Both players are facing a long spell without any club playing time
One day after he shut out Oman with the U.S. men’s national team, the harsh reality of Ethan Horvath’s club situation became apparent.
Nottingham Forest omitted Horvath from its 25-man Premier League squad on Wednesday, further reinforcing how far the 28-year-old is from club minutes.
The Colorado native missed out behind the club’s current starter, his international teammate Matt Turner, as well as the newly signed Odysseas Vlachodimos and Wales international Wayne Hennessey.
Horvath started last season while on loan at Luton Town, helping the club earn promotion to the Premier League. The Hatters opted against making the move permanent, however.
Horvath is now ineligible to play in the Premier League again until January at the earliest. With Forest already eliminated from the Carabao Cup and FA Cup minutes looking unlikely, Horvath is facing several months without any club playing time.
The only hope of avoiding that fate is a late move to the increasingly small number of leagues where the summer transfer window is still open.
Horvath has earned nine USMNT caps in his career, and served as Turner’s backup at the World Cup last year.
Steffen makes Man City’s PL squad
In a somewhat surprising move, USMNT goalkeeper Zack Steffen was named to Manchester City’s Premier League squad.
Steffen joined starter Ederson, as well as Scott Carson and Stefan Ortega as the Premier League champions’ four goalkeepers.
But don’t expect Steffen to see the field for City. The goalkeeper is still working his way back from knee surgery in June, and has previously expressed his desire to leave City permanently after playing with Middlesbrough on loan last season.
Eight USMNT players are in the English top flight this season
The U.S. contingent on Premier League rosters may have diminished in the last couple of months, but the group is still solid.
Even after Serie A became the summer’s hot new league to play in for U.S. men’s national team players, eight remain on rosters in the English top flight.
With Tim Ream and Antonee Robinson holding it down at Fulham, and moves for Tyler Adams and Matt Turner to stay in the English top flight, four players seem set for plenty of starts in the world’s most highly-regarded league.
On the other hand, a quartet of players face something of a battle for minutes at their clubs, though Chris Richards has at least appeared in cup play for Crystal Palace.
Here are the eight Americans playing in the Premier League this season:
11 U.S. players are in the world’s biggest club competition
There was once a time where a U.S. men’s national team player being on a Champions League squad list — even if they might have no shot at playing in any actual games — was a very big deal.
It’s safe to say those days are gone, with no fewer than 11 U.S. players on the books for clubs that qualified for this year’s competition.
Sure, in some cases the player in question is probably a major longshot to even dress on gameday, but between Christian Pulisic’s sublime start to life at AC Milan and a USMNT trio at PSV, USMNT fans are likely going to be watching games on multiple screens just to keep up.
Here is the complete list of U.S. men’s players to make it to this year’s Champions League proper:
The goalkeeper will miss both of the USMNT’s summer tournaments
Zack Steffen has undergone knee surgery and is reportedly set to miss 3-4 months.
The U.S. national team goalkeeper just completed a season on loan at Middlesbrough, falling just short of promotion to the Premier League after his side fell to Coventry in the Championship playoff semifinal.
The 28-year-old revealed on Thursday that he had surgery on his knee, with The Washington Post reporting it was a scope to clean out meniscus damage and he’ll be out for at least three months.
Steffen posted on his private Twitter account: “In life there are times when you have to take a step backward in order to progress further, stronger and wiser.
“God has a plan different from our own. I’m grateful for all who have helped me these past couple of weeks. I’ll be back soon.”
Zack Steffen undergoes knee scope to clean out meniscus damage he suffered early last season and had to manage all year, I’m told. Out 3-4 months, which postpones decision on loan destination from Man City. #usmntpic.twitter.com/x7kYbBx1gZ
The procedure means Steffen will miss out for the USMNT this summer as it aims to defend its titles in both the CONCACAF Nations League and Gold Cup.
After surprisingly being left off the USMNT roster for the World Cup, Steffen returned to the national team in March for its two Nations League matches.
Due to his high wages, Boro appears unlikely to make a permanent move for the American.
