Tonight's the night. Win and in. Tie and maybe in. But it looks good for the fellas to make the WC again.
Here's the breakdown.
If the U.S. beats Trinidad and Tobago
It qualifies for the 2018 World Cup by finishing in third place in the CONCACAF region.
If the U.S. ties Trinidad and Tobago -
The U.S. will almost certainly still qualify for the World Cup. The only way the U.S. could drop out of third place would be if Panama beats Costa Rica by eight goals or Honduras beats Mexico by 12 goals. In the unthinkable event that both those happened, a tie would eliminate the U.S. If one of them happened, a tie would put the U.S. into a playoff against either Australia or Syria in November.
If the U.S. loses to Trinidad and Tobago - then if Panama beats Costa Rica and Honduras beats Mexico, then the U.S. would be eliminated and miss out on the World Cup for the first time since 1986. If Panama and Honduras lose, the U.S. would still qualify in third place. And if Panama or Honduras win but the other ties or loses, then the U.S. would finish fourth and go into that Syria/Australia playoff.
Apparently the field in TnT was completely under water and the playing conditions will be awful tonight. The field is now surrounded by a huge moat if water. Big surprise there.
I watched all but 3 games of the entire WC 2014. Guess I won't be doing it this time.
This may set back US Soccer for years. Signing Klinsmann was a disaster and holding him as long as they did doomed this team. Thought certain Arena would be able to hold court, but NOOOOO.
This is almost as disappointing as the Giants 0-5 start, maybe more.
I often wonder whether we are even fielding the best squad when you look all the way down to u17 and whether the current staff has the right approach in their selection criteria. I just can't see how this is our best squad we can put together.
Absolutely stunned.
I watched all but 3 games of the entire WC 2014. Guess I won't be doing it this time.
This may set back US Soccer for years. Signing Klinsmann was a disaster and holding him as long as they did doomed this team. Thought certain Arena would be able to hold court, but NOOOOO.
This is almost as disappointing as the Giants 0-5 start, maybe more.
worse...The World Cup is the greatest sporting event in the world, and the US is not going to be represented. That is embarrassing.
And the hometown team didn't make it. What a fucking disgrace.
"Nothing has to change. To make any kind of crazy changes I think would be foolish. We're building a good system in our professional league. We have players playing abroad of some quality.
"There's enough there. There's no excuses for us not qualifying for the World Cup."
These guys are fucking delusional.
The thing that bothers me most is the portion he is right about, on a skill level, I think the US team has come far over the last decade which makes it a mystery as to how those teams could qualify for the WC and this one was so inept.
We just missed out on an every 4-year event because of mismanagement of the team.
Clean house at the top and the new people will hopefully settle on what's needed at the bottom.
I'd be interested in some thoughts about how to eliminate the pay for play culture that has overtaken US soccer.
Nothing like scheduling a game in what became a neutral site b/c of all the Costa Rican fans. Your home turf should be an advantage.
F the USSF.
THe back line we trot out there is not World Cup worthy. Bad positioning, bad foot skills, bad service, bad everything
However, this narrative about disrespecting and not using the MLS players more has to stop. This team is filled with MLS players. Dempsey, Bradley, Altidore, Howard, Guzan, Nagbe,Gonzales (until recently), Besler, Morris, Zardes, Wondo, McCarty, Zusi,Rimando,Acosta,---17 out of 25 on the roster all MLS players. They were coached by an MLS coach.
The problem is not where they play but how they are used and in what combinations and with what strategy. Arena was as clueless as JK. In reality, two European based players, if fully fit would have helped last night in Fabian Johnson and Brooks. Yet, that would have been a stopgap measure that simply concealed the overall flaws in the US system, and its lack of consistency and direction. Time for lots of change as we become everyone else's "practice" game while they ready for the WC and American soccer has been set back decades.
Way to not call up Cameron or have Fabian on the roster for the last couple of matches. Fuck you for saying there's no problem. We just missed out on the world cup for the first time in 8 cycles. Asshole.
Like I said earlier CONCACAF is perfectly suited to allow Mexico and the US to being playing in the WC as regulars. Yet we lost to the fucking cupcake of the group with everything on the line. This is surreal.
