5/29/26 Champions League Sat 12 noon PSG vs Arsenal CBS, US WC Roster Revealed, US Men play Sun 3 pm, US ladies play next Sat right after men, Crystal Palace wins Europa League Final, NWSL last week


Notes

All kinds of excitement on the announcement of the teams for the World Cup along with new song: World Cup song
USA announcement video Brazil Video   USA promo Video.
What a great final Game of MLS Season before the World Cup Break as Messi and Miami won a high scoring affair over Philly at home. (highlights). Where is your Favorite WC Team training?  Poch emailed the boys who were left out.   Alright Alright Alright Dempsey compares Zendejas to himself. Zendajas is one of the top scores in Mexico for Club America’.  Chicago Fire GK Chris Brady is on the team..   US hype from MLS    The US has arrived in Atlanta at the new training facility.
Nor forgetting the US Ladies who are off to Brazil – Triple Expresso is back as The Ladies prepare for a tough pair of games in cities where they will probably be playing next summer in the World Cup.

In other news Huge Congrats to Arsenal 2026 Premier League Champs for the first time in over 20 years hopefully they can continue it by winning Champions League over PSG Sat. 12 noon. Thrilling to see Bournemouth and Tyler Adams make Europa League play for the first time like ever – they just missed out on Champions League. Crystal Palace won the Europa Conference League over Rayo Vallencano Wed despite Chris Richards missing out with a ligament tear in his ankle. (well see when he suits up for the US this Sun or next weekend or not till the World Cup?

Champions League Final Arsenal vs PSG Sat 3 pm on CBS, Para+

So can Arsenal actually find a way to pull off the upset on Saturday or will PSG make it two in a row? I think PSG wins this 2-1 but still a great season for Arsenal.

US Men World Cup Roster is Set – Play Senagal Sun 3 pm on TBS, HBO

So the Men’s Roster is set and of course – Poch picked the obvious ones properly – but coming in to a World Cup with only 1 #6/Defensive midfielder is ludicrous! Tyler Adams – you know the guy who has missed half the season with a bad back and hasn’t suited up for the US in 6 months and has a propensity to get aggressive yellow cards up the field, is our only Dmid. He inexplicably left off our 2 other dmids in Tanner Tessman and Aiden Morris after our Atletico Madrid man Johnny Cordosa went down with injury. Instead he brings MLS’ers Berhalter – who is an attacking mid #8 not a DMid and Christian Roldan a player I love for chemistry but is not a Dmid either, He’s going to lock Weston McKinny back there — which doesn’t allow McKennie to wander – or doesn’t allow Adams to pressure and dispossess up the field. Either way its a HUGE mistake by Botchitino – that could very well cost us when we get to the 3rd game and Adams is sitting on a yellow and can’t play vs Turkey for first place in the Group.Overall this is best the US has to offer right now. Honestly while we’ll have to see if they if this Golden Generation can earn its way in World Cup play – or only excels and playing at the best clubs overseas collectively in our short World Cup history. If Botch Blows this and gets us Grouped I will never forgive him after spending thousands to follow the US around this summer. I suspect he’ll start strong line-up in our first match vs Senagal on Sunday afternoon – though I don’t expect to see CB Chris Richards until Chicago next weekend if not till World Cup play. I suspect Aaron Trusty will get the first chance to slot in next Tim Ream with Dest and Robinson on the edges. I see the US winning 2-1 over Senagal.

US Men World Cup Roster

GOALKEEPERS (3): 25-Chris Brady (Chicago Fire; 0/0; Naperville, Ill.), 24-Matt Freese (New York City FC; 14/0; Wayne, Pa.), 1-Matt Turner (New England Revolution; 53/0; Park Ridge, N.J.)

DEFENDERS (10): 18-Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 18/1; Fresno, Calif.), 2-Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 37/2; Almere, Netherlands), 16-Alex Freeman (Villarreal/ESP; 15/2; Plantation, Fla.), 22-Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/FRA; 27/0; Bear, Del.), 13-Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 80/1; St. Louis, Mo.), 3-Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 36/3; Birmingham, Ala.), 5-Antonee Robinson (Fulham/ENG; 52/4; Liverpool, England), 12-Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 38/3; Arlington, Mass.), 23-Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 24/0; Lake Grove, N.Y.), 6-Auston Trusty (Celtic/SCO; 6/0; Media, Pa.)

MIDFIELDERS (6): 4-Tyler Adams (AFC Bournemouth/ENG; 52/2; Wappingers Falls, N.Y.), 14-Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps; 11/1; Columbus, Ohio), 8-Weston McKennie (Juventus/ITA; 64/12; Little Elm, Texas), 7-Gio Reyna (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 36/9; Bedford, N.Y.), 15-Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders; 45/0; Pico Rivera, Calif.), 17-Malik Tillman (Bayer Leverkusen/GER; 28/3; Fürth, Germany)

FORWARDS (7): 11-Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 57/9; Medford, N.J.), 20-Folarin Balogun (Monaco/FRA; 25/8; London, England), 9-Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 35/13; El Paso, Texas), 10-Christian Pulisic (AC Milan/ITA; 84/32; Hershey, Pa.), 21-Tim Weah (Olympique Marseille/FRA; 49/7; Rosedale, N.Y.), 19-Haji Wright (Coventry City/ENG; 20/7; Los Angeles, Calif.), 26-Alejandro Zendejas (Club América/MEX; 13/2; El Paso, Texas)

US Ladies Travel to Brazil for 2 Game Series Next Sun -Triple Expresso is back

The USWNT is pouring itself a triple shot of espresso, as attacking trio Trinity Rodman, Mallory Swanson, and Sophia Wilson headline today’s 26-player roster for next month’s friendlies in Brazil. Swanson returns to the US women’s national team for the first time since 2024, joining “Triple Espresso” teammates Rodman and Wilson for the first time since winning the 2024 Paris Olympics.“It’s fantastic for our team, both on and off the field, to have Trinity and our two soccer moms back on the same roster,” said Hayes, as Wilson and Swanson continue their returns from parental leave. (See full roster)

