Christian Pulisic Is Somewhat of a Faster Version of Clint Dempsey

Clint Dempsey was a special American player because of his skill with the ball, which was way beyond any other American player minus Freddy Adu, who for all his problems, was exceptional with the ball at his feet. Christian Pulisic appears to have Dempsey’s technical ability with the ball, although it remains to be seen just how his shooting and ball striking compare.

Christian Pulisic’s Speed Gives Him an X-Factor That Clint Dempsey Didn’t Have

Without a doubt his passing is as good or better than Dempsey’s. Pulisic’s speed and quickness allows him to shake defenders and/or glide past them even if they are particularly fast. Dempsey didn’t have this asset to use, even though he was by no means slow. Pulisic, on the other hand, is truly fast, and his electric speed makes him more dangerous against top competition than Dempsey was.

Dempsey had many qualities, and in many ways, he was underrated to the extent that people looking to mock American soccer players liked to downplay and openly scoff at his ability. Of course, there was no justification for this, but nevertheless, the speed that Pulisic has allows him to beat defenders and get into the area with greater ease than Dempsey. One has to think that Dempsey can’t watch Pulisic without wishing that he himself was blessed with that extra gear of speed.

They say speed kills, so you should have no illusions that speed isn’t a deadly weapon in football. Speed is so important that many observers have claimed that Kylian Mbappe has already surpassed Neymar despite not having the same quiver of dribbling, passing, and shooting skills that make the Brazilian truly a grandmaster. Mbappe’s speed hypnotizes people into believing that he is a better player than Neymar which isn’t the case. In an interview with Alexis Nunes of ESPN, the Jamaican footballer, Leon Bailey said that Neymar was the only player close to Ronaldinho in terms of technical ability and magic with the ball. He could have said Lionel Messi, but he didn’t. That tells you just how magical Neymar is.

The increased media attention on Pulisic now that he’s at Chelsea in many ways demonstrates a certain degree of bias and ignorance amongst the media and fans. Pulisic was already playing for Borussia Dortmund, which is arguably the second biggest club in Germany and in the Bundesliga, so Pulisic was already a proven commodity at the highest level. German football is better than English football, and Germany as a country has four World Cup titles. To argue that Pulisic is only now playing under the spotlight or at the highest level is simply demonstrably untrue.

We’ll see how Pulisic performs for Chelsea and how much he plays. He looked sharp, electric, direct, and aggressive in his first game for Chelsea. Although last season at Dortmund, his playing time was down from the previous year, Chelsea’s players might not be at the same level as Dortmund’s. German football is very technical and elite, and it’s hard to argue that the Premier League showcases the same degree of technical skill and ability.

One thing is for certain, and that is that Pulisic is easily the best American player any of us has ever seen. No other American was able to attack top defenders and blow past them like Pulisic has done, and in addition to his individual 1v1 ability and speed, he has a great football mind who reads the game quickly and plays creative one-to-two touch football.

 

Three Improvements for the U.S. National Team in 2016

Since the U.S. Men’s National Team has been having a major problem keeping possession and creating scoring chances, there is plenty to improve in 2016.

Here are three things the U.S. National Team can do to improve in 2016:

Play Michael Bradley as a defensive midfielder

Once Bradley has been named the team’s starting defensive midfielder, then two or three other midfielders can be chosen to play with him to improve the midfield’s possession problems.

If a three-man midfield is used, then a center midfielder and attacking midfielder can be penciled in to start. There is also the option of starting two other center midfielders with Bradley.

Looking at the American player pool, both Kellyn Acosta and Dillon Powers can start as the center midfielder with Bradley, and Benny Feilhaber, Darlington Nagbe, or Sebastian Lletget can be started as the attacking midfielder. Once Bradley’s position is settled as a defensive midfielder, then the National Team can find the best supporting class to help the team actually keep possession and look to dictate the game.

Include an attacking midfielder in the lineup

As discussed above, Feilhaber, Nagbe, and Lletget are all Number 10s or playmakers. Any of them can improve the U.S. National Team from going from no playmaking at all to at least some.

