Be it ever so humble, there's no place like a home FIFA World Cup qualifier.
At least not in a CONCACAF region where member countries from Mexico into Central America and the Caribbean use heat and humidity, altitude, air quality and, in normal times, fervent fans to their advantage.
Here in pandemic-modified times, the U.S. men's national team plays its third qualifier within a week — this one likely in single-digit temperatures Wednesday night at Allianz Field against Honduras.
Soccer outdoors, in Minnesota, in winter's midst?
Why?
In 2018, the U.S. didn't qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1986. It didn't partly because of a damaging 2-0 summertime qualifying loss in New Jersey that presumably drew too many or just too loud Costa Rica supporters.
In this three-game qualifying window played unusually in mid-winter because of COVID delays, the Americans are playing their two home games in northern cities against tropical teams far from either U.S. coast's population centers.
They beat El Salvador 1-0 on Thursday night in Columbus, Ohio. In between home games, the U.S. plays at Canada on Sunday in Hamilton, Ontario.