Taking stock: The USWNT will manage key absences against the 2027 World Cup host, as Naomi Girma nurses a lingering calf knock, Catarina Macario deals with a heel injury, and Sam Coffey recovers from knee surgery.Third goalkeeper Mandy McGlynn is back in the lineup, alongside fellow returners Michelle Cooper, Croix Bethune, and Riley Jackson.“Few challenges in women’s international soccer compare to facing Brazil in Brazil, so we’re excited for the valuable lessons this experience will bring,” Hayes added.
Swanson returns to the US women’s national team for the first time since 2024, joining “Triple Espresso” teammates Rodman and Wilson for the first time since winning the 2024 Paris Olympics.“It’s fantastic for our team, both on and off the field, to have Trinity and our two soccer moms back on the same roster,” said Hayes, as Wilson and Swanson continue their returns from parental leave. (See full roster) Third goalkeeper Mandy McGlynn is back in the lineup, alongside fellow returners Michelle Cooper, Croix Bethune, and Riley Jackson.“Few challenges in women’s international soccer compare to facing Brazil in Brazil, so we’re excited for the valuable lessons this experience will bring,” Hayes added. The USWNT will face Brazil on June 6th at Neo Química Arena in São Paulo and again on June 9th at Arena Castelão in Fortaleza.

GOALKEEPERS (3): Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC), Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United)

DEFENDERS (8): Tierna Davidson (Gotham FC), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash), Lilly Reale (Gotham FC), Tara Rudd (Washington Spirit), Emily Sonnett (Gotham FC), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC), Kennedy Wesley (San Diego Wave)

MIDFIELDERS (8): Croix Bethune (Kansas City Current), Lindsey Heaps (OL Lyonnes), Claire Hutton (Bay FC), Riley Jackson (North Carolina Courage), Rose Lavelle (Gotham FC), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns), Jaedyn Shaw (Gotham FC), Lily Yohannes (OL Lyonnes)

FORWARDS (7): Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville), Ally Sentnor (Kansas City Current), Mallory Swanson (Chicago Stars), Alyssa Thompson (Chelsea FC), Sophia Wilson (Portland Thorns)

Indy 11 beat Lexington 3-1 Host Rhode Island Sat 7 pm Pride Night

Indianapolis – On the eve of the Indianapolis 500, Indy Eleven took an early lead, temporarily let up on the gas, but accelerated in the final half hour to race across the finish line with a 3-1 victory over visiting Lexington SC, extending their unbeaten streak at Michael A. Carroll Stadium to eight games (7-0-1).  Indy Eleven will look to extend their unbeaten streak that dates back to last season on Saturday, May 30, when they host Eastern Conference opponent Rhode Island FC at Carroll Stadium at 7 p.m. Tickets start at $14 online and fans can add an Indy Eleven Pride Knit Scarf at checkout for $20.  For this match only, Desnuda Tequila Deck tickets are $29!  Ticket options include the new Desnuda Tequila DeckFamily Four-Packs, and Flex Mini-Plans.  Noble Okello has been called up for the WC for Uganda while Anthony Herbert will compete for Trinidad & Tobago.

On the Ladies side Indy Eleven fell to USL W League Valley Division rival Racing Louisville FC in a hard-fought 1-0 loss Wednesday evening in 82-degree conditions. The Girls in Blue remain in third place in the division and travel to Toledo to face Toledo Villa FC for the final road game of the regular season next Wednesday at 7 p.m. on Sports Engine Play.

Good luck to all those In State Cup, President’s Cup and Challenge Cup play Sat/Sun at Grand Park

Best of luck to our Carmel FC qualifiers: – I’ll look for you after I ref in the AM
⚽ 2012 Boys Gold
⚽ 2013 Boys Gold
⚽ 2013 Boys Blue
⚽ 2015 Boys Gold
⚽ 08/10 Girls Gold
⚽ 2012 Girls Gold
⚽ 2013 Girls Gold
⚽ 2013 Girls Blue
⚽ 2014 Girls Gold
⚽ 2014 Girls Blue

Final CYO Games of the Season at Our Lady Mount Carmel with Mike A, & Dave Howard – the black hat committee 🙂

Tryout Schedule


TV Schedule – Games on TV


Fri, May 29
8 pm Prime Racing Louisville vs Denver Summit (Amazon Prime)
Sat, May 30 Champions League Final
12 noon CBS PSG vs Arsenal
1:30 pm Ion, Tubi KC Current vs Boston Legacy NWSL
4 pm Ion, Tubi Portland Thorn vs Utah Royals NWSL
6:30 pm Ion, Tubi Washington Spirit vs Seattle Reign NWSL
7 pm MyIndy TV23 Indy 11 vs Rhode Island
8 pm FSI Toluca vs Tigres Concacaf Championship
Sun, May 31
9 am FS2 Switzerland vs Jordan
1 pm CBSSN Chicago Stars vs San Diego Wave NWSL
2:45 pm FS2 Germany vs Finland (Friendly)
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
5:30 pm Telemundo? Brazil vs Panama
7 pm Victory Angel City vs NC Courage NWSL
Mon, June 1
1 pm FS2 Norway vs Sweden
2:45 pm fubo, Tubi Austria vs Tunisia
7 pm Uni? Colombia vs Costa Rica
9 pm FS2 Canada vs Uzbekistan
Tues, June 2
1 pm Fubu, Tubi Croatia vs Belgium
2:45 pm FS2 Wales vs Ghana
8 pm Uni? FoxD Haiti vs New Zealand
Wed, June 3
2:45 pm Fubu, Netherlands vs Algeria
Thurs, June 4
1 pm Fubu, Tubi Croatia vs Belgium
3 pm Prime? Spain vs Iraq
3:15 pm FS+, Fubu France vs Ivory Coast
10 pm Uni? FoxD Mexico vs Serbia
Fri, June 5
7 pm FS2 Canada vs Ireland
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago Tix
5:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Ladies @ Brazil 
4 pm FS+ England vs New Zealand
7 pm Wish TV8 Indy 11 vs Forward Madison FC
8 pm Uni? FoxD Argentina vs Honduras
Sun, June 7
2:45 pm FS2 Croatia vs Slovenia
3 pm ESPND, plus Morocco vs Norway
Mon, June 8
2:45 pm FS2 Netherlands vs Uzbekistan
3 pm ?? France vs N. Ireland
10 pm ?? Peru vs Spain
Tues, June 9
8:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Ladies @ Brazil 
Thur, June, 11 World Cup
3 pm Fox Mexico vs South Africa
10 pm FS1 Korea vs Czech Republic
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
7 pm ESPN+ Pittsburgh Riverhounds vs Indy 11
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Fri, June 19
3 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup
Thur, June 25
10 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup

Complete 2026 World Cup schedule featuring match dates and start times
NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule 

USA vs Germany — the Final Home Send of Match from Chicago on Sunday June 6 is Sold Out


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Champions League Final Sat 12 noon

Champions League final betting odds: Why PSG are favourites to beat Arsenal
3 tactical keys for UCL final: PSG’s bizarre kickoff, Arsenal’s striker choiceSam Tighe
PSG’s Luis Enrique offers take on Arsenal styl
Dembélé, Hakimi fit to return for PSG in UCL final
Carra: Arsenal minnows in Europe without CL win
Ousmane Dembele praises ‘excellent’ Arsenal ahead of UCL final
Arsenal’s Timber fit to start Champions League final
Pundit explains the variables that make Arsenal Champions League
UEFA needs to fix terrible Champions League final format (but it never will)


US Men

USA vs. Senegal, 2026 USMNT Friendly: Scouting Senegal
Antonee Robinson relieved to be back with USMNT after knee surgery
How USMNT’s Alex Zendejas earned his World Cup moment




Reffing

Catching some of the younger Games at Grand Park last weekend with Mason and Braylon B.


 Arsenal & PSG’s Battle for Immortality Rog = Men in Blazers

 
Champions League Final: PSG 🇫🇷 vs. Arsenal 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (Saturday, 12 p.m. ET, CBS/Paramount+)
In Budapest on Saturday, Mikel Arteta will have to write a new type of team talk, because his Arsenal side will assume an unfamiliar role as underdogs. They may travel to Hungary with a new-Premier-League-champion glow, but Luis Enrique’s PSG are the final boss of modern football, a reputation that was earned in their vindictive 5-0 decimation of Inter Milan in last year’s final. However, the Gunners are a different beast who have mastered the art of set pieces and defensive dominance, conceding only six goals and losing zero matches in this season’s Champions League. The question is, for Arteta: Do you fight fire with fire and stack the midfield with mercurial creators Eberechi Eze and Martin Ødegaard, or opt for caution, and grind PSG down with one or both of Martín Zubimendi and Myles Lewis-Skelly?
🥊 The Final’s Vital Matchups
Jurriën Timber has given his manager a welcome headache with a return to fitness, but despite being a world-class operator, he hasn’t started since mid-March, so a duel with Khvicha Kvaratskhelia might be throwing him in the deep end. Enrique has a similar quandary in the same position with arguably the world’s best right-back, Achraf Hakimi, who is racing to be fit for the final alongside his crown jewel and Ligue 1 Player of the Year, Ousmane Dembélé. Mr. Ballon d’Or has endured a frustrating stop-start season, but as Bayern found out in the semis, he is lethal when available, averaging almost one goal contribution per game in this season’s campaign. PSG dismantled Arsenal on their way to glory in the 2024/25 semifinal, but the last time these two met was in October, when the north London side humbled the champions with a convincing 2-0 win at the Emirates. 
🤔 Can Arsenal Become “The Unforgettables”? 
While shredding the bottle-job narrative by winning the league was always Arteta’s priority this season, Arsenal’s trophy cabinet has a glaring Champions League-shaped gap, so this final presents him with a unique opportunity. Incredibly, the Gunners have never won this tournament in their history, but they came agonizingly close 20 years ago when Arsène Wenger’s once Invincible side lost to Ronaldinho’s Barcelona in the final. Immortality is tangible, but like last season, PSG are peaking at clutch time and they’re desperate to be the first side since Zinedine Zidane’s Real Madrid to defend the UCL. When Arsenal stubbornly overcame Atlético Madrid in the semifinal two weeks ago, like a wise old sage setting the stage for his worthy apprentice, Thierry Henry told Bukayo Saka “If you guys do it… you will be known as the Unforgettables.” North London expects, history beckons, and true greatness is just 90 minutes away.
MoreBased on this stat, history definitely favors one side…





NWSL Season Goes on Hiatus for World Cup

The NWSL is going out with a bang, as a top-table Saturday clash between No. 1 Utah and No. 2 Portland headlines the final slate before June’s midseason break.
The Royals and Thorns sit atop the NWSL standings with 23 points apiece — though Utah has both a game in hand and undeniable momentum coming off a nine-game unbeaten streak.“[The game] will just require the same elements we’ve been doing really well,” Utah manager Jimmy Coenraets said ahead of the weekend showdown. “We’ll have to measure intensity.” (See full standings) Taking stock: Potent attacking duos fuel both teams, as Portland’s Sophia Wilson and Olivia Moultrie attempt to offset Utah’s Chloe Lacasse and Mina Tanaka. Moultrie should play a major factor in the Thorns’ game plan, as she currently sits tied for league assists-leader while ranking fourth in goals scored with four through 10 games. (See full stats)“We have to be efficient in front of the goal,” added Coenraets. “All of the games we’ve been winning thus far, we’ve been efficient.” Tune in: Utah takes on Portland on Saturday at 4 PM ET, live on ION.

