Pamela Anderson is surprised at the response she’s received in going makeup-free.
The newly nominated Golden Globes actress, 57, revealed in an interview that she initially stopped wearing makeup as “an experiment,” as she discussed her recent streak of makeup-free appearances.
“This whole peeling it back was kind of how I just started. I just wanted to remember who I was,” Anderson told Entertainment Tonight while promoting her new film The Last Showgirl.
“I mean I’ve been playing characters my whole life — I want to play characters in movies, not in my personal life,” she continued in the clip posted to the outlet’s Instagram on Dec. 10. “I just want to be me, so this is an experiment. It’s just something I feel drawn to do — I didn’t even think anyone would notice!”
Anderson has been making makeup-free appearances at events ever since she first appeared with no makeup during Paris Fashion Week in September 2023.
Anderson attends the SAG-AFTRA special screening of ‘The Last Showgirl’ in West Hollywood on Dec. 8.
Emma McIntyre/Getty
Anderson’s latest comments come after she showcased another stunning natural look while debuting new bangs at the SAG-AFTRA screening of The Last Showgirl in West Hollywood on Sunday, Dec. 8.
The actress and activist wore on the red carpet a structured brown cashmere Bottega Veneta dress with a caped silhouette paired with Bottega Veneta’s Canalazzo pumps, which retail for $1,150, as she was joined by her costars in the film, Kiernan Shipka and Brenda Song.
Anderson also appeared without makeup at the 2024 IndieWire Awards in New York City on Dec. 5, in an elegant outfit consisting of a navy-blue draped gown with lapels and flared sleeves and a short train, black pantyhose and black strappy sandals. The actress was nominated for her role in The Last Showgirl at the ceremony.
Anderson pictured at the Mugler H&M Global Launch Event in N.Y.C. in April 2023. ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images
On Monday, Dec. 9, Anderson received her first Golden Globe nomination for best actress in a motion picture for her work in the Gia Coppola-directed film.
Anderson wrote in a statement obtained by PEOPLE following the news, “I share this beautiful nomination with The Last Showgirl Family, my family, and my hard-working companions on this interesting journey.”
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“It is never too late to dream, to start again, to stay open to possibilities — we are not all so lucky,” the Baywatch alum continued. “I wish everyone my love and thanks while I navigate this new exciting chapter.”
Pamela Anderson is surprised at the response she’s received in going makeup-free.
The newly nominated Golden Globes actress, 57, revealed in an interview that she initially stopped wearing makeup as “an experiment,” as she discussed her recent streak of makeup-free appearances.
“This whole peeling it back was kind of how I just started. I just wanted to remember who I was,” Anderson told Entertainment Tonight while promoting her new film The Last Showgirl.
“I mean I’ve been playing characters my whole life — I want to play characters in movies, not in my personal life,” she continued in the clip posted to the outlet’s Instagram on Dec. 10. “I just want to be me, so this is an experiment. It’s just something I feel drawn to do — I didn’t even think anyone would notice!”
Anderson has been making makeup-free appearances at events ever since she first appeared with no makeup during Paris Fashion Week in September 2023.
Anderson attends the SAG-AFTRA special screening of ‘The Last Showgirl’ in West Hollywood on Dec. 8.
Emma McIntyre/Getty
Anderson’s latest comments come after she showcased another stunning natural look while debuting new bangs at the SAG-AFTRA screening of The Last Showgirl in West Hollywood on Sunday, Dec. 8.
The actress and activist wore on the red carpet a structured brown cashmere Bottega Veneta dress with a caped silhouette paired with Bottega Veneta’s Canalazzo pumps, which retail for $1,150, as she was joined by her costars in the film, Kiernan Shipka and Brenda Song.
Anderson also appeared without makeup at the 2024 IndieWire Awards in New York City on Dec. 5, in an elegant outfit consisting of a navy-blue draped gown with lapels and flared sleeves and a short train, black pantyhose and black strappy sandals. The actress was nominated for her role in The Last Showgirl at the ceremony.
