, many questions remain for USSF

We don’t have to look far to know this is true. Speculation is rampant about the USWNT trying to poach England manager Sarina Wiegman, to the point where the FA felt compelled to shoot down the rumors. If England prevails in the World Cup final, she’ll be able to stake a claim as one of the great international managers of all time. Her team was inches from suffering the same fate as the USWNT did in their round of 16 match against Nigeria, turning in the exact same level of performance, but edging the penalty shootout to advance.

Bev Priestman guided Canada to an Olympic gold medal, then exited the World Cup in the group stage 2 years later. Pia Sundhage has earned praise for Brazil’s improvement over the last 4 years, and her team went out in the group stage. Futoshi Ikeda presided over a Japan team that played the most impressive soccer at this tournament, then was defeated by Sweden more decisively than the United States was.

Andonovski did not do a good job, but the margins are paper thin in international soccer tournaments. The alternate reality where his team wins the World Cup is not that difficult to imagine, especially given that Spain has made the final while their players openly despise their coach and claim he is incompetent.

Where does U.S. Soccer go from here?

An opinion I was stewing on before I started writing this article, but wasn’t totally set on, is that the next USWNT manager should be someone who has experience in international management. I became more convinced of that when I started reminiscing about how good Andonovski was at adjusting to injury and squad construction problems when he was a club manager, and conversely, how bad he was at doing the same thing as USWNT manager.The way you replace outgoing or unavailable talent is different in club vs. international soccer. If you’re asking a player to convert to a new position as the USWNT manager, you don’t get to work with them every single day for nine months at a time as you do as their club coach. Andonovski’s USWNT was great when he had all his preferred pieces available, but when he started losing them, he was unable to problem-solve as he did with FC Kansas City and OL Reign.It was reasonable to hypothesize that, based on his club record, Andonovski would be an excellent USWNT manager. Unfortunately, his skillset didn’t translate well. I fear that the likes of Laura Harvey and Emma Hayes would run into similar problems, and end up lamenting how little of their job was actually working on the grass with players. International management is probably closer to being a CEO than a soccer coach, hence Jill Ellis’s current position with the San Diego Wave.

FIFA WOMEN’S WORLD CUP

England’s Mary Earps can cement her place as the game’s best goalkeeper

Updated Aug. 17, 2023 12:34 p.m. ET

Martin RogersOX SPORTS INSIDER

Mary Earps has loved the Women’s World Cup because she loves winning, and England is winning.

She has loved her time in Australia and New Zealand because she enjoys making big saves, and she has made some absolute gems. And because she believes now more than ever she’s part of a group that’s good enough to lift the trophy when the team takes on Spain on Sunday (coverage begins at 5 a.m. ET with kickoff at 6 a.m. ET on FOX and the FOX Sports app).

If you could write the ideal script for a player based off how they would wish their tournament to go then Earps’ tale might be it: The formerly discarded goalkeeper who won back her spot, has conceded just twice in more than nine hours, triumphed in a penalty shootout, is loved by her teammates and her army of loyal TikTok followers and has backed up her status as FIFA’s best shot-stopper.But there is one thing Earps wishes she could change. Like the rest of her colleagues she is being supported by a cadre of friends and family members Down Under, getting behind the Lionesses‘ surge to meet Spain in Sunday’s final.Yet she’s the only member of the starting lineup whose loved ones don’t get to support her in the most obvious and visible way — by wearing her jersey. It isn’t for sale, no matter how much England supporters and Earps enthusiasts might be willing to pay.”I can’t really sugar-coat this in any way, so I am not going to try,” she told the Guardian last month. “It is hugely disappointing and very hurtful. It is something I have been fighting behind closed doors. I have been trying to go through the correct channels as much as possible. … I have been desperately trying to find a solution.”Nike has stated that selling England goalkeeping jerseys is not part of its commercial strategy. Frankly, it is hugely disappointing. Earps’ traveling fans have bought outfield jerseys and had her name and No. 1 embossed upon them, but that’s far from an ideal workaround.Earps plays for Manchester United, where she became the Women’s Super League goalkeeper of the year and the first to claim 50 clean sheets in WSL. Her goalkeeper jersey with the Red Devils was available, for a while. It was so popular, it sold out.

2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup final preview: Spain vs. England

That Earps would be outspoken and attack the issue with passion should be no surprise. She lives her life the way she plays the game, with spirit and barely a backward glance.She holds a degree in business and information management and vacations in eye-catching locations, to the delight of her social media followers. Sydney, where the Lionesses will meet La Roja at Stadium Australia, has already been ticked off her list. So, too, coincidentally given Sunday’s opponent, has Madrid.Her trips usually take place during offseason downtime, and there hasn’t been much of that lately. Earps’ performances in starting every game of England’s victorious European Championships campaign led to her claiming the FIFA award. This tournament has done nothing to dispel the notion that there’s no better women’s goalkeeper, anywhere.

Earps was calm and disciplined against Australia in the last four, and the goal the co-host did score, a scorching strike from Sam Kerr, fell into the category of “unstoppable.”She’s 30 and coming into her prime for a keeper, but less than three years ago she thought this might be it, after falling out of the England squad altogether, with four other keepers selected ahead of her. Earps sat on her kitchen floor, in tears, at the news.”I had made peace with my international career being over,” she told the English Football Association’s website.This, needless to say, is the opposite end of the spectrum.All that comes before Sunday is a compelling story about an intriguing and mightily likable athlete. But it’s about to get overtaken. Rightly or wrongly, a World Cup final has an inevitable way of becoming the biggest thread to a soccer player’s narrative.

[England ends Australia’s dream run, will meet Spain in World Cup final]

To win one is life-changing, an accolade to be placed on the top line of the resume forever. To lose one hurts, the sting so deep as to never be fixed. Over-dramatic? Just ask anyone who it’s happened to how they feel about it, and if they still think about it, never mind how long has elapsed since.

Goalkeeper Mary Earps leads England against Denmark

England looks good but will be up against its biggest test. The backline in front of Earps is perhaps the tournament’s best. Jess CarterMillie Bright and Alex Greenwood have been mostly rock-solid, though captain Bright erred in allowing Kerr too much space for that Wednesday wonder-goal and would do well to avoid a repeat against Jenni Hermoso or Salma Paralluelo.Earps seems to take everything in her stride, and that’s just as well. The next task on the list? Oh, just the biggest game of her life.”The job is not done,” Earps told reporters, with typical unflappability. “Still one game to go.”Martin Rogers

Published Aug. 16, 202

Medford’s Brenden Aaronson is enjoying his new home with Union Berlin

‘It just really opened my eyes,’ the Medford native said of moving to Berlin on loan from Leeds United, ‘I felt like it was a great place to come, and it would get the best out of me as a footballer.’ Philly U:nion

Brenden Aaronson poses in a Union Berlin jersey at the team's presentation before the start of the Bundesliga season.
Brenden Aaronson poses in a Union Berlin jersey at the team’s presentation before the start of the Bundesliga season.Matthias Kern / Getty Images

A new chapter in Brenden Aaronson’s European soccer journey starts Sunday when his new club, Germany’s Union Berlin, kicks off its Bundesliga season.

The Medford native moved to Berlin from England’s Leeds United last month on a season-long loan, a financial and sporting consequence of Leeds’ relegation from the English Premier League. But while the Premier League is the world’s most prestigious domestic league, Aaronson isn’t making that much of a trade-off on the whole.

Union Berlin will play in the UEFA Champions League this season for the first time in its history, qualifying directly for the group stage after finishing fourth in the Bundesliga last season. Off the field, Aaronson gets to live in Germany’s largest city, and be part of a club renowned for its family atmosphere and tight-knit fan base.

“The things that they were talking about, the plan of the club and things like this, and playing in [the] Champions League and in the league, it was easy,” Aaronson, 22, told a small gathering of media including The Inquirer via Zoom this week.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I think they made it a really good layout for us, and a good layout for myself,” he said, “and what they wanted me to come and do here, and the player that they want me to be. It just really opened my eyes, and I felt like it was a great place to come, and it would get the best out of me as a footballer.”

» READ MORE: Brenden Aaronson joins Union Berlin on loan from Leeds United

https://youtube.com/watch?v=29_0I9b6K8U%3Ffeature%3Doembed%26enablejsapi%3D1%26origin%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.inquirer.com

A new style and a familiar face

Aaronson will play in a different tactical setup with Union Berlin than the U.S. national team’s usual 4-3-3, and the 4-4-2 he saw often with past clubs. Manager Urs Fischer prefers a 5-3-2 setup with Aaronson in a box-to-box role. That’s deeper than Aaronson has been used to, but he said he likes it.

“We get into a shape and we’re very structured and we’re hard to break down,” Aaronson said, “but then attacking, he tells me to be free, go one-v-one and play my creative self like I like to be in games. … Honestly, it’s going really well, I feel very confident in the system now, I feel like it’s going to benefit me a lot as a player. I’m going to learn a lot this season.”

ADVERTISEMENT

There’s a long, proud history of Americans in the Bundesliga, including a current U.S. national team colleague at Union Berlin: striker Jordan Pefok. Aaronson was happy to see a familiar face when he arrived, though Pefok might not be staying there. He has fallen down the team’s depth chart, and soon after Aaronson spoke for this story, a report emerged in Germany that Pefok might go on loan to Borussia Mönchengladbach.

“He’s been like an older brother, I guess you can say, coming in here,” Aaronson said. “It’s just a good feeling having someone to go to at first, because things can be a little awkward sometimes. At first I’m a little shy, but then when I get up to guys and I get to know the group, it goes really well.”

» READ MORE: For USMNT goalkeeper Zack Steffen, coming home to Downingtown still means a lot

Jordan Pefok (right) playing for Union Berlin last March.
Jordan Pefok (right) playing for Union Berlin last March.Andreas Gora / AP

The Aaronson Derby

Speaking of brothers, Aaronson’s actual brother — his younger brother Paxten — is set to begin his second campaign with Germany’s Eintracht Frankfurt on Sunday. It’s a neat coincidence that Union and Eintracht play back-to-back Sunday, and each at home: Union vs. Mainz (9:30 a.m., ESPN+) and Eintracht against Darmstadt (11:30 a.m., ESPN+).

Because Paxten turned pro in MLS with the Union after Brenden left, it’s the first time in the brothers’ careers that they have played professionally in the same league. They could face each other twice in the Bundesliga this season, Nov. 4 in Berlin and March 30 in Frankfurt.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It’s going to be amazing — I can’t wait to see my brother,” Brenden said. “I’m already trying to plan a trip to, like, if I have two days off or something, go and see him in Frankfurt. He’s there alone right now because his girlfriend just went back to the States, and I know what it’s like being alone in a foreign country. It’s tough.”

The elder Aaronson has quite a bit of experience with that now. It’s been more than 2½ years since he left the Union to move to Europe, first to Red Bull Salzburg, then Leeds, and now Berlin. Last season was especially difficult for him, because his first World Cup — the pinnacle of his career to date — was jammed into the European club season.

» READ MORE: Ernst Tanner reveals details of Paxten Aaronson’s move from the Union to Eintracht Frankfurt

Paxten Aaronson (left) on the ball for Eintracht Frankfurt last April.
Paxten Aaronson (left) on the ball for Eintracht Frankfurt last April.Alex Grimm / Getty Images

Summer rest ‘really needed’

While many fans don’t like it when players complain about playing too much, in the soccer world they’ve gotten a fair hearing. The 2022-23 European season was exhausting, and the World Cup made it end later than usual, which cut into increasingly rare time off to relax.

Aaronson noted that in the short span between when the World Cup ended in December and the Premier League season resumed just over a week later, he flew home to New Jersey for a few days, then flew back to Leeds. Only in late June, after the English season and the U.S. national team’s Concacaf Nations League title win were finished, was he finally able to just go sit on the beach for a while.

“Everybody knows that it was a tough year; it wasn’t the way things wanted to go,” Aaronson said of Leeds’ relegation. “I think the beginning of the year, it went really well, we were playing good football, and then, you know — I mean, I’ll say it — [expletive] happens in football. It’s tough, and that’s the way it goes, but I think that to be able to disconnect from the season, go home, be around family, just get away from it, play a little golf with some friends, just relax, go to the beach — it was something I really needed.”

» READ MORE: From Leeds to Philadelphia, Brenden Aaronson’s first Premier League goal was big news

Brenden Aaronson (right) walks off the field with U.S. national team colleague Tyler Adams after their Leeds United squad was relegated from the English Premier League last season.
Brenden Aaronson (right) walks off the field with U.S. national team colleague Tyler Adams after their Leeds United squad was relegated from the English Premier League last season.Stu Forster / Getty Images

He emphasized, though, that “there’s no excuses” for his subpar stats down the stretch of the season, which earned him a lot of scorn from Leeds fans.

“I think I could have played better for a portion of that season,” he said. “I’m OK with it now, and I’ve forgotten about it, so yeah, I feel good.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Aaronson hasn’t forgotten about his old team back home, though. He noted that when he woke up the morning after the Union’s 4-1 blowout loss to Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami (which took place in the middle of the night in Germany), he checked his phone and was surprised by the score.

“I saw a 30-yard goal from Messi, and I was like, oh my God, he scored on Andre Blake from 30 yards?” Aaronson said. “It’s crazy.”

Spoken like the Union fan he still is, now having a second Union to call home.

» READ MORE: B.J. Callaghan’s rise up the U.S. men’s soccer team’s coaching staff has roots at Villanova

Published Aug. 17, 2023

Messi and money: The ripple effect for MLS, its teams and sponsors

Messi and money: The ripple effect for MLS, its teams and sponsors

Paul Tenorio Jul 31, 2023 The Athletic

Just a day after Lionel Messi announced to the world that he was coming to Major League Soccer and Inter Miami, CBS Sports Golazo Network host Susannah Collins twirled her hands around a clear glass bowl live on air and pulled out a red ball.

FC Cincinnati and Inter Miami had advanced out of the quarterfinals of the Eastern region in the U.S. Open Cup. The team whose name was pulled out of that bowl first would host the semifinal of the 110-year-old tournament. On the heels of Messi’s announcement the day prior and the seismic movement of ticket prices around his games in the hours since, the ball Collins pulled would now represent a multi-million dollar prize. The semifinal was now likely to be a sold-out game, with the chance to sell every ticket in the house at Messi-level prices.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ba20af315994431c37b149a91626e6db.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“The team that will be hosting in the east is…” Collins said, pausing slightly for effect and unfurling the small piece of paper.

“FC Cincinnati.”

Three weeks later, FC Cincinnati put tickets for the semifinal up for sale. Typically, the club’s rivalry “Hell is Real” game against the Columbus Crew is their hottest-selling ticket. With around 17,000 season ticket holders and a stadium capacity of 25,513, that game usually sells out after a few days.

Messi’s visit needed just one day to sell out.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Messi has turned free kicks into an art form that confounds goalkeepers

When details of Messi’s contract emerged, some observers wondered whether MLS owners would be frustrated that league partners like Apple, Fanatics and Adidas played a role in sweetening the deal in order to entice the Argentine to any single club. So far, the answer has been no, mostly because every team understands that it, too, will see the benefit of the signing. MLS was built so that the business interests of the teams are tied together, a single-entity structure that embraces revenue share and aims to minimize losses for each individual owner. What’s good for one team typically is good for all.

“The group in that room (at MLS board of governors), they’re all partners unless they play each other,” MLS deputy commissioner Gary Stevenson said earlier this month. “So they’re rooting for each other.”

Fans are flocking to more cities than just Fort Lauderdale to see Messi (Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Messi’s arrival opened up the potential for increased revenue not just for Inter Miami, but for the whole league, something which is important when you consider that Sportico research for last year had the average MLS team bringing in $57 million of revenue per year, compared to NFL ($545 million), NBA ($308 million), MLB ($313 million) and NHL ($187 million).

“It’s a positive for all the clubs in the league, and I think it’s positive for the league,” Houston owner Ted Segal said earlier this month. “Personally, I feel gratitude towards the Mas brothers and David Beckham for getting the deal across the line, in partnership with the league. And I think it’s a (continuation) of our momentum that we have in this league right now.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

David Beckham, the interview: Miami, Messi, Manchester United – and more

Right now, just about everyone in American soccer is seeing the rewards of Messi’s arrival — and the show he’s put on in his first two games. Most MLS teams hosting Miami are seeing significant upticks in gameday revenue. Messi’s jerseys are selling out. Apple announced that three games the week of Messi’s debut set records in viewership. Social media numbers are through the roof, both in Inter Miami’s followers and in views on highlights, like Messi’s freekick goal in his debut against Cruz Azul, which has drawn hundreds of millions of eyeballs. Even the U.S. Soccer Federation will benefit – as the organizer of the U.S. Open Cup, it will get a 50 percent cut of the gate from FC Cincinnati’s U.S. Open Cup semifinal.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ba20af315994431c37b149a91626e6db.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Messi’s deal is not just about who is paying him, but also about just how big the ripple effect from this contract will be.

“While we’ve talked about the dollars being significant, I think the halo effect of him and what it means for the entire football ecosystem (is key),” said Derek Aframe, executive vice president and head of integrated marketing at Octagon, a top global sports and entertainment marketing and management firm. “Anyone in some form or fashion is going to benefit from his presence.”


After Inter Miami’s 4-0 win over Atlanta United last Tuesday, right back DeAndre Yedlin arrived to speak to the media with a pair of pink and black Beats by Dre headphones on top of his head. They were a gift to teammates, he said, from Messi.

Beats by Dre, of course, is owned by Apple, so the headphones became another visible extension of the partnership between one of the biggest companies in the world and one of the biggest sports figures.

It also spoke to the unique nature of Messi’s contract.

“The fact you’ve got MLS, Apple and Adidas and equity in (Inter Miami), those four pieces coming together are rather historic, that you see that level of coordination to bring any athlete,” Aframe said.

Similar to David Beckham’s deal with MLS in 2007, Messi’s contract is designed to be a mutually beneficial one beyond Messi’s playing days. MLS paid a steep price in the $25 million expansion clause that Beckham triggered to launch Inter Miami. By the time the team was announced, expansion fees were significantly higher — NYCFC paid $100 million in 2015, a year after Beckham triggered his clause, and FC Cincinnati paid $150 million in 2018, the year Miami announced its team. But in providing Beckham an opportunity to own an MLS franchise, the league also kept Beckham’s brand tied to its own.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ba20af315994431c37b149a91626e6db.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Beckham’s visibility around Inter Miami, and thus MLS, advertises the league to all of his followers and fans. Messi’s contract has similar benefits. With a trigger to own a percentage of Inter Miami after he is done playing, Messi will be an MLS stakeholder after his playing days. His brand will remain closely linked with the league. It also incentivizes Messi to continue to push the league forward, as he directly benefits from its growth.

“Jorge (Mas) is spending a tremendous amount of money, to have Apple and (senior vice president of services) Eddy (Cue) jump in, this only happens when you have five or six people that are willing to take economic risk,” said former AEG executive Tim Leiweke, who helped put together the deal that brought Beckham to MLS in 2007. “The league and Don Garber have been through this and Don is smarter about this than anybody in the world. It’s about: how do you compensate Messi to share in the 10-year vision even though the contract is three years?”

Inter Miami owner Jorge Mas noted as much when he compared the contract to that of Michael Jordan, whose deal with Nike and the Jordan brand has continued to pay long after Jordan stopped playing.

“Commercial opportunities are important. The windows of athletes are ‘X’ time and I always talked to him about a legacy,” Mas said on Taylor Twellman’s new Apple podcast, Offside. “I said, ‘Lionel, you have an opportunity. Much like Michael Jordan. Much like figures in time, Muhammad Ali, a name you could recognize in every corner of the world, David Beckham and others. That in your post-career, you can not only maintain relevance but make a difference in the things that matter to you.’ And I think that was super compelling.”

Messi’s arrival has seen ticket sales increase in many cities (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Even in the short-term, MLS attaching itself to brands like Beckham and Messi is hugely valuable, both in significance and in reach. That has been evident in the early days of Messi in MLS, with his highlights being shared out by both Messi (490 million Instagram followers) and Beckham (81.5 million), far exceeding the impact of Inter Miami (12.7 million) or MLS (3.3 million).

“When we look at athletes active on social, by carrying sponsors with them, jerseys sponsors, arena sponsors, there is an incredible amount of value in that and that value attaches itself to Inter Miami and their sponsors,” said Daniel Kirschner, the CEO of Greenfly, a platform used by over 500 sports organizations to optimize digital content. “Inter Miami’s reach and impact, the number of people seeing those logos, has expanded exponentially. For MLS more broadly, it brings value by showing who he is playing against, awareness of teams, awareness of the league. It carries that value to a much broader fan base.”

For Messi’s commercial partners, the impact has been immediate.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ba20af315994431c37b149a91626e6db.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Tor Southard, senior director of Adidas Soccer in North America, said in a press conference on July 20 that the company has seen “incredible demand” for Messi jerseys and that “retail partners have reported record single-day sales for the launch day.” Messi jerseys are on backorder online and have sold out in the team stores at DRV PNK Stadium on game days. Adidas inked Messi to a lifetime contract in 2017.

Ahead of last Tuesday’s game against Atlanta United, Messi shared a link to MLS Season Pass on his Instagram story. It was another example of the value of his partnership with Apple. According to Sports Business Journal, the MLS Season Pass subscription numbers have increased from around 700,000 in early June to nearly 1 million in late July.

Other advertisers, like Hard Rock Casino and Budweiser, have also put out new ads upon Messi’s arrival.

AB InBev struck a partnership deal with Messi in 2020, winning an award for an advertising campaign by sending bottles of Budweiser to the goalkeepers on whom Messi has scored goals. Octagon works with AB InBev, and Aframe said Messi’s move to North America brings an entirely different value proposition to companies’ partnership with the Argentine.

“It opens up a whole new set of opportunities to attract a new fanbase in that sense,” Aframe said. “There’s a chance to maybe reframe the story of Messi, in light of now playing in this country. That story is yet to be told.”


In MLS, the valuation of Messi goes beyond single-game ticket sales, or even jersey and subscription sales. There is an opportunity valuation, as well. Messi opens doors to new audiences.

The Messi boost can be seen simply by looking at Inter Miami’s social media growth, from just less than 1 million Instagram followers before he announced to 12.7 million today (though claims that 3.5 billion people saw his unveiling should be taken with a large pinch of salt). But there is no guarantee on how long that expanded audience will stick around.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://ba20af315994431c37b149a91626e6db.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

The task the league and teams now face is how to turn these touchpoints with Messi into fans that stay after he’s gone. It’s a challenge that MLS teams hosting Inter Miami recognized as soon as Messi announced he was coming and ticket sales spiked.

The Chicago Fire is currently on pace to set a league record for most gross revenue driven by a single game. Prior to Messi’s announcement on June 7, the team had sold around 8,000 tickets for its midweek game against Inter Miami on October 4. They sold 10,000 more in the 10 hours or so after Messi’s announcement.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Uhh, Messi’s in my WhatsApp group. Behind the scenes of the Miami hero’s first days

Currently, the team is tracking toward more than 40,000 tickets sold for the game at Soldier Field, an NFL venue with a capacity of 61,500. The low ticket prices are $189 in the 400 level, with prices going up to $495 in the club level, $650 in the 100 level and a handful of field-side seats as high as $3,500. Sources said the Fire are looking at between $7 and $10 million in revenue for the game. That is more than every other Fire home game this season combined.

For a team that ranked dead last in MLS in revenue as recently as 2021, it’s a massive uplift. But the game now also represents a significant opportunity for Chicago, which has been attempting to pull in new fans since returning to Soldier Field in 2020 after a generation in suburban Bridgeview.

The Fire has been one of the worst teams in the league over the past decade, and that’s led to a significant drop-off in fan interest. The hope was that a rebrand and a return to the downtown Soldier Field in 2020 could provide a rare chance at a reintroduction to the market that might spur interest. That plan was scuttled by the COVID-19 shutdown. The Fire sold nearly 50,000 tickets for its first game back at Soldier Field in March 2020 only for the pandemic to end any hope of making a big impression under new owner Joe Mansueto. The game was postponed and the season was played behind closed doors.

This Messi game now presents a similar marquee event to pull in fans who otherwise haven’t engaged with the Fire. If Chicago can put on a show for the 30,000-plus who purchased tickets specifically to see Messi, perhaps they can compel them to return.

The Fire is not alone in these efforts. Atlanta United opened up the upper bowl of its stadium (Mercedes-Benz Stadium, 71,000 capacity for soccer) and sold out the 25,000-seat inventory with an average price of around $150 — adding around $4 million in gross revenue. That despite the fact that Messi may not even play because Atlanta United has an artificial turf surface and some players deem that too risky as it can cause more knee injuries in particular. (With the Mexican national team playing the Tuesday before the game and the NFL’s Falcons playing the day after, Atlanta United officials have said they will not be putting down a grass surface on top of the turf.) Charlotte FC also opened up the entirety of its NFL stadium and is selling upper-bowl tickets for between $150-$250. They also play on an artificial surface.

It’s unclear if Messi will play at Atlanta (Photo: Matias J. Ocner/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Other teams, like LAFC, who have bigger season ticket bases and smaller venues, aren’t going to see the single-game revenue increases, but look at the game as an advertisement for their teams, stadiums and atmosphere. Notably, the league’s revenue share model, which was updated this year, requires teams to put 10 percent of all ticket revenue into a league pot through the first 30,000 tickets sold, then 33 percent of all revenue above that, according to sources with knowledge of the agreement. So, every team in MLS benefits from the Messi crowds.

Those aims to convert Messi fans into Fire fans — or any other MLS team — are a microcosm of the long-term opportunities built into this current Messi boost.

“We have a special moment to capitalize on,” Garber said earlier this month. “So you would expect us to do everything to ensure that we’re providing our fans, our partners, particularly our media partners, all the tools to be able to capture the moment. We’re very thoughtful about how we ensure that to 2026 and beyond, MLS is raised to a higher level and it’s really transformed by having this iconic moment that we take advantage of.”

AC Milan Serie A 2023-24 season preview, predictions: Rossoneri might be favorites to win Scudetto

Stefano Pioli’s team were the most active this summer

By Francesco PorzioAug 16, 2023 at 3:09 pm ET•3 min read

milan.jpg

Getty Images

AC Milan went through a big summer revolution. After reaching the Champions League semifinals last season, losing to city rivals Inter, coach Stefano Pioli and the club decided that it was the right time to make some changes in the roster. Club legend and former director Paolo Maldini left after some disagreements with the American owner, Gerry Cardinale. The former head of scouting, Geoffrey Moncada took charge of the transfer business alongside the new CEO, Giorgio Furlani. The Rossoneri made some big changes that created a lot of expectations around the team and the club, which is now considered one of the main candidates to win the title in the upcoming season. This will be the first season without soccer legend Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who decided to retire at the end of the past season. 

Golazo Starting XI Newsletter

Your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters.

I agree to receive the “Golazo Starting XI Newsletter” and marketing communications, updates, special offers (including partner offers), and other information from CBS Sports and the Paramount family of companies.