Feilhaber has been blackballed by Jürgen Klinsmann, but both Nagbe and Lletget can start at the same time. Whether a 4-2-3-1 or 4-3-3 formation is used, Nagbe and Lletget can both start. In the 4-2-3-1, Nagbe and Lletget can be used in the line of three with Dempsey, and in the 4-3-3, Nagbe can be given a spot in the three-man midfield with Lletget given a spot in the attacking trident.

No matter what the National Team does, an attacking midfielder needs to start to fix the total lack of possession in the midfield and the lack of link-up play with the attack.

Build a 23-man roster with a Starting 11 in mind and substitutes for every position

Picking a Starting 11 and its substitutes should be an easy albeit controversial exercise for the U.S. National Team coach.

It’s easy to select a decent national team roster, but finding world-class players isn’t easy for anyone. Klinsmann can rightly claim that he doesn’t have world-class players, but he doesn’t have the right to say that he can’t call up a decent, balanced roster.

In 2016, the U.S. National Team needs to use an effective roster where every position has a first and second-choice option. Instead of using the best players he has, Klinsmann thinks he has to play players out of position because he doesn’t have world-class players. For Klinsmann, having a bizarre lineup is better than having a decent lineup.

Clint Dempsey, American Soccer Legend

 

 

Clint Dempsey continues to demonstrate how special of an American soccer player he is. Landon Legend isn’t the only American soccer legend.

Along with Landon Donovan and Michael Bradley, Dempsey’s abilities are on a different level than other American players.

Dempsey totally distinguished himself from all of his American peers except for Donovan as soon as he became a professional. His skill on the ball with his first touch and trickery were new for an American.

American soccer has been known for fitness and toughness without much technical skill, but Dempsey combined fitness and toughness with skill soccer.

Like Dempsey and Bradley, Donovan was an excellent two-footed player, but Dempsey has shown a level of fast footwork that has shown that Americans can use this sort of skill to be effective against elite competition.

Several other American players experienced success in the top European soccer leagues, but it was Dempsey that consistently performed and started in an attacking role in a major European league.

American soccer players not only owe Donovan a huge thank you for raising the bar on American soccer standards, but they equally owe Dempsey a thank you for his consistently good attacking performances for years at the club and international level.

Recently, there has been discussion of phasing Dempsey out of the National Team, but every time he plays for the United States, he showcases a level of skill and quick attacking play that the United States is hoping to see from all of its attacking players.

Dempsey is closing in on Donovan’s international scoring record for the United States, and it’s clear that Dempsey isn’t fully-appreciated by the American media and fans.

Before you support the phasing out of Dempsey, remind yourself that there is still no replacement for him and matching his achievements will be a big task for the next best American soccer player.

While Donovan is widely-considered the best American soccer player of all time, Dempsey is equally as good, if not better.

For his attacking skill, his success in Europe, his longevity, his heart, his toughness, his ability to score, and his trailblazing role for American soccer players, Dempsey has rightly earned the right to be called the best American soccer player alongside Donovan.

When Dempsey retires, don’t forget Dempsey’s achievements or the way that he played. There are no stats to describe Dempsey’s contributions to American soccer.

 

The Best American Soccer Players (July 2015)

 

Clint Dempsey remains the American soccer player par excellence. (Photo: AP)
Clint Dempsey remains the American soccer player par excellence. (Photo: AP)

 

 

Rankings are hard. Weighing various factors to rank soccer players presents plenty of problems. How you consider skill, position, club, league, and international form leads to controversy.

 

All rankings are biased as everyone values different qualities and criteria differently, but here is World Soccer Source’s rankings of The Best American Footballers for July 2015:

 

