US v Mexico in Gold Cup final: Self-belief or pre-World Cup panic on line for United States

Posted by James Nalton | 9 hours ago | Sport | Views: 8


The Gold Cup is Concacaf’s Euros and Copa America equivalent. Sunday’s final against Mexico is the United States’ last competitive match before the World Cup, which explains the sense of urgency going into it.

Pochettino’s side have experienced a promising campaign despite missing some key players. Their presence in the final reflects that progress.

It has been a bonding experience for the players involved, but it’s likely the XI that starts their first World Cup game in Inglewood next June will look significantly different.

Due to a combination of injury, the Club World Cup and fatigue, this current squad is without familiar names such as Fulham’s Antonee Robinson, Juventus pair Weston McKennie and Timothy Weah, AC Milan duo Yunus Musah and Christian Pulisic and Monaco striker Folarin Balogun.

Star man Pulisic’s decision to rest this summer rather than take part in the Gold Cup was particularly controversial given the context of building for next year’s home World Cup.

The players Pochettino has been able to call upon have developed into a useful unit as the tournament has progressed and it’s the most together and determined a US group has looked since he took over.

He might wish this togetherness could have been created with his first-choice group but, on the other hand, it has given him a good chance to test fringe players in a competitive, high-pressure environment with a trophy on the line.

Some of this contingent have made a good case for inclusion in next summer’s 26-man squad.

Diego Luna has long been touted as a player with the potential to offer the United States something they’ve been missing. The 21-year-old energetic playmaker, who plays his club football for Real Salt Lake in MLS, has come into his own in the Gold Cup as one of this team’s star players.

In goal, Matt Freese, of Manchester City’s US relative New York City, has been given the nod ahead of Nottingham Forest’s Matt Turner all tournament and, bar one mistake against Haiti, has pushed for inclusion at the World Cup.

Freese’s penalty shootout heroics in the quarter-final against Costa Rica gave him a tournament highlight, doing his chances of a 2026 call-up no harm at all.

Elsewhere, midfielder Jack McGlynn, who was also eligible to represent the Republic of Ireland, has showcased his talent on the international stage, Bayer Leverkusen-linked Malik Tillman has impressed in a role just off the striker, and Crystal Palace defender Chris Richards has strengthened his claim for a starting centre-back role.

Regardless of what happens against Mexico, this Gold Cup has been a useful experience and a productive exercise – but there’s an argument it needed to be more.

Sooner rather than later, Pochettino needs to turn this work in progress into a fully prepared first-choice team.



BBC Sport

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