Berhalter on Japan game: ‘We got our butts kicked and we’re not proud of it’

The USMNT didn’t mince words when describing the 2-0 defeat

U.S. men’s national team head coach Gregg Berhalter didn’t hold back when describing his team’s display against Japan, admitting: “We got our butts kicked and we’re not proud of it.”

The USMNT struggled badly in a 2-0 defeat in Düsseldorf, failing to muster a single shot on target while falling victim repeatedly to a well-coordinated Japanese press.

The result and nature of the performance has left the U.S. in dire need of improvement in Tuesday’s match against Saudi Arabia, the final game it will play before the World Cup kicks off in November.

Speaking to the media on Monday ahead of the Saudi Arabia match, Berhalter admitted that just about everything went wrong in his team’s penultimate match before Qatar.

“I think it was a poor performance from us,” he said. “We got our butts kicked and we’re not proud of it. We think we should have played much better, we could have played much better but we didn’t. So we want to play better this game.”

The USMNT turned the ball over consistently against Japan, but Berhalter was quick to point out that he felt the problems were more of his own side’s making.

“It wasn’t something that like we’re carelessly trying to play through seven or eight guys of pressure and we’re not successful and they’re coming down our throat. It was just making some bad decisions.

“And having said that, we’re not happy with that. But we had an off game. Again, I can’t say it clearly enough: We played poorly. The coaching staff takes responsibility for that. And we move on to the next game.”

Given his team’s struggles with the press, Berhalter can expect to see more of it in the future. Asked how the USMNT can better deal with high pressure, the coach responded: “Decision making, identifying who the free man is, identifying where the pressure is coming from and then exploiting it. That’s something we didn’t do a great job of [against Japan].”

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Three thoughts after a listless USMNT falls 2-0 to Japan

Japan chewed an alarmingly flat USMNT up on Friday

The U.S. men’s national team’s final friendly window started off with a stumble, as a woefully flat performance ended with a 2-0 loss to Japan.

The USMNT and Japan are roughly at the same level on paper, and losing 2-0 to a peer is not in and of itself a reason to rend your new, unloved USMNT jersey. The way we got there, though? It was truly rough stuff for anyone with hopes of seeing a USMNT run deep in to the World Cup.

Mentality minnows

The biggest reason for alarm for the USMNT was what Gregg Berhalter described as a lack of “personality.” There are some badly outdated stereotypes that hold that Japan is a technical team with no little cutting edge, but the fact is that Hajime Moriyasu’s side chewed the USMNT up and spat them out. They were the more physical team, the more driven team, the more urgent team. In all the ways you can define aggression in soccer, Japan had the advantage over the USMNT.

That tepid vibe, more than players having a bad day passing and moving, is the big worry from this game. We’re less than 60 days from the World Cup, and several U.S. starters in this one are trying to establish that they should be moved up a level in the team’s hierarchy. Starters should be pushing to become stars, the first few guys off the bench should be trying to become starters, and so on.

A lack of intensity should flat-out not be a problem right now.

Berhalter tried to shake something loose, making four halftime subs and changing systems, but it only stirred the USMNT to a certain degree, and only for about half an hour. Kaoru Mitoma got Japan’s second in the closing minutes, and it wasn’t some lone chance on the counter, either. They were back to bossing the game, primarily through sheer effort.

Will this version of the USMNT show up against Wales? Probably not. They seem good at getting up for the truly big occasions (see: several consecutive matches against Mexico). And England, being so full of elite players, will probably also see a fully motivated USMNT.

It’s that Iran match, though, that people should have qualms about. Iran’s not Japan, they don’t play the same way, but they are the opponent in the group that the USMNT is most likely to overlook. Friday’s loss was a worrisome reminder that this is a team with no room for looking past anyone.

Handing it over

Japan’s press gave the USMNT fits. Some of this was simply a good team executing their plan cohesively and at a high level. Japan knew what it wanted to make the USMNT do — pin them in their own half and make center backs Aaron Long and Walker Zimmerman solve the problem in possession — and did so at an impressive level.

There are two things that should alarm USMNT fans that have nothing to do with how fluently Japan played. First, the obvious: the USMNT was simply abysmal with the ball. Maybe that’s a one-game problem that disappears against Saudi Arabia next week, or maybe the absences of Chris Richards and Cameron Carter-Vickers are a bigger deal than it initially seemed. No matter how you slice it, the number of telegraphed passes, or passes delivered with a laggardly pace, was a major disappointment.

