11/8/25 US Men Roster Set, CHS Boys Win State, Girls Finish 2nd, NWSL Playoff Start, MLS Round 1 Wraps, UCL 1/2 Way Group Stage

US Men’s Roster for Next Weekend’s Games Released

DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (Club/Country; Caps/Goals)

GOALKEEPERS (4): Roman Celentano (FC Cincinnati; 0/0), Matt Freese (New York City FC; 11/0), Jonathan Klinsmann (Cesena/ITA; 0/0), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew; 3/0)

DEFENDERS (9): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 14/1), Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 35/2), Alex Freeman (Orlando City; 11/0), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse FC/FRA; 24/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 78/1), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 37/3), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 21/0), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel/GER; 4/0), Auston Trusty (Celtic/SCO; 4/0)

MIDFIELDERS (7)Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 52/2), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 7/0), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough/ENG; 11/0), Gio Reyna (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 32/8), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders; 41/0), Tanner Tessmann (Olympique Lyon/FRA; 10/0), Sean Zawadzki (Columbus Crew; 1/0)

FORWARDS (5): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 54/9), Folarin Balogun (AS Monaco/FRA; 27/7), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; 16/3), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 33/13), Haji Wright (Coventry City/ENG; 19/7

Wow I slip off to Jacksonville for 1 weekend for a little Family Reunion and Football and the Carmel High Boys and Girls go off and make the Finals for the State Championship in Soccer and the Boys win it all. Huge congrats to Shane Schmidt and the Carmel High School boys on his first State Championship and the programs 4th overall State Championship after winning the final over defending Champ Harrison 3-1 last weekend. CHS Boys State Final Video

The Carmel Girls also wrapped up a fantastic season in new coach John Simmonds and Carmel FC Asst Coach Carla Baker’s first season back charge as they made the Finals losing a heartbreaker to the HSE Girls 1-0 on Saturday at The Mike. Again congrats to both teams along with the Guerin High Catholic Boys who won State on PKs  .

Carmel High School wins boys soccer state title
Carmel High School girls soccer team finishes state runner-up
Soccer State Finals: Carmel boys break 19-year drought
See the best photos from Carmel vs Harrison (West Lafayette) in IHSAA boys soccer title
2025-26 Class 3A Boys Soccer State Championship Recap
Unranked to 3A champs: Carmel boys soccer finishes ‘magical run’ with title finish
Harrison comes up just short vs Carmel in IHSAA Class 3A boys soccer state championship
‘Pure happiness’: HSE wins first girls soccer state title in epic 1-0 game vs Carmel

Cool to see Sir David Beckham – Current GM of Inter Miami — get knighted this week in England. His Miami of course hosts Nashville in the crucial Final Game 3 Sat night at 8 pm on Apple TV in Miami to see who advances. Cincy hosts Columbus in Hell is Real Final at 6 pm on Apple TV and Amazon Prime, while Minn United hosts game 3 and my Seattle Sounders at 4 pm on Prime & Apple TV.

Sir David Beckham is Knighted In England Beckham receives knighthood at Windsor Castle.

Congrats to the Guerin Catholic Boys State Champs 2A winning 12-11 in PKs. Guerin High Catholic Boys who won State on PKs

TV Game Schedule

Sat, Nov 8
7:30 am USA Tottenham vs Man United
|9:30 am ESPN+ Union Berlin vs Bayern Munich
9:45 am FS2 US U17B vs Tajikstan U17B World Cup
10 am USA Everton vs Fulham
12 noon Paar+ Juventus (McKinney) vs Torino
12 noon CBS Washington Spirit vs Racing Louisville NWSL PLAYOFFS
12:30 pm NBC Sunderland vs Arsenal
2:45 pm Para+ Parma vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
3 pm NBC Chelsea vs Wolverhampton
4 pm Apple TV Minn United vs Seattle Game 3 Playoffs
6 pm Apple TV Cincy vs Columbus Game 3 Playoffs
8 pm Apple TV Miami vs Nashville Game 3 Playoffs

Sun, Nov 9
9 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Brighton
9 am USA Aston Villa vs Bournmouth (Adams)
11:30 USA Man City vs Liverpool
12:30 ABC KC Current vs NY Gotham FC NWSL Playoffs
3 pm ABC Portland Thorns vs San Diego Wave NWSL

