Zimmerman is fed up, and he’s not afraid to say it
Walker Zimmerman is fed up with the attitude of some of his U.S. men’s national team teammates, and he’s not afraid to say it.
Zimmerman was one of three overage players with the U.S. under-23 side at the Olympics, which ended with a thud on Friday in a 4-0 rout against Morocco in the quarterfinal.
The 31-year-old was able to play at the Olympics after he wasn’t selected for the Copa América roster, with the center back falling out of the senior team picture over the past year.
After the U.S. was bounced from the Olympics, the veteran spoke to the media about what it meant to him to represent his country. According to Zimmerman, there are too many players involved with the program who have begun to take that privilege for granted.
“I think to some degree we’ve gotten away from that and [players] feel like just because we’re whoever you are that you just can get called in — that stuff pisses me off,” Zimmerman said in quotes on ESPN.
“I think guys need to, every time they put on the jersey, I don’t care how talented you are, you want to play with pride. I think we have the characters to do it, but we don’t always do it.”
Zimmerman didn’t name any specific players, but during the latter days of Gregg Berhalter’s tenure as USMNT head coach, some fans and pundits began to question whether some players had become too comfortable with their spot on the team.
The defender, who hasn’t played for the USMNT since last summer, seems to agree.
“You need to know what it means to represent the U.S., and that’s where I think we can improve,” Zimmerman said. “I hope that that’s what we can kind of push forwards and push towards with the culture moving forward.”
The veteran defender appears likely to be heading to the Olympics as an overage player
U.S. men’s Olympic head coach Marko Mitrović has called in a 25-player roster for the team’s upcoming training camp and friendly against Japan.
For the first time this cycle, the roster includes one overage player: Nashville SC defender Walker Zimmerman, who now looks like a safe bet to head to the Olympics as one of the team’s overage options.
Zimmerman has earned 42 caps with the senior USMNT, starting three of four games at the 2022 World Cup. He is one of 19 players on this roster with at least one senior cap.
This camp represents the last chance Mitrović will have to evaluate players ahead of naming his 18-player roster in July for the Olympics. The men’s tournament is restricted to under-23 players, with the exception of three spots for overage players.
The U.S. will hold a training camp in Kansas before a match against Japan on June 11 at Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kansas.
For the first time since 2008, the U.S. men qualified for the Olympics this summer. Mitrović’s team will open the tournament against host France on July 24, and will then face New Zealand and Guinea in the group stage.
USMNT U-23 June roster
Goalkeepers (2): Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew), Gaga Slonina (Chelsea)
Defenders (7): Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union), Jalen Neal (LA Galaxy), Bryan Reynolds (KVC Westerlo), John Tolkin (New York Red Bulls), Jonathan Tomkinson (Norwich City), Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United FC), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC)
Midfielders (7): Cole Bassett (Colorado Rapids), Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Benjamin Cremaschi (Inter Miami), Jack McGlynn (Philadelphia Union), Aidan Morris (Columbus Crew), Rokas Pukstas (Hajduk Split), Tanner Tessmann (Venezia)
Forwards (9): Paxten Aaronson (Eintracht Frankfurt), Esmir Bajraktarevic (New England Revolution), Taylor Booth (Utrecht), Cade Cowell (Chivas), Damion Downs (Köln), Johan Gomez (Eintracht Braunschweig), Duncan McGuire (Orlando City), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg), Griffin Yow (Westerlo)
The U.S. roster picture for the 2024 Olympics is coming into focus
U.S. men’s national team head coach Gregg Berhalter has given a few hints as to the overage players that could be heading to Paris this summer as part of the U.S. Olympic roster.
The USMNT is getting set for its first Olympics since 2008, as head coach Marko Mitrović prepares to select an 18-man roster for the tournament.
Men’s soccer at the Olympics is an under-23 event (players born on or after January 1, 2001), with every team eligible to select three overage players.
On Monday, Berhalter named a 27-man roster for the USMNT’s pre-Copa América friendlies next month, with the bulk of the team’s 26-player roster for the Copa América expected to come from that squad.
In a call with the media, Berhalter said that a few players just outside that roster would be considered for an overage place on the Olympic team.
The coach was specifically asked about defender Auston Trusty and forward Brandon Vazquez, replying: “Brandon’s a guy that was definitely in the conversation for that group.
“We’re evaluating the availability of some of our other players for the Olympic pool. So it’s just about the communication with clubs and communication with the players. But certainly those are two names that came up in that context. Another name that came up was Walker Zimmerman. We know he’s working back to getting to fitness. So he’s another guy.”
