AL-RAYYAN, Qatar — The preparations involved in getting a team ready for the World Cup are always complicated. In some cases, they can make or break a tournament. Germany‘s hideaway in Brazil in 2014 was widely hailed as being key to their eventual title. Conversely, the United States men’s national team’s decision to sequester themselves in a remote chalet in 1998 has often been cited as one of several factors that led to the team’s miserable time in France.
The reality is that every tournament has its own peculiarities, be it the host nation, venues, training base or opponents. The U.S. staff, led by USSF director of administration Tom King, is well aware of this truth. The 2022 World Cup, however, will be like no other, and not just because it will be the first to be held in the Middle East.
The tournament’s November start means it will fall smack in the middle of the European club season. That has created all manner of obstacles and wrinkles in terms of preparation, and that is especially true for the U.S.
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Typically, the U.S. would have an extended training camp with around three friendly matches to prepare and fine-tune things. Then there was a relatively early arrival in the host country to get acclimated. Not so this time. Players with European clubs played up until this past weekend. Most MLS players with the national team had to contend with the fact that their seasons had been over for a month or more.
For U.S. manager Gregg Berhalter, it made for a tricky run-up in terms of the form and fitness of his players. Every week he was taking a microscope to his players’ performances and praying that they made it through unscathed. He also held a camp specifically for MLS players in a bid to maintain their fitness, from which seven of the final 26-man roster emerged, although game sharpness — or lack thereof — will be an issue.
Now that the roster has been named and the team is in Qatar, the short run-up is compounded. The U.S. plays Wales on Monday, the second day of the tournament, giving Berhalter’s side a little more than a week to get settled and make final preparations. Compare that to the extended camp and 14 days in-country Berhalter had when he played in the 2002 World Cup in South Korea. But the U.S. manager likes the idea of this short runway.
“Everyone’s going to want to just get it going,” Berhalter said to ESPN in an exclusive interview. “We’ve been waiting for this for a while, and with a younger team, we just want to get to our business. In World Cup qualifiers, we were used to quick turnarounds. This will have a little bit more lead-in, and we’ll be ready to go.”
There is the question of how much the short run-up will affect the team’s tactical preparation. When the group convened for the September international window, Berhalter remarked how there was too much of a focus on granular details — such as the team’s shape when opponents break pressure and switch fields — instead of focusing on the basics.
“What we missed was the guys had been away for three and a half months,” Berhalter said. “They just did a whole preseason with their clubs where they’re learning different things, and our basic pressure wasn’t even right. The second part was guys were also coming into the camp with different starting points with the buildup part of the game.”
Berhalter added that he doesn’t think the six weeks between camps — at least for the European contingent — will be a problem in Qatar.
“They were just with us [in September], so I think that’s a really good thing,” he said in terms of the team’s tactical preparation. “But I think we’re in a really good spot in terms of understanding what we’re going to need to get this group ready to play against Wales.”
There has been some discussion regarding why…
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