Steffen’s latest injury won’t help his cause as he searches for a new club, as he looks set to miss at least the first couple weeks of the regular season.
Several USMNT players are battling to avoid the drop as the season winds down
Last season’s crop of top-flight Americans Abroad saw their ranks thinned significantly after a number of relegations.
Some moved on to bigger and better things (Luca de la Torre), some dropped down a division and thrived (Tanner Tessmann and Josh Sargent), while some saw their personal stock sink along with their team (George Bello and Gianluca Busio).
This season appears to be mercifully lighter when it comes to Americans facing the drop in major European leagues, but there are still some notable names who could be sent packing to the second tier in the coming weeks.
This weekend saw some significant movement, both good and bad, for the relegation-threatened Americans Abroad. Let’s start the Five with a look at a vital weekend in the race to avoid the drop.
The USMNT goalkeeper has a contract at the Etihad through 2025
Zack Steffen’s time at Manchester City appears to be over.
Or at least that’s what the U.S. men’s national team goalkeeper says is his hope, as he continues to start for Middlesbrough on a season-long loan from the Premier League champions.
After surprisingly being left off the USMNT roster for the World Cup, Steffen is back with the national team for its two CONCACAF Nations League matches this month.
Steffen’s form with Boro, currently third in the Championship table as it chases promotion to the top flight, has helped propel him back to the USMNT after one of the biggest disappointments of his career.
And speaking to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the 27-year-old has said he isn’t prepared to return to City and be a backup again.
“I don’t think I’ll go back,” Steffen said. “No, I want to be playing. Although I had a great time at City and I love those guys, and obviously an amazing club, I don’t really have any plans to go back.”
How Steffen would engineer an exit from City is yet to be determined. His loan at Boro goes through the end of the season, at which point he is scheduled to return to City. His contract at the Etihad runs through 2025.
Steffen originally joined City from the Columbus Crew in 2019, before going out on loan to Fortuna Düsseldorf for the 2019-20 season. After starting for the then-Bundesliga club, Steffen returned to City where he served as Ederson’s backup for two seasons.
Stefen has earned 29 caps for the USMNT after making his debut in 2018.
There was no last-minute injury heartbreak for the U.S. ahead of the World Cup
There were several headlines with Americans abroad this weekend but in a sense, the only thing that really matters is the story that didn’t happen.
Namely, no players on the World Cup roster got injured in their final game before heading for Qatar.
USMNT fans watched the weekend’s slate of games with their breaths collectively held, but there was no devastating last-minute injury. In fact, there was even a key player returning from a short spell on the sidelines.
Before we go on a hiatus for the World Cup, let’s get to the Five.
Steffen not being the starter wasn’t a shock, but missing the roster entirely? Very few saw that coming
It always seemed like the U.S. men’s national team’s decision in goal was going to be a tough one, but no one expected it to go like this.
Gregg Berhalter named a USMNT World Cup roster without goalkeeper Zack Steffen, his most frequent first choice since taking over the job. Matt Turner, Ethan Horvath, and Sean Johnson are in the squad instead, while Steffen — even after moving on loan to Middlesbrough to get more playing time than he had seen at Manchester City — is out.
Plenty of observers wouldn’t have been shocked to see Turner get the start against Wales on November 21. Turner was one of the only players to come out of the September window without disappointing, and while he’s not first-choice at Arsenal, the timing of this World Cup means that the London side’s Europa League matches have kept him in action more or less weekly. His rapid ascent is, on some level, the story here.
Speaking to reporters in a press conference in Brooklyn after the roster was unveiled, Berhalter didn’t go too far into the reasons behind his decision. It was plain that he didn’t make the choice lightly, calling it “heartbreaking,” but that still leaves the question of “why” unanswered.
Steffen hasn’t been at his best
On a surface level, one key here is pretty straightforward: Steffen has not played well since moving to Middlesbrough. Berhalter said as much, telling ESPN’s Fútbol Americas that the USMNT coaches felt they “needed more out of Zack” for club and country over the past 18 months.
