The USA has transformed itself from a developing footballing nation into a World Cup contender, from an old-boysâ league into a European-style talent factory. This is its five-year plan in the lead-up to hosting the tournament in 2026âŠ
THE USAâS ROADMAP TO WORLD CUP VICTORY
SOCCER INC Words: JĂŒrgen Schmieder
The USA menâs football team has a real chance of winning the 2026 World Cup.
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âWeâve never had as many talented players before as we do now,â says USA menâs national team head coach, Gregg Berhalter. âThe squad is extremely young. Many of them will be at the peak of their careers by the time their home World Cup comes around.â Berhalter is talking about players such as 22-year-old Christian Pulisic, who plays in England for Chelsea; Gio Reyna (18, Borussia Dortmund); Rising stars (and stripes): the USA menâs football team training in Bradenton, Florida
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Sure, it sounds crazy. Especially when you say that of a nation that â in stark contrast to the runaway success of its womenâs female football team, which has won four Womenâs World Cup titles and dominates the sport â has never got beyond the quarter-finals stage of the menâs tournament. Embarrassingly, the team failed to even qualify for the 2018 World Cup, its under-23s team lost in Olympic qualifying to Honduras this year, and the USAâs top-level league competition, Major League Soccer (MLS), is still seen as second-rate in comparison to Europeâs elite divisions. And yet, isnât it the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world who end up being the ones who succeed? Thatâs what Apple co-founder Steve Jobs said in his companyâs famous 1997 ad. The slogan he presented was âThink Differentâ, and thatâs exactly what the USA menâs national team is doing now, after decades of megalomaniacal bungling. So, hereâs a thought⊠What if we stopped thinking of US football as a federation; stopped thinking of MLS as a league; stopped thinking of clubs such as the New York Red Bulls as just clubs and thought of the whole thing as a huge start-up instead? And the World Cup in five yearsâ time â which is being joint-hosted by the USA, Canada and Mexico â as its IPO? What prospectus would this football start-up produce for investors?
Weston McKennie (22, Juventus); Sergiño Dest (20, Barcelona); Yunus Musah (18, Valencia); Brenden Aaronson (20, Red Bull Salzburg); and, of course, Tyler Adams. The 22-year-old RB Leipzig midfielder is a shining example of how things are shaping up in this football start-up at this present time. âI only really started focusing on soccer when I was accepted by the Red Bulls Academy at the age of 12,â Adams explains. This observation is more significant than it may at first seem. The footballer hails from the village of Wappingers Falls, which is
THE RED BULLETIN