3 pm ESPN+ Celta Vigo vs Barcelona
2:45 pm Para+ Inter Milan vs Lazio
9 pm Apple TV San Diego vs Portland Game 1 Playoff R2
Wed, Nov 12
12:45 pm CBS SN Bayern vs Arsenal UEFA Womens UCL
3 pm ESPN+ Man United (US GK) vs PSG UEFA Womens UCL
3 pm CBS SN Atletico Madrid vs Juventus UEFA Womens UCL
Thurs, Nov 13
11 am ESPN+ Nigeria vs Gabon WCQ
12 noon FS2 Azerbaijan vs Iceland WCQ
2 pm ESPN+ Cameron vs Congo WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 France vs Ukraine WCQ
2:45 pm ?? England vs Serbia WCQ
5 pm CBSSN Surinam vs El Salvador WCQ
7 pm CBS SN T&T vs Jamaica WCQ
7:30 pm FS2 Canada vs Ecuador Friendly
9 pm CBS SN Haiti vs Costa Rica WCQ
Fri, Nov 14
9:45 am FS+, TUDN Argentina U17 vs Mexico U17 World Cup
10:45 am Telemundo US U17 vs Morocco U17 World Cup
2:45 pm fubu? Poland vs Netherlands WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Luxembourg vs Germany WCQ
Sat, Nov 15
9 am FS1 Kazakhastan vs Belgium WCQ
12 noon CBS Washington Spirit (Rodman) vs Portland Thorns NWSL Playoffs
12 noon? Georgia vs Spain WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Greece vs Scotland WCQ
2:45 pm ? Switzerland vs Sweden WCQ
5 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Paraguay Chester PA
8 pm TUDN, Univision Mexico vs Uruguay
Sun, Nov 16
7 am ESPN2 Liverpool vs Chelsea FC Womens Superleague
9 am FS1 Hungary vs Ireland WCQ
9 am FS2 Portugal vs Armenia WCQ
12 noon FS2 Azerbaijan vs France WCQ
12 noon ?? Albania vs England WCQ
2:45 pm FS1 Italy vs Norway WCQ
3 pm ABC Orlando Pride vs NY Gothem FC NWSL Playoffs
Mon, Nov 17
12 noon FS2 Finland vs Andorra WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Germany vs Slovakia WCQ
Tues, Nov 18
2:45 pm FS2 Belgium vs Liechhtenstein WCQ
4 pm ?? Canada vs Venezuela
7 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Uruguay Tampa, FL
8:30 pm Univision Mexico vs Paraguay
Weds, Nov 19
12:45 pm ESPN+ Juventus vs OL Lyonnes (Heaps) Women’s UCL
12:45 pm CBSSN Wolfsburg vs Man United Women’s (GK Joyce) UCL
3 pm CBSSN Arsenal vs Real Madrid Women’s UCL
Thurs, Nov 20
12:45 pm CBSSN Twente vs Atletico Madrid Women’s UCL
3 pm CBSSN PSG vs Bayern Munich Women’s UCL
3 pm ESPN+ Chelsea vs Barcelona Women’s UCL
Sat, Nov 22
7:30 am USA Burnley vs Chelsea
9:30 am ESPN+ Heidenheim vs Mgladbach (Reyna & Scally)
9:30 am ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs Freiburg
9:30 am ESPN+ Wolfsburg vs Bayer Leverkusen (Tilman)
10 am USA Bournmouth (Adams) vs West Ham United
10 am Peacock Wolverhampton vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
10 am Pk Liverpool vs Nottingham Forest
10:15 AM ESPN+ Barcelona vs Athletic Club
12 noon Para+ Juventus (McKinny) vs Fiorentina
12:30 pm NBC New Castle vs Man United
8 pm CBS NWSL CHAMPIONSHIP
9:30 pm Apple TV Vancouver vs LAFC MLS Playoffs

US Players on TV

Friday

Charlotte v NYCFC – 7p on MLS Season Pass: Matt Freese has yet to give up a goal in regulation but his NYCFC side are tied in the best of three series with Tim Ream and Charlotte after the second match was scoreless for 90’ and went to a penalty shootout which Charlotte won to draw even in the series, 1-1. The rubber match will be played on Friday night with the winner advancing to face the waiting Philadelphia Union.

Saturday

Bayer Leverkusen v Heidenheim – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Malik Tillman returned midweek to play 33’ in Bayer Leverkusen’s 1-0 win over Benfica in Champions League play. Tillman had been out since mid-October and was not included in the November call-ups but it is good to see him getting back on the field for Leverkusen.

Middlesbrough v Birmingham City – 10a on Paramount+: Aidan Morris started and played the full 90’ for Middlesbrough as they drew with Leicester last weekend. The result extends a three match slide for Middlesbrough who remain in the top three of the table but are now five points back of league leading Coventry City. On Saturday they will face a Birmingham City side that are in ninth place, just two points out of the promotion playoff positions.

Stoke City v Coventry City – 10a on CBSSN: Haji Wright notched his first assist of the season on Tuesday as Coventry City handled Sheffield United 3-1, maintaining their three point lead for first place in the English Championship. Coventry will now travel to Stoke City to take on the second place team who are currently on a three match win streak.


Norwich City v Leicester City – 10a on Paramount+: Josh Sargent also picked up an assist midweek against a Sheffield side as Norwich snapped a six game losing streak but settled for a draw with Sheffield Wednesday. After starting the season with at least a goal in his first four matches Sargent has yet to find the back of the net again in the past ten though he has assisted twice. Norwich are winless in that same streak and currently sit in the bottom three with just nine points through fourteen matches. Norwich will try to get back into the win column against a Leicester City side that are also winless in their last five matches and are currently 13th in the table.

Olympique Marseille v Brest – 11a on beIN Sports: Tim Weah has missed the past two matches for Marseille and was not included in the USMNT November squad though he was spotted at Marseille training in the team socials so is perhaps nearing a return.

Juventus v Torino – Noon on Paramount+: Weston McKennie was also left off the November squad with Pochettino saying he would like to give McKennie the opportunity to remain in Italy to train with his new club manager. McKennie has started his first two matches under Spalletti including last weekend’s 2-1 win over Cremonese and Tuesday’s 1-1 draw with Sporting in Champions League action.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Koln – 12:30p on ESPN Select: Joe Scally and Gio Reyna have been called in for the November camp though it sounds like the expectations for Reyna are more that he would get to interact with the staff than that he will see extended playing time. On Saturday they will face Kristoffer Lund who was not called into the November camp though he has been starting regularly for Koln. Koln defeated Hamburg last weekend and are currently in seventh place while Gladbach finally picked up their first win of the Bundesliga season, defeating St Pauli 4-1.

Parma v AC Milan – 2:45p on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic is among the injured players who will be missing out on the November camp but he is reportedly available for AC Milan this weekend as they travel to Parma. Pulisic has missed the past four matches but Milan have stayed afloat during that time with two wins and two draws, they currently sit a point back of league leading Napoli and are tied with both Inter Milan and Roma on twenty-one points.

Minnesota United v Seattle Sounders – 4p on MLS Season Pass: Cristian Roldan and the Seattle Sounders defeated Minnesota United 4-2 in the second match of the best of three series and will now return to Minnesota where the two teams played to a scoreless draw before Minnesota won the match in penalties.

Cincinnati v Columbus Crew – 6p on MLS Season Pass: Miles Robinson and second seeded Cincinnati were thumped by Max Arfsten, Sean Zawadzki Patrick Schulte, and the Columbus Crew 4-0 in the second match of their series and will look to get things turned back around at home on Saturday to take the series in the hotly contested in state rivalry.

