3/8/26 USWNT wins She Believes Cup, Champs League knockout stage starts Tu/Wed, MLS Concacaf Champs Cup Tue-Thur, NWSL Starts Fri

Champions League Sweet 16 Tues/Wed on Para+ & CBSSN

Champions League Sweet 16 action is here wit h some powerhouse games on hand in defending Champs PSG facing World Club Champ Chelsea Wed, while powerhouses Real Madrid & Man City will once again face off in the round of 16 starting Wed in Madrid with Madrid probably missing Mbappe. A couple of American’s are still alive as Atletico’s Johnny Cardosa will host Tottenham on Tues 4 pm on Para+, while Yanus Musah & the only Italian side left Atalanta will host Bayern Munich at 4 pm on CBSSN & Para same time. Wed gives us Bayer Leverkusen and American Midfielder Malik Tillman hosting Arsenal at 1:45 pm on Para+.

Last 16 fixtures in full.

PSG vs Chelsea
Galatasaray vs Liverpool
Real Madrid vs Man City
Atalanta vs Bayern Munich
Newcastle vs Barcelona
Atletico vs Tottenham
Bodo/Glimt vs Sporting
Leverkusen vs Arsenal

US Ladies win She Believes Cup with 1-0 win over Colombia

Alyssa Thompson scored a late game-winning (Goal) and the U.S. women’s national team beat Colombia 1-0 to win its eighth SheBelieves Cup title over the weekend. (Game Highlights Video) The USWNT faced Argentina Canada  and Colombia over the course of seven days and shut out all three opponents on their way to hoisting that trophy. The U.S. was extra motivated entering this tournament after losing to Japan last year. Alyssa Thompson was named Tourney MVP .

MLS -Miami @ Orlando visit saw Messi Score & Concacaf Champs Cup Tu-Thur

What a special time my wife and I had seeing Messi up close and personal as we got to see Inter Miami from the Field box in Orlando thanks to RCI (no we aren’t buying more timeshare points -but they tried). Miami vs Orlando Highlights CONCACAF Champions Cup Sweet 16 action is happening this week on Fox Sports & Fox Sports 2 for those that don’t have regular Apple TV. Games Tues 7 pm Philly vs Club America, 11 pm LAFC vs LDA, Wed Nashville vs Miami (Messi) 7:30 pm, Thurs Cincy vs Tigres 8 pm, Vancouver vs Seattle 10 pm.


NWSL Kicks Off Season Friday 8 pm Prime, Sat 12:30 ABC, Sun

The 2026 NWSL regular season begins Friday, March 13, with all 16 clubs in action across opening weekend. Friday night coverage on Prime Video opens with the 2025 NWSL Championship runner up Washington Spirit hosting Portland Thorns FC at Audi Field. Saturday action includes a nationally televised matchup on ABC featuring NWSL debutante Boston Legacy FC and defending NWSL Champion Gotham FC. Saturday coverage continues with an ION tripleheader showcasing the launch of Denver Summit FC’s (Heap) inaugural campaign Sat 6:30 pm vs Bay, offseason acquisitions and emerging young talent across the league. Opening weekend concludes Sunday with a Victory+ doubleheader featuring matches between Orlando Pride and Seattle Reign FC, and Angel City FC and Chicago Stars FC. I just love the TV deals the NWSL has put together – with national TV coverage each weekend on ABC/ESPN, & CBS along with ION TV on Sat late afternoon and evening games (youtube & cable have ION), Prime Video on Friday nights and now I guess Victory+ has replaced Paramount plus :(. IF MLS had brains they would do a deal like this and perhaps include APPLE somehow – but my kids teams don’t watch MLS even with Messi (Dang shame). Anyway enjoy opening weekend. I will break out my predictions after the first weekend of play.

Sophia Smith (Wilson now) back from Maternity leave leads Portland into Washington to take on Trinity
Rodman on PRIME VIDEO Friday Night.


TV Schedule – Games on TV


Mon, Feb 23
3 pm ESPN + Br4entford vs West ham United
Tues, March 10
1:45 pm PAra+, Uni Galatasaray vs Liverpool
4 pm PAra, CBSSN Atalanta (Musah) vs Bayern Munich
4 pm Para+ Atletico Madrid (Johnny) vs Tottenham
4 pm Para+ Newcastle United vs Barcelona
7 pm FS1 Philly vs Club America CCC
9 pm FS2 Monterey vs Cruz azul CCC
11 pm FS2 LAFC vs Ala CCC
Wed, 3/11
1:45 pm Para+ Bayer Leverkusen (Tillman) vs Arsenal
4 pm CBSSN Para+ Bodo Glint vs Sporting CP
4 pm Para+ Real Madrid vs Man City
4 pm Para+_ PSG vs Chelsea

7:30 pm FS2 Nashville vs Inter Miami Cup
9:30 pm FS2 LA Galaxy vs Mount Pleasant
11:30 pm FS2 San Deigo vs Toluca Cup
Thurs, March 12
1:45 pm Para+ Bologna vs Roma
1:45 pm Para+ Lille vs Aston Villa
4 pm Para+ Crystal Palace (Richards) vs AEK Lanarca
8 pm FS2 Cincy vs Tigres UNAL CUP
10 pm FS2 Vancouver vs Seattle Sounders CCup
Fri, March 13
3:30 pm ESPN+ Gladbach (Reyna, Scally) vs St Pauli
8 pm Prime Portland (Sophia) @ Washington (Rodman) NWSL
Sat, Mar 14
10 am Para+ Inter Milan v sAtalanta
10:30 am ESPN+ Bayren Munich vs Bayer LEverkusen (Tilman)
11 am NBCSN Burnley vs Bournmount
11 am USA Sunderland vs Brighton
12:30 pm ABC/ESPN Boston Legacy vs Gotham FC NWSL
1:30 pm USA Arsenal vs Everton
1:30 pm Peackock Chelsea vs Newcastle United
1:30 pm Apple free Toronto vs NY Red Bulls
3:45 pm Para+ Juventus (McKinney) vs Udinese
4 pm USA West Ham vs Man City
4 pm ION KC Current vs Utah Royals NWSL
6:30 pm ION TV Bay vs Denver Summit NWSL
6:15 pm FS1 Columbus Crew vs Nashville SC
7:30 pm Apple Charlotte vs Inter Miami
8:45 pm ION TV San Diego Wave vs Houston Dash NWSL
9:30 pm Apple Houston vs Portland Timbers
10:30 pm Apple LAFC vs St Louis
Sun, March 15
10 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Ricahrds) vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
10 am NBCSN Nottingham Palace vs Fulham (Jedi)
10 am USA?? Man United vs Aston Villa
11:15 am ESPND Barcelona vs Sevilla
12:30 pm USA Liverpool vs Tottenham
4 pm victory+ Orlando Pride vs Seattle Reign NWSL
4:30 Apple TV Vancouver vs Minn United
7 pm Apple TV Seattle vs San Jose
7 pm victory+ Angel City vs Chicago Stars NWSL

Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
NWSL Schedule

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USMNT midweek viewing guide: The round of sixteen

Follow along with all the USMNT action this week. https://www.starsandstripesfc.com/usmnt-americans-abroad/42796/usmnt-midweek-viewing-guide-template

Tuesday

  • Atalanta vs Bayern Munich, 4p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, Fubo, ViX: Yunus Musah and Atalanta host Bayern in the first leg of the Champions League round of 16.
  • Atlético Madrid vs Tottenham, 4p on Paramount+, DAZN: Johnny Cardoso and Atléti host Spurs in the first leg of the Champions League round of 16.

Also in action:

  • Millwall vs Derby, 3:45p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Golazo: Patrick Agyemang and Derby County visit Millwall in the EFL Championship.
  • Philadelphia Union vs Club América, 7p on FS1, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Alex Zendejas and América visit Quinn Sullivan, Frankie Westfield, Cavan Sullivan, and the Union in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.
  • Sarmiento vs Racing Club, 9p on TyC Sports, Fubo: Matko Miljevic and Racing visit Sarmiento in Argentina’s Liga Profesional.
  • LAFC vs Alajuelense, 11p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Timothy Tillman and LAFC host Alajuelense in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.

Wednesday

  • Leverkusen vs Arsenal, 1:45p on Paramount+, TUDN, UniMás, Univision NOW, ViX: Malik Tillman, Monty Culbreath, and Bayer Leverkusen host the Gunners in the first leg of the Champions League round of 16.

Also in action:

  • Middlesbrough vs Charlton, 3:45p on Paramount+: Aidan Morris and Boro host Charlie Kelman and Charlton Athletic in the EFL Championship.
  • West Brom vs Southampton, 3:45p: Daryl Dike, George Campbell, and West Brom host Southampton in the EFL Championship.
  • Coventry vs Preston, 4p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Golazo: Haji Wright and Coventry City host Preston North End in the EFL Championship.
  • Nashville SC vs Inter Miami, 7:30p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Matthew Corcoran, Thomas Williams, Reed Baker-Whiting, and Nashville host Noah Allen, Ian Fray, and Inter Miami in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.
  • LA Galaxy vs Mount Pleasant, 9:30p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Edwin Cerrillo, Elijah Wynder, and the Galaxy host Mount Pleasant in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.
  • San Diego FC vs Toluca, 11:30p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Luca Bombino, Pedro Soma, Duran Ferree, and San Diego FC host Toluca in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.

Thursday

  • Celta Vigo vs Lyon, 4p on Paramount+, DAZN: Tanner Tessmann and OL visit Luca de la Torre’s old club Celta in the first leg of the Europa League round of 16.
  • Crystal Palace vs AEK Larnaca, 4p on Paramount+, ViX: Chris Richards and Palace host Larnaca in the first leg of the Conference League round of 16.

Also in action:

  • Panathinaikos vs Real Betis, 1:45p on Paramount+, DAZN: Erik Palmer-Brown and Panathinaikos host Johnny Cardoso’s old club Betis in the first leg of the Europa League round of 16.
  • Sigma Olomouc vs Mainz, 4p on Paramount+, ViX: Lennard Maloney and Mainz visit Sigma Olomouc in the first leg of the Conference League round of 16.
  • FC Cincinnati vs Tigres UANL, 8p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Miles Robinson, Roman Celentano, Matt Miazga, and FC Cincinnati host Tigres in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.
  • Vancouver Whitecaps vs Seattle Sounders, 10p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Jordan Morris, Cristian Roldan, Jesús Ferreira, Jackson Ragen, and the Sounders visit Sebastian Berhalter, Brian White, and the Whitecaps in the first leg of the Concacaf Champions Cup round of 16.

Friday

  • Mönchengladbach vs St. Pauli, 3:30p on ESPN Select, Fubo (free trial): Gio Reyna, Joe Scally, and Gladbach visit James Sands and St. Pauli in the Bundesliga.
  • Torino vs Parma, 3:45p on Paramount+, DAZN: Benja Cremaschi played the full 90 in Parma’s last outing. This time they’re on the road against Torino in Serie A.
  • Marseille vs Auxerre, 3:45p on beIN Sports, Fubo: Tim Weah and OM host Auxerre in Ligue 1.
  • Alavés vs Villarreal, 4p on ESPN Select, ESPN Deportes, Fubo: Alex Freeman has been an unused sub in four straight for Villarreal. They visit Deportivo Alavés in La Liga.

Also in action:

  • Magdeburg vs Darmstadt, 1:30p on ESPN Select, Fubo: 20-year-old American defender Grayson Dettoni has yet to make his 2.Bundesliga debut for Darmstadt on loan from Bayern Munich. He’s been an unused sub in four straight Darmstadt games.
  • Dortmund II vs Düsseldorf II, 2:30p: 16-year-old winger Mathis Albert made his debut with Dortmund’s reserves in December, and has played in 5 of their 6 games including that debut, with one assist so far in Germany’s fourth tier Regionalliga West.

That’s it! Did I miss anything that matters? Let me know in the comments below. Let’s see who stands out this week!

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE GAMES TO WATCH

UCL – Galatasaray 🇹🇷 vs. Liverpool 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (Tuesday, 1:45 p.m. ET, Paramount+)
Galatasaray welcome Liverpool to hell tomorrow, although they may be acclimatized after playing Wolves away twice in four days. Arne Slot’s Premier League title defense has been weaker than airport wifi, but Liverpool have always had an intrinsic bond with the Champions League, winning it six times in their history; number seven would secure both Slot’s job and his legendary status. Victor Osimhen scored the winner when the Istanbul side beat Liverpool earlier in the tournament, and he’s warned the English champs his team “will fight” to defeat them again.
UCL – Atlético Madrid 🇪🇸 vs. Tottenham 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (Tuesday, 4 p.m. ET, Paramount+)
Tottenham’s European and domestic duel personality is equally intriguing and frustrating, the seeds of which were sown during last season’s Europa League win and poor domestic showing. It seems hallucinogenic that Spurs have kept five clean sheets in their last six UCL matches, but Atléti’s Metropolitano is a vociferous inferno that Conor Gallagher probably wishes he’d never left.
UCL – Newcastle 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 vs. Barcelona 🇪🇸 (Tuesday, 4 p.m. ET, Paramount+)
When five-time UCL winners Barcelona visited St. James’ Park in September, Marcus Rashford’s brace painted the Toon Blaugrana, and it’d be unsurprising if the Mancunian winger bullied them again tomorrow as he so often has. After emerging victorious from two quick-fire rounds with the red and blue of Manchester over the past week, the Magpies will feel quietly confident, especially as they possess the tournament’s second top goalscorer in Antony Gordon.

US Ladies

 4 Takeaways From the USA’s SheBelieves Cup Title Run
Alyssa Thompson’s Late Goal Lifts USWNT Past Colombia for SheBelieves Cup Title
U.S. Women’s National Team Defeat Colombia 1-0 On Late Goal From Alyssa Thompso
Gisele Thompson earns more responsibility under Emma Hayes in SheBelieves Cup
Alex Morgan Q&A: Why The USA Great Is Excited For The World Cups in 2026 and 2027
‘The team’s growing up’: Hayes underscores composure in USWNT’s 1-0 win over Canada
US wins SheBelieves Cup as core squad becomes clear 
Canada Outlasts Argentina In Penalty Kicks, 3-2, After 0-0 Draw In Regulation Time At 2026 SheBelieves Cup,

NWSL

NWSL Stars Feature in 2026 SheBelieves Cup, USWNT Takes Title
NWSL WEst Preview

NWSL Offseason Moves
https://www.nwslsoccer.com/schedule/regular-season

Wilson off maternity leave ahead of Thorns return
Leroux teases Angel City return after season off
Sources: Thorns hire ex-Spurs coach Vilahamn
Crew owner exploring Columbus NWSL expansion
https://www.nwslsoccer.com/how-to-watch

https://www.nwslsoccer.com/how-to-watch

US Men

Bournemouth manager: ‘Every team needs a Tyler Adams’
Six Things to Look Forward to Ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup

Champions League

The best teams in European soccer right now: Can anybody touch Barcelona, Bayern?
Howe urges Newcastle to create history vs. Barça
Real Madrid vs Manchester City in UEFA Champions League:
Simeone: Atléti not favourites for Spurs CL clash
Premier League giants can’t afford to miss Champions League riches for even a season
 Mbappé a doubt for Man City UCL clash, admits Arbeloa

World Cup

World Cup countdown hub: 100 days of facts, stats and stories
94 days to the World Cup: The biggest crowds in tournament history
95 days to the World Cup: Cristiano Ronaldo wants 1 last shot
Is Brazil in crisis mode heading into the 2026 World Cup?

MLS

Messi scores his 899th career goal: The legend is close to a new achievement
MLS Power Rankings: Vancouver the early-season team to beat
MLS duo banned for life for betting on own games
Messi paid $70M-$80M per year, Miami owner says
Messi, Miami honored by Trump at White House


GK

MLS: Best Saves of the Week
Lloris has 4th clean sheet in LAFC’s perfect start
Liverpool’s Alisson injured for Galatasaray CL tie

Reffing

How to Become a Travel Ref 

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Australia grants Iranian WNT players asylum

 Islamic Republic of Iran players take part in anthems during the AFC Women's Asian Cup Australia 2026 match between Korea Republic v Islamic Republic of Iran
Five Iranian players have been granted humanitarian visas following their Asian Cup exit. (Albert Perez/Getty Images)
The Iranian women’s team made headlines this week, after Australia granted asylum to five national team members following their 2026 AFC Asian Cup exit.
The team declined to sing the Iranian national anthem before its opening match, prompting widespread fears for the athletes’ safety after Iran’s state-run media labeled them “traitors.”“We’re willing to provide assistance to other women in the team, noting that this is a very delicate situation, and it is up to them, but we say to them, if you want our help, help is here, and we will provide that,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters.
Big picture: Iran exited the Asian Cup after three group-stage losses, as the US and Israel’s growing conflict coincided with the team’s trip overseas.
“I don’t want to begin to imagine how difficult that decision is for each of the individual women, but certainly last night it was joy, it was relief,” said Australian Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, going on to post photos with the players to social media. “People were very excited about embarking on a life in Australia.” (Read full report)

The truth about World Cup ticket demand and why USA’s opener has struggled to sell out

SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles will be a 2026 World Cup host

SoFi Stadium will host two of the USA’s World Cup group games, including the opener Frederic J. Brown / AFP / Getty Images

By Henry Bushnell March 2, 2026Updated March 9, 2026 9:08 am EDT The Athletic has live coverage of the latest news for the 2026 World Cup

Six days after FIFA president Gianni Infantino claimed that “every” 2026 World Cup match is “already sold out,” FIFA, out of nowhere, launched an effort to sell World Cup tickets.bIt emailed fans advertising an “exclusive additional chance to purchase,” and warned that “availability is extremely limited.” Then, from Wednesday onward, it offered tickets to at least 64 of the World Cup’s 104 games, according to fans who sent information and screenshots to The Athletic.The unexpected sale was, some experts suspect, the clearest evidence yet that FIFA has perhaps overstated demand for some World Cup games — or, rather, that it has priced out segments of that demand.“When they say there’s incredibly high demand for this [World Cup], of course that’s true,” Jim McCarthy, a ticketing industry veteran, told The Athletic. “But that doesn’t mean there aren’t a whole bunch of games that are going to need some [marketing] support, and probably are still overpriced.”It is not entirely clear why FIFA created this surprise sales window. One source suggested that the inventory could include tickets that had been offered to (and declined by) broadcasters and sponsors. Others assume it was tickets that FIFA wasn’t able to sell in its main lottery phase, the “Random Selection Draw,” which wrapped up last month. Either way, the 64-plus matches were ones that FIFA hadn’t fully sold, despite Infantino’s claim, and despite a purported 508 million ticket requests. And they speak to the likely truth behind that big nine-digit number, which “doesn’t tell the whole story,” McCarthy said.

The whole story is that there has, almost certainly, been unprecedented demand for certain World Cup games — the ones that weren’t available in last week’s sales window. When fans logged on Wednesday and Thursday, they saw neither the final nor either semifinal. No games involving Argentina, England or Mexico were listed. For Brazil, Colombia, Canada, the U.S., Scotland, Morocco and France, at least two of three group games were unavailable. This, surely, was not coincidental — these, plus the quarterfinals and round of 16, are the games that account for huge chunks of lottery entries and interest, even at FIFA’s prices.

Then there are the rest: games involving teams like New Zealand or Austria or Saudi Arabia.There was clear rhyme and reason to the availability. This was not just a random selection of tickets made available by credit card failures in the Random Selection Draw. Perhaps there were some of those, but this looked a lot more like leftovers. It was, primarily, Category 1 and 2 tickets — the most expensive categories — to matches involving non-top seeds. Some sold quickly, others didn’t.It was, therefore, probably a window into the contours of World Cup ticket demand — a window into which games were fully oversubscribed in the lottery and which weren’t, and which could still be available during a “last-minute” sales phase in April.And the single biggest takeaway was that the U.S. vs. Paraguay, the American opener at SoFi Stadium near Los Angeles, was beyond available.

The USMNT will open the World Cup against Paraguay in a rematch of a November 2025 friendlyVincent Carchietta / Getty Images

It was available when the Los Angeles window opened at 3 p.m. ET on Wednesday, and still available hours later, and still available throughout Thursday, into Friday morning. On the main page of FIFA’s portal, it didn’t even get a “limited availability” tag — as other matches did, either immediately or as fans scooped up the inventory. Why? Well, likely because FIFA priced Category 1 tickets to that game at $2,735 and Category 2 tickets at $1,940. At the start of sales back in October, it was the third-most expensive game of the entire tournament, sandwiched between the two semifinals. As a result, many U.S. men’s national team supporters — or at least those who’ve spoken to The Athletic — focused their efforts and their funds on getting to Seattle for the second group match, or to Los Angeles for the group finale, each of which costs less than a third of the opener’s prices.And over the five months since, the opener was one of relatively few games for which FIFA didn’t raise prices — likely an implicit acknowledgement that tickets to that game haven’t sold as well as expected.Category 3 tickets to that game, priced at $1,120, have seemingly sold, but fans have evidently balked at the higher numbers.Similar trends seem to exist for less-glamorous games at lower price points. In every sales phase, at every game, Category 3 (and virtually non-existent Category 4) seats have disappeared quickly. But hours after last week’s access began, Uruguay vs. Cape Verde, Jordan vs. Algeria, Croatia vs. Ghana and even Tunisia vs. Netherlands still had plenty of Category 1 and 2 tickets available.More on the 2026 World CupHow the 2026 World Cup got caught up in a U.S. government funding fightPublic rhetoric over a government shutdown has put the World Cup in focus, with security funding U.S. host cities need being held up

In some cases, availability did indeed seem “extremely limited.” France’s match in Philadelphia, and Scotland-Haiti in Boston, for example, sold before some fans could get through digital queues. Several knockout games were initially offered but, in most cases, quickly gone. Ditto for the third-place match in Miami.But for others, inventory was either plentiful or unappealing. (A full list of matches made available, most of which The Athletic has independently confirmed, was compiled by fans on Reddit.)

