7:02 am | January 27, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:
9:31 AM ET
GLENDALE, Ariz. — If a new era dawns and no one is there to see it, can you really call it a fresh beginning? New U.S. manager Gregg Berhalter and his players are determined to answer that in the affirmative.
Yes, some people will take in Sunday’s friendly between the U.S. men’s national team and Panama at State Farm Stadium in suburban Phoenix, but as it stands now, not that many. A U.S. Soccer spokesman told reporters that as of Saturday morning, just over 6,000 tickets had been sold. That isn’t even one-tenth of State Farm Stadium’s capacity of 63,400.
As much as fans might complain about ticket prices, the venue or the makeup of the roster, the reality is that until an indeterminate time in the future, the U.S. men will continue to be known as “The Team That Didn’t Qualify For The World Cup.” It doesn’t matter that Berhalter wasn’t the manager. It doesn’t matter that the vast majority of players had nothing to do with the failed qualifying effort or “That Night in Couva” when the Americans somehow contrived to lose to Trinidad & Tobago. That qualifying campaign sits like an anvil on the shoulders of the USMNT program.