In terms of Olympic age-eligible players who weren’t named to the USMNT squad on Monday, Berhalter mentioned Kevin Paredes, Bryan Reynolds and Aidan Morris as players who would likely benefit more from an Olympic roster spot than uncertain playing time with the senior team this summer.
(Photo by Oliver Hardt/Getty Images)
One player who won’t be going to the Olympics as an overage player is midfielder Lennard Maloney, who also missed out on the senior USMNT roster.
“I’ve had conversations with him,” Berhalter said of the Heidenheim midfielder. “We see the depth chart for the Olympic group comprising of a number of Olympic age-eligible players in midfield. So he’s not in consideration for that as of now.”
On the senior roster, Berhalter added: “[Maloney] just misses out due to some other guys performing a really high levels.”
Berhalter added that with two major international tournaments coming up, it did make his roster decisions slightly less complicated than usual.
“Decisions were easier because we knew that there was certain opportunities for players with the Olympics coming up,” he said. “We have the Japan friendlies in June for that group. And then we have the Olympics.
“By the end of this, we’re going to get 42 players or 44 players prepared with international experience. So that’s definitely something that made it a little bit easier choosing our roster.”
A smart adjustment from Gregg Berhalter ends with an impressive draw
The U.S. men’s national team stepped it up against England, securing a 0-0 draw in which they had the better of the game’s few chances.
The USMNT may have been slightly disappointed with one point against Wales, after dominating in the first half and leading until the final stages, but it’s hard to have too many serious complaints after they held the Three Lions to virtually no serious chances.
We’ll have deeper analysis in the future, but during the World Cup we’ll be giving a quick breakdown of each USMNT player’s performance.
Our scale:
1: Abysmal. Literally any member of Pro Soccer Wire’s staff would have been been able to play at this level.
6: Adequate. This is our base score.
10: Transcendent, era-defining performance. This is Maradona vs. England in 1986.
The USMNT needed one more standout, and one less mistake
A strong start from the U.S. men’s national team wasn’t quite enough for them to get their first World Cup win since June 16, 2014.
The USMNT dominated the first half and took a deserved lead through Tim Weah, but fell under progressively more pressure and conceded a late Gareth Bale penalty kick, sealing a 1-1 draw that is neither satisfactory nor a disaster.
It’s a bit of a tough game to parse, with many players doing an adequate job, a couple being outright good, and one major mistake undoing their efforts. We’ll have deeper analysis in the future, but during the World Cup we’ll be giving a quick breakdown of each USMNT player’s performance.
Our scale:
1: Abysmal. Literally any member of Pro Soccer Wire’s staff would have been been able to play at this level.
6: Adequate. This is our base score.
10: Transcendent, era-defining performance. This is Maradona vs. England in 1986.
The USMNT and Saudi Arabia sure did play a game of soccer
The U.S. men’s national team fanbase was hoping Tuesday’s friendly against Saudi Arabia would wash the taste of a dispiriting defeat to Japan out of their collective mouths.
We have three key takeaways to get into, but as you can probably guess if you watched the game or simply read the three paragraphs preceding this one, none of them is good news.
Opponents to USMNT center backs: Here, have the ball
Saudi Arabia plays a markedly different game from Japan: they attack in a 4-3-3 formation that becomes a 4-1-4-1 out of possession, maintaining a high defensive line without a corresponding high line of contention up front.
The object here is simple: let the other side’s defenders have the ball, stay compact from back to front, and leave teams few options other than to play perfect diagonal switches or balls into the space in behind. The10 Saudi field players, from the deepest defender to the highest attacker, were often only 30 or so yards apart, leaving no space to pass into the midfield and build that way.
Interestingly, this much different approach still left USMNT center backs Walker Zimmerman and Aaron Long (and eventually, in this game, Mark McKenzie) with the same problem they faced against Japan. They were on the ball, with an opponent who took all their simpler options off the table. The challenge, in both cases, was that the center backs had to play passes that solved a problem rather than simply finding a midfielder or fullback to do that.
While the turnovers weren’t as costly — Saudi Arabia has less athleticism than Japan, and were less forcing turnovers with tackles than they were intercepting errant passes at midfield — they were still a pretty regular factor in this game, and while the USMNT piled up possession, they were often completely muted when they tried to do anything with it.
Berhalter’s side has figured this problem out before. It’s not like teams in CONCACAF have never heard of “let the center backs have all of their possession” as a tactic before. Yes, Japan and Saudi Arabia would have also qualified out of the Octagonal, but there’s an issue with execution right now on the USMNT side.
