Chattanooga Times Free Press

Big loss could bring big changes for U.S.

- BY RONALD BLUM

COUVA, Trinidad — When men’s soccer holds its world’s fair in Russia next June, the American pavilion will be glaringly absent.

A bumbling, stumbling, tumbling World Cup qualifying campaign ended Tuesday night with a calamitous 2-1 loss to already eliminated Trinidad and Tobago, the 99th-ranked nation in the world, when merely a tie was necessary to eke out the final automatic World Cup berth from one of soccer’s weakest regions.

“Unacceptab­le,” tweeted former Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala, a U.S. Soccer Federation board member. “For us in USSoccer more than a wake-up call. Time for revolution. Need long term plan that is smart.”

After American soccer’s Waterloo, the fallout almost surely will lead to a new coach and possibly a new USSF head. There also figure to be calls for a re-examinatio­n of the player developmen­t structure, from youth teams through academies designed with the hope of producing elite prospects.

“There is no denying that this is a setback for all of us involved with the game in our country,” Major League Soccer said in a released statement.

New York Cosmos owner Rocco Commisso, chairman of the lower-level North American Soccer League that has sued the USSF, called for federation president Sunil Gulati to resign along with board members and senior administra­tors he put in place.

“In the almost 12 years during which Sunil Gulati has been the USSF’s president, little or nothing has been done to enhance our prospects,” Commisso said in a released statement. “The leadership of U.S. Soccer has failed all of its stakeholde­rs: players, fans, sponsors and those of us who have invested in profession­al soccer. Getting back on track requires fundamenta­l change in the structure and management of the sport in our country, starting with a change in the federation’s leadership.”

While fans fulminated over the front office, the next national team coach must instigate a ruthless roster purge. The era of stars Michael Bradley, Clint Dempsey and Tim Howard is over, and pretty much any player older than 26 will be past his past his prime when the World Cup in Qatar kicks off in November 2022. The Americans won’t even play a competitiv­e match for nearly two years — not until the 2019 CONCACAF Gold Cup.

By then, Christian Pulisic, at 19 already the top American, should be surrounded with other players on the rise, such as 19-year-old midfielder Weston Mckennie, who has started Schalke’s last three games in the German Bundesliga. Haji Wright, a 19-yearold winger loaned from Schalke to second-division Sandhausen, is another top prospect, as is forward Josh Sargent, who agreed last month to sign with Werder Bremen on his 18th birthday in February.

Matt Miazga and Cameron Carter-Vickers should be tested in defense as the team reorients to 2022.

A shocked Gulati was measured in his reaction.

“You don’t have wholesale changes based on the ball being two inches wide or two inches in,” he said. “We will look at everything, obviously, and all of our programs, both the national team and all the developmen­t stuff. But we’ve got a lot of pieces in place that we think are very good and have been coming along.”

The Americans returned to the World Cup in 1990 after a 40-year absence, and soccer grew at an exponentia­l rate in this country, helped by the United States hosting the tournament in 1994. Major League Soccer launched two years later, while cable television and the Internet brought top European clubs to American television­s and later laptops and cell phones.

Still, the national team peaked with its quarterfin­al appearance at the 2002 World Cup. The United States failed to qualify for the 2012 and 2016 men’s Olympic soccer tournament­s, a generation­al talent gap evident when a creaky defense repeatedly broke down during qualifying. There were no young goalkeeper­s considered challenger­s to Howard and Brad Guzan.

“This has been coming for a while” former U.S. defender Marcelo Balboa said Wednesday. “I think it’s just kind of been building up.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The United States’ Christian Pulisic, right, is comforted Tuesday by a member of the team staff after the U.S. lost to Trinidad and Tobago in their World Cup qualifying match at Ato Boldon Stadium in Couva, Trinidad and Tobago.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The United States’ Christian Pulisic, right, is comforted Tuesday by a member of the team staff after the U.S. lost to Trinidad and Tobago in their World Cup qualifying match at Ato Boldon Stadium in Couva, Trinidad and Tobago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States