The most heroic USMNT performance of all time didn't come from a striker. It didn't feature a hat-trick or a long-range stunner. It didn't even come in a win. That just goes to show what Tim Howard achieved with his 16 saves against Belgium at the 2014 World Cup. On that day, the Secretary of Defense became legendary.
What made that performance so special, in some ways, is that it was no fluke; it was actually expected. Throughout the team's modern history, the USMNT has been defined by great goalkeeping. Howard, on that day, was just the latest in a long line. Tony Meola set the tone in 1994. Brad Friedel and Kasey Keller carried the torch for years. Eventually, it fell to Howard and, like his predecessors, he proved he could define games all on his own.
"We went to a situation where, at one stage, we had four [American] goalkeepers starting in the Premier League - from Brad, myself, Tim and Marcus Hahnemann," Keller told GOAL. "I think the person I feel the most sorry for is Marcus - he'd have 100 caps if he was born 10 years later.
"And it's just one of those anomalies I think that happened at that stage, and then now we're going through maybe a little bit of an anomaly the other way, that we're we're not having anybody really at this point grab this position by both hands - where it was something that we hadn't had to worry about in a long, long time. Because even with Tim, when let's say Brad and I got a little older, then Brad Guzan steps in to be a great competition for Tim."
When any USMNT goalkeeper puts on that kit, they feel the weight of those who came before. Patrick Schulte, one of the team's current contenders, says he can feel it every time he sees his name on that shirt in the locker room. When you step into the national team, the level changes. So, too, do the expectations. There is standard, and it's expected to be met.
"I grew up on it," Schulte told GOAL. "Tim Howard was the guy for me. That was the guy I wanted to be, just because that's when I started transitioning to be a goalkeeper. For me, watching him gave me the mentality of knowing you're the backbone. You have to be Mr. Reliable. You have to be the guy who's going to save points or save wins week in and week out.
"We have just been used to that as Americans. Meola, Keller, Friedel, Howard, Guzan - all of these guys, it was like, when they came into the team, they were the backbone. You knew you could rely on them. You have to be that guy and, if you're not that guy, there are going to be questions. You have to be that standout, that stud, that is going to win games."
Also reliable? The women who have served at No. 1 in goal for the USWNT. That spot has been safe since the first Women's World Cup, when Mary Harvey was in the net en route to the first of many trophy triumphs. Harvey passed the baton to the legendary Brianna Scurry and, as she completed her run, Hope Solo was ready to take it and sprint right on by.
By the time Solo's national team career came to a close, Alyssa Naeher had served as her understudy at two major tournaments, making the transition seamless. Naeher was arguably the best goalkeeper in the world right on through to her international retirement last year - winning an Olympic gold medal in her last hurrah. No national team in the world has had safer hands than the USWNT.
So that begs the question: how has American soccer done so well to develop players in this specific position? Given the success across both the men's and women's sides, it isn't luck - it's culture.
From a young age, Americans tend to play multiple sports. Schulte was a point guard for his high school basketball team. Matt Turner, the USMNT's No. 1 at the 2022 World Cup and still today - at least for now - played baseball at a high level in his youth. Naeher, too, was a star basketball player in high school, while Scurry was a track, floor hockey, softball and basketball star.
For years, sports diversification has been seen as crucial for goalkeepers. It's not a myth, says Jack Robinson, U.S. Soccer head of goalkeeping. Rather, it's a major reason that the U.S. has so often had success that few other countries have been able to match.
"There have always been fantastic goalkeepers in there, and the sports in America naturally align themselves to that," Robinson told GOAL. "Basketball, American football - it's all hand-eye coordination. Obviously, for developing goalkeepers, that's perfect. I think that's one of the biggest strengths... An American trait is that athleticism, that hand-eye coordination."
In his role, Robinson oversees just about every aspect of the position in American soccer. He works with both the men's and women's sides while also developing the coaching education systems designed to grow the next generation of American goalkeepers. Robinson's job, in many ways, is the bigger picture. But at the moment, both the national teams have questions of their own to answer.