I felt that the Gold Cup went as good as I could have reasonably hoped. We WERE the second best team, but who REALLY thought that we were ready for Mexico just yet? As it turned out, we could have won that game too. (Admittedly, not having Herrera is a BIG loss for them.)
Our games showed finally that Pulisic is as good as they say he is. The Mexican coach had to game specifically against him --- and Wonderboy broke away several times anyway. Our games showed that we are deep at centerback and have a keeper with potential --- a legit hope given his youth. Our games showed the emergence of Cannon, who was for me the big discovery of this cup. We are now, in my opinion, filled with good RB players (Yedlin, Cannon, Lima, and Adams if the staff insists on misplaying him there.) LB? I disagree about negativity towards Tim Ream. He's not going to be a star, but we didn't lose because of Tim Ream --- it is a sadness that Mexico's goal comes due to very clever counterattacking which was covered well by both CBs, Ream, and Bradley, but blown when McKennie decided not to run back with his man and that guy ended up with the last clever pass and a clear shot. .... odd moment for McKennie, but he has some. ... and as always, everyone bitches about Bradley without, in my opinion, being able to point to a single instance where he makes a bad blunder which leads to a goal. Agreed, he is too old to count into the future team, but just now we have no one else until he teaches someone.
I like the look of a future with the young keeper, four stud CBs, several good wingbacks, and McKennie, Pulisic, "down the spine". This means that we need the forward attackers (will they be Sargent and Weah and one other? Boyd? Pomykal? Where will Adams show up?) Our back wall seems pretty solid, yes, with Bradley still there until Master finds Pupil. McKennie as Mean-Mid (8) and Pulisic as creative Mid (10) seem to be ready to cause other teams trouble. My real ongoing gripe with the Gold Cup team was that we had to labor with no one in Mexico's class in any of the Forward Spearpoint positions (except for those early brief flashes from Boyd.) Arriola tried REALLY hard. He's just one step below high-grade country-level team qualities. He is a place-holder until someone with threatening skill can be found.
But since the back-end is solid, and the attacking mids can threaten, then, IF Sargent, Weah, or whomever can insert juice into the attack, we're not that far away from being able to compete truly with someone who knows how to play.