  1. CLINT DEMPSEY (Seattle Sounders)
  2. MICHAEL BRADLEY (Toronto FC)
  3. BENNY FEILHABER (Sporting KC)
  4. MIX DISKERUD (NYC FC)
  5. JOZY ALTIDORE (Toronto FC)
  1. JUAN AGUDELO (New England Revolution)
  2. GEOFF CAMERON (Stoke City)
  3. ALEJANDRO BEDOYA (Nantes)
  4. FABIAN JOHNSON (Borussia Mönchengladbach)
  5. ARON JÓHANNSSON (AZ Alkmaar)
  1. DEANDRE YEDLIN (Tottenham)
  2. CHARLIE DAVIES (New England Revolution)
  3. BRAD GUZAN (Aston Villa)
  4. VENTURA ALVARADO (Club América)
  5. JOHN BROOKS (Hertha Berlin)
  1. JOE CORONA (Veracruz)
  2. RUBIO RUBIN (Utrecht)
  3. LEE NGUYEN (New England Revolution)
  4. SEBASTIAN LLETGET (LA Galaxy)
  5. MAURICE EDU (Philadelphia Union)
  1. GREG GARZA (Atlas)
  2. DILLON POWERS (Colorado Rapids)
  3. GYASI ZARDES (LA Galaxy)
  4. JOSÉ VILLARREAL (LA Galaxy)
  5. ANDREW FARRELL (New England Revolution)

 

Injured: JERMAINE JONES

Honorable Mention: ERIC LICHAJ, BRADFORD JAMIESON IV, MATT MIAZGA, TEAL BUNBURY, LUIS GIL, LONDON WOODBERRY, PAUL ARRIOLA

 

 

Hope For the Future of American Soccer

 

José Villarreal (Photo: LA Galaxy)
José Villarreal (Photo: LA Galaxy)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

 

There is much for which to be hopeful for the future of American soccer and the United States Men’s National Team. Plenty of talent is coming through the pipeline.

 

The United States has technical and athletic players that are young and youngish at virtually every position.

 

In goal, the USA has William Yarbrough, Clint Irwin, Cody Cropper, and Zack Steffen.

 

In defense, the USA has DeAndre Yedlin, John Brooks, Andrew Farrell, Greg Garza, Erik Palmer-Brown, Cameron Carter-Vickers, Matt Miazga, and Christian Dean.

 

In the midfield, the Stars and Stripes have the likes of Mix Diskerud, Joe Corona, Dillon Powers, José Villarreal, Kellyn Acosta, Benji Joya, Emerson Hyndman, Luis Gil, and Paul Arriola.

 

In the attack, the United States has Juan Agudelo, Gyasi Zardes, Bradford Jamieson IV, Jordan Allen, Rubio Rubin, Mario Rodriguez, Alonso Hernandez, Junior Flores, and Romain Gall.

 

These young players coupled with others that weren’t listed along with the players in the 25-32 year old range give the USMNT a deep pool of talent where many need experience, playing time, and seasoning.

 

But, one thing is for sure, and that is that the skilled and proven experienced players can be started with a few of the younger players to give them experience, seasoning, and chemistry with the senior squad.

 

Of all of the younger players in the pool, with the exception of players like Agudelo, Yedlin, Alvarado, and Brooks who have proven themselves with the National Team, Bradford Jamieson IV really stands out as the most exciting national team prospect of the group.

 

Jamieson has an excellent first touch, advanced technical ability, speed, fearlessness, size, vision, excellent passing ability, and lots and lots of speed and quickness. Jamieson also has the thing that American soccer has been looking for: a player that can take defenders off the dribble and score solo goals from the run of play. Jamieson will attack defenders directly and continue to do so even when defenders take possession from him on his previous dribbling attempts.

 

If the United States wants to use a 4-2-3-1, 4-4-2, or 4-3-3 formation, there is room for Jamieson to get some real minutes with the National Team.

 

There are many conflicting views of who should start for the United States, but if we look at a 4-2-3-1 formation with the experienced and proven players, then there is room to put Jamieson in to play the first half or the last 20-30 minutes of the game.

 

What is a proven USA XI in a 4-2-3-1?

 

I’d argue that Brad Guzan, DeAndre Yedlin, Ventura Alvarado, John Brooks, Greg Garza, Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, Alejandro Bedoya/Joe Corona, Mix Diskerud, Clint Dempsey, and Jozy Altidore is a non-controversial and strong starting line-up.

 

If we look at that line-up, what does it hurt to start Juan Agudelo over Altidore and Jamieson over Bedoya and Corona just to give him experience and the squad an explosive and quality attacker?

