Profiling MLS Player Pipelines

Continuing my exploration of MLS team’s infrastructure behind-the-scenes, here I am trying to holistically look at the entire developmental pipeline for each MLS team, from the youngest academy team, to the oldest academy team, and on through USL club/reserve team to the first team. I include the latter aspect because there are already a handful of article ranking MLS academies online. I also wanted to do a seperate article on reserve teams for this series so I’m essentially combining the two ideas here.

For each team I am going to look at how many age groups their academy includes, how much money goes into their academy, whether they have a U-23 team (not usually considered an academy team) whether their reserve team is directly operated by the club or an affiliate club, how many academy players have signed for the first team (Homegrown Players), and how many academy players have been sold for a profit.

Atlanta United

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Atlanta United II

Homegrown Players: (4) George Bello*, Andrew Carleton*, Chris Goslin*, Lagos Kunga*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Chicago Fire

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Affiliated with Tulsa Roughnecks

Homegrown Players: (10) Grant Lillard, Djordie Mihailovic*, Drew Connor*, Joey Calistri*, Patrick Doody*, Colin Fernandez*, Chris Ritter, Harry Ship, Kellen Gulley, Victor Pineda

Homegrowns Sold: None

Columbus Crew

Academy Levels: U12 – U18

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Affiliated with the Pittsburgh Riverhounds

Homegrown Players: (2) Wil Trapp*, Alex Crognale*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Colorado Rapids

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: None

USL Team: Affiliated with Colorado Switchbacks

Homegrown Players: (7) Davy Armstrong, Shane O’Neil, Kortne Ford*, Ricardo Perez*, Dillion Serna*, Sam Vines*, Cole Basset*

Homegrowns Sold: Shane O’Neil to Apollon Limassol (Belgium) for an undiscolsed fee.

DC United

Academy Levels: U12 – U18

U-23 Team: Yes

USL Team: affiliated with Richmond Kickers (Loudon County FC starts in 2019)

Homegrown Players: (8) Chris Durkin*, Ian Harkes*, Jalen Robinson*, Bill Hamid*, Andy Najar, Michael Seaton, Conor Shanosky, and Ethan White

Homegrowns Sold: Andy Najar to Anderlecht for $3 million, Michael Seaton traded to Portland for TAM and an INTL roster spot, Ethan White was traded to Philadelphia for another player

FC Cincinnati

Academy Levels: TBD

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: They were one as recently as this year

Homegrown Players: None

Homegrowns Sold: None

FC Dallas

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: A team is slated to play in the third division (USL League 1) in 2019

Homegrown Players: (23) Bryan Leyva, Ruben Luna, Moises Hernandez, Victor Ulloa*, Richard Sanchez, Bradlee Baladez, London Woodberry, Kellyn Acosta, Danny Garcia, Jesse Gonzalez*, Coy Craft, Jonathan Top, Alejandro Zendejas, Aaron Guillen, Paxton Pomykal*, Jesus Ferreira*, Bryan Reynolds*, Reggie Cannon*, Brandon Servania*, Kris Reaves*, Jordan Cano*, Chris Richards* and Thomas Roberts*.

Homegrowns Sold: Richard Sanchez to Tijuana for an undisclosed fee, Alejandro Zendejas to Chivas Guadalajara for ~ $500,000, Kellyn Acosta to Colorado for another player and allocation money.

Houston Dynamo

Academy Levels: U10 – U19

U-23 Team: Yes

USL Team: Rio Grand Valley FC

Homegrown Players: (9) Memo Rodriguez*, Christian Lucatero, Sebastian Ibeagha, Bradley Bourgeois, Tyler Deric*, Alex Dixon, Francisco Navas Cobo, Josue Soto, Bryan Salazar

Homegrowns Sold: None

Los Angeles Galaxy

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: LA Galaxy II (Los Dos)

Homegrown Players: (9) Efrain Alvarez*, Hugo Arellano*, Bradford Jameison IV*, Tristan Bowen, Gyasi Zardes, Jaime Villareal, Nathan Smith, Oscar Sorto, Raul Mendiola

Homegrowns Sold: Tristan Bowen to Chivas USA for an undisclosed fee, Gyasi Zardes traded to Columbus for another player