By pressing sign up, I confirm that I have read and agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge Paramount’s Privacy Policy.

Summer transfer business

The AC Milan summer transfer window started off with Italian midfielder Sandro Tonali leaving his childhood club to join Newcastle for €70 million plus €5 million in add-ons. That money was immediately used to make some signings, as the Rossoneri signed goalkeeper Marco Sportiello and midfielder Luka Romero as free agents. Then, they signed USMNT winger Christian Pulisic from Chelsea for around €20 million and USMNT midfielder Yunus Musah for €20 million, add-ons included, Then midfielders Tijjani Reijnders from Feyenoord for €19 million and Ruben Loftus-Cheek from Chelsea for €16 million followed, and most recently winger Samuel Chukwueze from Villarreal for €20 million and striker Noah Okafor from RB Salzburg for €14 million. 

It was a very active summer for the club, which decided to add young and talented players. AC Milan will also change the tactical system and will play with the 4-3-3 in the upcoming season, as the Rossoneri already tried in the first preseason games against Juventus, Real Madrid and Monza, with the possibility to switch back to the 4-2-3-1 as they played in the past three years under Pioli.

Don’t miss CBS Sports Golazo Network’s Morning Footy, now in podcast form! Our crew brings you all the news, views, highlights and laughs you need to follow the Beautiful Game in every corner of the globe, every Monday-Friday all year longContinue watchngFormer Steelers QB Ben Roethlisberger returning to field … as an assistant youth football coachafter the ad

javascript:false

What to expect from AC Milan 

AC Milan can be considered one of the top candidates to win the title, as they renovated the roster with some young and promising talents but also had already some of the best players in the league, including winger Rafael Leao and goalkeeper Mike Maignan. AC Milan will likely fight with Inter again for the Serie A title and can be considered as the best-positioned side to win it this time, considering that have invested and changed the team early in the summer, while Inter still have to make some moves at the end of August. Pioli had more time to prepare for the season and worked with the new signings already the whole preseason, while Simone Inzaghi couldn’t. The Rossoneri also signed two of the most talented USMNT players. The two should not be starters at the beginning of the season, but they will definitely have chances to show their potential.

Three players to watch out

Tijjani Reijnders: One of the most underrated signings of the summer. The Dutch midfielder was one of the best talents of European soccer in the past seasons when he played for AZ Alkmaar and now has the chance to make an impact in one of the most prestigious clubs in the world. Watch out for him, he’s one to follow this year. 

Christian Pulisic: The USMNT star can play in multiple positions of the attacking line. He can play as right winger, left winger when Leao is not available and potentially also as a number ten if AC Milan will use the 4-2-3-1. Pulisic is the player that AC Milan missed in the past years, the one that can also come off the bench and decide games. 

Samuel Chukwueze: He is considered one of the best talents around Europe and attracted interested of multiple clubs, but AC Milan were able to bring him to the Italian league. The Nigerian winger should become the starter on the right in the 4-3-3.

AC Milan predictions

  • Serie A finish: 1st
  • Top scorer: Olivier Giroud
  • Player of the season: Rafael Leao  
  • Something unexpected: Zlatan Ibrahimovic will join coaching staff
  • Christian Pulisic at AC Milan: USMNT star fitting right in with Rossoneri after positive preseason performance
  • The American international has looked sharp for his new club so far
  • By Francesco Porzio
  • Jul 30, 2023 at 9:14 am ET•3 min read
  • Getty Images
  • Christian Pulisic has officially started his new chapter at AC Milan. The U.S. men’s national team player moved this summer from Chelsea for €22 million with the ambition to become a key player for the side coached by Stefano Pioli. Pulisic made his debut in the US pre-season tour and played as a starter in both clashes against Real Madrid and Juventus. AC Milan lost 3-2 to the Spanish giants in the second half after the Rossoneri were up 2-0 and then lost in penalties against the Italian rivals on Thursday. 
  • Despite the results, Pulisic is making a great impression so far among both his teammates and the fans. His attitude on and off the pitch was widely appreciated, and supporters could feel his desire to shine with his new club since he touched ground in Italy at the beginning of July. Pioli considered Pulisic the perfect addition to his squad, which last season suffered a lot when key player and winger Rafael Leao was not fit. The USMNT player can play in three different positions in the tactical system used by the Rossoneri — he can play as a left winger, as a right winger in the 4-3-3 and potentially also as a number ten in the 4-2-3-1. 
  • Golazo Starting XI Newsletter
  • Your ultimate guide to the Beautiful Game as our experts take you beyond the pitch and around the globe with news that matters.
  • I agree to receive the “Golazo Starting XI Newsletter” and marketing communications, updates, special offers (including partner offers), and other information from CBS Sports and the Paramount family of companies.
  • By pressing sign up, I confirm that I have read and agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge Paramount’s Privacy Policy.
  • That’s what AC Milan needed — a player that could play in different positions of the attacking line to provide quality and depth. Pulisic, in fact, played in two different positions in his first unofficial games of the season. Against Real Madrid, he started at left winger, while against Juventus he started on the right, with Leao playing on the left. It’s easy to imagine that Pioli has in mind to play with Leao on the left and new signing Samuel Chukwueze on the right as starters in either the 4-2-3-1 or the 4-3-3, as he played in the first two games of the season. However, this shouldn’t impact the role of Pulisic, who can become a crucial player, potentially off the bench, something that AC Milan definitely missed last season. But he can also be key as a starter when one between Leao and Chukwueze aren’t available. 
  • “His physical condition is improving, we’ve only been working for two weeks. He can play on the right, left or on the frontline, he’s smart and has quality,” Pioli said after the Juve match. “Can he play with Leao? They also swapped sides against Juventus. We have Leao on the left, Chukwueze on the right, Pulisic who can play very wel everywhere.”
  • In general, the first impressions of Pulisic are definitely positive. He’s adapting fast and well, and the fans are perceiving his attitude as a good sign for the upcoming season. For sure, he needs to work hard to get a starting role in this renovated roster, but he will have his chances. Pioli considers him as the perfect player to overcome some of what lacks in the squad, either as a starter or as a player that can come out of the bench and decide a game. 
  • Tactically speaking, Pioli will have to deal with the presence of much more offensive players like Leao, Chukwueze and Pulisic that support striker Olivier Giroud compared to past years. The question is: can they all play together? At the beginning of the season, probably not, but considering that the second lines didn’t perform as the starting eleven players, this is definitely a big improvement for the club in any case, at least on paper. 
  • Pulisic needed a place to shine, and AC Milan this season looks like the right place to be, despite the big changes that happened in the summer, including the farewell of former director and club legend Paolo Maldini. Time will tell us if this was the right move for him, but looking at the first weeks of his new chapter at AC Milan, it all seems to be going in the right direction. 
facebook sharing button
sharethis sharing button

Eleven looking for third straight victory

#ELPvIND Preview 
Indy Eleven at El Paso Locomotive FC
Saturday, August 19, 2023 – 9:30 p.m. ET / 7:30 p.m. MT
Southwest University Park – El Paso, Texas

Follow Live
Streaming Video: ESPN+ (click to subscribe)
In-game updates: @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed
Stats: #ELPvIND MatchCenter at USLChampionship.com

2023 USL Championship Records
El Paso Locomotive FC: 9W-9L-5D (-8) 32 pts; 8th in Western Conference
Indy Eleven: 8W-9L-7D (3), 31 pts; 6th in Eastern Conference

Community Health Network Sports Medicine Indy Eleven Injury Report
OUT: Y. Oettl (ankle), M. King (hip)
QUESTIONABLE: None


SETTING THE SCENE
The Boys in Blue return to action Saturday when they hit the road for the second game of a three match road trip against El Paso Locomotive FC.

The Eleven are coming off a 1-0 win over The Miami FC and are 3-2-0 in their last five games. With an 8-9-7 record, Indy is sixth in the USLC Eastern Conference. El Paso is 0-4-1 in its last five matches and is coming off a 5-0 loss to Phoenix. ELP is eighth in the Western Conference at 9-9-5.

ELPIND
23Games24
29Goals29
37Goals Conceded26
20Assists19
99SOT76
107Shots Faced91
6Clean Sheets8

SERIES VS. EL PASO
Saturday marks the second meeting between the two teams, with El Paso holding the 1-0-0 all-time advantage in USL Championship action. The is the lone meeting of the season.

ELP leads: 1-0-0 | GF 0, GA 2

Recent Meetings
6.9.21 | at ELP | L, 2-0

2021 USL Championship Regular Season
El Paso Locomotive FC 2:0 Indy Eleven
Wednesday, June 9, 2021 – 9:00 p.m. ET
Southwest University Park – El Paso, Texas

Scoring Summary
ELP – Nick Ross (Macauley King) 2’
ELP – Diego Luna (Macauley King) 49’

A FAMILIAR FOE
Indy’s roster looks drastically different from the last time these teams met in 2021. In fact, there were more current Indy players in El Paso’s starting lineup than there were in the 18 for the Boys in Blue. Mechack Jerome, Macauley King and Bryam Rebellon suited up for El Paso, while current assistant coach Ayoze was the only current Eleven product to represent the Boys in Blue. Head coach Mark Lowry was also on the other bench for the match up, while Sebastian Velasquez spent two stints with the club.

INDY ELEVEN PLACE FOUR ON USLC TEAM OF THE WEEK
AUGUST 15, 2023

After an undefeated week, Indy Eleven placed four players on the USL Championship Team of the Week and added a bench selection

Defender Adrian Diz Pe, midfielder Solomon Asante and forward Sebastian Guenzatti earned starting nods after Indy earned a decisive 4-0 win over Birmingham Legion FC and a 1-0 win over The Miami FC last week. Defender Younes Boudadi was added as a bench selection. Indy is the only third team in 23 weeks of action to place three players on the team of the week, while adding a bench player, and only one team has seen four players recognized among the league’s top 11.

Diz Pe scored his first goal of the season, which proved to be the match winner in the 1-0 decision over Miami on Saturday. As part of the Indy backline, he helped the team to a pair of shutouts, registering 14 clearances and a pair of interceptions.

Asante recorded three assists in a match for the third time in his USL Championship career in the win over Birmingham. His three assists gave him a combined 103 goals and assists (51G/52A), placing him tied for fourth all-time in the USL Championship, and made him the first player to split 50-50. His assist total places him second all-time.

Guenzatti scored a pair of goals, including the game winner, in Indy’s win over Birmingham. The two tallies bring his season total to six and USLC career total to 63, moving him to ninth all-time in the league.

Boudadi played all 180 minutes of action on the Indy backline over a two-match week helping the Boys in Blue to a pair of clean sheets. He registered four tackles, three clearances, a blocked shot and an interception. In all, the Eleven only allowed five shots on target.

LAST TIME OUT
MIA 0:1 IND
AUGUST 12, 2023

It was another night for the history books as Indy Eleven defeated The Miami FC, 1-0, on Saturday. The victory ended a three-match win streak for Miami, the hottest team in the USL Championship’s Eastern Conference, who had only given up one goal in the stretch.

Adrian Diz Pe had the match-winning strike as he headed in a corner from Aodhan Quinn to improve the Eleven to 8-9-7 on the season. The 51st-minute game winner was the first of the season for Diz Pe who came on for Indy at the half, and the assist was the 50th career for Quinn.

Quinn is now fourth all-time time in the USL Championship for regular season assists and moved up to a tie for fourth with four players, including teammate Solomon Asante, with 103 (53G/50A) combined goals and assists. Asante reached the feat on Wednesday against Birmingham Legion FC with his third career USLC match with three assists, and now sits at 51 goals and 52 assists. Quinn and Asante are the only two players in the USL Championship who have reached the 50/50 threshold.

USL Championship Regular Season
The Miami FC 0:1 Indy Eleven
Saturday, August 12, 2023 – 7:00 p.m. ET 
FIU Stadium – Miami

2023 USL Championship Records
The Miami FC: 6W-10L-8D (-3), 26 pts
Indy Eleven: 8W-9L-7D (2), 31 pts

Scoring Summary
IND – Adrian Diz Pe (Aodhan Quinn) 51’

Discipline Summary
MIA – Boluwatife Akinyode (caution) 12’
IND – Younes Boudadi (caution) 47’
MIA – Joaquin Rivas (caution) 62’
IND – Cam Lindley (caution) 66’

50/50 CLUB
Solomon Asante and Aodhan Quinn became the first two players in USL Championship history to reach both 50 regular season goals and 50 regular season assists. Asante (51G/52A) had three assists in the 4-0 win over Birmingham (8.9) to push himself over the plateau. Quinn (53G/50A) added his 50th assist in the 1-0 win at Miami (8.12).

20,000 AND BEYOND…
Aodhan Quinn became the USL Championship’s leader in regular-season minutes played against Tampa Bay on July 22.

Minutes | 20,546 | 1st
Appearances | 247 | T6
Assists | 50 | 4th

Quinn has 53 goals, becoming the 24th player in USL Championship history to hit 50 goals. He is one of only seven players to have a combined 100 career goals and assists with 53 goals and 50 assists, and is the second player to join the 50 goals/50 assists club.

Quinn has recorded 24 penalty kick goals in 27 attempts in his career in the league, the most of any individual player on record in league history.

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane

8/14/23 WWC Semi-Finals Spain/Sweden Tu 4 am, Wed Eng/Aus 6 am, Who Wins? Messi’s Miami vs Philly Tues 7 pm Apple, 1st EPL weekend in the books

World Cup Semi Finals – Tues 4 am Spain vs Sweden/Wed 6 am Eng/Australia on Fox

We are down to 4 with 3 of them European squads – along with the home team in Australia.  So who do you like?  As much as my English Friends want the Lioness’ to bring it on home – I like Australia in the this semi-final.  Australia has managed without best player on the planet for the last 5 years – Sam Kerr for most of this tourney and she played 65 minutes last game and could go for more in this one?  I see Australia winning a close one 2-1 in normal time.  (enough shootouts).  On the other side I like Sweden over a young Spain side that has simply never played at this level before.  They might be more skilled but will take Grit and Great Defense and Head balls on set pieces in tight games so I like Sweden 2-0.  Beside Sweden took out the US – then defended them by saying no one should take potshots at the strongest program the world has ever seen.  Give me Sweden to take it home. (tons of stories below)  Now interesting in this one as we watch the Aussies – who have flat captured the nation – my daughter is there – and she says the Aussies are so fun to root for!   Unfortunately my girlie Courtney is over there like these US fans – looking for a team to root for. (check below for tons of stories & Great GK Saves)

MLS Leagues Cup Semi-Finals Tues Night 7 pm Miami @ Philly, 9:30 pm Monterrey @ Nashville Apple TV MLS Pass

So 3 of the Final 4 teams in the New Leagues Cup between MLS and Liga MX are MLS.  At 7 pm  Messi and Miami will travel to Philly who pulled it out in the final minutes. While on the other side Nashville pulled out the miracle PK win and will host Mexican power Monterrey at 9:30 pm all on Apple TV MLS Season Pass.  (Read stories below) I like Messi & Miami to pull off the win 3-2 in PKs, while Nashville will ride the home crowd to take down Monterrey again 2-1 in PKs. 

EPL off to Roaring Start for American Players

What a start for Fulham football club with a solid 1-0 win over Everton with American defenders Tim Ream and Jedi Robinson holding down the defense, couple that with a fine showing for American #1 GK Matt Turner at Nottingham Forest as they almost upset Arsenal at home (2-1) thanks in part to some great saves by Turner

Australia and England round out semifinalists

The Matildas and the Lionesses are through to the semifinals after quarterfinal dramatics on Saturday.
Australia becomes the first home nation to make the Women’s World Cup semifinals since 2003.
England is the only team to make the semifinals of the 2015, 2019 and 2023 World Cup.
Nerves of steel: Australia took the long route to victory, advancing past France in a historically lengthy penalty shootout after a 0-0 draw through extra time. Goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold became the hero of the match for the Matildas, making multiple penalty saves to put Australia through.
England also had to battle adversity, coming back to defeat Colombia 2-1 after conceding the first goal.
An equalizer from Lauren Hemp sent the game into halftime all level, and Alessia Russo scored the game-winner in the second half. There hasn’t been a European Women’s World Cup winner since 2007, but 2023 might be the year that changes. Three of the four semifinalists are from UEFA: Sweden, Spain and England. With Spain taking on Sweden in the semifinals, at least one European team will have a shot at the trophy. Making history: No matter what, there will be a team winning the World Cup for the first time in 2023.England, Spain and Australia have all yet to reach a World Cup final.
Spain, Australia and Sweden have all yet to win a major tournament.
Bottom line: The last few years have made waves about European investment in women’s football. It’s now time to see if that pays off on the biggest of stages.
Spain vs. Sweden, Tuesday at 4 am ET (FOX)
England vs. Australia, Wednesday at 6 am ET (FOX)

 

Carmel FC GK Training starts Monday, Aug 21

Mondays – Shelbourne Field 2 U11/U12 5-5:45 pm U13+ 5:45 -6:30 pm w/Coach Shane Best

My Daughter Courtney (middle) was one of those American’s in New Zealand who had to find another team to root for. They had a good time – but no US being there sucked.

GAMES ON TV

Tues Aug 15

4 am FOX                             Semi Spain vs Sweden WC 

7 pm Apple MLS Philly Union vs Inter Miami (Messi)

Weds Aug 16

6 am FOX                             Semi Australia vs England WC 

3 pm CBSSN                        Man City vs Sevilla (UEFA Super Cup)

Fir, Aug 18

2:30 pm  ESPN+                 Werder Bremen vs Bayern Munich

2:45 pm USA                      Nottingham Forest (Turner) vs Shelfield United 

Sat, Aug 19

4 am FOX                             WORLD CUP 3rd place Game

9 am ESPN+                        Leverkusen vs RB Leipzig

10 am USA                          Fulham (Ream, Jedi) vs Brentford  

10 am Peacock                  Liverpool vs AFC Bournemouth

12:30 pm NBC                    Tottenham vs Man United 

3 pm USA                            Man City vs New Castle United

8 pm Apple MLS Pass Nashville vs Miami (Messi, Alba, Bisquets) Leagues Cup Final

9::30 pm ESPN2                 San Diego Loyal vs New Mexico United USL

Sun, Aug 20

6 am FOX                             England vs Spain WORLD CUP FINALS   

9 am USA                             Aston Villa vs Everton

9:30 am ESPN +                 Union Berlin vs Mainz

11:30 am USA                    West Ham United vs Chelsea

1:30 pm ESPN+                  Barcelona vs Cadiz

2:45 pm Para+                   Udinese vs Juventus (Mckinney, Musah)

3:30 pm ESPND                 Real Betis vs Atletico Madrid

7:30 pm Apple TV             Columbus Crew vs Cincy   

7:15 Apple TV Free NY Red Bulls vs DC United    

Mon, Aug 21

2:45 pm Para+                   Bologna vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

3 pm USA                            Crystal Palace vs Arsenal

Wed, Aug 23

7 pm Para +                Cincy (Vasquez) vs Inter Miami (MESSI. Busquets, Alba)

8 pm ESPN+                        Memphis vs Indy 11

Pairs of Americans playing overseas this Fall

US Women + World Cup

Evaluating Possible USMNT Coaching Candidates Stars and Stripes  Donald Wine II 

USWNT fans’ World Cup experience without the U.S.: ‘The more the thought sunk in, the more disappointing it got’ EPSNy

Race for the Golden Boot: Who will be top goal scorer at Women’s World Cup?

World Cup Daily: Australia united in wild celebration for Matildas

The Matildas’ moment: Each penalty had its own story to tell

The football gods have the Matildas on the precipice of Australian immortality

England driven by 2019 World Cup loss – Bright

Bring on Australia! – Hemp confident ahead of semi

Colombia’s World Cup breakout start of something special, but off-field issues remain

France exit Women’s World Cup with mix of regret and optimism

Super Falcons show what Nigeria can achieve with a little less chaos

Sweden’s flawless tactics, team vibes too much for Japan in World Cup quarterfinal

England’s Lauren James receives two-game ban for red card

 Sydney Leroux mocks Netherlands after loss: ‘Now you’re bye too’

 World Cup 2023 quarterfinals: State of the Golden Boot race

MLS – Leagues Cup

 Messi raises “expectations”: Inter Miami now Leagues Cup favorite

Who Are the Favorites to Win the Inaugural Leagues Cup?

Monterrey prez: Leagues Cup setup favors MLS

Welcome to ‘Messitown’: How Rosario shaped Inter Miami star

Martino: Messi’s Miami leadership similar to WC

Goalkeeping

Top Saves in the World Cup So Far

Women’s World Cup 2023: Mackenzie Arnold, Zecira Musovic & Mary Earps star in best saves so far – BBC Sport

2023 FIFA Women’s Assie GK Arnold

France’s Elisa De Almeida saves the day after blocking a shot …

Turner: U.S. No. 1 spot validates Arsenal move

Real Madrid sign Chelsea keeper Kepa on season-long loan to replace Courtois

Reffing

How USA fans watched the World Cup after USWNT exit

  • Caitlin Murray, ESPNAug 14, 2023, 03:03 AM ET

SYDNEY — After Bill and Heather Drake took their two daughters to see the U.S. women’s national team compete in the group stage games of the 2019 Women’s World Cup, the American team went on to win the whole thing in a captivating run through the knockout stage. So, when the 2023 tournament rolled around, this time the Drakes wanted to see the U.S. in the later rounds.They booked flights from Detroit, Michigan to Auckland, New Zealand — a travel day of around 24 hours — where they planned to see the USWNT compete in the quarterfinals and semifinals, both set to take place in Auckland. Two days before their flight, however, they woke up at 5 a.m. and watched on TV as Sweden knocked the Americans out in the round of 16.”It was heartbreaking,” Heather said. “I was happy — I felt like they were playing well. Up until that game, I didn’t think they were playing like the U.S. team that we expected. So I was excited — I was like, ‘OK, maybe this can happen.'”But then it didn’t happen. The U.S. previously had never failed to reach the semifinals of a Women’s World Cup, but after a 0-0 deadlock, the round-of-16 match turned to penalty kicks, where Sweden gave the Americans a shocking early exit.

And with that, countless travel itineraries went up in smoke for USWNT fans.The Drakes and their daughters, Claire and Claudia, made the most of their trip, chatting with ESPN on a ferry bringing them back to Auckland’s downtown from picturesque Waiheke Island. But when first confronted with the notion of flying around the world to see a team that was no longer even in the World Cup, it was hard not to feel let down.It was a little disappointing,” Bill said. “The more the thought sunk in, the more disappointing it got.”How much blame lies with Andonovski for USWNT’s World Cup failure?Luis Miguel Echegaray questions the tactics of head coach Vlatko Andonovski after the USWNT crashed out of the Women’s World Cup vs. Sweden.Fans based in the United States bought nearly 100,000 tickets for the Women’s World Cup, according to FIFA — the most of any nation outside host countries Australia and New Zealand. That’s a lot of disappointed fans, some of whom might have never had a chance to watch their team play as they banked on the U.S. making it deeper into the tournament.On Saturday at the Auckland airport, a familiar scene played out at an Air New Zealand gate where passengers waited to fly to Sydney, the host city of a semifinal game and the final. Two sets of strangers, a family of four — a mom, dad, daughter and son — and a couple of women (one wearing a Portland Thorns T-shirt) shared updates on the ongoing Australia-France game and recognized each other as Americans and got to chatting.

EDITOR’S PICKS

“You’re here for the World Cup too?” “Yep. We’re from L.A. Where are you from?” “The Bay Area.” “Ah.” They had rearranged their plans when the USWNT got knocked out, and the talk quickly turned to the team and questioning coach Vlatko Andonovski’s choice of lineups and substitutions.

Upstairs at the Auckland airport that night, Tehya Mondala was playing cards with her dad, Bryan, and her mom, Helen. They were waiting for their flight to head back to San Diego after watching the USWNT in only one of the three games they had planned to see. They attended the group stage game against Portugal, but when the USWNT failed to win the group and took an unexpected path, the family couldn’t see the team in the round of 16 — and then, well, the Americans weren’t even in the quarterfinals.

“We knew that was a risk — although it’s the first time in history it happened,” Bryan Hageman said. “We weren’t going to change our hotel and our airfare and everything else.”

The team’s poor form early in the tournament had braced the family for the possibility beforehand, Bryan added: “Before we came here, we knew in that Portugal game they had to score four goals and they didn’t look like they were going to score one goal, even before the game.”

LIVE ON ESPN+ (SELECTED GAMES)

FRIDAY, AUG. 18 (all times ET)
• Mallorca vs. Villarreal (1:30 p.m.)
• Werder Bremen vs. Bayern (2:30 p.m.)
• Valencia vs. Las Palmas (3:30 p.m.)

Some fans did rearrange their plans, however.

Before the tournament started, the consensus prediction was that the U.S. would win Group E, which meant that the team would have played its round-of-16 match in Sydney before returning to New Zealand for a quarterfinal in Wellington. (The organizers of the tournament, FIFA, thought the same and plotted a schedule where the winner of Group E would play locally in the afternoon so the games could air during primetime for an American TV audience.)

But the U.S. finishing second in the group meant a detour to the round of 16 in Melbourne, Australia, and then a return to Auckland for the quarterfinal. (Those games were set to be played at night locally, which meant kickoff times in the middle of the night back in the United States.)

Cassidy Fialkiewicz and Zion Moore of Seattle booked travel from Auckland to Sydney, expecting the Americans to top their group, but made an impromptu 24-hour whirlwind trip to Melbourne to follow the team when the path changed. The pair managed to get last-minute match tickets and flights, so they went for it.

“Our base is in Sydney because we thought they were going to be in Sydney,” Cassidy said on the day of the U.S.-Sweden game. “We flew in this morning and we’re leaving tomorrow at 6 a.m. and no hotel.”

Asked what she’d do if the USWNT unexpectedly got knocked out that night, she said she planned to make the most of the World Cup. “I love soccer,” Cassidy said. “We’re just going to go to Sydney and watch some good football. That’s what it’s all about.”

But the World Cup has largely continued on without the U.S. fans who have been such a presence at past tournaments — including the American Outlaws, the superfans who travel in groups to major tournaments and friendlies for both the men’s and women’s national teams. Monica Bosiljevac of the American Outlaws estimated that about 3,000 fans attended the march to the stadium before the USA-Netherlands group game in Wellington, comparable to the turnout in Paris for the USWNT’s 2019 quarterfinal against France.

“It seems less accessible, or like less people are traveling here than they did for Canada [in 2015] or France because it’s a longer trip, but I’ll say that the turnout for AO has still been blowing us out of the water,” Bosiljevac said early in the tournament when the U.S. was still in it.

Carlisle: Rapinoe was disappointing throughout World Cup

Jeff Carlisle looks back on the USWNT’s World Cup exit and the underwhelming performances from Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan.

Of fans who made the American Outlaws events part of their itinerary, a popular choice was to plan to see the third game of the group stage and then continue on to the knockout stage. Some fans hedged their bets, booking refundable options for the USWNT winning the group or finishing second.