Sunday

Crystal Palace v Brighton & Hove Albion – 9a on Peacock: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace defeated Brentford last weekend. Richards has started every league match for Palace this season but there has been a bit of criticism from the club over his usage with the national team and he was left off the squad for November.

Aston Villa v Bournemouth – 9a on USA Network: Tyler Adams will be in the squad this November after missing the October window for the birth of his second child. Adams scored his first EPL goal last weekend but Bournemouth fell to Manchester City 3-1 last weekend, falling to fifth place in the league table.

Nottingham Forest v Leeds United – 9a on Peacock: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United fell to Brighton & Hove Albion last weekend and now have another relegation scrap at Nottingham Forest on Sunday morning. Aaronson has started the past seven matches for Leeds who are currently four points out of the relegation spots and five points ahead of Forest.

Lorient v Toulouse – 9a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie’s Toulouse will travel to Lorient on Sunday. McKenzie was not included in the squad last weekend as Toulouse played to a scoreless draw with Le Havre but he was included in the November squad list.

AZ v PSV – 10:45a on ESPN Select: Ricardo Pepi came on as a sub midweek and pulled PSV level with Olympiacos as the teams played to a 1-1 draw in Champions League action. Pepi has been come off the bench since returning from injury but he has three goals in his last four matches, including two in Champions League action which may get him more time. Sergino Dest has been a regular starter for the Dutch side that is currently level with Feyenoord for first place and will be facing third place AZ on Sunday.

Stuttgart v Augsburg – 11:30a on ESPN Select: Noahkai Banks remained in the starting lineup for Augsburg a week after giving up six goals to RB Leipzig. The performance last weekend was much more respectable but his side still fell to Borussia Dortmund, 1-0. Augsburg are in fourteenth place and will have their third straight match against a top five opponent when they face fourth place Stuttgart this weekend.

Eintracht Frankfurt v Mainz – 1:30p on ESPN Select: Lennard Maloney got his first start of the season for Mainz last weekend, lining up as a centerback as the team drew with Werder Bremen 1-1, snapping a four match losing streak.

Olympique Lyon v PSG – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann has come off the bench in Lyon’s last two league matches but has been starting in Europa League for the team, including Thursday’s 2-0 loss to Real Betis. Lyon have drawn their last two league matches, falling to sixth place, and now host league leading Paris Saint-Germain who are four points ahead of them.

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US Men

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Recent returns
Pulisic ready to return from injury for AC Milan
Pepi, Reyna return as Pochettino announces November USMNT roster
As the World Cup approaches, can the USMNT impress in final tests of the year?
Four USMNT players feature on the MLS Best XI
USMNT midfielder Brian Gutiérrez reportedly wants to play for Mexico
Which injured players are most needed on the USMNT roster?
USMNT defender Alex Freeman wins MLS Young Player of the Year
Gomez: Pochettino right to contradict himself with Reyna recall
Pochettino ‘missing’ PL, eyes return after USMNT


NWSL & USWNT

Why are USWNT players leaving the NWSL for Europe?
USWNT big board: Girma, Rodman injuries cloud 2027 World Cup plans
USWNT routs New Zealand to close out October window
Utd’s Tullis-Joyce: Every UWCL game is ‘do or die’
Moultrie & Co. get Hayes’ team back playing ‘the USA way
Rodman questionable as Spirit start NWSL playoffs
NWSL playoffs preview: Can anyone stop Kansas City? How each team will, won’t win it all

MLS

Game 3 Predictions: Who will move on from Round One?
National Writer: Charles BoehmSan Diego FC “playing for their lives” in Game 3
Miami’s Mascherano: Suárez ban: ‘very strange’
Last Dance: Playoffs will define the MLS legacy of Inter Miami’s Fantastic Four
Son, LAFC set up clash with Muller’s Whitecaps
Columbus trounces Cincinnati to force Game 3
Messi tracker: All goals, assists, key moments for Inter Miami in 2025
Philadelphia’s Carnell wins MLS coach of year
‘Honored’ Messi awarded key to the city of Miami
Atlanta confirms ‘Tata’ Martino return as coach
Sir David Beckham: Man United, England legend’s career in pictures

Champions League

Is the Champions League Arsenal’s to lose? Ranking the field, Best XI at midway point
The good, the bad and the ugly: Are Liverpool back to their best?
Lookman and ex-Premier League boss in sp
Who’s the striker beating Mbappé, Haaland in race for European Golden Shoe?
UCL talking points: Flawless Bayern, Slot’s switch, VdV’s worldie, more
Osimhen topples Mbappé, Haaland with hat trick

Reffing

RIP Bruce Carlstead Obituary
Ref Flag Positions  

Goalkeeping

Thibaut Courtois MASTERCLASS! 😮‍💨 | Great Champions League Saves MD4
TOP Goals From Across Europe This Week! 😮‍💨 | UCL, UEL, UECL
Emma Settles on Top 3 US GKs

NWSL playoffs preview: How can each team win it all?

  • Jeff KassoufNov 6, 2025, 12:42 PM ET

The 2025 NWSL playoffs are here and just like in the regular season, everyone is chasing the Kansas City Current after the Shield-winners’ historic season. Kansas City is the undeniable favorite to win the NWSL Championship on Nov. 22, but historically, the NWSL has been anything but predictable.

Could one of the other seven teams go on a run for a few weeks and lift the trophy? Of course? Will they? Well… here’s why each team will — and won’t — win the NWSL Championship.

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Gotham FC logoNo. 8 seed Gotham FC

Next game: at KC Current, Nov. 9, 12:30 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

Why they will win: Talent and tactics. Gotham is not your average No. 8 seed. This is a team that should have finished higher up the table, but laid an egg on Decision Day. Still, Gotham is loaded with championship-caliber talent: little over a month ago, they were lighting up the league with new arrival Jaedyn Shaw joining the healthy, in-form Rose Lavelle and the workhorse Jaedyn Shaw.

