'Neymar can leave PSG' – Leonardo open to offers after 'superficial' Barcelona discussions

The sporting director admitted the French giants are willing to negotiate a transfer but said no offers have come in for him

Paris Saint-Germain sporting director Leonardo has said Neymar is allowed to leave the club but says there have been no offers despite “superficial” talks with Barcelona.

Neymar’s future at PSG has been in doubt this summer amid reports he wants to return to his former side Barcelona, while Real Madrid have also been linked.

Barca president Josep Maria Bartomeu said last week that the Brazil international wants to leave the Ligue 1 champions , though he dismissed his side’s chances of buying him because “PSG do not want him to go”.

But Leonardo has now revealed that the French champions are willing to let him leave if a club matches their asking price.

“Neymar can leave PSG, if there is an offer that suits everyone,” Leonardo told  Le Parisien .  “But to date, we do not know if anyone wants to buy him or at what price. All this is not done in a day, that’s for sure.

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“It’s clear to everyone [that Neymar wants to leave], but in football, you say one thing today and tomorrow another. It’s amazing but it’s like that.

“We talked with his entourage too. Everyone knows everything. The position is clear for all participants. But one thing is concrete today: he still has three years of contract with us and since we have not received an offer, we cannot discuss anything.”

He added: “PSG wants to rely on players who want to stay and build something big. We do not need players who would do a favour for the club by staying here.”

Although Leonardo confirmed informal talks with Barcelona about a potential deal, he said no offer has been made for the 27-year-old.

“We have not received any offers. But we had, it’s true, very superficial contacts [with Barcelona]. They said they wanted to buy but we were not sellers.

“[Bartomeu] is the one saying it, but we did not see that Barcelona was really in a buyer position.”

Leonardo’s comments come on the same day PSG announced that they will take action against the Brazilian attacker after he missed training on Monday, though his father says the club had already agreed to the delay.

Responding to Neymar Sr’s claims, Leonardo said: “He wasn’t here in training. He had to arrive and he did not arrive. But he knew he had to be there.

“We will study the measures we need to take, as we would do for all employees.

“He made commitments to his institute and a sponsor, but these were not dates agreed with the club. However, he played his last game on June 6. The holidays were until July 8th and he didn’t come.”

Asked when Neymar will report for training, Leonardo said: “I do not know. The only thing I know is that he was not there on the scheduled date, July 8th.”

 

Tottenham appoint Mason as academy coach

The former midfielder, who retired from football last year after a head injury, is now academy coach at Tottenham and will focus on the Under-19s

Tottenham have appointed former midfielder Ryan Mason as an academy coach as part of a reshuffle of their backroom staff.

The 28-year-old, who retired from football in February 2018 after suffering a head injury, will take charge of the Under-19 side in the UEFA Youth League.

Mason, who worked with Spurs’ academy staff last year while earning his coaching badges, spent 17 years at the club as a youngster and senior player.

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Mason made 70 appearances and scored four goals for Spurs before a permanent move to Hull City in 2016.

He was forced to retire after fracturing his skull in a collision with Gary Cahill in Hull’s 2-0 Premier League defeat to Chelsea in January 2017.

The injury proved to be life-threatening and despite his efforts to return to the game, Mason called time on his career in February 2018 following specialist medical advice.

Former Portsmouth, Bolton Wanderers and West Ham midfielder Matt Taylor has also joined Spurs’ academy staff, taking over as Under-18s boss while ex-Watford defender Nigel Gibbs has been made assistant head of player development.

“We have always tried to assemble a blend of staff who know what the demands of the game are at the highest level,” John McDermott, head of academy coaching and player development at Spurs, said. 

“It’s also important to have a mix of experience through internal promotions and external appointments, including coaches who have recently retired and are current with the modern player, plus coaches who have been in the cauldron of professional football – not just Academy football – and can pass on their wisdom of what the real game expects in terms of behaviour and performance.

“All five of these members of staff understand the incredible standards set for young and senior players at this club and they will be invaluable in driving our players to become the best young men and players that they can be. Four of these staff have spent many years at the club and know how we function. Only Matt is completely new to the fold, so the experience for the players will be seamless.”

Tottenham are looking to improve on last season’s fourth-place finish in the Premier League and recreate their journey to the Champions League final.

