SAO PAULO − There is life after elimination, Jurgen Klinsmann wants you to know. If you can’t get enough of the U.S. national soccer team, if your red-white-and-blue jersey is already jonesing for the next occasion, the wait won’t be long. If things go right, you may yet get a chance to see Matt Besler and Omar Gonzalez chase around Lionel Messi in 2018, maybe even at a New York stadium. The World Cup goes on now without the plucky Americans, and we all know the level of interest in the States takes a steep dive. The watch parties dwindle to a precious few hard-core fans, the TV ratings for MLS matches will continue to be embarrassing, at least for now, and talk radio stops riffing and starts ripping again. At a wrapup press conference on Wednesday, however, Klinsmann said his players had more to give, and that he planned to get that extra bit out of them through competitions over the next few years. “If we put that ball in the net last night, we would have been in the next round,” Klinsmann said. “(The players) need that sort of accountability, that kind of criticism. In the States, people…