And to people who’ve followed the World Cup ticketing process, the overarching conclusion was reasonably clear. “They have a lot of inventory they need to move,” Barry Kahn, a former ticketing executive who helped pioneer dynamic pricing in sports, told The Athletic. “There’s absolutely demand,” Scott Friedman, host of the “Ticket Talk” show, told The Athletic. “People obviously want to go. But [some games are] drastically mispriced.” Hardly anyone doubts that a majority of 2026 World Cup games will ultimately sell out. That they seemingly haven’t yet, with the tournament still three-plus months away, is not (necessarily) cause for alarm. The question is how FIFA will get them over the line — will it lower prices? — and how far it still has to go. It’s difficult to know how many tickets were made available last week and how many fans were given access. It’s unclear what will be available in April. FIFA spokespeople, as has been the case throughout a remarkably opaque process, won’t say. Or, perhaps there will be another sale between now and April. Who knows? FIFA, in early February, told ticket applicants in emails that “the next opportunity to secure tickets … will be during the Last-Minute Sales Phase,” which its website said would begin “in early April.” Then, without warning, some of those same fans got emails last week about the previously unadvertised sale. FIFA, when asked why, said it offered the opportunity to lottery applicants who hadn’t been chosen “in order to maximise fairness and acknowledge fans who have already demonstrated strong interest in the tournament.” McCarthy offered a different line of analysis: “Creating a new window is a sign that they would like to get some completed orders into the system.” Kahn was more blunt: “When you have an organization that’s announced a plan, like FIFA did, and when you deviate from the plan, clearly something is wrong.”

Predicting the 2026 UEFA Champions League winner based on past winners

  • Ryan O’HanlonMar 10, 2026, 07:12 AM ET ESPNFC

These are the teams that have won the past 10 UEFA Champions League titles: Real MadridLiverpoolBayern MunichChelseaManchester City and Paris Saint-Germain.

Those teams also comprise six of the eight sides on what UEFA is calling the “Silver Path,” or the top half, of the 2026 Champions League bracket. These teams have combined to win 31 Champions League titles, and they’ve finished second another 15 times. At most, only one of them will reach the final this season.

As for the other side, which we’re officially calling the “Blue Path,” I guess? Their last title came in 2015, and the eight teams on that side have combined for five European Cups and nine more second-place finishes. Apart from Barcelona, no one else on that side of the bracket has a single Champions League trophy.

We got a first-time winner last year, and the way the bracket fell this year has seriously opened up the possibility for it to happen again. Though their odds are still way lower than 50%, Arsenal are sizable betting favorites to win the whole thing.

But will they? Like we do every year, we’re going to look back at all of the past champions for whom we have advanced data, and figure out which of the 16 remaining teams looks the most like a winner.

All data, unless otherwise noted, comes from Opta and Stats Perform.


– Ranked: 10 worst Premier League teams, relative to spending
– The Premier League is boring now — here’s how to fix it
– Summer transfer needs for all 20 Premier League teams


Predictive measurement No. 1: Scoring goals

Rather than leaning only on goals, we’re going to adopt a hybrid of goalscoring and chance creation that I’ve referred to in the past as “adjusted goals.” This, simply, is a blend of 70% expected goals (xG) and 30% actual goals — a better measure of performance than goals alone.

The floor here, as it is in most places, is set by the Chelsea side that won the Champions League despite finishing in sixth place in the Premier League in 2012. Over the whole season, Roberto Di Matteo’s side averaged 1.61 adjusted goals per game — a mark that’s just ever-so-slightly better than what the other Champions League-winning Chelsea side put up nine years later.

Which team doesn’t make the cut this time? We have to say goodbye to three walkers of the blue path and one from the silver, as Atlético Madrid (1.58), Atalanta (1.52), Newcastle (1.52), and Tottenham (1.13) fall below the threshold. We also must remove Sporting Lisbon, Galatasaray, and Bodo/Glimt, based upon the fact that no team outside of Europe’s Big Five top leagues has even reached the final in any of the past 15 seasons.

(If you want some more analytical-like reasons for why they don’t look like winners: Bodo had the fifth-worst xG differential in the league phase among all teams, Galatasaray scored six non-penalty goals in the league phase, and Sporting were outshot 118-87 in the league phase.)

Teams eliminated: Atletico Madrid, Atalanta, Newcastle, Tottenham, Galatasaray, Bodo/Glimt, Sporting Lisbon

Teams remaining: Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Manchester City, Liverpool, PSG, Real Madrid, Chelsea, Bayer Leverkusen


Predictive measurement No. 2: Preventing goals

Defense wins championships — or at least, it used to.

We’ve seen a handful of truly elite defensive teams win the Champions League over the past 15 seasons: Chelsea in 2021, Barcelona in 2011 and 2015, Liverpool in 2019, and Bayern Munich in 2013. They all posted adjusted goals-allowed numbers below 0.85. But most of the recent champions have hovered closer to right around 1.0.

Is it a sign of a shifting tactical balance across Europe? Or is it completely meaningless and random? We shall see.

The worst defense to win it all was the worst attack to win it all: Chelsea in 2012, with their 1.22 adjusted goals allowed per game. Of the remaining sides, the only team with a worse defense this season is, well, Chelsea, at 1.29 adjusted goals allowed per game this season. Just a handful of the 16 teams left allow more shots than Chelsea’s 11 per game, and only Barcelona — the last remaining practitioners of the sell-out-at-all-costs high press — are allowing higher quality shots.

Both Liverpool (1.22) and Barcelona (1.21) snuck in just under the threshold.

Teams eliminated: Chelsea

Teams remaining: Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Manchester City, Liverpool, PSG, Real Madrid, Bayer Leverkusen


Predictive measurement No. 3: Pressing

Some 10 years ago, manager Roger Schmidt was proving with Bayer Leverkusen how effective aggressive, vertical soccer could be. It wasn’t just that they pressed high; they did, but then they’d also try to get a shot off on goal as soon as possible. There really wasn’t any team like them, and I’m not sure there has been any team like them since, either.

The current version of Leverkusen is certainly nothing like them. As measured by passes allowed per defensive action (PPDA), they are the least aggressive pressing team left in the Champions League.

The most aggressive pressers to win the Champions League were Luis Enrique’s Barcelona in 2015, who produced a freakish 6.98 PPDA. This is the same team that rarely ever gave up any goals and had some random dudes named Lionel MessiLuis Suárez, and Neymar playing up top. They’re the best soccer team I’ve ever seen.

The least aggressive pressers to win the European Cup, unsurprisingly, were Chelsea in 2012. They produced a PPDA of 13.26, which means that we must eliminate Leverkusen and their 13.44 PPDA from contention.

Teams eliminated: Bayer Leverkusen

Teams remaining: Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Manchester City, Liverpool, PSG, Real Madrid


Predictive measurement No. 4: Frequency of crossing the ball

Unlike the other numbers we’ve gone over, this is more of a sweet-spot situation. We’re looking for teams who fall between the highest- and lowest-frequency crossers of the ball.

Why? Crossing is an inefficient method of play on average, but you still need to be able to stretch the defense horizontally and create danger from the flanks. If you never cross the ball, that’s a bad thing. And if you always cross the ball, that’s also a bad thing. A healthy approach doesn’t rely on crossing as its main attacking lever, but it also doesn’t eliminate it altogether.

A Champions League-winning approach has previously fallen somewhere between 8.4% and 19.7% of final-third passes being crosses. The former number is PSG last season and the latter is, again, Chelsea in 2012.

Among this season’s remaining participants, only Spurs fall outside the high end of the threshold, but a number of the current favorites fall below the threshold. Bayern Munich, Barcelona, and PSG — the current second-, third- and sixth-favorites to win the tournament — are crossing the ball less than last season’s winners did. Barcelona are at 8.0%, while Bayern (7.7%) and PSG (7.4%) are even lower.

The question for all three of these teams in the knockout rounds: Will they be able to create quality opportunities if they come up against a big, physical, organized defense?

Teams eliminated: Bayern Munich, Barcelona, PSG

Teams remaining: Arsenal, Manchester City, Liverpool, Real Madrid


Predictive measurement No. 5: Pace of play

It’s pretty much impossible to be in control of every game you play in the Champions League. Not only is the competition level so high and the type of competition so different from what you’re used to in your domestic league, but when you play the same team twice in a couple of weeks, tactical weaknesses are more likely to be exploited.

In other words, if you’re going to win the Champions League, you have to be able to survive — and even thrive — during long stretches when the ball is bouncing back and forth and both teams are running up and down the field.

But once the pandemic hit, the sport changed overnight and we haven’t gone back. In 2019, Liverpool’s matches averaged 99.1 possessions per team — then the highest of any winner in the dataset. That was until Bayern Munich, with 99.8 possessions, broke the record the following year. The five champions since then, though, are now the five winners who averaged the fewest possessions per game.

But the number hasn’t kept dropping after Man City set the lower bound of 78.5 possessions per team in 2023. So, for now, we’re keeping it there. And that means both Arsenal (77.2) and Real Madrid (78.2) get sent packing.

Teams eliminated: Arsenal, Real Madrid

Teams remaining: Manchester City, Liverpool


Predictive measurement No. 6: Defensive shape

There are all kinds of ways to play defense and win trophies.

You can press high and keep the ball away from your box. You can drop deep and make it impossible for your opponent to find space in the attacking third. Or you can slot somewhere in between: play a midblock that frustrates your opponent right around midfield and mucks up every possession. We’ve seen teams suppress goals at a really high level by doing all of the above.

What we haven’t seen before: a successful defense that allows its opponents to get on the ball in the center of the field.

In Europe this season, the average team allows its opponent, on average, to touch the ball 17.52 meters from the center of the field. Every single one of the past 15 Champions League winners kept their opponents even farther away from the center. When Manchester City won their only Champions League in 2023, their opponents got on the ball, on average, 17.58 meters from the center of the field — and that’s the lowest distance-from-the-center for any recent winner.

That’s bad news for Liverpool, who are allowing their opponents to touch the ball 16.76 meters from the center, which is not only closer to the center than any past winner, but it’s closer to the center than all but six other teams in Europe’s Big Five leagues this season.

And so, that leaves us with Manchester City. That feels strange, given that this is one of the three or four worst City teams that Pep Guardiola has managed. But what’s interesting about City is how, well, uninteresting they are. In the past, Guardiola’s teams would always exist on some kind of extremes — for how they controlled possession or pressed or moved the ball forward. Now, they just kind of look like all of the other good teams do, without too many distinctive stylistic features.

That doesn’t work as well when you’re trying to maximize your points haul over a 38-game domestic season, hence Man City being behind Arsenal in the Premier League title race — but maybe it’s a better fit for four rounds of knockout soccer against all of the best teams in the world.

Winner: Manchester City

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 Serie A: Thanks to Pervis Estupiñán’s first AC Milan goal and a by-any-means-necessary Max Allegri defensive masterclass, the Scudetto title race is back open for business after an Oscar-worthy night of storytelling in the Derby della Madonnina. Inter Milan’s Serie A lead is down to seven points and the Rossoneri have now done the double over their little brothers for the first time since 2011 as the battle at the top heats up again. After a 2-1 win at Cagliari, Cesc Fabregas’ Como have leapfrogged Roma to enter the top four for the first time, as the Lombardi lakes side continue to confound all expectations.

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Bundesliga: Bayern Munich’s headlock on the Bundesliga is so firm that even without the injured Harry Kane, they swatted away Borussia Mönchengladbach 4-1 with four different goal scorers. Kane’s knock to his calf should be minor enough for a return in the Champions League against Atalanta tomorrow, but in the league they remain 11 points ahead of Borussia Dortmund, who won 2-1 away at FC Köln.

The FA Cup’s Often Silly, Completely Wild Fifth-Round Weekend -courtosy of Men in Blazers THE RAVEN NL
By Tommy Stewart
Wrexham 2-4 Chelsea
When Sam Smith put Wrexham 1-0 up to send the STōK Cae Ras into the stratosphere, Chelsea knew they were in for a fist fight. With the match perfectly poised at 2-2 on the verge of extra time, George Dobson’s tired attempt at a tackle looked more like an effort to chop Alejandro Garnacho in half – a challenge that might be forgiven in the Championship, but with VAR watching like Sauron’s eye, he rightly saw red.
The Argentine recovered to put his side ahead in extra time before VAR once again poured cold water all over the cup’s magic when Lewis Brunt’s equalizing header was found to be a toenail offside. Phil Parkinson’s 10 men almost took the World Champions the whole way, but with João Pedro’s 18th goal of the season, the Welsh dragons were buried. For a proud Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, it felt like a dress rehearsal for a club who aren’t just dreaming, but demanding, Premier League football in the near future.
More: The Blues won the game, but the Red Dragons won the award for best commentary.
Newcastle 1-3 Manchester City
Harvey Barnes‘ sixth goal in nine should’ve been a platform for Newcastle to build on, but City flexed their frightening squad strength at St. James’ Park on Saturday. Despite making 10 changes to his side, Pep’s starting XI was saturated with international talent hungry to prove what their manager’s been missing out on, and Savinho took his chance with a bizarre tap-in to gut-punch the Magpies before halftime. An assertive Omar Marmoush brace in the second half was laughably good according to his manager, whose touchline histrionics earned him a two-match ban after a sixth booking of the season. While Pep’s side gun for the quadruple, Eddie Howe said Barcelona’s visit to St. James’ Park tomorrow is the biggest game in his club’s history; he knows unless they can perform miracles in Europe, Newcastle’s season is in danger of quietly petering out.
Port Vale 1-0 Sunderland
Port Vale are accustomed to underdog status, having perennially lived in the shadow of neighbors and former Premier League residents, Stoke City, but the 57 league positions dividing them and Sunderland seemed a stretch. The lowest-ranked side left in the FA Cup are bottom of League One and they battled into extra time with Bristol City only five days before this fixture to get here. Ben Waine was the difference in that match and the New Zealand international, who grew up a Newcastle fan, paid homage to his hero Alan Shearer with not only a decisive header that the Toon legend would be proud of, but the celebration to match. His goal puts Port Vale into their first FA Cup quarterfinal in 72 years as Sunderland’s comedown from their early-season high hits its lowest ebb.
Mansfield Town 1-2 Arsenal
With Mansfield’s patchwork Field Mill stadium, homemade tin foil trophies in the stands, and two schoolboys on the pitch in Arsenal’s Max Dowman and Marli Salmon, this tie ticked so many Magic of the FA Cup™️ boxes. Noni Madueke perforated the League One side’s brave defense just before halftime, but a generational upset felt feasible when 16-year-old Salmon gifted the ball to opportunistic Mansfield sub Will Evans, who scored a goal that his grandkids’ grandkids will be talking about. Dowman dominated all afternoon, but it was Eberechi Eze who laid Nigel Clough’s side to rest with a banger worthy of winning any game, meaning Arsenal’s quadruple quest marches on.
Wolves 1-3 Liverpool
For Arne Slot, the FA Cup offers his side the most tangible chance of a trophy this season, and they had one foot in the quarterfinal when Andy Robertson’s strike from distance opened the scoring. Mohamed Salah bagged his second goal of the week at Molineux soon after and Wolves were no longer at the door when Curtis Jones scared them off for a third. Hwang Hee-chan’s consolation came too late and Liverpool tasted warm revenge after their calamitous Premier League loss to the Championship-elect side only days before.
 
Elsewhere in the FA Cup: Fulham 0-1 Southampton, Leeds 3-0 Norwich City

US WOMEN WIN SHE BELIEVES CUP

The US has won its eighth SheBelieves Cup, completing a three-game tournament sweep with Saturday’s 1-0 win over Colombia.
In yet another chippy clash, forward Alyssa Thompson broke the deadlock, striking the 81st-minute game-winner from just outside the penalty area.“I think it’s been a tremendous year for Alyssa for both club and country,” US manager Emma Hayes said. “The consistency in her play is the standout for me in terms of being able to do things over 90 minutes and do it game after game, including a clutch moment like today.” (Watch full highlights)
Marching orders: The US exits March’s international window riding a seven-game clean-sheet streak, while looking to improve connectivity after scoring just four goals in three matches.
“I think we’ve shown how to win when we’re not our best,” said Hayes, crediting Saturday’s second-half subs with the victory after a lack-luster first half. “I think we’ve shown the versatility, I think we’ve shown the depth, I think we’ve shown maturity and as a coach, I’m happy.”
Up next: The competition only heats up from here, as the US prepares to host Japan for a three-friendly series starting April 11th.

Emma Hayes’ rebuild of the USWNT is taking shape – and already reaping rewards

A photo of USWNT head coach Emma Hayes

Emma Hayes could not hide her delight after the USWNT’s SheBelieves success Brad Smith / Getty Images

By Melanie Anzidei March 8, 2026 The Athletic

HARRISON, N.J.—The U.S. women’s national team was in a vastly different place this time last year.They had won gold at the summer Olympics in Paris, but were on the verge of a pair of losses, to Japan and Brazil, that would redirect the course of the next 12 months. This weekend, that year culminated with the U.S. reclaiming the 2026 SheBelieves Cup crown, and in the strongest state the team has been since Emma Hayes took charge in May 2024.“If we think about the Olympics, we’d talk about a (U.S.) team that was really resilient and difficult to beat and (we’d talk about) the Triple Espresso,” head coach Emma Hayes said on Saturday from Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, N.J., moments after her team’s thrilling win over Colombia. “Now, we talk about all the other players.”While the forward trio of Trinity Rodman, Mallory Swanson and Sophia Wilson led the team to victory at the Olympics, they have not played together since due to injuries and pregnancies. In their place, players like Alyssa Thompson, Jaedyn Shaw, Ally Sentnor, Emma Sears, and even newer additions like Jameese Joseph have found their stride as the team nears 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup qualifying later this year.

The U.S. spent the last week traveling around the country, facing a trio of opponents — Argentina in Nashville, Tenn., Canada in Columbus, Ohio, and Colombia in Harrison, N.J. — for the SheBelieves Cup, an annual invitational tournament. Each team presented its set of challenges. Argentina tested the U.S. mentality, while Canada offered an opportunity to show its controlled possession and high press.

Colombia, meanwhile, challenged the backline, forcing the Americans to repurpose their strategy halfway through the match. It ultimately took a quartet of substitutes in the 61st minute — Lindsey Heaps, Lily Yohannes, Olivia Moultrie and Shaw — to redirect the momentum. Eventually, their burst of energy in the second half led to Thompson’s winning goal in the final eight minutes of the match, reminiscent of a vintage Christen Press-style goal.

Alyssa Thompson scores the winner against Colombia.Adam Hunger / Getty Images

“They can do it because of the experiences of losing to Japan, losing to Brazil,” Hayes told reporters. “That game (against Colombia) was exactly what we needed. Something that was a little bit spicy. There’s stuff we’ve been doing in the background to make sure that discipline is an edge for us. We handled that really well.”Hayes has said this would be the first window where she would begin finalizing her core group before the World Cup 2027 qualifiers begin. An early version has emerged and will continue to narrow with every camp.While the SheBelieves Cup is a friendly tournament that doesn’t impact the FIFA rankings, it did provide a stage for some standout performances. Heaps and Shaw carried the team to victory against Argentina, and Sentnor was the lone goal scorer against Canada. On Friday, it was Thompson’s moment to show how the momentum she has built in England at Chelsea has translated to the national team.The tournament’s round-robin format also mirrored the environment of an international competition, with matches played every couple of days. This is why Hayes said she intends to outline two teams within her rosters during three-match windows like these. She emphasized developing relationships between players — like Naomi Girma and Emily Sonnett in the back, or Claire Hutton and Sam Coffey in the midfield — to be ready for all scenarios.What You Should Read NextHow defender Emily Sonnett quietly became the USWNT’s most consistent leaderThe 32-year-old defender has found staying power in her consistency and quiet leadership.

“It’s important that everybody plays their role, because it matters,” Hayes said. “Players that didn’t make the starting lineup today are always going to be disappointed, but it’s your reaction to it. It’s making sure that you make that difference … I want to be able to keep offering another version of ourselves.”

When reflecting on the USWNT during the 2024 Olympics, she was still getting to know the team. “The depth might have been there,“ Hayes said, ”but it hadn’t been developed.”

Lindsey Heaps, right, and Claire Hutton, No 15, have shone for the USWNT.Johnnie Izquierdo / Getty Images

Having multiple players capable of adapting to various roles allows Hayes the flexibility to fill a roster and make tactical changes more freely.  The U.S. midfield is so strong, for example, that Heaps, a two-time Olympic medalist and World Cup winner, may sometimes be a better option off the bench, as was the case twice this week.

This will be especially important now as the U.S. turns its focus to its next camp in April, when the team prepares for three back-to-back-to-back matches against Japan, arguably the most tactical team in the world.

Japan dethroned the U.S. in the SheBelieves Cup a year ago. In true Hayes fashion, the head coach responded by scheduling three matches against them the following year.

SheBelieves is “indicative of a new group post-Olympics,” Hayes said.  “This is a team that we are building towards World Cup qualification. What was the standout for me? Three very different opponents with very different challenges, and that sets us up nicely for playing against Japan, who I think are another level to all three teams (in SheBelieves). It sets us up perfectly to see where we stack up at the next stage.”

How defender Emily Sonnett quietly became the USWNT’s most consistent leader

By Melanie AnzideiFeb. 27, 2026Updated March 2, 2026

Emily Sonnett takes nothing for granted.Not winning a World Cup, two Olympic medals or three National Women’s Soccer League Championships. Not a single one of her 113 appearances with the U.S. women’s national team. The 32-year-old Gotham FC defender approaches every opportunity with the same level of care and gratitude.Advertisement“I would never think I’m a shoo-in,” Sonnett said during a recent interview with The Athletic. “I always have to be performing and e consistently performing.”

This, she said, may sound “so cliché,” but there is nothing cliché about Sonnett, who, despite her sometimes-quiet profile, has become one of the most respected players in the NWSL and a critical piece to U.S. head coach Emma Hayes’ national team puzzle.

Sonnett is set to feature in her 11th SheBelieves Cup in March. She has been called up to every edition of the annual tournament since it was founded in 2016, and boasts seven titles. “I love SheBelieves, apparently,” Sonnett said, with a laugh, “and it loves me.This year’s edition will serve as the first major test for Hayes and the U.S. women’s national team as they prepare for 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup qualifying. It is the most experienced U.S. roster the former Chelsea manager has put together in over a year. For Sonnett, the tournament serves as a tangible reminder of her progression.hen she was first called up for SheBelieves by then-head coach Jill Ellis, Sonnett was 22 and had just been selected as the first overall pick of the 2016 NWSL College Draft from the University of Virginia. She went on to play a full 90 minutes for the U.S. in the opening match against England, helping the team eventually win it all.

