Ream: USMNT Gio Reyna controversy a "non-story" from World Cup

Tim Ream USMNT

US menā€™s national team center back Tim Ream has squashed the Gio Reyna-centric controversy thatā€™s enveloped the program since they left the 2022 FIFA World Cup in early December.

The brouhaha emerged when off-the-record remarks from head coach Gregg Berhalter were made public in a Charter newsletter and said they nearly sent a player home. Quickly after, a story in _The Athletic_Ā detailed how Reyna apologized to his teammates for a perceived lack of effort in training.

The 20-year-old Borussia Dortmund attacker then issued a statement on his Instagram page, saying he ā€œlet my emotions get the best of meā€ after learning heā€™d have a limited role in Qatar. Reyna confirmed he issued a team-wide apology.

ā€œFor us, it's a non-story,ā€ Ream said on the ā€˜Indirectā€™ podcast he co-hosts. ā€œWe dealt with it in camp. Things moved on, we moved past it and that's where we are.ā€

The 35-year-old Fulham defender, the most senior member of the USMNTā€™s World Cup roster, also said there was no player vote to send Reyna home despite a report claiming there was a 13-12 decision for Reyna to stay: ā€œWe can put that to bed.ā€

Reyna didnā€™t start any of the USMNTā€™s four games in Qatar, only getting seven substitute minutes (vs. England; didnā€™t play vs. Iran or Wales) as they placed second in Group B. He was then a halftime substitute in their Round of 16 match vs. the Netherlands, though couldnā€™t prevent a 2-0 halftime deficit from turning into a 3-1 knockout defeat.

Reamā€™s comments were the first time a USMNT World Cup player has addressed the issue around Reyna, one of the Yanks' most-talented players.Ā 

ā€œWe addressed it in camp and [Gio] did what he had to do,ā€ Ream said, ā€œand obviously came on against the Netherlands and played a solid 45 minutes for us and helped to kind of drag us back into the game. For us, that's it. That's the end of it.ā€

The USMNT return to action next month when facing Serbia (Jan. 25) and Colombia (Jan. 28) in Los Angeles-based friendlies. Those games will begin the 2026 World Cup cycle; the US co-host the tournament alongside Canada and Mexico.