England and Spain are playing on while the U.S. women are back home on the couch after their debacle of a showing at the World Cup.

Tempting as it might be for the USWNT to wallow a bit longer, there isn't time. Not when the Paris Olympics are less than a year away.

It was the USWNT's sluggish and stodgy performance in Tokyo, remember, that should have been a blaring alarm bell of the troubles ahead. The problems persisted after, resulting in the shorter-than-acceptable stay at the World Cup. So unless the world's No. 1 team wants more mediocrity, it needs to do a major reset over the next 11 months because Paris will be here before we know it.

The process began Wednesday, with reports that Vlatko Andonovski is resigning as the USWNT's coach. This is hardly a surprise; the USWNT's round-of-16 exit was their earliest ever at a World Cup or Olympics, and Andonovski was the first to coach the USWNT at multiple major tournaments without winning a title.

U.S. Soccer will be deliberate in its search, but the need for a new USWNT coach sooner rather than later is paramount because Paris will be here before we know it.

WORLD CUP CENTRAL: 2023 Women's World Cup Live Scores, Schedules, Standings, Bracket and More

Here, then, is a not-exhaustive look at some of what the USWNT, and U.S. Soccer, must do before the Olympics:

Find the right coach

Andonovski already had a tough assignment, taking over the two-time World Cup champions just nine months before what was supposed to be the start of the Tokyo Games. Then COVID hit.

Other teams faced similar challenges, however. Ditto for having significant and untimely injuries — we see you, England!

These weren’t the reasons the USWNT had sub-par performances, both in Tokyo and at the World Cup.

Andonovski was determined to use a system that didn’t play to his players’ strengths, and he proved incapable of making adjustments even when it was clear it wasn’t working. The USWNT was so focused on trying to make the bad fit work it sucked the joy out of their game and robbed individual players of their creativity.

Andonovski, who resigned Wednesday as USWNT coach, wasn’t the one sending shots wide or over the crossbar or taking an extra step or three rather than shooting. But the players don’t have problems finishing at the club level, and you have to wonder if they spent so much time thinking about how they were playing that they were paralyzed when they did have opportunities.

Did you see Alessia Russo’s game-winner against Colombia that sent England into the semifinals? There was no hesitating when she caught up to the ball, no slowing to try and avoid the closing defender, no maneuvering to find a better opening. She had an opening and she took it. Or how about everything Lauren Hemp did in the second half of England's semifinal win over Australia? She was ruthless, in the best sense of the word.

The USWNT didn’t have enough of that boldness at the World Cup, and whoever is the USWNT’s new coach has to find a way to get it back.

It also is probably wise to hire someone that has international experience. Andonovski didn't and it's fair to ask whether he was overwhelmed at the different atmosphere at the World Cup and Olympics.

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Take an unsparing look at the talent pool

Given the USWNT’s success over the last 11 years — two World Cup titles and one Olympic gold medal — it’s easy to evaluate players for who they were rather than who they are. But hard choices will have to be made with some of the veterans so the players who will be the USWNT’s cornerstones for the next generation can emerge.

Megan Rapinoe announced before the World Cup she’d be retiring and Julie Ertz did the same (sort of) afterward. Alyssa Naeher remains world class, and goalkeepers can play longer, but she will be 39 in 2027. Same for Kelley O’Hara. Even Alex Morgan will be 38 at the next World Cup, and given history, is unlikely to be a starter.

This isn’t to say any of them should be shoved to the side. But the USWNT risks sacrificing its present by valuing its past more than its future. It's easy to say in hindsight, but only playing Alyssa Thompson in two games, for a total of 21 minutes, was a mistake. Same for not playing Ashley Sanchez at all. If you don’t trust players in big moments, then why bring them in the first place? And how do you expect them to get the experience to handle those big moments if they’re sitting on the bench?

Give the youngsters meaningful minutes, and start bringing in players who will be contributors over this next World Cup cycle. The San Diego Wave's Jaedyn Shaw tops this list, but the USWNT also needs to start bringing teen phenoms Olivia Moultrie and Chloe Ricketts into the fold.

The USWNT has the deepest talent pool in the world, and it hasn't been making the best use of it.

Find fire in the failure

The USWNT did not go into the World Cup complacent, and what they wore before games or did after did not cause their early demise. Suggestions otherwise were both absurd and a bid to drum up controversy. And ratings.

That said, failure is a powerful motivator and the USWNT, its young players in particular, need to use it.

Sophia Smith was inconsolable after missing what could have been a game-winning penalty kick in the Round of 16 loss. Trinity Rodman looked shell-shocked. Lindsey Horan fought back tears. The USWNT needs to take that hurt, sadness, embarrassment, anger — all of it — and use those emotions so they never feel the same way again.

“What I’ve learned is more valuable than any experience I’ve ever had,” Smith wrote on Instagram last week. “… I know without a doubt we will be back and hungrier than ever.”

The clock, both for Paris and beyond, is already ticking.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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