A US team playing with most of its young core was hammered by England in London Thursday afternoon.
The game was a reminder that for all the generation’s young promise, the Americans are still far behind.
It was also another example of why a US program in transition must find stability sooner and not later.
Sanjay Sujanthakumar
Tweet I wanted to wait until the US roster for the late summer friendlies was released to write part two… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
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Neil W. Blackmon
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Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon and Jon Levy Four years. For the United States Men’s National Team, an entire World Cup… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon The United States Men’s National Team won the game it had to win Friday night, defeating… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Jon Levy and Neil W. Blackmon Bruce Arena called it correctly late last week when he said “If we… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon The US Men’s National Team play the first – and without question most important – of… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon The US Men’s National Team hoped to come to Utah and make a statement. Instead, it… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Daniel Seco Bruce Arena has called in 27 players to represent the United States in two critical World Cup qualifiers to… Read more »
Daniel Seco
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon Embed from Getty Images As the calendar lurches toward another summer of soccer, US Men’s National… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon
Tweet Neil W. Blackmon and Jon Levy The United States Men’s National Team continues World Cup qualifying Tuesday night… Read more »
Neil W. Blackmon