Herculez Gomez is sunning himself in the bright spotlight as one of the truly fascinating stories of the ongoing
Timeline: the improbable rise of U.S. candidate Herculez Gomez


Now, he’s on the cusp of making the
1982 – Born in
Circa 1993 – Joins Neusport FC. The club helped instill a passionate love for the game, as well for the bonds developed in his years with the youth club.
2001 – Barely out of
2002 – Finding the adjustment tough and not havingmuch success in
2002 – Instead he catches on with the semi-pro San Diego Gouchos. Scouts for the nearby L.A. Galaxy notice him. Meanwhile, he’s working part-time at Abercrombie & Fitch to make ends meet.
2003 – On loan to the Seattle Sounders (then playing in USL), Gomez breaks his foot. He had played just five minutes with the Galaxy in 2003, when his salary for the season was $16,500.
2004 – Following a lengthy recovery from injury (which included time with the San Diego Sockers of the Major Indoor Soccer League), he re-signs with the Galaxy. Major League Soccer’s decision to expand rosters to accommodate a new reserve league may have been his saving grace and invitation back into the league.
2005 – Landon Donovan extensive time on national team duty early in the season gives Gomez a shot on the big stage. Around that time, one MLS coach tells me Gomez strikes the ball as cleanly as anyone in MLS – but that he does need to keep shoring up other areas of his game to become a more complete player.
Late 2005 – The Galaxy makes a late run into the playoffs and eventually wins the MLS Cup (also claiming the US Open Cup that summer; Gomez nails the winner in the Open Cup championship). Gomez is the Galaxy’s leading scorer with 18 goals in all competitions and is voted the team’s Most Valuable Player. He is a newcomer to the league in every practical sense, but as he signed a contract with the Galaxy back in 2003 he is ineligible for Rookie of the Year balloting.
2006 – He struggled early and didn’t seem happy that then-coach Steve Sampson was using him in various positions. Later, as Frank Yallop took over in
Summer 2007 – Gomez travels to play in the Copa America with the
Late 2007 – Yallop trades Gomez to
2008 – Another year, another trade. This time to
January 2010 – Gomez signed with
May 2010 – Bradley makes the call, inviting Gomez into camp. The striker’s approach to the camp is humble and 100 percent team-oriented, exactly what you’d want to see from the guy. “I definitely have 29 players ahead of me,” he told reporters upon arrival.
One more thing to consider on this story: Argentine-born Frank Lemmon was Gomez’ longtime coach on that Neusport youth club that nurtured the player’s love for the game. Here’s what Lemmon told the Las Vegas Review-Journal earlier this year, and how true it is:
“The reality is, with the infrastructure of
The tale may end Wednesday when Bradley makes the cuts, but it is an improbable, inspiring one.











