Jürgen Klinsmann is Almost Two Years Into His USMNT Tenure, And the Results Have Been Disappointing
Jürgen Klinsmann’s U.S. team lost its first hexagonal match to Honduras. Hysterical reactions are inevitable, as are self-important, tranquil retorts to the hysteria. A proportional response would rest between those two poles. The current qualifying position after one match should not be disconcerting, though the team’s form should be setting off alarms.
Style is ancillary in the Hex. It’s a ten-match toil. Get the points. Finish in the top three. Qualify. This group has substantial parity. Judging from past years, the safety zone should be around 17 points. Throw out the Mexico matches. Win the four home games. Obtain as many points as feasible on the road. Try your best against the rivals, but make sure a result there is a bonus rather than a necessity.
Losing is never a good look, especially at the start. That said, losing what may be the second toughest away match in a group of 10 in no way cripples them. Mexico dropping home points against the lowest-ranked team, Jamaica, last night was worse. A draw might have felt better, but it was not essential.
The qualification situation may not be critical, but don’t let that comfort you. The Honduras effort fits a broader pattern of underwhelming performances under Klinsmann. This team has made no progress.
Talent is not the issue. Eight of the 11 starters for the U.S. yesterday play significant roles for clubs in the Premier League, the Bundesliga or Serie A. Jozy Altidore has scored 17 goals in Holland so far this season. The other two, Eddie Johnson and Omar Gonzalez, were top-caliber MLS players. That’s enough ability. CONCACAF is strengthening. Areas of the roster are thin, but this team has no limiting factor. There’s no excuse to justify not qualifying for the World Cup.
Responsibility for the present malaise rests with Klinsmann. He promised a vibrant brand of soccer. He said he would find “Latin” players with technique. He said he would instill a more attacking intent. It has not materialized. Whatever impetus the USMNT has gained going forward in open play under him has been checked by defensive regression. That’s precisely what happened against Honduras.
The two conceded goals came from individual mistakes, mostly from Cameron and Gonzalez in central defense and Tim Howard. The probability of such individual mistakes increases when players are disorganized and under duress. Neither Cameron nor Gonzalez had played together or played in the Hex before. Klinsmann exacerbated pressure on them by fielding a front-loaded team, aggressive formation that could not hold possession.
Klinsmann selected a 4-3-3 with three forwards. That forces the left and right back to cover a lot of space on the wings defensively where a wide midfielder would normally be. That can leave the two central defenders and the goalkeeper quite exposed. Doing that is dandy when you are Barcelona and you have Xavi, Iniesta and others to sit on the ball 85 percent of the game. The U.S. had Michael Bradley and no one else who could pass when challenged.
Honduras received the ball back easily and had the space to be dangerous with it. A U.S. loss was a fair outcome. Mistakes happen. Good defensive teams limit opportunities for their defenders to make mistakes. When you let teams run at your defenders it is only a matter of time. Klinsmann’s tactical plan seemed to be to attack and have his defenders to pick up whatever mess came of it. That has been a pattern throughout his coaching career.
Klinsmann did not qualify Germany for the World Cup. They were the hosts. Part of the reason his semifinal run was so surprising, was that their buildup matches were so awful. The Germans hosted the 2005 Confederations Cup, and conceded 11 goals in five matches. Australia scored three times against them at home.
A similar thing happened when Klinsmann took over at Bayern Munich. His team scored a great number of goals. They also allowed 45 goals in his 33 domestic matches in charge (For comparison: the 2012-13 team has allowed seven goals in 20 matches in the Bundesliga). Particularly telling were defeats to Wolfsburg (5-1) and to Werder Bremen (5-2) at home where well-drilled teams with some talent picked them apart.
His U.S. teams have not been that porous, but the competition has been poorer. Honduras was the first qualifier against a team in the SPI Top 60. Despite playing relative minnows such as Antigua and Barbuda and Guatemala, the U.S. has kept just one clean sheet in seven qualifiers.
Klinsmann has coached 23 matches over almost two years. These aren’t growing pains. There just has not been growth. It’s not even clear in what direction this team is supposed to grow. There has been nothing but rhetoric and letdown. Klinsmann has deployed eight different formations and cycled through players. The process has resembled trial and error far more than development.
These are early days. Things may coalesce here as they did with Germany. But with no American Michael Ballack or Joachim Löw emerging to paper over the cracks, it is time to be concerned.