Anderson pictured at the Mugler H&M Global Launch Event in N.Y.C. in April 2023. ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images
On Monday, Dec. 9, Anderson received her first Golden Globe nomination for best actress in a motion picture for her work in the Gia Coppola-directed film.
Anderson wrote in a statement obtained by PEOPLE following the news, “I share this beautiful nomination with The Last Showgirl Family, my family, and my hard-working companions on this interesting journey.”
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“It is never too late to dream, to start again, to stay open to possibilities — we are not all so lucky,” the Baywatch alum continued. “I wish everyone my love and thanks while I navigate this new exciting chapter.”
On May 22, 2022, Justin Thomas bagged his fifteenth win on the PGA Tour. The second major win of his career came after a dramatic playoff, as he went to score a 2-under after three playoff holes against Will Zalatoris at the PGA Championship. It has been almost two and a half years since he last grabbed a win. The next item on his list is surely to grab a win, and he seems to be completely dedicated to getting one.
JT’s fitness coach, Kolby Wayne, recently took to his official Instagram account a few hours ago and shared a video of JT sweating out at the gym. The first video was of him doing backward lunges with a water bag, while the second clip showed him working with Romanian deadlifts. He captioned it as,“@justinthomas34 25season prep.”
Well, working out has proven to be a great deal of help earlier as well. Scottie Scheffler, who is World No. 1 now, has grabbed ten wins over the past two seasons. The secret behind him being in such good form was his intense amount of time spent at the gym, and that stands as a standing testament to why the experiment might turn out fruitful for JT. Trying an exercise regimen is not quite a health experiment. JT said he would not ever do one again after his failed experiment of adopting a gluten-free diet last year.
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In 2023, JT felt a drop in energy when competing in extreme heat. To address this, he underwent blood work and food sensitivity tests, which led him to adopt a gluten and dairy-free diet recommended by Dr. Ara Suppiah, the chief medical doctor for NBC Sports and Golf Channel. Imagine leaving your guilty pleasure of a slice of pizza in the quest for greatness. However, that did not work out for him, and he failed to win anything last year too.
Unsure of how his body would react to gluten after so long, he tried it, and apparently, it was all okay; “I think like the six months was right when I was over in the U.K. for Scottish and British and I’m like I’m not going to start this back up in the middle of a tournament because I didn’t know how my body was going to react. Literally not having anything for six months, I thought there was a chance my body would freak out. After shooting about 400 the first two days at The Open Championship, when I got to Minnesota I got a gluten-free pizza like on Monday or Tuesday and I swear I could have cried, it was so good.”
Justin Thomas went into core training before the 2017 season
The 31-year-old golfing professional bagged five wins in the 2017 PGA Tour season. This included his first major victory at the PGA Championship, with an added feather of finishing at No. 2 at the Tour Championship. He dealt with injuries, and that was when JT decided to spur up his workout regime. He fixated on strengthening his core and included a lot of mobility exercises to heal his wrist. This was so that he could become more flexible and come back to the best form.
“I wasn’t always someone who loved working out,” Thomas told Men’s Fitness. “But now, it’s a major part of my life. It’s important for my body to feel how it needs to feel to play the best I can. It’s something I take very seriously. I probably put on a good 15-20lbs last year.” It did help him improvise his swing speed, giving him more confidence on the greens. His priority was to stabilize the muscles in his abdomen, back, hips, and glutes.
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As it turns out, from his current workout videos, he is doing the same once again. Do you think the JT will finally have his comeback in 2025 that he and his fans are longing for? Let us know in the comments section below!
I do remember my first pimple. 1983 and I begged my mother to buy Clearasil. She came home with cleanser, toner and moisturiser the pharmacist said would have a better long term result. I hated that pharmacist and yelled at my mother. Why couldn’t she just let me put hydrogen peroxide on my face like other teenagers?