If Esther González, with her 13 regular-season goals, is healthy, she has proven capable of carrying the team throughout the season.

Why they won’t win: Defensive lapses. Only Kansas City conceded fewer goals than Gotham’s 25 this season, granted, but the way in which Gotham has conceded goals is something Kansas City could feast on. Gotham endured self-inflicted mistakes trying to play out of the back in Sunday’s loss to North Carolina, and that’s exactly what happened the first time that Gotham and Kansas City met in June, when the Current took the lead three minutes into the match.


 Racing Louisville logoNo. 7 seed Racing Louisville FC

Next game: at Washington Spirit, Nov. 8, 12 p.m. ET, CBS/Paramount+

Why they will win: A gritty identity. Louisville can play a direct, purposeful style of play and punish teams on counterattacks thanks largely to forward Emma Sears. Their 41% average possession ranks dead last in the league, per TruMedia, but they produced 35 goals and 10 wins from that. It’s the type of soccer that won’t always win award, but can be very effective over a 90-minute knockout game. And maybe — just maybe — their postseason naivete could play to their advantage like it did for, say, the 2016 Western New York Flash.

Why they won’t win: Late-game management. Louisville had a propensity to drop points late in games far too often this season, which left them to fight for a playoff berth until the final moments of Decision Day instead of trying to host a playoff game. That trend could creep back up on an inexperienced squad playing in the franchise’s first playoff game — and in one of the most hostile environments in the league.


San Diego Wave FC logoNo. 6 seed San Diego Wave FC

Next game: at Portland Thorns, Nov. 9, 3 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

Why they will win: They grab hold of the game. San Diego kept the ball more than any other team in the regular season — 59.4% per TruMedia, over 6% more than next-closest Gotham FC — and that allowed the Wave to frequently dictate the flow of games. The Wave served up another taste of that in the first half of Sunday’s loss to Kansas City when they jumped out to an early lead.

The French connection of Kenza Dali and Delphine Cascarino remains electric, and they could be the difference-makers.

Why they won’t win: Inconsistent final product. Their possession game is great, but too often this season, San Diego has failed to muster enough in the final third. The Wave’s run of four straight games without a goal just after the summer break was the worst of the stretches.

They came alive, finally, in a 6-1 win against the Chicago Stars on Oct. 18, but that game was an anomaly — and with all due respect, Chicago is not Portland nor any other playoff team. If San Diego needs to chase this game at Providence Park or another should they advance, that could spell trouble.


Chelsea logoNo. 5 seed Seattle Reign FC

Next game: at Orlando Pride, Nov. 7, 8 p.m. ET, Amazon Prime

Why they will win: Experience and resolve. Stay with me through the potential cliches and yes, get your ChatGPT jokes out of the way: Laura Harvey is the winningest coach in league history. Yes, even the all-time great Reign teams she coached came up short in the playoffs, but Harvey and the ageless Jess Fishlock keep finding ways to win (or score) even when the expectations are relatively low. They’ve overachieved this year, and they are certainly capable of making Orlando sweat.

Why they won’t win: They don’t score enough. Seattle’s 32 goals scored this regular season tied with the last-place Chicago Stars and ranks worst among all playoff teams. What’s worse is that, per TruMedia, the Reign over-performed from 25.19 expected goals — the worst mark in the league. Their 162 chances created also ranks last in the NWSL this season. Seattle managed to grind out results this season, none more impressive than handing Kansas City one of its three losses in an early-season meeting.


Chelsea logoNo. 4 seed Orlando Pride

Next game: vs. Seattle Reign, Nov. 7, 8 p.m. ET, Amazon Prime

Why they will win: It’s all finally clicking. Orlando was never going to repeat last year’s near-invincible double-trophy season. Orlando is also than their mid-season slump suggested. The Pride enter the playoffs on a five-game unbeaten streak highlighted by a big 3-2 road win over the Spirit in a rematch of last year’s final.

What made Orlando great last year is that everyone on the roster was playing to their utmost potential, even the role players who don’t get the spotlight. That theme has returned in this late-season peak, with Carson Pickett, Kerri Abello and Haley McCutcheon among those scoring or creating goals. Timing is everything, and the Pride might feel that it is on their side.

Why they won’t win: They’re trapped on the wrong side of the bracket. Orlando’s path to a repeat NWSL Championship starts with a scheduling oddity and a trap game: a rematch of Sunday’s regular-season finale with Seattle. That 1-1 draw was a toss-up much like Friday’s quarterfinal will be, and whoever wins on Friday will likely have to go to Kansas City for a semifinal.

The odds are not with either team there, and while Orlando has been more productive than Seattle, the Pride still sit middle of the pack in the NWSL this year in chance creation and expected goals.


Chelsea logoNo. 3 seed Portland Thorns FC

Next game: vs. San Diego Wave, Nov. 9, 3 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

Olivia Moultrie: I can’t wait to continue my journey with the Portland Thorns

USWNT’s Olivia Moultrie believes signing a contract extension with the Portland Thorns is the right decision at this stage in her career.

Why they will win: They own the midfield. Well, they will win if they can own the midfield. Sam CoffeyOlivia Moultrie and Jessie Fleming are perfectly capable of that. All three have been influential in Portland’s steady late-season form, and Coffey is one of the best midfielders in the league. They have their work cut out for them against fellow Midfielder of the Year candidate Kenza Dali and the dynamic Gia Corley.

This quarterfinal will be won and lost in midfield and the Thorns should have a raucous Providence Park crowd behind them.

Why they won’t win: A disconnect reemerges. The early-season Thorns suffered from the same issues as the 2024 Thorns: inconsistency and incongruity. They’ve largely shaken that off over the past month or two to hit their stride, but the issue of players being out of sync has popped up sporadically over these past two seasons. Largely, individuals have carried them through those stretches, whether Sophia Wilson last season or Coffey or Moultrie this year.

