U.S. can claim a win despite falling to Mexico in Gold Cup final

The U.S. was thoroughly outplayed by Mexico in Sundayβs CONCACAF Gold Cup final. It was outshot, outpassed, outpossessed and arguably out of its league.
Which, surprisingly, was partly the way coach Mauricio Pochettino wanted it. Because the monthlong tournament was never really about results for the U.S. It was about finding heart, grit, determination and dedication. It was about taking the pulse of his player pool a year before soccerβs biggest event returns to North America.
And those are things not easily measured by results alone.
So while Mexico deservedly won Sundayβs battle 2-1, the larger war, Pochettino believes, rages on.

U.S. defender Chris Richards celebrates with Alex Freeman, Patrick Agyemang, Malik Tillman and Diego Luna after Richards scored against Mexico in the Gold Cup final Sunday.
(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
βThat,β he said after Sundayβs final, βis the way we want to build our journey into the World Cup.β
When Pochettino gathered his team for the tournament in early June, it was missing as many as six first-choice starters for a variety of reasons. Some had club duties, some were injured. Others preferred rest over the honor of playing for their country.
So Pochettino called up a roster that averaged just 25 years of age and 14 players with fewer than five international caps and challenged them to prove they belonged. That was the team that rolled into Sundayβs final unbeaten (barely) in five Gold Cup games. That was the team that entered the final 15 minutes against a veteran Mexico squad even on the scoreboard.
If this was Pochettinoβs βCβ team, nobody bothered to tell the players.
βItβs an honor,β midfielder Diego Luna, who had played for the U.S. just four times before the Gold Cup, told reporters about wearing the crest. βI think every single one of these players thinks about it the same way I do. Itβs the No. 1 dream that weβve had as kids and weβre going to fight for this to have as many chances to wear it was we can.β
Credit Pochettino for taking the lemons he was handed and turning them into lemonade. After the USMNTβs listless and uninspired performance in last Marchβs Nations League final four, where it scored just once in back-to-back losses to Panama and Canada, the coach learned the majority of his first-choice lineup planned to pass up the Gold Cup, the teamβs final competition matches before the World Cup.
If the U.S. had lost its identity, had lost its way, by the end of the Nations League, the absences of veterans Yunus Musah, Gio Reyna, Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie this summer gave Pochettino an unexpected opportunity to redefine what it meant to be a national team player. He pushed his young, inexperienced roster of fringe national team players to show how much they cared, to show they really wanted to be part of the program.
And it worked.

United States players pose for a team photo before the teamβs CONCACAF Gold Cup final soccer match against Mexico in Houston on Sunday.
(David J. Phillip / Associated Press)
Luna thrust himself into contention for a World Cup roster spot through grit and hunger alone. Others such as goalkeeper Matt Freese, midfielders Sebastian Berhalter and Malik Tillman and forward Patrick Agyemang also shone brightly enough that the coach said his roster for his teamβs September friendlies with South Korea and Japan, much less the World Cup, is wide open.
βAll the American players have the possibility for September to be on the roster,β he said Sunday. βItβs still one year from the World Cup. But now we need to build a roster for September. We need to analyze every single player, see the circumstances, the situations, performance, fitness level.
βDonβt worry. We are people that are very open, and not closed. And who deserves to be [there] will be [there.]β
Pochettinoβs message is that desire and national pride are as much a requirement to play for the national team as talent. Itβs partly a bluff, of course. He wonβt go far in the World Cup with Luna and Berhalter playing in place of Pulisic and McKennie because all the star-spangled celebrations in the world canβt hide the fact the team Pochettino fielded this summer was deeply flawed.
It prepared for the Gold Cup by getting outscored 6-1 in losses to Turkey and Switzerland, running the teamβs losing streak to four games, its longest since 2007. The U.S. rebounded with narrow wins over Saudi Arabia and Haiti to advance out of the tournamentβs group stage and in the knockout stage it beat Costa Rica on penalty kicks, then had to hold off Guatemala for a one-goal win to reach the final.
Of those six opponents, only Switzerland ranks in the worldβs top 20, according to FIFA. Guatemala isnβt even in the top 100. And the loss to Mexico was the fifth in as many games against top 30 teams since Pochettino took over nine months ago.
That wonβt get it done in the World Cup.
If heart, effort and belief really do matter, so does talent. That makes Pochettinoβs task during the next year a simple one: he must find a way mesh the intangibles developed this summer with the talent heβll need to win next summer.
As the players shuffled out of Houstonβs NRG Stadium after Sundayβs loss, that fusion was already taking place.
βThereβs a few non-negotiables now,β defender Chris Richards told reporters. βThis was kind of a game-changer. β¦ When the guys come back, these are some things that we have to hold each other accountable for. And hopefully moving forward we can add a little bit more quality to it, as well, and weβre going to be a really tough team to beat.β
β½ You have read the latest installment of On Soccer with Kevin Baxter. The weekly column takes you behind the scenes and shines a spotlight on unique stories. Listen to Baxter on this weekβs episode of the βCorner of the Galaxyβ podcast.