Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Americans back after an 8-year abscence

Reyna, Scally and Musah were 11 the last time the U.S. took the field at this stage

- By Ronald Blum

DOHA, Qatar — Gio Reyna, Joe Scally and Yusuf Musah were 11 years old the last time the United States took the field in a World Cup match. On the 3,066th day after that loss in Brazil, the Americans return to soccer’s showcase with a newlook team dreaming lofty goals and hoping for actual ones.

Filled with novelty, nerves and naivety, these young Americans take the field against Wales on Monday night in a match a growing fanbase back home has been pining for since 2014.

“Three years, four years of just working up to this moment, I think all the guys are ready to go,” midfielder Weston McKennie said.

A Friday match against England follows and group play ends Nov. 29 against Iran, which famously eliminated the U.S. from the 1998 World Cup in France.

Only DeAndre Yedlin, a 29- year- old defender, remains from the American team eliminated by Belgium in the second round eight years ago. Yedlin, Christian Pulisic, Kellyn Acosta and Tim Ream are among just four holdovers from the group that flopped to the field in anguish after the crushing loss at Trinidad in CONCACAF qualifying in October 2017 that ended the streak of U.S. World Cup appearance­s at seven.

McKennie debuted a month later in a 1-1 friendly draw at Portugal along with Cameron Carter- Vickers and Tyler Adams, who was appointed captain Sunday at age 23.

A total of 118 players were tried over 68 matches in a World Cup cycle interrupte­d by a pandemic, including 91 after Gregg Berhalter was hired as coach in December 2018. He gave debuts to 56 players and took the secondyoun­gest roster to the tournament at an average age of just over 25 years, older than only Ghana.

Some are already looking ahead four years, to when the U.S. co-hosts the tournament and the core group figures to be in its prime.

“We want to build a ton of momentum going into 2026, but it all starts now,” Berhalter said.

Berhalter becomes the first American to play and coach at a World Cup — his 50th minute shot from Claudio Reyna’s corner kick struck German defender Torsten Frings’ arm on the goal line but was not called a hand ball in 2002′s 1-0 quarterfin­al loss.

“I was in my mom’s belly,” quipped Gio Reyna, Claudio’s son, who was born that November.

Berhalter has installed a high-pressing style and led the Americans to a 36-10-10 record that included titles in the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup and Nations League.

“The final determinat­ion of this group,” he said, “will be at the World Cup. That’s how generation­s are measured. We can all be talking — that’s great, we beat Mexico three times. Or we won the Gold Cup or the Nations League. But the real measuring stick for this group is certainly going to be how you perform in Qatar.”

Wales is back in the World Cup for the first time since 1958, led by 33-year-old Gareth Bale and 31-year-old Aaron Ramsey but without injured midfielder Joe Allen. The lack of World Cup experience has the Welsh as guarded as the Americans heading into the match at Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, a renovated 44,000-seat venue west of the capital.

“They’re a good young squad and have some fantastic players,” Bale said. “We’re under no illusions that they’re here to win the game just as we are, so we know it’s going to be a difficult match tomorrow and I’m sure they know the same thing, too.”

With Miles Robinson and Chris Richards injured, the American central defense will start a pair from among Walker Zimmerman, Aaron Long, Carter-Vickers or 35year-old Tim Ream, back on the national team for the first time in 14 months.

Pulisic has struggled for playing time, getting only five starts for Chelsea this season.

As the opener approached, Pulisic recalled gathering for World Cup games in the basement of his home in Hershey, Pa., and watching Landon Donovan score the injury-time goal that beat Algeria in 2010 to earn advancemen­t.

“The family coming together, wearing all our red, white and blue, just getting excited,” Pulisic said. “It was always a dream of mine. I wanted to be there so bad. But now to be here as a part of this team actually at the World Cup, it’s special. And, yeah, I don’t want to take a moment of this for granted.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Tyler Adams, left, and Joshua Sargent, right, playing during the a friendly soccer match Sept. 23 between the U.S. and Japan as part of the Kirin Challenge Cup in Duesseldor­f, Germany. Adams has been named the United States' captain for the World Cup ahead of their opener against Wales on Monday.
Associated Press Tyler Adams, left, and Joshua Sargent, right, playing during the a friendly soccer match Sept. 23 between the U.S. and Japan as part of the Kirin Challenge Cup in Duesseldor­f, Germany. Adams has been named the United States' captain for the World Cup ahead of their opener against Wales on Monday.

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