That means some American fans, of course, were left having to find new teams to root for. Many U.S. fans had tickets to watch the quarterfinal in Auckland that, without the USWNT, turned into a match-up between Sweden and Japan. Early on, it became clear many Americans were rooting against Sweden, the team that sent the U.S. home.

The Drakes had tickets to that game, too. When ESPN asked whether they’d be rooting for Sweden or Japan, they didn’t hesitate, all responding in unison: “Japan.”

Of course, Sweden knocked Japan out of the tournament that night. American fans just can’t catch a break at the 2023 Women’s World Cup.

England vs. Australia World Cup semifinal odds: Lionesses favored against host Matildas

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 12: Sam Kerr of Australia celebrates her team's victory through the penalty shoot out during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Quarter Final match between Australia and France at Brisbane Stadium on August 12, 2023 in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

By Dan Santaromita7h ago


The England-Australia Women’s World Cup semifinal has plenty of storylines to watch. Not only is this England against a former colony, one that still bears the Union Jack on its flag, but this is one of the pre-tournament favorites against the host nation.Stadium Australia in Sydney will be rocking with more than 75,000 fans. The Matildas played in this venue for their opening group play match against Ireland (a 1-0 win) and their opening knockout match against Denmark (a 2-0 win). England played its come-from-behind quarterfinal win against Colombia in Stadium Australia.England is -155 (20-to-31) to advance with Australia at +110 (11-to-10) on BetMGM. The Lionesses had emerged as the favorite to win the tournament after the Americans went out, but Spain has taken the top spot in the odds ahead of the semifinals.All odds from BetMGM. Here’s where you can buy tickets to upcoming games.

England vs. Australia

Kickoff time: 6 a.m. ET/11 a.m. BST Wednesday

Venue: Stadium Australia, Sydney
https://tallysight.com/new/widget/tile/womens-world-cup/org:the-athletic/event:2023-semifinals/topic:england-australia/variant:1/sportsbook:betmgm
Neither of these teams had an easy time in the quarterfinals. England fell behind Colombia late in the first half and Australia had its back up against the wall in the penalty shootout multiple times against France.

Australia became the second host nation to advance past the quarterfinals and is getting star striker Sam Kerr back to fitness. Kerr subbed on in the 55th minute against France, her longest appearance of the tournament. After playing for more than an hour with extra time, she could be ready to start in the semifinal.

The Matildas have had clean sheets in four of their five matches. The one that was not was a 3-2 loss to Nigeria in group play.The Lionesses have had plenty of close matches this World Cup. Outside of a 6-1 shellacking of China, England had two 1-0 wins in group play, survived in penalties against Nigeria (after 120 minutes of goalless play) and beat Colombia 2-1. With a rocking crowd in Sydney, it would be a minor surprise to see the English get an easy victory despite an edge in talent and big match experience after winning the Euros last year.

This is the first time Australia has made it this far in a World Cup, but it is England’s third straight semifinal. In the previous two, the Lionesses lost 2-1. For this match, however, the English are favored.

The winner of this game will get a minor edge in the final. Both this semifinal and the final take place in Stadium Australia.


More from the 2023 World Cup

Australia are gaining momentum but England are now better placed to deal with their threats

Football in Australia finds its moment – ‘The rest of the world has woken up’

England’s defence might just win them the Women’s World Cup

(Photo of Sam Kerr: Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images)

Center back Amanda Ilestedt’s golden boot bid shows Sweden’s set piece strength

AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND - AUGUST 11: Amanda Ilestedt of Sweden celebrates after scoring her team's first goal during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Quarter Final match between Japan and Sweden at Eden Park on August 11, 2023 in Auckland / Tāmaki Makaurau , New Zealand. (Photo by Jan Kruger - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

By Kudzi Musarurwa4h ago1


After Sweden’s 2-1 win over Japan in its World Cup quarterfinal, a journalist asked Amanda Ilestedt when she would ask her coach to move her up the field to play as a striker. The Swedish center back laughed and said, “I already did (move up the field).”

Ilestedt currently leads Sweden in goals scored (four) and is one of four players tied for second place in the tournament’s golden boot race. The reasoning is quite simple, Sweden effectively uses its set piece opportunities and Ilestedt is in the right place at the right time.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Set pieces are very important. Amanda is very good there. (She) can score goals in different ways,” Sweden coach Peter Gerhardsson said. “Old fruits in trees when they fall down, you have to pick them up. That’s what we did in the last game (scoring goals from the set pieces).”

All but one of Ilestedt’s goals have come from headed corner kicks. The goal Gerhardsson referred to as “old fruits in trees” falling down was the one against Japan. Kosovare Asllani sent a free kick into the box and Nathalie Björn and Magdalena Eriksson both attempted shots, but it was Ilestedt who cleaned up from close range.

With a semifinal against Spain beckoning, Sweden looks to reach its sixth major tournament final. They haven’t made a final of the World Cup since 2003, when they lost to Germany, but they have a great chance this time around. First, Sweden must get through Spain on Tuesday at Eden Park in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland, though.

If they want to use their strength, Ilestedt will be crucial. Along with her goals, her partnership with Eriksson in the center of Sweden’s defense has helped them progress throughout the tournament — including beating the U.S.

A golden boot contender

Sweden’s set piece success is no secret.Against Japan, Sweden profited twice from set pieces. The first was a close-range goal from Ilestedt. The second came from a converted penalty after a handball by Fuka Nagano during another corner kick for Sweden. But with that goal, Ilestedt’s teammates are now confident she’s demonstrated everything needed to be the tournament’s top scorer.“I also want to score some goals, but if you have Ilestedt then I’m like, ‘OK, she can score, it’s fine,’” Björn said with a laugh. “I think she can (win the golden boot) now that she showed she can shoot, as well. ”Sweden has mostly used in-swinging set pieces throughout the tournament. They have varied on occasion with out-swinging deliveries, but putting a ball directly in front of the goal has proven to be more successful for the team. It gives players like Ilestedt the chance to get on the ball and not have to generate too much power to turn it goalward.“I think set pieces are one of our biggest strengths, it’s something we work on. Amanda is amazing but we have so many players that are really good in the area,” Asllani said. “In the end, I don’t think anyone cares who’s the leading goal scorer, the only thing we’re thinking about is winning games.”

As seen with her previous goals before Japan, all Ilestedt had to do was redirect the ball when it came to her. She didn’t have to try to angle it in a certain way. The power and direction came due to the set piece delivery, which both Asllani and Jonna Andersson have been very good at throughout the tournament.

“I don’t think so many people were expecting her to be the one with the most goals for our team but she’s an amazing player and she really deserves this,” said Fridolina Rolfö. “We all know how good she is at heading the ball. As (Asllani) said, set pieces are one of our strengths so I’m not surprised but at the same time, I’m happy for her because she’s an amazing player”

Partnership with Magda Eriksson in central defense

When we talk about Ilestedt, we can’t do so without focusing on her primary job: being a defender. Sweden has conceded two goals so far this tournament, which shows just how strong they have been defensively.Against the U.S., Sweden struggled to maintain possession and avoid pressure. Goalkeeper Zećira Mušović produced some incredible saves to keep the score at 0-0, but the communication between the two center backs also helped Sweden see out the game.“Amanda and I like to talk to each other,” Eriksson said. “It was impressive against the U.S. that we managed to maintain the dialogue despite the pressure.”It was needed again against Japan as Sweden faced an onslaught late in the second half. Similar to the match against the U.S., Ilestedt and Eriksson did just enough to keep Japan from finding the tying goal.

Ilestedt and Eriksson celebrate during Sweden’s match against South Africa. (Photo: Hagen Hopkins, Getty Images)

Whether they are in a back three or a back four, the two center backs continue to be key for what Sweden has done right in this tournament so far. Eriksson tends to progress the ball more when Sweden is in possession but that doesn’t mean that Ilestedt isn’t capable of finding the right pass, either. In the first half against Japan, Ilestedt’s understanding of when to move or which lane to step into to cut out the passing lines was part of what Sweden did right. When she had the ball at her feet, she was also able to make the right decision and continue to recycle possession.

Eriksson and Ilestedt have been targets for all of Sweden’s set pieces. And though the former has yet to score, Ilestedt has done it enough for the both of them. She’s already matched Wendie Renard’s World Cup record for most goals by a defender at a single World Cup. She will be someone that Spain has to mark tightly. If they don’t, Ilestedt could become the first defender at a World Cup to win the golden boot award.(Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

Women’s World Cup Daily: Semifinal previews, predictions

  • ESPN

The 2023 Women’s World Cup is in full swing, and these daily files give you the latest reporting from around the tournament as well as betting lines, what-to-watch-for information and best reads. Check in with ESPN throughout the tournament as we bring you the latest from Australia and New Zealand.


The lead: And then there were four

After 32 teams began their 2023 Women’s World Cup campaigns, we’re now down to four, with many of the favourites already sent home, including the United StatesCanadaBrazil and Germany.

With JapanColombiaFrance and Netherlands now out after the quarterfinals, there will be a new Women’s World Cup champion crowned. England face co-hosts Australia, while Sweden battle Spain for the right to be called the best women’s international team on the planet.

– Women’s World CupLanding page | Bracket | Schedule | News

ADVERTISEMENT

ESPN’s writers on the ground in Australia and New Zealand take us through the two semifinal fixtures.


Semifinal previews

Spain vs. Sweden, Tuesday
Eden Park, Auckland; 8 p.m. local, 4 a.m. ET, 9 a.m. BST

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Spain have overcome a lot on their path to the World Cup semifinals, but now is perhaps their biggest challenge: beating Sweden for the first time in their history.

The squad mutiny from last October, when 15 players wrote to the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) demanding changes behind the scenes and within the coaching setup, has somehow been put in the rearview mirror at this World Cup, but Jorge Vilda’s team also suffered a 4-0 defeat against Japan in the group stage. And the ongoing battle for fitness of Spain’s leading player, two-time Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas, is another issue that Vilda has had to deal with.

While Spain have gotten this far despite their problems, Vilda knows Sweden poses a significant test for his players.

“Yes, we have never beaten Sweden,” Vilda said. “But it is an additional motivation and we have this opportunity now. I am convinced that we can look them in the face and, if we present a good version of ourselves, win the game. We are Spain, everyone knows how we play, and we will stick to the script. But it has to be the best version of Spain for us to win.”

Sweden, having eliminated Japan and the U.S. to reach the semis, go into the clash at Eden Park as the favourites to reach the final. Peter Gerhardsson’s team have made it this far by capitalising on their ability on set pieces, and the coach makes no apology about the direct style of his side.

“One of our strengths are the set pieces in the offense and defence,” he said. “We practice a lot. It’s part of the game and you can work a lot on structure at set pieces. We are not scoring all goals directly from set pieces. It is second balls, too. When old fruit in trees are falling down, you have to pick them up. That’s what we did in the last game — it’s falling fruit.”

Sweden player to watch: Amanda Ilestedt

Ilestedt has scored four goals in five games for Sweden, despite playing in central defence. Only Japan’s Hinata Miyazawa has scored more goals than Ilestedt, who could win the Golden Boot as well as the trophy. All of Ilestedt’s goals have come from set pieces, while eight out of Sweden’s 11 goals at the tournament have followed dead-ball setups. Her performance so far has even surprised some of her teammates. “I don’t think so many of us were expecting her to be top scorer in our team,” forward Fridolina Rolfö said. “But she’s an amazing player, especially with her head, and I am so happy for her.”

Spain player to watch: Salma Paralluelo

At 19, Paralluelo is on course to be the outstanding young player of the tournament. The Barcelona winger showcased her incredible ability with a stunning solo goal to win Spain’s quarterfinal match against the Netherlands. A former 400-metre runner who competed for Spain at the 2019 European Athletics Indoor Championships, Paralluelo’s pace is one of Spain’s biggest weapons. Having started on the bench against the Dutch, the big question is whether she will play from the start against Sweden. — Mark Ogden

Lynch: No sweeter win for Australia than beating England

Joey Lynch looks ahead to a rivalry clash in the World Cup semifinals with hosts Australia set to face England.

England vs. Australia, Wednesday
Stadium Australia, Sydney; 8 p.m. local, 6 a.m. ET, 11 a.m. BST

SYDNEY — The front page of Monday’s Australian Daily Telegraph (renamed the “Daily Tillygraph” in honour of the Matildas) said it all: “Now for the Poms.”

This is the latest chapter of a cross-sport Australia-England rivalry, played at a sold-out Stadium Australia. It’s box office. Many of the players know each other, as they play for the same clubs. They’ve crossed paths for years, but never like this. This is the semifinal the 2023 World Cup wanted: the co-hosts against the reigning European champions, all with years of sporting hostility behind them.

Tony Gustavsson’s Matildas will have the benefit of a wall of green and gold inside the stadium. The boisterous home fans will be there roaring on a team that has gripped a nation, and they’re hoping for another huge victory in their first World Cup semifinal.

England’s Lionesses are unbeaten at this World Cup, suffering just one defeat in all since Sarina Wiegman took over as coach in 2021. That loss came against Australia in April, a 2-0 defeat in London, and this is a new-look team with star players injured or retired, and young phenom Lauren James suspended. But England have showed their adaptability in this World Cup as they played a 4-2-3-1 in wins over Haiti and Denmark, before switching to a 3-4-1-2 for their final group-stage match with China, a game they won 6-1.

England’s knockout stage has been tough. But this is the big one, and it’s their sternest test yet.

Player to watch for England: Millie Bright

England are a team packed with stars and have the depth to cope with some absentees, but Bright is indispensable. The England captain has been a rock at the back. She came into the tournament having just recovered from a knee injury but has been the pillar of the back three, heading away anything that has come her way. Bright will be the key to stopping Australia’s attacking threats.

Player to watch for Australia: Caitlin Foord

Foord has had a wonderful tournament so far. The Arsenal forward has been lethal, switching between a role at the front in the opening couple of matches to out wide in the knockout stage. But it’s not just her ability to turn defences inside out which makes her so valuable — it’s also her defensive qualities that make her a world-class player as she tracks back to help her teammates. Foord will be targeting that gap between Lucy Bronze and Jess Carter on England’s right side, and both will be on red alert to stop the Aussie star. — Tom Hamilton


Predictions

Sophie Lawson: Sweden and Australia for me. Sweden have experience at this level; Spain do not. If Sweden can dominate the midfield as they did against Japan, or sit back and let Spain have the ball as they did against the U.S., I think they have the nous to get through 2-1. As for the Matildas, they’ve been growing into this tournament whereas England are a lot more stop-start. Factor in the swell of home support and all signs point to gold vs. gold, Swedish manager vs. Swedish manager in the final. The score? 2-0.

Tom Hamilton: I think it’ll end up being a Sweden vs. England final. The strength of Sweden’s set pieces and defensive stability will see them through 2-1 against Spain, but expect Vilda’s team to dominate possession and territory.

Australia and England can be decided on the flip of a coin, but the Lionesses’ experience at this stage — their third World Cup semifinal in a row — and defensive stability will see them through 1-0, despite the wave of passionate home support.

Mark Ogden: I’m going for a sea of yellow at Stadium Australia in the final on Sunday. Sweden have too much power and belief against a Spain team that have reached the semis for the first time. 2-0.

England have a better all-round team than Australia. The Matildas have the outstanding talents of Sam Kerr and Mary Fowler, as well as the incredible home support which will tilt Wednesday’s semi in their favour. 2-1.

Joey Lynch: Sweden and England to win. Having shown the weight that ruthless pragmatism and strength can have against one technically superior opponent, Sweden should have enough to step up and do similar to Spain and win 2-0. Where England get the goals they’ll need is a massive question, but if they can clamp down on Australia’s transition and Jess Carter and Lucy Bronze do similar to Foord, I can’t see the Matildas getting through their defence. 1-0 to England.

Caitlin Murray: Sweden vs. Australia in the final. Sweden beat my previous winner pick (Japan), so they’ve earned the nod. Sweden also beat the team I came here to cover (the U.S.), so I shifted my coverage accordingly and found that Sweden’s team has remarkably similar vibes to the 2019 USWNT that won it all four years ago. They seem like the kind of team that can stop anyone, even Spain, so I predict 1-0 Sweden. Meanwhile, this is wishful thinking, but I’d love to see Australia make it through as a host country and underdog. The players are stepping up, and Gustavsson is allowing them to be their best, so I think it’s possible. England can and will put up a fight, so I predict the Matildas going through 2-1.

Marissa Lordanic: Sweden vs. Australia as well. Both of these semifinals will be tight contests, but I expect Sweden to continue their upward trajectory, coupled with a healthy smattering of luck, and their experience at this stage of major tournaments. Sweden goalkeeper Zecira Musovic will be key again for a 1-0 win. Australia will top England 2-1, namely because their attack’s potency should trump England’s defensive resoluteness.


Sweden’s advance into the World Cup semifinals ‘came down to millimetres’

Sophie Lawson reacts to Sweden’s 2-1 win vs. Japan to get into the semifinals and compares it to round-of-16 game against USWNT.

Sights and sounds

Amid World Cup hype, talk of All Blacks never far

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — As the Northern Explorer train came to a halt at Auckland Strand station after its 11-hour journey up the North Island from Wellington on Sunday, the train manager had a message for the passengers before disembarking.

The train was busier than usual — winter is the quiet season on the route through New Zealand’s stunning volcanic landscape — and she will have noted the many Americans on board by their accents and sportswear bearing the crests of the Minnesota Twins, Los Angeles Dodgers, Atlanta Falcons and New York Yankees, not to mention several in Team USA gear.

FIFA data shows that from the 90,000 tickets bought by U.S. residents, many paid to attend the Wellington quarterfinal, expecting the USWNT to have played in that tie rather than suffer a shocking round-of-16 elimination.

Many of those on the train back to Auckland headed north originally expecting to watch the USWNT in Tuesday’s semifinal in the city. But with the defending champions no longer in the competition, the American fans have time on their hands to explore New Zealand’s biggest sights — and the train manager made sure to tell her passengers what really matters in the country.”If there’s one thing I can recommend you all to do in Auckland, it is the All Blacks Experience [guided tour],” the train manager said. “I know most of you are here for the soccer, but we’re pretty big on rugby here, and it is a definite must for anyone who is visiting Auckland.”

New Zealand has embraced the Women’s World Cup as co-host, but make no mistake, while locals will chat about the football, they move on to rugby as quickly as possible.

The train manager was almost speaking for the nation: “Enjoy the football, but rugby is the real deal here.” — Mark Ogden

Sweden’s unusual approach

AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Sweden coach Peter Gerhardsson has been one of the characters of this World Cup, and he admitted that he will adopt an unusual approach to preparing for Tuesday’s semifinal against Spain.

After “going the gym and for a walk,” Gerhardsson plans to read a book: “Resonance: A Sociology of Our Relationship to the World,” by German author Hartmut Rosa.

“I’m glad you asked me this,” Gerhardsson said in his prematch news conference. “It’s a book about sociology and about not knowing what is coming. If you as a human being know everything, it’s not exciting. That’s why football is so exciting — you never know what is going to happen.”Gerhardsson then revealed that his mother has been buying copies of newspapers in Sweden every day during the tournament for his scrapbook.”She is very interested in football,” he said. “She buys all the newspapers so I can read everything when I get back and put them in the scrapbook. It’s costly to pay her back, I can tell you! But it’s the same in every tournament.” — Mark Ogden

England’s Bright ready for Australia semifinal: ‘Bring it on!’

Millie Bright speaks after England fight back from a goal down vs. Colombia to reach the World Cup semifinals.


News of the day

– Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Monday backed calls for a public holiday if the Matildas win the Women’s World Cup. “I’ve said that the state and territory leaders should consider it and I know that it’s received a pretty warm reception in most quarters,” Albanese said in a radio interview with state broadcaster ABC when asked if calls for a public holiday were justified. “This is something much more than just a sporting event. This is an inspiration to young girls in particular, but also young boys.”

– While many fans will view this match through the lens of the history of the two nations, and in particular their battles in other sports, the Matildas seem genuinely unfazed by any talk of rivalry with England. “I think you see it a lot in the men’s competition, especially in cricket and rugby,” Matildas goalkeeper Lydia Williams told the media when asked about England. “But for us, we’ve had so many rivalries with other countries that we played against. We’ve played against Brazil at every other World Cup, you could say that about America, you could say that about so many countries. So really for us, it’s just another game. I think for us, Australians are, I don’t want to say unbothered, but we want to go out there and do the job and that’s to play. All the extra stuff of rivalries, it doesn’t really come about.”

– The hurt of England’s 2-1 defeat to the U.S. at the semifinal stage in the 2019 World Cup has stayed with captain Millie Bright. “I think as much as you look forward — and for us our mentality is always looking forward — when you play in tournaments, those moments always stay there and you always want to correct them,” Bright said. “For us, the game is in a very different place and as a team we’re in a very different place. We look forward now, it’s a new challenge and new opportunity. You definitely learn from it, but the game’s in such a different place that a lot has changed since then. Everything is different — the crowd, the atmosphere, the teams, the quality of the tournament. Everything is at a new level, so as much as you still carry some of that with you at this point, you’ve already learned a lot, so for me it’s always about looking forwards.”

And finally …

SYDNEY, Australia — The whole country of Australia was enraptured in the Matildas’ dramatic quarterfinal clash with France on Saturday, and former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce was no different. The only problem for the honourable member for New England was that he wasn’t watching the right encounter with Les Bleues.Joyce admitted on a breakfast television appearance on Monday morning that what he thought was Australia defeating France 1-0 and advancing to the semifinals of the World Cup was actually footage of their pretournament warm-up fixture.As the rest of the country went into various states of hyperventilation as the actual game went into extra time and then a remarkable penalty shootout, Joyce went out to dinner, operating under the impression that Mary Fowler had sent his nation into the final four. It was only when he finished his meal did he realise.

Why the Commercial Hotel in Walcha was broadcasting a replay of this game, rather than a live fixture on free-to-air television is unknown. As is why nobody in the pub picked up the footage on the screen very clearly taking place at Melbourne’s Docklands Stadium — which is not a World Cup venue — as opposed to Brisbane’s Lang Park.

One hopes that the former leader of the National Party, who readers might remember as the politician who threatened to euthanise actor Johnny Depp’s dogs if he didn’t immediately send them back to California, has better luck in watching Australia’s clash with England. But given that the two nations previously played a friendly in April, he may want to triple check which game is on before he settles in — Joey Lynch

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 07: Mary Earps of England during the penalty shoot out during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between England and Nigeria at Brisbane Stadium on August 07, 2023 in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Naomi Baker - The FA/The FA via Getty Images)

Special report: Women’s goalkeeping has long been ridiculed but not any more – this is why

Chloe MorganAug 11, 2023

Chloe Morgan is The Athletic’s women’s football editor. She is a former professional goalkeeper who played for Tottenham in the Women’s Super League and Crystal Palace in the Women’s Championship.

Coming into this Women’s World Cup, I spent some time trying to pre-empt its emerging stories — who the standout stars might be, where the “Cupsets” might lie, how many more federations will be exposed as failing to properly provide for their players and staff.My heart sank a little as a former goalkeeper when I thought it was inevitable that there would be some obvious and decisive goalkeeping error that would trigger all kinds of debate or, worse, abuse about how female goalkeepers were just not up to scratch. 

Then it happened. South Africa’s Kaylin Swart, facing a soft shot directed straight at her by Lineth Beerensteyn of the Netherlands, let the ball slip through her arms and dribble into the back of the net, triggering a collective gasp around the stadium. The goal was a game-changer — the difference between South Africa, who were 1-0 down with 22 minutes still to play — going from hoping for an equaliser to damage limitation as they exited the tournament.For Swart, despite playing in a history-making game for South Africa — this being the first time they had reached the last 16 stage — it will be a match she will want to forget. But this was far from the main focus of the game. In fact, barely any fuss was made and Swart received no backlash. If anything, the goalkeeping story that day was the positive one of Zecira Musovic of Sweden, who made 11 saves against the U.S. as her side went on to defeat the four-time champions on penalties.The narrative around female goalkeeping has changed for good.

Sweden, USWNTZecira Musovic in action for Sweden in their round-of-16 win against the U.S. (William West/AFP via Getty Images)

I spoke to two goalkeeping legends — and former England No 1s — Karen Bardsley and Rachel Brown-Finnis to get their takes on the situation. “I can see why you might have wanted to protect goalkeepers, but that’s changed,” says Brown-Finnis. “No one is taking their errors as ammunition anymore when comparing the two (male and female).” he reason being the standard is just so bloody good now.“There’s a reason we’re seeing so many goalkeepers get player of the match this year,” adds Bardsley. “Chiamaka Nnadozie (Nigeria), Mary Earps (England), Daphne van Domselaar (the Netherlands), Zecira Musovic, Courtney Brosnan (Republic of Ireland), Becky Spencer (Jamaica). It says a lot about the standards.”So why has this tournament been such a big win for goalkeepers?


Increased data 

Football’s modern era uses technology to give players and teams an extra edge. When I first started with Spurs, almost a decade ago, I would have been lucky to have seen a couple of hardback books on the art of goalkeeping, but now the information available is endless. During my career, all players started to wear GPS vests every training session and match. Every game was monitored by video platform Wyscout and the team’s sports scientist tracked certain metrics every game, including interceptions, recovery times, accelerations and decelerations.Most importantly for goalkeepers, there started to be access to data around how the majority of goalscoring chances arrived — through set pieces, penalties (noting players prone to going down a little too easily…) or open play.

The data became so granular that we could map teams’ attacks: whether they progressed via the left- or right-wing or centrally, who took set pieces and the areas or players they would aim for, whether the crosses would be in- or out-swinging.I would have data on where the most likely penalty takers would aim and their success rate. So many elite goalkeepers have taken to printing this out, attaching it to their water bottles — as Musovic did against the U.S.Despite her not saving any of the penalties (the majority of which were unsaveable), she went the right way for all but two — oddly enough one being the penalty taken by U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, on whom, understandably, there was unlikely to be any data.

The downside is that too much information can feel overwhelming. A significant part of goalkeeping will always be instinctive, reacting to the live scenario. It can sometimes be difficult to reconcile data with what is happening in real-time. In a penalty shootout, you might know that Jane Bloggs prefers — and is most successful with — a low, driven strike in the bottom left corner. You might also notice how she opens her body up during the run-up and her foot positioning indicates she will not strike across her body, so it’s important to not rely solely on the data.Ultimately, data is a relatively new weapon in women’s goalkeeping. Approaching a game, you want to be armed with as much information as possible because anything that gives you an advantage can be the difference between making that vital save and not — and sometimes the difference is in a split second or fingertip.


Talent pathways 

When Brown-Finnis, Bardsley and I first started playing, the mentality and perception around goalkeeping was completely different. You were put in goal if you were considered the weakest or least talented on the pitch — I can’t recall the sheer number of times I was told to get in goal because I’d cause the least damage there. I started to receive specific goalkeeper training only in my early-to-mid twenties and, unsurprisingly, I improved massively. In my last year in the Championship at Crystal Palace, I played alongside 18-year-old goalkeeper Emily Orman, who was on loan from Chelsea.