Analyzing USMNT’s 2026 World Cup squad: Pochettino’s top stars, key players and weaknesses

By Paul TenorioHenry BushnellTom Bogert and Felipe Cardenas

May 26, 2026 Updated May 27, 2026 The Athletic has live coverage of the latest 2026 World Cup news.

For the past eight years, hope and expectation in the United States have circled the home World Cup in 2026.

After the success of the 1994 World Cup in building a more stable environment for professional soccer, the belief was that 2026 could be “rocket fuel” for the sport — whatever that meant to whichever executive used the tag line.The U.S. learned it would be a cohost just months after failing to qualify for a tournament for the first time since 1986. That disaster in Trinidad was devastating, but one that led to immediate change. Quickly, hope was rebuilt around a group of young players that many believed could be a golden generation for American men’s soccer.That group was the second-youngest team at the World Cup in Qatar, where it emerged from its group before losing to the Netherlands in the knockout stage. In the aftermath of that loss, any realized that the development and maturation of those players from 2022 to 2026 would likely determine their legacy.

Now, with a star coach, Mauricio Pochettino, many of those same players — Christian Pulisic, Tim Weah, Weston McKennie, Gio Reyna and Tyler Adams among them — plus some fresh faces will take the field in 2026 looking to fulfill all of those expectations. Here is a deeper look at Pochettino’s 26-man squad, one tasked with not just succeeding, but living up to the hype and continuing to build soccer in America. (Players are listed alphabetically by last name)


Goalkeepers

Chris Brady

Club: Chicago FireAge: 22Caps: 0World Cup experience: None

Brady has never played for the senior national team — he is the second uncapped player in the USMNT’s modern era (1990-present) to make a World Cup roster (GK Juergen Sommer, 1994) — but he was a standout at youth levels. Having established himself in MLS with Chicago, he became a regular in U.S. camps. He likely won’t see the field this summer, but he should get every opportunity to earn the starting job throughout the 2030 World Cup cycle.

Matt Freese

Club: New York City FCAge: 27Caps: 14World Cup experience: None

Three years ago, Freese was an MLS backup. Now, he’s set to start for the U.S. at a home World Cup. He established himself as the team’s top goalkeeper throughout 2025, and will soon step into the biggest spotlight he’s ever encountered.

self-described “nerd” who played two years at Harvard, Freese took the long, slow road to the top of his profession. He spent his first few years out of college as a reserve in Philadelphia. A trade to NYCFC helped unlock his talent. His shot-stopping earned him a maiden national team call-up in January 2025, and just five months later, his heroics in a penalty shootout against Costa Rica earned him praise and trust. “Penalties,” he said afterward, “are my thing.”

A glance at the shots he has faced suggests he might be a little vulnerable on his left side, but his MLS record shows that shot-stopping is in line with expectation — with 18 goals conceded matching the quality of shots he has faced (Expected Goals on Target — xGOT).

He is not at the level of former U.S. keepers like Brad Friedel or Tim Howard. In fact, some would argue he’s not even a standout in MLS. But he’s the USMNT’s No. 1.

Matt Turner

Club: New England RevolutionAge: 31Caps: 53World Cup experience: 2022

Turner was the starting goalkeeper at the 2022 World Cup. But over the three years that followed, he struggled for playing time in England, lost some confidence and sharpness, and eventually lost his place as the U.S. No. 1.

At his best, he’s a super shot-stopper — long, lanky and athletic. But he hasn’t been at his best for a while now. It’s unclear if he’s still in contention for the starting job, or if he’s firmly behind Freese.

USMNT's World Cup roster

Defenders

Max Arfsten

Club: Columbus CrewAge: 25Caps: 18World Cup experience: None

Arfsten has quite the story. While his now-U.S. teammates were starting pro careers or jumping to Europe as teens, he was playing high school soccer in Fresno, Calif. “Which is crazy,” Arfsten told The Athletic last fall, his mind blown by the contrast. “But everyone’s journey is different.”He gradually rose through the American soccer ranks, from the University of California, Davis, to the San Jose Earthquakes reserves, and eventually to MLS in Columbus. After every step up, he’d tell himself: “I belong.” He did just that when he earned his first USMNT call last year. And he quickly earned Pochettino’s trust.He is not a natural left back, and has been exposed defensively when asked to play there, but could be an option as a wingback off the bench this summer if the U.S. is chasing a game.

Sergiño Dest

Club: PSV EindhovenAge: 25Caps: 37World Cup experience: 2022

Born in the Netherlands to a Dutch mother and Surinamese-American father, Dest chose in 2019 to represent the U.S. and has been a key contributor ever since.Nominally, he is a defender, but he’s better described as an enigmatic playmaker. He starts at fullback, but his unique strength is his ability to carry the ball from wide areas into dangerous ones and unbalance opponents. He can start on the right or the left, and will often look like a winger in possession.His hamstring injury, suffered in March, seems to be behind him, and all stars seem aligned for Dest to seize the World Cup stage again this summer.

Alex Freeman

Club: Villarreal (Spain)Age: 21Caps: 15World Cup experience: None

Maybe the breakout player in the U.S. pool under Pochettino, Freeman, the son of former Green Bay Packers wide receiver Antonio Freeman, went from earning his first cap in June 2025 to potentially starting at a World Cup a year later. It’s an incredible rise.

He’s seen similar growth at the club level. The right back moved from the academy at Orlando City to its second team in 2022, then debuted with the MLS side in 2023 before his national team debut in 2025. He was transferred to Villarreal in Spain for $4 million in January 2026 and was able to make nine appearances with three starts over the last months of the La Liga season.Pochettino has used Freeman as both a right wingback and a right back who can slide into a central position or out to a more typical right back spot. His ability to get involved in the attack can unbalance opponents.