Tanguy Ndombele has already been added to Mauricio Pochettino’s squad in the current transfer window, joining in a €60 million (£54m/$68m) deal from Lyon.

The north London side will begin their pre-season fixtures on July 21 when they take on Juventus in Singapore, followed by a clash with Manchester United in China before facing Real Madrid in Munich and Inter in London.

They will then begin their Premier League campaign on August 10 with a home clash against Aston Villa before visiting reigning champions Manchester City the following week.

Juventus close in on De Ligt but still €10m short of Ajax asking price

The 19-year-old has already struck a deal with the Italian giants but their latest bid has fallen short of the Dutch side’s valuation

Juventus are confident of securing the signing of Matthijs de Ligt from Ajax this week after agreeing a deal with the defender.

The Serie A champions have reached an agreement with the 19-year-old centre-back over a five-year contract that will see him earn €12 million (£11m/$13m) per season – €8m in basic salary with €4m in bonuses. 

De Ligt’s agent, Mino Raiola, confirmed to Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf on Sunday that a deal has been made with Juventus.

“Agreements have been made with Matthijs and it is up to Ajax how they deal with this,” Raiola said.

Juventus have offered Ajax €65m (£58m/$73m) for De Ligt – €55m (£49m/$62m) up front with €10m (£9m/$11m) in bonuses, but the total falls around €10m short of the Dutch champions’ asking price.

The Turin outfit do not see the the gap as insurmountable, however, and believe a deal will be made in the coming days, while new coach Maurizio Sarri has already spoken to the coveted star over the phone.

Despite his looming departure, De Ligt, who has also been linked with Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester United and Barcelona in recent months, returned to training with his Ajax team-mates on Monday as Erik ten Hag’s side begin preparations for the new campaign.

The Amsterdam club won the domestic double and reached the Champions League semi-finals last term, losing to Tottenham in the dying seconds of the second-leg. 

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As captain, De Ligt played a key role in his side’s season, making 55 appearances in all competitions and scoring seven goals.

He will be Juve’s fifth signing of the transfer window, as the Bianconeri have already landed Adrien Rabiot, Aaron Ramsey and Gianluigi Buffon, returning after a year with Paris Saint-Germain, in free deals, while Luca Pellegrini was bought from Roma and Merih Demiral arrived from Sassuolo.

Ajax, on the other hand, have already signed new centre-backs in 18-year-old Kik Pierie, who joined from Heerenveen, and Lisandro Martinez, while Quincy Promes and Razvan Marin also moved to the Dutch capital.

De Ligt will be the second major departure from Ajax this summer, as fellow rising star Frenkie de Jong has already left the Johan Cruyff Arena for Barca in a €75m (£67m/$84m) deal agreed in January.

Napoli boss Ancelotti talks up 'true quality' of James and Icardi amid transfer links

The Serie A giants could move for the South American pair this summer, if the Italian manager’s words of admiration are anything to go by

Napoli boss Carlo Ancelotti has spoken in glowing terms of the “true quality” of reported transfer targets James Rodriguez and Mauro Icardi.

Club president Aurelio De Laurentiis has confirmed Ancelotti would be keen to reunite with James, with whom he worked at Real Madrid and Bayern Munich.

The Colombia star’s future is uncertain after his loan deal with Bayern ended and the option to make that move permanent was not taken up.

Speaking to reporters on Monday, Ancelotti said of James: “He is a player I know well and he is true quality.

“Unfortunately, he is not a Napoli player yet…maybe he never will be, or maybe he will!

“Let’s talk about James once he becomes a Napoli player, as we do with other players. If today a manager from another club spoke about a Napoli player, I wouldn’t be happy.”

Napoli have also been linked with a move for Icardi, who has been told by Inter bosses he is not in their plans for the first season under new coach Antonio Conte.

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They are reported to have offered the Argentina striker, who is also being linked with Juventus, a contract worth in the region of €7.5 million ($8m, £7m) per season.

“Icardi is a great player, held in high esteem by all of us, by me as well,” said Ancelotti.

“All these names of such important players…it is positive they are mentioned next to us.”

Ancelotti also spoke positively about his hopes for a new defensive partnership between Kalidou Koulibaly and new signing Kostas Manolas, with Raul Albiol having ended his six-year stay at the San Paolo by returning to Spain with Villarreal.

