Lee Nguyen
Stop me if you've heard this before. Lee Nguyen was snubbed from another Jurgen roster. For someone who has very little in the form of creative, attacking midfielders, it's a head scratcher. Klinsmann has talked about Nguyen in the past, but has seldom used the 28-year old. Even if he's not in the plans for 2018, at least use him to help you get there. As Doug McIntyre of ESPN mentioned, veterans rave about Lee Nguyen. Being popular among teammates, fans, and the manager alike should be a recipe to get a call up and significant play time, but alas, Lee Nguyen will have to wait and see if he's tapped on the next go around.
Chris Tierney
Here's a interesting one. The 29-year-old left-back earned his first selection to the MLS All-Star Game this past summer, becoming the first Revs player to be named to the gameday roster since Shalrie Joseph in 2011. He was unable to play due to injury, but after recovering he continued to prove he's one of the best, if not the best, left backs in the league. He has also never made an appearance with the men's national team. It's a little baffling to be honest. He's good defensively and is able to move up the flank and attack, playing perfect crosses into the box. Break Shea has been uninspiring in his last few appearances with he squad, and other than him there's Greg Garza who's inconsistent. Fabian Johnson has seen more time at left midfielder and right back but could slot in there as well. Given the lack of depth at the position you'd think Tierney could get one look in at least a meaningless friendly, but Klinsmann seems to disagree.
Andrew Farrell
Here's one that may be happening in the future, or at least it should. Farrell has been a key piece to the Revs defense, shifting this season from the starting right back position to the central pairing with Jose Goncalves. He was shaky at times, but offers a lot of upside. At 23, he should get a look soon. A future central defensive stable of Farrell, Miazga, John Brooks, Erik Palmer-Brown and Cameron Carter-Vickers would be quite the sight to see. Farrell's ability to play right back as well could help his case.
Scott Caldwell
This might be the biggest stretch of them all. At 24, Caldwell has time to grow, much like Farrell. He also happens to play defensive midfielder, a position where Kilnsmann has little depth. Kyle Beckerman is the one true holding midfielder in the pool right now, and he's set the bar high. Jermaine Jones can play their as well, but has a knack for going forward to join the attack and help dictate the midfield. He was paired up on the Revs with Caldwell, who's staunch defensive efforts helped Jones do what he wanted on the field. Caldwell is aggressive and has a high work rate, but is a smart player that could be great for the USMNT. His shortcoming is he's, well, short. Standing at 5'8" compared to Beckerman's 5'10", he can get outmuscled by larger opponents, but as he continues to learn and figure out how to exceed his physical capabilities using his mind, he could be the new DM for Klinsmann. The consistent Caldwell won the Revolution's MVP award this season, and Jones has even tabbed him as his future replacement, a glowing endorsement from a seasoned veteran.
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