Alex Freeman dribbles against Belgium in a friendly

Alex Freeman has become a U.S. mainstay under Mauricio Pochettino after surging onto the national team radarJared C. Tilton / Getty Images

Mark McKenzie

Club: Toulouse (France)Age: 27Caps: 27World Cup experience: None

One of the last cuts from the 2022 squad, the former Philadelphia Union homegrown player has found a way into the squad with his consistency at Toulouse. McKenzie moved to Belgium from MLS in 2021 and has spent the last five seasons in Europe. He started 56 of 59 games he’s played in Ligue 1 over the past two seasons and also started eight games under Pochettino.

McKenzie has good athleticism and can play on the right side of a back three or in a back two. He created 19 chances for Toulouse this season, an extremely high rate for his position, and he’s mostly solid defensively, though he is susceptible when defending in 1-on-1 situations.

He has the chance to start if Pochettino opts for three center backs on the field.

Tim Ream

Club: Charlotte FCAge: 38Caps: 80World Cup experience: 2022

Ream is the USMNT’s elder statesman and captain. He’ll be the oldest player to ever appear for the U.S. at a men’s World Cup. And his national team story is a remarkable one.

After a decade as an intermittent-but-steady presence in defense, Ream was frozen out for an entire year in the buildup to the 2022 World Cup. He “made peace” with the apparent fact that he’d never reach soccer’s pinnacle. But a surprise call-up changed his career and his life. He started every match in Qatar, earned the nickname “Grandpa,” and then kept on earning his place over the coming months and years.

Now, on the verge of his second World Cup, at age 38, he has battled niggling injuries and struggled to keep up with youthful forwards. But he’s arguably the best ball-playing center back the U.S. has ever had, and is one of the best passers on this team.

USMNT center backs Tim Ream and Chris Richards

USMNT center backs Tim Ream and Chris Richards will lead the U.S. defense this summerShaun Clark / ISI Photos / Getty Images

Chris Richards

Club: Crystal PalaceAge: 26Caps: 36World Cup experience: None

Richards is perhaps the USMNT’s most important player. A well-rounded center back who’s strong in the air and underrated with the ball, the Alabama native will anchor a U.S. defense that is otherwise fragile.He’ll also be fulfilling a dream that was ripped away from him four years earlier. Having ascended from the FC Dallas academy to Bayern Munich, then settled at Crystal Palace in England, he looked set to start for the U.S. at the 2022 World Cup before a hamstring injury left him stuck at home, devastated.Another ill-timed injury, this time an ankle sprain, has thrown his 2026 status into question, but multiple sources told The Athletic last week that Richards will be “good for the World Cup, 100%.”

Antonee Robinson

Club: FulhamAge: 28Caps: 52World Cup experience: 2022

Robinson is a player who has become crucial to the success of this team. Tactics can shift in one direction or another depending on his fitness and availability. Robinson is an aggressive attacking fullback who can tilt the field in the U.S.’s favor. This summer, he will be among Pochettino’s most trusted players and an integral part of the manager’s gameday setup.

Robinson is expected to be both a stout 1-v-1 defender — he’s often matched up against the opposing team’s top winger — and a dangerous player on the flank going forward. After recovering from offseason knee surgery and complications that followed, Robinson is primed for a standout World Cup.

USMNT's World Cup squad by age

Miles Robinson

Club: FC Cincinnati
Age: 29Caps: 38World Cup experience: None

It will be a huge relief for Robinson to book a spot on this World Cup team after he was cruelly denied a chance to play in 2022 when he ruptured his Achilles tendon six months before the tournament. Robinson was in line to start in Qatar, and his injury helped open the door for Ream to come back into the team.

Drafted by Atlanta United with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2017 MLS SuperDraft, the Syracuse product has long been considered a top prospect because of his elite athleticism. That was hampered somewhat by the Achilles injury, but Robinson still boasts the speed and strength of a top defender, though he’s not always in the right spaces tactically and isn’t the most dependable on the ball.

Joe Scally

Club: Borussia Mönchengladbach (Germany)Age: 23Caps: 24World Cup experience: 2022

Scally, a New York native, is valued for his versatility. He can play wingback, fullback or center back in a defensive three, and he can do all of it on either the right or left side of the field. He doesn’t have the on-ball skill or calmness to become a truly elite player, but he’s a buccaneering athlete. His physicality and 1-v-1 defending are the reasons he has already made 167 appearances for Mönchengladbach, the German club he joined as a teen.

He’ll now be looking for his first World Cup appearance. Although he made the 2022 team, he did not get game time in Qatar. It’s not entirely clear what his role will be in 2026.

Auston Trusty lifts the Scottish league trophy

Auston Trusty won the Scottish league title with CelticIan MacNicol / Getty Images

Auston Trusty

Club: Celtic (Scotland)Age: 27Caps: 6World Cup experience: None

A former Philadelphia Union homegrown player, Trusty was a starter for his hometown team in 2018 and 2019 before being traded to the Colorado Rapids. After two-plus seasons there, Trusty wanted a move to Europe and the Rapids’ partner club, Arsenal, both owned by Stan Kroenke, bought him and sent him on loan to Birmingham City. Trusty proved himself a reliable defender in the Championship with both Birmingham and Sheffield United before moving to Celtic for $7.8 million.

A left-footed center back with good size, he’s a physical presence that can win aerial duels and defend well. Coming off a dramatic Scottish domestic double with Celtic, he’s an option to start in a back three, or to step into the lineup if Ream falters.


Midfielders

Brenden Aaronson

Club: Leeds (England)Age: 25Caps: 57World Cup experience: 2022

One of the more resilient players in the national team pool, Aaronson has risen to a Premier League starter despite a slight frame and unconventional strengths and profile. A Philadelphia Union homegrown player, Aaronson was developed in a high-pressing system of play that was perfect for his high-motor, high-capacity running style. His success as a No. 10 in MLS earned him a move to Red Bull Salzburg. Playing in a dominant team there, Aaronson had nine goals and nine assists across two seasons in the Austrian Bundesliga before Leeds bought him to fit into its similar style of play. It was hardly a perfect start there. Aaronson struggled in the Premier League and was loaned to Union Berlin when Leeds was relegated. He returned to the team for the promotion push last season, and this year found a new level, starting 30 games in the Premier League and scoring four goals with five assists.