In my early 40s I became a newspaper magazine editor; free lipstick, skincare and far too many opportunities for self-doubt. I learned to say “fragrance” instead of “perfume” but remained terrified of the beauty industry. Photographer Yvonne Todd’s “Bellevue” portraits of cosmetic counter consultants trigger me in a way I still can’t articulate. Imagine being born knowing whether you are a blue-red or an orange-red?
In 2014, I tracked my beauty spend for the year. The regime I considered minimalist came in at $3985 ($5191 in today’s dollars). Did I want to pay for monthly facials, pedicures and potions – or a three-week overseas holiday?
I ditched the treatments and started feeding my face a simple but cost-effective diet: Kiehl’s cleanser, Cetaphil moisturiser and the occasional splash of Antipodes rosehip oil. And then, one day, I woke up – 54 and tired. Whatever I had been doing was no longer enough.
Marilyn Monroe is said to have glowed in photographs because of the way the camera flash caught her facial fuzz. As a woman on her way to developing a full menopausal beard, even candlelight is dangerous. Like, literally, a fire risk.
Why had I abandoned a skincare routine on the brink of the decade I would clearly need it the most?
I don’t want to turn back time – my laugh lines are deep testimonials to a good life, two vertical furrows between my eyes are the legacy of thinking hard and often, and I despair at the “should I get Botox” conversations tormenting younger colleagues – but I do want healthier skin.
Early July and my skin is dull and sallow. Squeezed spots become scabs that take weeks to heal. The bags under my eyes are deep and dark. “Congested”, a word I’ve previously only associated with a cold, is now being applied to my complexion. “Milia” (hard cysts made of trapped, dead cells that I know I should not be digging out with a needle) are popping up everywhere.
My forehead feels like sandpaper and even my eyelids are dry and flaky. Perversely, the creases down the side of my nose breed squishy whiteheads and the powder foundation that used to hide my pores now emphasises them. My formerly rosy cheeks are red spider webs of broken capillaries.
At my kitchen table, I stare into a magnifying mirror: Can I restore my inner radiance? Do modern products have the power to deliver smoother, calmer and more hydrated skin? Is the beauty industry just an expensive promise in pretty packaging?
“Please don’t get a facelift,” she says, sipping an oat milk latte. I nearly choke on my long black. I assumed she’d prescribe an eye cream; maybe a serum or two.
The minutes pass in a blur of words I’ve never considered applying to my face: Chemical peels. Lasers. Lactic acid. Glycolic acid. Microneedling. Microcurrents. Dermaplaning. LED masks. Intense pulsed light therapy. Gua sha stones.
Ashleigh is forensic in her approach. What products do I use now? How often do I wash my makeup brushes? When did I last replace my beauty blender? Recently, she says, she cut open a sponge to discover its interior was black with mould.
“Twelve weeks of in-clinic treatments, plus topical products, and you should notice a change,” she says. “Six months for a real difference. If I’m trialling a product, it’s a minimum of four weeks, because the skin renews every 28 days. The key will be consistency.”
My beauty boot camp had begun.
Kim’s official ‘before’ pic. Photo / NZ Herald
Retinol, sunscreen – and injectables
How much is too much to spend on your face?
I’m searching Farmer’s online shopfront for skincare. The department store that sold me my first toaster, couch and ceramide capsules (in that order) has a $4.95 single use blueberry sheet mask for “elasticity” – and a $1197 (plus postage) 30ml pump bottle of Chanel Sublimage L’extrait de Nuit Ultimate Repair Night Concentrate. What the f***? (And I do not mean “face”).
Where do you even start to make the right skincare decisions when just one store lists more than 2000 products? Thanks to Ashleigh’s contacts, I have an appointment with an expert.
At a cosmetic clinic in an expensive postcode, treatments are performed by qualified GPs and registered nurses. The procedures are high-tech; the appearance “medicine” administered by injection.
In reception, I fill out a form as a departing client counts out $100 bills. The cost of her perfect face will not be listed on any credit card statements this month. The form, meanwhile, is taking a shockingly long time to complete. I hadn’t realised just how many things I wasn’t loving about my skin.