“When I think of SheBelieves, my early years were definitely the ‘learning years for Emily Sonnett,’” she said. “I might have been a part of it, but I spent a lot of those early SheBelieves (asking), ‘How am I developing?’”

Sonnett debuted in the NWSL with the Portland Thorns a few weeks later. She ended the 2016 season as one of three finalists for NWSL Rookie of the Year. A first NWSL crown followed in 2017 with the Thorns, and then a second with the Washington Spirit in 2021. Her third was won after a thrilling postseason run with Gotham FC last year.he experienced defender’s versatility makes her a triple threat, with experience as a center back, full back and defensive midfielder. For the national team, her role has evolved. She was on the fringes throughout 2017 but earned a spot on the 2019 World Cup winning team and is now a USWNT regular and leader for Hayes.

“Everyone’s journey is different,’ Sonnet said. “Being able to now get over that hump to where I’m consistently getting called in, and I’m performing at a higher level than what I was, is something that I’m really happy about (and) I take a lot of pride in.

“The earlier development phase for me was difficult. It took me a little bit longer to get there. I have so many best friends who have been integrated (with the team) for such a long time, like Rose (Lavelle), Mal (Swanson), Lindsey (Heaps). So, to be able to get over that hump and be more of an on-field presence with leadership and that veteran (group) has been a rewarding feeling.”

In her record 11th SheBelieves Cup, Emily Sonnett is a leader on the back line.Vincent Carchietta / Getty Images

The USWNT is on the cusp of meshing that veteran contingent with up-and-coming stars.

Hayes spent the last year reimagining her player pool, carving out a pipeline for Under-23s into the senior team. It felt like a radical approach because it simply had never been done. But it was a logical solution that created an environment where players were rewarded for their consistency and work ethic. Players like Sonnett, who is meticulous in analyzing her individual progress, thrived.

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Hayes has repeatedly praised Sonnett’s quiet leadership, describing her as someone who leads by example and performance on the pitch. Seattle Reign center back Jordyn Bugg, 19, has been told to spend time with Sonnett during national team camps, though she recently had to leave the SheBelieves Cup camp early due to a hamstring injury. Hayes recently said fellow defender Emily Sams, who wore the U.S. armband for the first time in January, reminded her of a young Sonnett because of her quiet leadership.

“It’s probably the first time I’ve been in that position with the national team,” Sonnet said. “I’m so appreciative that she (Hayes) sees those qualities in me and I can be an extension, in terms of leadership (on the team).

“I love learning from my teammates, but being able to learn from Emma has been incredibly useful: how she leads, how she wants the veterans to be integrated with younger players, how we want to be operating so we’re all getting the best out of each other.”

Emily Sonnett is one of the veteran players head coach Emma Hayes has relied on as she builds her 2027 World Cup team.Patricia De Melo / Getty Images

Somewhere along the way, Sonnett realized she was good at soccer. It may have been between ballet classes or after winning a foot race, but she realized soccer kept her and her twin sister, Emma, the most entertained. Eventually, she realized the sport could help fund her college education, so she kept chasing the dream.

Sonnett is a lifelong student. She loves to learn, even picking up tennis recently for a new challenge. She started working with a personal analyst outside of NWSL and national team environments “five or six years ago, to really understand what my strengths and weaknesses are” and to understand how her play translates between both settings.

“I do a lot of self-reflection,” Sonnett said. “Everything’s so data-driven now, but data gives you a story and there’s always context. Maybe I’m running way too much and there’s ways to be more efficient.”

Sonnett was not yet a starter on the national team when she began this additional introspection. “That was a big step to really understand my weaknesses and where I am against the other best center backs in the world, or in just this league, and to really hone in on how I can best prep in the off-season, and then what am I doing in-season?

“That’s helped me. If you looked at Sonnett year 1, 2, 3 and 4, and then (when I started doing it) this way, my consistency among categories has gone up.”

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Sonnett has, as Gotham teammate Jaelin Howell has shared, an “insane recovery routine” on game days. She admits, “I’m activating everything” – and it’s much more than using those resistance bands popular among athletes. She has Therabody recovery boots, which provide leg compression therapy. She uses red light therapy. A lot of “water submerging.”

“Ten years ago, I didn’t even pre-activate,” Sonnett said, with a laugh. “Jaelin got a taste of what I do to take care of my body, and it’s a lot.”

U.S. and Gotham teammates say Emily Sonnnett is a quiet leader who leads by example.Alex Broadway / Getty Images

Sonnett sees herself as a player who leads by example and a player that her teammates can lean on. She takes pride in keeping the environment competitive. She asks herself, “How am I bringing my best self to training and big games? How am I making sure, every day, the team has a little bit of grit and competitiveness?”

That tracks with what Sonnett’s teammates at Gotham say.

“She is an incredible leader. She fights for us behind the scenes and makes sure that we’re all on the same page,” 21-year-old Gotham and USWNT midfielder Jaedyn Shaw told The Athletic. “Even the way that she plays, she brings so much intensity and leadership and organization from the back line that helps all of us know exactly where we need to be. It’s been great to have her as that voice behind me on the field.”

Lilly Reale, the 2025 NWSL Rookie of the Year, started her freshman season by filling an unexpected hole in Gotham’s backline after defender and club captain Tierna Davidson suffered a season-ending knee injury in April.

The 22-year-old had the perfect partner in Sonnett, at Gotham and with the U.S. The pair, alongside club teammates Lavelle and Shaw, were called up for the SheBelieves Cup.

Sonnett is “so competitive on the field, but also just a really good friend off the field to have, and someone who really cares about the people that she surrounds herself with,” Reale said.  “She’s just been someone I’ve leaned into. A number of people have. I don’t think everyone always sees that side of her.

“She’s someone who sets the bar and raises the bar, at the same time.”

AdvertisementReale’s favorite Sonnett memory remains her full-body block in the NWSL Championship against the Spirit last year. The central defender followed the ball as it glided across Gotham’s box. When Spirit midfielder Croix Bethune backheeled a pass to striker Leicy Santos in sight of goal, Sonnett jumped up and spun around, contorting her body in just the right way to block Santos.https://www.instagram.com/reel/DRYgCYckcfj/embed/?cr=1&v=14&wp=540&rd=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com&rp=%2Fathletic%2F7067359%2F2026%2F02%2F27%2Femily-sonnett-uswnt-quiet-leadership%2F#%7B%22ci%22%3A1%2C%22os%22%3A2083.7000000476837%2C%22ls%22%3A974.3000000715256%2C%22le%22%3A1944%7D

“She’s just someone who is really fun to watch on the ball, as well,” Reale said. “She knows exactly how to manipulate players. I always just laugh because she swivels her hips a lot to get by people, and just fake them out.”

When you ask Sonnett what her goals for 2026 are, she takes a moment to reflect. “To be focused on my club environment, to perform well, to then get called up.”

She also references the advice passed down to her by the players who came before her. “Never take any camp for granted,” they all said. That includes this SheBelieves window. Some recently-retired players advised her to slow down and soak it all in.

“I’m really cherishing the friendship moments, being able to grab coffee when you’re on the road, and just making sure that those moments are still real,” she said. “I’m not there yet, at retirement, but there’s not a lot of years left. So, being able to really understand that I am playing soccer for a living, it’s amazing.”

What happens if Iran does not play at the World Cup?

Iran are drawn at the 2026 World Cup

Iran’s World Cup participation could be in doubt Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images

By Henry BushnellMarch 2, 2026Updated March 9, 2026 9:08 am EDT

The Athletic has live coverage of the latest news for the 2026 World Cup

The ongoing U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran have plunged the Middle East into uncertainty.

The bombing of several major Iranian cities, which is “intended” to last “four to five weeks” if necessary, U.S. President Donald Trump , has killed the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and also sparked retaliatory attacks.dvertisement

In that context, the consequences for this summer’s men’s World Cup in the U.S., Canada and Mexico may seem trivial. Yet the events of the past 48 hours have raised questions about whether Iran will send a team to the tournament or if the U.S. government — which has already barred Iranian nationals from traveling to the States, though with an exemption for sports teams — would restrict Iran’s participation.Mattias Grafström, general secretary of FIFA, football’s world governing body, said Saturday that, “of course, our focus is to have a safe World Cup with everybody participating.” And a FIFA source with knowledge of the matter told The Athletic Sunday that no plans have changed.But the Iranian football federation’s president, Mehdi Taj, told local state media that, “after this attack, we cannot be expected to look forward to the World Cup with hope,” according to the Associated Press and several other translations. He said the “sports chiefs” would decide on participation.The World Cup, which is owned and operated by FIFA, is set to begin June 11. Iran is scheduled to play all three of its Group G games in the U.S. — against New Zealand (June 15 at SoFi Stadium near Los Angeles), Belgium (June 21 at SoFi) and Egypt (June 26 at Lumen Field in Seattle).So what happens if Iran can’t or won’t?


Why wouldn’t Iran participate? Could the U.S. government bar the team?

There are several potential reasons:

  • Iran could essentially boycott the World Cup in response to the U.S. attacks.
  • Several entities could decide that, for different reasons, the team’s participation isn’t safe.
  • The U.S. government could also restrict their participation.

The Trump administration — both back in 2018 and over the past year — has repeatedly claimed that everyone, from teams to fans, is welcome at this World Cup. In a 2018 letter signed by Trump, a month before North America was awarded hosting rights, the president cited previous Olympics and World Cups in the U.S. and stated: “I am confident that the United States would host the 2026 FIFA World Cup in a similarly open and festive manner, and that all eligible athletes, officials and fans from all countries around the world would be able to enter the United States without discrimination.”

U.S. President Donald Trump and FIFA president Gianni Infantino are close alliesMandel Ngan / AFP via Getty Images

It’s not clear if the U.S. government has ever signed a binding guarantee, though, or if Trump would feel compelled to honor one. He has already barred travelers from Iran and three other World Cup-participating countries, with only limited exceptions for “any athlete or member of an athletic team, including coaches, persons performing a necessary support role, and immediate relatives, traveling for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event.” And in the fall, multiple Iranian delegates had visas denied ahead of December’s World Cup draw.When asked why, Andrew Giuliani, head of the White House World Cup task force, said at the time that “every visa decision is a national security decision.” If FIFA wasn’t able to intervene and overturn those decisions, it likely couldn’t prevent the Trump administration from barring individuals or even an entire team before the tournament itself.


What happens if Iran pulls out?

If Iran were unable or unwilling to participate, FIFA regulations give the global soccer governing body broad discretion to call in a replacement team or adjust the tournament accordingly.

Article 6 of FIFA’s 2026 World Cup regulations, published last year, addresses cases of non-participation — but with little specificity.

Regulation 6.5 addresses “force majeure,” an irresistible force or unforeseen event: “If a Participating Member Association withdraws or a match cannot be played or is abandoned as a result of force majeure, the authorised FIFA organising body (including the Tournament Operation Centre) shall decide on the matter at its sole discretion and take whatever action is deemed necessary.”

Regulation 6.7 then states: “If any Participating Member Association withdraws and/or is excluded from the FIFA World Cup 26, FIFA shall decide on the matter at its sole discretion and take whatever action is deemed necessary. FIFA may decide to replace the Participating Member Association in question with another association.”

FIFA, therefore, would essentially have two broad options if Iran withdrew, either by choice or force. FIFA could cancel Iran’s games and tweak rules to treat Group G as a three-team group, or it could replace Iran with another nation’s team.

Finding a replacement, however, would be complicated by timing. It seems unlikely that Iran — as a country and as a national team — will have clarity on World Cup participation any time soon. With Trump pursuing regime change and power vacuums atop the country, experts believe that the World Cup implications of Saturday’s strikes are unclear in the near future.Any withdrawal would therefore be relatively last-minute. FIFA and its chosen replacement would be scrambling to complete preparations, contracts and arrangements that typically take months to complete.


Which teams could replace Iran?

The multi-stage format of Asian World Cup qualifying makes choosing a replacement on merit tricky.

Iran qualified comfortably by winning Group A in Asia’s third qualifying round. Uzbekistan, the second-place team, also earned an automatic berth. The third- and fourth-placed teams, UAE and Qatar, went to a fourth round — where Qatar ultimately secured World Cup qualification. UAE, on the other hand, lost a playoff to Iraq who, with that win, earned a spot in another playoff — the intercontinental playoff in Mexico later this month.

Iran fans celebrated World Cup qualification last yearKarim Jaafar/AFP via Getty Images

Iraq will face either Bolivia or Suriname on March 31 near Monterrey, with a World Cup berth at stake. If Iraq wins that playoff, UAE would presumably be next in line as a potential replacement for Iran. If Iraq loses the playoff, either Iraq or UAE could be chosen.

Or, FIFA would look outside Asia. It could choose the intercontinental playoff loser (Bolivia or Suriname). Under FIFA’s own rules, it could do whatever it wants.


Is there precedent for replacement teams at World Cups?

There is no modern-era World Cup precedent. The last time countries withdrew from a World Cup after qualifying was 1950. That year, Scotland and Turkey pulled out before the draw, India and France pulled out after the draw, and the first post-World War II tournament was contested by only 13 teams — sorted into two groups of four, one group of three and one of two.

The most relevant modern precedent is the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup. Last March, less than three months before the novel tournament began, FIFA booted Mexican qualifier León, citing multi-club ownership rules. Appeals stretched into early May.

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When the Court of Arbitration for Sport rejected those appeals, on May 6, FIFA — after discussing alternatives for months — announced that Club América (as the top-ranked Mexican team) and LAFC (as the team that lost to León two years earlier in the Concacaf final that originally earned León its place) would compete in a one-game playoff on May 31 for the last spot at the tournament. LAFC won the playoff and replaced León in Group D.

FIFA, in theory, could stage a similar playoff to replace Iran if necessary. The World Cup, though, requires significantly more logistical planning than the Club World Cup. Naming a replacement team with a few weeks of lead time would come with challenges.


Could the U.S. attack imperil the country’s hosting of the World Cup?

That’s unlikely.

Of course, there is no precedent for a World Cup host bombing a participating nation less than four months before the tournament. But there do not appear to be security concerns in the mainland U.S. stemming from the conflict.

And there have been no suggestions from anyone at FIFA that the governing body would consider relocating games as a penalty for the military assault. And there is no known regulation that would force FIFA to act.

Other countries could boycott, but international reaction to the attack has been mixed — far from the type of unanimous condemnation that would lead to meaningful calls for a widespread boycott.

2/20/26 MLS Starts Sat, Champs League Drama, USWNT names Cup Roster

MLS Kicks off this Weekend

The 2026 MLS season starts Sat and runs to early November, featuring 30 teams playing 34 regular-season matches, with a significant break from May 25 to July 16 for the FIFA World Cup. The season includes Eastern and Western Conferences, culminating in the MLS Cup Playoffs in November/December.  Defending Champions are Miami and Lionel Messi who was League MVP. He will be missing many of his Barcelona buddies who all retired at the end of last season however. Read all about Miami in the Season Preview below. The games will all be broadcast on FREE APPLE TV. So if you have APPLE TV you get MLS with no additional charge like the last few seasons. (Awesome news) I still hate that more games are not on linear TV like Fox, FS1 and perhaps ESPN – because I am 100% sure NO ONE KNOWS MLS starts this weekend do you? Don’t lie – NOPE. Well you heard it here first and the first game on FOX is the Cincy vs Atlanta United game at 4:45 pm Saturday. Other notables have have Columbus traveling to Porland 10:30 pm on Apple, LAFC hosting Messi & Miami 9:30 pm on Apple, and my Seattle Sounders hosting Colorado Sunday at 9:15 pm right after LA vs NYCFC at 7 pm.

  • Duration: February 21 – November 7, 2026 (Regular Season).
  • Format: 30 teams; 34 games per team (17 home, 17 away).
  • 2026 FIFA World Cup Pause: May 25 – July 16, 2026.
  • All-Star Game: July 29, 2026.
  • Decision Day: November 7, 2026.
  • Broadcast: All matches are available on Apple TV. 

Champions League See’s US Stars shine and Controversy in Benefica

American’s were again on fire in Champions League as Monaco’s/US forward Folarin Balogun scored 2 goals (header) and this lovely runner to give them a 2-0 lead before settling for a 3-3 tie with Inter Milan heading to Milan next week. US Mid/F McKinney had his 4th assist in 3 games in their 4-1 loss at Galatasaray.  The first legs of the UEFA Champions League knockout playoffs are in the books, and we have a lot to review. From Real Madrid narrowly winning at Benfica (led by former Real boss Jose Mourinho), to Bodo/Glimt stunning Internazionale in the Arctic Circle and even holders Paris Saint-Germain rallying from 2-0 down to win 3-2 at fellow Ligue 1 side AS Monaco, we’ve seen it all. Oh, and how about Galatasaray scoring five against Juventus and Newcastle United hitting six at FK Qarabag? It was a Crazy week – man I love Champions League!
The Sad moment came however in Benefica where Real Madrid’s Vinicius Jr. Scored a wonder goal – ran to the flag to celebrate… was yellow carded – then evidently racially abused by Benefica’s Prestianni. Pretty embarrassing for both the club and Coach Jose Mourino who was horrific in his post game press conference blaming Vinicius Jr. I thought CBS/Paramount Plus’ post game coverage was spectacular and hard hitting as analyst Tierry Henry explained his experiences nearly 20 years ago with racism in soccer. Kate Scott’s Elegant Comments on the Racism in Soccer Great stories below about the games and the controversy. Of course return games are this Tuesday/Wed on CBSSN & Paramount Plus.

Huge news for NWSL – I love that you can find games and coverage on ESPN, ABC, CBS, Para+, Ion TV, Prime. ESPN
covers them, as does CBS and ABC sports. This is how you promote the game in the US – if only MLS had a clue!

TV Schedule – Games on TV

Sat, Feb 21 MLS Season Starts
9:30 am ESPN+ Union Berlin vs Bayer LEverkusen (Tilman)
10 am NBCSN Aston Villa vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
10 am Peacock Chelsea vs Burnley
12:30 pm NBCSN West Ham vs Bournmouth (Adams)
3 pm ESPN+ Atletico Madrid (Jonny) vs Espanyol
4:45 pm FOX Cincy FC vs Atlanta United MLS
9:30 pm Apple Free LAFC vs Miami *Messi MLS
10:30 Apple Free Portland vs Columbus Crew MLS
Sun, Feb 22
9 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Ricahrds) vs Wolverhampton
9 am NBCSN Nottingham Palace vs Liverpool
9 a,m USA Sunderland vs Fulham (Jedi)
11:30 am USA, Tel Tottehman vs Arsenal
12 noon Para+ AC Milan (pulisic) vs Parma
7 pm Apple TV, LA Galaxy vs NYCFC
9:15 pm FS1, Apple TV Seattle vs Colorado
Mon, Feb 23
3 pm USA, Tel Everton vs Man United
Tues, Feb 24
12:45 pm PAra+ Club Brugge vs Atletico Madrid
Para+ Qarabag vs Newcastle United
3 pm Para+ Olympicakos vs Bayer LEverkus (Tilman)
3 pm PAra+ Inter Milan vs Bodo Glimt
Wed, FEb 25
12:45 pm Para+ Dortmund vs Atalanta
3 pm CBSSN Para+ Galatasaray vs Juventus (McKinney)
3 pm Para+ TUDN REal Madrid vs Benefica
3 pm Para+_ Monaco (Balogan vs PSG
Thurs, Feb 26
12:45 pm Para+ Celtic vs Stuttgart
3 pm Para+ Zninsjki vs Crystal Palace (Richards)

Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

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USMNT weekend viewing guide: Encore performances and new beginnings

Follow up performances and new seasons by jcksnftsn Feb 20, 2026, 3:14 PM EST

Inter Milan vs Juventus Turin - Serie A

Weston McKennie (Juventus Turin) celebrate during the Inter Milan and Juventus Turn Matchday 25 of the Serie A at San Siro on February 14, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Ulrik Pedersen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)NurPhoto via Getty Images

Weston McKennie, Folarin Balogun, and Haji wright have had a great week and will look to keep things rolling this weekend while back in the States MLS regular season action kicks off this weekend including two matches that will be available on network television. The majority of MLS matches will be available only on Apple TV this season though thankfully not behind an additional paywall on the platform. For this weekend we are focused in on those two broadcast matches but moving forward we will likely try to focus in on the matches where recent callups or likely World Cup participants are participating.

Saturday

West Bromwich Albion v Coventry City – 7:30a on Paramount+: Haji Wright scored a hat trick midweek as Coventry City overtook Middlesbrough for the lead in the Championship, snapping a three match winless streak in the process. Coventry now have a six point lead over Millwall for direct promotion. They will face a West Brom side that are at the opposite end of the table, just two points ahead of Leicester in the relegation battle.


Real Sociedad v Real Oviedo – 8a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Real Sociedad suffered their first loss under Pellegrino Matarazzo last weekend, falling to Real Madrid 4-1. The team remain in eighth place despite the loss.

Juventus v Como – 9a on Paramount+: Weston McKennie notched two assists last weekend and scored a goal midweek in Champions League play as he now has nine goal contributions across all competitions since the start of the new year. Unfortunately, Juventus lost both matches despite McKennie’s best efforts, falling 3-2 to Inter Milan after going down a man late in the first half and then suffering a stunning 5-2 loss to Galatasaray in Turkey in the first leg of their Champions League knockout rounds match. Juve will look to get back on track as they face sixth place Como who are four points back of Juventus and coming off a 1-1 draw with AC Milan.

Wolfsburg v Augsburg – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kevin Paredes was among the players who missed last weekend due to illness as Wolfsburg drew with Leipzig 2-2. The draw left Wolfsburg in 15th place, just a point out of the relegation playoff position. If Paredes is able to return this weekend he will face off with Noahkai Banks and Augsburg who are in 11th place following their 1-0 win over Heidenheim. Banks played the full 90’ as Augsburg kept the clean sheet.

Union Berlin v Bayer Leverkusen – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Malik Tillman came on as a halftime substitute last weekend in Leverkusen’s 4-0 win over St. Pauli and was a second half sub again midweek as Leverkusen defeated Olympiacos 2-0 on the road in the first leg of their Champions League matchup. Prior to last weekend Tillman had started all but two of Leverkusen’s past fourteen matches so the change to a substitute role, if that’s what is happening here, would be a big one.

