USMNT, with another clunker, loses to Canada in Nations League third-place match

With questions swirling about their mentality and urgency, the USMNT promised to respond against Canada. Instead, they flopped, and lost 2-1. (Photo by Luiza Moraes/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — After Thursday’s stunning loss to Panama, the U.S. men’s national team promised a response. Head coach Mauricio Pochettino assured fuming fans that a sleepy CONCACAF Nations League semifinal “didn’t describe, or doesn’t describe, how we are.” Players said they’d “look in the mirror” and “raise the bar.” And yet, in Sunday’s third-place match against Canada, they did none of that.

They lost 2-1 to their northern neighbors, and deserved every last ounce of the defeat.

They managed one solitary shot on goal over the game’s first 84 minutes.

In the face of criticism and doubts, they talked about how, “if we want to be praised, we have to give people something to praise us about,” as midfielder Tyler Adams said Saturday. Instead, they regressed, and further disillusioned their supporters, and inflamed doubts about their readiness for a World Cup on home soil next summer.

All involved promised that, after the 1-0 loss to Panama, Sunday’s performance would be better. This Nations League consolation match would “be an important game to see how we react,” Pochettino said Saturday.

“Mentality obviously needs to change,” Adams said hours later.

“We’re gonna come out with that fighting spirit,” Tim Weah added.

In the interim, they had one-on-one talks and a “beautiful meeting,” Weah said, in which Pochettino pleaded for “killer mentality” and more. The message, Weah said: “We have to want it. We have to want to be here 100%. We have to fight.”

But on Sunday, they floundered. For most of the first half, they didn’t take the risks nor show the “aggression” they said they would. In a stadium that was once again nine-tenths empty at kickoff, they played dull soccer, and conceded a 27th-minute goal before they’d even taken a shot of their own.

Soon thereafter, Diego Luna tried to inject life into the USMNT, and into another snoozefest. Playing in his first competitive match for the national team, he started an attacking move from the right side of midfield, and, with a driving off-ball run, propelled it into the penalty box. It was the exact type of initiative that the U.S. lacked Thursday — and has often lacked under multiple managers.

“The desire and the hunger that he showed is what we want,” Pochettino said postgame.

At the end of his run, Luna received a pass in stride. He poked a clever square ball to Patrick Agyemang, who equalized with a firm finish.

The two Major League Soccer attackers, two of five changes to the U.S. starting lineup, seemed to lift a lagging team back into the game.

Neither, though, could erase the mediocrity around them. Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie, the team’s two Italy-based stars, were quiet. Adams and Weah looked nothing like their typically active selves. The USMNT was once against stagnant.

Not long after halftime, they receded again. They nearly conceded two penalties. (Canada head coach Jesse Marsch was red carded for protesting one of the no-calls.) Then, in the 59th minute, they conceded again. Jonathan David put Canada up 2-1.

And that’s how it ended, just as a friendly between these two teams ended in September, with the U.S. beaten — and with all sorts of questions swirling about the talent, passion, ceiling and capabilities of these U.S. players.

It ended with Pochettino “disappointed,” again, and reaching for reasons that the medium-term future, in 2026, could still be bright.

“I want to send the message to the fans: Don’t be pessimistic,” Pochettino said.

But he couldn’t offer clear rationale for why they shouldn’t be, other than: “In football, anything can happen.”

And as he rose to depart his postgame press conference, he apologized to everyone present, saying that he felt “shame” after the two losses, and promising, again, that “next time” would be different. “We need,” he said, “to move on.”

USMNT vs. Canada live blog

LIVE COVERAGE IS OVER32 updates

  • Another dismal performance for Mauricio Pochettino and the U.S. men’s national team as they lose the third-place match on home soil. Next up, the CONCACAF Gold Cup.

5 – Jonathan David (2 goals, 3 assists) has five career goal contributions against the USMNT, more than any other player since his first match against the U.S. in October 2019. Difference. pic.twitter.com/UIUGacPMev

— OptaJack⚽️ (@OptaJack) March 23, 2025

  • Tanner Tessman, Yunus Musah and Gio Reyna replace Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Tyler Adams.

Jesse Marsch visibly frustrated after being shown a red card and sent to the locker room in the Concacaf Nations League third-place match 🟥 pic.twitter.com/i93Qkgkzl7

— Golazo America (@GolazoAmerica) March 23, 2025

  • Jonathan David puts Canada back on top with a close-range golazo after a defensive lapse by the U.S.
  • A deserved goal.
  • After the U.S. failed to play out of its own defensive third, Ahmed splits Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie with a pass to Jonathan David.
  • Mark McKenzie, in a 1-v-2 situation in the box, stands off David, who finishes with his left foot.
  • 2-1 to Canada.
  • After Jonathan David slipped in the box — and after the Adams tackle, which was a more justified shout for a penalty — Marsch fumed and ran all the way onto the field, in front of the U.S. bench, raging at the referee.
  • Had to be restrained by staff.
  • The referee didn’t give it. Replays showed it was borderline.
  • Nonetheless, it was a clumsy tackle from Tyler Adams, who hasn’t been good today (after being one of the few U.S. players who put in a respectable performance against Panama)

This first half has a January camp look and feel. It is more about emotion and mistakes than actual ability and design—it’s a tough watch.

Diego Luna is the most active and bright on both sides of the ball. #USMNT

— herculez gomez (@herculezg) March 23, 2025

  • This has not been a good U.S. performance, by any stretch of the imagination.
  • But Diego Luna did exactly what he was brought in to do: provide a spark.
  • He picked up the ball on the right, came infield with it, released it, and continued his run all the way into the left half of the penalty box. There, he received it in stride, and poked a clever pass to Patrick Agyemang for the U.S. goal.
  • Some questioned whether Luna could hang at this level.
  • Consider those questions answered (at least for now, today). 1-1.

35′ – GOAL – Diego Luna with the pass to Pat who finds the back of the net!

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) March 23, 2025

  • The USMNT responds with a goal of their own after some remarkable playmaking by Diego Luna, who gets the ball to Patrick Agyemang inside the box for an easy look and blast into the net!

🇨🇦 Canada leads the U.S. in three straight games for the first time since 1985.

🇨🇦 Canada has scored first in consecutive AWAY games vs the U.S. for the second time. Other was two games in 1926 and 1957.

— Paul Carr (@PaulCarr) March 23, 2025

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