Minnesota United coach Adrian Heath always has supported his players' national-team duties because he knows what it meant to him — and what it means to them — to play for one's country.
But defender Michael Boxall's absence, for much of July when he plays for his New Zealand, is a tough one.
Boxall is the Loons' physical and emotional leader on their back line and Heath could have denied New Zealand when it asked to add the 32-year-old veteran to its U-23 team bound for Tokyo next month.
While all the details haven't been determined, Boxall could miss as few as two games and as many as seven for a Loons team that plays six games in July. The length of his absence will depend on whether New Zealand advances from Group B play and what length quarantine, if any, he must do on his return.
"Obviously, it's a big decision for us because he's such an integral part of what we do," Heath said. "We've still got a bit of stuff to sort out because the least amount of games he misses, the better. In one way, I'm pleased for him. In another, I'm disappointed for us because he's the cornerstone of our back four here."
Boxall said he talked with New Zealand's coach about the possibility a year ago. Discussions with Minnesota United have simmered the last six weeks.
Loons players Robin Lod, Jan Gregus and Jukka Raitala just missed three June games so they could play for the Finland and Slovakia national teams at the UEFA European championship. All three are expected back for a July 3 home game against San Jose after both countries were eliminated after group play.
The Loons allowed those three to play in Europe because it's a FIFA tournament and the sport's governing body obligates them to do so. The Olympics are not FIFA-run. Boxall is eager to play one more Olympics in a career that might never include a World Cup appearance.