Los Angeles FC

Academy Levels: U12 – U14

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: affiliated with Orange County SC (ended at the end of 2018)

Homegrown Players: None

Homegrowns Sold: None

Minnesota United

Academy Levels: U13 – U15

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: affiliated with St. Louis FC (may switch to new D3 Madison team in 2019)

Homegrown Players: None

Homegrowns Sold: None

Montreal Impact

Academy Levels: U8 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Affiliated with Ottawa Fury

Homegrown Players: (13) Jason Beaulieu*, Louis Beland-Goyette*, David Choiniere*, Mattieu Choiniere*, Anthony Jackson-Hamel*, Thomas Meiller-Giguere*, James Pantemis*, Maxime Crepeau (GK)*, Jeremy Gagnon-Lapare, Zakaria Messoudi, Karl Ouimette, Ballou Jean-Ives Tabla, Maxim Tissot

Homegrowns Sold: Ballou Jean-Ives Tabla to Barcelona B for an undisclosed fee

New York Red Bulls

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: Yes

USL Team: New York Red Bulls II

Homegrown Players: (17) Giorgi Chirgadze, Juan Agudelo, Matt Kassel, Sacir Hot, Connor Lade*, Santiago Castano, Amando Moreno, Matt Miazga, Sean Davis*, Tyler Adams*, Brandon Allen, Derrick Etienne Jr.*, Alex Muyl*, Mael Corboz, Scott Thomsen, Chris Thorsheim, Arun Basuljevic

Homegrowns Sold: Juan Agudelo was traded for a player, Matt Miazga to Chelsea for ~ $5 million, Tyler Adams to RB Leipzig for $3 + 33% of future sale

New York City FC

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: None

Homegrown Players: (2) James Sands*, Joe Scally*

Homegrowns Sold: None

New England Revolution

Academy Levels: U13 – U19

U-23 Team: Yes

USL Team: None in 2018, potentially with Hartford Athletic in 2019.

Homegrown Players: (4) Scott Caldwell*, Diego Fagundez*, Zachary Herivaux*, Isaac Angking*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Orlando City SC

Academy Levels: U12 – U18

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Orlando City B (USL League 1, 2019)

Homegrown Players: (1) Mason Stajduhar*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Philadelphia Union

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: Reading United AC

USL Team: Bethlehem Steel

Homegrown Players: (9) Brendan Aaronson*, Anthony Fontana*, Derrick Jones*, Mark McKenzie*, Matt Real*, Auston Trusty*, Cristhian Hernandez, Jimmy McLaughlin, and Zach Pfeffer.

Homegrowns Sold: Zach Pfeffer was traded to Colorado for draft picks,

Portland Timbers

Academy Levels: U14 – U19

U-23 Team: Yes

USL Team: Timbers 2

Homegrown Players: (4) Marco Farfan*, Foster Langsdorf*, Steven Evans, Brent Richards

Homegrowns Sold: None

Real Salt Lake

Academy Levels: U16 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Real Monarchs

Homegrown Players: (15) Danilo Acosta*, Jordan Allen*, Corey Baird*, Justen Glad*, Jose Hernandez*, Aaron Herrera*, Brooks Lennon*, Sebastian Saucedo*, Eduardo Fernandez, Nico Muniz, Benjamin Lopez, Phanuel Kavita, Fito Ovalle, Ricardo Velazco, and Donny Toia

Homegrowns Sold: Eduardo Fernandez to Tigres UANL for an undisclosed fee

San Jose Earthquakes

Academy Levels: U12 – U 19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Affiliated with Reno 1868 FC

Homegrown Players: (5) Jacob Akanyirige*, Gilbert Fuetes*, Nick Lima*, JT Marcinkowski*, Tommy Thompson*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Seattle Sounders

Academy Levels: U15 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Seattle Sounders 2

Homegrown Players: (9) Victor Mansaray*, Jordan Morris*, Aaron Kovar*, Handwalla Bwana*, Henry Wingo*, Darwin Jones, Sean Okoli, Jordan Schweitzer, and DeAndre Yedlin.