 

Furthermore, how could it hurt to give Dillon Powers minutes in the midfield and to give Andrew Farrell minutes at center back?

 

Surely, these players are good enough to see minutes in friendlies or in the first round of the Gold Cup against truly weak opponents.

 

The most important thing is that MLS appears to be producing more and more technical and athletic defenders, midfielders, and forwards.

 

Despite being produced here, these players are demonstrating a level of technical ability along the lines of Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey, and Michael Bradley.

 

Once again, of all of these players, Jamieson is by far the most polished and exciting of these young players, and Jamieson is the type of creative and skilled attacking player that the United States has been waiting for more of since the appearance of Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey.

 

Jamieson’s technical ability, speed, and 1v1 skills are truly special by any standard. The fact that an 18-year-old American player that was born and raised in the United States is displaying these skills is a reason for hope for the undeniable rise of American soccer.

 

Let us not forget all of the other promising young players that are defenders, midfielders, and forwards. It will be interesting to see which players begin to stand out more and more from the others.

 

Looking toward the Gold Cup, perhaps Powers, Farrell, and Jamieson are the most deserving of surprising roster inclusions for that tournament. With proven players largely already filling up the 23-man Gold Cup roster, there is room for Farrell, Powers, and Jamieson on this summer’s roster.

 

The continued improvement of American soccer will depend on risk. The players starting for the National Team should be consistent performers at the club level or at least proven performers at the club or international level, but the United States needs to start incorporating its younger players that display the most skill.

 

 

American Soccer Player Rankings (April 2015)

Clint Dempsey remains the American soccer player par excellence. (Photo: AP)
Clint Dempsey remains the American soccer player par excellence. (Photo: AP)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

Ranking the Best American Soccer Players (April 2015):

 

  1. Clint Dempsey, Forward/ Midfielder, Seattle Sounders
  2. Michael Bradley, Midfielder, Toronto FC
  3. Benny Feilhaber, Midfielder, Sporting KC
  4. Jozy Altidore, Striker, Toronto FC
  5. Juan Agudelo, Forward, New England Revolution
  1. Mix Diskerud, Midfielder, NYC FC
  2. Joe Corona, Midfielder/Forward, Tijuana
  3. Geoff Cameron, Defender/Midfielder, Stoke City
  4. Ventura Alvarado, Defender/Midfielder, Club América
  5. Brad Guzan, Goalkeeper, Aston Villa
  1. Maurice Edu, Midfielder/Defender, Philadelphia Union
  2. DeAndre Yedlin, Defender/Midfielder, Tottenham
  3. Tim Howard, Goalkeeper, Everton
  4. John Brooks, Defender, Hertha Berlin
  5. Dillon Powers, Midfielder, Colorado Rapids
  1. Alejandro Bedoya, Midfielder, Nantes
  2. José Villarreal, Forward/ Midfielder, LA Galaxy
  3. Kelyn Rowe, Midfielder/Forward, New England Revolution
  4. Lee Nguyen, Midfielder, New England Revolution
  5. Greg Garza, Defender, Tijuana
  1. Fabian Johnson, Midfielder/ Defender, Borussia Mönchengladbach
  2. Charlie Davies, Forward, New England Revolution
  3. Gyasi Zardes, Forward, LA Galaxy
  4. Shane O’Neill, Defender/Midfielder, Colorado Rapids
  5. Andrew Farrell, Defender, New England Revolution

 

 

The Best American Footballers (July 2014)

 

Clint Dempsey (Photo: AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
Clint Dempsey (Photo: AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

 

By: COLIN REESE

 

These rankings are a subjective ranking of American soccer players, and there is no way to equally weigh skill, experience, club form, international form, and the like into the ranking of players.

 

Furthermore, ranking players of various positions makes placing a numerical rank on a player even harder as each position brings with it its own importance and skill-set.

 

While attacking midfielders and strikers are usually more technically-skilled, every position requires important unique skill-sets and overall technical skill.