The U.S. will need him to do more than press and cause issues. He must show he can be goal dangerous at the highest international level.

Tyler Adams

Club: Bournemouth (England)Age: 27Caps: 52World Cup experience: 2022

Like Robinson, Adams’ availability can dictate how well the U.S. plays on the day. In Qatar four years ago, Adams established himself as a bonafide leader, captaining the second-youngest team at the tournament. He was arguably the best U.S. player at that World Cup after four consistent performances in central midfield.

Adams is a tough tackler who can hunt the ball and mark an attacking player out of the game. He can cover space in midfield and organize his side with or without the ball. As a defensive midfielder, one of Adams’ most important roles is to limit the opposition’s capacity to play freely in the middle of the park.

There is no better evidence of that than looking at his player dashboard, as one of the most active midfielders in Europe’s top five leagues when it comes to front-foot defending.

Sebastian Berhalter

Club: Vancouver WhitecapsAge: 25Caps: 11World Cup experience: None

The son of former U.S. men’s national team manager Gregg Berhalter, the Whitecaps midfielder has earned every bit of this World Cup roster spot. First loaned out and then traded from his homegrown team, the Columbus Crew, Berhalter worked his way into a starting role with Vancouver. He has since become an integral part of one of the best teams in MLS, pushing them to appearances in the 2025 Concacaf Champions Cup final and 2025 MLS Cup.Berhalter has 10 goals and 19 assists over the past season and a half in Vancouver, and he stepped into a starting role under Pochettino at last summer’s Gold Cup and earned the manager’s trust with his attitude and work ethic. A tireless runner who is unafraid to mix it up, Berhalter brings value to the team beyond what happens in games. He’ll be counted on to keep the level high within the group with his mentality. He also adds value with fantastic set-piece delivery.

Weston McKennie

Club: Juventus (Italy)
Age: 27Caps: 64World Cup experience: 2022

McKennie, all things considered, had the best 2025-26 season of any American man in global soccer. He made himself indispensable at Juventus in Italy, whether as a wingback or a free-roaming attacker. Year after year, Juve coaches or executives have tried to marginalize him; and year after year, in a variety of different positions, he’s proven he belongs. “He has all the qualities to do well anywhere,” his current Juve coach, Luciano Spalletti, raved.

A look through The Athletic’s season-level player dashboard highlights just how many positions he has occupied across the pitch.

For the U.S., he has largely played as an attacking midfielder. A lack of depth at the base of midfield might pull him back into a deeper role, but whatever the ask, McKennie will be capable. He met the moment at the 2022 World Cup, when he bossed England and helped create the USMNT’s decisive goal against Iran. He’ll be one of the team’s most influential players this summer.

Gio Reyna

Club: Borussia Mönchengladbach (Germany)Age: 23Caps: 36World Cup experience: 2022

The son of USMNT legend Claudio Reyna, the attacking midfielder was once thought to be on track to become a bigger U.S. star than Pulisic. It hasn’t quite worked out that way. After wonderful early returns as a teenager at Borussia Dortmund, injury, controversy and fitness issues have hampered that idealized trajectory. For the broader audience, Reyna is known mostly for his actions at the 2022 World Cup (and his parents involvement after), and his struggles to get on the field at the club level have left little else to talk about. While he’s had some bright moments — most notably in the Concacaf Nations League — Reyna will consider himself fortunate to be included on Pochettino’s roster. The Argentine has called him “a special situation” who warrants an exception to what the coach insisted would be a merit-based process in which reputation would not supersede form.If he can conjure the talent he displayed as a 17- and 18-year-old, it’ll reward Pochettino for the risk, but whether he has the legs to perform at the highest level will be tested.

Cristian Roldan

Club: Seattle SoundersAge: 30Caps: 45World Cup experience: 2022

The ultimate glue guy, Roldan is one of the most respected veterans in the U.S. locker room. He was part of the 2022 team in a similar role, becoming a mentor and friend to some of the team’s biggest stars, including Pulisic and chMcKennie.

A stalwart for a Sounders team that has been one of the most successful in North American during his time with the club, Roldan was called the “perfect player” by Pochettino last fall. His steadiness in midfield could make him one of the surprise players at the World Cup for the U.S. if he is able to get on the field — which he did not do in Qatar.

Roldan, who turns 31 on June 3, can play in either central midfield role and, as he showed last fall against Australia with two assists in a 2-1 win, he’s more than capable of impacting the game in a bigger way.

Malik Tillman

Club: Bayer Leverkusen (Germany)Age: 23Caps: 28World Cup experience: None

The son of an American serviceman and German mother, Tillman was born and raised in Germany and played for the youth national teams of both countries before committing to play for the U.S. senior team in May 2022. A former Bayern Munich prospect, Tillman missed out on the Qatar World Cup, but has developed nicely as an attacking option with stops at Rangers and PSV before moving to Leverkusen for $41 million last summer.Tillman, who turns 24 on May 28, has found most of his national team success under Pochettino, breaking out in a starring role at the 2025 Gold Cup. A creative midfielder with a quiet personality, Tillman is at his best combining in and around the 18-yard box. He had six goals in the Bundesliga during an up-and-down season in which he started just twice in the final three months.

Tim Weah dribbles against Portugal

Tim Weah offers a ton of versatility to Mauricio Pochettino as he mulls his tactical approachJohn Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images

Tim Weah

Club: Olympique de MarseilleAge: 26
Caps: 49World Cup experience: 2022

The son of 1995 Ballon d’Or winner and Liberian great (and former president) George Weah, Tim was born and raised in Brooklyn. A winger with an ability to stretch the field vertically with pace and who is happy to cede the spotlight to others despite his famous last name, Weah scored the opening goal of the 2022 World Cup for the U.S. in its 1-1 draw with Wales.

