Marsch says he 'feels home' with Canada after being overlooked by U.S. Soccer Federation
Having led Canada to the semifinals of the Copa America, coach Jesse Marsch said he didn't need success to prove his ability after he was fired by Leeds and overlooked by the U.S. Soccer Federation.
"I felt how strongly they wanted me here, and I'm at a point in my life where I don't need all the other bulls—t," Marsch said during a news conference ahead of Tuesday's match against Argentina.
He laughed as Monday's news conference was being simultaneously translated.
"I don't know how you say that in Spanish, OK?" he explained with a grin.
He interviewed with the USSF last year before Gregg Berhalter was rehired, and Canada gave the 50-year-old Marsch its national team job in May. While Canada advanced in its first Copa America appearance, the host U.S. was eliminated in the group stage.
"I never doubted my ability as a coach," Marsh said. "What I've always doubted in this business is how do you find the right people to work with? And so the best thing about where I'm at right now is it feels home to me. It feels like I'm working with a group of players that I think value the things that I bring. I value the things that they're about."
Canada had not reached the World Cup since 1986 when it qualified for the 2022 tournament under coach John Herdman. It went 0-3 in Qatar. Herdman left in August to coach Toronto in Major League Soccer after saying the Canada Soccer Association did not provide the national team with the necessary financial support and resources.
Marsch was hired after Peter Augruso replaced Charmaine Crooks as CSA president.
"I think the Canadian Soccer Association is a humble but professional organization and that the new leadership is fantastic," Marsch said. "The people in the country have been 100 per