Dr: How do you feel about the colour and unevenness?
Me: “I have redness. And I can feel myself sweating right now . . .”
Dr: Are you going through menopause at the moment, or have you been?
Me: “I’ve had a hysterectomy, but I kept one ovary . . .”
The consultation is thorough, friendly and professional. The firmness of my skin? The lines? The symmetry? The volume? Anything sagging? How do I feel about my moles? Any scars? The doctor discusses options for reducing redness, shrinking pores and improving the turnover of skin cells. Tighten, smooth and lift are the words du jour. Some procedures (and she proposes six, plus peels and dermaplaning) will take up to two hours. Pain levels? Between a four and a five out of 10, she replies.
I’m convinced nothing hurts like an abdominal hysterectomy with a vertical incision but, still – I haven’t had children, a tattoo or even a bikini wax. Later, on a WhatsApp chat with friends aged from their 40s to 60s, I ask: “Anyone use IPL? Trying to get a sense of how much it will hurt?”
Sample responses:
“Once for peach fuzz on my face. Excruciating. Like a hundred bee stings and I have a high threshold for pain. Now I have dermaplaning. Easy as!”
“IPL? I’m picking we are not talking about the Indian Premier League?”
“I had it to remove the brows I’d had tattooed on and it just about killed me – like being flicked again and again with a whole bunch of teeny rubber bands. Downtime was pretty minimal though.”
“I thought it was a craft beer.”
The older I get, the more divided this particular friend group is on issues of appearance. Some ferociously fight the years, others are adamant they’ll never submit to liquid facelifts. (Hair colour is non-negotiable – brunettes have gone blonde but, so far, nobody is gracefully greying.)
What’s fascinating is how much we don’t talk about it. Menopause and sex? Intimately! Menopause and cosmetic medicine? Only in the abstract.
I think women over 50 are more afraid of being judged than 20-somethings who happily compare chemically-enhanced pouts. It’s easy to go public about injectables and fillers when, deep down, you know you look just fine without them. At a certain point, these procedures stop being a fun diversion. For women at the top of their games who, generally, don’t take shit from anyone, I suspect it is galling (and a little embarrassing) to admit: I’m ageing and I don’t like it.
Back at the cosmetic clinic, I am being educated on the benefits of injecting hyaluronic acid. A little stingy at first, but keep it up for two years? Transformative!
The doctor moves on to discuss home skincare. Retinol. Sunscreen. Vitamin C. Vitamin B. I agree to it all, but who even am I now? I know I need to do more reading, but I’m sold. I have projected my face to 2026 and strangers are stopping me on the street to comment on its glow.
In medieval times, they called it elixir vitae – a potion supposed to grant eternal youth. My quest to restore radiance comes with a $5505 price tag (excluding daily skincare products). I don’t own a house. It’s not like I’ll need the money for a kitchen renovation.
False start. Always read the fine print. Some health conditions and medications (including blood thinners for atrial fibrillation) do not entirely align with the proposed plan. I grapple with this for a couple of days – the risks are minuscule, a gazillion people have done this before me, etc – but ultimately, I’m compelled to admit:
I’m super comfortable with the environment and care levels I experienced at my clinic appointment, but can’t shake the “what if/worst case scenario” fears. Do my concerns about my tired old skin outweigh concerns I’ll bruise awfully or stress myself into a bout of AF? Just because I can do this, do I think I should?
I’m surprised to feel a little disappointed. Secretly, I promise myself – if Plan B doesn’t work, I am totally going back to that nice doctor in the leafy suburb.
Plan B: The skincare-only alternative
The last time I had a facial, the ding of a temple bell signified the batik-clad beautician had finished pushing her thumbs through my actual temples.
Skintopia, in Auckland’s Herne Bay, is the exact opposite of that candlelight and sandalwood experience.