Homegrowns Sold: Sean Okoli was traded to New England for draft picks, DeAndre Yedlin to Tottenham for ~ $3 million,

Sporting Kansas City

Academy Levels: U12 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Swope Park Rangers

Homegrown Players: (6) Erik Palmer-Brown, Jaylin Lindsey*, Gianluca Busio*, Wan Kuzain Wan Kamal*, Daniel Salloi*

Homegrowns Sold: None

Toronto FC

Academy Levels: U13 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: TFC II

Homegrown Players: (19) Ayo Akinola*, Jay Chapman*, Aidan Daniels*, Marky Delgado*, Julian Dunn*, Liam Fraser*, Jordan Hamilton*, Ashtone Morgan*, Manuel Aparicio, Sergio Camargo, Oscar Cordon, Doneil Henry, Josh Janniere, Nicholas Lindsay, Keith Makubuya, Chris Mannella, Quillan Roberts, and Matt Stinson,

Homegrowns Sold: Doneil Henry sold to Apollon Limassol for an undisclosed fee, Josh Janniere traded to Colorado for draft picks.

Vancouver Whitecaps FC

Academy Levels: U15 – U19

U-23 Team: No

USL Team: Affiliated with Fresno FC

Homegrown Players: (12) Alphonso Davies, Theo Bair*, Michael Baldisimo*, Simon Colyn*, David Norman Jr.*, Russell Teibert*, Bryce Alderson, Marco Carducci, Kianz Froese, Ben McKendry, Ethen Sampson, and Brian Sylvestre

Homegrowns Sold: Alphonso Davies sold to Bayern Munich for ~ $12 million, and Kianz Froese to Fortuna Dusseldorf for an undisclosed fee

 

Check out the rest of my series Profiling MLS Teams 2018

2019 NFL Coaching Carousel

Black Monday came and went in the NFL, leaving eight head coaching vacancies throughout the league. Each team has a bit of a different approach to filling the opening and unique factors to consider, making this a fun exercise. This is who I think each team should hire as their head coach, not necessarily who they will hire. Let’s take a look at the best fits for each opening across the league.

Cincinnati Bengals (6-10)
Previous coach: Marvin Lewis
New hire: Vic Fangio

After 16 years, Marvin Lewis is finally out in Cincinnati. Lewis turned around the Bengals, but never managed to secure a playoff win. It is a result-driven business and the results have not been Lewis’ friend in recent years. This is a team that might be about to undergo a complete overhaul on offense. Rumors persist about the futures of both A.J. Green and Andy Dalton. There are plenty of holes on that side of the ball for the new head coach to fill. Let’s make something clear, Hue Jackson is not the answer to the offensive problems. It sounds like Cincy might go this route, which would be a massive mistake.

However, the defense has been even worse. Cincinnati allowed the most yards per game and the third most points per game. That’s where Vic Fangio comes in. Fangio has overseen the incredible transformation of the Chicago Bears defense. His defense allowed the third fewest yards per game and fewest points per game. At age 60, Fangio is far from a young option, but has 32 years of NFL coaching experience at different levels. Fangio deserves a shot to lead a team. For a team searching for an identity, the Bengals could find one with this defensive guru.

Denver Broncos (6-10)
Previous coach: Vance Joseph
New Hire: Kris Richard

John Elway made it very clear he wants a coach that is an expert on his side of the ball. The Denver Broncos should be very familiar with Kris Richard’s expertise when it comes to coaching defense. He coached the Legion of Boom in Seattle en route to a Super Bowl victory at Peyton Manning’s expense. That was the best statistical offense in NFL history and Richard stymied it.

Over the course of this season as the defensive backs coach in Dallas, he has helped develop Byron Jones into a true lockdown corner. He dealt with all kinds of personalities in that Seattle locker room and learned under Pete Carroll. Richard has a good resume for a first-time coach. The damage he could do with Von Miller, Bradley Chubb, and Chris Harris Jr. would be fun to watch. The team needs to figure out a long-term solution at quarterback, but finding a way to get this defense back on track is a huge step to pushing this team in the right direction.