Orman, who had signed with Chelsea aged 16 and had represented England from under-14 to under-19 level, had been training with the first team since her arrival and had been receiving world-class goalkeeper coaching — and also trained alongside some of the world’s best in Ann-Katrin Berger and Musovic.

The difference between my generation and Orman’s is huge. I had seen the position transition from shot-stopping to being inclusive with the back line — with a greater focus on distribution, starting counter-attacks and being involved in game management. These things came more naturally to Orman.

“There has been a significant transformation in the position and we’re now seeing top athletes in goal,” Brown-Finnis explains. “We’re seeing goalkeepers who have started off life really young — perhaps as outfield players first — who are developing neuro-muscular pathways early. They’re learning to strike the ball, change movement and are also being given the opportunity to play in different positions to better understand the roles on the pitch.

“Mary Earps is brilliant at starting attacks, (Germany’s) Merle Frohms is fantastic at playing out from the back. It boils down to better goalkeeper coaching at a younger age. There’s this saying that it takes 10,000 hours to master something. These girls coming through now have been getting those hours in much earlier.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Equally, the Championship (the level below England’s WSL) is now being used for budding goalkeepers to gain match experience — to iron out the kinks and learn to bounce back from mistakes in a less pressurised environment, mainly because the Championship has less exposure and generally lower attendances, although the competitiveness is still significant.


Relationship with the back line

Alongside the improvement of goalkeeper-specific training, there is now a focus on working with the back line. “The goalkeeping position has developed and it is now viewed as part of the back four/five unit,” Brown-Finnis says. “They do hours of training together, in and out of possession. It’s drilled into the (defenders and goalkeepers) that they are integral to each other.”

On top of this, squads are now starting to bring in unit specialists. We’ve seen this at Arsenal, where finishing and set-piece specialists (also Kelly Smith) are working with the front line and new addition Alessia Russo. 

“Defensive specialists have been brought in to improve output as a unit,” says Brown-Finnis. “We’re seeing goalkeepers being more engaged in games, working on communicating with clarity and tailoring their communication depending on which players they are speaking to. But also goalkeepers are having a chance to work on how they communicate with the outfield players in their respective leagues.”

Earps will be familiar with the playing styles of a significant majority of her team-mates having played alongside Lauren James, Ella Toone, Alessia Russo and Katie Zelem at various points in Manchester United’s previous four seasons. She will also be familiar with her other Lionesses team-mates having played against them in the WSL.

Mary Earps has made some vital saves for England at the World Cup (David Rogers/Getty Images)

A prime example of when this defensive cohesion has not been immediately present was when Switzerland took on Spain in the round of 16. Spanish goalkeeper Cata Coll made her international debut, being picked over Real Madrid’s Misa (who had started all of the group games). In the 11th minute, defender Laia Codina blindly launched a strong back pass to Coll, who clearly wasn’t expecting it and watched the ball roll into her own net.It was Codina’s error, but that initial cohesion between the back line and keeper was missing — understandably given this was the first time the unit had worked together in a competitive game.

Bardsley notes that Nigeria’s Nnadozie has stood out as someone who has a good relationship with her back line: “She’s a very good shot-stopper, but she links up really well with her centre-backs and full-backs. She’s happy to clip into the full-backs and she can do so using both feet — that’s the standard now.”


Increased focus on goalkeeper-specific training

As a goalkeeper, you face a host of scenarios in a game: one-v-ones, two-v-ones, high crosses, a packed box for a corner, penalties, long-range shots, bouncing shots, cutbacks. The list goes on. The goalkeepers at the Women’s World Cup will have had hundreds, if not thousands of hours with their coaches working on how best to deal with each scenario. Each drill is aimed at optimising their ability to react as the game unfolds.But the outfield drills are just half the work. Training at elite level now includes position-specific, individualised strength and conditioning, with goalkeeper plans being unique. Bardsley notes that focus on plans had been “hyper-accelerated to where we are now”.“I remember, around 2011, we were starting to question why goalkeepers were doing box-to-box runs and outfield workouts when goalkeepers had completely different output and in-game demands. Even with nutrition, it made little sense for us to eat loads of sweet potatoes (as per the outfield nutrition plan) when we wouldn’t be expending the same levels of energy. To me, it made more sense to look at the types of carbs which would help us with concentrating and focusing in key moments.”

My own plan with Spurs included plyometric box jumps — different types of jumps with resistance bands and a focus on core work to improve stability when being crowded in the box. To the delight of the other players, particularly Lucy Quinn, who would rip me to shreds most gym days, I also had wrist-strengthening exercises, such as holding a plate over the edge of a box or wrist curls. To be fair, it did look odd.Brown-Finnis feels the specific plans had a huge impact on goalkeepers and, more specifically, were important to female goalkeepers given the unique challenges they face. “Goalkeepers have very different needs to outfield players as female goalkeepers are shorter (compared to male goalkeepers),” she says.This definitely rings true: the average height of male keepers at the 2022 Qatar World Cup was 6ft 2in (188cm) compared to 5ft 8in (173cm) for the women. The goals are the same size and yet the group stage at this World Cup only saw a handful more goals let in compared to last year’s group stage in Qatar for the men.“What we’re seeing in gym plans now is a focus on plyometrics — short, sharp bursts of work,” Brown-Finnis adds. “Goalkeepers are concentrating on footwork and improving their reaction time, making sure they’re in the right position earlier to make the save.“It can be argued that (female goalkeeper) reactions need to be quicker than men’s/taller goalkeepers so they can push off earlier to give them a better chance of the save. Making a save is a mathematical equation — you need to see the ball, recognise the flight, react with every ounce of plyometric power, have quick feet to initiate the movement and then also decide to go with your top hand for optimal reach.”Bardsley also feels that the focus has now shifted to work on movements that better replicate game scenarios. From her time in the U.S., she recalls coaches using American football pads pushed against players to mimic opponents applying pressure.

Making saves against world-class strikers requires athleticism. One of the best saves in the tournament so far was Musovic’s against the U.S., helping to earn her the player of the match award. Lindsey Horan shot from the edge of the box — its speed was recorded at 92km/h — and the strike went through a sea of bodies, meaning Musovic was late to see it. But what happens before is key — and this is where the gym work is critical. Her quick footwork gets her across goal, her explosive leg power enables her to dive, and her wrist/finger strength takes the impact of the shot as she tips it around the post for a critical save.For another example of goalkeeping athleticism, look no further than Japan’s Ayaka Yamashita — and another contender for the save of the tournament — in their last-16 game against Norway. It was a huge leap; Yamashita (who is 5ft 7) reaches to claw a header away at the back post from Karina Saevik at point-blank range. The save denied Norway a chance at mounting a comeback, sending Japan through to the quarter-finals.

Ayaka Yamashita is in great form for Japan (Lars Baron/Getty Images)


Mental resilience

The mental stress of goalkeeping is intense. One lapse of concentration or judgment could mean fatal error — and a loss. No other position has quite the same level of pressure, especially with 40,000-plus fans watching — with millions more at home — in a stadium on the other side of the world and in the most important international tournament on the planet. But what we’ve seen this year in bundles from goalkeepers is resilience, focus and presence. In terms of making the difference, Brown-Finnis feels there had been increasing focus on “the mental side (of the game); mental preparation and mental rehearsal”.“There is a greater capacity to stay present, to be unwaveringly unemotional on the pitch,” she continues. “Goalkeepers want to reach an optimal emotional level of excitability to enhance their ability to concentrate and be ready to perform.”At the elite level, goalkeepers are being given greater access to sports psychologists to help with mental performance. Being prepared is key. “I do a lot of visualising mental training, brain training,” Musovic said recently. “So a lot of hours of extra work that I think you don’t realise if you’re not in this body.”“The support around goalkeepers is a lot different and more holistic now,” Bardsley says. “The staff are not just goalkeeper coaches — they try to understand the person and the player and also create an environment around the goalkeeper to enable them to be themselves.”Within the England camp, that support is very much shared across all the goalkeepers, not just the current No 1 and starting XI. “Everybody is clear on what their role is,” says Bardsley. “It can be an awkward dynamic between ’keepers when you know you need to train and prepare the same way for a game, but there may be some insecurity because you won’t be starting.“The England goalkeeper’s union, while obviously not all being able to make the starting XI, appreciated that if Mary had a good tournament then that would be a success for the whole team. Sarina would have had these conversations early — before the tournament started — so everyone knew the situation and could then be supported by staff, the goalkeeper coach and the players.”In terms of the goalkeeper-specific support that can be provided, Brown-Finnis says: “There are certain tools goalkeepers will develop (with the help of psychologists), such as visualisation as well as reset buttons for when bad moments happen. I used to wipe my hand over my head and that was my rest to detract from a bad moment, to reset and get back to my optimal state. It took practise.”I had my lucky (or sometimes unlucky) towel that my mum had bought me as a housewarming present. It became my glove towel and if I ever had a bad moment or felt I was at fault, I would go to it, wipe my gloves and start again mentally. You only ever have limited time on the pitch to make a difference so can’t dwell on a mistake and possibly perpetuate the cycle and make another. After the game — likely the following day — it’s appropriate to reflect on the events with your coach.On mental resilience, Bardsley feels having access to mental support had the “biggest impact” on her career, specifically in helping to increase her self-awareness and understanding of how she liked to work.“The (support) helped me to become more efficient in my training and preparation. What we see now is that goalkeepers have access to performance and lifestyle coaches and that support is more qualified and skilled. Before, it would often be someone who might have been a bit newer to the profession or with less experience.”Returning to Swart’s error, the quality of her positioning, movement and footwork in the lead-up to the relatively soft strike from Beerensteyn is not in dispute. Her handling let her down — the ball went through her arms and trickled into the back of the net. What’s noticeable is that Swart did not appear to dwell on her error, coming off her line to sweep up a ball heading for the path of Beerensteyn again. It also did not detract from her magnificent save in the 8th minute, when she expertly tipped a high cross over the bar to keep the game level. And, while Swart was responsible for the error, her team also had multiple chances on goal (Thembi Kgatlana in the first half and Linda Motlhalo in the second) to secure a draw and didn’t. Attacking errors should also be considered as such and noted as missed game-changing moments. Swart’s error should not be taken in isolation.This year, and perhaps because of a more understanding fanbase, one-off mistakes can be taken for what they are: isolated, human and bound to happen in moments of relentless high pressure. (Top photo: Naomi Baker – The FA/The FA via Getty Images)

Why Nottingham Forest signed Matt Turner: Strong in the air and a superb shot-stopper

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JUNE 18: Goalkeeper Matt Turner of USA celebrates after his side scored a goal to make it 0-1  during the CONCACAF Nations League Final between Canada v United States at Allegiant Stadium on June 18, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images)

By Paul Taylor and Matt PyzdrowskiAug 9, 2023100


The signing of Matt Turner from Arsenal is the first of two major pieces of incoming transfer business Nottingham Forest hope to complete this summer to bolster their goalkeeping options.

United States international Turner will almost certainly be in goal, back at the Emirates Stadium against the club he just left, for Saturday’s 2023-24 Premier League season opener, having made a £10million ($12.7m) move to the City Ground. However, Forest remain determined to bring Dean Henderson back as well, following last season’s successful loan from Manchester United.In the meantime, they have made a significant addition in Turner.While he will be a familiar face at the Emirates after his one season there, the 29-year-old might be a lesser-known quantity to some Forest fans, given the limited game time he saw for Arsenal after a transfer from MLS last summer.Our Forest correspondent Paul Taylor (PT), along with The Athletic’s goalkeeping expert Matt Pyzdrowski (MP) — an American who spent over a decade playing professionally in Swedish from 2011 — takes a look at what Turner brings to the table, why he wanted to sign for Forest and what it means for the club.


Why has Turner made this move to Forest?

The reality is that he wasn’t going to get close to being first-choice at Arsenal.

He knew that to lock down his place as the No 1 for the USMNT, who co-host the World Cup in 2026, he was going to need to leave the north London club he only joined a year ago.

While it may seem an obvious move, it won’t have been an easy decision to give up the prestige and glamour of being at a Champions League club for one that had to fight hard to avoid relegation to the EFL last season and, let’s face it, accept the financial implications that come with it.

So for Turner to be mature enough to understand that and say, “I’m hungry, I’m not OK sitting on the bench. I want to play!” is a smart and proactive position to take and speaks volumes about his character and ambitions.

Turner playing for Arsenal in the FA Cup last season (Photo: David Price/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)

It’s the kind of move his international team-mate Zack Steffen didn’t make early enough after joining Manchester City in 2019. Steffen waited a season too long to leave City (joining Middlesbrough of the Championship on loan for last season) and his development stagnated. This ultimately cost him a squad spot at last year’s World Cup — something that at one point would have been unthinkable.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://e65f129e594a58d0997c41dd800c625b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Turner is coming off a very strong CONCACAF Gold Cup this summer, where he captained the U.S. and played a key role, highlighted by his heroics in their shootout win over Canada in the quarter-finals. He was arguably the only American player on his team to walk away from the tournament with any credibility (they lost in the semi-finals to Panama).

Moving now, when he’s in form and confident, is ideal. MP

Why do Forest want him?

When on-loan duo Henderson and Keylor Navas returned to their parent clubs at the end of last season, it left a huge void in the squad and there was a growing sense of trepidation that head coach Steve Cooper’s side might start the season without having signed replacements.

Forest have always wanted to bring Henderson back and there is a belief that it will happen, once he is back to fitness after the January injury that ended his season early. But the arrival of Turner eases the pressure on that front.

The club also explored the idea of trying to bring Navas back from Paris Saint-Germain, but the finances involved were prohibitive — particularly when it came to potentially signing both him and Henderson.

One benefit of signing Turner and Henderson is that they are both likely to increase in value if they flourish at the City Ground. Henderson is 26 and Turner three years older — still relatively young for goalkeepers.

Forest will keep 36-year-old Wayne Hennessey as a third option between the posts, while looking to move on Ethan Horvath — another U.S. international. George Shelvey, a 22-year-old who has done well in pre-season but is yet to make his senior debut for the club, will be sent out on loan to gain experience.

Presuming the deal to bring Henderson back from Old Trafford gets completed as well — which is likely to be another loan with either an obligation or an option to make the move permanent — Forest will have two high-quality players fighting it out to be first-choice in goal.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://e65f129e594a58d0997c41dd800c625b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Legendary Forest manager Brian Clough understood the value of having a good goalkeeper — as he demonstrated when he paid a then significant £270,000 ($344,000) to sign Peter Shilton in 1977 — and that ethos has not been lost at the club 46 years later. PT

What will Turner bring to the Forest team?

One of the biggest question marks for Turner on his arrival at Arsenal a year ago was his ability with the ball at his feet.

Turner admitted this was an area of his game that needed to improve if he wanted to take the next step in his career, and at Arsenal he was in an ideal place to do so.

Their manager, Mikel Arteta, encouraged Turner to take even more risks than he was used to with the U.S. and his MLS side, New England Revolution, and, judging by his performances over the past 12 months, it’s clear that has paid dividends.

While it would be wrong to suddenly classify him as an expert passer, he has undoubtedly improved and grown in confidence — especially in regards to his decision-making — and in a short amount of time added a more expansive skill set to his game.

At Forest, it’s unlikely that Turner will be called upon to play out from the back in a similar way regularly, but he is more than capable of doing so if required. It is more likely that he will be required to play long, accurate passes to his wingers and forwards to stretch the opposition and try to catch them on the counter. This is something he is comfortable doing, which is good news for Forest.

But his biggest strengths have always been his athleticism and shot-stopping.

The test for him will be how he handles the pressure of being on a team most people expect to be in the bottom half of the Premier League, with the threat of relegation again a possibility.

It will also be interesting to see how he responds after making his first big mistake. Will he learn from it or not? Dealing mentally with errors is something that every goalkeeper has to do and the ability to bounce back quickly is what defines them.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://e65f129e594a58d0997c41dd800c625b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Judging by his performances, it is unquestionable that Turner improved in his year with Arsenal and he now has a chance to prove he is good enough to be a No 1 in the Premier League. MP

Why do Forest want Henderson too?

Forest did well to land a player of Navas’ quality and experience in the January window once it became clear Henderson was going to be sidelined for a considerable amount of time. It was a truly vital mid-season signing and a key factor in their eventual top-flight survival.

Navas played 17 games, including big wins over Brighton, Southampton and Arsenal.

Henderson suffered an injury in January (Photo: Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)

But the club do not want to have to be scrambling around for such a last-gasp signing again next January if they suffer similar injury misfortune. Rather than having to pull a rabbit out of their hat as they did with Navas, they want to be proactive.

Their desire is to have two quality players fighting it out for the first-team spot — competition for places would help to keep both Turner and Henderson on their toes, regardless of who is in the team. PT

What would the impact of Henderson signing be on the team dynamic?

It has the potential to set up one of the more intriguing goalkeeper battles in this season’s Premier League.

Coming off his injury and being cast aside at United, where £43million Andre Onana has been signed from Inter Milan to replace the departed David de Gea, Henderson will feel like he has a lot to prove, and he won’t be happy sitting on the bench and missing valuable game time with a European Championship squad place with England next summer surely in his sights.

It will be interesting to see how he handles that, should it happen, and also to see how it impacts Turner and the rest of the goalkeeping group. Though it’s quite possible they will support one another, it may potentially challenge the relationships the pair have with each other, and even with the club — much in the same way it did between Henderson and De Gea at United.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://e65f129e594a58d0997c41dd800c625b.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Also fascinating is the fact Turner and Henderson are so similar in their ability as goalkeepers. They are both more traditional in terms of their strengths — strong in the air and good shot-stoppers.

Both will be expecting to be the one to play and there are also those national-team implications for each of them. It will be a very delicate and difficult relationship to navigate. The key for Cooper and the rest of his backroom staff will be to handle the situation well.

What will encourage Forest is Henderson’s attitude last season.

Despite being a loan signing, he moved to the area and, more than that, when sidelined with injury, stayed around rather than return to United and even travelled to away games. He remained a familiar face around the training ground too, even once he had undergone surgery and it was clear he would not play again last season. Such a mentality will be vital again now. PT/MP

Forest already have one U.S. international goalkeeper in Horvath… is Turner an upgrade? And how will all this impact the USMNT?

Steffen’s sporadic and limited game time for Manchester City, in addition to his inconsistent form when he did play, left the door open for Turner’s rise to claim his country’s No 1 jersey.

It is perhaps ironic that those roles have now shifted. Steffen made 45 appearances for Middlesbrough last season and was one of their best performers as they made the promotion play-offs. In total, he played 4,050 minutes of club football in 2022-23, while Turner managed just 630 (way down on what he was registering in MLS).

Though Steffen is currently recovering from knee surgery, Turner knows that another year on the bench at the Emirates would risk seeing him lose his place in the national team. That is a big reason why he has left Arsenal and why he hopes to be the No 1 at Forest.

Turner celebrates after the Gold Cup shootout victory over Canada last month (Photo: Jeff Dean/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Another goalkeeper who had a strong 2022-23 and is in the conversation for the USMNT No 1 jersey is Horvath.

Loaned out to Luton Town, he played a huge part in their promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, registering a total of 4,620 minutes on the pitch, keeping 20 clean sheets in 47 appearances. However, overall Horvath is seen as being a step below Turner — with the latter a much more well-rounded goalkeeper.

Should Turner come in and perform at his best, he has the potential to single-handedly win Forest several points this season. MP

Premier League roundtable: Will City win four in a row? Which teams should fear drop? Who’s heading back from Saudi Arabia?

Premier League roundtable: Will City win four in a row? Which teams should fear drop? Who’s heading back from Saudi Arabia?

The Athletic UK StaffAug 10, 2023216

The Premier League returns tomorrow.

The 2023-24 season kicks off at Turf Moor on Friday night as Vincent Kompany’s new-look, new-vibes Burnley take on treble winners Manchester City. Not only did Pep Guardiola’s team win the FA Cup and the Champions League in 2022-23, they also won the Premier League for the third season in a row.

https://cb3abf1797a4d9cc0495ae318b72b0c7.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

No team in English top-flight history (since 1888-89) has ever been crowned champions for four successive years. Not yet, anyway.

Can City further their dominance to unprecedented levels? Or will Arsenal go one better than last year and win their first league title for 20 years? Who’s going to struggle? And what revolutionary new tactic will we all be enjoying come May 2024?

We asked seven of our writers to answer those questions and more ahead of the 32nd Premier League campaign.


Will Manchester City become the first team to win the league for four consecutive seasons? If not, why not? And who will?

Joey D’Urso: Arsenal were brilliant for most of last season and their late wilting seemed to be more about experience and mentality than anything else. They have battle scars now as well as three great new signings in Declan Rice, Kai Havertz and Jurrien Timber. It’s on…

Carl Anka: It pains me to write this, but Manchester City are favourites for the title until proven otherwise. They’ve got the best manager in the league (if not the world) who seems quicker and more inventive at finding solutions than anyone else. Their defensive scheme is remarkable. The structure and aggression of their front press can make games claustrophobic and they have a genuine game-breaking striker in Erling Haaland. To dethrone City, you will need to be near perfect and they will have to have endured a down spell. Good luck to any potential usurpers!

Ahmed Walid: For City to win it, they probably need to put in their best shift once again. It’s likely they will because Pep Guardiola is Pep Guardiola and the quality of their players is non-negotiable, but it won’t be completely surprising if one of Arsenal, Manchester United or Liverpool beat them to it.

Nick Miller: Every year I tell myself I’m not going to be sucked in by an indifferent spell of form from Manchester City. Every year I tell myself that at some point they will peel off a 10-game winning run and leave everyone else in the dust. Every year I tell myself they’re too strong and don’t hope for anyone else to produce a bit of variety. But every year I forget and I’m sucked in by the hope. I should know better. I should know they’re going to be too strong again. I should know not to hope too much for a proper title race. But I don’t know better, so I’m going to say: Arsenal for the title.

https://cb3abf1797a4d9cc0495ae318b72b0c7.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Sarah Shephard: My heart says no but my head says yeah, they will. Arsenal will be stronger both in terms of squad depth and experience, but I still can’t see it being quite enough to close the gap on Guardiola’s treble-winners. I can see Manchester United also pushing them hard this season, but again, it’s a struggle to see them surpassing City. The only slight question mark could be if there is any sort of complacency or competition fatigue (if there is such a thing) from City having so much success and fighting on so many fronts for so long last season. But I’m not holding my breath.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

How Pep Guardiola will fight ‘Dwight Yorke Effect’ at Manchester City

Adam Hurrey: Yes, because they’ve engineered themselves into a state that every elite club craves: relative stability. Tales of Pep Guardiola’s relentless demands are legion, but through a combination of pathologically obsessive carrot and cold-blooded stick, he has managed to keep his City squad hungry and willing to compete for places. The only candidate from the so-called Big Six who can offer anything like that is Arsenal, but Mikel Arteta’s ship hasn’t been fully sea-trialled across a 60-game season yet. The others still have too far to bounce back in 2023-24.

Jack Lang: Yes, just about. Arsenal were brilliant for long chunks of the 2022-23 season and have added both depth and quality this summer. They should be better equipped to sustain a title challenge and I can see them going closer. Manchester United, too, should put up a decent fight, but City have the best striker in the world and the best manager in the world and remain the team to beat.


In order, who will finish in the top… five* and qualify for the Champions League?

D’Urso: Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester UnitedChelseaLiverpool

Anka: Manchester City, Liverpool, Arsenal (the smallest of margins between two and three), Manchester United, Chelsea

https://cb3abf1797a4d9cc0495ae318b72b0c7.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Walid: Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool, Newcastle United

Miller: Arsenal, Manchester City, Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool

Hurrey: Manchester City, Arsenal, Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool

Shephard: Manchester City, Arsenal, Manchester United, Liverpool, Newcastle

Lang: Manchester City, Arsenal, Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool

*based on UEFA coefficents, the Premier League should have five spots in the new-look 2024-25 Champions League

Can Arsenal dethrone Manchester City? (James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images)


Is the Big Six over? Is it a Big Seven? Eight? Twenty?

D’Urso: No. The Big Six descriptor was always about money, not the league table. Although Tottenham finished below Villa, Newcastle and Brighton last season, their revenue is roughly double each of those clubs’, giving them a huge advantage for the longer term, especially as financial fair play restrictions become increasingly important. The same goes for Chelsea. It would take several bad seasons (and good ones for someone else) for anyone to truly break up the Big Six.

Anka: We’ve been asking this question ever since Brendan Rodgers’ Leicester looked like they would gatecrash the party. Their relegation serves to show how the Big Six is a big club and breaking into it is harder than anticipated. I thoroughly expect Newcastle to have a good 2023-24, leading us to have a conversation with the sub-editors desk as to whether we should use “The Rich Seven” or “The Magnificent Seven” as shorthand, but for now, my answer is the same as last season. The Big Six descriptor has less to do with league position and more to do with money and the cultural history of the clubs included in it. So long as teams change their tactical approach when they play you and it’s treated as a big deal when you lose, then the Big Six remain.

Walid: From a football perspective, it is. The quality of Newcastle United, Brighton, Aston VillaBrentford and even Fulham makes them a thorn in the side of the Big Six. Any of those teams could beat Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Tottenham, Liverpool or Chelsea on any given day.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://cb3abf1797a4d9cc0495ae318b72b0c7.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Miller: Sort of. The nice thing about the group of financially dominant clubs expanding is that there is an increased chance of a really rich team doing something stupid or having an awful season, which is a) funny and b) good for some semblance of competitive variety. So the top seven probably won’t be the big seven, but they will still buy everyone else’s players.

Hurrey: As unromantic as this will sound, the Big Six was always about more than perennial league position: it’s been about influence, commercial revenue, Champions League knockout experience, stealing players from shrewder, smaller clubs, that sort of thing. Given their apparent legal untouchability and latent sleeping-giantness, I will allow Newcastle into a provisional Big Seven.

Shephard: Not yet. I’m afraid it will take more than one season for a club to be allowed entry. Newcastle seem the most likely to force an expansion but only if they can repeat last season’s form.

Lang: I agree wholeheartedly with Joey.

Newcastle and Chelsea of the… Big Seven? (Jason Allen/ISI Photos/Getty Images)


Which clubs will struggle this season?

D’Urso: The obvious answers are Luton Town and Sheffield United, who aren’t spending much. This tells us something interesting about modern football — it might make more sense in the long run for both to just bank a year of TV money and subsequent parachute payments and hopefully get back to the Premier League again with a firmer financial base. It’s a less risky strategy than betting the house on staying up, which worked for Nottingham Forest last season, but things would be very ugly at the City Ground now if it hadn’t.