San Diego is well organized — not to mention a stacked Spirit team potentially awaiting in a semifinal — and could force the Thorns to stray from their identity.


Chelsea logoNo. 2 seed Washington Spirit

Next game: vs. Racing Louisville, Nov. 8, 12 p.m. ET, CBS/Paramount+

Why they will win: Consistency. The Spirit have quietly marched through the season in Kansas City’s shadow, but player for player, they feel like they can stack up with the league’s best — as forward Trinity Rodman recently said. When healthy, the Spirit has the offensive firepower to match Kansas City, and the central combination of Esme Morgan and Tara McKeown has largely been up to the task.

Much like last year, when the Spirit sat in the shadow of Orlando’s dominance, Washington is the best team nobody is talking about.

Why they won’t win: Mounting injury concerns. Washington had nothing to play for on Decision Day and smartly opted to rest players, but the sight of only three healthy field players on the bench — with two goalkeepers named just to have a legal roster — underscored some of the injury concerns for Kansas City’s most legitimate challenger. All eyes are on forward Trinity Rodman and whether she returns from her sprained MCL, but how close to 100% will Croix Bethune and Leicy Santos be, just to name two other major players?

Rodman, especially, had to labor through the pain during last year’s playoffs. She and some teammates will have to do the same again this year.


Chelsea logoNo. 1 seed Kansas City Current

Next game: vs. Gotham FC, Nov. 9, 12:30 p.m. ET, ABC/ESPN

Why they will win: They are unstoppable. This is the best team in NWSL history. Kansas City set records for wins (21), points (65), goals against (13) and shutouts (16). The Current are richly deep in talent in their front six, from the steady Lo’eau LaBonta to the flashy Debinha, and they punish teams ruthlessly and quickly on the counterattack. They control games out of possession better than any team since the 2018 North Carolina Courage, and this year, they’ve had the defense (for a full season) to back up their attack.

By all logic, this team should beat any opponent and lift the trophy on Nov. 22.

Why they won’t win: If Chawinga isn’t healthy… Finding faults with Kansas City, who only lost three times all season, feels like splitting hairs. But one major question is the adductor injury to back-to-back NWSL Golden Boot winner Temwa Chawinga, who is day-to-day and missed Sunday’s game, two weeks after sustaining the injury.

The sample size is small to evaluate Kansas City’s games without Chawinga, but the Current are less productive (see: 1-0 loss to Houston last month) and less unpredictable, as Sunday showed. And what if Bia Zaneratto, who left Sunday’s game injured, is also unavailable?

For Nashville, Inter Miami, decisive playoff game adds chapter to intertwined history

Inter Miami and Nashville SC meet in the MLS playoffs

Leonardo Fernandez / Getty Images

By Tom Bogert

Nov. 7, 2025Updated 12:24 pm EST

In a weird way, Nashville SC and Inter Miami have a lot of shared history.

The clubs entered MLS in the same year, 2020. Expansion draft and other roster building mechanisms were simultaneous. The way the clubs have operated is much different. There was the glamor of Miami — long before Lionel Messi joined — and then the defensive-minded Nashville, who went about their business a bit more quietly.

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Both have had plenty of success in their first six seasons, sometimes at the expense of the other.

Nashville and Miami played their first playoff match against each other in 2020 (Nashville won). There was a U.S. Open Cup round of 16 game in 2023 (Miami won) and then, the big one, an electric Leagues Cup final that went to penalties in 2023. Miami won, with Messi delivering his first trophy to Miami merely a month after debuting.

Miami beat Nashville in the Concacaf Champions Cup the following year and now, these two teams are together again, facing a win-or-go-home playoff match on Saturday with Nashville looking to extend its season and send the league’s most expensive roster home with another playoff disaster.

“It does feel like there’s this yin and yang type of thing, we keep matching up against Miami in these big moments,” Nashville midfielder Alex Muyl told The Athletic. “It’s interesting. … The real rivalry grows in these moments in big games. There’s just history and high stakes between the teams, fate has put us in these positions to play really meaningful games against them.”

Lionel Messi scores a playoff goal vs Nashville SC

Lionel Messi and Inter Miami split the first two playoff games vs. Nashville SCSteve Roberts / Imagn Images

Miami took the playoff opener handily, but then Nashville mostly dominated Game 2 to set up a decisive finale back in South Florida.

There isn’t a whole lot of new preparation for Nashville to do, even with Luis Suárez suspended. This is the fourth match in a row these two teams will play against each other, as they happened to play on the final day of the regular season too.

“I mean, Miami is not a new team to us,” defender Jack Maher said. “I don’t know in the history of MLS there’s ever been a team where you play a team four times in a row. We know just about every single person on their team, we have all the profiles.”What You Should Read NextLionel Messi’s appearance at a forum for business and politics strangely made senseThe Inter Miami and Argentina star has a huge presence in the business world, but humbly admits he knows little about it

Added Muyl: “It’s strange, but honestly, playing Miami this many times is amazing. Playing Miami has always felt like such an anomaly and a different kind of game because of everything around the game. When it comes up on the calendar, you kind of have to adjust. But when you play them four times, it feels normal. You tune out the other parts.”

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Nashville may not be taking the bait, but the stakes for Miami as a whole are significant. And as it relates to Messi, he is staring down the potential of what would be just the second trophyless season in his career.

In 20 of his 21 previous professional seasons — and in all 20 uninterrupted by COVID-19 — Messi won at least one team trophy. In 14 of those 20 seasons, he won two or more.

“I don’t think anyone in Nashville knew that statistic,” Maher said with a laugh. “That has not been talked about.”

Nashville SC's Sam Surridge celebrates a goal

Striker Sam Surridge (9) has given Nashville SC plenty to celebrate in 2025Matthew Maxey / Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

Inside Nashville’s locker room, it’s only about them, not the opponent. They will gladly deflect questions about Miami and Messi. It’s a club that has long embraced an underdog mentality and a hardworking, gritty ethos even as it exploded with its best attacking season in its brief history this year, paced by Sam Surridge (24 goals, five assists) and Hany Mukhtar (16 goals, 12 assists).

