DC United's Russell Canouse making a claim for USMNT No. 6 role

Russell Canouse - DC United - Close up

CHULA VISTA, Calif. ā€” Russell Canouse believes he can be the holding midfielder the US men's national team need as they start on the path toward the 2022 World Cup, and his impact over a little less than a season and a half at D.C. United offers strong testimony that it could be so.


The 23-year-old from Lancaster, Pa., is in his second successive January USMNT camp, and his comfort level, confidence and aims have grown appropriately since Dave Sarachan blooded him a year ago. He impressed in his initial call-up but didn't make it off the bench in the Bosnia and Herzegovina friendly, so making that first appearance -- on Jan. 27 against Panama in Glendale, Ariz., he hopes -- is the carrot he's chasing.


ā€œThat's been a goal of mine. It's given me a lot of motivation this past year, too,ā€ Canouse told MLSsoccer.com this week from Chula Vista Elite Athlete Training Center. ā€œJust playing with D.C. United, trying to grind out games and get results to make a run for the playoffs. but I, obviously, personally, have a bigger goal, and that's to become an impact player with the national team, too. The first cap is the first step in that process.ā€


Gregg Berhalter, conducting his first camp as US head coach, sees in Canouse someone who potentially could make the No. 6 role his own.


ā€œRussell has a very specific position in terms of being that worker in front of the backline. That's what he excels at ...,ā€ Berhalter said. ā€œI think the first thing [that makes him unique within the pool] is that he has a tremendous workrate.


ā€œWhen we're looking at his distance covered, in Major League Soccer, it's one of the top in the whole league. So he has a tremendous ability to cover ground, and that's important when you're playing in front of the defense.ā€


Canouse, who spent six years in Bundesliga club Hoffenheim's system, is strong, canny and possesses talent and vision, and he's been transformative for a D.C. team that's struggled to defend when he's not around. That was most apparent last year, when he missed the first half of the season after suffering a knee injury soon after joining his team following the US camp. In the 17 games before he made his first start, United were 3-9-5 and were outscored, 34-27. In his 17 starts, they were 11-2-4 with 33 goals and just 16 surrendered.


Much of the credit went to midseason addition Wayne Rooney, but Canouse's return to the lineup played a significant, if unheralded, role in the turnaround.


ā€œOnce he came back, it was like everything blended together perfectly ...,ā€ said Paul Arriola, Canouse's D.C. and US teammate. ā€œThe sky's the limit, as long as he can continue to stay focused and push himself. I think he will. I know he will. Because that's the type of guy he is. He's a good guy. He's very humble, hard worker, wants to win, and those are the guys that you need on your team.ā€


Canouse left the New York Red Bulls' academy to join Hoffenheim's youth set-up when he was 15, and he progressed to the second team but made just one first-team appearance before a loan to second-tier Bochum. He came to D.C. United for regular playing time.


ā€œGetting a good stretch of games at a good level [has helped my game],ā€ he said. ā€œAnd being able to bring myself back to the US and have people be aware of what kind of player I am and the impact I can bring on the field. ... It's been great in terms of development, just getting a lot of games, but also just being put on the map so I can get an opportunity like this.ā€