 

Below are the rankings of The Best American Footballers (July 2014):

 

1. Clint DEMPSEY (Seattle Sounders)

2. Fabian JOHNSON (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

3. Jermaine JONES (Besiktas)

4. Michael BRADLEY (Toronto FC)

5. Landon DONOVAN (LA Galaxy)

 

6. Tim HOWARD (Everton)

7. Geoff CAMERON (Stoke City)

8. Benny FEILHABER (Sporting KC)

9. Joe CORONA (Tijuana)

10. Juan AGUDELO 

 

11. Brad GUZAN (Aston Villa)

12. Mix DISKERUD (Rosenborg)

13. Jozy ALTIDORE (Sunderland)

14. Maurice EDU (Philadelphia Union)

15. DeAndre YEDLIN (Seattle Sounders)

 

16. John Anthony BROOKS (Hertha Berlin)

17. DaMarcus BEASLEY (Puebla)

18. Alejandro BEDOYA (Nantes)

19. Michael OROZCO (Puebla)

20. Matt BESLER (Sporting KC)

 

21. Julian GREEN (Bayern Munich)

22. Benji JOYA (Chicago Fire)

23. Eddie JOHNSON (DC United)

24. Terrence BOYD (RB Leipzig)

25. Greg GARZA (Tijuana)

 

26. Dillon POWERS (Colorado Rapids)

27. Chris KLUTE (Colorado Rapids)

28. Andrew FARRELL (New England Revolution)

29. Joe GYAU (Borussia Dortmund II)

30. Kofi SARKODIE (Houston Dynamo)

 

31. Paul ARRIOLA (Tijuana)

32. Luis GIL (Real Salt Lake)

33. Mario RODRIGUEZ (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

34. Kellyn ACOSTA (FC Dallas)

35. Dillon SERNA (Colorado Rapids)

 

36. Alonso HERNANDEZ (Monterrey)

37. Caleb STANKO (SC Freiburg)

38. Chris SCHULER (Real Salt Lake)

39. José VILLARREAL (LA Galaxy/Cruz Azul)

40. Edgar CASTILLO (Atlas)

 

 

Benji Joya Has the Clint Dempsey Mentality

 

Benji Joya (8). (Photo: MexSport)
Benji Joya (8). (Photo: MexSport)

 

Benji Joya has the Clint Dempsey mentality. It’s a winner’s mentality that is a combination of irreverence for opponents with a strong sense of humility off the field.

 

Joya is a different type of player than Dempsey, but Joya is an excellent talent who is more of a box-to-box midfielder compared to Dempsey, who is a second striker.

 

Joya plays one-to-two touch soccer. He tackles well. He’s not intimidated by opponents, even Paul Pogba, and he’s cool under pressure.

 

Big games are Joya’s favorite type of games, and he has the skill to start for the United States Men’s National Team in the 2014 World Cup, should the United States qualify.

 

For people who were so adverse to using a trequartista, enganche, meia-armador, or central attacking midfielder (all the same thing), Joya provides that sort of vision, creativity, passing ability, and style, while being an aggressive defender who tracks back on defense and times his tackles well.

 

The USMNT needs a player like Joya who offers Geoff Cameron, Michael Bradley, and Clint Dempsey a skilled passer and attacker who also helps to win back possession in the midfield and break up the passing of the opposition.

 

Even without international experience for the United States Men’s National Team, Benji Joya is a game day player who has shown strong signs that he is a complete midfielder unfazed by tough opponents or hostile crowds.

 

Once Joya played well against Paul Pogba, it’s hard to argue that he needs more experience. Joya even tried to put Pogba in a head lock in a recent U-20 World Cup game against France, and Pogba knew not to react.

 

Fighting for no reason shouldn’t be applauded in soccer, but Joya doesn’t do that.

 

But, Joya has shown that he is willing to mix it up with anyone just like Clint Dempsey shows almost every game.

 

However one chooses to look at Joya’s level of experience, Joya is an intense player who won’t be intimidated and psyched out by famous and talented opponents, and Joya’s skill and athleticism is matched by his mental toughness.

 

The USMNT needs more players like Benji Joya, and Jürgen Klinsmann will have to begin to incorporate Joya into his rosters, if he hopes to compete against the world’s best national teams, when they are at full-strength.

 

Benji Joya has the Clint Dempsey mentality.