For one, Zimmerman and (especially) Long seemed to struggle on some very straightforward passes that they have both probably completed literally thousands of times in professional games. Secondly, the USMNT seemed unable to shift the angles to open Saudi Arabia up, which means the problem extends to what movements are being offered by the other eight field players.
No Musah no party
Yunus Musah was in the stadium for this one, watching from the stands after making the trip down the Mediterranean coast to Murcia. Unfortunately for the USMNT, his stock ended up rising despite him being in street clothes, because for the second straight game, it became clear that the “MMA” midfield doesn’t function anywhere near its best without him.
Kellyn Acosta has had some fine moments with the USMNT, and his set piece taking ability actually makes him a pretty valuable member of the squad going into a tournament where prep time is low (side note: the USMNT wasn’t particularly threatening on dead balls in this window, but they probably didn’t want to show any of their designed plays off yet either).
However, he’s more suited for a game where the USMNT is going to be on the defensive, needing that extra ball-winning and positional sense more than other, more flashy traits. In a midfield with Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie, against a mid-block opponent who was always going to be a puzzle to solve, he was redundant.
Photo by JOSE JORDAN/AFP via Getty Images
The MMA midfield isn’t even a perfectly ideal balance of roles, as there’s no true playmaker and no true expert in terms of occupying spaces without the ball. Adams and McKennie make up for this latter issue with ferocious effort, but even when Musah — who thrives as a facilitator and ball-progressing midfielder rather than as a true No. 10 — is in, it’s a case of hoping the three can emphasize what their games do have to such an extent that what they lack isn’t a big deal.
When you take Musah out of the mix, that scenario doesn’t play out. The USMNT were sluggish in terms of their tempo, and so much of their time in possession saw Saudi Arabia keep their collective shape, herding possession back to the center backs or even to Turner. The USMNT wasn’t suited to play without their best player in terms of shifting an opposition shape in the middle third. Most teams will miss that player, but it feels like the U.S. learned today just how severe that absence is for them.
Berhalter more or less acknowledged this with his final pair of subs, with Brenden Aaronson coming into Acosta’s spot. Nothing much came of this spell, with the best USMNT chance largely coming down to the FC Dallas connection between Jesús Ferreira and Paul Arriola, but the moves alluded to what was missing in this one.
Right now, it’d be very smart for the USMNT to seriously look at making sure Aaronson has the reps to step in for Musah (or for that matter McKennie, as neither player has a spotless injury record). It could be that Musah, Adams, and McKennie are good to go for 270 minutes in eight days in a desert climate where temperatures are famously very hot, but you don’t want to walk into Group B with all your eggs in that particular basket.
Struggle for fullback balance
Musah wasn’t the only normal starter whose absence was keenly felt. Antonee Robinson may be back very soon for Fulham, but without their normal left back, the USMNT seemed to struggle with the balance between its two fullbacks.
Without Robinson, and after Sam Vines struggled to really make the same kind of impact that Robinson does against Japan, Berhalter moved that responsibility over to right back. Sergiño Dest, normally seen as an attack-first fullback, was asked to not push so high, and to dip inside to help change the angles in possession. DeAndre Yedlin had the job of providing that serious width on the other side.
The problem here is that the USMNT’s best attacking right back is, you know, Dest. He’d have thrived on the right with that kind of assignment, and ended up being the more dangerous attacking fullback despite having to pick and choose when he got forward.
Yedlin wasn’t poor, but he wasn’t influential either, and the USMNT system needs the player with this responsibility to be a constant factor. Particularly against a team playing a mid-block like this, this fullback role is a major factor in pulling the opposition out of their shape, and Saudi Arabia’s comfort without the ball starts with there being no true danger from Yedlin being higher up the field. The timing of his runs made him easy to defend, and he wasn’t getting much help from Acosta to open that space up either.
As with the midfield quandary, Berhalter addressed this with a sub. Joe Scally came in not long after Yedlin was caught by a bad tackle from Saud Abdulhamid that deserved a harsher punishment than the yellow card it got, and was pretty quickly more of a factor in the attacking third than Yedlin had been.
Perhaps that’s the benefit of the USMNT coaching staff having an hour-plus to analyze the game and tell Scally exactly what to look for, or perhaps it’s just a fresh player coming in against a tiring opponent.
Either way, the situation underlined how much the USMNT’s hopes hinge on unbalancing teams by using their fullbacks. It’s not good news that Robinson’s health is right up there with Musah’s, and Pulisic’s, and Reyna’s, but that’s where the USMNT is at right now.