Koln v Hoffenheim – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kristoffer Lund and Koln fell to Stuttgart 3-1 with Lund playing the full 90’. Koln have lost three of their past four and are in twelfth place now, just four points out of the relegation playoff position.

Aston Villa v Leeds United – 10a on NBCSN: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United needed Penalties to defeat Championship side Birmingham City last weekend in FA Cup action. Aaronson game on in the 68th minute but ended up playing 52’ as Leeds gave up the tying goal in the 89th. Leeds will face third place Aston Villa this weekend.

Lens v Monaco – 11a on beIN Sports: Folarin Balogun hasn’t scored a league goal since early November but he notched a brace midweek against PSG in Champions League action. Unfortunately Monaco would cough up the two goal lead and lose the match 3-2. Moncao are undefeated in their past four league matches but will face league leading Lens this weekend who have won four straight and fourteen of the past fifteen matches that they have played across all competitions.

West Ham United v Bournemouth – 12:30p on NBCSN: Tyler Adams made the bench for Bournemouth’s last EPL match, a 2-1 win over Everton, but did not see the field as he continues his steps to return from an injury that has kept him out since mid December. Bournemouth are in ninth place following the win, now tied with Everton and will face a West Ham side that are undefeated in their last three matches but still sit in the final relegation spot, three points from safety.

PSV v Heerenveen – 12:45p on ESPN Select: Sergino Dest and PSV suffered a shock 2-1 defeat to 15th place FC Volendam last weekend though they still hold a fourteen point lead for the league title. The team will look to rebound against eighth place Heerenveen who have won their past two matches.

Toulouse v Paris – 1p on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Toulouse have lost their last two matches, most recently 2-1 to Le Havre, and now sit in tenth place in the Ligue 1 standings. McKenzie is reportedly suspended for this weekends match with Paris due to yellow card accumulation though he did not receive a card last weekend in his start against Le Havre.

Atletico Madrid v Espanyol – 3p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso got the start last weekend but Atletico fell to Rayo Vallecano 3-0. Cardoso then saw just a minute off the bench midweek in his clubs 3-3 draw with Club Brugge in Champions League action. The team will look to get back on track this weekend as they host sixth place Espanyol.

Cincinnati v Atlanta United – 4:45p on FOX: Miles Robinson and Roman Celentano start their season on Saturday with the first of two MLS matches that will be available via broadcast over the weekend. Cincinnati will be hosting Atlanta United in their opener.

Sunday

Crystal Palace v Wolverhampton Wanderers – 9a on Peacock: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace fell to 19th place Burnley who now have just 19 points on the season. Palace still have eight points separating them from West Ham and the final relegation spot but if they keep loosing matches against relegation quality opponents they will have some real concerns come the end of the season. They get to try again this weekend as they face last place Wolverhampton this weekend who have just one win through 27 matches this season.

Atalanta v Napoli – 9a on Paramount+: Yunus Musah was stuck to the bench again last weekend as Atalanta defeated Lazio 2-0 and midweek as well in the teams 2-0 loss to Dortmund in Champions League play. Musah has failed to appear in four of the last six matches for his club. On Sunday the team will host third place Napoli who are coming off a 2-2 draw with Roma.

Sunderland v Fulham – 9a on USA Network and Telemundo: Antonee Robinson started and went the full 90’ in Fulham’s 2-1 win over Stoke City last weekend but had not appeared in the prior two league matches for his team, a surprising turn of events for a player who has been such a workhorse over the years, albeit dealing with significant injuries to start this season. Fulham are in twelfth place and can jump eleventh place Sunderland if they pick up the road win this weekend.

Freiburg v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN Select: It’s become unfortunately unsurprising to see Gio Reyna not included among the starters for Borussia Monchengladbach as he deals with repeated injuries. What has been surprising however is that Joe Scally has joined him on the bench recently, coming on as a substitute in the teams last two matches, most recently a 3-0 loss to Frankfurt with Scally not entering until his team was already down 2-0. Gladbach are winless in their past six matches and have fallen to 13th place. They will travel to Freiburg this weekend to face off with the eighth place side.

St Pauli v Werder Bremen – 11:30a on ESPN Select: James Sands and St. Pauli were thumped by Leverkusen 4-0 last weekend with Sands starting and playing 69’ minutes. St. Pauli need to string together some positive results if they are going to avoid relegation this season and this weekend would be a good place to start as they host 16th place Werder Bremen who they can vault with a win that would pull them at least into the relegation playoff spot.

AC Milan v Parma – Noon on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic apparently has been dealing with some injuries that are restricting his playing time but aren’t so severe to keep him out altogether. Pulisic was a substitute again last weekend in AC Milan’s 1-1 draw with Como, a result which left them seven points back of Inter for the league lead. They now face twelfth place Parma who have won their past two matches.

Strasbourg v Olympique Lyon – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann started again for Lyon as they won their seventh straight match last weekend, 2-0 over Nice, to remain six points back of PSG and seven back of the league lead. They travel to face seventh place Strasbourg on Sunday.

Seattle Sounders v Colorado Rapids – 9:15p on FS1: Cristian Roldan and the Seattle Sounders will host Zack Steffen, Paxten Aaronson and the Colorado Rapids in the second broadcast MLS matchup of the weekend. Both teams have a number of former USMNT senior and youth players with Roldan seeming the most likely to make this summers World Cup roster.

This year, top finishers such as Arsenal and Bayern Munich will benefit by avoiding fellow European giants Real Madrid and PSG in the round of 16.

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USA Women

Rodman headlines USWNT SheBelieves roster
Trinity Rodman: I want to Help Grow soccer in the U.S. video
Emma Hayes reveals USWNT SheBelieves Cup roster
Looking at the state of the USWNT roster ahead of the 2026 SheBelieves Cup
Catarina Macario reportedly drawing interest from teams in Spain, England, and the USA
USMNT to compete for 1 of 6 spots at 2030 WC

USWNT’s Bethune off to KC, Hutton joins Bay FC

US Men

Toronto FC closing in on deal for USMNT striker Josh Sargent
Yanks Abroad: Pepi thrives, Matarazzo hired, Banks impresses, new dual national panic, & more

MLS

2026 MLS Preview & Predictions: LAFC and Vancouver strong again, Galaxy to rebound
Expert predictions: 2026 MLS Eastern Conference & Western Conference standings
MLS Cup: 5 players who will decide Inter Miami vs. Vancouver Whitecaps
Club & country: MLS players who could star at the 2026 World Cup\
James Rodríguez joins Minnesota United with World Cup mindset
MLS preview: Top 15 Young Americans in MLS ahead of 2026 season
The 2026 MLS season begins this weekend and ASN’s Brian Sciaretta tries to identify the 15 young American players who will make the biggest impact in the

Champions League

Champions League talking points: PSG’s comeback win, Bodø/Glimt surprise Inter, more
Brazil want punishments in Vinícius Jr. case
Seedorf on Mou: Mistake to justify racial abuse

Bodo/Glimt add win over Inter to impressive run
Gordon scores 4 as Newcastle put 6 past Qarabag

UCL talking points: PSG’s comeback win, Bodø/Glimt surprise Inter, more

  • Sam Tighe, 
  • Beth Lindop, 
  • Mark Ogden, 
  • Sam Marsden

Feb 18, 2026, 07:53 PM 126

The first legs of the UEFA Champions League knockout playoffs are in the books, and we have a lot to review. From Real Madrid narrowly winning at Benfica (led by former Real boss Jose Mourinho), to Bodo/Glimt stunning Internazionale in the Arctic Circle and even holders Paris Saint-Germain rallying from 2-0 down to win 3-2 at fellow Ligue 1 side AS Monaco, we’ve seen it all. Oh, and how about Galatasaray scoring five against Juventus and Newcastle United hitting six at FK Qarabag?

So, following a raucous set of first legs this week, ESPN FC writers Mark Ogden, Sam Tighe, Beth Lindop and Sam Marsden weigh in on the action so far and what’s still to come.


– Champions League recap: Bodø/Glimt stun Inter with famous win
– Real Madrid learned lesson from Champions League loss to Benfica

– Why every remaining team will, won’t win UEFA Champions League


Q1. Paris Saint-Germain had to come from 2-0 down to win the first leg at Monaco, with Désiré Doué coming off the bench to turn the tie around. Is the fatigue from last season’s UEFA Champions League title and deep run to last summer’s Club World Cup final about to catch up with them?

Sam Tighe: I am not remotely surprised that any club that went deep into last summer’s Club World Cup looks incoherent or racked with injuries. In PSG’s case, it’s both. Three weeks between “seasons” is not sufficient, so these players are undoubtedly struggling both physically and psychologically.

This time last year, Les Parisiens were in the middle of beating Brest 10-0 on aggregate in the Champions League playoffs. They began to hum, striking fear into the watching world in the process. A year on, things feel so different that Ousmane Dembélé recently called out his teammates by suggesting they were putting themselves ahead of the club, rather than the club first (like last season). There are other key changes too: Defensive leader Marquinhos‘ level has notably dropped, while they’ve gone from calling upon one of the world’s finest, game-breaking shot-stoppers in Gianluigi Donnarumma (who left for Manchester City) to a grim choice between two underperformers, Lucas Chevalier and Matvey Safonov.

It really does not feel like last year, and it really doesn’t seem as if they’re about to hit an imperious stride, but I suppose in this sport, you never know…

Beth Lindop: It’s not so long ago that it was hard to see anyone beating PSG. After a bumpy start to last season, Luis Enrique’s side really hit their stride after the turn of the year. They have a lot of supremely talented players so you can’t totally write them off and they showed great fight to come back against Monaco. That said, they don’t quite look like the force they once were and, as Sam pointed out, you can hardly blame them considering the workload they had to shoulder over the summer.

They look more like a team of individuals rather than the well-oiled machine they were by the end last season. But that individual quality could still win the day.

Mark Ogden: PSG have an unexpected problem this season — they are locked in a tight three-way battle for the Ligue Un title with leaders Lens and Lyon, so they don’t have the luxury of being able to coast domestically and focus on the Champions League as they did last season. So every game matters and that reality, compounded by the lack of rest for Luis Enrique’s players last summer, is definitely having an adverse effect on results and performances.

But don’t rule PSG out. They showed their quality by overturning a 2-0 deficit against Monaco and they can beat any team in Europe on their day. I think it will be tough for them to win the Champions League again this season, especially with Chelsea or Barcelona up next in the round of 16, but the experience of winning last year means they know how to do it again.

Sam Marsden: I have to admit I am wobbling on PSG for all the reasons mentioned above, but I am still backing them to deliver when it matters. It’s true that tiredness, injuries and a tight title race are pushing them to the limit at the moment, but when their backs are to the wall, I still think they can deliver.

As Mark says, at 2-0 down against Monaco, and especially after losing Ballon d’Or winner Dembélé to injury, things looked bleak, but they showed their quality and their depth. This time it was Doue, on for the injured Dembélé, who won the match for them, but next time it could just as easily be Khvicha Kvaratskhelia or Bradley Barcola. I am always going to back a Luis Enrique team, too.

Leboeuf praises Doué’s ‘perfect’ performance for PSG vs. Monaco

Frank Leboeuf reacts to Désiré Doué’s performance in PSG’s Champions League comeback win against Monaco.


Q2. Real Madrid had a wobbly and dramatic road win on Tuesday, marred by allegations of racial abuse towards Vinicius Jr., but they carry a narrow lead into next week’s second leg. Can Álvaro Arbeloa join some illustrious coaches who have taken over a big club in midseason and lead them to Champions League glory?

Ogden: Absolutely, because it’s all about the players in the Champions League. A top coach is important, but some pretty unremarkable coaches have won it or taken a team to the final, and Arbeloa has plenty of star players to take Real all the way in spite of him as a coach, rather than because of him. Zinedine Zidane and Thomas Tuchel are the elite names who have taken a job mid-season and ended up winning the Champions League, but Roberto di Matteo won it with Chelsea in 2012 and Avram Grant (Chelsea, 2008) and Edin Terzic (Borussia Dortmund, 2023) took their sides to a final, so Arbeloa wouldn’t be an outlier if he won it with Real.

But let’s be honest. If you have Kylian MbappéVinícius JúniorJude BellinghamFederico ValverdeThibaut CourtoisTrent Alexander-Arnold — need I go on? — in your team, you can win the Champions League. As long as the coach doesn’t over-complicate things with tactical demands or selection eccentricities, the best players always have a chance. And Real are stacked with world-class players.

Lindop: I agree with Mark. As much as Real Madrid (by their own lofty standards) have had a pretty unremarkable season so far, you can never count them out when it gets to the Champions League knockouts. More than any other club, Real have a special relationship with this competition and they have so many match winners within their squad. Arbeloa seems to have brought a sense of togetherness to the team and the return of Trent could also be key to helping the team tick.

You’d definitely fancy them to get the job done in the second leg against Benfica and then it’s all down to who they’re drawn against in the last 16.

Marsden: While I agree with Mark and Beth — Real Madrid in the Champions League is such a thing — I don’t think either of the Clásico teams, to throw Barcelona into the mix as well, are good enough to win the competition this season. Of course I would still have them in the bracket of teams just behind the favorites — the likes of ArsenalBayern Munich and still, for me, PSG — and it wouldn’t be a surprise with a favorable draw and upturn in form if either side made the final, but they both look so vulnerable at times.

That said, Madrid actually looked improved in midfield against Benfica, which is where I would say they are weakest. Arbeloa’s use of Aurélien TchouaméniEduardo Camavinga, Valverde and Arda Güler worked well, allowing more freedom for Mbappé and Vinícius in attack. It may be difficult to maintain that balance when Bellingham returns, though.

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Tighe: I think I stand with (the other) Sam here.

I cannot dispute that this Real Madrid side have the quality — particularly up front and between the sticks — to win this tournament and their special relationship with it increases the allure. And yet for some reason, I absolutely cannot picture it.

Perhaps it’s because I’ve seen them play so poorly too often this season. Perhaps it’s because I place more of an importance on the manager than, say, Mark does, and Arbeloa is a genuine rookie. Whatever it is, it’s gnawing at me, and when predicting something as wild and random as a Champions League winner, you have to trust your gut. My gut says no.

Nicol: Vinícius Jr. showed maturity with reaction to alleged racist abuse

Steve Nicol speaks about Vinícius Júnior’s reaction to suffering alleged racist abuse against Benfica in the Champions League.


Q3. Which team of those that lost this week is most likely to turn around a first leg deficit?

Ogden: I think there is still some life in the Atalanta-Borussia Dortmund tie. A 2-0 lead obviously makes Dortmund the favorites, but they weren’t great away from home in the League Phase and an early goal in Bergamo could give Atalanta the edge. I’d give Atalanta slightly more hope than Inter Milan, who have a 3-1 deficit against Bodø/Glimt.

Inter have the atmosphere of a packed San Siro to drive them on, but Bodo have now beaten Inter, Atlético Madrid and Manchester City in successive Champions League games, so they will go to Milan with confidence from that run. I just don’t see Dortmund having the same self-belief — this is a team was well beaten away to Tottenham Hotspur — so I’m backing Atalanta to turn the tie around and win the second leg.

Tighe: As thrilling as the Bodø/Glimt story is, and as good as they were in their 3-1 win over Inter on Wednesday night, I just wonder…is a two-goal lead enough? After all, while Glimt were razor sharp in attack here — just as they were when they beat Manchester City at home in the league phase — their goal frame lived a charmed life. Both Matteo Darmian and Lautaro Martínez hit it as they sought the lead, only for the Norwegians to then deliver two quick sucker punches in response.

And as Mark suggests, the playing field will be rather different next week — quite literally. No plastic pitch, no heaps of snow on the sidelines; instead, a raucous San Siro to cheer on last year’s finalists. It’s important to note that Bodø/Glimt are not solely reliant on home results — they lost just once on the road during the league phase, and beat Atlético Madrid in Spain! — but this remains a tall task.

Lindop: I mean, Qarabag could always surprise us! On a serious note, though, I’m going to opt for Atalanta. Borussia Dortmund’s 2-0 lead might seem commanding on paper, but the German side are a little bit unpredictable and Atalanta can cause plenty of problems for teams, particularly at home.

Inter could pull off a turnaround too, buoyed by the brilliance of the San Siro. However, I did dub them my biggest disappointment of the group stage, and Wednesday night’s result hasn’t done an awful lot to change that.

Marsden: Firstly, a great result for Bodø/Glimt again. I think we need to give their run of results some real credit. They have now beaten, in Europe, Manchester City, Atlético Madrid and Inter in consecutive games. So while my first thought was to go for Inter as the most likely to turn the tie around, I am going to back the Norwegian side to see the tie out — although it won’t be easy at the San Siro.

The other Italian teams with home advantage — Juventus and Atalanta — are also long shots to produce comebacks, but what about this instead: no side who lost the first leg will make it through to the last 16.


Q4. Which performance (player or team) impressed you most in the first legs?

Ogden: It has to be Anthony Gordon. If you score four goals in a Champions League game, then you deserve your flowers.

The Newcastle forward joins an elite group of players who have done it, including Lionel MessiCristiano Ronaldo, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Andriy Shevchenko, Marco van Basten and Roberto Lewandowski — anyone who adds their name to that list of stars merits all the praise that comes his way. And while Gordon is the individual star of this week, you have to give credit to Newcastle as a team for getting a huge, and decisive result, in Azerbaijan. Chelsea drew away to Qarabag and Eintracht Frankfurt lost in Baku, so this was a tough trip for Eddie Howe’s side and they made it look easy.

Lindop: It has to be Gordon for me, too. The Newcastle forward has had a pretty indifferent couple of years after his eye-catching form saw him tipped for a £70 million move to Liverpool in the summer of 2024. He hasn’t scored enough goals for Newcastle over the past two seasons, but he more than made up for it on Wednesday night.

He’s still very much capable of turning in scene-stealing displays and, at 24, he still has the potential to get even better. With the World Cup just a few months away, his return to form is no bad thing for both club and country.

Marsden: It’s hard to disagree with Gordon. What a Champions League campaign he’s having.

However, given he’s had a lot of praise here already, let’s chuck some honorable mentions out there: PSG’s Doué for his game-winning performance of the bench, Madrid’s Vinícius for his stunning strike on a difficult night in Lisbon, Bodø/Glimt for another remarkable win, and Club Brugge for a fine attacking display in their 3-3 draw with Atlético Madrid that probably should have ended in a win.

Tighe: OK, Gordon’s had enough praise. Let’s spotlight a guy who got three goal contributions on Wednesday on a famous night for his club: Kasper Høgh of Bodø/Glimt.

He’s showcased a remarkable finishing pedigree over the last two seasons, but can we take a moment to appreciate his link-up and creative play too? The Dane scored, but also teed up two goals here, one of which was absolutely exceptional. The reason Glimt are so good to watch going forward is that they attack the center of the pitch better than almost anyone.

Rather than turn to wide combinations and crosses, they work beautiful combinations in tight spots just outside the penalty box, somehow creating space for a shot that shouldn’t be there. Høgh is both integral to creating this space and finishing these chances. He’s having an incredible Champions League campaign.

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Club Brugge shock Atlético Madrid with late equaliser

hristos Tzolis’ 89th-minute goal snatched a 3-3 draw for Club Brugge as Atlético Madrid‘s defensive problems in the Champions League continued.

Having squandered a two-goal lead in nine second-half minutes, Joel Ordonez’s own goal looked to have handed Diego Simeone’s side an important advantage ahead of the second leg at home.

However, Raphael Onyedika, who had sparked the hosts’ comeback, slid through a pass for Tzolis to shoot across goalkeeper Jan Oblak and a VAR check confirmed he had just stayed onside.

“The match was exactly what we expected. They’re possibly the most intense opponent we’ve faced in the Champions League, they’re very young,” said Atleti coach Diego Simeone. “We knew it wouldn’t be an easy game. We controlled the first half.

“With the score at 2-1, they got back into the game. We weren’t attacking like we did in the first half. They made it 2-2, and we regained the lead, and then came that last goal, which was a misinterpretation of how we should defend.”

Atlético have yet to keep a clean sheet in the competition this season and this was the third time they had conceded three or more goals, having shipped 15 goals in seven matches so far.

The visitors appeared to be cruising after goals from Julián Álvarez, his 12th in 18 Champions League matches, and Ademola Lookman, in first-half added time, gave them a comfortable lead.

Álvarez fired home from the penalty spot in only the eighth minute after Joaquin Seys was contentiously judged to have handed the ball as it dropped from height.

Seconds before half-time Antoine Griezmann flicked on an inswinging corner and Lookman applied the final touch inside the far post.

Six minutes into the second half Oblak could only half-stop Nicolo Tresoldi’s header from a corner and Onyedika scored from close range.

Brugge equalised on the hour when Mamadou Diakhon’s left-wing cross was converted at the near post by Tresoldi.

Alexander Sorloth hit the crossbar with a header before Ordonez, under pressure from Sorloth, turned Marcos Llorente’s cross into his own net with just 11 minutes remaining but Tzolis punished the visitors again late on.

“A match is 90 minutes, not 45,” Simeone added. “We reacted well to their two goals.

“I leave with the feeling that the team competed very well against an opponent that isn’t easy to beat here.”

Simeone and Atlético host Brugge in the return leg at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano on Tuesday.

“In the first half, we felt we were playing well, but the context of the match suggests it was a fair draw. Both teams had scoring opportunities. The second leg is at home.”

CBS Sports owned the conversation on a night of Champions League controversy

By Adam CraftonFeb. 19, 2026 NY Times — The Athletic

As the scope and significance of the Champions League match between Benfica and Real Madrid became clear on Tuesday evening, the two men in charge of CBS Sports’ coverage made a decision.Pete Radovich, the coordinating producer of the broadcaster’s UCL Today show, and line producer Matt Curtis decided the post-match section should run longer than its usual slot of around an hour, extending it a further 30 minutes to end shortly after 6.30pm ET.The call was made because Thierry Henry, Micah Richards and Jamie Carragher, the show’s pundits, had lucid thoughts and raw feelings they needed to share. They were speaking in the aftermath of the Madrid forward Vinicius Jr’s allegation that he had been racially abused by Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni. The Argentine subsequently denied this, and was defended by his club, but the matter is now the subject of a UEFA investigation.In these moments, as the world’s gaze fixes on the Champions League, CBS increasingly dominates the global conversation. Across Tuesday and Wednesday night, clips from UCL Today combined for over 20 million views across platforms, but also set the tenor of the debate across the English-speaking world.It is, in many ways, a curious phenomenon. It is only available to viewers in the United States (via the CBS Sports Network and the Paramount+ streaming platform) and, in truth, it is not the most convenient slot in the week for many Americans.As Champions League games take place in the European evenings, it translates to various times in the afternoon in the U.S. depending on one’s location within the country. Many people are still in their workplace, others are commuting by the time matches end at around 5pm ET, but it is a good time for children returning home from school, especially on the east coast. The precise numbers of people who actually watch the matches are not often disclosed, a common trait across streaming platforms.CBS Sports’ coverage dominates the global conversation around the Champions LeagueRobbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty ImagesYet while this is a show made for a U.S. audience, in many ways modelled on Inside the NBA, its reach and influence are much broader. That, in itself, is a strange and remarkable thing, because any match action itself is geoblocked, meaning CBS Sports cannot share its match analysis on social media outside of the United States.