“From me and the entire Napoli community goes a big thanks to Albiol, who lived an important spell here at Napoli,” he said. “He was very useful, a true professional and we will miss something there. But one of the best defenders on the market has arrived.

“Manolas is a formidable central defender and he will make a fantastic pair with Koulibaly. They will enable us to play a more aggressive football since we will be able to have a less deep defensive line.”

Young artists deliver commanding Kunqu Opera performance

The day before he heads to a war, an undefeated commander named Qi has a dream in which he loses a battle and dies. When he wakes up, Qi bids farewell to his wife and gets ready to go and fight. While gaining successive victories, Qi decides to celebrate, despite the fact that there is a final battle waiting for him. When he gets drunk and falls asleep in his tent, Qi’s army is ambushed by the enemy and he is killed just as his dream predicted.

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This is the story that has inspired the latest Kunqu Opera production, titled A Commander’s Introspection, performed and produced by the Northern Kunqu Opera Theatre.

It was premiered on Friday during the Festival OFF d’Avignon, the biggest performing arts showcase in France that forms part of the Avignon Festival, an annual arts festival held in the eponymous French city every summer.

After its French premiere, A Commander’s Introspection will be staged in Beijing’s Star Theater on July 19, before heading to Xichang in the Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture in Sichuan province, this November, where it will be staged as part of the first Daliangshan International Theatre Festival.

“This is the first time that the Northern Kunqu Opera Theatre has premiered a show in France. It is a great platform to showcase the ancient art form of Kunqu Opera and to meet hundreds of theater troupes from around the world,” says Yang Fengyi, director of the theater.

Over 500 enterprises participate in East Asia Expo

JINAN — The ongoing East Asia Expo 2019 held in Jinan, capital of East China’s Shandong province, has attracted more than 500 institutions and enterprises from 56 countries and regions and presented over 10,000 exhibits.

The expo focuses on the development of trade in goods and services between China, countries in East Asia and other countries and regions.

Introducing Russian honey, vodka and other commodities to visitors, Russian trader Darya said many companies had shown an interest to cooperate and some have reached initial intentions.

“The expo sets a good stage for economic and trade exchanges,” said Darya.

Deep sea cod from the Netherlands are also popular at the expo, with long queues outside the Dutch exhibition area.

Many exhibitors are confident about the huge consumption potential of the Chinese market. “Tariffs have been cut, and even the prices of those imported with original packaging are not so high. On the other hand, in the context of the consumption upgrading, many Chinese consumers pay more attention to the quality of goods and life,” said Cai Lizhen, an importer of ceramic glazed pots in the German exhibition area.

Scheduled from July 5 to 7, the expo also includes an e-commerce development forum, which mainly shares cutting-edge ideas and achievements of e-commerce worldwide.

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El Barrio has new brunch menu

 

Mexican restaurant El Barrio has launched a brunch menu for the summer with chef Bollo Rodriguez offering several classic Mexican dishes.

Slow-cooked beef tripe with red chili soup is one highlight, which has onion and lime to add a fresh and sour flavor to the soup. Eggs are the star of the brunch menu as they are cooked in several different ways.

One example is sunny side up with a choice of two Mexican sauces – green and red hot salsa. The truffle mushroom quesadilla is a must-try. It has black truffle paste combined with sauteed Yunnan wild mushrooms.

2F Nali Patio, No 81 Sanlitun Beilu, Chaoyang district, Beijing 010-6416-1716

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Brazil's Copa title brings Alves historic 40th trophy

The free-agent right back skippered his country to a triumph on home soil and collected the Player of the Tournament award in the process

Dani Alves has become the first footballer to win 40 trophies after his Brazil side won the Copa America – the right-back’s second Copa trophy.

The 36-year-old, who captained the side, also won the Best Player of the Tournament award in a star-studded field.

The Selecao saw off Peru 3-1 in the final at the Maracana on Sunday, to seal their first Copa triumph since 2007.

They took the lead through Everton after a wonderful cross from Gabriel Jesus.

The Manchester City forward scored their second in first-half injury time, restoring the lead after Peru had equalized through a Paolo Guerrero penalty just four minutes earlier.