We know they can hit a high enough level to be a serious threat to advance when everyone’s healthy, but is everyone going to be healthy in November? There are now 55 days for Berhalter to figure out how to make sure the answer to that question is positive.
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.
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.”
Tucker, who turns one later this month, clearly had the time of his life. He got to be held by Jordan Morris. He got to be held by Aaron Long while playing peekaboo with Cristian Roldan. He got to have some swim time with dad. He got to play the piano with Antonee Robinson. And he got to play some more peekaboo with Christian Pulisic.
What more could a baby ask for?
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The 29-year-old has locked down one half of the USMNT’s defensive pairing with his steady play and leadership
KANSAS CITY, Kansas — Gregg Berhalter has known for a while it’s important to remain flexible as the coach of the United States men’s national soccer team — especially when that squad is gearing up for its first World Cup since 2014.
A key focus, between the bookend questions at the striker and goalkeeper positions, is one that seemed solved during World Cup qualifying.
Center backs Miles Robinson and Walker Zimmerman were the exceptions to the rule: They were all but set in stone. The pairing played six of the 14 World Cup qualifiers together, including the last four, and recorded a 4W-1L-1D record when starting together. Four of those games were clean sheets, and they conceded only three goals total.
Though he’s not officially ruled out for the World Cup, which kicks off in November, it would be an abnormally quick recovery if he did make it back. Fellow center back Aaron Long returned earlier this year after eight months of recovery from the same injury.
Long, a New York Red Bulls defender, missed most of World Cup qualifying due in part to his torn Achilles. He paired with Zimmerman for the first 45 minutes of the USMNT’s 3-0 win over Morocco on Wednesday and played another half alongside Zimmerman on Sunday before making way for Kansas City native Erik Palmer-Brown to get his casting call in front of a hometown crowd.
The scoreless draw against Uruguay was the second opportunity in four days where Berhalter could see players battle against a top-25 FIFA ranked team on its way to the World Cup.
“We played two games against World Cup opponents and didn’t give up a goal,” Berhalter said. “Center backs are playing against high quality strikers, and we didn’t give up a goal against them.”
Thor, the God of Thunder and teamwork
While the cast of players rotates to find the next best fit, Zimmerman — who is also part of the national team’s leadership council and was instrumental in the recent collective bargaining agreement negotiations — stands as a steady beacon in the team’s backline.
“I try to make their role as easy as possible. I think a lot of that is done with communication and organization,” Zimmerman said after the draw with Uruguay. “I think an underrated quality of a center back is the way that they read the game and the way that they help their teammate read the game.”
On Sunday, when Palmer-Brown came into the game at halftime, it took him a few minutes to get used to the pressure Uruguay was bringing. Zimmerman was there to back him up.
In the 88th minute, while the USMNT was holding on to the draw, Palmer-Brown tripped while tracking Diego Rossi. When Rossi sped past the defender, he turned his nose to goal. But Zimmerman was there to back his teammate up, making a tough tackle and forcing the ball out of danger.
Like the USMNT as a whole, the success of the center back position relies on buy-in from every player — whether starter or on the fringe.
And while players are competing against each other for coveted seats on the plane to Qatar, the players speak highly of the camaraderie that holds them together. The center backs in particular hold regular meetings to discuss game performance and what could be done better.
“We [all] sit down before games. We meet over what we can do better — over what we should do in certain situations, and everyone’s got open dialogue,” Palmer-Brown said. “We talk and we hype each other up. It’s a great environment for this team. The vibes are unbelievably high.”
(Photo by Kyle Rivas/Getty Images)
Zimmerman, 29, knows what it’s like to be on the outside looking in. He was part of the first World Cup qualifying group in September 2021. But he did not perform up to Berhalter’s standards and did not receive a call back in October until veteran center back Tim Ream had to stay out of camp due to family reasons.
The Nashville SC defender got his second chance and didn’t take it for granted. He soon became Berhalter’s go-to man, holding down the defense.
“I am trying to be a good teammate to where I am covering for them, making sure they are covering for me and trying to get everyone on the same page,” Zimmerman said. “They probably get so annoyed with me, honestly, being in their ear. But that’s the way you can make sure you get on the same page and ultimately get shutouts.”
Now he is a leader on defense and creating chemistry with anyone who lines up beside him.
“He’s a beast. He’s Walker. He looks like Thor, the God of Thunder,” Palmer-Brown said. “He’s such a good dude off the pitch, and on the pitch, he is a leader.