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Yet this show’s unique blend of hi-jinks, sincere friendship and agenda-setting discussion means that the action is not a required ingredient for global virality.

UCL Today, it should be said, is not always to everyone’s taste. One viewer’s ‘fun’ may be another’s roll of the eyes, and it is true that some of the show’s most-viewed content on YouTube includes a guest appearance by IShowSpeed and a compilation of schoolboy giggles about the club from the French city of Brest who played in the Champions League last season.

But it is perhaps because the show is so often light-hearted that it then becomes appointment viewing when the most serious matters come into play.

The sudden solemnity that gripped the four protagonists — Henry, Richards, Carragher and host Kate Scott — on Tuesday evening was striking, with much of the post-game show reserved for news, reaction and discussion from the game in Lisbon.

CBS Sports demonstrated the importance of investing in a product, because the post-match position taken up by pitchside reporter Guillem Balague illuminated the tensions between Benfica and Madrid after the final whistle.What You Should Read NextThe shocking scale of the racist abuse suffered by Vinicius JrAccording to La Liga, there have been 26 incidents of racist abuse directed towards him since October 2021

From his station near the locker rooms, viewers could see scuffles breaking out between rival club employees, with Benfica’s president Rui Costa somewhere in the thick of it. Balague gamely requested an interview every time Costa passed by, albeit unrequited, and wondered whether UEFA would rather all this wasn’t being filmed.

Broadcasters are not always so challenging when these events occur. At times, they see themselves less as information platforms and more as partners, or even advertisers, of the product they have acquired.

This was how it felt when DAZN broadcast the FIFA Club World Cup last summer and supplied little immediate analysis or scrutiny after Real Madrid’s Antonio Rudiger alleged he was racially abused in a game against Pachuca of Mexico (that case was ultimately dropped due to a lack of evidence). Yet that has never been the approach on UCL Today. Memorably, during the Champions League final in 2022, the CBS studio team, led by Scott and Carragher, challenged the UEFA narrative by revealing the mistreatment endured by Liverpool fans who were attempting to attend the match against Madrid at the Stade de France in Paris.

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A word on this occasion, too, for Clive Tyldesley, the experienced 71-year-old British commentator. Both he and co-commentator Rob Green handled the event with calm authority. They did not rush to make judgments. They used an old trick: simply saying what they could see.

The flashpoint between Gianluca Prestianni and Vinicius JuniorAngel Martinez/Getty Images

“You can see what Vinicius Jr wants to happen here,” Tyldesley said as the Brazilian exited the pitch following the incident with Prestianni. “He wants everybody off the field because if he has been racially abused, this takes this moment to a whole different level.”

By contrast, former Premier League referee Mark Clattenburg issued a statement to apologize on Wednesday after saying on Amazon Prime’s UK coverage that Vinicius had “not helped himself”.

“I got it wrong, I’m sorry,” Clattenburg wrote. “It was live TV, my job is to respond in the moment, and the words I used were clumsy and not right.”

Tyldesley instead pointed out that Prestianni had been smiling, but warned that it would be the “content” of what was said from behind the shirt collar the Benfica player had used to cover his mouth that would define the moment. “Somewhere in the midst of his celebrations, something has been said to him (Vinicius) that has raised his temperature beyond boiling point,” he added.

Opinion was largely deferred to those in the CBS studio.

Henry, usually a beacon of cool, appeared highly affected, transported back to past traumas from his own playing career at teams including Arsenal, Barcelona and the French national team.

Both he and Richards, as former Black professional footballers, knew the script. They empathized with the isolation that grips those who have encountered abuse. They also knew that the intricacies of the moment — most specifically that Prestianni had covered his mouth — may complicate any investigation. They knew some form of victim-blaming would ensue.

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“I can relate to what Vinicius Jr is going through,” said Henry. “I’ve been there, I feel so sorry for the guy. That happened to me so many times on the field. I’ve been also accused of looking for excuses after games when that happened to me. At times, you feel lonely, because it’s going to be your word against his word… You feel like you don’t know what to do anymore.”

Richards veered between anger and an air of resignation. “The one that gets me is, like, ‘Oh, they’re playing the race card again?’ What do you mean, playing the race card? It’s so difficult to talk about and articulate how you feel to someone who does not believe or feel what you feel at the time.”

He continued: “Prestianni is a coward… No one will ever know what he said, only him and Vinicius Jr. But to pull your shirt over your mouth and now we’re having a conversation about, ‘Did it happen?’”

In this instance, Carragher’s strength was his self-awareness. He recognized the power of saying less when his Black colleagues could say so much more. Henry and Richards had the lived experience and were best placed to take center-stage.

Carragher came into his own on the following day’s show, reflecting on his own experience as a player at Liverpool when that club rallied in support of his Uruguayan team-mate Luis Suarez after Manchester United’s Patrice Evra had accused the forward of racially abusing him. Carragher apologized to Evra for Liverpool’s behaviour years later while presenting for UK broadcaster Sky Sports, acknowledging that Liverpool had got things “completely wrong”.He also intervened on Tuesday night after Benfica head coach Jose Mourinho appeared to suggest that Vinicius Jr., in some way, invites trouble by expressively celebrating his goals.

“Anybody can celebrate how they like and you should not get racially abused for it,” Carragher said. “The Mourinho stuff… this is a guy who celebrates and antagonises the opposition more than any coach has ever done… It’s a bit rich coming from him. Vinicius is entitled to celebrate how he likes.”Advertisement

By this point, Richards appeared deflated: “I’m just disappointed with the whole thing. Mourinho is someone I absolutely love as a coach… I expect better from him, because he is a powerful person within the sport and a lot of people listen to what he says. I just feel a little bit let down.”What You Should Read NextJose Mourinho sank to a new low with absurd and offensive claims about Vinicius JuniorMourinho was, in effect, telling Vinicius Jr that he didn’t hear what he says he heard, which was alleged racist abuse from a Benfica player

Amid high tensions, Scott chaired proceedings with trademark skill, cutting between what was being said in the London studio and the stadium in Lisbon. She also provided live, second-by-second translations into English for the viewers of highly newsworthy interviews by Mourinho and Vinicius Jr’s French team-mate Kylian Mbappe. With sensitivities spiking, the potential for legal difficulties in any misrepresentation of those post-game interviews, and all the pressures of live television, Scott’s performance cannot be underestimated.

On Wednesday, in the cold light of day, Scott opened the show with a monologue which, by midnight ET, had recorded almost 1.5 million views on Twitter and Instagram alone.

“Jose Mourinho is an iconic figure in world football,” Scott said. “Yesterday, he switched the focus from what had actually been said to whether there was provocation for it. He essentially told us that Vinicius Jr was asking for it. That is a damaging narrative from a man who is considered a leading figure in the global game.

“Investigation and due process will have to occur, but whatever the results, we hope that football becomes a better platform, where hatred is met with more than nominal fines and partial stadium closures, where diversity is truly celebrated not just tolerated.

“The racial diversity on a football pitch in the Champions League is the representation of the global love for this game, and the global belonging in this game. This is the very spirit of football. And if you don’t agree, then respectfully, you are the one who doesn’t belong.”

By Adam Crafton

t means for Real Madrid and his World Cup dream

2/16/2026 Champions League is Back Tues/Wed, MLS Starts Sat, FA Cup 5th Rd set Wrexham host Chelsea

Champions League back Tues/Wed

The knock out Stage is here with teams 8-24 battling it our to see who will face the top 8 teams in the next round. Powerhouses Real Madrid, PSG and Juventus all fell out of the top 8 setting up playoff time for them to advance. Tues gives us a beaut with the Special one Jose Mournino and Benefica hosting the club he once coached to a UCL trophy Real Madrid at home. AS Monaco and American Balogan has his chance vs defending champs PSG and Weston McKinney and his Juve will travel to Galatasaray.

Borussia Dortmund vs. Atalanta

Benfica vs. Real Madrid

AS Monaco vs. Paris Saint-Germain

Galatasaray vs. Juventus

After a Full weekend of FA Cup Play the fifth round draw has been made

Some interesting games ahead. Perhaps the just juiciest non all-EPL match-ups are We are Wrexham (owners Ryan Reynolds & Rob McElhenney & their FX TV Show hosting Chelsea, League 1 foe Mansfield Town hosting EPL leaders Arsenal and perhaps Bristol City hosting Sunderland. Love it when the little guys get to host the big guys.

Home teams listed first

  • Fulham vs. Southampton
  • Port Vale or Bristol City vs. Sunderland
  • Newcastle vs. Manchester City
  • Leeds vs. Norwich City
  • Mansfield Town vs. Arsenal
  • Wolves vs. Liverpool
  • Wrexham vs. Chelsea
  • West Ham vs. Macclesfield or Brentford

MLS Kicks off this Weekend

The 2026 MLS season runs from this Saturday February 21 to early November, featuring 30 teams playing 34 regular-season matches, with a significant break from May 25 to July 16 for the FIFA World Cup. The season includes Eastern and Western Conferences, culminating in the MLS Cup Playoffs in November/December.  Defending Champions are Miami and Lionel Messi who was League MVP. He will be missing many of his Barcelona buddies who all retired at the end of last season however. Read all about Miami in the Season Preview below. The games will all be broadcast on FREE APPLE TV. So if you have APPLE TV you get MLS with no additional charge like the last few seasons. (Awesome news) I still hate that more games are not on linear TV like Fox, FS1 and perhaps ESPN – because I am 100% sure NO ONE KNOWS MLS starts this weekend do you? Don’t lie – NOPE. Well you heard it here first and the first game on FOX is the Cincy vs Atlanta United game at 4:45 pm Saturday. Other notables have have Columbus traveling to Porland 10:30 pm on Apple, LAFC hosting Messi & Miami 9:30 pm on Apple, and my Seattle Sounders hosting Colorado Sunday at 9:15 pm right after LA vs NYCFC at 7 pm.

Key Details for the 2026 Season:

  • Duration: February 21 – November 7, 2026 (Regular Season).
  • Format: 30 teams; 34 games per team (17 home, 17 away).
  • 2026 FIFA World Cup Pause: May 25 – July 16, 2026.
  • All-Star Game: July 29, 2026.
  • Decision Day: November 7, 2026.
  • Broadcast: All matches are available on Apple TV. 

Future Changes:
Starting in 2027, MLS will shift to a summer-to-spring calendar (similar to European leagues), running from July to May, with a winter break. 



TV Schedule

Tues, Feb 17
12:45 pm Para+ TUDN Galatasaray vs Juventus (McKinney)
3 pm Para+ TUDN Benefica vs REal Madrid
3 pm CBSSN, Para+ Dortmund vs Atalanta
3 pm Para+_ Monaco (Balogan vs PSG
8 pm FS2 Atletico Ottawa vs NAshville SC CCC
10 pm FS2 Real Espana vs LAFC CCC
Wed, FEb 18
12:45 pm Para+ Qarabag vs Newcastle United
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulilsc) cs Como
3 pm CBSSN, PAra+ Club Brugge vs Atletico Madrid
3 pm Para+ Olympicakos vs Bayer LEverkus (Tilman)
3 pm PAra+ Inter Milan vs Bodo Glimt
6 pm FS2 Defense Force vs Philly Union CCC
8 pm FS2 Universidad vs Cincy UCC
10 pm FS2 Cartagines vs Vancouver UCC
Thurs, Feb 18
12:45 pm Para_ Fenerbache vs Nottinham Forest
12:45 pm Para+ Zninsjki vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
3 pm Para+ Celtic vs Stuttgart
Sat, Feb 21 MLS Season Starts
4:45 pm FOX Cincy FC vs Atlanta United MLS
9:30 pm Apple Free LAFC vs Miami *Messi MLS
10:30 Apple Free Portland vs Columbus Crew MLS

Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

USMNT midweek viewing guide: Pushing forward

Follow along with all the USMNT action this week.

Tuesday

  • Galatasaray vs Juventus, 12:45p: Weston McKennie – Champions League round of 32 first leg
  • Dortmund vs Atalanta, 3p: Yunus Musah – Champions League round of 32 first leg
  • Monaco vs PSG, 3p: Folarin Balogun – Champions League round of 32 first leg

Also in action:

  • Charlton vs Portsmouth, 2:45p: Charlie Kelman – EFL Championship
  • Atlético Ottawa vs Nashville SC, 8p: Matthew Corcoran, Jack Maher, Thomas Williams – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg
  • Real España vs LAFC, 10p: Timothy Tillman – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg

Wednesday

  • Levante vs Villarreal, 2p: Alex Freeman – La Liga
  • AC Milan vs Como, 2:45p: Christian Pulisic – Serie A
  • Club Brugge vs Atlético Madrid, 3p: Johnny Cardoso – Champions League round of 32 first leg
  • Olympiacos vs Leverkusen, 3p: Malik Tillman, Monty Culbreath – Champions League round of 32 first leg

Also in action:

  • Defence Force vs Philadelphia Union, 6p: Quinn Sullivan, Frankie Westfield, Cavan Sullivan, CJ Olney, Nathan Harriel, Andrew Rick – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg
  • O&M FC vs FC Cincinnati, 8p: Miles Robinson, Roman Celentano, Matt Miazga – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg. Kristian Fletcher is expected back from an ACL injury in early March.
  • Cartaginés vs Vancouver Whitecaps, 10p: Sebastian Berhalter, Brian White, Tate Johnson, Emmanuel Sabbi – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg

Thursday

  • Zrinjski Mostar vs Crystal Palace, 12:45p: Chris Richards – Conference League round of 32 first leg
  • Celtic vs VfB Stuttgart, 3p: Auston Trusty – Europa League round of 32 first leg. Cameron Carter-Vickers is out for the season with an Achilles injury.
  • Panathinaikos vs Viktoria Plzeň, 3p: Erik Palmer-Brown – Europa League round of 32 first leg

Also in action:

  • Sporting San Miguelito vs LA Galaxy, 8p: Harbor Miller, Ruben Ramos, Elijah Wynder – Concacaf Champions Cup first leg

Friday

  • Mainz vs Hamburg, 2:30p: Lennard Maloney, Damion Downs – Bundesliga
  • Brest vs Marseille, 2:45p: Tim Weah – Ligue 1
  • Puebla vs América, 10:06p: Alex Zendejas – Liga MX
In case you think American football is that big a deal ? More people watched a regular season EPL game earlier that day.

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USA

Haji Wright, vying for spot on USMNT roster, delivers timely hat trick
USMNT World Cup roster watch: Who’s on the rise and who’s losing ground ahead of March camp
Transfer rumor roundup: EPL giants circling Pulisic
Haji Wright hat-trick takes Coventry back to top with win over Middlesbrough
Haji Wright hat trick: USMNT forward leads huge Coventry City win over Middlesbrough (video)
San Diego cruises past Pumas, Adams returns, Matarazzo’s remarkable run, U-17s qualify, & more
Americans Abroad Five: Agyemang soars, other USMNT strikers falter

Morris & Boro into first, Freeman debuts, McKennie scores again, and more

USMNT star attends USA-Germany Olympic hockey game

Champions League

How we can improve the Champions League: New mini-league? Clubs picking opponents?
Mourinho says ‘wounded king’ Madrid vulnerable
Real Madrid broke Mourinho. Now he could break them with Benfica
Luis Enrique slams ‘worthless’ Dembélé PSG take
Madrid’s Arbeloa on Benfica: Not about revenge
Champions League knockout rounds: Bracket, key dates, more
Why Barcelona’s Super League withdrawal ends uneasy truce with Real Madrid
Barca’s issues remain glaring under Champions League lights

MLS

Inter Miami CF 2026 Season
2026 World Cup: USMNT players to watch in MLS this season

Reffing

How to Become a Travel Ref 

Goalkeeping

Top MLS Saves 25
Cincy GK Top Save of the Year MLS

Champions League knockout rounds: Bracket, key dates, more

  • Nicholas Som

Feb 16, 2026, 02:44 AM ETe draw for the knockout playoff round of the 2025-26 UEFA Champions League featured some of the biggest clubs in Europe. Now that it’s complete, we know who the likes of Real Madrid and defending champions Paris Saint-Germain will be facing with a spot in the round of 16 on the line.

But which teams look to have the best path through the knockout rounds? How is the rest of the bracket shaping up?

Here’s everything you need to know about Champions League knockouts.

Which clubs are in the knockout playoff round?

Only the 16 teams that finished ninth through 24th in the league phase will compete in this round.

The top eight teams in the league phase advanced directly to the round of 16, and clubs finishing 25th to 36th were eliminated.

When is the knockout playoff round?

The first legs of each matchup will be held Feb. 17-18. The second legs will be contested the following week, on Feb. 24-25.

What are the knockout playoff round fixtures?

The teams that placed ninth to 16th are listed second, and they will have the advantage of playing at home in the second leg.

Borussia Dortmund vs. Atalanta

Benfica vs. Real Madrid

AS Monaco vs. Paris Saint-Germain

Galatasaray vs. Juventus

Club Brugge vs. Atletico Madrid

FK Qarabag vs. Newcastle United

Bodo/Glimt vs. Internazionale

Olympiacos vs. Bayer Leverkusen

What does this mean for the top eight clubs?

After the playoff round draw, the teams who finished inside the top eight in the league phase still have four possible opponents in the round of 16.

The knockout playoff round will whittle the number of potential opponents to two. But the exact matchups won’t be known until the round-of-16 draw.

Possible round-of-16 ties:

Arsenal or Bayern Munich will play one of the winners of:
Atalanta vs. Borussia Dortmund
Bayer Leverkusen vs. Olympiacos

Liverpool or Tottenham Hotspur will play one of the winners of:
Club Brugge vs. Atletico Madrid
Galatasaray vs. Juventus

Barcelona or Chelsea will play one of the winners of:
AS Monaco vs. Paris Saint-Germain
FK Qarabag vs. Newcastle United

Sporting CP or Manchester City will play one of the winners of:
Benfica vs. Real Madrid
Bodo/Glimt vs. Internazionale

Is there any country protection?

No — clubs from the same country can play each other throughout the rest of the competition. If Borussia Dortmund defeat Atalanta, for example, they can still be drawn against fellow German club Bayern Munich in the round of 16.

What happens next?

After teams compete in the two-legged knockout playoff round in February, the draw for the round of 16 will be held Feb. 27. That draw will determine the round-of-16 matchups and finalize the bracket for the remainder of the knockout rounds.

What are the other important Champions League dates to remember?

Round of 16/quarterfinal/semifinal draw: Feb. 27
Round of 16: March 10-11, March 17-18
Quarterfinals: April 7-8, April 14-15
Semifinals: April 28-29, May 5-6
Final: May 30 (Budapest, Hungary)

Why did it matter where teams finished in the league phase table?

Last season provided a notable example of how the new system can make a huge impact. Manchester City didn’t qualify for the knockouts until the final day of the league phase, and their 22nd-place finish meant they had to compete in the knockout playoff round. As an unseeded team, they were drawn against seeded Real Madrid, who won 6-3 over two legs.

On the flip side, PSG seemed unaffected by the extra round of matches, rolling past Brest in the playoffs and all the way to the title.

This year, top finishers such as Arsenal and Bayern Munich will benefit by avoiding fellow European giants Real Madrid and PSG in the round of 16.

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USMNT Players Abroad: McKennie with two assists, goal for Busio

The weekend roundup of USMNT players abroad has Weston McKennie recording two assists in Serie A and a goal for Gianluca Busio in Serie B. In the Championship, Patrick Agyemang once again scored for Derby County. Leeds and Fulham advanced in the FA Cup.

Serie A

Christian Pulisic subbed on in the 78th for AC Milan’s 2-1 win at Pisa. Ruben Loftus-Cheek put AC Milan up in the 39th with Pisa equalizing in the 71st. Luka Modic returned AC Milan’s lead in the 85th. AC Milan’s Adrien Rabiot saw red two minutes into stoppage time. Weston McKennie’s Juventus lost 3-2 at Inter Milan. Juventus gave up an own-goal in the 17th and Andrea Cambiaso equalized in the 26th. Juventus’s Pierre Kalulu saw red in the 42nd. Inter retook the lead in the 76th and Manuel Locatelli equalized for Juventus in the 83rd with McKennie assisting. Inter Milan scored again in the 90th minute.

Andrija Novakovich subbed out five minutes into stoppage time for Reggiana’s 1-1 draw at Empoli in Serie B. Natan Girma converted a Reggiana penalty in the 26th and Empoli equalized in the 72nd minute. Gianluca Busio’s Venezia won 4-0 at Cesena. Busio opened the scoring for Venezia in the 38th, Andrea Adorante doubled the lead a minute into stoppage time, and Antoine Hainaut scored in the 62nd. Lion Lauberbach converted a Venezia penalty two minutes into stoppage time.

FA Cup – Fourth Round

Antonee Robinson’s Fulham won 2-1 at Stoke City. Trailing from the 19th, Kevin equalized for Fulham in the 55th and Harrison Reed scored in the 84th minute. Brenden Aaronson subbed on in the 68th for Leeds United’s 1-1 draw at Birmingham City. Leeds advanced 4-2 on penalties. Lukas Nmecha put Leeds up in the 49th and Birmingham equalized in the 89th minute. Birmingham City failed to convert in rounds two and three of penalties while Leeds converted on all four of their attempts. Aaronson scored in round three.

Championship

Patrick Agyemang subbed out in the 89th for Derby County’s 2-0 home win over Swansea City. Rhian Brewster opened the scoring for Derby County in the 47th and Agyemang doubled the lead in the 67th. Agyemang saw yellow in the 27th minute.