[Photo via Presswire]

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43 Responses to “Jürgen Klinsmann is Almost Two Years Into His USMNT Tenure, And the Results Have Been Disappointing”
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February 7th, 2013 at 3:27 PM
Epic failure is too strong of a word at this point, but I’m pretty sure it will be fitting afte they finish 4th in the hexagonal section.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:29 PM
Did they win that game yesterday? They need to start using drugs to enhance their performance.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:29 PM
This entier paragraph makes me sad as a USMNT fan.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:32 PM
They will still qualify, but they won’t make it look easy. JK seems like he would be a better Technical Director than a coach at this time. Hopefully this past game showed him that the US needs to have players who can play wide and pass/hold the ball. Williams might be a good player, but besides 1-2 good games for the USA he should not have been starting that game. Hopefully this will be the end of the Jermaine Jones era as well. He is no where near the player he was 3-4 years ago and he has never had a great game for the US so far.
Any chance that Gulati would fire JK if they have 0 points over the first 3 games?
February 7th, 2013 at 3:33 PM
David Regis isn’t walking through that door.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:33 PM
Too many moving parts.
/Queef’d
February 7th, 2013 at 3:34 PM
This entier paragraph makes me sad as a USMNT fan.
That entire paragraph is an example why soccer doesn’t have sustained success with fans in this country.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:35 PM
They can finish 4th and then they will most likely have to play New Zealand which should not be that tough of a time. That being said who knows how they would play. Last time the 4th place team qualified with 16 points but this year I am guessing the total will be 14-15 points as the competition is better.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:36 PM
He keeps talking about how at Bayern he didn’t succeed because of the board. That’s simply not true. Board didn’t support him because the players figured out that his style wasn’t suitable for success.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:36 PM
Yup. No consistency whatsoever.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:39 PM
I 99% doubt that Gulati would fire JK due to the $$ that he is being paid, but if he did who would the US hire?
- Bradley is in Egypt and would not leave them
- Arena- Qualified 2x for the WC
- Kinnear- One of the better American coaches in MLS
- Schmid- same as above and was a US youth coach
- Hiddink- no chance, but I will put him here anyway
February 7th, 2013 at 3:40 PM
Remember that guy that used to talk about azz clowns? Whatever happened to that guy, does he still comment here?
February 7th, 2013 at 3:40 PM
just hire Hiddink. Fuck it.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:40 PM
This is true. I think he can definitely help American soccer in that type of role. Give him a group of 40-50 talented youngster and I think he can he can groom them away from public eye.
And he really doesn’t do himself any favor when he talks about USA playing fluid, attacking football. Bottom line is that players in this country suck too much to do anything besides eking out win against small island nations.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:41 PM
Nope because Gulati was the one that pushed for Klinsi for 5 years.
If the US trots out that awful formation with 3 central midfielders, MB90, Jones and Edu/Williams/Beckerman with Eddie Johnson on the left wing I’m just going to bang my head against the wall repeatedly. That way maybe I will understand his reasoning.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:41 PM
Style is ancillary in the Hex. It’s a ten-match toil. Get the points. Finish in the top three. Qualify. This group has substantial parity. Judging from past years, the safety zone should be around 17 points. Throw out the Mexico matches. Win the four home games. Obtain as many points as feasible on the road. Try your best against the rivals, but make sure a result there is a bonus rather than a necessity.
This entier paragraph makes me sad as a USMNT fan.
It’s true though. Win at home. Hoover up as many points on the road. Anything against Mexico is gravy. This isn’t about doing anything other than qualifying. With Mexico, Honduras and Costa Rica all lying about, it’s not as easy as once thought.
That said, Klinsmann demanded a lot of power over US Soccer to take that job. Anything but a spot in Brazil 2014 and he’ll have nowhere to go.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:43 PM
After yesterday, they still will qualify comfortably behind Mexico. All those ties really helped them out.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:45 PM
I think Kreis from RSL is up there on that list. Vermes at KC probably is too.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:45 PM
@ derkaiser- I agree about how he talks about the fluid/passing soccer and then he throws out a line up with EJ, Jones, Williams out there. What also annoys me is how the media keeps bringing it up and asking “when will the USMNT start playing the way JK has talked about” when they should know that the US team can not play that style.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:47 PM
Can someone explain what this is about? From what I can tell the Hexagonal means there are 6 teams who each play each other twice. Yes? And the top three qualify for the next World Cup?
February 7th, 2013 at 3:47 PM
@ tarheel- I think Kreis would be in the discussion too, just didn’t feel like adding him. Vermes possibly, but would take Sigi, Arena, Kreis, and Kinnear over him due to their experience.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:47 PM
This Christopher Dorner shit is crazy….