Anka: Something feels off at Fulham. They were impressive last season in how they maximised set pieces and Aleksandar Mitrovic’s bully-ball stylings, but their summer activity hasn’t moved the needle too much. There’s a good core group there but several players are over the age of 30 and Mitrovic looks to have had his head turned by an offer from the Saudi Pro League, even if he ends up elsewhere. I don’t think they’ll be relegated, but I can see them getting dragged into the mire.

Walid: With a few of the teams getting closer to the Big Six, there was a clear gap in quality between the top half of the table and the bottom half last season. Unless any of the bottom-half teams, in addition to the promoted ones, overachieve, then the struggling clubs could be all of the bottom half once again.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://cb3abf1797a4d9cc0495ae318b72b0c7.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Miller: Depends on your definition of ‘struggle’, but I can see Spurs finishing mid-table, although nobody will mind too much because they’ve got a manager who doesn’t feel like he’s doing them a massive favour by being there. I wonder whether Crystal Palace will regret sticking with Roy Hodgson. Luton and Sheffield United seem to be in ‘take the money and stabilise’ mode. Nottingham Forest could go either way. Everton have been chancing it for a few seasons. So it could well be a big ol’ bunfight at the bottom.

Hurrey: If you can even call it struggling, in relative terms, I officially ‘fear for’ Luton and Sheffield United. I have also decided that Brentford will plateau, Everton and Wolves will get booed by their fans a lot and that Forest — who will part ways, really messily, with Steve Cooper before Christmas — are basically the new Watford.

Shephard: I have concerns for Wolves after last season’s struggles and the losses of Raul Jimenez, Joao Moutinho and Ruben Neves this summer (and clearly former manager Julen Lopetegui did, too). Luton and Sheffield United will also be up against it, but I have a feeling that at least one of them will survive — likely the latter.

Lang: I think it will be quite a tricky few months for Brentford. Ivan Toney is a gigantic loss and although they coped well without him in the final few games of last season, there will surely be a drop-off over the longer term. Thomas Frank is obviously brilliant but I would be hugely impressed if he and his players manage to match last season’s ninth-placed finish.


____ is the player who will outscore Erling Haaland in 2023-24…

D’Urso: Did you see the former intelligence officer who told Congress the other day that the USA has proof that aliens exist? There’s a greater chance of him being right, and Elvis and Tupac being found alive for good measure, than anyone outscoring Erling Haaland this season (barring injury, obvs).

Anka: Lol. Lmao. Julian Alvarez if you want to be goofy. Next question.

Walid: If Harry Kane stays at Tottenham, he is the most logical answer to this question. The England striker’s 30 goals last season have been forgotten among the 300 million mentions of Erling Haaland, but unlike the Norwegian, Kane scored them in a turbulent Spurs side that surely would have finished lower than eighth if not for him. Otherwise, yes, it’s Haaland again.

Miller: Barring a startling revelation that Dixie Dean or Jimmy Greaves were actually cryogenically frozen in their prime and will be thawed out this season, it’s going to be Haaland. But I will play your little game and say… Mo Sal… Harry Ka… Marcus Ra… nope, sorry, can’t do it. Haaland.

Hurrey: Nope.

Shephard: Ugh. On the understanding that his level would have to drop massively for anyone to outscore him, I’ll shoot for… Marcus Rashford.

Lang: Realistically, it’s going to take a full-on Tonya Harding/Nancy Kerrigan situation to stop him. The pertinent question, therefore, is this: which Premier League striker seems like they would have the most violent, most unhinged entourage? The answer is obviously (heavily redacted on advice of crack legal team).

Haaland celebrating goal number one of 36 in the Premier League last season (Julian Finney/Getty Images)


2023-24 will be a season too far for ____

D’Urso: Fulham. They outran expected goals last season and gravity could catch up with them this time, especially if they lose any one of Aleksandr Mitrovic, Joao Palinha or manager Marco Silva.

Anka: I’m not ready to watch a Premier League without James Milner in it, but I’ll be surprised if he makes more than 10 starts for Brighton this season. He’s probably still amazing at the bleep test, but at 37 years of age and many miles on the clock, let’s not ask too much from him.

Walid: Nottingham Forest. No specific reason, just a hunch.

Miller: Fulham won’t be as good as last season, particularly if their sole plan for replacing Mitrovic is Raul Jimenez. But Wolves appear to be selling everyone and have lost a manager who kept them up but who didn’t want to be there. They could go down.

Hurrey: The Thomas Frank hype machine, Roy Hodgson’s been-there-done-it outlook, David Moyes wearing a slim-fit tracksuit, the chances of Frank Lampard ever again managing a serious top-flight club.

Shephard: Steve Cooper. He’ll have been Nottingham Forest manager for two years in September, which in Forest years is about 35, so I can’t help but feel the end is in sight. Sorry, Steve.

Lang: Possibly Bournemouth. Andoni Iraola is a brave, exciting appointment and I’m rooting for them to thrive, but… well, the squad is a bit of a jumble and a bad start could easily lead to the kind of existential crisis that usually ends with Sam Allardyce taking over in February.


Which player or team are you most looking forward to watching?

D’UrsoMoussa Diaby at Aston Villa. Chalk-on-the-boots wingers who run at people really fast are a dying breed in modern football. Diaby seems a livewire.

Anka: I’m very intrigued to see this new iteration of Manchester United with Andre Onana pinging balls out from the back and Rasmus Hojlund looking like a baby Cavani. I’m curious to see Big Ange’s revolution of Spurs and I predict, big, BIG things for Chelsea right-back Malo Gusto. I was genuinely punching the air when he got picked up last January.

WalidDominik Szoboszlai. I am a sucker for brilliant shooters and the Hungarian’s profile makes sense at Liverpool, especially after their shift towards a 3-2-4-1 shape on the ball.

Miller: Whichever player Brighton have found from somewhere that we haven’t really heard of yet who will turn out to be brilliant and worth £50million by next summer.

Hurrey: A fully pre-seasoned Mykhailo Mudryk.

Shephard: I’m intrigued to see how Liverpool shape up with their new-look midfield, but also what Mauricio Pochettino manages to eke out of a Chelsea side that looked so bereft of ideas and oomph last season.

Lang: To me, there is no sight more thrilling than that of a defender dribbling out from the back, accepting the inherent risk because it shrinks in comparison with the possible payoff. What I have seen of Jurrien Timber, therefore, has made me quite excited.

A pre-seasoned Mykhailo Mudryk (Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images)


The player clubs should try to buy back from the Saudi Pro League in Jan is ____

D’Urso: Newcastle have just sold Allan Saint-Maximin to Saudi club Al Ahli for around $30million despite both clubs being owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. If the player was loaned back to Newcastle, they could keep the talented Frenchman while adding a load of cash to Newcastle’s balance sheet that would help them get around financial fair play restrictions and not cost the Public Investment Fund a penny. (This is tongue-in-cheek of course, but there doesn’t seem to be any rules to stop this happening, which is a bit concerning.)

Anka: It’d be dead funny if Sergej Milinkovic-Savic finally made it to the Premier League this Jan after years of being linked with a move to Manchester United. I’m surprised a European club didn’t try to get Marcelo Brozovic on a short-term deal. He remains an exceptional midfielder who could have done a job for many clubs in the top six.

Walid: Surely it’s Ruben Neves?

Miller: The Ruben Neves loan to Newcastle feels quite ‘on the nose’, but if it’s anyone it will be him. Unless Jordan Henderson discovers that floating in pools of money doesn’t quite make up for missing one of Jurgen Klopp’s big hugs.

Hurrey: Nobody in particular, although I can vividly picture Moussa Dembele “ending his Al Ettifaq nightmare” to score three goals in 14 games for Crystal Palace.

Shephard: Ruben Neves. He’s only 26 and he really, really wants to play Champions League football (so he said back in May). It’s only fair on the poor lad.

Lang: No one. Hey, remember all those players who went to China, earned enough money to keep their great grandkids’ great grandkids in Prada pyjamas, then returned to have really successful careers in top European leagues? No, me neither. The players who have made the choice to go to Saudi Arabia have told us something about their priorities and we should listen.


How many of the 20 teams will end the season with the manager they started with?

D’Urso: Less than half. It’s carnage out there. A big factor in this is that England is the place to be for any aspiring manager now, not to mention the most lucrative (Saudi aside). Owners will know they can easily poach top bosses from abroad in a way that wasn’t the case 10-15 years ago.

Anka: Nine bosses are not surviving the season. No club will have three managers across 2023-24. Sean Dyche will teeter, before pulling things back.

Walid: At least nine. The math behind this is that I can’t see any of Guardiola, Jurgen Klopp, Erik ten Hag, Mikel Arteta or Mauricio Pochettino getting the sack. Thomas Frank, Eddie Howe and Roberto De Zerbi’s credit in the bank will surely keep them safe, plus all three are a big reason why their teams are in those positions in the first place. Finally, Unai Emery’s power at Aston Villa and the success of last season means it would take a crazy campaign to see him get the chop.

Miller: Eight. I’ve got a hunch that a big dog could go mid-season, although I can’t quite tell you which one yet.

Hurrey: A startlingly stable and rational 14-15 teams.

Shephard: At least 11, I think. But there’s no accounting for owners with itchy fingers and panic buttons – one of those gets pressed and the whole Jenga tower begins to crumble.

Lang: Eleven, although just typing that has made me feel like a gullible rube with way too much faith in humanity.

Sam Allardyce at Leeds in 2022-23. Will he take part in 2023-24? (Stu Forster/Getty Images)


What new tactical trend will emerge?

D’Urso: Brentford’s long throw-ins are fun and seem to lead to goals. It’s surprising this hasn’t been copied more widely.

Anka: This summer I have seen many an imagined XI put in a 3-2-4-1 formation with a box midfield. The value of inverted full-backs and the power that box midfields have against counter-attacks is still not properly understood, but I reckon we’ll see multiple teams attempt it and try to figure things out.

Walid: More innovation at set pieces, especially corners. Last season’s 3.9 goals per 100 corners was the highest number of any season since 2007-08, and with more set-piece specialists coaching at Premier League clubs, that number could increase.

Miller: Not so much a new trend but a doubling down on the full-backs in midfield thing: rather than just one moving inside, some madman will do it with both. Probably Arsenal, with Oleksandr Zinchenko on one side and Jurrien Timber on the other.

Hurrey: A step up in the move away from using traditional names for formations. Feels like “4-3-3” and variants don’t quite do justice to how some managers are trying to set their teams up. Also, I have no idea.

Shephard: With the new rules surrounding time-wasting coming into play, might we see a player from each team who has the specific task of reminding everyone to get a move on during goal celebrations/set pieces etc? Probably not the most popular person in the squad… maybe the same one responsible for collecting player fines in the dressing room?


My biggest hope for the new season is ____

D’Urso: Fewer handball penalties. They should be reserved for Luis Suarez vs Ghana-style abominations. No more close games decided by a ball-to-shoulder penalty calls in unthreatening positions. They’re rubbish.

Anka: (Outside my usual hopes for a decrease in racist abuse in the game and less rampant hyper-capitalism squeezing the joy from things) I was hoping that Chelsea wouldn’t get a sponsor for the front of their shirts. It was quite nice the way it was but that dream looks to be over before the season has even begun.

Walid: For it not to be over in March. A competitive Premier League where the title is decided in May, European places touch-and-go towards the end of the season and a relegation battle that makes your head go crazy on the final day of the season is much better than a team just rampaging through the league and three doomed teams we knew were going down from February onwards.

Miller: It would be nice if Roberto De Zerbi lasted the whole season at Brighton. As it is, he’s probably one of the obvious choices if a big club panics, but they were so good at points last season it would be lovely if he could have until May.

Hurrey: Everyone gives the cups a right good go!

Shephard: In line with the above and in response to the criticism some teams received last season for “going OTT”, I hope we continue to see players release their full emotions when they feel it’s warranted (not when the pundits/commentators deem it “right” to do so).

Lang: …that the football community as a whole wises up to the fact that pretty much everyone is using the verb “to invert” incorrectly. To invert something is to turn it upside-down or arrange it in the opposite order. A winger can be inverted if he or she plays on the opposite side than may have been expected historically given his or her stronger foot. A full-back can also be inverted, but invert does not mean move into the centre. Denis Irwin was an inverted full-back because he was right-footed and played on the left; Oleksandr Zinchenko is doing something interesting when he drifts in off the flank, but he’s not inverting.


How we think the Premier League will finish in 2023-24

Some 42 of our writers and editors predicted the final order of the 2023-24 Premier League. This table is an average of those predictions:

Our 2023-24 predicted PL table

POSITIONTEAM
1Man City
2Arsenal
3Man Utd
4Liverpool
5Chelsea
6Newcastle
7Tottenham
8Aston Villa
9Brighton
10Brentford
11West Ham
12C Palace
13Fulham
14Burnley
15Bournemouth
16Everton
17N Forest
18Wolves
19Luton
20Sheff Utd

(Top photo: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

8/11/23 MLS Leagues Cup Tonight, EPL Predictions Starts Today, World Cup Quarters Sat, CHS Ranked #1, CFC GK Starts Mon

EPL &  Leagues Kick Off this Weekend

The English Premier League kicks of this weekend with games across Peacock and the occasional USA network or NBC game.  I will start keeping track of the American’s overseas as a few have made moves including Matt Turner from Arsenal to Nottingham Forest along with fellow American GK Ethan Horvath.  Tyler Adams looks to be on the move to Chelsea – where Pulisic left to join Italy’s AC Milan along with Yanus Musah.  Tim Weah and McKinney will team up in Italy at Juventus so it might be time to get Paramount plus for Serie A Italian League games and Champions League of course.   I will make my official predictions next week – but rest assured Arsenal, Liverpool, and Man City will be in the top 4.  Still working on the others and where my precious Fulham and American’s Tim Ream and Jedi Robinson will end up.  All the games this weekend are below – but the big game is Sunday 11:30 am on Peacock Liverpool vs Chelsea.   Wow News on Spurs Harry Kane finally choosing to join Bayern Munich rather than stay at Spurs in search of the EPL Goals record – stories below.

Sat Games

7:30 am Peacock               Arsenal vs Nottingham Forest (Horvath, Turner)

10 am Peacock                  Everton vs Fulham (Ream,  Jedi)

12:30 pm NBC                    New Castle United vs Aston Villa

Sun, Aug 13

9 am Peacock                     Brentford vs Tottenham 

11:30 am Peacock            Chelsea vs Liverpool  

WORLD CUP CONTINUES WITH France/Australia Sat 3 am & England/Colombia Sat 5 am on Fox

If you are waking up late – today’s world cup games are must see TV !!

Spain scored late to secure their first ever trip to the Semi-Finals of a World Cup, while Sweden continued its impressive run and held on to beat Japan 2-1 to advance.  England and France will look to make it a European sweep of the Final 4 – vs the home side Australia (with Sam Kerr) back in the mix, and the only team from the America’s Colombia.  Its an All American Ref Crew for England vs Colombia Sat am. (see Ref section below).

Of course the fallout is still coming in the USWNT after their first ever ouster before the Semi-Finals as we expect to hear any day that American Manager Vlatko A is no longer our coach.  The US has just 9 months to ready a squad to compete in the Olympics in France in July. Already Rapinoe and Julie Ertz have retired from international play and the thoughts are right back Kelly O’hara will announce soon as well.  The ladies are scheduled to return to NWSL play earlier than anyone expected this summer. 

Huge congrats to all those Carmel FC players who made their high school teams !! The Carmel Soccer Programs – Carmel Girls & Boys Ranked #1 in Pre-Season.  The CHS Ladies start on Sat 11 am at Murray Stadium vs HSE, while the Boys are underway at Zionsville 11:30 Sat?

Preview Indy Girls High School

Boys preview:Indy-area’s top goalies to watch in 2023                    Indy Boys High School – Top Mids

Boys preview:Indy-area’s top defenders to watch in 2023            Indy Boys High School – Top Forwards

Carmel FC GK Training starts Monday, Aug 14

Mondays – Shelbourne Field 2 U11/U12 5-5:45 pm U13+ 5:45 -6:30 pm w/Coach Shane Best

GAMES ON TV

Fri, Aug 11

3 pm USA                            Burnley vs Man City EPL starts

8:30 pm Apple Season   FC Charlotte @ Inter Miami (Messi, Busquets,Yedlin)  

Sat, Aug 12

3:am FOX                             Australia vs France QF3 WC

6:30 am Fox                        England vs Colombia QF3 WC

7:30 am Peacock               Arsenal vs Nottingham Forest (Horvath, Turner)

10 am Peacock                  Everton vs Fulham (Ream,  Jedi)

12:30 pm NBC                    New Castle United vs Aston Villa

2:45 pm ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs RB Liepzig Super Cup

3:30 pm ESPN +                 Athletic Club vs Real Madrid 

7 pm ESPN+                        Miami FC vs Indy 11

Sun, Aug 13

9 am Peacock                     Brentford vs Tottenham 

11:30 am Peacock            Chelsea vs Liverpool  

3:30 pm ESPN+                  Getafe vs Barcelona

Mon, Aug 14

9 am USA                             Man United vs Wolverhampton

Tues Aug 15

4 am FOX                             Semi Final #1 WC 

7 pm Apple MLS Philly Union vs Inter Miami (Messi)

Weds Aug 16

6 am FOX                             Semi Final #2 WC 

3 pm CBSSN                        Man City vs Sevilla (UEFA Super Cup)

Fir, Aug 18

2:30 pm  ESPN+                 Werder Bremen vs Bayern Munich

2:45 pm USA                      Nottingham Forest vs Shelfield United 

Sat, Aug 19

4 am FOX                             WORLD CUP 3rd place Game

9 am ESPN+                        Leverkusen vs RB Leipzig

10 am USA                          Fulham (Ream, Jedi) vs Brentford  

10 am Peacock                  Liverpool vs AFC Bournemouth

12:30 pm NBC                    Tottenham vs Man United 

3 pm USA                            Man City vs New Castle United

9::30 pm ESPN2                 San Diego Loyal vs New Mexico United USL

Sun, Aug 20

6 am FOX                             WORLD CUP FINALS   

9 am USA                             Aston Villa vs Everton

9:30 am ESPN +                 Union Berlin vs Mainz

11:30 am USA                    West Ham United vs Chelsea

1:30 pm ESPN+                  Barcelona vs Cadiz

2:45 pm Para+                   Udinese vs Juventus (Mckinney)

3:30 pm ESPND                 Real Betis vs Atletico Madrid

7:30 pm Apple TV             Columbus Crew vs Cincy

7:30 pm MLS Pass            Inter Miami (no MESSI) vs Charlotte       

Mon, Aug 21

2:45 pm Para+                   Bologna vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

3 pm USA                            Crystal Palace vs Arsenal

Wed, Aug 23

7 pm Para +                Cincy (Vasquez) vs Inter Miami (MESSI. Busquets, Alba)

8 pm ESPN+                        Memphis vs Indy 11

Pairs of Americans playing overseas this Fall

US Women + World Cup

Andonovski may be first casualty for USWNT
Australia-France, England-Colombia head to Saturday’s World Cup quarterfinal matchups

Matildas’ World Cup Quarterfinal Takes Over Aussie TV

Spain sneaks by Netherlands in quarters
World Cup: Women’s soccer will soon crown a new queen after Sweden beats Japan

Women’s World Cup 2023: Will Sweden triumph after reaching another semi-final?

England reach World Cup dividing line as Sarina Wiegman faces crunch decision

The World Cup tips David Beckham is giving to England star Alessia 

MLS – Leagues Cup


Charlotte FC takes on Inter Miami in Leagues Cup quarterfinals

Lionel Messi in Nashville? How Nashville SC could host Inter Miami in Leagues Cup final

How to See Inter Miami vs Charlotte

Messi Scores 2 and a PK in 4-4 Miami OT win on PKs @ Dallas

League Cup Next Round

Leagues Cup Bracket

EPL

USMNT midfielder Tyler Adams’ deal with Chelsea reportedly collapses


Predicting the 2023-24 Premier League table

Premier League predictions: Do any of our writers think Man City can be beaten?

Harry Kane to call time on Bayern Munich move if deal with Tottenham is not agreed this week

Aaron Ramsdale deserves to remain Arsenal’s No 1 – despite David Raya’s likely arrival

Harry Kane travels to Bayern Munich to complete $110 million transfer

Harry Kane has Bayern Munich medical with transfer from Tottenham almost complete

Life after Harry Kane: what ‘mourning’ Tottenham fans can expect

Kane arrives in Germany ahead of ‘imminent’ Bayern Munich move

David Raya: Brentford boss Thomas Frank expects goalkeeper to complete Arsenal transfer

World

FRANCE Ligue 1 Season Preview
GERMANY Bundesliga Season Preview
ITALY Serie A Season Preview
SPAIN La Liga Season Preview
Dortmund keep losing stars, but still manage to challenge Bayern
 
onstantin Eckner

Goalkeeping

Degea to Real Madrid for Injured Courtois?  

Matt Turner to Nottingham Forest in EPL

Musovich Saves vs USA

What a Save to Beat US from Musovich

Great World Cup GK discussion

Top Boys Goalkeepers Pre Season in Indy

Top Girls Goalkeepers Pre Season in Indy

Reffing

How can Corners Not Be Subject to VAR?  Penalty ? No Way?  

No Doubt this is a Red Card England Game
Premier League changes for 2023-24: Longer games, referees to clamp down on bad behaviour
 

====================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ====================== 

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

Save 20% on your order 

(mention the ole ballcoach) 

Check out the BarBQ Ribs, pulled Pork and Chicken, Brisket and more.  Sweet, Tangy or Spicy sauce. Mention you heard about it from the Ole Ballcoach — and Ryan will give you 20% off your next mealhttps://www.rackzbbqindy.com/ Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!  

Save 20% on these Succulent Ribs at Rackz BarBQ when you mention the Ole Ballcoach – Corner of 131 & Hazelldell. – Call 317-688-7290.

======================RackZ BAR BQ ====Save 20% ======================

 

Why Nottingham Forest signed Matt Turner: Strong in the air and a superb shot-stopper

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JUNE 18: Goalkeeper Matt Turner of USA celebrates after his side scored a goal to make it 0-1  during the CONCACAF Nations League Final between Canada v United States at Allegiant Stadium on June 18, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Matthew Ashton - AMA/Getty Images)

By Paul Taylor and Matt PyzdrowskiAug 9, 2023


The signing of Matt Turner from Arsenal is the first of two major pieces of incoming transfer business Nottingham Forest hope to complete this summer to bolster their goalkeeping options.United States international Turner will almost certainly be in goal, back at the Emirates Stadium against the club he just left, for Saturday’s 2023-24 Premier League season opener, having made a £10million ($12.7m) move to the City Ground. However, Forest remain determined to bring Dean Henderson back as well, following last season’s successful loan from Manchester United.In the meantime, they have made a significant addition in Turner.While he will be a familiar face at the Emirates after his one season there, the 29-year-old might be a lesser-known quantity to some Forest fans, given the limited game time he saw for Arsenal after a transfer from MLS last summer.Our Forest correspondent Paul Taylor (PT), along with The Athletic’s goalkeeping expert Matt Pyzdrowski (MP) — an American who spent over a decade playing professionally in Swedish from 2011 — takes a look at what Turner brings to the table, why he wanted to sign for Forest and what it means for the club.


Why has Turner made this move to Forest?

The reality is that he wasn’t going to get close to being first-choice at Arsenal.He knew that to lock down his place as the No 1 for the USMNT, who co-host the World Cup in 2026, he was going to need to leave the north London club he only joined a year ago.While it may seem an obvious move, it won’t have been an easy decision to give up the prestige and glamour of being at a Champions League club for one that had to fight hard to avoid relegation to the EFL last season and, let’s face it, accept the financial implications that come with it.So for Turner to be mature enough to understand that and say, “I’m hungry, I’m not OK sitting on the bench. I want to play!” is a smart and proactive position to take and speaks volumes about his character and ambitions.

Turner playing for Arsenal in the FA Cup last season (Photo: David Price/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)

It’s the kind of move his international team-mate Zack Steffen didn’t make early enough after joining Manchester City in 2019. Steffen waited a season too long to leave City (joining Middlesbrough of the Championship on loan for last season) and his development stagnated. This ultimately cost him a squad spot at last year’s World Cup — something that at one point would have been unthinkable.Turner is coming off a very strong CONCACAF Gold Cup this summer, where he captained the U.S. and played a key role, highlighted by his heroics in their shootout win over Canada in the quarter-finals. He was arguably the only American player on his team to walk away from the tournament with any credibility (they lost in the semi-finals to Panama).Moving now, when he’s in form and confident, is ideal. MP

Why do Forest want him?

When on-loan duo Henderson and Keylor Navas returned to their parent clubs at the end of last season, it left a huge void in the squad and there was a growing sense of trepidation that head coach Steve Cooper’s side might start the season without having signed replacements.Forest have always wanted to bring Henderson back and there is a belief that it will happen, once he is back to fitness after the January injury that ended his season early. But the arrival of Turner eases the pressure on that front.The club also explored the idea of trying to bring Navas back from Paris Saint-Germain, but the finances involved were prohibitive — particularly when it came to potentially signing both him and Henderson.One benefit of signing Turner and Henderson is that they are both likely to increase in value if they flourish at the City Ground. Henderson is 26 and Turner three years older — still relatively young for goalkeepers.Forest will keep 36-year-old Wayne Hennessey as a third option between the posts, while looking to move on Ethan Horvath — another U.S. international. George Shelvey, a 22-year-old who has done well in pre-season but is yet to make his senior debut for the club, will be sent out on loan to gain experience. Presuming the deal to bring Henderson back from Old Trafford gets completed as well — which is likely to be another loan with either an obligation or an option to make the move permanent — Forest will have two high-quality players fighting it out to be first-choice in Legendary Forest manager Brian Clough understood the value of having a good goalkeeper — as he demonstrated when he paid a then significant £270,000 ($344,000) to sign Peter Shilton in 1977 — and that ethos has not been lost at the club 46 years later. PT

What will Turner bring to the Forest team?

One of the biggest question marks for Turner on his arrival at Arsenal a year ago was his ability with the ball at his feet.Turner admitted this was an area of his game that needed to improve if he wanted to take the next step in his career, and at Arsenal he was in an ideal place to do so.Their manager, Mikel Arteta, encouraged Turner to take even more risks than he was used to with the U.S. and his MLS side, New England Revolution, and, judging by his performances over the past 12 months, it’s clear that has paid dividends.While it would be wrong to suddenly classify him as an expert passer, he has undoubtedly improved and grown in confidence — especially in regards to his decision-making — and in a short amount of time added a more expansive skill set to his game.t Forest, it’s unlikely that Turner will be called upon to play out from the back in a similar way regularly, but he is more than capable of doing so if required. It is more likely that he will be required to play long, accurate passes to his wingers and forwards to stretch the opposition and try to catch them on the counter. This is something he is comfortable doing, which is good news for Forest.But his biggest strengths have always been his athleticism and shot-stopping.The test for him will be how he handles the pressure of being on a team most people expect to be in the bottom half of the Premier League, with the threat of relegation again a possibility.It will also be interesting to see how he responds after making his first big mistake. Will he learn from it or not? Dealing mentally with errors is something that every goalkeeper has to do and the ability to bounce back quickly is what defines them.