Berhalter might be onto something on that front. Steffen had a high-profile error in his biggest Man City assignment, letting Sadio Mané tackle the ball off of his foot and into the net in last year’s FA Cup semifinal. His move to Middlesbrough began with him missing on a cross against Queens Park Rangers, giving away an easy goal in his second appearance at the club.
The list could go on here, which makes the point: Steffen, for all of his ability, has been unreliable in some fairly straightforward situations, and it’s not all that surprising that Berhalter has lost some confidence in a player he had long believed in.
It’s not just gaffes, either. There is no perfect metric for sorting good goalkeeping from bad, but in one important advanced category, Steffen is faring somewhat poorly among Championship goalkeepers. Post-shot expected goals per shot on target is an attempt to measure how difficult a goalkeeper’s shot-stopping load has been, effectively gauging just how hard it is to make saves based on a season’s shots on frame.
In that metric, using data from FBref, Steffen is 16th out of 25 Championship goalkeepers with more than 10 starts on the season, meaning that the saves he’d have to make are less difficult than most of the other starters around the league. However, his post-shot expected goals minus his actual goals allowed, on a per-90 basis (an evaluation that gets close to defining shot-stopping ability, or at least a combination of that and good fortune) sees him 19th out of the same 25 players.
In other words, Steffen has underperformed despite facing, in relative terms, a fairly modest challenge.
Interestingly, though, the data isn’t really better for Horvath, who is facing the fourth-easiest post-shot expected goals per shot on target with Luton Town, but only returning the 17th best post-shot expected goals minus goals allowed.
You can read that as an indicator that Horvath is part of a more organized defense, and that neither is doing anything special in the saves department. Both have had some gaffes as well, and the apples-to-apples comparison here doesn’t exactly fill one with confidence.
What you can’t do is parse very much in terms of who should be backing Turner up. Horvath may be in (slightly) better form, but Steffen’s experience with the USMNT is more extensive, and he’s played in Berhalter systems for most of his professional career. Generally speaking, in a case like this, a coach goes with the known quantity, but Berhalter is taking the opposite tack.
Hierarchy a key
The closest thing to a peek into what Berhalter was thinking came in that same Fútbol Americas interview, and it may have less to do with form or data than a word Berhalter only used once, but that says so much: hierarchy.
“Part of it was looking at the players that we do have, and exactly the roles that they would fill at the World Cup,” said Berhalter. “We feel confident that we have three really good goalkeepers, and the hierarchy in the goalkeeper line I think is set pretty well.”
What Berhalter means by hierarchy here is that Turner is a clear starter, rather than someone who was still battling for the job. It’s the kind of move you make to settle someone’s confidence, as opposed to keeping that fight for the No. 1 shirt going to stoke the competitive fire. To go so far as remove Turner’s seeming top competitor for the job, Berhalter’s read has to be that the Arsenal man is competitive enough as is, and that the wise move is to demonstrate just how strongly he feels about starting him at the World Cup.
There are other ways to do that, though, which could include just clearly announcing that Turner will start if healthy. And it only sort of gets at how Horvath got the call over Steffen. Both would be backing Turner up, so why not take both and have them competing to be the alternative? Iron sharpens iron, as the old saying goes.
The thing about that adage is that the sharpening comes from friction, and that’s probably what Berhalter doesn’t want in his team right now. Unity and cohesiveness seem to be the preference over having the most intense competition at this point. For the USMNT, the battle for playing time in goal appears to be more or less over, and the time to settle into and embrace the roles available has begun.
That thought process requires picking a second-choice goalkeeper that can thrive in that specific role, which is to say which player can give you his very best despite the hierarchy handing him some unwanted news.
It’s rare for a starting goalkeeper to have any particularly special appearance coming off the bench, but Horvath has just that: a near-legendary performance replacing Steffen in the 2021 Nations League final against Mexico, helping the USMNT get a massive win in terms of shifting the tone and perception of the team.
That’s very likely not Berhalter’s only data point in evaluating which player would be more likely to deliver if called upon as a substitute. Horvath did well for Nottingham Forest last season when Brice Samba missed games due to injury, and had to sub into the club’s promotion playoff final in stoppage time and help Forest cling to a one-goal advantage. He’s been able to perform when he wasn’t necessarily expecting to have to step in.
