United States players celebrate after defeating Canada in a CONCACAF Nations League final match Sunday, June 18, 2023, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher) |
Having scored his first goal for the United States and won his first medal, Folarin Balogun looked to a future that includes a 2026 World Cup co-hosted by America.
“I’ve only here a short amount of time, but already I feel a
part of it and I feel a part of something bigger,” he said.
Balogun and Chris Richards scored their first international
goals, both off assists from Gio Reyna, and the U.S. beat Canada 2-0 on Sunday
night for the Americans’ second straight CONCACAF Nations League title.
“It’s another step in the right direction,” U.S. captain
Christian Pulisic said. “It’s just going to be about these knockout games. Come
those big tournaments, Copa América, World Cup, it’s time to get tough. We got
to step up and score the goals when it counts and keep them out of our goal.”
Richards scored in the 12th minute from Reyna’s corner kick,
bouncing a header from 7 yards to the left of goalkeeper Milan Borjan for his
first goal in 10 international appearances.
Balogun, who debuted in Thursday’s 3-0 win over Mexico after
choosing to play for the U.S. over England, doubled the lead in the 34th when
he took a feed from Reyna and held off Scott Kennedy with his right arm to slot
past Borjan.
“We’re looking beyond to the 2026 World Cup, and we need to
perform in high-intensity knockout games,” interim coach B.J. Callaghan said.
“That’s something that we learned from the World Cup.”
Callaghan took over May 30 and also will run the team in the
CONCACAF Gold Cup starting next weekend. Gregg Berhalter, brought back as coach
Friday 5 1/2 months after his contract was allowed to expire, won’t return to
the sidelines until September exhibitions.
Balogun, who debuted in Thursday’s 3-0 win over Mexico after
choosing to play for the U.S. over England, doubled the lead in the 34th when
he took a feed from Reyna and held off Scott Kennedy with his right arm to slot
past Borjan.
“We’re looking beyond to the 2026 World Cup, and we need to
perform in high-intensity knockout games,” interim coach B.J. Callaghan said.
“That’s something that we learned from the World Cup.”
Callaghan took over May 30 and also will run the team in the
CONCACAF Gold Cup starting next weekend. Gregg Berhalter, brought back as coach
Friday 5 1/2 months after his contract was allowed to expire, won’t return to
the sidelines until September exhibitions.
Before a crowd of just 35,000 at Allegiant Stadium, the U.S.
extended its home unbeaten streak against Canada to 22 games dating to 1957.
Canada remained without a title since the 2000 Gold Cup.
Reyna sparked both goals from a central midfield role rather
than the wing Berhalter used him on, then left at halftime with a calf injury
and was replaced by Luca de a Torre. Reyna’s lack of hustle in training at the
World Cup and his family’s angry response created the controversy that let to
Berhalter’s January departure.
“It shows his quality that’s on the field, his ball
security, his ability to take on two or three players and connect passes,”
Callaghan said. “We’ve challenged Gio to do more work off the ball on the
defensive side, and he’s absolutely risen to the occasion.”
Before Richards’ goal, the Americans had not scored from a
corner kick since Jordan Morris’ goal at El Salvador on June 14 last year.
“I definitely know I didn’t play that much this year, but I
know what I can bring,” said Richards, who had just four Premier League starts
and nine appearances for Crystal Palace.
Callaghan made three changes from Thursday, inserting
central defender Walker Zimmerman for Miles Robinson and midfielder Brenden
Aaronson and right back Joe Scally for Weston McKennie and Sergiño Dest, both
suspended after getting red cards against El Tri.
Canada coach John Herdman said the 6-foot-3 Zimmerman and
6-foot-2 Richards were difficult to defend against.
“We’re just not in that killer area of the pitch,” Herdman
said. “We’ve talked about this post-World Cup. It’s in the boxes where Canada’s
suffering. You don’t get time to work with the players. There’s no time. But we
need this September window. We need the resources where we can actually put a
camp together, where I can work for six days on the things that make the
biggest difference moving forward.”
NOTES: The game was streamed on Paramount+ while the CBS
Sports Network broadcast the Canadian Football League and sprint cars. ...
Atiba Hutchinson didn’t get in the game, ending his Canada career with 104
appearances. ... Mexico beat Panama 1-0 in the third-place match on Jesús
Gallardo’s fourth-minute goal. Aníbal Godoy’s apparent equalizer on a 55th-minute
bicycle kick was disallowed in a video review for offside, and 76th-minute
penalty kick awarded to Mexico by Jamaican referee Daneon Parchment also was
reversed in a video review. -AP