Secondly, as much as Japan did what they set out to do at a really good level, we’re not talking about a complicated plan. Japan pressed out of a very straightforward 4-4-2 shape, something that every USMNT player has seen on a regular basis in recent years. If anything, you’ve been hearing the phrase “nine-ten press” more often over the past two years or so, with teams that on paper play 4-2-3-1 or 4-3-3 often opting to drop their wingers and move a central midfielder up when they’re out of possession.

And yet, the USMNT on Friday looked bewildered at times, unable to find good angles or make the right movements to open that shape up. Japan used their structure well, but they also weren’t really challenged. The USMNT midfield, who squandered an ostensible three-on-two numerical advantage by being out-fought for 90 minutes, wasn’t opening passing lanes with their movement. If the right run came, it arrived too late and at too slow a speed, and Japan could cut the passing lane off without anything else opening up.

Without Christian Pulisic (who per U.S. Soccer picked up some kind of minor injury in training) and Tim Weah, the front three featured two players that want to go narrow and a No. 9 that pretty notoriously checks back into the midfield. That gave the USMNT no vertical options, allowing Japan to push their line of contention higher. There was no easy outlet, and the USMNT didn’t play well enough to work through things the hard way either.

Now, we haven’t seen the USMNT struggle to this degree very often this year, and missing both Pulisic and Weah made a big difference. Zimmerman and Long have both established that they’re better passers than we saw in this game. Maybe getting the mentality side right fixes all of this, but if it doesn’t, it could undermine the plans of advancing from Group B, much less winning a knockout round game.

Turner time

The USMNT’s best player on the day, by far, was Matt Turner. The goals from Japan were well-taken and not his fault, and he wasn’t the one misplacing simple passes out of the back either.

Historically, the USMNT enters any given World Cup with goalkeeping as a strength, but it’s not entirely clear who Berhalter’s top three are, and who the starter is. There are concerns with every candidate: Zack Steffen has a knee issue and may or may not be first-choice at Middlesbrough. Ethan Horvath has had consistency problems. Sean Johnson’s ceiling might not be as high as the rest of the contenders.

For Turner, the issue has been a more straightforward question of whether he was going to play enough to stay sharp. Turner got a once-in-a-lifetime offer from Arsenal that he had to take, but the concern was that he might be vying for a World Cup spot without being able to show what he can do in games.

Against Japan at least, that issue didn’t appear to be a problem. Turner may have only one appearance since moving to London, but he looked like a full-time starter, showing no signs of rust or a lack of confidence. If not for three particularly good Turner stops, the scoreline would have been worse.

There may be questions at some other vital positions with this team right now, but at the moment Turner seems to be a very strong bet to be the No. 1 when the USMNT takes the field against Wales on November 21.

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Berhalter says USMNT lacked personality in dismal Japan loss

It was an all-around ugly performance for the USMNT against Japan

Gregg Berhalter has said his U.S. national team side lacked personality in a dismal 2-0 defeat to Japan on Friday.

The USMNT was played off the pitch in Düsseldorf as Japan’s press caused a series of poor giveaways, while Berhalter’s side also failed to manage a single shot on goal all game.

It was a distressing performance as the USMNT enters the home stretch leading into the World Cup. Tuesday’s match against Saudi Arabia will be the team’s final game before it faces Wales on November 21 in Qatar.

Berhalter said post-game on ESPN’s broadcast that the U.S. had too many “silly giveaways,” which was a symptom of the team’s lack of personality in the match.

“I think it was a really competitive match,” Berhalter said. “I think we ended up hurting ourselves a little bit too much in the game with silly giveaways. We want a little more personality.

“Give Japan a lot of credit. Good team, competitive team, they pressed well, but we can do better.”

Asked what he’d like to see different against the Saudis and Berhalter replied: “It’s a more-personality match. For some reason, I didn’t see a lot of personality in our performance tonight.”

One of the only U.S. players to emerge from Friday’s game unscathed was Matt Turner, who made a series of quality saves to keep the scoreline from getting too lopsided.

Turner admitted that he saw his teammates get down on themselves after a series of bad turnovers, with Japan’s second goal a glaring example.

