Matt Turner Shut Out England Four Years Ago and Now Sits on the USA Bench

Image Courtesy FIFA
Image Courtesy FIFA
Advertisement
Advertisement

Four years ago in Qatar, Matt Turner stood in front of his goal against England and let nothing past. Ninety minutes against the country where he had spent the season as a backup, and the United States walked off with a clean sheet and a point that helped carry them into the knockout rounds. He kept another shutout against Iran days later. By the end of that World Cup, Turner had started all four matches and established himself as the goalkeeper a rising American team trusted.

This summer, at a World Cup on home soil, Turner has watched most of it from the bench. Matt Freese has Mauricio Pochettino’s gloves now. Turner’s only action came in the dead-rubber finale against Türkiye, a 3-2 loss with a place in the Round of 32 already secured. For a 31-year-old playing the biggest tournament of his life in his own country, the view from the sideline carries a particular sting.

His teammates from that 2022 group still talk about the calm he brought. Turner was not the loudest voice or the flashiest shot-stopper, but he made the saves that mattered and rarely beat himself with a mistake. Against an England side stacked with attacking talent, he commanded his box and snuffed out danger without drama. For a United States team that arrived in Qatar with questions about its temperament, the goalkeeper’s steadiness set a tone.

None of this was supposed to be the script. When the United States learned it would co-host a World Cup, Turner was the goalkeeper most expected to anchor the team. He had the experience, the trophies and the tournament pedigree. Form, and a hungry younger rival, rewrote the plan.

Advertisement

The Goalkeeper Who Found the Sport Late

Turner did not grow up dreaming in goal. A New Jersey kid raised on basketball and baseball, he barely played organized soccer until he was a teenager, picking up the position almost by accident. He was not a prodigy funneled through an elite academy. He was a late starter who had to outwork everyone to make up the years he had lost.

He played college soccer at Fairfield University, a small program that does not produce many internationals, and went undrafted in the 2016 MLS SuperDraft. The New England Revolution gave him a trial rather than a contract. He earned a roster spot in preseason, sat behind more established keepers, and waited. Within two seasons he was the club’s number one. In 2021 he was named MLS Goalkeeper of the Year, and a player nobody drafted had become one of the best in the league.

The path he took to that point was unusual for an American international. Many of his peers were spotted young, slotted into development academies and tracked for years. Turner was the opposite, a multi-sport kid who came to goalkeeping with a basketball player’s hands and a chip on his shoulder about the time he had lost. He has spoken openly about being overlooked, about coaches who did not rate him, and about turning that doubt into fuel. Every promotion he earned came after someone told him he was not ready.

That history explains the decision to return to MLS at the peak of his profile. A lesser-known truth of goalkeeping is that confidence comes from repetition, from the rhythm of weekly games rather than the occasional cup tie. Turner had spent stretches in England watching from the bench, and he refused to carry that rust into a home World Cup. Going back to the Revolution was not a step down in his mind. It was a calculated move to be the best version of himself when the tournament arrived.

Arsenal, an FA Cup, and the Road Back to MLS

The performance that changed his life came at international level. Strong displays for the United States earned him a move to Arsenal in 2022, one of the biggest clubs in the world. He served mostly as a cup keeper there, then moved to Nottingham Forest for regular Premier League minutes, and later to Crystal Palace. At Palace he started the run to the 2025 FA Cup, lifting a major English trophy as the team’s first-choice goalkeeper.

From there he came home. Turner returned to the New England Revolution, the club that gave him his break, choosing steady games over a seat on a Premier League bench. The decision said something about a player who has always valued playing over prestige. He wanted to arrive at a home World Cup sharp, not rusty, and the surest path to minutes ran back through MLS.

From Shutting Out England to the Bench at Home

The plan ran into a younger man in form. Freese seized the starting job and held it through the wins over Paraguay and Australia that sent the United States through as group winners. Pochettino rewarded him, and a coach rarely changes a goalkeeper who is keeping the team winning. Turner got his start in the meaningless final group game and conceded three against Türkiye, hardly the audition to reclaim a place.

The numbers still tell a story of rare standing. By starting against Türkiye, Turner became one of only a handful of American goalkeepers to start matches at multiple World Cups, a list that runs through Tony Meola, Kasey Keller, Brad Friedel and Tim Howard. That is the company he keeps. Yet at this tournament, the milestone arrived in a match his team had already won the right to ignore.