Pay to play is immediately getting major attention and perhaps with this continued noise will be a thing of a past.
Arena is for sure a goner. Plenty of time to identify a replacement coach who will develop and field a time with some sort of identity.
We're going to graduate some players and perhaps for the better. Howard, Guzan, and Rimando have been great players for us but their well past their prime. We need to move forward with the wealth of younger keepers and see what the cupboard holds. Players like Hamid, Jesse Gonzalez, and Horvath deserve a shot to show they can help us. Field players like Dempsey, Bedoya, Wondo, Zusi, Beasley, perhaps even Bradley need to be pushed out by a younger generation. The talent is there... We just need a coach to use it properly.
This may be the force to drive Gulati out at last... We need some fresh minds to look at the program and identify how we're going to improve it and what direction we want to take for the next 4 years. It cannot be more of the same...
I don't know how we remedy that shortcoming. The fault doesn't lie in the domestic league. It lies in the issues that exist in player development
I'd be interested in some thoughts about how to eliminate the pay for play culture that has overtaken US soccer.
I don't think there's a way to kill it, but you have to focus investment in inner-city programs. Free youth programs in key markets where you have franchises that serve as a breeding ground for academy players.
There are countless articles online as to how soccer is a wealthy suburban sport in the US while in most of the rest of the world it is played by people of all economic backgrounds - which is at the root of the USMNT's perennial underachieving status.
If we could funnel the kids from Spanish-speaking and other immigrant communities where soccer is king into our national team programs, instead of relying on children of well-to-do families who have paid thousands of dollars per year for a decade or more for expensive travel teams, we would be a perennial top-10 team in the world.
It's all sitting right there to be taken advantage of, and yet US Soccer bumbled its way into being embarrassed on the world stage.
What a week to be a fan of the Giants and the USMNT. It can only get better from here....right?!?!
I don't know how we remedy that shortcoming. The fault doesn't lie in the domestic league. It lies in the issues that exist in player development
Agree that "set back decades" could be an overstatement, but that depends upon what happens next. As much as people disliked JK, he was right in talking about the need to bring some uniformity and consistency to the national training program for kids.
We are losing the opportunity in American soccer to develop the 13-16 year old age group. Travel squads are very expensive and start to lose players in that age to high school sports that are free, local and easier for parents. The ODP system was a complete failure. The academies are still not numerous enough or available enough to reach the vast majority of kids or the families with limited means.
Unfortunately, it's devastating in the short-term and was an unnecessary evil. The US should have qualified with its eyes closed and also should have addressed its institutional problems.
I think these MLS academies are a step in the right direction-- it seems that the sheer number of young US players in European leagues as a result of MLS academies has gone up over the last decade.
The problem is that it's not nearly enough.
But there are a lot of young names getting bandied about that, while I admittedly only know them as names, seem to have more promise than when the current crop were youngsters (Sargent, Green, Brooks, Hyndman, Accosta, McKinnie, Carleton, Miazga, etc)
Klinsmann was an inept coach, but he wasn't wrong in spirit on the player development part. They need a well-rounded technical director who can build a system and style of play. Maybe it's Tab Ramos.
I think that 25-29 year old generation is out there... They've just been ignored...
But for right now, that's the only thing that's certain. I don't know who should take Gulati's place, and I don't have a firm opinion on who should be the next manager. A lot will depend on what the answers are to some very fundamental questions:
- What kind of soccer should USMNT be playing?
- What should the relationship be with MLS?
- What are the goals for the youth teams, and how will they be tied to the senior team?
The Conmebol and UEFA leagues are vastly superior (it is not even close) so i wouldn't take solace in Chile and the Dutch missing the WC.....
Quote:
Chile and the Netherlands are far superior teams to the US and they'll be golfing too. But still, there was no excuse to be in a possible elimination spot on decision day and to shit the bed on decision day is a completely due to lack of heart. The conditions were the same for both teams. The US squad has some big decisions coming up, not the least of which is WTF to do about keeper going forward.
The Conmebol and UEFA leagues are vastly superior (it is not even close) so i wouldn't take solace in Chile and the Dutch missing the WC.....
Not according to Bruce Arena. Oops...