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U.S. men’s soccer team roster has a European feel to it

Chelsea's Christian Pulisic controls the ball during an English Premier League match.
Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic controls the ball during an English Premier League match between Liverpool and Chelsea on July 22 in Liverpool, England.
(Phil Noble / Associated Press)
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Gregg Berhalter, coach of the men’s national soccer team, called up a young, talented roster of mostly European-based players Tuesday for November friendlies with Wales and Panama, the team’s first games in nine months.

“It’s been a long time. And since then, our world has changed considerably,” Berhalter said in a teleconference call with reporters. “I’m just really looking forward to getting this group together.”

The 24-man roster includes a U.S.-record nine players off Champions League clubs, including Chelsea’s Christian Pulisic, Barcelona’s Sergiño Dest and Konrad de la Fuente, Weston McKennie of Juventus and Gio Reyna of Borussia Dortmund.

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Pulisic, 22, is nursing a hamstring injury so his participation in the two exhibitions is uncertain. Reyna, 17, is one of seven teenagers on the team and one of 10 looking for their first senior national team cap.

In their first game since the firing of coach Guillermo Barros Schelotto, the Galaxy beat Real Salt Lake 2-1, but the team still has issues to resolve.

“It is a young group with a tremendous amount of talent,” Berhalter said. “This group gives you a lot of optimism when you see some of the young players, how they’re performing at such a young age. It will be great for us to get to work with them.”

The team will begin gathering in Cardiff for training Sunday, four days ahead of the Nov. 12 game with Wales in Swansea. The U.S. will face Panama on Nov. 16 in Wiener Neustadt, Austria. Both matches will be played without fans.

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With MLS finishing its regular season Sunday and beginning the playoffs Nov. 20, Berhalter did not call up any domestically based players. The only man on the roster currently playing outside of Europe is midfielder Johnny Cardoso of Brazil’s Internacional.

“We felt that we have enough depth in Europe to field a good roster,” Berhalter said.

So much depth, in fact, World Cup veterans De Andre Yedlin, Julian Green and Aron Johannsson didn’t make the cut.

Nineteen players are age-eligible for the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, a U-23 tournament. Among them is midfielder Yunus Musah, a dual national who has played for England at the youth level and is also eligible to play for Italy and Ghana.

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“He has a connection with the United States,” Berhalter said. “He loves the direction the team is going in, he loves the young talent that he can be alongside. And we see him as having a ton of potential.

“All we can do is hope that in the end he chooses us.”

Musah, who plays in Spain for Valencia, was born to Ghanaian parents in New York City but grew up in Italy and England, where he played in Arsenal’s academy.

The nine-month break between games brought about by the coronavirus pandemic is the longest for a men’s national team since 1986-87, when the U.S. went 16 months between matches. That was also the last time the U.S. played fewer than four times in a calendar year.

Multiple players on LAFC have tested positive for the coronavirus, prompting MLS to postpone Sunday’s match between LAFC and San Jose.

Only two players called up Tuesday also played in the national team’s first game this year. Defender Reggie Cannon, who recently left FC Dallas of MLS for Portugal’s Boavista, played 90 minutes in that Feb. 1 game while forward Uly Llanez, a former Galaxy academy player now with Dutch club Heerenveen, made his senior national debut and scored the only goal in a 1-0 win over Costa Rica at Dignity Health Sports Park.

The roster:

Goalkeepers: Ethan Horvath (Club Brugge), Chituru Odunze (Leicester City), Zack Steffen (Manchester City)

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Defenders: John Brooks (Wolfsburg), Reggie Cannon (Boavista), Sergiño Dest (Barcelona), Matt Miazga (Anderlecht), Tim Ream (Fulham), Chris Richards (Bayern Munich), Antonee Robinson (Fulham)

Midfielders: Tyler Adams (RB Leipzig), Johnny Cardoso (Internacional), Richard Ledezma (PSV Eindhoven), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (Valencia), Owen Otasowie (Wolverhampton)

Forward: Konrad de la Fuente (Barcelona), Nicholas Gioacchini (Caen), Christian Pulisic (Chelsea), Uly Llanez (Heerenveen), Gio Reyna (Borussia Dortmund), Josh Sargent (Werder Bremen), Sebastian Soto (Telstar), Tim Weah (Lille)

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