My first consultation is in the open plan “skin lounge” – glass walls, loads of sunlight, and zero whale music. The treatment menu reads like a gym membership (ProSkin 60, OxyGlow, Power Up) and the skincare partner sounds like science (Dermalogica).
A media cheat sheet informs me this is a “skin centre”, not a beauty salon or spa. The therapists (not beauticians) say “brightening” not “lightening” or “whitening”. A facial has become a treatment, a pimple is a blemish. There will be no “miracles”. Just “results”.
“You’ll be placing your head into the machine and there are different lights and different settings . . .”
That’s therapist Bianka Dalton guiding me through an Observ Skin Diagnostic, AKA the “before” photographs. I catch words like vascular, hydration, pigmentation and oil flow and – great news – discover I’m the perfect candidate for a new “lifting” eye cream.
It costs $237 for 15ml (or approximately three teaspoons). The instructions tell me to dispense pea-sized blobs, but my decades reading beauty mags have not been wasted. I know for a FACT eye cream is measured in rice grain-sized blobs.
To be honest, I’m an eye cream sceptic (compared to regular moisturiser, it always seems twice the price for half the amount) but three weeks into this trial, I make a startling discovery. My eyelids are coated in vellus hairs – teeny, tiny strands that help my skin feel touch, vibration, heat and pressure. Did they sprout overnight? Or were they previously hidden in the fine lines that have magically plumped and hydrated?
I’m getting ahead of myself.
“Looking at your skin, your barrier is definitely impaired,” Bianka told me on that first visit. “We want to work on strengthening your barrier.”
The language is new to me. I imagine my face as a car hurtling towards a clifftop. I am through the guard rail and Bianka is the ambulance at the bottom, dispensing around $1500 worth of skincare products and another $750 worth of in-clinic treatments. In three months the barrier will hold. I will take that turn in the road and the next one and the next one. The travel will not show on my face.
“Can you actually do that?” asks my husband. “Replenish your barrier?”
I’ve laid five products on our kitchen table and asked him to estimate their worth. “Some of them look really expensive?” (Correct). “Two hundred bucks all up?” (Very incorrect).
Every morning, I use a Dermalogica cleanser in the shower and a serum, moisturiser and sunblock at the kitchen table. At night it’s the same, minus the sunblock and with a different, more intense moisturiser. I’m also consuming a daily dose of Glow Ageless powder ($79 for 150g) from The Beauty Chef. Ingredients include mung beans, chickpeas, sweet potato and shiitake mushroom. Mixed with water, it’s simultaneously gritty and slippery – like an unset jelly for the over 50s.
I was concerned how much time I might have to devote to a skincare regime. Ultimately, I’ll spend longer staring at my face than I do slapping products on it. Quite quickly, something amazing is happening. Blemishes fade fast, I haven’t had a whitehead in my nose crease for days and even the stubborn milia bumps lie flatter on my face – are they melting? If I had to pick a word to describe this, it would be “renewal”. Every day, I feel like fresh new cells have busted their way to the surface.
Another weird thing? I’ve been to the dentist for the first time in a decade, had a mammogram and booked an overdue smear test. Self care is breeding self care. This is a dividend I wasn’t expecting.
“It can make you feel good having a little routine at home,” agrees Bianka. “Having your products lined up and making yourself accountable.”
My first in-clinic treatment was the Dermalogica ProCalm60 aimed at reducing sensitivity and calming my skin. Mid-August and the redness is lessening and the skin near my hairline is noticeably smoother. My “barrier” is deemed strong enough for the action-packed ProSkin60 with its “super charge” add ons.
At this second treatment, very tiny stainless cones will “tap” my skin. Nanoinfusion, according to the experts, creates channels for product – in this case hyaluronic acid – to penetrate deeper. It’s painless but what is it doing to my already spider-veined cheeks? (My worries are groundless. Next day, the broken capillaries are even less visible).