“What we’re building here is not a one-year thing,” Maher said. “We’re looking forward and we expect to win, that’s what (head coach) B.J. (Callaghan) has brought to the team. Every time we step on the field, we expect to win.”

Nashville already won its first trophy in club history this year, lifting the U.S. Open Cup on October 1. It was a special night, but the team immediately got on a plane and started preparing for a weekend match a few days later in Montréal. There hasn’t been much time to bask in that celebration. Nashville hopes there’s one more in 2025.

“I don’t know if any of us have really allowed the Open Cup to settle in yet as a team,” Maher said. “I don’t know if words can describe how special a moment was for us, but we want to celebrate two trophies at the end of the year, not one.”

Tom Bogert

By Tom Bogert Senior Writer, US Soccer

Pochettino explains the ‘why’ behind USMNT’s many key November omissions

Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie won't be part of the USMNT's November camp

Christian Pulisic and Weston McKennie won’t be part of the USMNT’s November camp Omar Vega / Getty Images

By Paul Tenorio

Nov. 6, 2025

The experimentation was largely supposed to be over.

With just two windows left until the U.S. men’s national team’s pre-World Cup camp, manager Mauricio Pochettino was narrowing in on the players that would be part of a home tournament. The roster changes and new names were expected to fade away.

But the uncontrollable realities of sport tend to get in the way of idealism.

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November’s U.S. roster will be without several regulars: Christian Pulisic, Tim Weah, Weston McKennie, Malik Tillman and Antonee Robinson were left off the team. So, too, was Chris Richards, whose absence comes at the culmination of a running war of words between his club coach, Oliver Glasner, and Pochettino. Several others who have been a part of the last two cycles – Yunus Musah, Matt Turner and Johnny Cardoso – were also out of Pochettino’s squad.

Those absences have undoubtedly opened the door for other players to make an impression. But it speaks to the difficulty of national team management. For as little time as Pochettino and his staff have had to build their team and their identity, they are also at the whims of the sport in the form of injury and other influences.

Pulisic was missing because he has been sidelined due to a low-grade hamstring tear suffered last month in a friendly against Australia. He is expected to play this weekend for AC Milan, but it will be his first minutes back on the field since October 14.

“It’s common sense not to call a player that maybe is coming from … a small issue,” Pochettino said. “It’s to provide him the possibility to recover 100%, be full and be ready to play after the international duty with his team. That is common sense. We never risk players.”

Tillman (hamstring), Weah (thigh), Richards (calf), Cardoso (ankle) and Robinson (knee) are also absent for this camp due to injury or the need for rest. Richards played Thursday for Crystal Palace in the Europa League, but Pochettino said the center back deserved a chance to rest and recover.

“We had a lot of discussion about that, but I think the priority always needs to be the player,” Pochettino said. “After the camp in Denver, I think we decided not to call (him). We already know his leadership on the team, but I think the most important thing now is to provide him the possibility to play, to recover in his club, and not to take risk.”

Chris Richards and Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner

U.S. center back Chris Richards and Crystal Palace manager Oliver GlasnerSebastian Frej / Getty Images

Richards was at the center of some debate after Glasner, the Crystal Palace coach, seemed to take issue with the U.S. playing Richards in both games last month despite the calf issue. It was an interesting take especially considering that the center back went the full 90 minutes for Palace in all four games leading into the international break and went the full 90 in the first game back from it.

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Pochettino pushed back on the idea that he and his staff ever jeopardize their players, both in TalkSport interview published Thursday and then again in his comments following his roster reveal.

“I am very disappointed with Oliver because we always respect and we as the coaching staff respect the player and we respect the clubs,” Pochettino said in the former. “Our medical area is in contact with all the clubs that we have players at and always we will take the best decision for the player.

“I understand that sometimes coaches can complain about the national team. We’ll see one day if he’s in my position to be a coach in the national team where he can understand this type of situation.”

To be fair to the U.S. coach, there is plenty of evidence available — including in this roster — that he has opted to leave players out if he thinks they would be better off staying at their clubs.

“Milan or Palace, they are not right to complain, because I think if a coaching staff that cares about the player, we are the first that care,” Pochettino said later. “We never made to play a player with some doubt. Never. Never. … That makes me feel very disappointed, because I am very respectful with all the coaches, with all the clubs and, of course, first and foremost the players and the fans.”What You Should Read NextGio Reyna’s USMNT return a ‘special situation’ that mixes Pochettino’s messageFor months, Mauricio Pochettino has preached how all players need to earn their USMNT places. Gio Reyna is the exception to his rule

Pochettino continued by reiterating that players know he acts in their best interest, and that because the U.S. did not have World Cup qualifying on its schedule, these friendlies have served as important markers for the team’s development ahead of next summer.

Even with just four games until the pre-World Cup camp in June, the former Tottenham, Chelsea and PSG manager has taken the long-term view with this roster.

While a number of players were left out with injury, one prominent star, McKennie, was left at his club simply to help him keep his place. The midfielder had to work his way into the good graces of manager Igor Tudor to get onto the field at the start of this season, what has become somewhat of an annual tradition at the Italian club. Tudor was fired last week, however, and former Italy coach Luciano Spalletti was hired.

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“With a new coach arriving in a new club you can see that Weston is playing all the games,” Pochettino said. “Now, I think these next few weeks, with the possibility for the new coach to work with the players there, and to compete, I think it’s important for Weston to be there and try to convince the coaches that ‘Keep playing me.’ I think it’s more important, that, than maybe to be with us, no? Because we already know what he can provide the team.”