Bundesliga

Malik Tillman subbed on at halftime for Bayer Leverkusen’s 4-0 home win over James Sands’s St Pauli. Sands subbed out in the 68th. Jarrell Quansah put Leverkusen up in the 13th, Patrik Schick scored in the 14th, and Edmond Tabsoba made it 3-0 in the 52nd. Ernest Poku finished off the Leverkusen scoring in the 78th minute.

Joe Scally subbed on in the 65th for Gladbach’s 3-0 loss at Eintracht to goals in the 24th, 34th, and 75th minutes. Kristoffer Lund’s FC Koln lost 3-1 at Stuttgart, trailing from the 15th. Ragnar Ache equalized for Koln in the 79th, but Stuttgart retook the lead in the 84th and scored again two minutes into stoppage time.

In the 2.BundesligaJohn Tolkin’s Holstein Kiel lost 2-1 at home to Schalke. Trailing from goals in the 16th and 29th, David Zec converted a Holstein Kiel penalty in the 55th minute. Terrence Boyd subbed on in the 62nd for SV Waldhof’s 1-1 draw at Energie Cottbus in the 3.Liga. Down a goal from the 10th, Sanoussy Ba equalized for Waldhof in the 64th. Waldhof’s Janne Sietan saw red a minute into stoppage time. Boyd saw yellow four minutes into stoppage time.

La Liga

Johnny Cardoso subbed out in the 63rd for Atletico Madrid’s 3-0 loss at Rayo Vallecano. Atletico fell behind in the 40th and Rayo Vallecano added goals in the 45th and 76th. Cardoso saw yellow in the 29th minute. Alex Freeman subbed on in the 78th for Villarreal’s 2-1 home loss at Getafe. Trailing from a penalty in the 41st and a goal in the 53rd, Georges Mikautadze scored for Villarreal in the 76th minute.

Jonathan Gomez’s Albacete drew 1-1 at home with Sporting Gijon in the Segunda Division. Jefte Betancor converted an Albacete penalty four minutes into stoppage time and Gijon equalized from the penalty spot in the 78th minute.

Ligue 1

Folarin Balogun subbed out in the 76th for AS Monaco’s 3-1 home win over Nantes. Simon Adingra scored for Monaco in the 25th and 28th and Denis Zakaria made it 3-0 in the 30th. Nantes pulled a goal back a minute into first-half stoppage time. Monaci’s Aleksandr Golovin saw red in the 65th minute. Tim Weah’s Marseille drew 2-2 at home with Strasbourg. Mason Greenwood put Marseille up in the 14th and Amine Gouiri scored in the 47th. Strasbourg pulled a goal back in the 73rd and converted a penalty seven minutes into stoppage time. Weah saw yellow eight minutes into stoppage time.

Tanner Tessmann’s Lyon shutout Nice 2-0 at home, going ahead from a Corentin Tolisso goal a minute into first-half stoppage time. Noah Nartey doubled the Lille lead in the 64th. Tessmann saw yellow in the 52nd minute. Mark McKenzie’s Toulouse lost 2-1 at LeHavre. Playing a man down from the 2nd, LeHavre took the lead in the 43rd. Toulouse’s Djibril Sidibe equalized three minutes into first-half stoppage time. Le Havre went ahead for good in the 53rd minute.

Elsewhere in Europe

Sergino Dest’s PSV lost 2-1 at Volendam in the Eredivisie. Dennis Man scored PSV’s goal in the 82nd. Volendam equalized in the 67th and scored again in the 87th minute.

Auston Trusty’s Celtic won 3-2 at Kilmarnock. Trailing 2-0 from goals in the 21st and 28th, Celtic’s Sebastian Tounekto pulled a goal back in the 56th and Benjamin Nygren equalized in the 64th. Julian Araujo scored Celtic’s winner seven minutes into stoppage time.

Champions League Power Rankings: Real Madrid rounding into form as the playoffs for the knockout stage begin

The Champions League playoffs will be back this week around Europe

By Francesco Porzio 6 hrs ago•6 min read

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CBS Sports

The 2025-26 edition of the Champions League will be back this week when the 16 teams involved in the playoffs take the stage across Europe, competing for the remaining eight spots left in next month’s knockout. There are some big teams around Europe that are currently shiniing, such as Arsenal and Bayern Munich, while others will try to get involved in the race to win one of the most prestigious tournaments in the world of soccer. Let’s take a look at our weekly power rankings: 

1. Arsenal (–)

Week after week there is an increasing feeling Arsenal will win the Premier League this season, not only because of the advantage they have on Manchester City in the table, but also because the team coached by Pep Guardiola doesn’t look as solid as in the past years. There is still time and the Champions League will also be back soon for them and Arsenal also are among the leading candidates to win the European tournament as well. Clearly the class of Europe at the moment. 

2. Bayern Munich (–)

A six points advantage on Borussia Dortmund is definitely enough for them to hope for another Bundesliga win and this is something than can help them in the last weeks of European soccer when they will also try to win the Champions League under Vincent Kompany. They’ve also got Harry Kane who is in incredible form this season. 

3. PSG (–)

They are finally back on the right track. After a predictable slower start after the highly successful 2024-25 season they are now fully in the right place, both domestically and in Europe. The fact they will face AS Monaco in the playoffs shouldn’t threaten them and won’t change the fact they are still the team to beat in the knockouts. 

4. Barcelona (–)

Hansi Flick’s team is among the best teams around Europe, but the 4-0 defeat against Atletico Madrid last week will definitely put more pressure on the Blaugrana in the coming weeks. The Copa del Rey defeat doesn’t really change their status, but it’s now what Flick’s men needed ahead of the crucial stint of the season. 

5. Inter (–)

The Nerazzurri finally won a matchup against a big team over the weekend against Juventus. Even if the result was widely overshadowed by a controversial red card, the win against Luciano Spalletti’s team will give more self confidence to the Nerazzurri, who desperately needed a win against one of the top teams before meeting Bodo/Glimt on Wednesday for the first leg of the playoffs. 

 

Inter Milan are hitting their stride, and fellow Champions League contenders should take notice

6. Real Madrid (+1)

Alvaro Arbeloa has done a pretty good job so far, but the key match will be the one against Benfica that will take place this week in Lisbon. Real Madrid will be back facing Jose Mourinho’s team in the same stadium where Benfica managed to win an incredible game that led them to the playoffs thanks to the late goal scored by their goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin in January. 

7. Manchester City (-1)

We were all expecting more from Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City this season but there is still in time to win trophies. There are increasing doubts on the future of the Spanish coach who might leave at the end of the current season, and this is not helping the team, even if they can still potentially win at least one trophy. 

8. Chelsea (–)

The impact of new head coach Liam Rosenior is already proving significant for Chelsea, who now sit just one point off the top four in England. The renewed energy and tactical clarity he has brought to the side have revitalized their push up the table. With momentum on their side, Chelsea can aim for a top-four finish and even set their sights on a trophy. 

9. Liverpool (+1)

Too many ups and downs this season for Arne Slot’s team. In just the last few weeks they’ve lost at Anfield against Manchester City after winning 4-1 in the same stadium against Newcastle. Their lack of continuity is affecting their position in the Premier League standings. 

10. Atletico Madrid (-1)

What can you say to a team that won 4-0 against Barcelona? A lot, because it’s the same team that three days later lost 3-0 to Rayo Vallecano in the league. It’s the perfect representation of their season and the reason why I don’t expect them to win a major trophy in the upcoming months. 

11. Juventus (+1)

Despite losing to Inter at San Siro, Juventus are in great shape. Under Spalletti’s management, the Bianconeri have improved a lot and are now in the race both in the Serie A standings and in the Champions League where they will meet Galatasaray in the playoffs this week.  

12. Atalanta (-1)

Since Raffaele Palladino took over the club, things have drastically improved. Atalanta needed a change after a disappointing start under Ivan Juric who replaced Gian Piero Gasperini in the summer 2025. They will now face a playoff tie against Borussia Dortmund, not the easiest opponent but at least the second leg will be in Bergamo. 

13. Newcastle (–)

The 2-1 win against Tottenham slightly improved their position in the Premier League standings, but they are definitely not where they should be and the playoffs against Qarabag will tell us more about their European ambitions. 

14. Borussia Dortmund (–)

Despite the six-point gap with Bayern Munich they are they only team that is at least trying to keep pace with the German leaders, but this is probably not enough. 

15. Sporting CP (–)

What they are doing is impressive because staying close to Porto wasn’t an easy job to do this season, as the team coached by Francesco Farioli won 19 games, drew twice and only lost one while Sporting CP are sitting in second place four points behind the leaders. 

16. Tottenham (–)

What a week it was for them. Thomas Frank was sacked after the defeat against Newcastle and they hired former Juventus coach Igor Tudor as caretaker manager until the end of the season. We could predict this scenario, especially considering Frank only won two of the last 17 Premier League games he coached. 

17. Galatasaray (–) 

I was definitely expecting more from this team that will now face Juventus in the playoffs. I see the Italians as favorites but the Turkish side has players to believe in. 

18. Bayer Leverkusen (–)

They are in a similar spot as Borussia Dortmund, even if they also have to perform domestically to qualify again for the Champions League next season. Facing Olympiacos in the playoffs can guarantee them a spot in the knockouts. 

19. AS Monaco (–)

They don’t really have much chance to qualify against their French rivals PSG. 

20. Benfica (–)

Drawing Real Madrid in the playoff round was likely not what Jose Mourinho had hoped for with his Benfica side. But being among the top 24 teams in the Champions League already feels like an achievement in itself, showing again the status of the Portuguese coach. 

21. Qarabag (–)

The biggest surprise of the league phase will meet Newcastle in the two legged playoffs. Will they do it again? 

22. Club Brugge (–)

It feels like Atletico Madrid can potentially become a manageable opponent to face this week in the playoffs, but they need to perform much better than the league phase if they want to have a chance.  

23. Olympiacos (–)

The Bayer Leverkusen playoffs are not a bad outcome for them, even if they could have done much better in the league phase.

24. Bodo/Glimt (–) 

If you’ve followed them over the past few years, it should come as little surprise to see them reach this stage. However, drawing Inter in the playoffs is probably the toughest opponent they could have faced.

2/6/26 Pulisic welcomes Olympics, New US Jersey leak, Olympics pushes EPL to Peacock, Columbus to host Olympic Soccer

Notes

After 2 goals in Champions League last week American Malik Tillman can’t stop scoring as he notched this one on Saturday for Leverkusen. Weston McKinney also stayed hot with this stunner on Sunday in Juve’s 4-1 win. McKinney is legit playing the best ball of his life right now and is THE BEST player for Juventus right now – and a huge reason they are back in the top 4 in Italy. (Great story about him below). Stunning Goal by Tottenham as they tie Man City late man the EPL is something – every weekend. Reminder looking for EPL games this weekend – they will NOT be on USA or NBCSN or NBC – the Olympics is on everywhere – Its Peacock for all the games except Man U vs Tottenham on Sat 7:30 am. Liverpool’s huge 11:30 am game with Man City will be on Peacock. Came across this fascinating story about Pele and Diego Maradona beefed over who was the GOAT …

As Milan prepares to welcome the world tonight for the Winter Olympics – Pulisic in on board. Click to see – Pulisic Welcomes Winter Olympics

Huge News that the US World Away Kit has perhaps been leaked.

So what do you think? It should be noted that the logos will feature a metallic silver effect, rather than the plain white color shown in this mock-up.
Obviously that’s a Women’s Jersey with the 4 stars on it. But not bad I guess. I little too dark for me.

Columbus & Nashville to Host Olympic Soccer in 2028

We might have gotten shut out for the World Cup but Awesome News that both Columbus, Ohio and Nashville, TN will be host sites for Soccer for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. The Soccer games are always played around the nation – there will be 12 men’s teams and 8 women’s teams competing (the US is in for both of course). New York City, St. Louis, San Diego, San Jose will join in hosting games along with LA. Nashville & Columbus among 6 cities to host Olympic soccer. Speaking of tickets — anyone get World Cup Tickets? We are still trying to get tix – no word yet – still planning to head to LA June 13th and stay out west until we lose. Anybody got a line on US Tickets reach-out at shanebestsoccer@gmail.com.

So I guess I missed Girls in Sports Week this Week – so for all our Girls playing Soccer @ Carmel FC &
Everywhere Here’s to You! – Thanks Abby!

GAMES ON TV

Fri, Feb 6
2:30 pm ESPN+ Union Berlin vs Frankfurt
3 pm USA Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Nottingham Forest
Sat, Feb 7
7:30 am USA Man United vs Tottenham
9:30 am ESPN+ Freiburg vs Dortmund
10 am USA Fulham (Jedi) vs Everton
10 am Peacock Wolverhampton vs Chelsea
10 am Peacock Arsenal vs Sunderland
10:15 am ESPN+ Barcelona vs Mallorca
12 noon Para+ Genoa vs Napoli
12:30 pm Peacock Newcastle vs Brentford
12:30 pm ESPN+ MGladbach (Scaly, Reyna) vs Leverkusen (Tillman)
10:10 pm Uni America vs Monterrey (Mex)
Sun Feb 8
9 am Telemundo Brighton vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
11:30 am Peacock Liverpool vs Man City
11:30 am ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs Hoffenheim
12 noon Para+ Sassuolo vs Inter Milan
12:30 pm ESPN+ Athletico Madrid (Cardoso) vs Real Betis
2:45 pm Para+ Juventus (McKennie) vs Lazio
3 pm ESPN2 Valencia vs Real Madrid
Mon, Feb 9
2:45 pm Para+ Roma vs Cagliari
Tues, Feb 10
2:30 pm Peacock Everton vs Bournemouth
2:30 pm Peacock Chelsea vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
2:30 pm PC Tottenham vs NewCastle
3:15 pm Peacock West Ham vs Man U
8 pm FS 2 Pumas vs San Diego (1-4 CCCL 2nd leg)
Weds, Feb 11
2:30 pm Peacock Man City vs Fulham (Jedi)
2:30 pm Peacock Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Burnley (Adams)
2:30 pm PC Aston Villa vs Brighton
2:30 pm Peacock Nottingham Forest vs Wolverhampton
2:45 pm ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs RB Leipzig
3:15 pm Peacock Sunderland vs Liverpool
8 pm FS2 America vs Olimpia CCL 2nd leg
10 pm FS2 Monterrey vs Xelaju CCL 2nd leg
Thurs, Feb 12
2:30 pm Peacock Brentford vs Arsenal
8 pm FS 2 Cruz Azul vs Vancouver (CCCL)
Fri , Feb 13
2:45 pm Para+ Pisa vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
2:45 pm ESPN2 Hull City vs Chelsea
2:45 pm ESPN+ Wrexham vs Ipswich Town
8 pm FS 2 Cruz Azul vs Vancouver (CCCL)
Sat, Feb 14
2:45 pm Para+ Inter Milan vs Juventus (McKennie)
3 pm ESPN+ Liverpool vs Brighton
3 pm ESPN+ Real Madrid vs Real Sociedad

Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Fully loaded

A huge slate of matches this weekend by jcksnftsn Feb 6, 2026, 12:18 PM EST Stars & Stripes

There is a huge slate of matches this weekend, despite AC Milan and Christian Pulisic having the weekend off, and includes matches across the top and bottom of all the major European leagues as well as some head-to-head matches. In addition to Milan being off there are some injury watch areas that will impact viewing opportunities so keep an eye out for those. The action starts on Friday afternoon with a matchup between a couple teams looking to distance themselves from the relegation fray.

Friday

Leeds United v Nottingham Forest – 3p on USA Network: Brenden Aaronson started and went 71’ in Leeds 4-0 defeat to league leading Arsenal last weekend. Leeds are now level with this weekend’s opponent, Nottingham Forest, who picked up a point in their 1-1 draw with Crystal Palace last weekend. Leeds and Forest both have 26 points, which give them a six point lead over West Ham United who are currently in the final relegation spot. Friday’s match is a true relegation zone six pointer and Leeds will be looking to avenge their September loss as they host Forest.

Saturday

St. Pauli v Stuttgart – 9:30a on ESPN Select: James Sands and St. Pauli fell to Augsburg 2-1 last weekend and are now five points back of Werder Bremen for safety, four back of Mainz for the relegation playoff spot. Sands did start and go the full 90’ picking up his fourth yellow card of the season in stoppage time. St. Pauli have just three wins through twenty matches with only one of those victories coming in the last four and a half months.

Heidenheim v Hamburger – 9:30a on ESPN Select: After starting his first three matches with Hamburger Damion Downs was unavailable last weekend due to a calf injury as his team played Bayern Munich to a 2-2 draw. Hamburger face a Heidenheim side who are dead last and have given up a league leading 45 goals but it’s uncertain if Downs will be available to try to take advantage of the matchup.

Wolfsburg v Borussia Dortmund – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kevin Paredes missed last weekends match though he had been reported to be “back in full swing” the day prior to the match after also missing out two weeks ago due to illness. There were transfer rumors around the player whose contract expires in June so perhaps it was a precaution. Wolfsburg fell to Koln 1-0 and are now just one point clear of Mainz in the relegation playoff position. They host second place Borussia Dortmund who trail Bayern Munich by six points after gaining five points on them over the past two weekends.


Mainz v Augsburg – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Lennard Maloney and Mainz will host Noahkai Banks and Augsburg on Saturday morning. Maloney played nearly 20’ off the bench last weekend in Mainz’s 2-1 win over fourth place Leipzig. The win was Mainz’s third in four matches as the nine points doubled what they had picked up in their first sixteen matches of the season. They remain in sixteenth place, the relegation playoff position, a point back of a trio of teams for safety. Augsburg is also headed in the right direction over the last couple weeks with back-to-back wins over Bayern Munich and St. Pauli to pick up six points and move four points clear of Mainz in the relegation playoff spot. A week after serving a yellow card accumulation suspension and missing Augsburg’s 2-1 over Bayern, Banks was back in the starting lineup and picking up yet another yellow.

Fulham v Everton – 10a on Peacock: Antonee Robinson remains with Fulham, and Ricardo Pepi was not brought in after a curious decision to PSV not to let the injured player go because they couldn’t line up a replacement. Robinson and Fulham fell to suddenly hot Manchester United 3-2 last weekend with Robinson getting the start and playing 71’. Fulham dropped to ninth place with the loss and will take on an Everton side that are in tenth and tied with them on 34 points.

Coventry City v Oxford United – 9:01a on CBSSN: Haji Wright came off the bench last Saturday as Coventry City fell to QPR 2-1, it was their second straight loss this season and fourth in seven matches as they are now tied with Middlesbrough for the top spot in the league. The two teams with Americans are four points ahead of Hull City for automatic promotion to the EPL. Coventry will take on an Oxford United side that are ahead of only Sheffield Wednesday in the table. If you haven’t been following along Sheffield Wednesday are at negative seven points through thirty matches thanks to a pair of points deduction rulings totaling 18 points. That doesn’t have a direct impact on any USMNT players but what an odd table it makes.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Bayer Leverkusen – 12:30p on ESPN Select: Joe Scally and Borussia Monchengladbach played Werder Bremen to a 1-1 draw last weekend while Gio Reyna watched from the sidelines as he suffers through injury yet again. Reyna has missed the past two matches due to another muscle strain and it’s unclear when he will be available again. Scally and Gladbach will host Bayer Leverkusen and fellow American Malik Tillman. Tillman scored the second of Leverkusen’s three goals last weekend in the team’s 3-1 win over Eintracht Frankfurt. Leverkusen are in sixth place in the league standings, four points back of fourth place Stuttgart with a game in hand.

Real Sociedad v Elche – 3:00p on ESPN Select: Pellegrino Matarazzo’s Real Sociedad played Atheltic Club to a 1-1 draw last weekend and defeated Deportivo Alaves in the Copa del Rey quarterfinals on Wednesday as Sociedad remains undefeated since Matarazzo took the helm. Eighth place Sociedad will host thirteenth place Elche who are just two points out of the relegation zone in a very crowded lower half of the La Liga table. just four points separate the ten teams from 9th to 18th place with 18th representing the final relegation spot. Sociedad are themselves just two points ahead of that group and six points out of 18th themselves despite the recent run of success since Matarazzo took over.

Nantes v Olympique Lyon – 3:05p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann and Lyon defeated fifth place Lille to pull seven points ahead of them and level with Marseille in the Ligue 1 standings. It was the fifth straight league victory for Lyon who now travel to face sixteenth place Nantes who have just 14 points through their first 20 matches of the season and have lost three straight matches.

Sunday

Brighton & Hove Albion v Crystal Palace – 9a on Telemundo: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace were unable to stop their winless streak on Monday as they settled for a 1-1 draw with Nottingham Forest. It has been ten matches for Palace since their last win as they have slid to fifteenth place in the league standings though they are still nine points clear of 18th place West Ham.

Nice v Monaco – 9a on beIN sports: Folarin Balogun picked up an assist in Monaco’s 4-0 win over Stade Rennais last weekend. Balogun still hasn’t scored since November and has just four goals on the season but it was his second assist in the past four matches. The win also snapped a five match winless streak for Monaco and kept them in the top ten of the league standings. The team will travel to Nice on Sunday to take on the 13th place side who

Koln v RB Leipzig – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kristoffer Lund started again for Koln on Friday as they defeated Wolfsburg 1-0. Koln have won two of three and are in tenth place as they prepare to host fifth place RB Leipzig who are looking to bounce back after a 2-1 loss to Mainz.

Groningen v PSV – 10:45a on ESPN Select: Sergino Dest and PSV solidified their hold on the Eredivisie title race with a decisive 3-0 win over second place Feyenoord to increase their league lead to seventeen points with thirteen matches to go in the season. The seventeen point lead is what makes Ricardo Pepi’s abandoned transfer to Fulham even more curious though there are rumors that he could be returning more quickly than originally thought. PSV’s opponent this weekend is 8th place Groningen who have lost their past two matches.

Angers v Toulouse – 11:15a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Toulouse were held to a scoreless draw by 17th place Auxerre last weekend and remain in eighth place as they visit 11th place Angers this weekend. McKenzie has started all but three matches for Toulouse this season who have given up 23 goals through 20 matches which is the fifth best scoring defense in the league.

Atletico Madrid v Real Betis – 12:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso picked up a minor knock in training and missed out on Atletico Madrid’s 5-0 beat down of his old team, Real Betis, in the Copa del Rey quarterfinals on Thursday. Atletico will now face Betis in a league match on Sunday though Cardoso will likely miss out yet again though his injury isn’t expected to keep him out for an extended period.