“[There were] some moments all over the field that we wish we had back,” Turner added on ESPN’s post-game broadcast.

“That second goal comes from a lot of frustration with things just not really working for us on the day. We give the ball away and we kind of all just drop our heads and we don’t react. They were having joy on the ball and running freely at us. I think that second goal really summed up pretty much the whole match.”

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Gregg Berhalter names four USMNT starters for Japan friendly

Berhalter revealed most of his defensive group for Friday’s friendly

We already know four of the starters for Gregg Berhalter in Friday’s U.S. men’s national team friendly against Japan (8 a.m. ET, ESPN2/UniMás).

Berhalter revealed no fewer than four starters for the match, which will be played in Düsseldorf, Germany. Arsenal goalkeeper Matt Turner will get the nod, while Berhalter said he will also give starts to Aaron Long, Sam Vines, and Walker Zimmerman.

“We’re focused right now on the Japan game, evaluating performances there, just looking to have a good team performance. That’s the most important thing,” Berhalter told reporters on Thursday. “We talked about putting the players at ease, focusing on the team performance rather than individual performances. And for tomorrow, we decided to go with Matt in goal.”

Berhalter is surely looking at how the entire group responds as a unit, but in Turner’s case, he may have something else on his mind: match fitness. Turner has appeared just once for Arsenal since his summer move, in a 2-1 Europa League win at FC Zurich. Turner’s last USMNT appearance came in a 5-0 win over Grenada back in June.

In Long, Vines, and Zimmerman, Berhalter in all likelihood announced 75% of his starting back line to face Japan. On Zimmerman, who seems likely to start for the USMNT in Qatar at this point, Berhalter highlighted how important his aerial ability will be for the group.

“He’s a warrior. I think that’s what you want in center backs, as a starting point,” said Berhalter. “That’s what you want as a teammate. So guys can rely on him to give 100% in everything he’s gonna do. Besides from that, a key quality that he has is exceptional in the air. There’s not many people that you see that are that good at heading, and it helps the team especially when we’re pressing and teams are playing long.”

Big praise for Vines

While Long and Zimmerman are a familiar partnership over the past few years, Vines only has eight caps, and his last appearance with the USMNT came in the semifinals of the 2021 Gold Cup.

However, since moving to the Belgian top flight with Royal Antwerp, Vines has become a virtual ever-present. With Antonee Robinson absent through injury, Berhalter has called in plenty of players who have spent time at left back, but only Vines plays the role full-time.

In Berhalter’s opinion, Vines has taken a noticeable step forward of late.

“What I’ve noticed from (Vines) in particular is the speed of his decision-making has gotten better, has improved. He looks a lot more sure of himself, (being) aggressive, attacking down the left wing,” said Berhalter. “He’s been coming inside a little bit with his club sometimes, and that helps give him flexibility.”

“I see a confident Sam Vines, a guy who has been embracing one-v-one duels, embracing getting the ball under pressure and being able to play out of pressure. Overall he’s a guy that I’ve been really pleased with this camp. He’s another one that’s gonna start tomorrow. So, really excited about him, and him getting this opportunity, because when he’s played with us, he’s played well. So excited to see him get this opportunity tomorrow.”

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Berhalter on in-form Sargent: He’s stronger, quicker and more decisive

Things have changed a lot in a year for the Norwich forward

Gregg Berhalter has said the change in Josh Sargent is noticeable since the last time the forward was with the U.S. men’s national team.

Sargent got the call for the USMNT’s friendlies against Japan and Saudi Arabia this month, the team’s final two warm-ups ahead of the World Cup.

It was the first U.S. call for Sargent since September 2021 as the striker rounds into form for Norwich City at the perfect time.

The 22-year-old already has six goals for Norwich this season, leading the Canaries to second place in the Championship table. Sargent managed just two league goals all of last season as Norwich was relegated from the Premier League.

USMNT head coach Berhalter has been impressed with what he’s seen from Sargent after seeing him in camp for the first time in a year.

“He looks great,” the coach told the media ahead of Friday’s game against Japan in Germany.

“Confidence is a big thing but also strength: He’s gotten bigger, he’s gotten stronger, gotten quicker, more decisive with his movements. He’s looked really good in training, and it’s been good to have him in camp. He’s had a tough road but now it shows what he can do when he’s in form.”