Cleveland Browns (7-8-1)
Previous coach: Hue Jackson
New hire: Gregg Williams

It has been 15 years since Gregg Williams was a head coach in the NFL, leading the Bills during the early 2000s with no avail. His successes as the defensive coordinator in New Orleans, winning a Super Bowl in 2009, are a bit fresher in our minds. He was excellent in that role, save Bounty Gate. Now, he took over as the Browns coach midseason and led the team to a 5-3 record and much-improved overall play. There is no question Williams and offensive coordinator Perry Kitchens have been essential in that. Cleveland won more games under the duo in the second half of the season than it had in the previous three years combined.

For the sake of the development of Baker Mayfield, Myles Garrett Nick Chubb and some of the other young prospects, it makes sense to keep some stability. No one is going to be better-suited to continue Mayfield’s development than Kitchens other than maybe Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley, who signed a contract extension with the Sooners on Tuesday. Plus the level of turnaround this team saw was incredible. The three losses under Williams came against the Texans, Chiefs and Ravens, all playoff teams. Belief is this club could be a playoff team next year. Keeping this coaching staff in place would be a wise move.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5-11)
Previous coach: Dirk Koetter
New hire: Eric Beinemy

The biggest task for whoever takes over for the Buccaneers is figuring out what to do at quarterback. Jameis Winston does not seem like a guaranteed long-term solution. The former first overall pick in the 2015 draft will be under contract for 2019, but is not guaranteed anything past that. That leaves the franchise in a very tough position with no other even potential long-term solution at quarterback on the roster.

There is no question that finding an offensive-minded coach to mentor Winston will be crucial. Enter Eric Bieniemy, the Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator. Every team will be looking for the next Sean McVay with their newest hire. Bieniemy might not be McVay, but he is a former NFL running back, so there is that understanding of what it is like to be a player in the league.

Concerns with Bieniemy start and end with his experience. This is his first season as offensive coordinator and he is not the one calling the plays. However, the league places a high value on Andy Reid assistants and Bieniemy was Kansas City’s running backs coach from 2013 to 2017. In that span, the Chiefs produced two different 1st-team All-Pro backs and several good role players, including Charcandrick West, Spencer Ware and Damien Williams. Tampa needs a coach to revitalize the franchise and maximize the talent already existing on the roster. I trust Bieniemy to do just that after helping Patrick Mahomes become the 3rd quarterback in NFL history to toss 50 touchdowns in a season. It is time to give him a chance.

Arizona Cardinals (3-13)
Previous coach: Steve Wilks
New hire: Jim Caldwell

Arizona made the perplexing decision to fire Steve Wilks after one season, meaning it is time for a second straight offseason coaching search. This time, the Cardinals would do well to bring in a veteran coach with plenty of experience developing and fostering quarterbacks. Jim Caldwell fits the bill. Caldwell led the Colts to a Super Bowl berth in 2009, and took the Lions to the playoffs twice in four seasons. If you scrub the year where he coached the Colts without Peyton Manning, Caldwell’s record is 60-36. Needless to say, he deserves another chance in the NFL.

With Josh Rosen in need of some real guidance, Caldwell worked with one of the greatest quarterbacks ever in Manning. He also helped Matt Stafford become a much more efficient passer in Detroit. Former Colts center Jeff Saturday described Caldwell as being more laid back as well, an approach that could work well for a team that has Larry Fitzgerald on the roster. Caldwell is good at fostering the culture the players create. Fitz does it better than anyone else. Don’t overthink this and bring in a coach with real experience to oversee this rebuild.

Miami Dolphins (7-9)
Previous coach: Adam Gase
New hire: Dave Toub

There are a number of reasons why Dave Toub may be the best option for Miami. For one, he comes from the Andy Reid coaching tree, which has produced Matt Nagy, Sean McDermott and Doug Pederson most recently. The last Reid special teams coordinator who landed a head coaching job was John Harbaugh, who through 11 seasons is 114-77 including a 10-5 playoff record and a Super Bowl ring. I’m not saying Toub is guaranteed to be Harbaugh, but don’t sneer at the idea of a special team’s coordinator taking the top job. He did a stellar job in 2018, as the Chiefs ranked 2nd in special teams DVOA.