He has become one of the most consistent and trusted performers for the national team. Weah played at PSG, Celtic, Lille and Juventus before moving back to Ligue 1 with Marseille. He can play as a winger or wingback on either side of the field, and can also play as a No. 9, though he had just two goals and two assists in France this season.

Don’t be surprised to see Weah slot in as a wingback rather than a winger in Pochettino’s system.

Alejandro Zendejas

Club: Club AméricaAge: 28Caps: 13World Cup experience: None

Born in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, before moving to the U.S. at a young age, Zendejas came up through the FC Dallas academy and made his professional debut in 2015 in MLS. He was quickly sold to Chivas Guadalajara, where the under-17 national team teammate of Pulisic, Adams and others had to reject all future call-ups from the U.S. team in order to fulfill Chivas’ tradition of using only Mexican players.Zendejas moved to Necaxa and then Club América in 2022, and after nearly being named to Mexico’s World Cup team — and illegally appearing for them without filing a one-time switch — he got back into the picture with the U.S. team. A quick winger who can create goals for himself and others, Zendejas has been one of América’s best players over the past four seasons, with 31 goals and 25 assists in league play, though that hasn’t always translated to U.S. call-upsOne of the most in-form players on the team, Zendejas will add a different, more dynamic look for the U.S. — evidenced by his September goal against Japan that helped turn the tide for a team in turmoil.


Forwards

Folarin Balogun

Club: AS Monaco
Age: 24Caps: 25World Cup experience: None

Balogun was U.S. Soccer’s blue-chip recruit of the 2026 World Cup cycle. A Brooklyn-born forward, he spent nearly his entire childhood in England, but in 2023 chose to represent the USMNT. And in doing so, he instantly lifted the team’s ceiling.

He’s the starting striker less because he’s lethal in front of goal, more because he knows how to get in front of goal. He runs off the shoulders of defenders. He sniffs out space in the penalty box. His movement “helps us massively,” Ream said last year. He enters the World Cup having scored 11 goals in his last 14 games for Monaco in France, and could introduce himself as a star to America this summer.

Ricardo Pepi

Club: PSV EindhovenAge: 23Caps: 35World Cup experience: None

At 19, Pepi was perhaps the most controversial omission from the 2022 World Cup squad. He was in form, scoring goals and had chosen to represent the U.S. over Mexico. Pepi was stunned and disappointed by the decision. Four years later, he’ll get his chance as a back-up striker under Pochettino.

Pepi has been a consistently reliable center forward in the Dutch Eredivisie. He scored 16 goals in 26 matches during the 2025-2026 season. The 6-foot-1 El Paso, Texas, native is a box-dwelling striker with good instincts and effective movement inside the opponent’s penalty area.

Christian Pulisic

Club: AC MilanAge: 27Caps: 84World Cup experience: 2022

Pulisic has been the face of the USMNT ever since he was a teen. He burst onto the scene at age 17, wore the captain’s armband at 20, and blazed trails for American players in Europe with his club exploits at Borussia Dortmund in Germany, Chelsea in England and AC Milan in Italy.

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He can play on either wing or through the middle, threatening defenders with his quickness and dribbling. Midway through this past season for Milan, he was surging toward a career year and looked like one of the very best players in Serie A. But he has not scored a single goal since calendars flipped to 2026.

He hasn’t scored for the national team since November 2024. He has looked frustrated as he skids toward the World Cup, which could be a legacy-defining moment for a player often talked about as the biggest American men’s soccer star ever.

Haji Wright

Club: Coventry CityAge: 28Caps: 20World Cup experience: 2022

A bit of a surprise on the roster in 2022 after finding his goal-scoring form in the lead-up to the tournament, Wright then became a goalscorer for the U.S. in the knockout stage against the Netherlands — albeit on a bit of a lucky touch. He has continued his goalscoring form since returning from Qatar. Wright has found double-digit goals for Coventry in every season in the Championship over the past three campaigns, including 18 goals in all competitions this season for a team that earned promotion by finishing first in the table with a dominant 95 points.

The Los Angeles native is a far different profile at 6-foot-4, 175-pounds, and he can come off the bench and bring a different look — especially after the Achilles injury for Patrick Agyemang. Wright is not a traditional target striker, though, and is as comfortable playing off the wing as he is up top.

USA’s World Cup captain might be Mauricio Pochettino’s worst-kept secret

USMNT defender Tim Ream

USA’s defender Tim Ream poses with his 2026 World Cup jersey Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

By Tom Bogert May 27, 2026

While U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino has not yet formally named a captain for the 2026 World Cup, the identity of the leader for the first game against Paraguay on June 12 might be the squad’s worst-kept secret.Veteran center back Tim Ream, who emotionally accepted that his international career was likely over at the end of the 2022 World Cup but later became a trusted voice of experience under Pochettino, is who all signs point toward as skipper.

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Pochettino has not made his plans clear regarding a captaincy announcement, but he has time and again gone back to Ream for the armband, with the Charlotte FC defender having occupied the role for 16 of Pochettino’s 23 games in charge. In total, Ream has 80 U.S. caps.

At 38, somewhat remarkably, Ream is in line to become the oldest American player ever at a World Cup, beating the previous record set by the late Fernando Clavijo in 1994. He’ll be 38 years, 8 months and 7 days old when the U.S. takes to the SoFi Stadium field for its World Cup opener.

“I’ve done everything I possibly can to be sitting here, to be part of this group to make a second World Cup and have it be on home soil,” Ream told reporters on Tuesday. “I’m proud of all the decisions I’ve made, all the work I’ve done on and off the field that has landed me a second opportunity.”