Sargent is competing for minutes at forward in this camp alongside Ricardo Pepi and Jesús Ferreira.

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Cameron Carter-Vickers to miss USMNT September friendlies

Berhalter is now dealing with a fifth injury-related absentee

Cameron Carter-Vickers is the latest player to end up unavailable for the upcoming U.S. men’s national team friendlies against Japan and Saudi Arabia.

The Celtic center back was on Gregg Berhalter’s initial roster, but will not participate in the USMNT’s September friendlies after picking up an as-yet-unspecified injury in training.

Celtic boss Ange Postecoglu told the Daily Record early on Sunday that the 24-year-old would likely miss the USMNT camp, and that they hoped to have him available coming out of the international break.

“We’ll see how he is. I think he’s out of the US camp,” said Postecoglu. “We are hoping, post-international break, he won’t be too far away.”

Speaking at halftime of ESPN‘s broadcast of the Columbus Crew hosting the Portland Timbers, Berhalter confirmed that Carter-Vickers would not participate in friendlies against Japan (September 23 in Dusseldorf) and Saudi Arabia (September 27 in Murcia).

“Cam will be out of this camp, which is unfortunate,” said Berhalter. “We wanted to get him in and get him around the group this camp, but unfortunately he won’t be in. We are working on a replacement as we speak.”

Carter-Vickers is the latest USMNT player to end up unavailable in this window. Antonee Robinson and Tim Weah are both dealing with ankle sprains, though both players are believed to be close to a return. Zack Steffen was supposed to be out in order to rest and overcome a knee injury, but started for Middlesbrough on Saturday.

Berhalter then called in Internacional midfielder Johnny Cardoso as a replacement for Yunus Musah, who picked up what Valencia has said is a minor groin injury after the initial roster was announced.

Who will Berhalter call in to replace Carter-Vickers?

There was no immediate announcement of the USMNT’s choice to replace Carter-Vickers, but it stands to reason that Berhalter will add a center back to a squad that is currently down to just three (Aaron Long, Chris Richards, and Walker Zimmerman) rather than boosting numbers at a different position.

Mark McKenzie and Erik Palmer-Brown feel like the leading candidates at this point. While McKenzie has been in and out of Genk’s lineup so far this season, he has more of a history under Berhalter. However, Palmer-Brown has started every game for Troyes in Ligue 1, which may be enough to see him push ahead in what is probably a last chance to stake a claim on a World Cup spot for both players.

Berhalter also mentioned Matt Miazga as someone he’s been monitoring after announcing his squad, meaning the FC Cincinnati man is also a candidate here. While Berhalter also mentioned Fulham captain Tim Ream, it came with a note about how the style of play Ream does well in is not a good mesh with the USMNT’s system. A similar situation is likely to keep John Brooks out of the reckoning, even after the USMNT veteran sealed a move to Benfica.

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Berhalter: The USMNT can beat anyone in the world

The USMNT coach would not rule out the possibility of winning a World Cup

Gregg Berhalter has stated his belief that his U.S. men’s national team has the ability to beat any team in the world.

The World Cup kicks off in just two months, as the USMNT aims to get out of a Group B that features England, Wales and Iran.

The USMNT coach was asked by LaLiga North America about the possibility of winning a World Cup, which he did not totally dismiss out of hand.

“The starting point to even have the conversation if you can win the World Cup or not needs to start with: can we get out of this group?” Berhalter asked. “And that’s certainly a target of ours as a starting point.

“Then from there, do we believe that on any given day we can beat anyone in the world? Yes, we do. So now you start saying OK, now we need to play a very good game in the knockout rounds to keep advancing and that’s the goal. Once you get to the knockout round, it’s just survival. You get in survival mode and then anything can happen.

“The World Cup is a huge event with the whole world watching and you just have to stick to what we’ve been doing. And the guys really understand that and I think we’ve been practicing that. So now it’s about doing it on the world stage.”

Before the USMNT heads to Qatar, it will face Japan and Saudi Arabia in its final two warm-up friendlies, which are set for September 23 and 27.

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Berhalter: We’ve been educating USMNT players on Qatar controversies

The coach said it would be left up to the players if they wish to protest

U.S. men’s national team players have been educated about the myriad of controversies surrounding Qatar hosting the 2022 World Cup, according to head coach Gregg Berhalter.