Judging by his performances, it is unquestionable that Turner improved in his year with Arsenal and he now has a chance to prove he is good enough to be a No 1 in the Premier League. MP

Why do Forest want Henderson too?

Forest did well to land a player of Navas’ quality and experience in the January window once it became clear Henderson was going to be sidelined for a considerable amount of time. It was a truly vital mid-season signing and a key factor in their eventual top-flight survival.

Navas played 17 games, including big wins over Brighton, Southampton and Arsenal.

Henderson suffered an injury in January (Photo: Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)

But the club do not want to have to be scrambling around for such a last-gasp signing again next January if they suffer similar injury misfortune. Rather than having to pull a rabbit out of their hat as they did with Navas, they want to be proactive.

Their desire is to have two quality players fighting it out for the first-team spot — competition for places would help to keep both Turner and Henderson on their toes, regardless of who is in the team. PT

What would the impact of Henderson signing be on the team dynamic?

It has the potential to set up one of the more intriguing goalkeeper battles in this season’s Premier League.

Coming off his injury and being cast aside at United, where £43million Andre Onana has been signed from Inter Milan to replace the departed David de Gea, Henderson will feel like he has a lot to prove, and he won’t be happy sitting on the bench and missing valuable game time with a European Championship squad place with England next summer surely in his sights.

It will be interesting to see how he handles that, should it happen, and also to see how it impacts Turner and the rest of the goalkeeping group. Though it’s quite possible they will support one another, it may potentially challenge the relationships the pair have with each other, and even with the club — much in the same way it did between Henderson and De Gea at United.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://0df193ec41c81f63f2b9375486fd0b59.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Also fascinating is the fact Turner and Henderson are so similar in their ability as goalkeepers. They are both more traditional in terms of their strengths — strong in the air and good shot-stoppers.

Both will be expecting to be the one to play and there are also those national-team implications for each of them. It will be a very delicate and difficult relationship to navigate. The key for Cooper and the rest of his backroom staff will be to handle the situation well.

What will encourage Forest is Henderson’s attitude last season.

Despite being a loan signing, he moved to the area and, more than that, when sidelined with injury, stayed around rather than return to United and even travelled to away games. He remained a familiar face around the training ground too, even once he had undergone surgery and it was clear he would not play again last season. Such a mentality will be vital again now. PT/MP

Forest already have one U.S. international goalkeeper in Horvath… is Turner an upgrade? And how will all this impact the USMNT?

Steffen’s sporadic and limited game time for Manchester City, in addition to his inconsistent form when he did play, left the door open for Turner’s rise to claim his country’s No 1 jersey.

It is perhaps ironic that those roles have now shifted. Steffen made 45 appearances for Middlesbrough last season and was one of their best performers as they made the promotion play-offs. In total, he played 4,050 minutes of club football in 2022-23, while Turner managed just 630 (way down on what he was registering in MLS).

Though Steffen is currently recovering from knee surgery, Turner knows that another year on the bench at the Emirates would risk seeing him lose his place in the national team. That is a big reason why he has left Arsenal and why he hopes to be the No 1 at Forest.

Turner celebrates after the Gold Cup shootout victory over Canada last month (Photo: Jeff Dean/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Another goalkeeper who had a strong 2022-23 and is in the conversation for the USMNT No 1 jersey is Horvath.

Loaned out to Luton Town, he played a huge part in their promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, registering a total of 4,620 minutes on the pitch, keeping 20 clean sheets in 47 appearances. However, overall Horvath is seen as being a step below Turner — with the latter a much more well-rounded goalkeeper.Should Turner come in and perform at his best, he has the potential to single-handedly win Forest several points this season. MP(Top photo: Matthew Ashton – AMA/Getty Images)

The Premier League Bad Predictions Amnesty 2023-24
Indy 11 Coach Mark Lowry

The Premier League Bad Predictions Amnesty 2023-24

Carl AnkaAug 11, 2023 43

The Premier League is back tonight, promising thrills, spills and all manner of footballing chaos.
Our team of writers at The Athletic have gone to great effort to make some sensible predictions and season previews for 2023-24. But for those who want their football forecasts to talk about xVibes more than xGOT, this week has brought a return of our Bad Prediction Amnesty.

This is how it works: before a ball is kicked for a new season, you tell us your biggest, most instinctive prediction to do with it.

Hello friends, the Premier League returns this week.
So it’s time for the Bad Predictions Amnesty.
watched a pre-season fixture but think a team’s new striker will score a hatful? Put it in the amnesty.
Taken a look at Kenilworth Road and reckon there’ll be some Luton-flavoured disruption? Vent to the amnesty.Reckon a manager looks a little more flustered than usual and is headed for the sack? That’s a hot take for the amnesty.We’re looking for opinions that only the overconfident part of the football brain can create. Like when a player stands over a penalty and you “just get the feeling” the angle of their run-up is wrong, so they are obviously going to miss.

You can redo your prediction at the end of the January transfer window, and change your gut feeling if your gut is feeling twitchy.Then, when it’s all over, we all look back at our predictions, have a laugh and realise how attuned our football senses are to the sport we love so much.
We’ve received thousands of responses and predictions via social media. Remember: the idea of our amnesty is not to be proven correct. It’s to purge yourself of that nagging footballing thought you have rattling in your head before the season starts and to have a good laugh with fellow-minded fans too.

Here’s how the upcoming season will unfold, according to our Bad Takes.


Rule changes are going to cause havoc

With all the extra stoppage time, a team will score TEN goals in a game this season.— Dan Bardell (@danbardell) August 7, 2023

The 2023-24 season comes with an array of new officiating rules that will be sure to bring about fresh tactics and approaches to a matchday. The EFL got started last weekend and saw games with 10 minutes-plus of added time, in both halves, along with yellow cards for time-wasting, kicking the ball away and any hint of dissent.Couple that with another “let it flow” edict for referees, and we will have matches where players have to play for longer than ever before while having fewer stoppages for robust challenges. As such, our amnesty was full of predictions that this season will lead to outright chaos.Multiple double bookings and late dismissals in games. Numerous added-time muscle injuries. Plenty of last-gasp winners, many of which will come from the penalty spot.A new requirement — asking for all but one member of a team’s coaching staff to remain seated and away from the touchline — has been dubbed the “Jason Tindall Rule” by some fans, who believe the Newcastle United assistant to be most at risk of extra bookings.

Record number of red cards in injury time. And, linked, record number of games decided by an injury time penalty.— David Whitley (@mrdavidwhitley) August 7, 2023

The sensible prediction is to believe the relevant decision-makers will realise the flow of games has become increasingly untenable before quietly doing away with the new rule’s harsher sanctions.The predictions shared in this amnesty suggest we’re set for a record amount of late goals and sendings-off this season, as managers forget they are now allowed to use up to five substitutions across a game. 

The 20-assists record is finally broken

Trent Alexander-Arnold breaks the assist record— Brad (@DymondFormation) August 8, 2023

It happens every three or four seasons. A player will start a league campaign in good passing form and earn several assists in a short space of time, creating a conversation about this being the season where someone will finally dethrone Thierry Henry.His 20 assists for Arsenal in 2002-03 is one of the stranger curios in Premier League history. For one, Henry also managed to score 24 league goals that year. For another, Arsenal didn’t win the league, finishing second — five points behind Manchester United

His assists record has been equalled, by Kevin De Bruyne in 2019-20, but not beaten. Paul Pogba got off to a flyer in 2021-22, with seven in his first four games, but added only two more the rest of the way. Cesc Fabregas (18) and Mesut Ozil (19) came close in 2014-15 and 2015-16 respectively.

To break the record, someone will likely have to play every available minute throughout the season, take some set pieces and have an array of attacking options ahead of him. 

Rest assured, if the record is broken in 2023-24, The Athletic will have a meaty feature for you all to read, including a deep-dive on how Henry earned 20 assists in a season where Arsenal didn’t end up as champions. 

But for now, we wish good luck to any pretenders to the assist-king throne. Currently, Trent Alexander-Arnold is the amnesty’s leading candidate.

This leads us to…

Darwin Nunez is set for a terrific second season

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-4&features=efQ%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1688539379143249920&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Ftheathletic.com%2F4757916%2F2023%2F08%2F11%2Fpremier-league-season-predictions-amnesty%2F&sessionId=7aed67e192fa333bf1a9dce490d8522b9689f994&siteScreenName=TheAthletic&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

It’s time for DarwinSzn 🫡— Hari Sethi (@Hari_Sethi) August 7, 2023

There aren’t many fans who believe Erling Haaland will be beaten for this season’s Golden Boot, but plenty think Darwin Nunez is going to make a good fist of it. The Uruguayan had a topsy-turvy debut season with Liverpool, scoring nine Premier League goals in 29 appearances but looking a little awkward doing so. Nunez is physically dominant in a way few strikers are, but last season he was inconsistent in his application and prone to the occasional baffling on-field decision.

It’s hoped the 24-year-old has ironed out some of the stranger quirks for the coming season. Now taking English lessons and with a greater appreciation for Jurgen Klopp’s style of football, Nunez could be a crucial part of a healthier and revamped Liverpool.

Newcastle are going to have a turbulent season…

What would represent a good 2023-24 season for Newcastle? The sensible, considered answer can be found here, but there is an acknowledgement that they find themselves in a tricky situation. Newcastle would ideally like to consolidate themselves within the Champions League places, but they are doing so at a time when the ‘Big Six’ have all looked to strengthen.

Three senior signings have arrived at St James’ Park this summer too, but there are questions (from those less familiar with the club) as to whether any of Sandro TonaliHarvey Barnes and Tino Livramento truly move the needle.

It happens to plenty of clubs who try to make the leap from having a good team to having a good squad. 

Many are predicting an unfortunate stumble, and possibly a managerial change to boot. 

…but Luton will be fun

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenNa

Luton’s home ground to become a fortress and they stay up with ease!!— Ramzy (@Ramzy_Sports) August 7, 2023

If you’re reading this, you’ve definitely seen what the away fans’ entrance to Kenilworth Road looks like.

ADVERTISEMENT

You’ve probably

Luton end with a better away record than their home record— Jamie (@JamieCutteridge) August 7, 2023

The Premier League new boys play direct, physical football with two strikers, plenty of hard running and an aggressive front press.

The optimistic reading is Luton will steer themselves to safety using a style of football that would make Sean Dyche’s Burnley blush. The pessimistic reading is they will find the top flight a step beyond them, suffering a Premier League relegation on a par with the ignominy of Derby County’s 11-point 2007-08 horror show.

Whatever happens, Kenilworth Road will be the backdrop for many a memorable moment over the next nine months. 

And so many, many more…

This is but a sampling of the many predictions you have given us.

A number of you believe Kai Havertz is about to have a goalscoring purple patch having swapped Chelsea for Arsenal. Plenty predict Richarlison to take over from Bavaria-bound Harry Kane and make a good fist of being the central striker at Spurs. 

Graham Potter to return to club management this season. Michael Carrick will be a top-flight boss before the campaign is over. Morgan Gibbs-White to be so impressive for Nottingham Forest he receives a senior England call-up.  

No one is quite sure which European competition Chelsea, Brighton or Aston Villa will find themselves in for 2024-25, but nearly everyone thinks Bournemouth will prove a top-half surprise package.

All your predictions will be stored to look at again, with more knowledgeable eyes, in a few months’ time.

(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

Christian_pulisic_-_asn_top_-_milan_preseason_2023-24
Season preview

ASN’s 2023/24 European season preview: a detailed look at each American player in Europe

ASN’s Brian Sciaretta gives a detalied look at each of the American players throughout Europe as the 2023/24 season prepares to get underway. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED AUGUST 09, 2023 11:50 AM

  • SHARE THIS STORY

A NEW SEASON IS upon is in Europe. Some leagues have already begun, and some leagues are nearing their kickoff. This past offseason has seen a lot of changes and there are still several American players who can or should be moving before the transfer window closes. But most of the stage is set for the coming season.

Most leagues feature a number of American players, and each has their own set of possible goals in the months ahead. Here is a discussion of each of the players in each league and what are the realistic goals in the coming season.

THE PREMIER LEAGUE

There has been a lot of movement regarding Americans in England this year at several levels. The Leeds relegation and Christian Pulisic’s exodus has changed the landscape. But there is still a significant presence.

First, there is the duo at Fulham which overperformed last year immediately after promotion.

Tim Ream was perhaps the best American player in any league in 2022/23. It ended early with a broken arm and that limited his preseason. But Ream will soon be 36 and the obvious question is how much longer can he stay at one of the highest levels in the game? He is only signed at Fulham through this season. For now, he is still a big player, and he has a spot on the national team. We will learn a lot about Ream this year. Is he still a national team player for the Copa America? Does he want to stay in Europe beyond this season? Father Time wins all battles, but Ream is aging like fine wine.

Antonee Robinson also had a very good season for Fulham in 2022/23 where he made big strides in his game and finally showed himself to be a player who belongs in the Premier League and is a lock starter on the national team. He doesn’t need to do anything more than keep it up, build off last season, and prove he can keep doing this season after season.

Chris Richards showed a high ceiling at times last season for Crystal Palace. But he’s now 23 and he needs to play regularly. We know his talent, but minutes have been too elusive for him due to a steady flow of injuries. In 2022/23, he played just 442 minutes and was injured for the World Cup. The most first-team minutes he has played in a season has been 1300. What he needs is to simply stay healthy and play regularly. He is likely to continue to play with the national team if he is healthy, but he needs minutes to be at his best heading into the Copa America.

Auston Trusty took a very positive first step in England last year. The move from Colorado to Arsenal didn’t really impress given the common ownership. But Trusty then went on loan to Birmingham City, played 4000 minutes and was the team’s player of the season. He used that to earn a legitimate transfer from Arsenal to newly promoted Sheffield United. Sheffield United needs defenders and Trusty can help them in their three-man backline. It should be expected that he plays real minutes, and it will be a huge challenge for Sheffield United to stay up. If they do, Trusty will likely have played very well. If Sheffield United are relegated, Trusty will be very prepared to help them in the Championship. But there is no question that this move will help raise his profile and allow him to compete for a spot on the national team.

Matt Turner is still yet to make his Premier League debut after spending all 2022/23 as the backup at Arsenal. Now he is set to be the first-choice goalkeeper at Nottingham Forest after securing a full transfer. Forest will likely be in a relegation battle and Turner’s play could help be a factor whether they remain in the Premier League. This is also great news for the national team who finally have stability for their top keeper.

There are also other issues for Americans in the Premier League. Folarin Balogun probably won’t be with Arsenal beyond this window. Arsenal wants to sell him, and his value won’t be any higher in January. It’s just a game of chicken for how long they can hold out and what their price is.

The good news for Matt Turner at Forest also means that Ethan Horvath shifts to the backup option. But he is good enough for the Championship at least. But will any teams there (or perhaps on the continent) make a push for him? Sticking with Forest, Alex Mighten is still there but he needs a loan or a transfer to play. His loan to Sheffield Wednesday was a disaster last season as it was canceled at the end of the January window and he was forced to play with Forest’s reserve team.

Luca Koleosho declined a spot on the U.S. U-20 team to play for Italy’s U-19 team, but in theory he could still switch back to the USA. But Koleosho, a winger, has impressed at Burnley and could be in line for a breakout season.

Finally, Gaga Slonina played for Chelsea’s U-23 team and isn’t ready for the first team yet. But there could be loan options for him this season at some point.

SERIE A

No other top European league has seen a huge bolster of American talent than Serie A. In a league where it used to be rare to see American players based, there are four top U.S. national team players there at two of the most historically powerful Italian teams.

Christian Pulisic is the biggest name in American soccer, and he is now at AC Milan after a rollercoaster tenure at Chelsea where he won the Champions League and also struggled with injuries and for a steady starting job after an endless flow of managerial changes. Expectations should be high for Pulisic. He is back in the Champions League, he is rated by Stefano Pioli who has more security than anyone at Chelsea, and Pulisic should also be playing with a chip on his shoulder. Pulisic has now reached a point where he is in his prime. He’s not seen as a player for the future. Milan wants him for what he is now. The only thing stopping Pulisic now are injuries. He needs to avoid those and be ready for a 2000+ minute season.

Yunus Musah will join Pulisic at Milan but there are far more questions surrounding Musah than Pulisic. For Musah, it’s about the final product. We see how he can effortlessly dribble through the midfield and he’s become a lock starter for the national team. But the question is creating and scoring goals. Last season, he failed to score and had just two assists for Valencia. He can and must be better at Milan and the leash will not be nearly as long under Pioli. Milan clearly believes Musah will become a more complete package, but it’s by no means a sure thing. That’s the most important thing for Musah over the course of the season – to show more creation and actual quantifiable goal production for Milan.

 Weston McKennie is perhaps the most surprising American player of 2023. His move to Leeds was a surprise. His struggles there to help the team avoid relegation were a surprise. His failure to trigger his option to buy on his loan to Leeds was a surprise. His remaining with Juventus after his loan was a surprise. Finally, his very impressive preseason for Juventus was perhaps the biggest surprise. He is back in top form at Juventus, but can he keep it up and can he help Juventus remain a solid top four team in Italy. We know McKennie can perform well at the highest of levels, but can he be reliable to perform this way for an entire season under the pressure of one of world’s most storied clubs? He’s done it as a member of the supporting cast at Schalke and Juve. But the next step is to be in the main cast.

Tim Weah is now also at Juventus and for the first time in his career, he seems set to begin a season in a set role. At PSG, Celtic, and Lille he floated from winger, to center forward, to right back, and to wingback. But now at Juventus, he seems set to play this wingback role. Weah, 22, looks comfortable and happy in this role. Perhaps this consistency of a position will allow him to go from a promising player to a dependably good player. Assuming he can stay healthy (and he is still yet to play a 2000 minute season at the first team level) there is no reason to feel anything but optimistic about this move.

Aside from these players, there still could be some interesting movement for Americans in Serie A. First, Folarin Balogun has been linked with Inter Milan and Arsenal has reportedly rejected offers for the U.S. national team forward. If Inter Milan eventually come to terms, that would put yet another American presence at the top end of the league – which would be a staggering development. If Inter Milan end up spending an enormous sum on Balogun, he will play.

Finally, keep an eye on Tanner Tessmann who impressed last season in Serie B with Venezia. There is reported interest from within Serie A for an August transfer.

THE BUNDESLIGA

Among the top European leagues, the Bundesliga is typically the home to the most American players given that it has fewer restrictions on foreign, non-EU players. This continues to be the case as at least nine players should be regularly in the matchday squads. There are also youth players knocking at the door at several clubs.

Gio Reyna is the biggest American name in the league but he’s also the biggest mystery. He puts up very productive numbers based on minutes played, but last season he rarely started. He also still struggles with injuries, and he hasn’t been able to participate with Dortmund’s preseason. He’s played less than 1100 minutes the last two seasons combined. There is no question about his talent. But will this be the season he can put it all together in all three areas: 1) staying healthy, 2) earning a starting spot, 3) continuing to produce. Dortmund will want to sell Reyna at some point, but he’s only going fetch a real sum if he can do all three. For Reyna, success could be determined as to when he will be at 100%.

Brenden Aaronson didn’t put up the numbers he wanted last year at Leeds United but now he will head to the Bundesliga with a Union Berlin team that is in the Champions League. The expectation and goals should be that he improves at Union Berlin where he is playing in a less physical league and is surrounded by better teammates compared with the level of the league. This is probably the move he should have made after Salzburg. Confidence will be key.

Jordan Pefok will also be at Union Berlin, but the open question is his confidence level as the season opens. He began 2022/23 in terrific form but then struggled shortly afterward. After September 17, he only scored one goal and he lost his spot in the starting XI. Was this a matter of confidence, or was it Bundesliga defenders figuring him out and taking away his strengths? There should be concern given how he has struggled in top leagues before. He was once a promising player in Ligue 1 but then faded before finding success in Ligue 2 and in Switzerland. We will learn a lot about Pefok this season as to whether he is simply someone who thrives at lower levels? Regarding the national team, the arrival of Balogun and the improvement of Ricardo Pepi has moved him down the ladder (and he was already behind Josh Sargent and Haji Wright). He also faces new competition from players like Brandon Vazquez. On many levels, he needs to have a big year.

Paxten Aaronson was denied a release by Eintracht Frankfurt to play in the U-20 World Cup because it seems like the club has a clear path for him. He showed some promise in the preseason and there should be hopes that he gets regular playing time. A 2000-minute season seems unlikely, but if he can impress off the bench early in the season, it should open doors for potential starts. Eintracht are clearly happy with the younger Aaronson and have a patient approach. He should get opportunities early in the season. Internationally, Aaronson could benefit tremendously from the Olympic team if Eintracht are willing to release him.

Timothy Chandler is now 33 and is clearly playing out the string of what could be the final years of his career. He’s a bench option for Eintracht these days and he hardly plays. Last season, he was only on the field for 81 minutes. It’s hard to see his situation improving much.

Kevin Paredes picked up an injury in preseason with Wolfsburg and won’t return until a few weeks into the season. The U.S. U-20 winger looked sharp last season, but it was almost entirely as a sub. He made a respectable 22 appearances but only started once (where he didn’t play well). The key for him once he returns to health is to show he can be an effective starter, even if it is just occasionally. He needs to far surpass the 512 minutes he earned in 2022/23. Internationally, he is another player who could benefit tremendously from the Olympic level to bridge the gap from the USYNT to the USMNT.

Joe Scally faded out of the starting lineup towards the end of 2022/23 when only played two minutes for Borussia Monchengladbach in the final five games of the season. Heading into the 2023/24 preseason, it appeared as if Scally would face competition for the starting right back job. But that changed dramatically in July when it was announced that Stefan Lainer had cancer and would miss several months. It was also revealed that Monchengladbach would not seek another right back. Scally, 21, has the starting job at M’Gladbach as a result. It’s not the way anyone would want to beat out competition, but Scally needs to take advantage of the opportunity to ensure he is the right back M’Gladbach want.

Lennard Maloney and 1.FC Heidenheim were the unlikely winners of the 2.Bundesliga last season and many in Germany are predicting the club won’t survive in the Bundesliga. That’s probably a fair assessment. But Maloney has a nice opportunity to test himself in Germany’s top tier where he will likely continue as a defensive midfielder (after converting from central defense last season). He desperately wants to play for the U.S. national team and playing well in the Bundesliga could give him the opportunity he craves.

John Brooks arrived at Hoffenheim midway through last season after a failed move to Benfica. In his return to Germany, he helped Hoffenheim climb out of the relegation zone and comfortably into midtable. Now 30, Brooks is a very experienced central defender who has a great understanding of the Bundesliga. He should be an anchor in the team’s backline once again after he was the team’s player of the month to end 2022/23. Will it get him back in the picture with the U.S. national team? Gregg Berhalter preferred other players last year and he will likely continue to explore other options the rest of 2023. But if Brooks is thriving at Hoffenheim heading into the Copa America and other central defenders are struggling, Brooks could be back in the mix.

Pellegrino Matarazzo is the only American manager in the top European leagues to start 2023/24 and it was a tough assignment for him to right the ship at Hoffenheim last year when he took the job in January. But eventually he did and Hoffenheim climbed out of the relegation zone in the final month of the season. Expectations should be that Matarazzo continues to improve the team back to where it should be – midtable. He’s a very good manager and is certainly continuing to make a big name for himself in Germany.

Elsewhere in Germany there are other players who are at the youth levels looking to break through. Quincy Butler has been making the bench this preseason at Hoffenheim after previously playing on the team’s bench. Damion Downs made the bench a few times for FC Koln last season and featured this preseason for the first team. He should be back with the second team to start the season but could get a look later in the season. Like Downs, Malik Sonogo is knocking at the door with the first team at Union Berlin while also playing with U.S. youth teams.

Malik Tillman has been training with Bayern Munich this preseason after a very productive loan last season with Rangers. He looks set for a loan to PSV this season.

Also, Borussia Monchengladbach has been looking at FC Cincinnati’s Brandon Vazquez for most of 2023. Cincy doesn’t seem willing to let Vazquez go before the end of the 2023 season, but would M’Gladbach look to acquire him in January (possible buying him in August and then loaning him back through 2023)? We will see.

LA LIGA/LIGUE 1

With several American players featuring in the top leagues of Spain and France, only one U.S. international is in the mix between the two leagues to start 2023/24.

Luca de la Torre had an up and down season with Celta Vigo in 2022/23. He eventually cracked the team’s starting XI where he had some good games and some subpar games. He only managed a couple of assists (with no goals) and had some good games and some bad games. Celta Vigo flirted with relegation but managed to escape at the end. The goal for de la Torre should be to remain as a starter despite upgrades at the club. If he does that, he must help guide the team to a safer season in 2023/24 where there is never any doubt about relegation. With the national team, he remains a solid backup option but there will be emerging competition among the younger group of players who are mostly U-23 players now. He should be feeling some pressure for both club and country in 2023/24 and it is up to him to prove he is still the better option.

THE EREDIVISIE

The Eredivisie will have its biggest presence of Americans in many years as a number of players have found their way into the league.

Ricardo Pepi remains in the top Dutch flight, but things are much different. He has gone from a relegation team to perennial powers PSV Eindhoven. He could also get the chance to play in the Champions League. While it won’t be as easy for him to see the field due to competition, he should be able to see the field on a regular basis, at worst as a sub. Expectations should be high for Pepi as he has already shown he can score in the Eredivisie – but now he should only see his play elevated by better teammates. It’s an appropriate step up and while Pepi might not play enough to reach double digits like he did last year, he should be effective.

Djordje Mihaiolvoic will finally get his first full season in the Eredivisie after joining AZ Alkmaar last December. When he joined AZ, it was tough for Mihailovic, 23, as he was trying to break into a team that in the middle of an overachieving season. His playing time was limited and most of his appearances came as a late substitute. Now with a full preseason with players starting off on an equal footing, more should be expected. Success for Mihailovic is starting most of his appearances and finding a way to create chances for a team that should finish in the top five.

Agustin Anello is an Olympic eligible winger who desperately wants to play for the United States for the first time at any age level. The Miami area native went on loan from Lommel (2nd tier Belgium) to Hajduk Split where he was a regular substitute. Hajduk declined its option to buy Anello, but Anello quickly secured an impressive move to Sparta Rotterdam. Anello played regularly in the preseason but we will see if Sparta sees him as a starter. That is unclear but he will get opportunities. From there, it is up to him. If he takes advantage, he could get a starting job and opportunities with the U.S. U-23 team.

Taylor Booth impressed last season and earned a spot on the U.S. national team by March. After a rocky first few weeks with Utrecht, Booth was the league’s player of the month for November. Eventually he cooled off a little, but he needs to stay at the level of being one of Utrecht’s better offensive players. He also needs to show he can handle the physicality of the league better for him to eventually force a sale and take a bigger role with the national team (and he’s also Olympic eligible as well). Booth has the ability to improve, and this season will also help set his ceiling.