The other reason Toub makes sense is because this roster needs a complete overhaul. He is not a specialist, but a good teacher. That is something the Dolphins desperately need. Outside of a handful of defensive pieces, Miami lacks talent. I actually think Adam Gase deserves a ton of credit for the success the offense did have this season. He had to get creative with a middling offensive line, no true No. 1 receiver, 36-year old Frank Gore as his top running back and the combination of Brock Osweiler and a banged up Ryan Tannehill at quarterback. The bigger decision here will be building the roster. Toub will be good at teaching everyone when they get some better young talent in the locker room. He has the experience teams want in a head coaching candidate.

New York Jets (4-12)
Previous coach: Todd Bowles
New hire: Jim Harbaugh

It’s time to bring some bravado back to Broadway. This is a really young team in New York in desperate need of discipline and leadership. Todd Bowles was a players coach through and through, but the Jets were one of the most penalized teams in the league during Bowles’ final two seasons. Harbaugh also has a pretty good track record at developing quarterbacks. He led the 49ers to the Super Bowl with Alex Smith and Colin Kaepernick. Under Harbaugh, Kaepernick threw 50 touchdowns to just 21 interceptions and completed 60 percent of his passes. In college, he helped develop Andrew Luck.

Harbaugh would probably be interested in working with Sam Darnold. He is a former NFL quarterback with a great coaching record at 44-19-1 during four seasons with the 49ers. It will take a decent amount of effort to pull him away from Michigan, but the critics have been out in full force after Jim failed to beat Ohio State for the fifth straight year. (Fun fact: Michigan has beaten Ohio State just twice since 2000.) Harbaugh represents a good teacher, with previous NFL head coaching experience and the personality to thrive in the New York market. This is the closest thing the Jets are going to find to the offensive-minded version of Bill Parcells, the last time they had a great head coach. If Mike Macagnan is serious about doing things differently, this is the route to go.

Green Bay Packers (6-9-1)
Former coach: Mike McCarthy
New hire: Josh McDaniels

After what he did to the Colts last season, teams are likely wary of the Patriots offensive coordinator, but he fits well with this Packers team. He is bit more fiery than Mike McCarthy, which is something I think fans will relish. He does have some head coaching experience in Denver, which didn’t go too well, but you would have to think he learned from his mistakes. The Packers also have some good offensive weapons for McDaniels to work with in Aaron Jones, Davante Adams and a solid offensive line.

There is a bigger reason why McDaniels to the Packers rumors will persist. He would have the opportunity to work with possibly the only quarterback in the league comparable to the one he worked with in New England. Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady are in a league of their own in terms of talent and personality. It is no secret they both possess egos that sometimes makes headlines. McDaniels’ experience working with Brady makes him one of the best candidates to work with Rodgers. He might even be able to bring some Patriots assistants with him to help turnover the defense with some good young pieces, but in need of a better system. Overall, it is time for McDaniels to get another chance, and for him to actually take it this time.

Assessing Berhalter’s 1st USMNT Roster

The USMNT’s January Camp is unique in international soccer. Since MLS has a summer schedule, the opposite of most leagues in Europe, the USMNT hosts a 3 week long camp which usually ends in a friendly or two. Only players from MLS or the Scandinavian leagues (who take a break in the winter) tend to be called-in to this camp. This will be Gregg Berhalter’s first camp with the team, so this year will be extra special. Additionally, the Gold Cup is this coming summer, meaning the USMNT will have significant games for the first time since 2017.

Berhalter called 28 players into this year’s camp, all from MLS. I am going to organize this roster differently than usual. Instead of naming players by position, I am going to name them under the reason why I think Berhalter wanted them in camp. My categories are: 1. “Players who fit Berhalter’s system” 2. “Players who earned it with their play this year” 3. “Players familiar with the USMNT” 4. “The Rest”.

For readers who are new to Berhalter, he is looking for players who are comfortable on the ball, good passers, have good vision, and players who can create (or already have) partnerships. These are attractive qualities because Berhalter plays a possession-based system where chemistry is key. Teams in MLS that play similar to this are NYCFC (more so under Viera), Philadelphia, and Atlanta (at times).

Player (Age/POSITION/Club Team)

1. “Players who fit Berhalter’s system” (Self-explanatory)

Wil Trapp (25/CDM/Columbus Crew), Gyasi Zardes (27/ST/Columbus Crew), Zac Steffen (23/GK/Columbus Crew)

Obviously these three players know Berhalter’s system as they all played under him in 2018. I don’t know if these three will be mainstays on Berhalter’s USMNT squad selections, but having them in this first camp to help introduce the system will undoubtedly be useful.