Taking notes is tricky when you’re lying horizontal under a weighted blanket, but in a series of post-treatment Ubers, I record the highlights on my phone: “Cold rubber mask” (the feel of a cooling contour masque). “Buttercup yellow” (the colour of the LED light treatment aimed at increasing hydration and skin thickness). “Crickets” (the noise of a hand-held, non-invasive firming and smoothing tool that chirrups like a backyard at dusk). “Piggy snore” (model’s own).
With each visit, my at-home product list evolves.
I add a Vitamin C-based evening serum ($200) that makes me feel like a kid eating sticky mandarins. And there’s an oatmeal “milkfoliant” I use every third day that refines my pores like nothing I’ve experienced before. It also costs $133 for 74g. (Have I recently blitzed supermarket porridge in a blender? Watch this space and please don’t tell Bianka or the beauty editor).
Three months and $2250 – the results are in, was it worth it?
In 2024, we’re all trying to be more resilient. Finally, I have the face to match the buzzword. Bianka deems my skin sufficiently strengthened and desensitised to cope with products that will target an oily tone and enlarged pores. She adds a slow-release retinol clearing oil (that includes salicylic acid) to my home care regime. It’s a $180 quadruple-whammy, aimed at fine lines, wrinkles, hyperpigmentation and active breakouts. When it bleeps its first blemish overnight I think of that insecure teenager with her first pimple. How far has my face come?
My third and final session was, at my request, going to include dermaplaning – a beauty industry euphemism for a close shave of the fine facial hair I’m increasingly self-conscious about. At the last minute, I say no. I’m reassured the hair does not grow back darker or thicker but removing it feels conformative. It’s enough to deal to my legs and underarms. The patriarchy can learn to live with my peach fuzz.
I am, however, totally there for the OxyGlow treatment in which Bianka will use an oxygen infusion tool to push a rejuvenating serum into my skin. In the background, a machine emits a rhythmic whoosh. My face is on life support – and I think it’s working.
“It feels . . .” I’m searching for the words as I pat my cheeks and forehead. “Firmer. But also fresher?”
It looks amazing. Dewy, walk-me-down-the-aisle-right-now, amazing. My three-month experiment is up. I’ve applied approximately $2250 worth of treatment and products to my 54-year-old face and developed a twice-daily skincare habit I plan to maintain. Would a holiday have provided an equally effective rest and reset? I just don’t think so.
“Your skin looks like you’re in your 20s,” says my husband and for so many reasons (including how great I’d look in the post OxyGlow photos) I’d remarry him tomorrow.
At Skintopia for the official photos, my face knows there’s a test and has come to the party with its first break-out in the entire three months. Bianka is, nevertheless, ecstatic when she compares the before and after imagery.
“Look at your fine lines! Wow. See how much smoother in texture your skin is? More clear, less redness, less dehydration.
“In the before image, you can see texture is rough, there is a lot of oil and shine, redness on forehead, wrinkles and fine lines around eyes. In the after image – significant reduction in fine lines, the texture looks more even and oiliness is reduced. Incredible results!”
Her main message: “It doesn’t matter what age you are, you can improve your skin.”
I went into this three-month experiment wondering if the beauty industry was all smoke and magnified mirrors. I emerged a (literally) changed woman. No needles, no fillers, no pain? Not entirely true. Somewhere, a bank account is writhing in agony. But the kitchen table selfies show it was money well spent.
Kim documented her results across a three-month period with regular makeup-free selfies.
Skintopia treatment notes
July: Dermalogica ProCalm 60, $250. A targeted treatment to help hydrate, balance, and restore the skin barrier for reduced sensitivity and calmer skin.
August: Dermalogica ProSkin 60, $170 + Super Charge $80. Includes facial massage and either microcurrent or hydrodermabrasion to target any skin concerns, improve the overall health of the skin and dramatically enhance results. Bianka used the Multivitamin Power Exfoliant to enhance exfoliation as Kim’s barrier had improved already. She then nanoinfused hyaluronic acid for more hydration and used contour mask as a bespoke treatment.