Yunus Musah playing for Atalanta vs Milan

Playing time has been hard to come by for Yunus Musah at AtalantaMarco Luzzani / Getty Images

The message is definitely more concerning for players like Musah and Turner, both starters at the 2022 World Cup, but who find themselves lower in the pecking order under Pochettino. Columbus Crew midfielder Sean Zawadzki was taken over Musah, for example, as the 22-year-old has struggled for minutes at Atalanta.

Among the players who will get a chance to make an impression are Zawadzki, Sebastian Berhalter, Joe Scally, Gio Reyna and Ricardo Pepi, who is returning from an injury that has kept him out of the picture for the U.S. since last November.

Pepi, who scored a stoppage-time equalizer in the Champions League this week for PSV, is an example of the good that can come on the opposite end of Pochettino’s philosophy: players who are coming back from injury and earn a spot back in the national team.

The idea “is to provide a big boost on the motivation for them to keep pushing, keep improving,” Pochettino said. “They need to have the motivation that we care about them. I think that is the most important. When the players are good in here, in their mind, I think it’s important (in helping) to improve the legs and the physical condition. They need to know that they are in the race for the competition and for the place to be in the roster in the World Cup.

“That, for us, is the most important thing. They can play more or less, but the importance here is they need to give their best to try to arrive in the best shape to be like animals and feel really strong to arrive in a competition that is going to be the most important competition for us in the history of the national team.

“That is the idea that we want to translate to them.”

Paul Tenorio

By Paul Tenorio

USMNT’s Matt Turner training with former side Crystal Palace ahead of November friendlies

Matt Turner playing for New England Revolution stood with his hands on hips in October.

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

By Matt Woosnam

Nov. 5, 2025

U.S. men’s national team goalkeeper Matt Turner is training with former club Crystal Palace.

The 31-year-old, who is on loan with MLS’s New England Revolution from Lyon through June 2026, is spending time back in London in order to maintain fitness before the November international break next week. The USMNT host friendlies with Paraguay on Saturday, Nov. 15, and Uruguay on Tuesday, Nov. 18.

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Turner, who has 52 caps for his country, spent last season on loan at Palace from fellow Premier League side Nottingham Forest, but they opted not to extend his stay, before Lyon paid €8million (£6.74m) to bring him to France. He then moved straight back to MLS prior to the summer transfer deadline in a loan move, with an option to buy.

Turner has been welcomed back to train with Palace after the end of New England’s season, with manager Oliver Glasner saying the goalkeeper had informed him of different rules regarding fixture scheduling and player rest in the U.S. compared to England, given Palace’s issues with congestion.

“He told me there is a law that every player has to have six weeks off. You’re not allowed to train,” Glasner said in his press conference before Palace’s UEFA Conference League game with AZ Alkmaar.

“If you make the finals you struggle with pre-season because players are not allowed to train within six weeks.

“The players are not allowed to play (again) within 72 hours. They will find a solution, but as long as they don’t have to, (they won’t). Humans try to find the easiest way, that’s how it looks to me here, it’s not finding the best way, but the easiest way.”What You Should Read NextArsenal-Crystal Palace Carabao Cup quarter-final set for December 23The scheduling of the game means both sides will have only one day’s rest following Premier League action on December 21.

Glasner took aim at what he said was about “maximising money” over player welfare regarding scheduling, as Palace face five games in 12 days over December due to their Carabao Cup quarter-final match with Arsenal being scheduled for December 23.

“I would prefer they sit together, talk about it and find the best solution for football, for the players,” he said. “(But) I won’t see this in my managerial career. We have the Club World Cup, the World Cup should be 64 teams, there’s always more and more maximising money.

“Always about maximising it’s not about the welfare of the players or finding what’s best. Everyone is looking at themselves to maximise the money. Now we can say it’s the UEFA schedule. It was clear this week before Christmas that the Conference League is played and it was 99 per cent the English team would play there.

“Why fix the Carabao Cup quarter-final to play then? I just don’t understand it. I think there is a hierarchy in football — UEFA games, Premier League games, then is it FA or EFL or they’re on the same level. Then if it’s a UEFA game you can’t say ‘we’ll play the quarter final (then)’.”

By Matt Woosnam

Crystal Palace Correspondent

Arise, Sir David: But what does Beckham’s knighthood entail, and what does it mean?

David Beckham and Victoria Beckham pose together at Windsor Castle after his investiture

David Beckham and his wife Victoria at Windsor Castle after his investiture Andrew Matthews/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

By Daniel Taylor

Nov. 4, 2025

This is an updated version of an article first published in June 2025.


So, arise, Sir David Beckham, and welcome to the small and exclusive band of people from the football industry to receive one of the highest honours in the United Kingdom — a knighthood from the royal family.

The news had originally been announced in June in The Gazette, the official organ of public record, as part of King Charles III’s official birthday honours — one of the two occasions each year when the ruling monarch honours a selection of people for their “significant contributions” to the country.

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Beckham, the former England captain and now joint owner of MLS team Inter Miami, took part in an investiture ceremony at Windsor Castle earlier today to make everything official. He was accompanied by his wife, the pop star turned fashion designer, who became Lady Victoria, and his parents Sandra and David.

The wait is finally over for the man she famously christened Goldenballs in his playing days, and whose desire to become a Sir has been depicted at times as almost obsessional.

“I couldn’t be prouder. People know how patriotic I am — I love my country and I’ve always said how important the monarchy is to my family,” said Beckham, who also revealed that King Charles had been impressed with his suit, which had been designed by his wife.

Not everyone will wish to join in the celebrations, bearing in mind the honours system — described by The Gazette as “classes of appointment” to the Order of the British Empire — is regarded by many of its anti-Establishment critics as outdated and elitist and, as such, brings some strong opinions.

“Truly deserved,” writer, author and broadcaster Brian Reade responded on X after the story of Beckham’s knighthood was leaked to the UK’s Sun newspaper in the summer. “Never before has a man scraped and crawled so hard to get three pointless letters stuck in front of his brand name.”

