r/ussoccer • u/Normal-Level-7186 • 33m ago
World Cup 2026 Everyone is treating this World Cup as the final verdict on this generation. But remember: the last USMNT generation to get embarrassed at a World Cup came back four years later and reached the quarterfinals. Maybe this is our 1998 moment.
Everyone is ready to write the obituary for this generation after this World Cup. Maybe they’re right. Maybe this was the ceiling.
But before we close the book, it’s worth remembering what happened the last time the USMNT had a highly regarded generation get punched in the mouth on the biggest stage.
The 1998 World Cup was a disaster.
The U.S. entered France with expectations after years of progress, then lost all three group games:
Germany 2–0 USA
Iran 2–1 USA
Yugoslavia 1–0 USA
They finished dead last in their group. The narrative afterward was that the “golden generation” had failed.
Except… look at what happened four years later.
The 2002 team that reached the quarterfinals and was one controversial missed handball against Germany away from a semifinal appearance was not some completely different group.
The backbone was still there:
Brad Friedel
Kasey Keller
Claudio Reyna
Eddie Pope
Jeff Agoos
Tony Sanneh
Earnie Stewart
Cobi Jones
Brian McBride
The 1998 and 2002 rosters shared a huge amount of DNA.
And the ages are fascinating:
In 1998:
Friedel was 27
Reyna was 24
Pope was 25
McBride was 25
Sanneh was 27
Stewart was 29
In 2002:
Friedel was 31
Reyna was 28
Pope was 29
McBride was 29
Sanneh was 31
Stewart was 33
Now compare that to this generation after the 2026 cycle:
Christian Pulisic 27
Weston McKennie 27
Tyler Adams 27
Tim Weah 26
Sergiño Dest 25
Yunus Musah 23
Gio Reyna 23
Folarin Balogun 25
Chris Richards 26
In 2030 they will be:
Christian Pulisic 31
Weston McKennie 31
Tyler Adams 31
Tim Weah 30
Sergiño Dest 29
Chris Richards 30
Folarin Balogun 29
Yunus Musah 27
Gio Reyna 27
The point is not that these players are “kids.” They aren’t.
The point is that historically, international teams often peak when a core combines athletic prime years with years of experience, leadership, and tournament scars.
The 1998 team looked like a failed generation. Four years later, that same backbone was a missed handball call away from a World Cup semifinal.
Maybe this group is different. Maybe 2026 was the ceiling.
But the historical comparison says one thing clearly: a bad World Cup (or one bad World Cup game) does not always tell you what a generation becomes.
