The Dawn of the Gregg Berhalter Era
After watching the January and now March friendlies it’s quite
clear that Gregg Berhalter is as advertised as a manager. The USMNT was more tactically aware than at any
time I can recently remember. What I
mean by that is everyone knows the plan and what they are supposed to do
now.
Under Jürgen that changed every camp and match, and the
further I get away from it the more I see how Klinsmann really didn’t have a
clue about tactical football. That was
supposedly known about him when he was hired, but Jürgen was great at keeping
players uncomfortable and never losing a dual-national.
I think it’s more damning to Bruce Arena honestly. He was supposedly this master manager, but on
the pitch his guys didn’t seem to have any more of clue than Klinsmann’s did. To compound that Arena relied WAY too heavily
on MLS guys he was comfortable with, and you see where that got us.
Dave Sarachan did a job, and he did it relatively well. Tactics weren’t the most important part of his mandate, and while that was fine for a long while, it got annoying towards the end. He blooded a bunch of new players, but he never really laid a solid foundation with a real plan (not that he was supposed to either).
Now back to Berhalter, last night was like a revelation. When Chile was overrunning us, he made an IN-GAME
tactical adjustment that worked like a charm!
He went from his preferred 4-3-3 to a 5-2-3. We couldn’t beat Chile’s high press at all,
so he put 5 in the back then had Bradley AND Trapp as the 2 in front of the 5. Suddenly we could control the ball and
actually hang with Chile. That was a
departure from his pregame directive to play out of the back (which we were
TERRIBLE at all night long). Just having
a guy in charge that can read the game in real-time and adjust on the fly is a
massive improvement. Jürgen and Bruce NEVER
did that, and it wasn’t Sarachan’s job to do so.
There was some downside with Berhalter though. I felt like most of the players were thinking
too much rather than just playing in all four matches. I suppose that could be a good thing in that
they are listening and trying to execute the plan, but too often there was that
slight hesitation. Like, am I in the
right place or is this the play I’m supposed to make? I assume that will all get ironed out over
time, but overall thus far there has been more good than bad with Gregg.
Since I’m on the bad I might as well roll with it, but in
both of these matches when Pulisic left the pitch so did our ability to hold
the ball and create offense. Further,
without CP, Adams and McKennie (like the second half last night) we are still
the same old USMNT against high quality competition. Meaning, we can’t create squat on offense,
can’t hold the ball when we get it and are exposed on defense due to lack of
experience or pace or both.
When CP was in the game yesterday we looked like a real
squad but as soon as he left it was more or less the same quality of the team
that lost in Couva and was generally lackluster throughout 2018 WCQ. It might be too much pressure, but he is our offense right now. And yes, his health issues are worrisome, for
country but especially for club. I’m not
totally sold that #10 is his best position either, but until someone else proves
they can do it CP is the best man for the job.
(Sidebar: Gedion Zelalem please, Please, PLEASE pan out as a
#10. Make it happen Peter Vermes!)
Tyler Adams is pretty clearly our second-best player overall
right now. However, I don’t love this
hybrid-RB role that Berhalter fancies him in.
Adams can play it, no doubt about it, but I think we need him in the
middle more than roaming all over the pitch and hustling back after a change of
possession. Dude has an engine that won’t
quit AND he can get the ball back AND hold onto it once he does.
Going with the same theme I think Weston McKennie is our third-best
player and should be paired with Adams in the middle until both of them are into
their 30’s. McKennie is a work horse and
can get the ball back, but his first touch and decision making aren’t on the
level of CP and TA quite yet. I guess
Weston is also a little reckless in the air, but I’ll take that. I really hope Schalke isn’t pissed at us over
his ankle.
Overall with these 3 guys in the middle of the park I think
we might be on to something at the highest level. Then you add in Zack Steffen as keeper (clearly
our #1 IMO) with John Brooks and Aaron Long in central defense and we the makings
of a nice spine.
One thing about Brooks that became clear to me over these
last two matches is that he’s really our only CB that can pass out of the back
and break lines with any kind of skill or consistency. Long has seriously impressed me thus far and has
passed Matt Miazga on my depth chart. MM
is still #3 right now but who #4 will be is anybody’s guess. I know who it won’t be and that’s Omar Gonzalez. Not sure why he was called back in to begin
with, but last night should be his last performance in a USMNT kit.
(Sidebar: It just kills me that the Timbers drafted Long in
2014 only to release him later that year.
Now Portland needs a CB desperately and he’s MLS Defender of the Year in
New York.)