Others, however, will find it hard to begrudge Beckham after a career that took in Manchester United, Real Madrid, LA Galaxy, AC Milan and Paris Saint-Germain (plus a loan spell at Preston North End as a youngster), as well as 115 appearances for England’s national team and some prodigious work for charity, principally Unicef.

Beckham in his pomp as England’s captainStu Forster/ALLSPORT

Now 50, Beckham is the 14th name on a list of football knighthoods (excluding administrators) featuring four former England managers — Walter Winterbottom, Alf Ramsey, Bobby Robson and, most recently, Gareth Southgate — as well as celebrated figures such as Tom Finney, Stanley Matthews and Geoff Hurst.

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Charles Clegg, a former England international who became chairman/president of the English Football Association, was the first person from the sport to be knighted, in 1927. It was Kenny Dalglish’s turn in 2018 and, before that, Trevor Brooking in 2004. And the other names on the list mean that Manchester United can now claim to have contributed four knights of the realm — more than any other club.

One was Matt Busby, the manager who led United from the horrors of the 1958 Munich air disaster to winning the European Cup a decade later. Bobby Charlton, who was alongside him during those moments of tragedy and glory, was another. Then, of course, there is Alex Ferguson, whose knighthood was rushed through in 1999 only weeks after he steered United to an unprecedented treble of Champions League, Premier League and FA Cup.

So, how does it all work? And how does the honours committee — a body made up of politicians and senior civil servants — go about informing the relevant people they are under consideration?

With great secrecy, is the short answer.

“You get a few months’ notice,” says Brendan Foster, the former long-distance runner who was knighted in 2020. “An email comes through saying they are minded to give you a knighthood, and asking whether you would want to accept; and you have to keep it a secret, otherwise you’re in trouble.”

Foster celebrates winning a 5,000m race in August 1975Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Foster, regarded as the voice of British athletics because of his long and distinguished commentary career with the BBC after retiring from the sport, is also the founder of the Great North Run, the largest half-marathon in the world. He received his knighthood from Princess Anne, once an equestrian athlete who had competed with him in Great Britain’s squad at the 1976 Olympic Games, rather than her mother, Queen Elizabeth II.

“You think about the people who have helped you get where you are,” says Foster, recalling his knighthood ceremony. “You think about your parents, your coaches, the guys you trained with and everyone else who helped. But you also think about the country. This is a great country and anybody who accepts the honours is, by definition, saying, ‘I’m proud of the country I live in’.”

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Most of the time, the knights-elect receive their insignia at either Buckingham Palace in London or Windsor Castle, when the protocol is to kneel on your right knee while the King, or another member of the royal family, touches your right shoulder, then the left one, with a bare sword blade. For females, the equivalent is to be made a Dame.

After that, it is the individual’s choice whether they want to use their new title. Foster, for example, says he is “50-50” about using ‘Sir’, though he jokes that it comes in handy when he needs to make a restaurant booking.

Anthony Hopkins, knighted by the Queen in 1993, also found it a dilemma. “I only ever use the title in the U.S.,” the actor explained. “The Americans insist on it, and get offended if I don’t.“What You Should Read NextDavid Beckham at 50: Why ‘Goldenballs’ is closer than ever to the knighthood he cravesAs he turns 50, Beckham has long since transcended football — but there is still one award he is desperate to earn

Ferguson, statistically the most successful manager in British football history, had some misgivings of his own, despite having previously been given an OBE (Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) and CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) — two of the awards beneath a knighthood in rank — in 1985 and 1995 respectively.

He and his wife were worried about the extra commitments the new title might involve (although there are no special requirements) and how it might look, with them hailing from a working-class background in the Scottish city of Glasgow, to be known as Sir Alex and Lady Cathy.

“I put it to the family,” Ferguson revealed in a 2000 interview with the official Manchester United magazine, “and Cathy was a bit, ‘Oh, I don’t know, what would your father think?’. And my son said, ‘Mum, it’s nothing to do with Dad’s parents. They’re gone. They’d be proud of him — you can’t refuse this, it’s recognition of what he’s done’. We had a discussion and decided it was right.”

In 2020, it was revealed that the number of people refusing an honour was 68 out of 2,504 offered (2.7 per cent), whereas there were only 277 occasions from 1951 to 1999 when somebody took that stance. So the frequency with which people say ‘Thanks, but no thanks’ is going up.

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Realistically, though, Beckham’s name was never going to be added to a list that includes singer David Bowie, physicist Professor Stephen Hawking, the ex-Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone and, on five occasions for various honours including a knighthood, artist LS Lowry.

Sir David and Lady VictoriaHector Vivas/Getty Images

The only awkwardness here is that Beckham, awarded an OBE in the Queen’s birthday list in 2003, will probably never be allowed to forget the controversy in 2017 when leaked emails, from four years earlier, showed his anger about being rejected for a knighthood.

The emails had been hacked from a company associated with his then-representative, Simon Oliveira, and were published by a variety of newspapers, showing him branding the honours committee “unappreciative c**ts” and insisting he didn’t “care about being knighted”. The email exchanges also revealed the UK authorities had concerns over Beckham’s tax affairs.

And now? Nobody should be surprised he has finally got his wish, bearing in mind his career achievements and several other factors that may or may not have counted in his favour.

He is, after all, on friendly terms with Prince William, Charles’ eldest son, and has banqueted at Buckingham Palace as a guest of the King (they are said to have bonded over a shared love of making honey). Plus, who could forget Beckham standing for 12 hours in the queue of people to see the late Queen lying in state in central London’s Westminster Hall following her death in 2022?

Beckham leaves Westminster Hall after paying his respects to the coffin of Queen Elizabeth IILouisa Gouliamaki/AFP via Getty Images

All that is left, perhaps, is to see whether the six-time Premier League champion chooses to call himself Sir David. Asked if he would use the title at home, he told Sky News: “I’m not insisting, but if they (his family) would like to call me Sir Dad or Sir Son, they can. But no, it’s going to take some getting used to people saying it.”

There is a possible lesson to be draw

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