The team’s failure to meet the moment left it searching for answers.
The Americans looked ungainly passing the ball. They took the scenic route when shortcuts were needed, lumbering around the perimeter of the Canadians’ dense defensive shell. It was a familiar set of problems: copious possession, scant production. The United States kept the ball for 71 percent of the game, but Canada’s sit-back-and-counterattack game plan worked just fine, and the result seemed fair.
“We needed much faster ball movement,” Berhalter said. “Everyone could see from the outside, we took way too long on the ball.”
He added, “We have to figure out ways to break down a compact defense because I’m sure there’s going to be other teams that come to the United States and do the same thing.”
Christian Pulisic, the Americans’ captain and best player, who returned to the lineup after missing the El Salvador game while he recovered from a positive coronavirus test last month, was critical, too — even if it was unclear whether he was targeting the coaching staff, his teammates, himself, or some combination of the three.
“I think we need new ideas at times,” he said. “Today I think we didn’t test them enough, whether it was not being direct enough, or not — I’m not sure. But it just felt like we couldn’t break them down. We just need some new solutions. Obviously it wasn’t good enough.”
Pulisic went on to suggest, as well, that the team could have conducted itself differently after taking the lead early in the second half, making some adjustments, perhaps adopting a more defensive mind-set.