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Berhalter has lofty goals for USMNT in 2026 World Cup

- Tom Schad Contributi­ng: Steve Berkowitz

WASHINGTON – The 2026 World Cup still feels an eternity away, with more than 800 days to go until the U.S. men’s national soccer team plays its first group stage game in Los Angeles.

For USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter, however, the planning for 2026 has long since begun. The next two-plus years will be crucial. And the expectatio­ns for the next World Cup – which will be the first men’s iteration on U.S. soil since 1994 – are both lofty and clear.

“There’s varying degrees of success, in my opinion,” he told USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday. “But I think it starts with going to a round or getting to a place where we haven’t been before.”

And that, for the U.S., would mean making it all the way to the semifinals.

“I think that’s where you start to say, ‘Wow, this group really did something with that,’” Berhalter continued. “The United States would be crazy. It would change soccer in America forever.”

It’s an audacious goal, to be sure – especially for a team that has won one knockout round game in modern World Cup history, against Mexico in 2002. But with another key internatio­nal tournament, the Copa América, coming to the U.S. this year, Berhalter has been clear about what’s at stake for this crop of players and what needs to happen over the next two years to best position themselves for a deep World Cup run.

Because the USMNT already has a guaranteed place in the 2026 World Cup field, as one of the event’s three host nations, it will not have to survive the usual gantlet of CONCACAF qualifying. Berhalter said the qualificat­ion process helped strengthen the USMNT’s core group of players ahead of the 2022 World Cup, but the tests they need this time are different.

“Now this group has to learn how to beat better teams, not how to beat, you know, Jamaica away. We’re beyond that,” Berhalter said. “That’s still going to be difficult, but our bigger challenge is how do you set the team up to beat Argentina at home in front of 80,000 people? That’s our bigger challenge.”

Berhalter, 50, led the USMNT for a little more than four years until his contract expired at the end of 2022, after the U.S. reached the Round of 16 at the Qatar World Cup and was eliminated by the Netherland­s. After six months under two interim coaches, U.S. Soccer ultimately opted to rehire Berhalter in June. His current contract runs through the conclusion of the 2026 World Cup.

In the absence of CONCACAF qualifying, Berhalter likened the team’s World Cup prep to building a brick wall. He said one metaphoric­al brick will be experience in knockout-style competitio­ns like Copa América, where the U.S. will face Bolivia, Panama and Uruguay in Group C. Another will be exhibition experience against top-tier opponents, like the June 8 friendly against Colombia that was announced Tuesday. (The U.S. is also slated to play Brazil on June 12, according to multiple news reports.)

The 2024 Paris Olympics, which begin 10 days after the end of Copa América, are also part of the equation. While Berhalter said the U.S. will prioritize Copa América, there are several regular starters who would be age-eligible to compete in Paris, such as Gio Reyna and Yunus Musah. (At the Olympics, men’s soccer rosters must consist of players who are 23 or younger, with three allotted exceptions per country.)

Berhalter said he has had casual conversati­ons with some USMNT players about their possible interest in going to Paris, but it is unclear which players would be the best fit for Team USA and receive permission from their club teams to compete at the Games.

The USMNT would obviously love to have deep runs or win trophies in all of these competitio­ns – the Olympics, Copa América or even the CONCACAF Gold Cup and two Nations League tournament­s. But Berhalter stressed that all of those events are just stops on the road to the 2026 World Cup.

The ultimate goal, he said, is not just to reach the knockout round or semifinals but to win the whole thing. “And that’s challengin­g,” he said.

 ?? YUKIHITO TAGUCHI/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Gregg Berhalter has lofty goals for the 2026 World Cup, and the road map for planning has begun.
YUKIHITO TAGUCHI/USA TODAY SPORTS Gregg Berhalter has lofty goals for the 2026 World Cup, and the road map for planning has begun.

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