The opening paragraphs in an article in today's Philadelphia Inquirer. Jonathan Tannenwald, who has a good reputation in the soccer journalist world, penned the article:
"COLUMBUS, Ohio — For all of U.S. men’s soccer team manager Mauricio Pochettino’s happy talk after
Saturday’s limp loss to South Korea, the players know the problems at hand.
They know the results are bad, the vibes are worse, and the combination has led a lot of soccer fans in America to simply ignore the program less than a year before the
World Cup.
Nothing would fix that faster than winning games against good teams, and the U.S. has lost its last five against the top 25 in FIFA’s rankings — by a combined score of 11-1. In fact, since the 2022 World Cup, the U.S. has beaten only one such team, next-door rival Mexico, whether under Pochettino or his predecessor Gregg Berhalter.
That shows the problem isn’t just based on Pochettino dropping many Europe-based stars to see if players from MLS can outhustle them. It’s a bigger issue, one that dates back to the complacency
at last year’s Copa América.
“We are here because something needed to change,” Pochettino said in a lengthy and combative news conference on the eve of Tuesday’s game against No. 17-ranked Japan (7:30 p.m., TNT, Telemundo 62). “That is why less than one year ago, [U.S. Soccer] came and offered being in charge of the national team here.”
Indeed, he spoke two days short of the one-year anniversary of his taking the job. In that time, his main tool for shaking up the status quo has been dropping some of the team’s stars — especially those who flopped in the Nations League final four in March.
..."