Jesus was sent off in the 71st minute after two yellow cards, but Brazil held on and sealed the game through a Richarlison spot-kick in the final minute.

They were inspired throughout the tournament by the ageless Alves, easing the pain of a disappointing home World Cup in 2014.

It was Alves’ fourth international trophy, with a pair of Confederations Cups added to his Copa victories.

He won five trophies with Sevilla before making the move to Barcelona in 2008.

It was at the Camp Nou he got his hands on the majority of his trophies, winning an incredible 23 tournaments with the Blaugrana in eight years in Catalonia.

He moved from Barca to Juventus in 2016 and scooped up the Italian double in one season in Turin, before switching to Paris Saint-Germain two seasons ago.

He collected six trophies in France, including the double in both seasons, and is now a free agent.

His former international team-mate Kleberson, who saw out his playing days in the United States, has said he would like to have seen Alves make the move to America, but sees him as a good option for European Champions Liverpool.

“I feel maybe he could fit in well at Liverpool,” the former Manchester United man said ahead of Sunday’s final.

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Alves has also been linked with a dream return to Barcelona, where he won three Champions League titles, after he said he would not return to PSG next season.

Wherever he ends up next season, Alves will bring an unprecedented trophy haul with him.

McKennie versus Alvarez and the matchups to watch in USMNT-Mexico clash

Sunday’s Gold Cup final features plenty of tantalizing individuals match-ups that will ultimately determine which Concacaf power lifts the trophy

The 2019 Gold Cup final will be the ultimate test for two teams in the early stages of new eras, with several young players ready to make their mark on Concacaf’s biggest rivalry. 

Christian Pulisic and Guillermo Ochoa are some of the bigger names who will look to grab the headlines, but the it will be others involved in the game’s best match-ups who could ultimately determine the winner of the latest installment of the USA-Mexico grudge match. 

There are some match-ups that each team will look to exploit, with Mexico’s Rodolfo Pizarro looking to go after young U.S. defender Reggie Cannon, and Uriel Antuna looking to use his speed against Tim Ream. Conversely, Christian Pulisic will look to invade the space in front of the Mexico defense while Jordan Morris tries to force Jesus Gallardo to defend. 

What are the actual top individual match-ups to watch in Sunday’s Gold Cup final? Here are five to watch: 


Gregg Berhalter vs. Tata Martino


No, you won’t see either coach suiting up, but these two have plenty of history and will look to tap into that history to try and get an edge on each other.

Martino’s Atlanta United sides won most of the meetings against Berhalter’s Crew, but Berhalter scored bragging rights by defeating Martino’s side in the only knockout match they played. The Crew won that match-up by attacking early and often, and it’s a safe bet Berhalter will not have the Americans sit back and defend to start the match.

Martino is also familiar with Berhalter’s style, and he has the wingers to make things difficult for the U.S. defense. The big question is how will Martino adjust his setup, and lineup, to try and deal with Pulisic?


Weston McKennie vs. Edson Alvarez


Mexico tends to get by with having Alvarez operate as the lone defensive midfielder, but how will he and El Tri adjust to having to deal with both Pulisic and McKennie operating as dual 10s?  

Mexico may have no choice but to start Jonathan dos Santos and have him play a deeper role, but even if El Tri does that, Mexico must still contend with McKennie’s surging runs into the final third, and his ever-improving passing. If Alvarez doesn’t keep close tabs on McKennie the Schalke midfielder could have a big day. 


Aaron Long vs. Raul Jimenez


The Mexico attack has stagnated in its past two matches, and we’ve seen Jimenez starved for service. El Tri should find chances against a U.S. side that isn’t going to sit back and bunker, but Jimenez will also have to deal with Long, who is in the midst of an outstanding tournament. 

If Long can handle marking Jimenez by himself, that will free up Matt Miazga (or Walker Zimmerman) to help with Rodolfo Pizarro on the wing, but if Jimenez has success shaking free from Long’s air-tight one-on-one defending, it will be a long night for the Americans. 


Michael Bradley vs. Andres Guardado


Leave it to the two midfield veterans to be involved in one of the game’s most important battles. Guardado will look to make Bradley work defensively, while also not allowing Bradley to dictate tempo by pulling the strings when the Americans have the ball. 