PSG v Olympique Marseille – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Tim Weah has started eight straight matches for Marseille who drew with Paris FC 2-2 last weekend. The draw dropped Marseille into a draw with Lyon which is significant as the top three in Ligue 1 automatically qualify for the Champions League. Marseille will take on league leading Paris Saint-Germain this weekend who have won six straight league matches. PSG hold a two point lead over Lens for the league lead and have a nine point advantage over Marseille.

Juventus v Lazio – 2:45p on Paramount+: Weston McKennie scored again for Juventus on Monday in the teams 4-1 win over Parma. It was the third goal of the calendar year for McKennie who was playing as the 10 for Juve who moved into the top four in the Serie A standings. They will take on eighth place Lazio who are coming off a 3-2 win over Genoa.

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USA

GK Horvath moves to Red Bulls from Cardiff City
USMNT’s Cardoso out 2 Atleti games with injury
 US Stars Tillman & McKinney dominate Abroad 
Atlanta signs U.S. youth star Gill from Barça
US U17s beat St V 8-0 in WCQualifiers

USWNT vs. Chile, 2026 friendly: What we learned
In Depth on Retiring Crystal Dunn
Nashville & Columbus among 6 cities to host Olympic soccer


MLS

Minnesota United sign Colombian superstar James Rodríguez
Source: Minnesota finalizing James Rodríguez deal
Take a closer look at 5 biggest roster questions facing teams in the East before the season starts: https://soc.cr/3Oai5Nu
Ex-U.S. GK Guzan takes on new role at Atlanta
How MLS’ USMNTers endure long offseason to stay sharp for World Cup
San Diego FC dominate Pumas in Concacaf Champions Cup opener


World

Wrexham have Premier League in sight, just five years after Reynolds and Mac takeover
We bought a soccer team! What NBA greats Kerr, Nash & Co. learned owning LaLiga’s Mallorca

Laurens’ weekend preview: Will Liverpool beat Man City? Can Carrick keep Man Utd run going?
City, Liverpool set for clash
Messi to Newell’s? Ronaldo to Sporting? Soccer’s potential romantic returns

Reffing

How to Become a Travel Ref
Offsides?  
Corner Flag Mechanics

Carmel Dad’s Club Soccer Referee Training –CLICK HERE 

Goalkeeping

Benefica Goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin Header at the Buzzer beats Real Madrid 4-2 s
Ex-U.S. GK Guzan takes on new role at Atlanta
Best PK Saves in MLS Last Season

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How injury concerns have interrupted Christian Pulisic’s dream pre-World Cup season

Christian Pulisic of AC Milan during his team's 1-0 victory over Lecce.

Nicolò Campo / LightRocket / Getty Images By Henry Bushnell Feb. 2, 2026 The Athletic

Christian Pulisic is not in AC Milan’s squad for a Tuesday trip to Bologna, and with every passing week, his dream pre-World Cup season looks more and more like another campaign hampered by unfortunate health.Milan manager Max Allegri said Monday that Pulisic has “bursitis that’s bothering him.” Bursitis is inflammation of fluid-filled sacs near joints, and Pulisic’s is reportedly near his hip.Allegri seemed to indicate that Pulisic’s condition wasn’t serious. The experienced Italian coach said that he and his staff hoped to get the American forward “back on track in the coming days.” In fact, Pulisic was in contention to travel and play Tuesday. “If he’s better today,” Allegri said early Monday, “we’ll take him.”But Pulisic wasn’t better enough. And he’s now gone more than a month without scoring or assisting a goal. And, all of a sudden, his career-best form this past fall feels like a distant memory.Pulisic could, of course, be fine and back to his best by the end of February. He could be better than ever by June, when he’ll be the face of the U.S. men’s national team at a home World Cup.But his trajectory is no longer demonstrably upward. Since September, he has tallied four goals and zero assists for club and country. After propelling Milan to the top of Serie A, and announcing himself as a bonafide star, injuries, yet again, have interrupted his desire and talent.For a while, that was the story of Pulisic’s young career. In his teens and early 20s, a variety of knocks and muscle strains — plus a variety of coaches with fluctuating opinions of him — complicated his development. He learned, however, to harden and manage his body, and by 2024, he seemed to have entered an uninterrupted prime. He contributed to 25 goals in his first season at Milan, and 27 in his second, the 2024-25 campaign.tsToward the tail end of that season, he heard his body and mind saying they needed a rest; so he took one. He used this past offseason to recharge, and returned from the break better than ever. When he was named Serie A’s September player of the month, he seemed to be exactly where every U.S. fan, teammate and coach wanted him to be — building toward the biggest tournament of his life.Then came the physical ailments. There was the swelling in his ankle ahead of a U.S. friendly against Ecuador. Four days later, against Australia, there were two crunching tackles and a hamstring tear.

Injuries have limited Christian Pulisic’s recent availability under Milan coach Max Allegri.Pier Marco Tacca / Getty Images

Pulisic recovered from that setback, and resumed his sterling season. In his first start back, he scored the only goal of a derby victory over Inter Milan. As 2026 neared, he was leading Serie A in goals plus assists per 90 minutes; and across all of Europe’s Big Five leagues, he was second to only Harry Kane.He was, in other words, playing soccer at a level that no American man had previously reached. And he was doing it, seemingly, at the perfect time.But the succession of injuries never relented.Pulisic felt muscular discomfort in late November and missed a match against Lazio. A week later, he fell ill, felt “truly dead,” and had to settle for a place on the bench. He entered that game as a substitute and scored twice to turn a 2-1 deficit into a 3-2 win over Torino. But he never fully re-found his prolific early-season rhythm.Then, after Christmas, he felt some more discomfort, and Allegri held him out of another starting 11 in Milan’s first game of 2026. Three scoreless weeks later, he was back on the bench for a massive match at Roma.And now, he’s out of the squad altogether.The hope, for all involved, is that his absence this week is largely precautionary. Milan, in general, has taken a cautious approach to Pulisic’s fitness and workload this year after he played over 7,000 minutes the previous two seasons combined. In fact, there’s a chance that his stop-start season — he’s on pace to play less than 2,500 minutes in 2025-26 — could be a blessing in disguise, especially for the U.S., whose priority is full health by May.

But it is, bluntly, a bummer for Pulisic. A few short months ago, he was rising toward the biggest tournament of his life in the form of his life. He was a candidate for Serie A player of the year.Now, at the very least, there’s uncertainty, or perhaps even concern, about how he’ll be feeling when he arrives in Atlanta on May 27 for the start of World Cup camp. The answer seems to depend on the roller coaster ride that his body has been on for much of his decade in pro soccer.By Henry BushnellSenior Writer, U.S. Soccer

Weston McKennie’s form makes him seem undroppable. Will Mauricio Pochettino agree?

Juventus star Weston McKennie celebrates a goal vs Parma

Alessandro Sabattini / Getty Images

By Henry Bushnell Feb. 4, 2026 6:00 am EST

If you’d like to know why Weston McKennie belongs at the heart of the U.S. men’s national team, all you really have to do is watch his latest Serie A masterpiece.Watch, in the sixth minute, as he runs the length of the field in transition, stays composed after a 50-yard sprint, and picks out a near-assist.Or watch the 11th minute, when he connects a Juventus possession on the edge of the box, then darts into it and creates another chance.You could also watch the goal, McKennie’s fourth in a month, an acrobatic, off-balance side volley. But it was his full body of work for Juve against Parma on Sunday — and against reigning champ Napoli the Sunday before, and throughout the month of January — that shows why he must be a USMNT catalyst at the World Cup this summer.The open question, however, is whether Mauricio Pochettino agrees with that assessment.McKennie, 27, might be the best American soccer player in the world at the moment. But Pochettino, the U.S. coach, has said: “The national team needs the right players; not the best players, the right players.”And with the World Cup four months away, it’s unclear whether he considers McKennie right for the USMNT’s starting 11.

An emphatic return to form

What’s clear is that McKennie is talented and influential. He has been for years, and over the past few months, he’s raised his level. “He’s an incredible guy,” his Juventus coach, Luciano Spalletti, said in December. “He always wins individual duels with his opponent. You can put him in multiple positions, and his skills allow us to change the formation. He has all the qualities to do well anywhere.” McKennie’s versatility has long been a blessing and a curse; a valuable asset that earned him playing time at five or six positions, but hindered his development at any single spot. That trend, to some extent, has continued under Spalletti. But recently, he has found a groove in an attacking midfield role — one that would, in theory, translate well to the U.S. national team. He has played as something of a second striker, whether on the right or directly underneath Juve’s No. 9, Jonathan David. He sometimes defends alongside David at the head of a 4-4-2, and in possession, he attacks space wherever he sees it. He’s a box-to-box midfielder, an inventive attacker and a goalscoring forward all at once, and “he is one of the best there is in this role because he’s always where the ball is,” Spalletti said.

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The experienced Italian boss, speaking after a 3-0 win over Napoli, even suggested that McKennie would be the “perfect center forward.” And a week later, he clarified: “I wasn’t joking last time, I was serious.”He raved about McKennie’s ability in the “real situations” that decide games, when they get “hectic” or “turbulent” — the unscripted moments that often get lost in debates over where McKennie fits in the USMNT.

Luciano Spalletti gives Weston McKennie a hug

Weston McKennie has a grand admirer in Juventus manager Luciano SpallettiGrzegorz Wajda / SOPA Images / LightRocket / Getty Images

As Pochettino drifted this fall toward a system with wingbacks, two central midfielders and two attackers in pockets behind a striker, questions arose surrounding McKennie’s place in it. A central midfield role is too restrictive. One of the advanced roles, though, will surely be Christian Pulisic’s, and another seems ripe for Malik Tillman.Tillman, who’s starting and occasionally scoring for Bayer Leverkusen in Germany, appeared to win Pochettino over at the Concacaf Gold Cup last summer. McKennie, on the other hand, has been largely uninvolved in Pochettino’s rebuild.He has only been in one camp since the Concacaf Nations League debacle last March — a week that Pochettino has since described as a “wake-up call” that inspired him “to destroy the things that we need to destroy, and start to build the house from the ground up” with a better, more committed, team-first culture. McKennie missed the first stage of the rebuild, that Gold Cup, while on Club World Cup duty with Juventus. He was then omitted from rosters in September and November as the new culture and on-field identity crystallized.Pochettino’s stated reasons for the omissions were, first, to “give [McKennie] the possibility to be more settled in his club”; and then, two months later, to give McKennie time to win over Spalletti, who took charge in late October. That, Pochettino said, was “more important than maybe being with us, because we already know what he can provide the team.”But as the U.S. pounded Uruguay 5-1 without him — and as Pochettino attacked the concept of “regulars,” continuing his assault on any entitlement that some players might have felt — it was difficult to escape the sense that McKennie no longer felt necessaryAnd when, a few weeks later, Pochettino spoke about “right players, not best players,” it was fair to wonder how he’d categorize McKennie.

McKennie’s many ways to make an impact

Over the past few months, though, McKennie has reinforced his indispensability. He’s offered reminder after reminder, week after week, that no matter his role or surroundings, he can — and often will — impact a game.In 73 minutes against Parma, for example, he fueled counterattacks and prevented them; offered outlets as a target man and as a channel-runner; played one-touch passes on the edge of the penalty area; and created and finished chances.

Weston McKennie vs. Parma

At one end of the pitch, he was clearing Parma crosses; at the other, his aerial presence contributed to Juve’s first and third goals on set pieces.Over the game’s first 40 minutes, he covered more ground than any other player. He was everywhere. And that, precisely, is why he surely has to be in the USMNT’s 11 whenever possible. Even if his role is tough to define, he has to have one. McKennie is a playmaker. Not in the traditional sense — he is neither a visionary No. 10 nor a flashy winger — but in his own unique way. He drives a team forward with his running. He pulls opponents out of their preferred shapes. He makes them uncomfortable, either with his off-ball movement or strength in duels, in a way that very few American players can. He is not the cleanest with the ball at his feet. He can’t play on the half-turn like Tillman and other technicians can. But he can link an attack with his back to goal…

Weston McKennie against Napoli

… and sniff out space that nobody else smells…

Weston McKennie against Napoli

… all while tracking runners and coping with back-post crosses.

Weston McKennie against Napoli

Pochettino and his assistants, two of whom have scouted McKennie in person this winter, surely see all of that.They have indicated that they understand McKennie’s value. They started him twice in October, when Pochettino said: “What I want to provide him is the freedom. He’s a player that needs freedom.”Last week, though, when asked about McKennie’s Juve form, Pochettino’s answer, while positive, wasn’t exactly effusive.“It’s very good that he is playing in a regular way, being very consistent now in Juventus,” Pochettino said. “Yes, we are happy that our player performs and plays in a very consistent and very regular way. … Now, it’s about assessing all the players, the players that we already know, how to mix the 26 players — thinking, of course, always, [about] the World Cup.” By Henry Bushnell Senior Writer, U.S. Soccer

Why Ricardo Pepi’s Fulham transfer collapse can help his U.S., World Cup outlook

PSV's Ricardo Pepi takes a shot in the Champions League

Dean Mouhtaropoulos / Getty Image

By Paul Tenorio Feb. 2, 2026

The enticement of a big transfer at the club level and all that a big move represents — growth, a new challenge, a bigger stage and (of course) more money — can sometimes be at conflict with the realities on the international stage. It’s an imbalance with which Ricardo Pepi is already intimately familiar. But this time around, fate may fall on his side when it comes to making the U.S. World Cup team. When Pepi made a $20 million move from FC Dallas to Augsburg in the German Bundesliga in January 2022, he looked like the striker of the future for the U.S. men’s national team. At just 18, Pepi was tapped for his international debut in a game with huge stakes: on the road in Honduras in the opening window of qualifying for the 2022 World Cup.After two draws to open qualifying, the U.S. needed a result in San Pedro Sula. The teenager delivered with a 75th-minute goal that gave the Americans a lead they wouldn’t relinquish, and he assisted on two others in a 4-1 win. He scored twice more the next month in a win over Jamaica, and his form in MLS combined with his national team breakout led to the big-money move to Germany.But Pepi struggled for playing time at Augsburg, ultimately going nearly a year without a goal. The teenage phenom who seemed bound to start at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar instead fell down the depth chart. Pepi looked to salvage his chances at making the team with a loan to Groningen in September 2022. But even after scoring five goals and adding two assists in his first eight Eredivisie games, Gregg Berhalter left him off the U.S. roster — a controversial decision, but one that left Pepi watching the tournament from afar.Pepi hung up on Berhalter when told the news. The snub, of course, stuck with him.“It was difficult, you know, but it’s part of life,” Pepi told The Athletic in 2023. “I feel like ever since that moment, I’ve grown as a player and I’ve grown as a person. … (These moments) make you strong mentally. I’ve been through a lot, having to go on loan, having to miss out on the World Cup, and things like this, these are things that build character. And I feel like I’m a strong person.”Now, with another World Cup coming up, Pepi’s purported move from PSV to Fulham fell apart on deadline day as the Dutch powerhouse couldn’t find a replacement for its American striker. And this winter transfer situation could wind up helping Pepi avoid another disappointing moment on World Cup roster decision day.

Ricardo Pepi plays for the USMNT vs Paraguay

Ricardo Pepi is hoping for another chance to face Paraguay, the USMNT’s opening opponent at the 2026 World CupOmar Vega / Getty Images

Pepi, who remains sidelined with a broken forearm and isn’t expected to return for another month and a half, has 11 goals and three assists across all competitions this season. He remains one of the most efficient goalscorers in Europe. Fulham put forth a bid in the region of €35 million to bring that track record to the Premier League.t all sounds nice in theory, but there was genuine risk involved.The path to regular playing time at a new club and in a new league would have been more difficult for Pepi, especially as he worked back from injury only to return with roughly two months left in the season. At Fulham, he would have been competing with veteran Mexico international Raúl Jiménez — who is out of contract at the end of the season, hence Fulham’s push to sign a new striker — for playing time. Rodrigo Muniz could be back from a hamstring injury later this month, and also served as competition.If he had failed to get consistent playing time and was again lacking for goals, it would have been easy for Pepi to fall back on the U.S. depth chart, especially if Patrick Agyemang and Haji Wright were to keep on firing in the EFL Championship. That’s introducing a lot of unpredictability and potential for volatility at a time when Pepi needs to be at his sharpest.Instead, he’ll stay at the club where he has scored 24 goals with six assists in the Eredivisie and Champions League over the past two seasons. Remaining gives Pepi a much more solid chance to get back on the field — and back to scoring goals — on an accelerated timeline, which should keep him top of mind for Mauricio Pochettino as he picks a World Cup squad.USMNT and the Winter Transfer WindowMauricio Pochettino backs USMNT players seeking January moves as World Cup loomsAlex Freeman has completed a big January move, while Ricardo Pepi could also make a switch before the transfer deadlineThat’s especially important since it seems Pochettino will look at the March window as an extension of camp for the team he’ll take to the tournament in the summer.Folarin Balogun looks set to be the starter up top for the Argentine manager. He’s been a difference-maker at the No. 9 for the U.S. in the last few windows. But behind him, the competition is still very much wide open. In Qatar, the U.S. learned how important depth was at the forward position. Wright had an inconsistent tournament, while Jesus Ferreira was ineffective in the knockout stage after Josh Sargent got hurt.Last week, Pochettino said he hopes to see Pepi fit again soon.“We’ll see how he is going to come back and start to play and to perform,” Pochettino said. “Of course he’s a player in our radar. [I] hope that he can be fit and I think we have time to assess and of course we are going to make the best decision for him and for us.”Pochettino made it clear that he likes to see his players make moves, even with the risk involved. They are betting on themselves and seeing chances to grow and improve. He doesn’t want players staying in their comfort zone.But for the U.S. and for Pepi, staying at PSV for the next few months might give them both the best chance at maximizing their World Cup summer. And if they do, then Fulham — and others — will be lining up for another shot to sign him. By Paul Tenorio Senior Writer, MLS

Josh Sargent’s Norwich status unchanged with one transfer deadline down, another to go

Norwich and USMNT forward Josh Sargent claps

Stephen Pond / Getty Image

By Paul Tenorio and Tom Bogert Feb. 2, 2026

Despite the English transfer window closing on Monday, there remains no update in Toronto FC’s pursuit of Norwich City and U.S. men’s national team forward Josh Sargent.Sargent’s future is not necessarily bound to the window abroad, as the MLS winter window is open until March 26, so Toronto has plenty of time to sign and register the player if a deal can be struck. Sources remain confident an agreement with Norwich can happen, especially after the English Championship club signed another forward ahead of deadline day, 21-year-old Australia and Randers striker Mohamed Touré.Norwich, though, insists Toronto’s opening $18 million bid is insufficient to sanction a departure, even as the forward trains with the U-21s. The saga stems from Sargent submitting a transfer request to the club and refusing to play in an FA Cup match vs. Walsall on Jan. 11. Sargent, who is under contract through 2028, hasn’t played for the club since.Update your feed. Follow new interests below for the latest stories.Toronto would like a deal to be reached sooner rather than later, with the opening match of the 2026 MLS season looming on Feb. 21.The club’s offer for Sargent is also hurt by the weakening value of the American dollar (despite TFC being a Canadian club, MLS teams conduct business in U.S. dollars). Norwich accepted a £21 million offer from Wolfsburg in July 2025, which at the exchange rate in the summer was valued at about $28 million. Toronto’s offer of $18 million currently checks in at just £13 million, which is why Norwich is so reluctant to sell at that price.In a market where players like fellow U.S. forward Ricardo Pepi are commanding fees of around £30 million (from Fulham to PSV), which ultimately was not accepted, there is belief that Sargent’s value won’t drop much less than £13 million even if he spent the rest of the season playing with Norwich’s under-21s.There is no rush to make a decision, as MLS’s window remains open for more than a month. But the belief is that Toronto is going to have to up its offer to get Norwich to budge on its stance.

USMNT Tracker: Champions League progress for McKennie and Balogun but late elimination for Weah

Monaco's Folarin Balogun competes for the ball against Juventus

Monaco’s Folarin Balogun had a goal disallowed against Juventus Frederic Dides/Getty Images

By Greg O’Keeffe Jan. 29, 2026

For some it was a chance to reassert their value with timely goals, for others it was a missed opportunity — or even last-ditch heartbreak.The league phase of the Champions League drew to a dramatic close yesterday, with progress secured for most of the USMNT contingent in Europe.Weston McKennie, Folarin Balogun, Malik Tillman, Johnny Cardoso and Yunus Musah all featured as their teams finished in the table’s play-off positions, ensuring another chance to clinch their place in the last-16 phase through next month’s play-offs.


Weah’s late heartbreak

Despite a memorable debut for his new club in this season’s competition, when he scored against Real Madrid at the Bernabeu in September, Tim Weah of Marseille was left forlorn on Wednesday.Just when Marseille thought they had scraped through to the play-off round, they were eliminated.Despite losing 3-0 in Belgium to Club Brugge, the French outfit headed into added time in 24th position, narrowly above the elimination zone. Only goal difference kept them above Benfica, who are managed by two-time Champions League winner Jose Mourinho, before a staggering finale in Lisbon.The Portuguese side’s goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin scored a sensational 98th-minute header that changed everything. It sealed a 4-2 win over nine-man Real Madrid, who dropped from the automatic qualification places into the play-offs, and moved Benfica above Marseille at the last gasp.At least when he recovers from his disappointment, he will not forget the earlier part of this season’s Champions League, especially that fine goal against Real Madrid.

That powerful finish stirred memories of how his iconic goalscoring father George had announced his arrival at another French club, Paris Saint-Germain, on his Champions League debut in 1994.What You Should Read NextTim Weah, an iconic magazine shoot and an historic Champions League goalThe USMNT star edged out of his father’s shadow with his historic Champions League goal at the Bernabeu


In-form McKennie and Balogun progress

Less dramatically, McKennie’s Juventus and Balogun’s Monaco played out a cagey stalemate that meant both teams head into the play-offs.

It may ultimately have been a quiet last league-stage fixture for McKennie but he had already made his mark on this competition. His previous three goals in three Champions League games were a streak timed as perfectly as his finishing, coming in the context of talks to extend his Juventus contract beyond this summer.

