There's no doubt about it: the disappointment from Nations League still lingers. If you think about it, so does the frustration over the 2024 Copa America exit.
This summer and the upcoming Gold Cup can't erase history, but winning cures all, right?
In the months since the USMNT was upset by Panama and then taken down by Canada in the CONCACAF Nations League semifinals and third-place match, respectively, the message has been clear, and unanimous: not good enough.
No real excuses, no pointing to luck, good or bad. The message has largely been consistent: the USMNT failed to live up to expectations - their own, and others' - and now is the chance to redeem themselves. And even with a roster depleted by injury and Club World Cup commitments - among those missing are Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Antonee Robinson, Tim Weah, Yunus Musah, Gio Reyna, Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi - coach Mauricio Pochettino is focused on making corrections, and winning.
"I think we need to respect the players that are here. We need to respect every single player and see if we are good enough," he said Friday. "I will let you know after. We weren't good enough to win the Nations League. We were not good enough - if we go back to the World Cup - we were not good enough to win the World Cup in 2022. I think we cannot judge or analyze in this way. I think we need to wait, and then if we win, so happy. If we don't win, you can criticize."
That sentiment is not just coach-speak. It's echoed by the players, those who know that the road to the ultimate goal - the 2026 World Cup in the U.S., Mexico and Canada - starts here, a year out.
"I think for us, the end-all be-all of that camp was that it wasn't good enough from anybody," goalkeeper Matt Turner said, looking back at the Nation's League results. "We looked at it internally after that, and, look, we can lose, but there's a way to lose. I think that what we showed on the pitch to our fans wasn't anywhere near good enough in terms of mentality and intensity.
"When you lose, you go so long between games that you think a lot about what could have gone differently and you analyze every aspect of the environment and player selection and all of that. For us, we know from player one to player 60, however, many of us are in this pool, the minimum standard is to show up and be intense. And we lacked that."
That will need to be the baseline this summer, but particularly in a pair of friendlies - the USMNT take on Turkey Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in Connecticut, and then Switzerland next Tuesday in Nashville. The pressure will be on. If they don't perform, the mood will be soured before the Gold Cup even begins.
Optics don't mean everything, but they do matter, especially at this U.S. group looks to atone for the mistakes of March.