Sean Jonson (29/GK/New York City FC), Tyler Miller (25/GK/LAFC)

Berhalter want’s ‘keeper’s who can play with their feet in order to pass the ball out of the back. Jonson and Miller have shown an ability to do just that with NYCFC and LAFC respectively.

Michael Bradley (31/CDM/Toronto FC)

This is the best example of “everyone needs another chance under Berhalter”. The new head coach himself said that he is going to give many players opportunities to prove themselves (from Berhalter’s opening press conference which you can find here). Before you start throwing tomatoes at me, think about it: Any player who played for the US for the last 8 years has either 1. Not been given great instructions by their coach (Jurgen Klinsman) or 2. Has been playing for a interim coach (Arena/Sarachan). If a player played poorly (or didn’t get called-up) in those circumstances they might deserve a second look under a coach who has a well-defined system (Berhalter). As for Bradley specifically, I think he’s a better version of Wil Trapp. He’s a better passer, he’s better defensively, and he covers more ground. His endurance has definitely dipped recently but we shouldn’t want him playing the whole game anyway. Sub him off for his potential replacement, or sub him on as a “closer” when we have a lead and the clock is winding down.

Marky Delgado (23/CM/Toronto FC)

Delgado is a very clean passer on the ball and has great vision. He can ping a through ball pretty well which will definitely fit into Berhalter’s scheme. I think Delgado may be better suited playing further upfield or perhaps as a tucked-in winger under Berhalter. However he usually plays deeper in the midfield. Not to mention he’s been Bradley’s partner in Toronto for the last few years so there’s instant chemistry there.

Keegan Rosenberry (24/RB/Philadelphia Union)

Not gonna lie, I started looking at Philadelphia tape more so to look at their CBs and I noticed “wow Rosenberry is making similar movements in attack as Harrison Afful does for Columbus”. He’s not too old either so I’m not surprised that Berhalter selected him.

Cristian Roldan (23/CM/Seattle Sounders)

Roldan is pretty good at everything: he can defend, he can play on the wing, he has a nose for goal, he likes changing the field of play, etc. I think he’ll be a pretty good stand-in for Artur (The Crew’s box-to-box midfielder under Berhalter). Roldan may even be an upgrade from Artur.

Aaron Long (26/CB/New York Red Bulls)

The Red Bulls play a different system from Columbus. Long seems like a fine passer but he’s not put under a ton of pressure when passing while playing for RBNY. I will say, Berhalter likes to push his fullbacks high up the field which the Red Bulls also like to do, and so the CBs in both systems have to be comfortable snuffing out a counter-attack. Both Long (and Parker who didn’t get called in) are really good at that. In that way, I think Long will fit into Berhalter’s scheme well. Its also worth noting that Long was just voted Defender of the Year, so he earned it.

2. “Players who have earned it with their play this year” (These players may not fit Berhalter’s system, but they played well in MLS this year).

Jeremy Ebobisse (21/ST/Portland Timbers), Corey Baird (22/ST,RW/Real Salt Lake)

Corey Baird won rookie of the year, and Ebobisse helped propel the Timber to the MLS Cup Final. As far as striker’s go, I think anyone can be good in Berhalter’s system so Ebobisse should be fine. Baird is listed as a midfielder here even though he played out wide and up top this season.

Nick Lima (24/RB or LB/San Jose Earthquakes)

Lima was perhaps the best player on a bad San Jose team this year. He even trialed with some German teams this winter. Lima usually featured at RB for San Jose but feels comfortable playing either fullback position. That flexibility is really useful on a national team where roster sizes are often limited. I’m interested to see how he plays at a higher level.

Reggie Cannon (20/RB/FC Dallas)

Cannon is probably a better defender than Rosenberry but I think Rosenberry offers more going forward. Either way, Cannon had a stellar first season for Dallas and has already been called-up by Sarachan a few times.

Russell Canouse (23/CDM/DC United)

Canouse rejoined DC from injury the very same game that Wayne Rooney joined the team for the first time. Many attribute DC’s great second half of the year to Rooney, but Canouse definitely steadied their midfield, aiding them to the best half-season in MLS history.