September: Oxyglow, $250. This 60-minute skin quenching treatment incorporates an oxygen machine followed by an LED light to hydrate, repair and heal. Bianka used hyaluronic acid to push into Kim’s skin and LED light in green and yellow to plump, hydrate, and firm the skin.
Kim Knight is an award-winning senior journalist with the New Zealand Herald’s premium lifestyle team.
Canada head coach Jesse Marsch talks with Derek Cornelius after the team’s friendly match against Mexico on Sept. 10 in Arlington, Tex.Tony Gutierrez/The Associated Press
One of the mixed blessings of playing host to a FIFA men’s World Cup is the qualification process, or more specifically, the lack thereof. So while Canada doesn’t have to sweat out its appearance at the 2026 tournament – it receives an automatic berth as one of the three co-hosts – it also doesn’t get exposed to the rigmarole of the qualifying campaign, which can help forge a team’s resilience as well as a winning attitude.
Instead, Canada will subsist largely on a steady diet of friendlies over the next couple of years, complemented by the occasional Gold Cup or Nations League contest. After two friendlies in September produced a win and a draw – against the United States and Mexico, respectively – Canada gets another chance on Tuesday at home to Panama.
The game in Toronto – head coach Jesse Marsch’s first match on Canadian soil since he took the position back in May – offers the chance to experiment with the team’s personnel, lineup and strategies.
With that in mind, Marsch has handed three former Canadian youth internationals – Jamie Knight-Lebel, Kwasi Poku and Santiago López – their first call-ups to the senior setup. However, while giving young players exposure to the full international experience is nice – rubbing shoulders with the likes of captain Alphonso Davies and others – when it comes to Tuesday’s match, Marsch is still playing to win.
“We’ve brought in different players to look at and expose them to what we do in the national team,” he said Sunday. “But in the end, we still want to go out and win this game. No question.”
Thinking outside the box and trying new things is all well and good – provided it works. England’s interim national-team manager, Lee Carsley, found himself as Exhibit A of what can happen when it doesn’t. Starting three No. 10s and no recognized centre forward in what turned out to be a home defeat to Greece last week, Carsley was pilloried in the English media as a result, proving there’s a vast difference between dipping your toe in the water and pushing the boat all the way out.
Thanks to a respectable first 10 games in charge of the national team – two wins, five draws and three defeats – Marsch says the attention that has come onto the men’s team has largely been positive, thanks in no small part to the fourth-place finish at Copa America. But after coaching stops in the United States, Germany, Austria and England, the 50-year-old is used to being second-guessed in the media and elsewhere.
“I’m older, you know, I’m used to being scrutinized and being called an idiot,” he said. “But what I’m focused on is making sure that the players have the type of environment where they can still be themselves and where they can focus on what we’re trying to achieve, and they can enjoy getting better.”
That environment hasn’t gone unnoticed by the players, either.
Toronto FC fullback Richie Laryea has played under his fair share of coaches as a 29-year-old – six at TFC alone – and in the matches he’s played under Marsch has grown to appreciate the American coach’s ability to take his share of risk when it comes to team selection.
“I think obviously experimenting and trying new things is good, and we need to be able to, as guys have said in the past, grow the depth on the team, see different guys, see different guys in different positions,” Laryea said. “I think this summer was evident of that. You saw guys step in and do really well.”
Winger Jacob Shaffelburg and central defender Moïse Bombito were two such breakout stars who returned to the international fold under Marsch and proved to be some of the better players at Copa America.
And whether it’s moving Davies around on the field to maximize his speed and skill, or sliding Laryea on to the wing from his usual fullback position, Marsch isn’t afraid to tinker with what has mostly been a successful lineup.
“I think with Jesse now, it doesn’t really matter the opponent,” Laryea said. “ … I don’t think he’s scared to put guys into the lineup and stuff like that.
“ … This is the time for our country. Whenever we step out, it has to be a good result for us, because we want to be able to climb and build heading into 2026.”