I'm surprised to see you say that. I believe anyone who has played on a team, two-man or more, knows different regardless of the outcome or how it looks.
Lou Figueroa
Yes, but this is not a team in the sense of sports. This is not a team that lives together, travels together at length, and competes together often. It is, and always has been, an impromptu gathering of top talent and the matter of chemistry was something I never heard mentioned in the first seventeen Mosconi Cups. It was only when the 2013 team, which was not picked by America but instead by Matchroom alone, played with an unprecedented lack of cohesion that the chemistry issue was discussed at all.
As I've said before, Team USA has struggled largely in singles and has performed just fine in doubles. If we're gonna win it's gonna be because of how our guys play when they compete alone. Do you think these seasoned veterans who customarily play with a minimal fanfare can't perform without great support from onlookers? If so, you are mistaken. Mosconi winners pocket as much as they'd typically win by winning five tournaments on US soil. Anyone who thinks these guys need more than the money to motivate them is overlooking just how little the pro pool player in America typically earns.
Chemistry is huge in team sports, but not so much in an impromptu exhibition of players who will disband when the exhibition is over. Yes, it matters, but the Mosconi is won with great play, not great teamwork.