Martino is sure to take advantage of the fact Bradley often finds himself alone in front of the defense, so look for Guardado to have some help flooding the area in front of the U.S. defense. That will either expose Bradley’s defensive liability, or force the Americans to provide more help from McKennie dropping deeper, which would then cut into McKennie’s ability to attack.


Jozy Altidore vs. Hector Moreno


These two veterans know each other well, so there’s no secrets here. Altidore’s hold-up play makes him such a threat at the top of the U.S. attack, which will mean that Carlos Salcedo will have to help Moreno by keeping tabs on the inevitable runs U.S. attackers will make off Altidore. 

Something else Moreno and Salcedo have to deal with is Pulisic, who has shown a good understanding with Altidore, and has the passing eye to spring the big forward if Mexico’s defenders fall asleep. Moreno is a veteran though, and has the strength to stay with Altidore on set pieces. 

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Who is Aaron Long? The late bloomer who has become the anchor of the USMNT defense

Five years ago Aaron Long was an unemployed midfielder, and now he heads into Sunday’s Gold Cup final as the U.S. national team’s best defender

The current best defender on the U.S. national team wasn’t even a defender five years ago and was instead a central midfielder struggling to get his professional career going. Five years later, Aaron Long is starring for the U.S. national team and stands as the best defender in Major League Soccer.

So much has changed for Long in the past five years, when, as an MLS rookie, he was cut by the Portland Timbers, leaving him briefly unemployed and as far away as you could imagine from where he will be on Sunday, starting as the defensive leader for the U.S. national team in the Gold Cup final against Mexico.

The New York Red Bulls defender began his journey to the national team as a kid growing up in Southern California in the same area that produced such standouts as former USMNT captain Carlos Bocanegra and MLS legend Nick Rimando. Long attended camps held by Bocanegra when he was a youth player, and neither could have known that Long would one day fill the same role as defensive leader for the USMNT that Bocanegra filled for more than a decade.

“The career path that he’s had to get to where he is is incredible so it’s fun to root for him,” Bocanegra told Goal. “I remember seeing him before he had that terrible mullet. He was always a good kid, and comes from a good family, so I couldn’t be happier for the kid because he just kept grinding, kept going, believing in himself. It’s nice to see him with the national team, especially when he captained the country. That was pretty cool.”

Back then, Long was a midfielder, and being a defender was the furthest thing from his mind. His favorite player growing up was someone that might surprise New York Red Bulls fans.

“I was an Arsenal supporter so I really liked Patrick Vieira, so that was kind of my guy,” Long admits of the former New York City FC head coach. “He was just a destroyer. Against the ball he was unbelievable, winning the ball back, and then, with the ball, he could make the game pretty. It was one of those things he could do both sides of the ball and do it for, in my opinion, one of the best teams in the world.”

Long wasn’t well-known outside of Southern California due to the fact he played collegiately for UC-Riverside, a smaller program in the shadow of college soccer powerhouses like UCLA. After finishing college, Long wasn’t invited to the MLS Combine but still managed to be drafted as a second-round pick by the Portland Timbers, the 36th overall selection in the 2014 MLS Draft.

Long never played for Portland’s first team, bouncing around on loan spells with USL teams before he was cut in the summer of 2014. After a stint with the Seattle Sounders playing for their USL affiliate, Long received an offer from the New York Red Bulls. The only condition was that he would be joining them to play as a center back, a position that Long hadn’t played much at that point, but it was a position then-Red Bulls head coach Jesse Marsch believed could suit Long.

“When I watched him play you could see he had a lot of tools. He was big, he was fast, he was good on the ball, he was good in the air, so I thought why not take a look at him,” Marsch told Goal. “We asked him if he would be willing to come here if it meant spending a year with Red Bulls II, learning our system.”

“I gave myself a timeline,” Long said of his decision to join the Red Bulls. “If it doesn’t work, if I go to Red Bulls and it doesn’t work for two years then I have to do something else, but I was still in the mindset of making it.”

The move to the Red Bulls was transformational. After initially struggling for consistent starts due to first-team Red Bulls defenders stepping in to get minutes, Long settled in as a regular starter for a Red Bulls II team that went on to win a USL title, with Long earning USL defender of the year along the way. Despite his status as a second-team player, Long saw plenty of Marsch, who worked closely with him, going over film with him and getting him ready for the move to the Red Bulls first team, which came after one season in USL.