Our fullback situation is completely up in the air right now
on both flanks. Tim Ream is a nice
utility player off the pine, but starting at LB? Hell no!
He’s too slow of foot and too mistake prone. Unfortunately, it looks like DeAndre Yedlin
has not progressed as we’d all have expected by now. I guess he’s still our best option at RB, but
this business about him being a winger is nonsense. All he has is speed. He has no touch on his crosses and doesn’t have
the best football IQ either in terms of positioning and what play to make when. I used to think he was a lock for 2022 but I’m
not so sure anymore.
I already said how I’d rather have Adams in the middle and
the only other guy to get minutes at fullback in March was Daniel Lovitz. He’s nowhere near an international level
player and I doubt he’s even CONCACAF quality.
(Sidebar: If we had Jonathan Gonzalez maybe Adams could play
RB full time, but oh well.)
I’ve long been a basher of Wil Trapp, but he played his best
minutes ever for the USMNT against Ecuador.
I still don’t want him on my 23 for a WC, but he at least finally showed
me why he keeps getting called in. Then
there’s Mr. Michael “I Always Play the Ball Backwards” Bradley. He’s lost a step or two, but if the choice is
Trapp or him give me Bradley every time.
Bradley just knows how to play at the highest level, and it shows when
he’s surrounded by other talent. That
said, neither of these guys should be starting.
For us to be a legitimate threat against the big boys it must be Adams
and McKennie centrally and not Trapp and/or Bradley.
As for the other guys that played in the middle, I wasn’t
impressed with either of them. After watching
Christian Roldan you can’t convince me that he’s a better option than Kellyn
Acosta behind TA and WM. Sebastian
Lletget is supposed to be this #10 playmaking force that will allow us to move
Pulisic out wide. Umm, no, that’s not
happening any time soon. He’s yet
another guy where the jump from MLS to high level international football seems
too vast for him.
Wingers…ugh…where to start?
Paul Arriola continues to be our best option on the right, but when is
he going to make the jump from hard worker to dangerous finisher/creator in and
around the box? I already said Yedlin as
a winger is a no-go, and you can add Jordan Morris to that list as well. For me Morris is a forward or nothing. Jordan’s not creative or instinctual enough
to play on the wing. While Corey Baird
was impressive in January, against Chile he was exposed as MLS or CONCACAF level
only.
This Jonathan Lewis guy might the answer on the left. He’s quick as hell and can get a decent cross
off. I don’t see him play at the club
level, but Taylor Twellman was saying how he’s big time inconsistent which is
why he’s mainly used as a super-sub in MLS.
At this point I think playing Lewis from the start might be wise just to
see what he can give over 60-70 minutes, rather than just 10 at the end.
(Sidebar: Can Lynden Gooch please get another look on the wing?)
(Sidebar: Can Lynden Gooch please get another look on the wing?)
Gyasi Zardes is the only guy to start all four matches in
the Gregg Berhalter era, and he rewarded his manager with playing a part in
both goals in March. I still don’t want
him starting up top, but I think I might be coming around to having him off the
bench as a decent option. Everyone knows
Zardes isn’t the answer if we are really going to be taken seriously, and that’s
why I think you’ll see Jozy Altidore in that spot come the Gold Cup.
So, I’m going to keep harping on this until it happens, but Josh
Sargent is ready NOW! Yes, he’s not
getting regular minutes at Bremen, but c’mon already! He is our future striker, and everyone knows
it. So why not throw him into the fire
now? Ugh, whatever.
I think Ethan Horvath has established himself as our #2 keeper
behind Steffen. Sean Johnson, Bill Hamid
and Brad Guzan aren’t really in the picture anymore for me.
I’m on record as saying that I see what US Soccer is doing
with having guys like Cameron Carter-Vickers (Captain of U-23’s), Antonee
Robinson, Djordje Mihailovic, Keaton Parks, Tim Weah, Sargent, etc. on the U-23’s. They want to get them big match experience in
Olympic Qualifying and fingers crossed the Olympics. Then hopefully some of them will separate themselves
through these competitive matches and earn their way to the USMNT. But when I look at our current dearth of fullbacks,
wingers and forwards I think getting these prospects into the senior team mix
sooner is better than later.
Contrary to Berhalther’s preferred system, I think our best
formation right now is the old standby 4-2-3-1 since it gets CP, TA, WM and
Sargent all in the spots they need to be.
Our best XI though? I’m not
really sure, like at all…
Sargent
??? Pulisic ???
Adams McKennie
??? Brooks Long ???
Steffen