To understand Berhalter’s line of thinking, it’s helpful to think of the goalkeeper corps not as the best goalkeepers available, but the best goalkeeper available, and then the best option to be that player’s back-up. That may be splitting hairs, and it may be galaxy-braining the situation, but one thing the USMNT has been consistent about under Berhalter has been considering every decision thoroughly. Fans can and do disagree with the outcomes, but you can’t seriously argue that Berhalter makes his choices casually.
As for Johnson, a player who has been behind Steffen in Berhalter’s eyes for years, it helps to know your USMNT history. The program has long embraced the line of thinking that your third-string goalkeeper’s most important skill is in the locker room and on the training ground. Nick Rimando in 2014 and Tony Meola in 2002 can both speak to that. Both were still playing at a high level, but the thing that got them into those squads, the X factor for them against their competitors, was their positive influence on the rest of the team.
Yes, your third goalkeeper could play, but they very likely won’t. What they will do, every time, is have some impact on the rest of the group from an interpersonal standpoint, and Berhalter acknowledged that in his press conference on Wednesday.
“Looking at a guy like Sean Johnson, who’s been with this program since day one, been with us since day one, and we think he’s a really valuable piece of the team,” said Berhalter.
Think about it: Johnson is going to Qatar knowing that he’s almost certainly there as the third option, and that he’s not going to see the field. What Berhalter needs in that case is a player that embraces that role, rather than being disappointed he’s not the starter. It’s only natural for Steffen to have the latter mindset at this point, having been the starter for so much of the last four years. For lack of a better way to put it, if the third goalkeeper is there mostly to maintain good vibes, someone who is (understandably) frustrated and disappointed isn’t really going to be in the right place to give others a boost.
All of which adds up to an unusual situation when it comes to evaluating the USMNT’s analysis of Steffen. It’s almost like he narrowly lost out on three different one-on-one battles: he’s not playing as well as Turner, so he’s not the starter. He’s not thought of as having the same ability to step in as a surprise, so Horvath gets the role of primary back-up instead. And then, when it comes to helping others maintain positivity and focus, Johnson apparently has the edge.
While the most stunning news comes in goal, Berhalter left at least one strong candidate out in every position group. The USMNT boss had to deliver bad news to center backs, wingers, strikers, fullbacks, and attacking midfielders.
Some choices came down to injuries, while others may relate to tactical preferences. In at least one case, Berhalter openly stated that the choice boiled down to form.
Here are the six most notable snubs in the squad heading to Qatar.
Many projected Steffen as the USMNT starter in Qatar. Instead he’ll be watching at home
Leading up to the 2022 World Cup, there has been a debate over which U.S. goalkeeper would start in Qatar: Zack Steffen or Matt Turner.
On Wednesday, USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter answered that question in emphatic and stunning fashion by leaving Steffen off his 26-man roster entirely.
There wasn’t much indication that this was coming. Steffen and Turner split duties in World Cup qualifying nearly evenly, with Turner starting eight games and Steffen starting six.
Some considered Steffen to have the edge due to his history with Berhalter, with the two working together previously during their time at the Columbus Crew. There was also plenty of speculation over Berhalter’s tepid endorsement of Turner after his strong displays in September’s friendlies.
In 2022 Berhalter has not had to decide between the two goalkeepers much. Injuries and family reasons have kept the pair from being on the same roster, save for the January/February World Cup qualifiers.
But it seemed certain that one would be starting in the World Cup with the other taking on a backup role. Instead, Turner will be joined by Sean Johnson and Ethan Horvath on the roster.
In search of more playing time ahead of the World Cup, Steffen moved on loan from Man City to Middlesbrough this summer. He’s been the starter when healthy, while Turner has had to be content with sporadic starts at Arsenal while serving as backup to Aaron Ramsdale.
Turner’s performances with Arsenal and the USMNT have won him the starting role, which isn’t necessarily a huge surprise. But Steffen not being his backup, or even the third-stringer, will go down as one of the biggest U.S. World Cup roster stunners in recent memory.