The Guardian (USA)

Let the rebuild begin: Alex Morgan left out of latest US squad

- Guardian sport

Interim US women’s national team manager Twila Kilgore has omitted World Cup winner Alex Morgan from her 26-player roster for the upcoming friendlies against China.

Morgan is among several veterans to be left out of the squad for the friendlies on 2 December and 5 December. Eleven players with 10 caps or fewer have been named to the roster as the US enters a new era after a disappoint­ing performanc­e at the 2023 World Cup.

Six players from the World Cup squad were left off the roster.

Sofia Huerta, Alyssa Naeher, Ashley Sanchez, Becky Sauerbrunn, Crystal

Dunn, Andi Sullivan and Morgan all featured in the team’s friendlies last month but have been left out of the squad, with US Soccer looking to evaluate a new generation of players before next year’s Olympics. Thirteen of the players named in Monday’s squad were not involved at the World Cup.

The matches in Ft Lauderdale, Florida, and Frisco, Texas, will be the first since Chelsea manager Emma Hayes was named as the next national team coach. With Hayes not taking over the role until May, the squad was put together by US Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker. Hayes and Kilgore were consulted on the formulatio­n of the squad.

“As we move forward with the next steps, we need more opportunit­ies to see players from our pool in our unique national team environmen­t, in both training and games, so we can evaluate if and how they might contribute moving forward to the Olympics,” said Kilgore.

Rose Lavelle is back in the USWNT fold for the first time since the World Cup. There are also returns for veteran defenders Tierna Davidson and Abby Dahlkemper.

Two uncapped players were named to the roster: Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Korbin Albert and NJ/NY Gotham midfielder Jenna Nighswonge­r. Nighswonge­r was named the NWSL Rookie of the Year after appearing in 20 games for the champions.

“We value these players who have recently been in camps or played in World Cup and were not chosen for this roster, and they are of course still

a part of our pool, but we know what they bring on and off the field,” Kilgore said. “At the same time, we also need to continue to evaluate and bring along players in the right ways to give the team the best chance for success.”

The friendlies against China will be the USWNT’s final fixtures of 2023. China is the second-most common opponent in US history (after Canada). The teams have met on 58 occasions in the past.

Full USWNT squad for friendlies v China

Goalkeeper­s: Jane Campbell, Houston Dash; Aubrey Kingsbury, Washington

Spirit; Casey Murphy, North Carolina Courage

Defenders: Alana Cook, OL Reign; Abby Dahlkemper, San Diego Wave FC; Tierna Davidson, Chicago Red Stars; Emily Fox, North Carolina Courage; Naomi Girma, San Diego Wave FC; Casey Krueger, Chicago Red Stars; MA Vignola, Angel City FC

Midfielder­s: Korbin Albert, Paris Saint-Germain; Sam Coffey, Portland Thorns FC; Savannah DeMelo, Racing Louisville FC; Lindsey Horan, Lyon; Rose Lavelle, OL Reign; Olivia Moultrie, Portland Thorns FC; Jenna Nighswonge­r, NJ/NY Gotham FC; Emily Sonnett, OL Reign

Forwards: Mia Fishel, Chelsea;

Ashley Hatch, Washington Spirit; Midge Purce, NJ/NY Gotham FC; Trinity Rodman, Washington Spirit; Jaedyn Shaw, San Diego Wave FC; Sophia Smith, Portland Thorns FC; Alyssa Thompson, Angel City FC; Lynn Williams, NJ/NY Gotham FC

more grave with the rookie wage scale and lack of guaranteed contracts. The NFL is a billion-dollar business and team salary caps are $224.8m but it’s not as if that money is equally distribute­d among players, and those with shorter careers are also the ones who are usually on the lowest salaries.

Earning six figures would make you rich in most places in the US, but in the New York Metro area the cost of living is exorbitant. Not only are rent and home prices sky high but healthcare, food and entertainm­ent costs all come with a “New York premium.”

San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Brock Purdy can relate. He is making almost $1m this year but in the San Francisco Bay Area that’s not an exceptiona­l salary. Purdy is smartly living with a roommate and keeping it simple by driving a Toyota SUV.

DeVito and Purdy’s living situations make a lot of sense given their geography coupled with lack of guaranteed money. Purdy will be around the league for a while, but DeVito doesn’t know how long his NFL career will last, and the money he earns this year is, make no mistake, very nice. But it’s not enough to set him up for life. Why not save while he sees how the future pans out? And it also makes a lot of sense from a psychologi­cal standpoint. These are guys in their early 20s, often without partners and kids of their own. The NFL spotlight can be harsh if you don’t have a support system. There’s no shame in going home and playing video games with your roomie or having your mom waiting with a warm hug and bowl of spaghetti bolognese. Just don’t forget to give her a bedtime hug.

MVP of the week

Brock Purdy, quarterbac­k, San Francisco 49ers. Speaking of money-saving quarterbac­ks: Mr Irrelevant was Mr Perfection in the 49ers’ 27-14 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Purdy’s 158.3 quarterbac­k rating makes him the first 49ers quarterbac­k to achieve a perfect rating since a couple of randoms named Joe Montana and Steve Young did it in 1989.

As Purdy’s perfect rating would suggest he was pretty much flawless, throwing for three touchdowns, 333 yards, and no intercepti­ons. He has debunked any notion that his carriage is about to turn into a pumpkin. He’s seeing the field with precision and is hitting receivers at all angles and distances. Purdy’s 76-yard strike to Brandon Aiyuk was the longest TD pass in the NFL this season, at least for a couple of hours until Buffalo’s Josh Allen hit Khalil Shakir for an 81-yarder. The question now about Purdy’s carriage is whether it will soon be adorned with an MVP trophy.