What Turner Still Offers

Goalkeeping is the cruelest position in the sport. There is one job and one shirt, and a backup’s chance usually depends on a team-mate’s misfortune. Turner has handled the demotion the way veterans are supposed to, supporting Freese in training and staying ready for a phone call that may never come. American teams have leaned on that kind of professionalism for decades, and a squad chasing a deep run needs its experienced keeper engaged rather than sulking.

If Freese wobbles against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Round of 32, Turner is the insurance. He has started World Cup knockout football. He has kept clean sheets against elite opposition on the biggest stage. Pochettino knows that a goalkeeper who shut out England in Qatar is not a bad name to have waiting on the bench, even if the hope is that he never has to leave it.

There is a wider lesson in his climb for the thousands of American kids who do not fit the academy mold. Turner came late, got passed over, and built a career on stubbornness and a refusal to accept other people’s timelines. Goalkeeping coaches now point to him as proof that the position can be learned by someone who arrives without the usual head start. His story tells a teenager cut from a youth team that the door has not closed, only moved.

A Home World Cup Few Players Ever Get

The cruelty of the timing is hard to overstate. American players have waited their whole lives for a World Cup staged across their own country, in stadiums an hour from where they grew up, in front of friends and family who never had to set an alarm for a 2am kickoff. Turner is living that dream from the substitutes’ bench. He will collect the memories and the milestones, but the on-field story belongs, for now, to someone else.

He has refused to make it a problem. Around the camp, Turner has been described as a stabilizing presence, the senior keeper who mentors rather than mopes. That role has value in a knockout tournament, where pressure builds and young players need steady examples. Whether or not he plays another minute, the United States are better for having a two-time World Cup goalkeeper who chose to lead from where he sits.

The Bigger Picture for American Goalkeeping

Turner’s situation reflects how far the United States has come between the posts. There was a time the national team scrambled to find one reliable goalkeeper. Now Pochettino can leave a two-time World Cup starter and FA Cup winner on the bench because someone younger has been better. Freese, Turner and a deep pool behind them give the country a position of strength where it once had anxiety.

That depth is little comfort to the man holding the second pair of gloves. Turner has spent his career being told he started too late, was drafted too low, and lacked the pedigree of those around him. He answered each doubt by playing his way past it. The home World Cup was meant to be the reward, the tournament where the late starter stood in goal in front of his own people.

Instead he waits, ready, the way he always has. The kid who picked up the sport years behind everyone else has two World Cups on his record and a major trophy in his hands. If his country needs him over the next fortnight, he will be prepared. And if it does not, he will have spent a home World Cup doing the unglamorous work that has defined him, pushing the man in front of him to be better.

WRITTEN BY

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the Founder of Futbol Chronicle and an accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following international football. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered matches at stadiums around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every match report, player profile, and tactical analysis he writes.

More articles by Jarrod →
Advertisement
Advertisement

Leave a Comment

Leave a Comment






The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

Advertisement

More in News

Jesse Marsch hails Canada’s ‘heroes’ after historic World Cup knockout breakthrough

Jesse Marsch praised his players as “Canadian heroes” after Canada’s ...

Carlo Ancelotti rejects mind games as Brazil prepare for World Cup knockout clash with Japan

Carlo Ancelotti says Brazil will focus on football rather than ...

Edin Dzeko Survived the Siege of Sarajevo and Returns to the World Cup at 40

Edin Dzeko was six years old when the shells began ...

Riyad Mahrez Scored Twice to Drag Algeria Into the World Cup Knockouts

The ball sat on the penalty spot in Kansas City ...

John Stones Anchors England’s Defence After a Decade of Injuries

When Thomas Tuchel read out his World Cup squad in ...
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending on Futbol Chronicle

Why Soccer Is The Best Sport

Soccer has become incredibly popular across the globe in recent ...
CHORZOW, POLAND - OCTOBER 11, 2018: Football Nations League division A group 3 match Poland vs Portugal 2:3 . In the picture assistant of referee. — Stock Editorial Photography

What Is Offsides in Soccer? The Offside Rule Fully Explained

A player is offside if any part of their head, ...
Lionel Messi

The Best Soccer Players of All Time: The 10 Greatest Ever Ranked

Ranking the greatest soccer players in history is a debate ...
Premier League

Map of All the Premier League Teams for 2025/26

The 2025/26 Premier League features 20 clubs spread across England, ...
Michael Carrick - Rooney says Carrick gave “taste of what it was like under Sir Alex Ferguson”

Michael Carrick points to lack of sharpness after Manchester United draw with West Ham

• Michael Carrick cited a lack of sharpness after Manchester ...
Advertisement
Advertisement