Auston Trusty (20/CB/Philadelphia Union) Mark McKenzie (19/CB/Philadelphia Union)

Trusty played every minute of the Union’s season in 2018, McKenzie played half of them. The Union had a pretty middle-of the road defense this year but their back line was young. Both these guys still have a lot to learn, but I think they have potential to fit into Berhalter’s system.

Paul Arriola (23/RM/DC United)

Seems like Arriola may be getting transitioned to RB rather than RM. He also played as a CM for part of 2018, so I am not sure where Berhalter will play him. He’s a hard runner and he’s pretty good on the ball. I think he might fit into the Ethan Finlay role of Berhalter’s system but I wouldn’t put money on that.

Greg Garza (27/LB/FC Cincinnati)

Garza earned his spot despite his season where minutes were limited due to injury. He’s looked good when he’s on the field but you gotta stay on the field. However LB is a mess for the national team per usual so I don’t mind Garza getting this call up.

Djorde Mihailovic (20/CM/Chicago Fire)

Similar to Garza, Mihailovic had his minutes limited by injury this year. But he looks good when he’s on the field and he’s young. Still not sure whether he projects more as a box-to-box midfielder or an attacking midfielder but he’s got some time to be molded into either role.

3. “USMNT Regulars” (These are players who may not fit Berhalter’s system, and didn’t have particularly great years, but they have national team experience and are talented).

Sebastian Lletget (26/CM/LA Galaxy), Kellyn Acosta (23/CM/Colorado Rapids)

Both of these guys play as box-to-box midfielder but they both play that position differently. I think both of them are deserving of a call-up but I don’t think either of them fit Berhalter’s system better than the other. Part of my difficulty here is that the box-to-box player is the least defined role on the field in any system. It seems like Berhalter want’s this player to defend well, support the attack, but not get so involved in the attack to make the team open to counters. Both of these guys like to get involved in the attack.

Walker Zimmerman (25/CB/LAFC)

I’m not thrilled with Zimmerman. he’s pretty good at last minute tackles to save a play but I’d prefer to see him put out fires before that happens.

4. “The Rest”

Justen Glad (21/CB/Real Salt Lake), Alex Bono (24/GK/Toronto), Jonathan Lewis (21/RW/NYCFC), Christian Ramirez (27/ST/LAFC), Daniel Lovitz (27/LM or LB/Montreal Impact)

Glad was a starter for most of RSL’s season but was on the bench down the stretch in the playoffs. Bono, and the rest of Toronto, had a down year; if he returns to 2017 form than this call-up is fine. Lewis got very few minutes (219) on NYCFC this year despite looking good when he plays. Ramirez had a transitional year getting traded from Minnesota to LAFC. He looked good-ish for a bad Minnesota team and was a rotational player once he went to LAFC. Lastly, Lovitz was a surprise for me at first but he started most of Montreal’s game this year at LB, and LB is a mess, as always.

None of these guys are bad call-ups, that’s not why they are in this category. However, I *might* have preferred other players get called-in instead (Hamid for Bono, Parker for Glad, Mueller for Lewis, Jozy Altidore for Ramirez, and Herrera for Lovitz) but Berhalter is the mastermind here so I’ll reserve judgement for now.

Here’s what a starting XI might look like:

Steffen

Rosenberry – Trusty – Long – Garza

Bradley – Delgado

Arriola – Lletget – Baird

Ebobisse

Subs: Jonson, Glad, Lima, Canouse, Mihailovic, Roldan, Zardes

I tried to use some pre-existing partnerships to solidify the roster (Rosenberry-Trusty, and Bradley-Delgado). I also wouldn’t be shocked if Trapp and Zardes start the first game. Once we can add European players into this mix imagine Pulisic either on the right wing or playing centrally, Miazga and/or Brooks in central defense (both pretty good on the ball), and then probably Adams and/or McKennie in the midfield. I wouldn’t be shocked if one of Adams or McKennie doesn’t start regularly for Berhalter. I’m leaning more towards McKennie starting and Adams on the bench but we shall see. Plenty more to consider and digest as the national team moves forward.