Anthony Fontana singed a new contract with newly promoted PEC Zwolle after he performed well on a short term contract for the last two months of 2022/23. The former Philadelphia Union homegrown hardly played in Serie B with Ascoli but he moved to Zwolle shortly after his contract was terminated. He’s likely a bench option for Zwolle to start the season, but success would be impressing and moving into the starting lineup and helping Zwolle avoid relegation back to the Eerste Divisie.

Elsewhere in the Eredivisie, Malik Tillman is linked with a loan to PSV from Bayern Munich. Such a move would likely include an option to buy. That would be a nice step up for Tillman after his successful time from Rangers.

Also at PSV, Richard Ledezma is still with NYCFC on loan and could rejoin PSV later in the season. His loan to NYCFC has been successful in getting him playing time, but he has not dominated in the way it would take to indicate he is ready to play regularly for PSV. It might take another loan.

Defender Kik Pierre is with Excelcior and while he could only play for the USA if he filed a one-time switch. That seems highly likely as his Dutch dreams seem distant. But he’s also not good enough yet for the USA. To get there, he needs to stay healthy and play well. But staying healthy has always been tough for Pierre and he is already injured to start this season.

THE BELGIAN FIRST DIVISION

The first division in Belgium will once again be busy with up to five Americans set to be regular contributors on matchday squads.

Mark McKenzie is the most prominent American in the first division. The central defender has locked down a starting job with Genk and has occasionally worn the armband. The start to the season hasn’t gone well as Genk has been bounced from the Champions League. But there should be a high bar for success this year for McKenzie. He should be one of the best central defenders in the First Division and help Genk into being a top two or three team. If that happens, McKenzie should be in a great position to be sold in 2024 and continued looks with the U.S. national team.

Bryan Reynolds will return to Westerlo after he had a very good season there on loan from Roma. He impressed so much that Westerlo purchased Reynolds directly from the Italian club. He has a high ceiling as a right back but needs quality coaching to get to that level. But he’s in a great spot to play every single game with a team and develop. Internationally, Reynolds seems likely to be the Olympic team’s right back.

Griffin Yow while he is injured to start the season, Yow is a very good pick to be a surprise this year among Americans abroad. Yow was actually Westerlo’s best player in the preseason and looks as if his game has come a long way from his DC United days behind the scenes. The winger from Virginia is another Olympic option and while making that team will be tough for Yow, it’s not an unrealistic goal either.

Sam Vines is a huge question mark heading into this season with a Royal Antwerp team who won the First Division. Vines made the move to Antwerp in 2021 but has dealt with serious injuries. First a broken collarbone shortly after he got there. Then last November, his World Cup hopes were eliminated when he broke is tibia in training. While he was a regular starter before his tibia injury, he never played again the rest of the season. In preseason and the start of the season, he’s been a sub. But success for him would be reclaiming his starting spot. But 100% recoveries from a broken tibia are tough to predict.

Marlon Fossey was one of the breakout Americans in 2022/23. After his youth career stalled out at Fulham (and with U.S. youth national teams) due to repeated injuries, Fossey finally turned his career around last year when he joined Standard Liege on a free transfer. He emerged as a regular starter as Standard’s right wingback. His athleticism in covering the right side was impressive and, even more impressively, he stayed healthy the entire season. One more healthy season could make him a nice asset for Standard to sell. Internationally, the right back position is crowded for Fossey but he could force a look if he builds off last season.

Finally in Belgium, it’s been a sad story with Owen Otasowie who isn’t being paid by Club Belgium and the club seemingly never know his whereabouts. It wouldn’t be surprising if we’ve seen the last of him as a professional player.

SCOTTISH PREMIERSHIP

There isn’t as big of an American presence in Scotland this season after Malik Tillman and James Sands left Rangers, Ian Harkes left Dundee United, and Matthew Hoppe’s loan from Middlesbrough to Hibernian unsuccessfully ended. But there are still important payers.

Cameron Carter-Vickers is regular starter for Celtic and is an important player to the team’s backline. He had knee surgery offseason but started the team’s first game of the season, a 4-2 win over Ross County. Clearly, Carter-Vickers needs to dominate Scotland again since he was on the Premiership’s Team of the Season for 2022/23. Anything less would be disappointing. His games in European play and in Old Firm games are critical because they are the few times he will be tested with Celtic. He was on the World Cup team and will have competition if Richards gets healthy and McKenzie plays well with Genk. But he’s in a good position too with Berhalter coming back.

Dante Polvara returned to Aberdeen from a successful loan stateside with the Charleston Battery. The new coaching staff at Aberdeen likes him so he has clear goals which would mark success: 1) starting regularly and 2) making an impact for an Aberdeen team which could finish as high as third place.

Joe Efford is healthy after being sidelines for most of the 2022/23. The winger needs to break back into Motherwell’s starting XI, but he didn’t have a great preseason so he has work to do.

Scott Pittman is the all-time appearance leader for Livingston and is a club legend. But now over 30, his starting job isn’t as secure. Getting back into the starting XI and helping the team to a top-half finish would be success.

THE 2.BUNDESLIGA 

There isn’t as much of an American presence in the 2.Bundesliga with Lennard Maloney getting promoted and Ryan Malone leaving for Ingolstadt in the 3.Liga along with American manager Joe Enochs getting relegated with Jahn Regensburg. But some big names remain.

Julian Green returns to Greuther Furth after a disappointing season. Two years ago, Green was key to Furth’s promotion. Then in the Bundesliga, he rarely played as they were relegated. Last season, he was lackluster as Furth limped to a midtable finish. But he had a nice preseason and a solid start to the season. We don’t yet know what Green will show up this season, but the early signs are that he could be at the level where he was three seasons ago in a successful season – which would be a big improvement.

Maxamillian Dietz looks to be a starter for Greuther Furth after years in the reserves. Last season, he made a few first team substitute appearances, but he started the club’s preseason games and the first two games of 2023/24. He plays the right side of a three-man backline. At 21 years old, he is eligible for the U.S. Olympic team so his goals should be starting for Furth, helping the team in a promotional race, and getting into the U.S. U-23 team (which needs defensive depth).

Terrence Boyd successfully restarted his career starting last season at the age of 32 when he was one of the best center forwards in the 2.Bundesliga with Kaiserslautern. His national team days are over, but it should be a nice goal for him to help in the Kaiserslautern revival as an offensive threat. He’s one of the better “feel good” stories with his charismatic personality. He could still hit double digits again.

Fabian Hurzeler was a remarkable story getting St. Pauli’s managerial job a month before his 30th birthday. When he took the job, St. Pauli was almost in the relegation zone. By the end of the year, St. Pauli was a contender for promotion. Hurzeler’s goal this year should be to have St. Pauli in contention for promotion. After last year, that is realistic.

THE CHAMPIONSHIP

There is a lot up in the air regarding Americans in the Championship. Will Zack Steffen and Ethan Horvath return with different teams after good seasons? Will Tyler Adams move on from Leeds despite being injured since March? Meanwhile, Matthew Hoppe moved away on loan while Jonathan Tomkinson could also still move away.

Josh Sargent has a lot on the line as he is now the top forward at Norwich since Teemu Pukki was sold to Minnesota. Sargent is a good forward and he can and should hit double digits again. But can he go from being a good forward to a forward who can lead a team in a promotional race? That is a high bar but that is a bar that Norwich set for him. He has a ton of responsibility and handling that well would impress Gregg Berhalter.

Also with Norwich City, former U.S. national team forward David Wagner is the team’s manager and the pressure will be on him to get the team into the playoffs, at least. Meanwhile, U.S. U-23 hopeful Jonathan Tomkinson had a mediocre loan to Stevenage in League Two last year and the defender from Texas might need another loan.

Daryl Dike has had a tough time since joining West Bromwich in 2022. He simply can’t stay healthy and is not supposed to be healthy until later in the year with an Achilles’ injury. It’s very disappointing news given how likable and charismatic Dike is. The goal for Dike is simply to get back on the field and stay healthy. Could he do better? Of course. But seeing him healthy for an extended period would be a great start.

Haji Wright is now with Coventry – who paid a club record for the American forward after he broke out in the Turkish Super Lig with Antalyaspor with 31 goals in all competitions over two seasons. But when a club pays that high of a price, it expects something in return. Namely, Wright will need to be a forward who can reliably produce goals for a team that expects to be in a promotional race. Last season, Coventry narrowly missed out on promotion in a shootout loss to Luton Town in the playoff final. After Coventry sold star forward Viktor Gyokeres to Sporting CP in the offseason, Haji Wright will be expected to fill that void and deliver. The pressure on Wright is enormous and the bar has been set high.

Duane Holmes made the move away from his hometown club, Huddersfield, and is now with Preston North End. At 28 years old, he needs to be consistent and steady for a club which finished 12th in 2022/23 but who has ambitions to push for the playoffs. A tenacious midfielder at his best, he has far more opportunity at Preston North End than with a limited Huddersfield team.

Lynden Gooch and Sunderland pushed for back to back promotions in 2022/23 but fell short in the playoffs. Gooch has had spells in and out of Sunderland’s starting XI. Now playing right back, he has grown nicely into the position. The goal for him is to start most of Sunderland’s games and help it continue to be in the playoff mix.

Vaughn Covil started at the beginning of last season for Hull City before suffering a torn ACL which not only ended his season, but it eliminated him from any possibility of playing with the U.S. U-20 team last cycle. He’s back now and the goal is for him to simply get back on track to where he was before the injury. It might take a loan away from Hull City.

Jaheim Headley played a lot of minutes last year for Huddersfield and he had some impressive moments. The 21-year-old left back has told people, however, that his goal is to play for Jamaica.

YANKS IN OTHER LEAGUES

Rokas Pukstas is one of the top American teenagers now and he is now a lock starter for Hajduk Split. He started off 2023/24 in terrific fashion with two game winning goals in the first two HNL games. He ended last season winning the Croatian Cup (where he drew a penalty). But unfortunately, he suffered a knee injury and will miss the next two months. It’s a setback given the strides he had been making. But his goal should be to continue to emerge as an important player for Hadjuk Split, win games/trophies, and eventually force a sale. Internationally, he seems like a strong candidate for the U.S. Olympic team next summer.

Erik Palmer-Brown earned a move from Troyes in France after their relegation to Panathinaikos FC, who finished second in Greece and are still alive in Champions League qualifying. For Palmer-Brown, 26, he now gets to join a team that is surrounded by better talent – as opposed to midtable or relegation level talent. It’s a great move for him mentally to be able to win. He should aim for a spot in the starting lineup (which he always seems to do, no matter where he plays) and he should also aim to be one of the better centerbacks in Greece. Internationally, he seems to be behind several other players on the national team but perhaps winning will help him (like it did for Carter-Vickers). He also wouldn’t be a bad overage selection for the U.S. Olympic team.

Alex Mendez has had an up and down time the past two seasons with Vizela in Portugal. He’s been in and out of the starting XI while occasionally having some big games. He’s still only 22 years old and time is on his side but the goals this season should be a 2000-minute season (he was around 1400 in his first two Vizela seasons) while also being productive to help Vizela push into the top half of the season.

Alejandro Alvarado had a disappointing season with Vizela in 2022/23 where his first team minutes completely evaporated, and it cost him a spot on the U.S. U-20 World Cup team. His career doesn’t seem to be in a great place and he simply needs to do whatever he can to play regularly.

Benji Michel was a good sub option for Arouca after joining the Portuguese club in January. Arouca finished firth last season to earn a spot in the qualifying rounds of the Conference League (where they will face Norway’s Brann). Michel, 25, only started once for Arouca and earning more starts should be his priority.

Justin Che moved from FC Dallas to Brondby in Denmark after Hoffenheim declined to purchase him following the end of an 18-month loan in May. In between, he played at the U-20 World Cup for the U.S. team. Two things for Che, he needs to gradually develop as a player and start to get regular playing time. He also needs to figure out a primary position after floating between right back and central defense the past two years.

Christian Cappis is also at Brondby and his minutes have been uneven (1049 minutes in 2021/22 and 982 minutes in 2022/23). There have been reports he might be exploring a move back the USA, which would be fine if this is where he can play. He probably will leave Brondby if he remains only an occasional starter.

Sebastian Soto moved last year to Austria Klagenfurt to jumpstart his stagnating career. He saw limited minutes and scored one goal. He is now hurt with a back injury to start 2023/24. Whenever he returns, he will need to crush it. At 23, it’s getting late early for Soto and the hype from his U-20 days is now over. He is still yet to show anything professionally.

George Bello also has struggled in recent years. He began to fade in Atlanta and then that continued when he moved to Arminia Bielefeld as that club suffered back-to-back relegations. Bello’s minutes evaporated by the end. Now he’s at LASK in the Austrian Bundesliga, and that would be fine expect that the club also recently signed long-time left back Rene Renner to a long time deal. Renner regularly plays nearly every minute for the club, so Bello joined a team where he is clearly the backup. If he gets any meaningful opportunity, he must take advantage of it. Otherwise, Bello is not going to play much.

Emmanuel Sabbi has been an effective winger for OB Odense with most of his goals coming against the bottom half of the Danish Super Liga. The strong winger has probably found his level at age 25 but OB’s sporting director has recently said Antalyaspor in Turker has been interested.

EDIT: there are now reports out of France that Sabbi will be on the move to Le Havre who were just promoted to France’s Ligue 1. That is a big step up for Sabbi and a rare chance for him to break into a top league. 

YANKS STILL ON THE MARKET

As we near mid-August, there are still several American players who could be on the move. These will be big stories for the remainder of the window.

Folarin Balogun increased his stock with a tremendous season in 2022/23 with Reims on loan from Arsenal. Inter Milan want him, and he could succeeded there and in many other places. It just comes down to Arsenal setting a realistic price.

Tyler Adams is still with Leeds United and there is interest from Premier League teams who would pay the release fee for Adams because they see him as a starter. Still, it becomes tough to move an injured player and Adams hasn’t played since an injury in March.

Sergino Dest had a terrible loan in 2022/23 to AC Milan and he is back with a Barcelona team that doesn’t want him. He will land on his feet with a good but not great club. To get back into the highest levels of the game, he needs improve in certain areas while having a coach who appreciates his style of playing. Among top managers, Dest isn’t for everyone.

Tanner Tessmann impressed last season with Venezia as a big and athletic midfielder who is also skilled. It would be a surprise if he remains with Venezia for the duration of this season. A move this summer still seems very realistic.

Gianluca Busio was also with Venezia but his minutes were erratic. He’s expensive for Venezia and the club would likely want to move him. But who will come in with a high enough offer for Venezia. A move back to MLS could work, but which teams will pay a few million for him? That doesn’t seem realistic.

Malik Tillman raised his stock nicely on loan with Rangers and he also isn’t in Bayern Munich’s plans. The reports of PSV seem like an appropriate step for him take, even if it is on loan.

Ethan Horvath returned to Nottingham Forest after his loan to Luton Town last season ended with his purchase option not being picked up despite a successful promotion. Is he really going to be Turner’s backup? It seems like he has done enough to show he is a keeper who can be a valuable asset to a Championship team looking for promotion.

Zack Steffen is also in limbo after returning to Manchester City after his loan to Middlesbrough resulted in his purchase option not being picked up. He’s a strong candidate to move since he is now No. 3  at City. He needs a good move for his national team career.

Reggie Cannon is a free agent after terminating his contract with Boavista. There have been reports of interest from Koln and Rayo Vallecano, but Cannon needs to be careful that clubs are not simply taking a flyer on him since he is now free. He’s in a tricky spot.

Caden Clark moved to Leipzig from the New York Red Bulls in January but didn’t play for the German team. In fact, Clark is yet to play a game since September 18, 2022 (nearly 11 months ago). He fell out of the U.S. U-20 squad too. There were reports that Twente was interested in him on loan. But he’s in a spot where he desperately needs to play. Almost any option that gets him on the field is a good one.

Konrad De la Fuente has had a miserable 18 months. He’s fallen out of favor at Marseille and he didn’t play on his loan to Olympiacos. Now there are reports that SD Eibar in Spain’s Segunda wants to bring him in on loan. That’s great. De la Fuente needs to play and reverse the downward trend. A big thing to watch with de la Fuente is his professionalism. How hard will he work to improve?

Uly Llanez is another young player in limbo. Still signed to Wolfsburg, he spent the last two seasons on loan to St. Poelten of Austrian’s second tier. He doesn’t want to go back there for a third season but Wolfsburg probably doesn’t have a lot of options for him either. His career has been stuck in the mud for a long time now and it isn’t clear how this will be fixed.

Linehan: This World Cup’s anti-USWNT outrage isn’t just hateful, it’s irrational

Megan Rapinoe of USA and OL Reign before the penalty shootout during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between Winner Group G and Runner Up Group E at Melbourne Rectangular Stadium on August 6, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

By Meg Linehanug 9, 2023


Here we are again.The U.S. women’s national soccer team, can you believe it, has done something to elicit a flood of commentary, criticism and right-wing vitriol. But in a novel twist, this time it was prompted by an on-field result — a World Cup round of 16 loss on penalties to Sweden, the first time in 12 years that the team has stumbled on the world’s biggest stage, with team lightning rod Megan Rapinoe missing her first-ever World Cup penalty kick in the process.

ADVERTISEMENT

Clearly, a lot of people have been waiting for this to happen.

On social media, former President Donald Trump attributed the loss to current President Joe Biden, adding that many of the players were “openly hostile to America,” among more unhinged contempt. Political commentators, almost all right-leaning, have parroted this talking point, with former Fox News and NBC host Megyn Kelly declaring on her SiriusXM radio show that she was “thrilled” the U.S. lost. Players’ public stances on a number of social, cultural and political issues have repeatedly been cited as offenses that constitute “revel(ing) in anti-American vitriol,” as Texas senator and former Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz put it on Twitter. So too are their marketing deals, their hairstyles, the awards some have won…everything down to the clothes they wear and the way they choose to celebrate existing at the peak of their profession.

Somehow, these voices have been given weight despite the fact that it’s likely few if any of them actually watch the USWNT, or women’s soccer, or women’s sports in general on a regular basis. And it’s all in addition to social media’s rotten waterfall of bigotry; hate speech masquerading as commentary, posted by trolls masquerading as serious people.

They’ve all gotten their chance to gloat. So here we are again.

When the U.S. women won the World Cup in 2019, conservative politicians and talking heads had a playbook they followed to the letter. The equal pay fight was at its zenith, kneeling for the national anthem was a hot topic, and Trump was trading barbs with a U.S. team that was at the center of those conversations. In a way, one could understand the uproar that accompanied that moment. The discussions at play were significant and real enough that nothing felt forced.

ADVERTISEMENT

Four years later, no actual discussions are on the table — just wedge issues conservatives are gleefully pushing in the hopes of scoring political points.

Consider the fact that so many of the people heaping invective on this U.S. team are doing so while trumpeting the need to “protect women’s sports” –  something that has never been about reducing harm for athletes or calling for increased investment and resources, but has always been about a deeply hypocritical politicization of women’s sports, about erasing trans people from public life and denying them the joy of playing at any level, and about policing the behavior of women.

These are all things that several members of the USWNT drew attention to last year, when they wore wristbands reading “Protect trans kids” during a friendly in Texas. Now, at least in part because of that stance, the players are in a target zone of hate.


More from The Athletic


The backlash actually has very little to do with the World Cup performance. You can tell because it didn’t start with the team’s loss to Sweden, or the awful performance against Portugal, or the lackluster draw against the Netherlands. It first became noticeable at the earliest possible moment, before the United States’ opening win against Vietnam, when some team members sang the national anthem and some did not. That, somehow, was enough to cause a ripple of outrage — a small one, but big enough that USWNT defender Naomi Girma was asked about it at a subsequent press conference.

The USWNT press corps — people like me who cover this team on an everyday basis — chose not to engage in that topic because it clearly wasn’t about singing the anthem. If it had been, I might have pointed out that most of the USA baseball team didn’t sing the anthem in the final of the World Baseball Classic this year, or that the USA men’s basketball team didn’t sing the anthem in the Olympic gold medal game in 2021. I could have pointed to a significant number of USMNT players who didn’t sing the anthem at the last World Cup, or identified the same among other countries who have competed in New Zealand and Australia over the last few weeks.

I might even have pointed out that the U.S. law concerning behavior during the playing of the national anthem (U.S. Code Title 36, Chapter 10, Section 171) makes exactly zero mention of singing. What it does mention, though, is standing. That isn’t something that was debated rationally very often in the buildup to World Cup 2019, but at least there was a basis to do so.

The 2023 outrage has never been rational. It’s just one group shouting regardless of whether anyone is listening or not. It is rooted in misogyny and sexism, racism, homophobia and transphobia — all the antitheses to the things this team has stood for collectively and individually.

We could be talking about all of the many reasons why the USWNT failed; the actual soccer that was played, coaching mistakes, or larger systemic issues that will need to be addressed by the U.S. Soccer Federation moving forward. All those things contributed to the team’s earliest exit from a World Cup in tournament history. Becoming too “woke,” whatever that means, certainly didn’t hurt them this time, just as it didn’t help them when they won in 2019, or even in 2015.

While the attacks are crude and meritless, they have at least proven that the platforms of the USWNT as a whole, and those of players like Rapinoe, are significant and far-reaching. They have power, enough to be considered both a target and a threat. That’s still a deeply uncomfortable if not outright dangerous position to be in — there is a real, human cost to this vitriol we are forgetting as we debate whether to engage or not.

The bigger question here is: Who are we listening to right now, and why?

Is it someone like Fox Sports commentator and former U.S. men’s national team defender Alexi Lalas, who declared the USWNT “polarizing” because of their “politics, causes, stances and behavior,” at least to a certain “portion of America?” I wonder if he has followed his own train of thought long enough to consider how his network’s coverage of the 2022 men’s World Cup in Qatar had its own political approach, from choosing to ignore Qatar’s lengthy history of human rights abuses directly related to that World Cup, to segments like the one in which Lalas appeared in a thobe alongside Qatari influencer Khalifa Al Haroon (also known as Mr. Q).

Perhaps instead we should be listening to the voices that know this team, this sport, and the USWNT’s legacy that extends beyond the field. There are numerous current and former players who have provided excellent analysis through the World Cup, and players from other national teams who have credited the USWNT with growing the sport. If the U.S. women’s national team had clearly been acting out of step with what was expected of them, surely these are the people who would be able to tell.

“The U.S. women’s national team, they’re pioneers,” Sweden forward Kosovare Asllani told Tobin Heath in a clip posted following her team’s win over the U.S. “You are raising the game, you’re opening doors for the rest of the community, the rest of the world. You’re first with everything.”

She also mentioned she had told an American journalist not to “talk sh–” about the USWNT.

I still can’t help but resent even having to write this column. I resent having to spend a single second of a single minute of a single day at this World Cup — a tournament of upsets and excellence — thinking about what bad-faith politicians and commentariat have to say about the USWNT loss. All of this is so cynical, so manufactured and so cheap. It’s not about soccer, nor is it about the facts, nor has it ever been. They’ve been waiting to see this team stumble, and they’ve finally cashed in on their chase to poison the USWNT’s World Cup platform for their own gain — especially in the case of Rapinoe.

Something she said four summers ago still works at this moment, though.“I think that I’m particularly and uniquely and very deeply American,” Rapinoe said, addressing her own view of what patriotism means. “If we want to talk about the ideals that we stand for, the song and the anthem, and what we were founded on, I think I’m extremely American. ”This team, more than ever before, represents the diversity of the United States. Keeping the spotlight on them as players, as humans, and on their platform and their “politics, stances, causes and behaviors” — as if any of those are anything but standing on the right side of history — is the best way to ensure they win, even if they are out of the World Cup.Otherwise, we’ll just be right back here again.(Photo: Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Meg Linehan is a senior writer for The Athletic who covers the U.S. women’s national team, the National Women’s Soccer League and more. She also hosts the weekly podcast “Full Time with Meg Linehan.” Follow Meg on Twitter @itsmeglinehan

We will be back stronger’

'We will be back stronger'

Getty Images

Japan cruised through the World Cup group stages and shocked the tournament with a 4-0 demolition of Spain in their final match.

They then easily beat Norway 3-1 to set up today’s quarter-final with Sweden, where many pegged them as favourites.

But it was Sweden who triumphed in the end, bringing to a close Japan’s high-octane football at this World Cup.

“We fought so hard because we wanted it,” captain Saki Kumagai said. “We want to go to the next round, of course. We will come back stronger.”On his side’s journey at the tournament, Japan coach Futoshi Ikeda added: “The team grew and the players grew out of this World Cup. We were able to demonstrate that on the world stage, which is a fact.”We also lost this match, which is also a fact. But the players, their work at this World Cup, is something that we need to assess positively.”

‘We want to go the whole way’

Asllani playing for Sweden

Getty Images

Sweden are not resting on their laurels after that 2-1 win against Japan in their quarter-final.

The European side, who beat the USWNT on penalties in the round of 16 on Sunday, were 2-0 up in their quarter-final and survived a late comeback from the Japanese to seal a place in the next round of the World Cup.”Obviously, we’re not happy with a semi-final, we want to go the whole way,” captain Kosovare Asllani said. “I believe strongly in my team and we’ll be more than ready for (the semi-final on) Tuesday.””We were very happy with the win against the U.S., but we knew we had to recharge and think about Japan,” midfielder Kosovare Asllani said. “We knew we were going to play a very skilled and technical team, and we didn’t want them to have a lot of time on the ball, because that’s when they’re the best.”Sweden will face Spain in Tuesday’s semi-final, after Jorge Vilda’s side beat the Netherlands 2-1 earlier on.

Russo anticipating a physical Colombia team: ‘We’ll be ready to go’

England forward Alessia Russo spoke with reporters ahead of her team’s quarterfinal match against Colombia on Saturday. Here’s what she said:

(Is there) more pressure as a starter rather than coming off the bench?

“I think there is always weight on your shoulders when you play for your country. It is different, but your job is the same and your focus is the same. When I went into the Euros, it was my first tournament and I just wanted to make sure I stayed in the moment and enjoyed every second of it. That’s been my mindset coming into this.

“Yes, obviously what you do on the pitch is most important but how you go into games is really crucial too. For us, as players, we know the standard and how to get the best out of each other so it’s just about staying in your zone and knowing what’s right for you.”

Colombia’s friendly against Ireland was called off, abandoned, before the tournament because of perceived over-physical behaviour. … Are you ready to get a kicking from defenders and are you ready to give a bit back?

“I think Colombia, yes, are a physical team and aggressive but so are we. It’s something that we’ve faced before in this tournament and we’ve stepped up. That’s part of the game now, it’s getting more physical, it’s getting stronger. Players are quicker and faster. I think in this tournament the level has been so high and it’s great to see, and I think you all know as much as I do that no one ever in this tournament is an underdog. And they [Colombia] have put on some really good performances in this tournament and, when Saturday comes, we’ll be ready to go.”

