“It was awkward. It felt like soccer, but it didn’t feel like soccer at the same time,” he told former U.S. international Taylor Twellman. “No fans, not really an atmosphere. You kind of have to depend on your self-motivation and self-drive to really give your 100 percent in the game.
“I guess going into the game it was awkward a bit. We had to wear masks – if you’re sitting on the bench, wear a mask. Go warmup at different times. Go out for warmups and there’s no fans. You hear every voice and echo in the stadium. You hear a ball get kicked, hear a ball drop to the ground. You hear everything,” he continued.
USMNT Identity: The Collective Group
While National Team matches remain on hold, players and the USMNT coaching staff have stayed in touch through different means of communication during the last few months. With the pandemic having forced the cancellation of the March and June national team camps, those touchpoints have been a substitute for USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter and his staff cultivating a feeling of family among a young group whose eyes remain set on qualification for the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
As the group continues to grow, there has been a question about the team’s developing identity. McKennie indicated that the team’s identity is more about the whole than the sum of its parts.
“Whenever I think of the National Team, I think of the collective group – that we know what we want to do, we know the type of players we have, and everybody knows what they have to offer, what we can do and everyone knows our abilities. When they say it’s a lack of identity, I don’t agree with that at all either. Our group is so close together, and so molded together and understand each other so well, it’s something I haven’t experienced in a long time.”