Qatar has been a controversial destination since it was awarded the World Cup nearly 12 years ago, and the dissenting voices inside and outside the sport have only grown since then.

Last year, a report from The Guardian said 6,500 migrant workers had died in the lead-up to the tournament. That is in addition to ongoing questions over the country’s treatment of women and the LGBT community.

“We’ve been talking to the players about what’s been going on in Qatar for about a year and a half now and really trying to educate the players,” Berhalter told Sports Seriously‘s Mackenzie Salmon. “We started this program called ‘Be The Change’ with the players during Black Lives Matter and it’s carried on through other social injustices as well.”

The USMNT has embraced a more activist role, notably writing an open letter to U.S. Congress this summer demanding changes to the country’s gun laws in the wake of mass shootings in Buffalo and Uvalde.

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There are expected to be a number of protest from teams at the World Cup, which could take on various forms. Denmark, for example, has said it will not participate in commercial activities arranged by World Cup organizers, and would wear messages promoting human rights on their warm-up shirts.

When it comes to any potential protest for the USMNT in Qatar, Berhalter said it would be left up to the players to decide.

“With this, we’re going to leave it up to the players, but it’s certainly something that we have been educating them [about] and now it’s about what do we want to do? And I think that the best thing any country can do is have a voice to bring change. I think as more countries do that, there could perhaps be change.”

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Berhalter urges Malik Tillman to ‘pick it up’ for USMNT, Rangers

Berhalter wants more out of the USMNT playmaker

Malik Tillman has started his time with Rangers off with plenty of success, but for U.S. men’s national team head coach Gregg Berhalter, the young midfielder should be doing even more.

Speaking with media after announcing his roster for the USMNT’s September friendlies against Japan and Saudi Arabia, Berhalter said that Tillman—who is one of six midfielders named in the squad for matches to be played in Düsseldorf and Murcia—needs to show more consistency in the biggest games.

“He’s done well, but he needs to do better. He needs to increase his level,” said a blunt Berhalter. “I’m disappointed with his last couple performances against Ajax and Celtic.” Those matches both ended in heavy 4-0 defeats for Rangers, with Tillman substituted in the 59th minute against Celtic and then at halftime against Ajax.

Berhalter: Consistency for Tillman is key

The problem Tillman will run into playing with Rangers is a common one for players who move to either Glaswegian giant over the years: Old Firm clashes and games in Europe are so high-stakes and are played at a very high level, but the competition in the Scottish Premier League outside of those Celtic vs. Rangers battles are a step down.

“He’s got a ton of quality,” added Berhalter, who emphasized that the USMNT coaching staff still thinks highly of the Bayern Munich academy  product. “The conversations I’m having with him (are) that he can help this group, but he needs to pick it up a little…he’s got a huge ceiling.”

That’s not to say Tillman has not produced in some very big games in the first weeks of his time with Rangers. He scored the goal that took them past Union Saint-Gilloise in the penultimate round of Champions League qualifying, and then had the assist on Antonio Colak’s decisive goal against PSV.

Since joining Rangers, Tillman has two goals and one assist, and had started nine of their first 10 games in all competitions. However, after two straight rough losses for Rangers, he was one of five players dropped by Giovanni van Bronckhorst for Wednesday’s Champions League visit to Napoli.

“It’s great to see the start that he had, and now it’s going to be about, in these next bigger games, when he’s in the Champions League, will he do the same type of thing he’s doing in the Scottish league?” asked Berhalter. “That’s going to be interesting to see.”

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Pefok, Ream and Vazquez headline the biggest USMNT roster snubs

Barring injuries or a real turn of form at club level, these guys are likely to be watching the World Cup on TV

There will always be a few snubs from any U.S. men’s national team roster, but rarely are they as meaningful as these ones.

Head coach Gregg Berhalter has insisted that the non-injured players who didn’t make his 26-man roster for September’s friendlies still have a shot to make the World Cup squad.

But it will be tough.

This is the last chance to impress Berhalter before the World Cup, so barring injuries or a real turn of form at club level, the following players are likely to be watching the USMNT on TV in Qatar.

Let’s get to the biggest omissions from the USMNT September roster.