[ad_1] Doug McIntyre Soccer Journalist Two days after Anthony Hudson hastily left his post as the interim U.S. men's national team coach for a c
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Two days after Anthony Hudson hastily left his post as the interim U.S. men’s national team coach for a club job in the Middle East, B.J. Callaghan, Hudson’s successor in the temporary role, named a 23-player roster that will defend the USMNT’s CONCACAF Nations League title later this month in Las Vegas.
Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Gio Reyna are among 13 holdovers from the U.S. squad that reached the second round at last year’s World Cup. But a number of other Qatar 2022 starters, including defender Tim Ream, striker Josh Sargent and heart-and-soul captain Tyler Adams, were unavailable because of injury.
Those who were selected will report to Los Angeles beginning this weekend for training camp, which kicks off on Monday. The U.S. faces chief nemesis Mexico – who they beat in the inaugural Nations League final in 2021 – in this year’s semis June 15. The winner will play either Canada or Panama for the title three days later.
Here’s the full U.S. roster followed by three quick takeaways:
- Goalkeepers: Drake Callender, Inter Miami; Josh Cohen, Maccabi Haifa (Israel), Sean Johnson, Toronto (MLS); Matt Turner, Arsenal (England)
- Defenders: Sergiño Dest, AC Milan (Italy), Chris Richards, Crystal Palace (England), Antonee Robinson, Fulham (England); Miles Robinson, Atlanta United (MLS), Joe Scally, Borussia Mönchengladbach (Germany); Auston Trusty, Birmingham City (England), Walker Zimmerman, Nashville (MLS)
- Midfielders: Johnny Cardoso, Internacional (Brazil); Luca de la Torre, Celta Vigo (Spain); Weston McKennie, Leeds (England); Yunus Musah, Valencia (Spain); Gio Reyna, Borussia Dortmund (Germany); Alan Soñora, Juárez (Mexico)
- Forwards: Brenden Aaronson, Leeds; Folarin Balogun, Reims (France); Taylor Booth, Utrecht (Netherlands), Ricardo Pepi, Groningen (Netherlands), Christian Pulisic, Chelsea (England); Tim Weah, Lille (France); Alex Zendejas, Club América (Mexico)
Tyler Adams’ absence is a problem
As much as the Americans will miss Adams’ intensity and vocal leadership in central midfield, they’ll miss his relentless defending even more. The destroyer is a unicorn in the U.S. player pool. Nobody else can recover possession as consistently or cover close to as much ground as the 24-year-old Adams, who missed the last two months of Leeds’ doomed Premier League season following hamstring surgery.
Making matters worse, Kellyn Acosta also isn’t on this roster. Acosta, Adams deputy in the deep-lying role over the last few years, just returned from injury himself but hasn’t played since limping out of an LAFC match on May 13. Acosta, who was on the bench but didn’t play Wednesday in the MLS Cup holder’s 2-1 CONCACAF Champions League loss at Liga MX side Leon, should be match fit in time for the Gold Cup, which runs June 24-July 16.
With both Adams and Acosta out, projected starters McKennie and Musah are likely to be joined in the middle by one of Cardoso, De la Torre, Reyna or Soñora
Matt Turner is the undisputed starter in goal
Injuries also prevented veteran backstops Ethan Horvath and Zack Steffen from inclusion. Both keepers were regulars in England’s second tier Championship this season, while Turner spent the final 10 weeks of Arsenal’s season on the bench.
While Turner was widely expected to keep the job he won midway through 2022 anyway, there’s no question now that the World Cup No.1 will be in nets this month. Longtime backup Sean Johnson will reclaim that role. Two uncapped keepers are behind them in Callender and Cohen, who earlier this season faced Benfica, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League.
All eyes on Folarin Balogun
Much of the attention this month will be on Balogun, the prized New York-born, London-raised tri-national striker who committed his international future to the U.S. over England and Nigeria last month.
With Sargent and Daryl Dike hurt and World Cup roster members Jesus Ferreira and Haji Wright overlooked, the starting job against Mexico will come down to Balogun or Pepi.
Pepi is the incumbent after scoring in each of the Americans’ two Nations League group stage wins in late March. Still, it could be hard for Callaghan to resist the temptation to throw Balogun – who last month became the first American to net 20 goals in one of Europe’s five best leagues – right into the fire against El Tri.
Doug McIntyre is a soccer writer for FOX Sports. Before joining FOX Sports in 2021, he was a staff writer with ESPN and Yahoo Sports and he has covered United States men’s and women’s national teams at multiple FIFA World Cups. Follow him on Twitter @ByDougMcIntyre.
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