Most games at this tournament have been almost a battle. Are you expecting more of that this weekend? And what’s it like as a player, to be in that sort of classic tournament match, where it becomes almost like a slog?

“I think it’s great that you can’t take your foot off the gas for one second and, not that we could in the Euros either, but you can see it, every game is so, so tight and that just shows the level of the game right now which is amazing. Yes, we’re expecting that on Saturday for sure. Colombia are a great team and they’ve got some great players, so it’s going to be, from minute one to the final whistle goes, it’s going to be tough.”

Do you think it’s significant that Sarina (Wiegman) is the last female coach in the tournament?

“It’s great for young girls that want to go into coaching. We always say about inspiring the next generation and to go out and play football and get as many young girls involved as possible, so to know that they can be a coach as well and see Sarina on the biggest stage is incredible. She’s one of the best managers I’ve ever played for so to have her as our leader and our role model is something that we really appreciate.”

What’s she like in tournament scenarios? She seems very cool. Is that the case? And you all seemed so calm for the penalties…

“Yes she’s very cool and she’s a very calm head, which is so important when you’re in high-pressure moments. She’s a winner, she knows how to win, and she’s done it before. Yes, she has the full respect of everyone and I think it’s great to have someone leading us that knows how to deal with those high-pressure moments, as well as [someone who] keeps everyone calm on the pitch.”

(There was a) video of you on social media the other day as a young person with a pair of football boots. … What do you think that young Alessia would think seeing you now and, when you see that, does it give you perspective on what you’re achieving now?

“I think it’s things like that make you realise and just relax a little bit. These moments in these tournaments can be really high-pressure but I think that little girl would have been dreaming about a World Cup ever since she was born. So to be able to be living in that moment now is something that I’m so grateful for but it’s so nice to be able to relate back to being that little kid when times are hard and pressure is on because that’s who you’re playing for, and that’s why you’re here.”

You’re quite a physical player. … Is that something you’ll relish if that comes up against Colombia?

“Yes I’m quite a big player in terms of my height and stature, so I’d like to think I could hold my own. I wouldn’t be doing my job if I couldn’t. But yes, I think the strength-in-depth in the squad is amazing and you’re tested every day in training to be strong in those moments. I’m coming up against Millie Bright most days in training, so I think if there’s ever a test it’s right there. So yes, you prepare for those moments every day in training.”

The role of a No. 9…what are some of the big differences you’ve noticed, compared to the WSL, at the international level? Especially at a World Cup, coming up against defenders that you won’t usually meet?

“I mean, I don’t think it differs too much because I think the standard of the WSL is so high. And the centre-backs that you play against are mostly internationals anyway. So I think it’s pretty similar but you have very little time on the ball and you’ve got to be really quick in your decision-making, and then when you’re in an around the box you have a split-second to get your shot off or you miss your moment, so I think, yes, it’s just about trying to be one step ahead and making sure you never miss a moment.”

I know you won’t tell us what formation you’re going to play but how much do you practice the two formations?

“We prepare for everything.”

England’s Russo talks her ‘pinch-me’ Beckham moment

England forward Alessia Russo spoke with reporters ahead of her team’s quarterfinal match against Colombia on Saturday. Here’s what she said:

(Is there a) different dynamic in the squad, given the competition for places and changing team?

“I think the dynamic of this team is what makes it so special. It’s been the same ever since I stepped into the squad. We have such a good team spirit and togetherness and I’d like to think that you can see that on the pitch in how we celebrate and enjoy each other’s moments.”

How have you found playing in a two with Lauren Hemp?

“I love playing alongside all the attackers in this team. We have so many different strengths and it’s great. When I’m up and around the box you enjoy yourself. Hempo and I have lots of conversations and it’s good. But you can see the strength in depth in this squad.”

(Is it) easier to get on the ball when you have someone with you? The mid-block has made it hard in this tournament for some strikers.

“It’s always nice when you have players around the box. That happens in this team regardless of the formation that we’re playing. I think my job as a No. 9 is pretty similar, whatever the formation. But it’s always nice when there are more of us.”

Can you tell us about meeting David Beckham?

“It was amazing actually. He has been one of my idols — and heartthrobs! — ever since I was a little girl. It is one of my biggest highlights off the pitch to sit and have a normal conversation with someone who you would watch on the world stage when you were a young girl. It was amazing. He was really nice. It was a pinch-me moment in terms of what women’s sport nowadays has done.”

Harper (Beckham’s daughter) said (Russo) was her favourite player.

“I was buzzing. Everybody is a fan of the Beckhams, aren’t they?”

What was your takeaway from it?

“It was a completely World Cup-focused conversation, and it was nice to not only hear from him about what he did on the pitch, but how he felt in the moments of the World Cup. He says that it was the biggest highlight of his career, a moment that obviously he will never forget. He said that his best and biggest memories were in an England shirt. It is something that you can really relate to. For me, stepping into my first World Cup is something I’ve dreamt of ever since I can remember.”

Does it show the size of the occasion, given his highs and lows?

“He said that you should never lose sight of what you guys are doing as a team. I think sometimes we are always in the moment and all we see and compete for every day is the pitch and training. But there’s an impact away from that and that’s really special to hear. Hearing that Harper is a huge fan is nice to hear.”

Swapped shirts?

“Yeah. I was buzzing for his shirt but he took mine as well.”

Has he been in touch over the course of the tournament?

“He messaged me after one game — I think the China game — but it’s just nice to hear that players are following the tournament. For all of us, these are our idols.”

What did the message say?

“I can’t actually remember. The time difference has thrown me off.”

Spain leave it late against Netherlands

Spain leave it late against Netherlands

Getty Images

Earlier, Salma Paralluelo scored an extra-time winner to earn Spain a 2-1 victory over the Netherlands and a place in the semi-finals of the Women’s World Cup for the first time.

The 19-year-old Barcelona winger broke the 1-1 deadlock when she latched onto a through ball, and unleashed a shot that went in off the post

“It means everthing for me, it was a unique moment, great euphoria … I’m extremely happy,” Paralluelo said.

Sixth-ranked Spain, who had not advanced past the round of 16 in two previous two World Cup appearances, will face Sweden for a place in the final in Auckland on Tuesday.

“We went to extra time, but the team kept on believing,” said coach Jorge Vilda. “They played on an extraordinary level, all players, and it was a match with a lot of emotional decisions, and the goal from Salma, it was sheer joy.”

All the goals came late in a tight game with Mariona Caldentey scoring Spain’s first from a penalty kick in the 81st minute after Dutch defender Stefanie Van der Gragt had handled the ball inside the box.

Van der Gragt, in her final match before retirement, earned some redemption when she equalised in the 91st minute to send the contest to extra time in front of 32,021 fans at Wellington Regional Stadium.

But Paralluelo had the final say, meaning the ninth-ranked Dutch — runners-up to the United States four years ago in France — followed the USWNT, Germany, Canada and Brazil out of the tournament.

Sweden hold off Japan fightback to reach semi-final

Sweden hold off Japan fightback to reach semi-final

Getty Images

Sweden held off a late Japan fightback to reach the semi-finals of the Women’s World Cup for the fifth time with a 2-1 win at Eden Park on Friday.

Five days after ousting four-time champions the United States in the last 16, the Swedes dominated the 2011 title winners for most of the evening to book a last-four date with Spain at the same stadium on Tuesday.

The result means a tournament full of surprises so far is without a former winner in the semi-finals.

Defender Amanda Ilestedt gave Sweden the lead with her fourth goal of the tournament in the 32nd minute, with Filippa Angeldal adding the second from the penalty spot just after the break.

Riko Ueki missed a 76th-minute penalty and fellow substitute Honoka Hayashi’s goal 11 minutes later proved too little, too late as Sweden held firm under pressure to progress.

All 54 American-born players who played in the World Cup, but not for the USWNT

BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 07: Antionette Payne of Nigeria is challenged by Lauren James of England during the FIFA Women's World Cup Australia & New Zealand 2023 Round of 16 match between England and Nigeria at Brisbane Stadium on August 07, 2023 in Brisbane / Meaanjin, Australia. (Photo by Elsa - FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

By Kudzi MusarurwaAug 9, 202339


Part of the World Cup viewing experience for many Americans is rooting for more than one team: the U.S. women’s national team and the country they or their parents may have immigrated from. The same concept can be seen among the players in the tournament.

The diaspora of multiple countries is prevalent across the United States. At the international level, playing for the U.S. isn’t always the first choice or, in other situations, even an option.

ADVERTISEMENT

This year, the Women’s World Cup expanded to 32 teams, increasing the chances of Americans playing for nations that aren’t the U.S. — in fact, 54 players in this year’s competition were born in the U.S. and represented another country that makes up their identity.

Casey Phair (left) is the youngest player to appear in a World Cup. Photo by Bradley Kanaris, Getty Images.

Casey Phair became the youngest player at a World Cup when she took the field for South Korea — she’s also currently enrolled at The Pingry School in New Jersey. The Philippines are by far the team with the most American-born players, with 18 of the 23 players playing for the country. Jamaica, who made the knockout round in its second-ever World Cup, also has double-digit U.S.-born players. With the Reggae Girlz elimination Tuesday, there are only three American-born players left in the competition.

Only two teams featuring American-born players. The expectation is that those players won’t see much of the field during the next round of the knockout stages, due to their place in the overall roster for their country. Here’s a look at the American-born players who took part in the World Cup as members of teams other than the USWNT.


Colombia

  • Angela Baron – Keller, Texas
  • Elexa Bahr – Buford, Georgia

The last team with American-born representation, Colombia booked its ticket to the quarter-finals of the Women’s World Cup for the first time in team history. Neither Baron nor Bahr have featured for Colombia in this tournament. They aren’t considered in contention for starting spots or as players who can come on and change the game for Colombia due to Baron being superseded by Daniela Arias, Monica Ramos and Jorelyn Carabalí in defense, while Linda Caicedo, Lady Andrade and Mayra Ramirez keep Bahr on the bench up top. They may only see minutes at the tournament if an injury happens to those above them in the depth chart, even with Colombia advancing to the quarter-finals.

The Netherlands

  • Damaris Egurrola – Orlando, Florida

Highly sought-after by the U.S., Spain and the Netherlands, Egurrola decided to play for the Dutch and has seen minutes at the World Cup as a substitute in all of the Netherlands’ games so far. She has Jill Roord, Jackie Groenen and Danielle van de Donk in front of her in the midfield depth chart, but many view Egurrola as a player set to star soon for the Netherlands. They are still at the World Cup, so chances are Egurrola will continue to feature as a substitute for as long as the Dutch are in the tournament.


Despite their journeys ending before the quarter-finals, some of the other players on this long list managed to make their mark in a significant way for their country.

Argentina

  • Sophia Braun – Beaverton, Oregon

Braun made her debut at the World Cup in a defeat against Italy at right-back. Despite the loss, she showed glimpses of quality which were amplified by her goal in Argentina’s draw against South Africa. Braun is also capable of playing as a defensive midfielder, which she showed in the game against Sweden. Argentina didn’t make it out of the group stages, but Braun was a highlight for the team.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW

Canada

  • Simi Awujo – Atlanta, Georgia

At 19 years old, the Atlanta native did not make an appearance at the World Cup. With midfielders like Jessie Fleming, QuinnSophie Schmidt and Julia Grosso ahead of her, Awujo will have to look to the future for minutes with Canada. The tournament did provide an opportunity for Awujo to gain valuable experience, even with the team going out in the group stage.

Haiti

  • Chelsea Surpris – Crowley, Texas
  • Danielle Etienne – Richmond, Virginia
  • Lara Larco – Boca Raton, Florida
  • Milan Pierre-Jerome – Fort Lauderdale, Florida
  • Noa Ganthier – Boca Raton, Florida

Surpris (right-back) and Etienne (midfielder), from Texas and Virginia respectively, were the only American-born players to feature for Haiti at the World Cup. Surpris started for Haiti in their final group match having been kept as a substitute in the other games, while Etienne only saw time as a substitute as she came on in the 81st minute against China. With Haiti now out of the World Cup, no other American-born player featured for Haiti at the tournament.

Ireland

  • Chloe Mustaki – Lima, Ohio
  • Courtney Brosnan – Millburn, New Jersey
  • Kyra Carusa – San Diego, California
  • Marissa Sheva – Sellersville, Pennsylvania
  • Sinead Farrelly – Havertown, Pennsylvania

Brosnan, Carusa and Farrelly have established themselves as starters for the Republic of Ireland at goalkeeper, striker and midfielder. Unfortunately for them, Sheva and Mustaki, Ireland’s World Cup dreams were over after the group stage and the loss to Canada. Throughout the tournament, Brosnan and Farrelly were standouts for Ireland and, while Carusa didn’t manage to get on the scoresheet, she was a vital hold-up player for the attacks.

Jamaica

  • Allyson Swaby – Hartford, Connecticut
  • Chantelle Swaby – West Hartford, Connecticut
  • Cheyna Matthews – Lynn, Massachusetts
  • Havana Solaun – Gainesville, Florida
  • Kameron Simmonds – Midlothian, Virginia
  • Kayla McKenna – Skokie, Illinois
  • Kiki Van Zanten – Buffalo Grove, Illinois
  • Liya Brooks – Eugene, Oregon
  • Peyton McNamara – Norwalk, Connecticut
  • Solai Washington – Brookhaven, Georgia
  • Sydney Schneider – Dayton, New Jersey
  • Tiernny Wiltshire – Elmer, New Jersey

Almost all of the Jamaican players listed here would be considered key members of the team, but the Swaby sisters are its heartbeat. With dominant defensive displays in the draw against France in their opening game at the World Cup and a win against Panama, Jamaica made a massive statement. After a brilliant defensive display by the Swaby sisters, Jamaica made it to the round of 16 for the first time in its history. On top of that, Allyson Swaby can add a goal to her World Cup resume, a 65th-minute winner against Panama, and the goal that ultimately sent them through to the knockout stages.

The youngest players on the team, Washington and Simmonds are worth noting as well. At 17 and 19 years old respectively, the pair are seen as Jamaica’s future.

Despite their defensive efforts, the Swaby sisters couldn’t stop Colombia from knocking them out of the tournament. They, and the rest of the players listed above, did all they could to push Jamaica further than it has ever been at the World Cup and should be proud of their achievements.

New Zealand

The captain of the co-hosts started off her World Cup campaign with an improbable win against Norway, but the defeat against the Philippines and draw with Switzerland showed Riley and her teammates an early exit. Over 99,000 people combined were in attendance for all three of New Zealand’s games and Ali Riley captained the team throughout. The hosts didn’t make it past the group stages but the fan attendance shows that they captured the support of the nation, and Riley was pivotal throughout those matches.

Nigeria

  • Ifeoma Onumonu – Rancho Cucamonga, California
  • Michelle Alozie – Apple Valley, California
  • Toni Payne – Birmingham, Alabama
  • Yewande Balogun – Washington, D.C.

Both Onumonu and Alozie have been standout performers for Nigeria, but it’s Payne who makes the team tick. When she’s on song in that midfield, Nigeria can threaten any team in the world, as shown by their recent performance against Australia. Payne runs that midfield with a dominant and confident air. Nigeria pushed England right to the end, only losing out on penalties. This was a showcase for how far Nigeria has come as a team and the contributions made by Payne and Alozie in particular, helped them on their impressive journey.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-2&features=eyJ0ZndfdGltZWxpbmVfbGlzdCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOltdLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjpudWxsfSwidGZ3X2ZvbGxvd2VyX2NvdW50X3N1bnNldCI6eyJidWNrZXQiOnRydWUsInZlcnNpb24iOm51bGx9LCJ0ZndfdHdlZXRfZWRp

Panama

  • Carina Baltrip-Reyes – Austin, Texas
  • Riley Tanner – Grand Rapids, Michigan

It’s been tough going for Baltrip-Reyes, Tanner and Panama. Baltrip-Reyes started for Panama at this World Cup as a center-back in their 4-0 loss to Brazil, and Tanner came on in the second half as a forward. Baltrip-Reyes also featured in the final game against France and did well enough for her team at right-back. A 6-3 loss isn’t usually something you want to write about for a team but with all that Panama came through to qualify for the World Cup, scoring three goals against a solid French side cannot be discounted. They were in a difficult group with France, Brazil and Jamaica, but can look back at their time in Australia with more hope for the future than disappointment.

Philippines

  • Alicia Barker – Woodinville, Washington
  • Carleigh Frilles – Fairfax, Virginia
  • Chandler McDaniel – Orange, California
  • Dominique Randle – Seattle, Washington
  • Hali Long – Cape Girardeau, Missouri
  • Isabella Flanigan – Fairmont, West Virginia
  • Jessika Cowart – Fairfield, California
  • Kaiya Jota – Baldwin Park, California
  • Katrina Guillou – Washington, D.C.
  • Kiara Fontanilla – Fullerton, California
  • Malea Cesar – Newport Beach, California
  • Olivia McDaniel – Laguna Beach, California
  • Quinley Quezada – Rosemead, Califórnia
  • Reina Bonta – New Haven Connecticut
  • Ryley Bugay – West Lafayette, Indiana
  • Sarina Bolden – Santa Clara, California
  • Sofia Harrison – Montgomery County, Maryland
  • Tahnai Annis – Zanesville, Ohio

The star of this team, and the name many should keep paying attention to in the U.S., is midfielder Bolden. She scored the goal that put the Philippines into the World Cup for the first time in its history and then proceeded to score the goal that won the game against New Zealand. The story for these talented players ended with a heavy defeat against Norway, which saw them exit the World Cup in the group stages.“When you go up against quality players like Norway have, it’s a way to gauge how far you as a player have to go to compete with them,” Bolden said after the match.

South Korea

  • Casey Phair – Warren Township, New Jersey

It was a tough start to the World Cup for the 16-year-old striker from New Jersey. South Korea lost their opener to Colombia 2-0. Head coach Colin Bell was very careful with his management of Phair, making sure to not ask her to do too much due to her age and development level. Phair was given the start against Germany in South Korea’s final game and almost produced a fairytale moment. Only three minutes in, she was sent through on goal and only a great save by Merle Frohms prevented the Phair from giving South Korea a dream start. South Korea found the back of the net three minutes later and held Germany to a draw, sending one of the tournament favorites out at the group stages.

Switzerland

  • Noelle Maritz – Newport Beach, California

Maritz shined in Switzerland’s backline and has helped set up her nation with the easiest path to qualification in Group A. After a solid win against the Philippines, a draw with Norway and a draw against New Zealand, Switzerland qualified for the round of 16. Switzerland tried to keep its steady defensive shape against Spain in the round of 16 but couldn’t stop the team who managed to find enough quality to knock out the Swiss. Maritz again was a steady presence, but it wasn’t enough to stop them leaving the tournament early.

(Photo: Elsa/Getty Images)

The My Game In My Words series is part of a partnership with Google Pixel. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

Union pushes past Querétaro to set up showdown with Lionel Messi, Inter Miami in Leagues Cup

Drexel product and Paoli native Chris Donovan played hometown hero, scoring the game-winner in the 101st minute.

Chris Donovan (right) celebrates his game-winning goal against Querétaro with teammate Alejandro Bedoya in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match Friday at Subaru Park.
Chris Donovan (right) celebrates his game-winning goal against Querétaro with teammate Alejandro Bedoya in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match Friday at Subaru Park.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp

The Union’s Leagues Cup quarterfinal win over Querétaro had everything: a 30-minute power outage, Jesús Bueno’s first goal for the Union, Chris Donovan scoring in front of his hometown crowd, and shoves traded between teams after the final whistle.

One thing it didn’t have was Lionel Messi, but don’t worry — he’ll officially be at Subaru Park on Tuesday with Inter Miami to take on the Union in the semifinals.

“We look forward to hosting the greatest player of the history of the sport in our building,” Union manager Jim Curtin said. “I think it will definitely be the loudest Subaru Park will ever be. It’s a great matchup, and one that if we play like tonight, we’ll be in big trouble.”

The last time the MLS and Liga MX teams faced off resulted in a 5-1 Union thrashing July 22 in the group stage. Friday’s match was quite different, with the Union finally pushing past Querétaro, 2-1, in the 101st minute thanks to Donovan’s goal.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We didn’t play good. We didn’t create a lot, but if you really look at it, did they create a ton?” Curtin said. “You know, they had some possession for sure. But they didn’t really hurt us; Andre didn’t have to do too much. The 5-1 game, you knew it wouldn’t look like that, because they’ve gotten better as this competition has gone on.”

The scoreboard is dark as a power outage delays the Philadelphia Union game against Querétaro at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, Aug. 11, 2023. The game started about an hour late before power was restored.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Julián Carranza and Querétaro Querétaro Kevin Escamilla chase the ball during the first half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Olivier Mbaizo collides with Querétaro Querétaro Jonathan Perlaza while heading the ball during the first half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Jack Elliott left and Jakob Glesnes over run Querétaro Querétaro Ángel Sepúlveda during the second half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023. The Union beats Querétar 2-1 to advance to the semifinals.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Jesús Bueno gets a shot past Querétaro goalie Querétaro Fernando Tapia for a goal during the first half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Jesús Bueno left celebrates his goal against Querétaro with teammates during the first half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union José Andrés Martínez and Querétaro Querétaro Ángel Sepúlveda head the ball during the second half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023. The Union beats Querétar 2-1 to advance to the semifinals.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Mikael Uhre takes a shot over Querétaro Querétaro Kevin Escamilla and goalie Querétaro Fernando Tapia during the first half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Jesús Bueno tries for the loose ball with Querétaro Sandoval Raul during the second half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023. The Union beats Querétar 2-1 to advance to the semifinals.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Chris Donovan kicks the winning goal against Querétaro goalie Querétaro Fernando Tapia with teammate Quinn Sullivan during the second half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023. The Union beats Querétar 2-1 to advance to the semifinals.Read moreSteven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp
Union Chris Donovan kicks the winning goal against Querétaro goalie Querétaro Fernando Tapia during the second half in the Leagues Cup quarterfinals match at Subaru Park in Chester, Friday, August 11, 2023. The Union beats Querétar 2-1 to advance to the semifinals.Steven M. Falk / Staff Photographer / Steven M. Falk / Staff Photograp

Querétaro also had made a goaltending change since its last game at Subaru Park, replacing Alejandro Arana with 22-year-old Fernando Tapia, and won its next three matches. Tapia only conceded one goal in that span and made 12 saves.

Quick lead

The Union tested Tapia early with a shot from Mikael Uhre that he saved in the first minute of play, but they broke through in the 10 minute. Jack McGlynn evaded two defenders and a deflected shot found Bueno through traffic, who tapped the ball by a reaching Tapia.Jesus Bueno earns his first #DOOP with the Union & gets us on the board in the 10th minute! 😈Jesus Bueno marca su primer gol con la camiseta del Union para ponernos arriba en el marcador 🇻🇪#DOOP | #PHIvQRO 1-0 pic.twitter.com/nbnTGiUBzg— Philadelphia Union (@PhilaUnion) August 12, 2023

Bueno was the hero in the Union’s round of 16 victory last week, scoring the penalty kick that ultimately lifted the Union past the New York Red Bulls. His goal on Friday night officially was the Venezuelan midfielder’s first with the Union.

“Jesús has been a revelation this year,” Curtin said. “Always has been a solid, steady player, but I think he’s taking this game to another level.”

ADVERTISEMENT

The Union outshot Querétaro, 7-3, in the first half, with three of the Union’s shots coming on target and only one for Querétaro.

Unfortunately for the Union, Querétaro’s second shot on target was the equalizer. In the 65th minute, Ángel Sepúlveda corralled a cross pass from Jaime Gómez and launched the ball past Andre Blake to knot the score, 1-1.

Julián Carranza exited in the 81st minute with an injury and was subbed for Quinn Sullivan.

“Julián reached for a ball and then felt something in his lower hamstring … I don’t want to speculate too much, and he’ll get an MRI,” Curtin said. “But this is kind of part of the the grind, the gift and the curse of it, of advancing in this competition, right? You see some injuries start to mount up for teams.”

ADVERTISEMENT

https://d34ec85f802e0779c64c149b2f9bcc50.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

» READ MORE: Jim Curtin blasts ‘little brother’ Red Bulls after Union’s latest win over New York

Donovan converts

The Union’s last two games in the Leagues Cup had gone to penalty kicks, and, for a while, it looked like Friday’s match was headed that way once again. In Leagues Cup matches, games that are tied after regulation bypass regular extra time and head straight to penalties.

While the Union had its chances to pull back ahead, sending several shots wide and into the stands behind the goal, the game remained deadlocked heading into stoppage time.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It is human nature to maybe have a an eye on the next game, so I tried to guard against that as best I can,” Curtin said. “But sometimes, you know, it’s human nature. These guys are people. And sometimes the excitement of that maybe got us a little distracted.”

In the 101st minute, Donovan finally found the back of the net on a redirected cross pass from Kai Wagner. The Drexel product and Paoli native played hometown hero to set up a date with Messi’s Inter Miami.It’s pretty surreal to score one where you know that extra time is just about to expire as well, and you know that Messi is on the other end of it,” Donovan said.

CHRIS DONOVAN SCORES IN STOPPAGE TIME & SENDS US TO THE SEMIFINAL!!! #DOOP | #PHIvQRO 2-1 | #LeaguesCup2023 pic.twitter.com/uWvmcnB9sV— Philadelphia Union (@PhilaUnion) August 12, 2023

High tensions

Tensions were high on the pitch throughout the game, with multiple scuffles between the teams broken up by the referees. Six yellow cards were handed out to Querétaro players and one to José Andrés Martínez. The home fans at Subaru Park loudly took issue with the 15 fouls called against the Union, while Querétaro collected 15 fouls of their own.

Omar Mendoza’s second yellow card resulted in his ejection in the 99th minute. Wagner’s kick from outside the box came inches away from putting the Union back in front, but it clanged off the post.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://d34ec85f802e0779c64c149b2f9bcc50.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

After Donovan found the back of the net moments later, players streamed out onto the pitch from both benches to trade words and pushes, but no supplemental discipline has been laid.

“At the end, it was a little bit [of] chaos probably, but that’s how it is, that’s how you play Mexican teams,” Wagner said. “They both bring the intensity, and that’s what we need sometimes.”

Gázdag’s status

The Union were without leading scorer Dániel Gazdag on Friday, as he went down with a knee injury in the second half against the New York Red Bulls. Gazdag netted three of the Union’s five goals in their last meeting with Querétaro.

Curtin said before Friday’s match that Gazdag had been diagnosed with a Grade 1 knee sprain and that he was not ruled out for the semifinals.

Published Aug. 12, 2023

ADVERTISEMENT

Rent this Beautiful 4 BR Beach house at Myrtle Beach for as low at $250 a night.


Proud Member of the American Outlaws  https://www.facebook.com/IndyAOUnite, Brick Yard Battalion – http://brickyardbattalion.com, Sam’s Army-http://sams-army.com 

Earn Your College Degree at ½ the Cost and Time of Traditional Schools  www.achievetestprep.com/shane