“He’s funny, he’s likeable, his work ethic is so strong. He’s not afraid,” Marsch said of Long. “When you work with him up close, Dave Sarachan learned this and I think Gregg (Berhalter) has too, you can’t help but like him. You can’t help but like the way he works every day, the way that he trains, the way that he treats his teammates. Once he got into the program I had a really good feeling that he would be able to establish himself on a big level.”

Now the manager at Austrian champion RB Salzburg after a season as an assistant with RB Leipzig, Marsch believes Long has also shown a good ability to adjust to different challenges, and would be capable of succeeding if he made a similar move to Europe, which is why interest in Long from European clubs has grown, with German club Eintracht Frankfurt among the teams to have expressed interest in him.

“It’s been nice to see how Aaron has been able to adapt to a different way of playing,” Marsch said. “I still believe that his max potential is when he plays our way, when he plays really strong against the ball, when he uses his athleticism. What it shows with the national team is this kid can play in a lot of different ways, and at a lot of different levels, and I do believe he can thrive in Europe.”

Marsch left the Red Bulls for Europe in the summer of 2018, but Long hasn’t forgotten the role Marsch played in helping his career take off. 

“I owe him a lot. In a lot of ways he set me up to be where I am,” Long said of Marsch. “He didn’t just play me there, he believed in me, he coached me. Those video sessions early on giving me the belief when I was a Red Bulls II guy, saying ‘listen, trust me, keep going down this path, you’re going to be a first-team player’.”

Long blossomed as a starter for the Red Bulls in 2017 and was named MLS defender of the year in 2018, developing a reputation as an elite one-on-one defender capable of holding his own against the league’s star strikers.

“He’s really shined and picked up the position fantastically because he didn’t play it growing up and that’s a difficult position at the higher level because it’s all about reading and instincts and the positional and tactical awareness,” Bocanegra said. “So for a kid who didn’t play that growing up in your developmental years when you’re getting into the game, it’s fantastic.

“He’s hard to beat one on one,” Bocanegra said. “The kid just doesn’t stop. I remember a few times when he came back against (Atlanta United), chasing down Josef (Martinez) or whatever, he makes himself hard to beat. He’s just got that grit and determination.”

“For collegiate players, and American players that want to make it, he’s for me a poster child for them because it’s not easy for an American player nowadays,” LA Galaxy assisrtant, and Long’s college coach at UC-Riverside, Junior Gonzalez told Goal. “So many of us in the league are looking at South American players and international players, and he had to struggle. He had to go through his adversity in multiple environments.”

Long’s rapid rise in MLS eventually carried over to the U.S. national team, which he didn’t make his debut for until just last October. When Berhalter took charge as U.S. coach in January, Long quickly became a key figure in his plans, earning starts and even the captain’s armband for the first two friendlies of 2019.

“We had this conversation with Dave Sarachan, we even had this discussion with Gregg Berhalter, when they watch him at first they don’t really rate (Long),” Marsch said. “Things that coaches sometimes don’t include is personality and what that means for their overall potential. I’m a big believer in personality. As much as guys like Tyler Adams and Matt Miazga are prodigies and good football players, it’s their personality that allows them to be as good as they can possibly be and that’s the case with Aaron.”

Long has quickly taken on a role of defensive leader, and his play in the Gold Cup has been a major reason the team has allowed just one goal heading into Sunday’s final. Now he will have a big task in trying to contain Mexico striker Raul Jimenez, the type of challenge Long has grown accustomed to defending against star strikers in MLS such as Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Wayne Rooney.

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Long is ready for the challenge of playing in a Gold Cup final, and the chance to play in his first USA-Mexico match. After growing up watching the rivals face each other, Long is excited for the opportunity to realize a dream, and continue the rapid rise his career has been in over these past five years.

“Building on what I’ve experienced as a fan, and to now come into the locker room and seeing the way the veterans are responding to this game, it really gets you hyped up,” he said.

“I’m a Southern California kid so I’ve got a lot of Mexican friends. USA-Mexico games were a big feature for me and my friends, so it means a lot to me, and my family and friends. I know the importance of this game.”