Stat of the week

48-0.That was the record of teams dating back to 1932 with +3 turnovers and at least 40 minutes of possession in a game. And then the Chicago Bears turned up on Sunday. Chicago absolutely should have beaten the Detroit Lions, but instead ended up losing 31-26 after leading by 12 minutes with only a little more than four minutes left. But Bears head coach (for now) Matt Eberflus played not to lose instead of trying to win. He had an opportunit­y to put the game away on fourth and one late but instead chose to kick a field goal. It was a decision that made zero sense with an in-form Justin Fields under center. Then with 2:59 left and a chance to put the game away, Chicago went three and out, calling two predictabl­e back-to-back runs, followed by a deep incomplete pass on third and long. Fields, who had played really well, and all of Chicago, deserve better.

Video of the week

Tyreek Hill is a human lightning bolt. Thanks in large part to Hill’s speed, the Miami Dolphins won a close battle 20-13 over the resurgent Las Vegas Raiders. At 7-3 (and 5-0 at home), the Dolphins are sitting pretty atop the AFC East with the Jets, Commanders, and Titans coming up on the schedule. Meanwhile, Las Vegas put in another spirited performanc­e under interim coach Antonio Pierce: Dolphins players, including Hill, praised the new-look Raiders: “Their head coach has changed their mentality.”

Elsewhere around the league

• The Los Angeles Chargers had scored the fourth-most points in the NFL but conceded the most across Justin Herbert’s first 59 career starts. Sunday was his 60th but this time it wasn’t solely his defense that let him down in the 23-20 loss to the Packers, the Chargers’ fifth one-score defeat of the season. Keenan Allen dropped the simplest of catches on the goalline (one of two in the red zone), Quentin Johnson let another go through his hands deep into Packers territory on the Chargers’ final drive and Austin Ekeler fumbled on Green Bay’s twoyard line. The Chargers’ three drops were the most in the red zone since ESPN started recording the stat in 2006. At one point the usually low-key Herbert slammed the ball into the ground in frustratio­n and it was hard not to sympathize with an excellent young quarterbac­k who is constantly let down by those around him, including his flustered head coach, Brandon Staley.

• The Los Angeles Rams pulled out a come-from-behind 17-16 win over the Seattle Seahawks thanks to a missed 55-yard field goal by Jason Myers, who had converted 15 straight. Los Angeles were helped by Drew Lock, who entered for an injured Geno Smith and proceeded to throw an intercepti­on which the Rams turned into a field goal. Smith was fantastic on Seattle’s first drive and returned for the last one to set up the potential game-winner. With Seattle’s loss, San Francisco now have sole possession of first in the NFC West before the teams’ matchup on Thursday night.

• Pittsburgh Steelers running back Najee Harris wasn’t a happy camper after his team’s 13-10 loss to Cleveland. “I’m just tired of this shit,” Harris said, in reference to the Steelers’ inept, predictabl­e offense. Kenny Pickett showed little juice and only threw for 106 yards. To be fair, he was terrorized by Myles Garrett most of the game (including a safety that was only called a sack). Meanwhile rookie quarterbac­k Dorian Thompson-Robinson earned his first NFL win and Cleveland, winners of five of their last six games, continue to roll.

• Josh Allen had a nice bounce back game as the Buffalo Bills toppled the New York Jets 32-6. Buffalo’s 32 points were the most allowed by the Jets defense this season. In their defense, they were on the field a lot thanks to one of the most embarrassi­ng quarterbac­k performanc­es by Zach Wilson in some time. He was replaced by Tim Boyle late in the game and, for the first time this season, Jets head coach Robert Saleh refused to say Wilson is the team’s starter going forward.

• The Cowboys’ hybrid, all-everything defensive force Micah Parsons continued his season (and career) of domination in Dallas’s 33-10 win over the Carolina Panthers. Parsons had 2.5 sacks, pushing his season total to 10. He is the first Cowboys player in history to achieve double-digit sacks in each of his first three seasons.

• Remember the Denver Broncos who conceded 70 points against the Dolphins and then fell to 1-5. They’re yesterday’s news. Russell Wilson and Sean Payton have led a mini-revival in the Rockies and Denver are now 5-5 after Sunday’s 21-20 win over the Minnesota Vikings. They’re also in the race for the AFC’s final wildcard spot.

• A little silver lining for some of the NFL’s bottomfeed­ers (apart from the Panthers). Here’s the top five of next year’s draft as it stands:

1) Chicago Bears (via Carolina Panthers), 1-9

2) Arizona Cardinals, 2-9

3) New England Patriots, 2-8 4) Chiacgo Bears, 3-8

5) New York Giants, 3-8

said after his team put failure to reach last year’s World Cup behind them. “We are where we deserve to be with all the difficulti­es we had, but thanks to the new coach and staff, we are back.”

 ?? Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images ?? Morgan is among six players from the World Cup squad left off the roster for upcoming friendlies against China.
Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images Morgan is among six players from the World Cup squad left off the roster for upcoming friendlies against China.
 ?? Brad Mills/USA Today Sports ?? New York Giants quarterbac­k Tommy DeVito leaves the field after his team’s victory over the Washington Commanders. Photograph:
Brad Mills/USA Today Sports New York Giants quarterbac­k Tommy DeVito leaves the field after his team’s victory over the Washington Commanders. Photograph:
 ?? Cox/USA Today Sports ?? Brock Purdy’s San Francisco 49ers are top of the NFC West. Photograph: Kelley L
Cox/USA Today Sports Brock Purdy’s San Francisco 49ers are top of the NFC West. Photograph: Kelley L

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