Tim Howard says blame for USMNT's failure lies squarely on the players

Tim Howard - US national team

LOS ANGELES -- The US national team's failure to qualify for the 2018 FIFA World Cup isn't about a loss in Trinidad, said legendary goalkeeper Tim Howard on Saturday morning at Major League Soccer's annual media day.


ā€œIt's never down to one game,ā€ Howard said. ā€œWe didn't get the results over the course of 10 games. The Mexico game, we lost, 2-1, in Columbus. We needed one goal or to not concede one goal. The draw in Honduras. A few other games in there. Any game we lost by one or drew, all we needed over 10 games was one goal.


ā€œI wouldn't say the [problems are] systemic in any way. CONCACAF teams are getting better. No matter how good or bad you are, if you don't get results, you don't qualify.ā€


Howard said the switch midway through the qualifying cycle from Jurgen Klinsmann to Bruce Arena made things tougher, as any managerial swap would, but that ā€œBruce Arena did everything in his power to get us qualified.ā€


ā€œWe were behind the 8-ball after the first two games,ā€ he said. ā€œI don't think [not qualifying] is on Jurgen's or Bruce Arena's shoulders. It's on the players.ā€


The Colorado Rapids netminder said he had no problem with New York Red Bulls fans railing against Michael Bradley and Jozy Altidore during the playoff series against Toronto FC -- ā€œThey want to blame Michael, Jozy, anyone else, they're entitled to thatā€ -- but that he was pleased with one aspect of how Bradley and Altidore responded.


ā€œ[They] showed just how important those [fans'] comments were,ā€ he said. ā€œThey meant nothing. They blazed through the playoffs and won the trophy.ā€


Howard says his career will be over in two years, so ā€œwhatever happens between now and then will happenā€ in terms of his international career. He thinks the US pool is strong and the country is producing good players, but that the national team is at something of a standstill right now.


ā€œRight now, nothing means a whole lot, in terms of rosters and January camps anf games,ā€ he said. ā€œWe need to elect a president and hire a coach before we can tell anything meaningful in regards to U.S. Soccer. Everything from when we got on the plane in Trinidad to come home until we hire a [full-time] coach is mundane and meaningless.ā€