It was a bit harsh, but it did capture the thoughts of plenty of the USMNT fanbase. Speaking on Futbol Americas, USMNT legend Kasey Keller didn't mince words when discussing the merits of the January camp.
“I understood it a little bit more back in the day when MLS had an almost four-month break and there were a lot more players on the national team playing in MLS,” Keller began. “I think really over the last 10 years, it’s almost been a disservice to actually call it a national team camp, because it’s really not the national team. It’s an opportunity for some players to get in front of the national team coach. It’s just a training camp for younger fringe players who might someday come into the national team camp. So I don’t really take a lot of merit into it.”
Keller went on to reveal that he'd been told that several coaches had, in fact, wanted to get rid of the camp altogether. “I know multiple coaches at different times have tried to get rid of the [January] national team camp,” he continued. "I know there are some TV contract stipulations where they need to have a couple of games to call it a national team game, but to me, it’s not a national team camp. It’s just a squad get-together before an MLS season.”
As a long-time USMNT star, you can see where Keller is coming from. Playing for the USMNT puts you into a select, small fraternity of players to have represented the country at the highest level. Handing out caps cheapens it a bit, taking some of the shine out of what it means to put on a USMNT shirt.
That's one side of it, though. The other is the human side. The players who are selected surely see it as a national team camp and certainly treat it as such. Even if it's just this one time, they get to see their name on a USMNT shirt, hear the national anthem before an international game and, if they're lucky, step on the field to represent the U.S.
Squads like this give us stories like Bernard Kamungo, who went from a refugee camp in Tanzania all the way to the USMNT; they give us stories like Brian White, a late bloomer who earned his chance to put on this shirt after scoring plenty of goals in MLS; they give us stories like Patrick Schulte, who went from MLS Next Pro to a USMNT camp seemingly in the blink of an eye.
Much like with anything else, there are two sides to this argument, and it's easy to see both. Even so, little harm is done in giving deserving and motivated players a chance to live the moment they've dreamed of. Not every player can play in a World Cup. For some, January camp will be the best it gets. And those players will surely feel like they played for the national team, even if some out there don't.