The Texan was not the only American who enjoyed an important scoring streak. Balogun notched in three consecutive Champions League games in November and December, including the only goal in wins against Bodo/Glimt and Galatasaray, which helped Monaco progress.

Weston McKennie warms up for Juventus ahead of facing MonacoValery Hache / AFP via Getty Images

Balogun thought he had scored another vital strike during the first half against Juventus at Stade Louis II in a game Monaco could not afford to lose.But a well-taken finish was ruled out for his foul on Pierre Kalulu in the build-up, and the Ligue 1 side’s nerves remained on edge until the end, even if Juventus struggled to create anything.


Injured Pepi watches as PSV eliminated

Ricardo Pepi also scored three times for PSV in the Champions League this season. The 23-year-old seized the opportunity of becoming his Dutch club’s first-choice centre-forward, after previously playing understudy to veteran Luuk de Jong.A broken arm earlier this month may have curtailed Pepi’s involvement in the league phase, but his performances prompted clubs who have been monitoring him, such as Premier League side Fulham, to step up their interest.Whether he leaves the Netherlands remains to be seen, but Pepi and his compatriot Sergino Dest won’t be going any further in this season’s Champions League. The defending Eredivisie champions lost 2-1 to Bayern Munich, meaning they were knocked out.Pepi and Balogun will compete to lead the line for the USMNT in the World Cup, but Mauricio Pochettino’s midfield is another area with strong options.


Cardoso struggles continue

In that respect, Johnny Cardoso will have hoped for better exposure in Europe’s elite cup competition so far this term. The 24-year-old has struggled to break into Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid side, and started only one of their eight league-phase games. He came on in the second half of their 2-1 loss to Bodo/Glimt on Wednesday.ardoso will at least get the chance to feature in the play-offs.


Tillman at the double

Another gifted young USMNT star carved out his own notable record. Malik Tillman repeated the trick of doing what no other American has done before, by scoring twice in a Champions League tie on Wednesday.His double against Villarreal helped Bayer Leverkusen to a 3-0 win and with that progress into the play-offs. They will now play either Borussia Dortmund or Olympiacos for a place in the last 16.

It echoed his record-breaking brace in the competition for his previous team PSV, against Shakhtar Donetsk in 2024.


Musah makes rare start

Yunus Musah will compete with Tillman for a midfield slot in Mauricio Pochettino’s side this summer, and he will also get at least one more chance to shine in the Champions League beforehand.Musah made his second start in the league phase for his Italian side Atalanta in a 1-0 defeat at Union Saint-Gilloise, but that did not prevent them making the play-off stage.The 23-year-old had a quiet game, and with only two Serie A starts so far this season, he might be concerned by his lack of minutes thus far in an important season. By Greg O’Keeffe Senior Writer

How NFL stadiums are transforming for the 2026 World Cup

SoFi Stadium in California will host World Cup games Frederic J. Brown / AFP / Getty Images

By Henry Bushnell Feb. 3, 2026

In the seven months between one American football season and the next, NFL stadiums are typically busy. They host concerts and other sports, monster truck tours and more, adapting for each event one week at a time. But in 2026, a handful have cleared their summer calendars, and will transform for two full months to welcome a tournament of peerless proportion: the World Cup.

“Transform” is the operative word because many of the 11 U.S. stadiums set to host World Cup games were built primarily for gridiron football. They were built for a sport commonly played on artificial turf; and for NFL fields that are 53.3 yards (48.7 meters) wide, almost 20 meters narrower than a World Cup soccer pitch. So, they have undergone construction above and below ground. They will carve out space for wider fields. All 11 stadiums — even the four that play NFL football on natural grass — will bring in special sod carefully crafted by agronomists and approved by FIFA. They will also change their names to “Los Angeles Stadium” and “New York New Jersey Stadium” rather than SoFi and MetLife. By FIFA decree, they will “debrand” by covering or scrubbing thousands of logos and signage from their premises — everywhere from the walls of suites to the top of their retractable roofs. The following is a rundown of their makeover plans, which have been in development for years; and which, now, with the NFL season coming to a close with the Super Bowl this Sunday, are nearly ready for action.

Grass replacing artificial turf

Seven of the 11 U.S. stadiums — plus an eighth World Cup venue in Canada, Vancouver’s BC Place — have synthetic surfaces. Those stadiums are:

  • Lumen Field in Seattle
  • SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. (near Los Angeles)
  • AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas (near Dallas)
  • NRG Stadium in Houston
  • Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta
  • MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. (near New York)
  • Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass. (near Boston)

All have hosted soccer matches on natural grass over the years. But in most of those instances, the grass was laid, strip by strip, over artificial turf or directly on the stadium’s floor. Some pitches played fine, but others felt spongy or jumpy and drew criticism from players. Plus, if they were pieced together only a few days before a game, they’d be patchy. But, on the other hand, if they were laid too early, the grass would start to die after multiple weeks without proper nourishment and air flow.

Grass laid over a non-grass stadium at the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup

Grass laid over a non-grass surface at Minnesota’s U.S. Bank Stadium at the 2025 Concacaf Gold CupHenry Bushnell

So, years ago, experts concluded that the plan for 2026 would have to be different.The solution was for stadiums to install irrigation and ventilation systems. Those will allow artificial-turf venues to build a more “conventional” grass field atop 10-plus inches of sand, and to maintain the field for two months as if it were a permanent playing surface. (They will then remove it and return to artificial turf before the 2026 NFL season, largely because artificial turf allows them to accommodate more non-sporting events in their downtime.)

Over the past few years, researchers, FIFA’s experts and stadium managers also explored an innovative plan for stadiums that wouldn’t install necessary infrastructure below ground. They developed a “shallow pitch profile,” featuring sod and a thinner layer of sand atop a permeable black drainage module. SoFi Stadium piloted the system at last year’s Concacaf Nations League finals, and MetLife Stadium, among others, used it for the Club World Cup. At some stadiums, a version of the “shallow pitch” concept will be used again in 2026, though the base layers of sand will be deeper than last summer — at least 10 inches deep, a FIFA spokesman told The Athletic. Exact specifications and modifications will vary from stadium to stadium. The other barriers, literally, are roofs. Three U.S. stadiums — Mercedes-Benz Stadium, NRG Stadium and AT&T Stadium — are indoor venues with retractable roofs. A fourth, SoFi, is technically open-air but with a translucent roof that blocks about 65 percent of the sun’s rays, according to Otto Benedict, the stadium’s SVP in charge of facilities. Grass, of course, feeds on sunlight, so maintaining it indoors has been a challenge. But the solution has become relatively commonplace: LED “grow lights” that replicate sunlight.In fact, the technology has become so advanced that stadiums will keep their retractable roofs closed for the duration of the World Cup. The venues in Atlanta and Houston, for example, will ship in a cool-season grass grown at a turf farm in Colorado, keep their buildings air conditioned at around 72 degrees Fahrenheit and trust that the grow lights will give the grass what it needs.The grass will also be reinforced by synthetic fibers, which will be stitched into the sod, making it a “hybrid” surface — around 90-95 percent natural grass and 5-10 percent artificial.ost pitches will be installed in May, weeks before the start of the tournament, which kicks off June 11.

Widening the fields, at the expense of seats

The other main structural incongruence of NFL stadiums as World Cup venues was their narrowness.They were built to get fans close to American football action, with concrete stands featuring built-in seats that curve from sideline to endline. There is space, of course, between the playing field’s boundary and the first row of seats, but not quite enough space for a World Cup.FIFA requires a pitch that’s 68 meters by 105 meters (74.4 by 114.8 yards); and, more importantly, a total field area that’s at least 85 meters by 125 meters (93 by 136.7 yards), according to contractual agreements with stadiums signed last decade. Those requirements clashed with the corners of NFL fields, where the edges of end zones are often not far from the facing of the stadium’s lower bowl. When these stadiums previously hosted soccer, pitches were often narrower than what FIFA requires. At least a few of the 11 U.S. stadiums have never hosted an event that required a field this wide.So, during NFL offseasons in 2024 and 2025, in addition to installing grass-related infrastructure, some stadiums have cut into their concrete structures and essentially replaced permanent stands with demountable bleachers. Those bleachers were in place for the 2025 NFL season but will be removed over the coming months for the World Cup. (At MetLife Stadium during last summer’s Club World Cup, for example, dozens of sections and rows of bleachers and seats were perched on trucks in adjacent parking lots; and inside the stadium, the front row of some sections was Row 5 or Row 11.)

Removable bleachers sit outside MetLife Stadium

Removable bleachers sit on flatbeds outside MetLife Stadium, site of the 2026 World Cup finalHenry Bushnell

The capacity of most or all U.S. stadiums will therefore be less than it is for NFL games, with the exact difference often in the thousands but varying from stadium to stadium.Some field-side suites, such as the ones at SoFi Stadium, will also be impacted — though in some cases, FIFA and stadiums have negotiated compromises, and total field area requirements have been reduced. (All pitches will still be 68 meters by 105 meters; the surrounding areas, though, which are largely for photographers, broadcasters and advertising, offer wiggle room.)And at some venues, the entire floor and field will be raised to accommodate the modifications.There will also be less-visible work done to reformat VIP areas as FIFA desires.All in all, according to contracts and people with direct knowledge of preparations, the pitch work, construction and other items will cost some stadiums more than $10 million apiece.

Strict signage

The final core component of the transformations will be “debranding.”When the stadiums signed up to host this World Cup, they agreed to FIFA’s “clean site” policy, which is stricter than that of any other event organizer.FIFA demands that the stadiums remove or obscure all advertising. The requirement protects the exclusivity that FIFA offers to its sponsors, including Coca-Cola, Visa and Aramco. It has also given headaches to stadium operators. Adam Fullerton, the VP of operations at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, said that he and his team must handle “somewhere over 2,000 cover-ups across the stadium, both inside and outside.”For some venues, including Mercedes-Benz, this includes hiding giant logos or lettering on the stadium’s roof. In Houston, for example, there is giant “NRG Stadium” signage high above a main entrance and also on the roof’s sky-facing eyelids. It is all visible when the stadium hosts College Football Playoff games or Super Bowls, but must be covered prior to the World Cup.FIFA, meanwhile, will dress up the stadiums with its own branding and signage.It will also refer to the venues as “Atlanta Stadium” and “Houston Stadium,” for the same reason. Even the famous Estadio Azteca in Mexico will be “Mexico City Stadium.” Only BC Place — which is named after the Canadian province in which it sits, British Columbia, rather than a commercial entity — will get to keep its name in some form. By Henry Bushnell Senior Writer, U.S. Soccer

After five years of Reynolds and Mac, Wrexham are on cusp of Premier League

  • Mark OgdenFeb 5, 2026, 08:56 AM ET ESPNFC

WREXHAM, Wales — Mickey Thomas still holds the distinction of scoring the most famous goal in Wrexham‘s history, even after five years of the Rob Mac-Ryan Reynolds dream factory that has taken the club to the brink of the Premier League.

Nothing yet has topped Thomas’s free-kick goal in a 2-1 FA Cup win over Arsenal in January 1992, when Wrexham — who finished bottom of the Football League, in 92nd position, six months earlier — eliminated the reigning league champions at the Racecourse Ground. But Thomas admits his historic goal may soon be eclipsed by even greater moments, following Wrexham’s incredible rise from the fifth-tier National League to the EFL Championship playoff positions since Mac and Reynolds completed their £2 million takeover on Feb. 9, 2021.

“Wrexham have become a runaway train since Rob and Ryan arrived,” Thomas told ESPN. “I’ve been in football a long time, I’ve seen everything, but the rise has taken my breath away. And the crazy thing about it all is that Wrexham could be playing Arsenal in the Premier League next season.

“When you think about that cup tie in 1992 and everything that has happened to Wrexham since then, the ups and downs, that prospect is absolutely amazing. It would be the greatest football story ever.”

On the day the takeover was confirmed five years ago, after the pair received a green light to complete the deal in November 2020, Wrexham secured a 2-1 away win against Altrincham to climb to seventh in the National League. Today, they are 73 places higher in the English soccer pyramid and will move up to fifth position, three places behind the automatic promotion spots, with a win at home to Millwall on Saturday.

Following three successive promotions, beginning with their elevation from the National League to the EFL in 2023, the Wrexham story may just be weeks away from another incredible chapter.

“Listen, is the structure of this club behind the scenes ready for the Premier League and would there be an immense amount of work to take place [if we get there]?” Wrexham manager Phil Parkinson told ESPN. “Of course, but wouldn’t it be great to have that chance? You’d probably say we weren’t ready for Division One, certainly not the Championship, but I think in football, you just keep evolving as you go along.”

When Wrexham announced their most recent annual financial results in March 2025, which reported a 155% rise in yearly revenue to £26.7 million during their first year back in the EFL after 15 years in the National League, the accounts included a statement of intent from the directors. “The goal of the owners is to grow the team and establish Wrexham AFC as a Premier League club in front of increased attendances and in an improved stadium,” the statement said.

Five years on from day one, the journey from Altrincham to Arsenal is almost complete, with Mac and Reynolds zooming toward each of those ambitions at breakneck speed.


Parkinson was Wrexham’s first game changer. His appointment as manager in July 2021 gave the Mac-Reynolds project instant credibility and offered proof of their determination to revive the club.

Parkinson was an established EFL manager with promotions on his record at Colchester and Bolton. In 2013, he achieved the unthinkable by guiding League Two’s Bradford City to the EFL Cup final, beating Premier League sides Arsenal and Aston Villa on the way. Those results meant he already had “miracle worker” on his résumé, but joining Wrexham was a gamble for Parkinson.

“It’s always an element of risk because if you drop into the National League as a manager and it doesn’t go well, where do you go from there?” Parkinson said. “But the more I looked into it and spoke to the owners myself, I realized how serious they were.

“Sometimes when you get a manager’s job, you look at what could be achieved — the potential here is huge. Since coming here, it’s been a roller coaster really. I don’t think you can describe it any other way. It’s just been incredible to see the club go from the National League to the Championship, but I think what Rob and Ryan have done, in everything they’ve said to anybody, they’ve delivered.”

The headline of Mac and Reynolds’ five years at the club is unquestionably the three promotions. No club had ever achieved three straight promotions in the history of English football, dating back to its very first season in 1888, but those successes have coincided with rapid change on and off the pitch.

Since February of 2021, 66 new players have arrived at Stok Cae Ras, at a total cost of £38.8 million, while 76 have left the club for a sum total of nothing as free transfers or loans — including Paul Mullin, the goalscoring hero of the first two promotions, who joined Bradford City last week after spending the first half of this season on loan at Wigan. Ollie Palmer, another key figure in the early promotions, was a £300,000 club record signing from AFC Wimbledon in January 2022, but he’s now playing in League Two for Swindon Town.

Wrexham’s squad evolution has seen their transfer outlay rise exponentially. Sam Smith eclipsed Palmer as the record signing when arriving for £2 million from Reading last January, but Smith was then overtaken by Nathan Broadhead when the Wales forward completed a £7.5 million transfer from Ipswich Town in August. Change has become a constant, and on an accelerated scale. Parkinson admits that while it is an essential part of the team’s growth, Wrexham have been determined to ensure that those heroes who played a role in those early promotions are treated with respect.

“It’s been a challenge,” Parkinson said. “We look to sign players that, if we stepped up, would continue with us and we’ve tried to bring that quality in, but then there’s always those players you need to bring better quality in each level, so there are players who have been incredible for us who have moved on. We’ve had to make some tough decisions and let players go — players who have been absolute legends for us at this club.

“But equally, when you step up as quickly as we’ve done, that change has got to happen quicker than we normally expect. That is a tough part of the job, but all you can do in those circumstances is sit down, speak to people respectfully and make sure when they’re leaving that it’s done the right way.

“But you’ve got to keep evolving as a squad because if you stand still, people go past you.”

For those players coming in, though, the attraction of Wrexham — a club on the up with Hollywood glamour sprinkled on top — is clear.

“The immediate attraction was obviously everything on the field, success with promotions, being a winning culture and a team that had stepped up to the Championship for the first time,” George Thomason, a £1.2 million signing from Bolton last summer, told ESPN. “But everyone knows the outside noise of the owners and things like that. Just to see the buy-in and the spirit and the culture around the club was something really special.

“I was really delighted when I heard about the interest from Wrexham. They want to keep going right to the top and that’s something that’s very exciting for every footballer.”

The “Welcome to Wrexham” documentary series that has chronicled the team’s rise through the divisions since Season 1, first airing in 2022, helped bring worldwide recognition to the club by showcasing the sporting drama as well as the off-field stories of supporters and the local community. But while Wrexham have become a global brand, their stadium remains an outdated lower-league venue.

When ESPN met Parkinson and Thomason at the ground, a lack of facilities meant that interviews were staged in a staff kitchen in the bowels of one of the stands and the stadium, which first staged football in 1864, would require a multimillion-pound upgrade just to make it fit for the Premier League. While teams need only a minimum capacity of 5,000, with 2,000 seats, to meet minimum Premier League requirements, they must also have high-intensity floodlights for broadcasting purposes, designated areas for cameras and media and secure segregation of supporters.

When Luton Town were promoted to the Premier League in 2023, the club spent £8 million on ground improvements to make their Kenilworth Road stadium — which included an entrance nestled between houses, and a footbridge over a garden — comply with top-flight demands. At Wrexham, work has started on a new 7,500-capacity Kop Stand, which will take the ground’s capacity to 18,000, but it is not due to be ready for months.

“The delivery date is early 2027,” Wrexham CEO Michael Williamson told ESPN. “But the reality is that the completed version of the new stand will probably not be available until the 2027-28 season, so we could be in the Premier League next season with just 10,500 seats.”

Still, when it is completed, the new stand will be in keeping with the glitz and glamour of Wrexham’s Hollywood owners having been designed by Populous, the stadium architects responsible for the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, the Lusail Stadium, which hosted the 2022 World Cup final, and The Sphere in Las Vegas.

“The connection with The Sphere was definitely a cool selling point for Rob and Ryan,” a source told ESPN. “They are both totally across the detail and even the choice of the Ruabon red brick for the stand was made with them wanting to acknowledge local tradition.” (Ruabon is a small town 10 miles from Wrexham, which is famous for the production of a terra-cotta-colored brick from local clay.)

But despite the challenges ahead off the pitch, Wrexham are ready to meet them full on. “There is no road map for this,” Williamson said. “To go from the National League all the way to the Premier League in successive promotions is something that no other club in the history of English soccer has done.

“When we were in League One I said to Rob and Ryan, ‘Hey, let’s try to get the Championship as quickly as possible because otherwise you risk getting stuck in League One.’ They bought into that. We invested in a squad and were able to get that promotion. We were sprinting all of last season off the pitch, and around all the other areas of the organization, and we’re sprinting to be able to survive in the Championship to build to a level where we could survive in a Championship.

“Ultimately, if we get to the Premier League, we are sprinting again to be ready to be Premier League-ready.”


So where do Wrexham go from here? Is it a case of when, rather than if, they reach the Premier League?

On the pitch, Parkinson’s team is in the heart of the playoff race, meaning Wrexham are well-placed to achieve their latest dream this season. Off it, the workforce and personnel hired by Mac and Reynolds point to the clear ambition of joining the sport’s elite. Williamson was recruited as CEO two years ago having previously worked at D.C. United, Inter Milan and Inter Miami, while chief business and communications officer Rob Faulkner arrived in December 2024 following roles at UEFA, Inter Milan and the European Club Association.

“I think Rob and Ryan made pretty clear their ambitions from their very first interviews, stating that they wanted to take Wrexham to the Premier League,” Williamson said. “I think at the time everyone kind of laughed at them, but here we are, six places away from being a Premier League club. What we have to look at is how do we make sure that once we arrive there [PL], we can stay there. And that includes growing in a lot of different areas. It means growing in the staffing, so we’ve gone from 40 permanent employees to over 140 in under 20 months.

“It is a sprint, it’s not a marathon. I would like to get to the marathon at some point to be honest, but it is a constant sprint. But the thing that I’ll say about us as a club is that we’ve been sprinting since Rob and Ryan have come in and so we’re pretty good at it.”

Impressively, Wrexham have become a global brand despite never having previously played in the top flight. Prior to the Mac-Reynolds takeover, their only real claim to fame was a run to the quarterfinals of the European Cup-Winners’ Cup in 1975-76. But they have become a phenomenon over the past five years, something that former player Thomas admits surprises him every day.

“I played for Manchester United and still work for the club on matchdays at Old Trafford, but wherever I go, people only ever want to talk to me about Wrexham,” Thomas said. “I just think people have embraced the story so much that the club is now as big as any Premier League team in the United States.”

Wrexham’s commercial power is also likely to appeal to the Premier League too, with the prospect of Hollywood celebrities soon sitting at the top table.

“Most international fans wouldn’t know the difference between a Fulham, a Bournemouth, even a West Ham maybe,” Omar Chaudhuri, chief intelligence officer of Twenty First Group, London-based commercial brand advisers, told ESPN. “But if you’ve suddenly got a team coming up that has an actual narrative attached to them, you’re drawing viewers to those games that you might not otherwise get in an average season.

“Particularly in the U.S., you’re going to have a big audience there that understands it has suddenly a connection with this team, so whenever Wrexham are on TV, you’re going to have an uplift of viewers and that definitely has value to the league. If you’re a Premier League club owner, you’re going to be welcoming that kind of thing.”

When Mac and Reynolds arrived at Wrexham, the club relied on local sponsors and partners not just for commercial revenue, but financial survival. They have since moved on from the likes of Ifor Williams Trailers to global corporations like United Airlines and Meta Quest, securing multimillion-pound deals that are likely to only grow if Wrexham make it to the Premier League. Their commercial power now underpins both their present successes and future ambitions.

“There are top-six clubs in the Premier League who would love the brand connection that we have in North America,” Williamson said. “So the possibilities are unlimited on what we can continue to do, but the key to the success has been, and will need to continue to be, that we stay rooted to our local community values.

“Some Championship clubs go into the playoffs and suddenly find themselves, ‘Oh wow, we got promoted and we’re in the Premier League and haven’t actually planned to be in the Premier League.’ That’s probably the biggest difference here. Even though we are infrastructure-wise challenged compared to some of the historic Championship clubs, our mentality is that we’re preparing ourselves to arrive there because that’s our expectation.”

It has taken five years to get to this point, but Wrexham might now reach their ultimate destination in less than five months.