February 7th, 2013 at 3:47 PM
Reading all the articles yesterday, he is digging in on starting Gonzalez. I really don’t mind that, at all. He had a brain fart yesterday, but in long run, he is a better option than Bocanegra.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:48 PM
Mexico drawing was huge.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:49 PM
Yes. And 4th team has playoff against Oceania, which might as well be a win. So in conclusion, you have to suck epically in order to not make it to the world cup from CONCACAF.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:49 PM
@gfunk- top 3 qualify automactically and #4 plays a team from Oceania for a place in the WC
February 7th, 2013 at 3:50 PM
Agree.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:51 PM
Klinsmann did not qualify Germany for the World Cup. They were the hosts. Part of the reason his semifinal run was so surprising, was that their buildup matches were so awful. The Germans hosted the 2005 Confederations Cup, and conceded 11 goals in five matches. Australia scored three times against them at home.
This is kind of an important part of his coaching resume, yes?
February 7th, 2013 at 3:54 PM
I don’t have a problem starting Omar either, he is a better option that Boca right now. Maybe if the US can get a few nice free kicks in a game they would be able to target Omar on them.
I would have rather had Mexico beat Jamaica and every other team they face other than the US. The less points other teams get can only help the US with how they have been playing the past year
February 7th, 2013 at 3:54 PM
i was pretty disappointed with how timmy chandler played yesterday, but he’s probably still in the depression phase of the “i am now committed to the usmnt” 5 stages of death and dying
February 7th, 2013 at 3:55 PM
LOLz.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:57 PM
What happened to that 10 year old American kid that went to Barcelona? Throw his ass out there. Can’t hurt, considering how rest of the team is playing.
February 7th, 2013 at 3:58 PM
@pennypacker – he seemed out of gas around the 25th minute. It is not a good look when Costly is beating your for pace! Hopefully in Denver he looks better, but I will be worried about him in Azteca a few days later.
February 7th, 2013 at 4:00 PM
Name? My brother has a friend who coached this dude and has trained in Portugal and has had visitors from Barcelona and Chelsea look into bringing him into their program.
February 7th, 2013 at 4:03 PM
Husker, his name is Ben Lederman. Went there in 2011 on two year contract. Let’s see if they keep him there past this year. If so, that’s great news for US soccer. By now they should know if he is a total fraud or not.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/722940-fc-barcelona-sign-10-year-old-american-to-development-academy
February 7th, 2013 at 4:05 PM
I can’t tell if this post has been in the hopper for a while or is a gross overreaction to yesterday’s result. Any knowledgeable fan would have expected a draw or loss, so I hope it’s the former.
Either way, I’d like to see a count of how many players he has called up since he was hired. It’s gotta be close to 50. He’s tried to evaluate as many as possible (in practice AND games) to figure out who can get us to the knockout round, and it’s difficult to transform the style of play when the same guys aren’t consistently on the field together. Nevermind that it’s a considerable deviation from Tracksuit Bob and his lone striker + three defensive center mids. When JK was hired everyone (myself included) basically gave him a free pass for the first two years, to figure out what the fuck to do with all of these below-average players we have, and wait until qualifying to judge him. One match isn’t enough for me to condemn him. So if they still look like this at the end of qualifying, fine. But I’m still in wait-and-see mode until we get through these first few qualifiers and our A team gets on the field together a couple of times.
tl;dr
February 7th, 2013 at 4:05 PM
Here’s an update on him
I would say quit calling him up to the fucking U-14 team and let him stay with people who know how to coach
February 7th, 2013 at 4:08 PM
The most disappointing thing from Germany since all post 1990 Scorpions albums
February 7th, 2013 at 4:21 PM
That’s what Klinsmann has been putting out there. Jozy or Gomez alone up top with MB90, Jones and one of Edu/Williams/Beckerman. Bob was more 4-2-2-2 with a bucket formation of two holding mids with two strikers even if meant putting the awful Findley there in the World Cup.
February 7th, 2013 at 4:29 PM
Right. Poorly worded by me. JK would rather not do that, but the current personnel can make it difficult to avoid, depending on who is in the squad. But yesterday, given his choice, he went 4-3-3.
February 7th, 2013 at 4:32 PM
Hopefully Holden stays injury free and keeps getting games so he can be ready for games.
February 8th, 2013 at 2:25 PM
This article is great, except for the fact that Klinsmann didn’t promise a “vibrant” brand of soccer and the team has already performed better under JK in the last year than it ever did under the two prior regimes.
February 11th, 2013 at 1:57 AM
Oh but wait!! Klinsmann revamped, rebuilt and rescued the whole of German football from the brink of devastation in his 24 mth tenure there. His reign in the US is only 18 mths or so to date. Surely this soccer guru will manage the relatively miniscule task of putting together a decent centerback pairing for us in the next 6 mths. Afterall, despite never holding a single position of note in at any academy, college, player development org or pro team in the US… he KNOWS our player pool, and he’s EUROPEAN!