U.S. men come up short in Gold Cup
final as women go global
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[July 08, 2019]
(Reuters) - The contrast in
competitiveness between the United States women and men's teams was
starkly exposed on Sunday when the former won a fourth World Cup and
the latter went down to Mexico in the Gold Cup final.
The 1-0 loss for the men in a regional competition the U.S. had won
six times before was a missed opportunity to take a big step forward
under Gregg Berhalter, who was leading the team in his first
tournament as coach.
"When you talk about a step the team needs to take, we're close,"
Berhalter told reporters after the match in Chicago.
"But we weren't there tonight. We needed to score goals, we needed
to put pressure on, and you saw tonight as the match went on, they
took control and scored the winning goal."
Berhalter, who was hired in December, has called for patience during
his short tenure but all results will be deemed meaningful after the
United States failed to even qualify for the 2018 World Cup finals.
The Americans certainly had another opportunity to lift a major
trophy against a Mexico side missing several key players.
U.S. midfielder Christian Pulisic, a promising 20-year-old who many
expect to play a leading role in the team in the years ahead, had a
couple of good chances but missed both. Still, Berhalter said, there
were some positives to take from the final. "I think the guys will
learn a lot from this game," he said.
"There's a lot of guys playing in a game like this for the first
time. For us, the whole month has been about making progress. And
when I look back I think we did make progress.
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United States players huddle against Mexico in the second half
championship match of the CONCACAF Gold Cup soccer tournament at
Soldier Field. Mike DiNovo-USA TODAY Sports
"This experience will help us moving forward."
Playing on the same day as their women captured headlines around the
world with their triumph in France only highlighted the long road
the men must travel to become a true international power.
While the women's team is a model of stability from the coaching
staff through to the players, the men are still searching for the
right mix.
"You're always searching for a perfect performance so when you
evaluate at every game, there's things that can improve," Berhalter
added.
"Defensively, we conceded two goals all tournament, chance creation
I think was positive in most games but overall ... I think they did
a good job of understanding that it's a long process, and you just
keep having to build."
(Writing by Jahmal Corner in Los Angeles; Editing by Nick Mulvenney)
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