The United States' promising run at the 2025 U20 World Cup came to a sudden halt as they were eliminated in the quarterfinals by Morocco, 3-1. If it sounds familiar, it should. Last year at the Paris Summer Olympics, the U.S. U23s were also beaten by the same nation at the same stage of the competition, 4-0.
While the U.S. didn't break new ground in this World Cup, there were areas in which the team did make a sizable impact. The U.S. opened in Chile with a 9-1 thrashing of New Caledonia, but their belief really took off against France three days later.
Up against a country that year after year produces world-class players, this was a match that the U.S. - on paper - should have lost. France were filled with highly-regarded Ligue 1 prospects. But once things got going, the Americans - largely filled with MLS prospects - took firm control.
The 3-0 scoreline grabbed headlines around the world, but the bigger surprise was that it took the U.S. as long as it did to score - knocking in all three goals in a six-minute span, started in the 88th minute by RSL's Zavier Gozo. The U.S. dominated on almost every attacking metric, from chances created to shots taken to corners attempted. It was a sign of things to come.
In the Round of 16, it was more of the same, as the U.S. stormed past Italy - another soccer powerhouse in terms of developing talent - in a 3-0 rout. It might have surprised some, but those results weren't coincidental, despite how it all ended for Marko Mitrovic's side.
Yet, the reality is, this was the U.S.'s fifth straight trip to the quarterfinals. The Americans have been knocking at the door, but what needs to change to finally open it? That question will remain after another disappointing end on Sunday.
GOAL looks at the winners and losers of the U.S. performance at the U20 World Cup.