Ream left Fulham of the English Premier League in 2024 to return to Major League Soccer, where he began his career with the New York Red Bulls in 2010. Even with Ream having been named to every camp under Pochettino and having been installed as captain for the Concacaf Gold Cup last summer, his appointment would be a notable departure from 2022, when Gregg Berhalter made midfielder Tyler Adams the youngest captain at the World Cup in Qatar. The 2022 squad voted on who they thought the best fit for the role was, and went for Adams a few days before the opening game against Wales.While Christian Pulisic was clearly the highest-profile player in that squad four years ago and remains so now, the AC Milan forward is typically freed from captaincy duties. Despite his nickname of Captain America — far from the first U.S. star to ever hold that moniker — he has been captain twice for Pochettino, and neither has proven to be a particular positive experience. During his most recent outing with the armband, Pulisic was subbed off injured after 31 minutes during an October friendly against Australia. His only previous captaincy since Pochettino became coach was in a defeat to Canada in the third-place game of the 2025 Concacaf Nations League.Ream’s composed style and popularity within the group seems to make him an admirable fit.“I am just another cog in the machine,” Ream said on Fox. “I try to help these guys as much as I can, but drawing on the experience we had in 2022 is going to be important. Now we have a group that knows what to expect and what is needed. It is just a reminder to enjoy all of what this is, embrace what this is and enjoy every moment.“This looks like if we had a game tomorrow. The training starts and it is all hands on deck, we are going after it from the very first training session and you have to treat each session as if it is the most important. We need to make sure we are ready to go on June 12 and that starts tomorrow.“You have to embrace it, you have to enjoy it, there is pressure no matter what game you play – it is a World Cup and it is the biggest single sporting event in the history of sports. Embrace it enjoy it and take everything in. There are so many people who would love to be in this position and we get to do it.”

Tyler Adams (left) was USMNT captain at the 2022 World Cup but hasn’t worn the armband under Mauricio Pochettino.Brad Smith / ISI Photos / Getty Images

Pochettino’s side opens its campaign against Paraguay in Los Angeles, before taking on Australia in Seattle on June 19. The Group D slate closes out with a clash against Turkey back in L.A. on June 25.

Apart from Ream and Pulisic, the other leaders under Pochettino have been Chris Richards (twice), plus Miles Robinson, Matt Turner and Mark McKenzie once apiece.

When asked in New York on Tuesday, midfielder Weston McKennie insisted he has confidence in the leadership qualities across the 26-man squad regardless of who wears the armband.

“So far, Tim Ream has been captain the past games and it has also been Chris Richards, but, in this team, we have a lot of experienced guys,” McKennie said. “Anyone can wear the captain’s armband and take on that responsibility.

“At the end of the day, it’s still a whole team who has to go out there, and we are all family, like brothers. We love each other like family, it doesn’t matter who you put on armband on, everyone’s going to go out there and fight just the same.”

Tom Bogert is a Senior Writer for The Athletic


USMNT Tracker: Tyler Adams signs off on high but Christian Pulisic misses out on Champions League

A designed image showing, left, Tyler Adams in action of Bournemouth, and, right, Christian Pulisic looking forlorn for Milan

Tyler Adam and Christian Pulisic in action for Bournemouth and Milan respectively Getty Images

By Greg O’Keeffe

May 25, 2026 Updated May 26, 2026

Christian Pulisic couldn’t save Milan’s Champions League hopes, but Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie had a happier season ending, while Auston Trusty secured more silverware for Celtic.

Welcome to this week’s USMNT Player Tracker.


Pulisic and Milan miss out on Champions League… again

Not with a bang but a whimper. That was how Milan’s season concluded, and although Christian Pulisic tried his best to change that, it also sums up the end to what started as a highly promising campaign for him.

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He was on the bench. Again. For the last three Serie A fixtures of the season, as Milan have fought to make the Champions League next term, the 27-year-old American forward has been among the substitutes.

Pulisic got 31 minutes against Sassuolo, missed the defeat by Atalanta with a glute muscle strain, played 14 minutes against Genoa (enough to register an assist) and in a game the Rossoneri needed to win to clinch fourth place, he came on at 46 minutes for the second half.

Ultimately, Milan could not hang on to a second-minute lead through Alexis Saelemaekers’ goal, and Cagliari came back at the San Siro to win 2-1. Pulisic battled gamely to make the difference. He had the joint-most touches (seven) in the opposition box, and completed the joint-most dribbles (three), according to Opta.

Christian Pulisic was dynamic and direct when he came off the bench against CagliariMarco Luzzani/Getty Images

But with none of the strikers around him firing, and Pulisic equally unable to find a way through, Milan did not test the visitors enough. With Como winning their final game, it meant Milan dropped into fifth place and missed out on Champions League qualification for a second consecutive season.

Clubs the size of Milan, and players of Pulisic’s ability, should be in Europe’s top competition. But the table never lies, and neither does the personal tally table, which shows Pulisic started the season on fire with 10 goals in all competitions, then plummeted at the turn of the year. In terms of numbers, he did not score in the second half of the season and managed two assists to take his creative haul for the campaign to four.

It is a drought that has been much-mentioned in this column and beyond. Milan manager Massimiliano Allegri has offered some mitigation, pointing out that his player has been sacrificed positionally, struggled with injuries and has not always been on the same page as team-mate Rafael Leao.

Pulisic reacts during the match against CagliariPiero Cruciatti / AFP via Getty Images

So what does it mean for the summer? Well, let’s look for some positives. The international team’s MVP will at least be fresher than he might have been if he had been starting every game in the run-in.

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Pulisic will also be arriving for the World Cup feeling a little kicked, a little irked, and perhaps aware his doubters have had fresh fuel this year. It might yield a fiery response to prove them wrong once more.

If that fire is burning ever brighter, then coming on top of the obvious motivation of a home soil World Cup, the USMNT should be set to see the best of their star player after a year to forget for his club.


McKennie signs off strongly after impressive season

Other players who seem set for Mauricio Pochettino’s roster had better final weekends of the season with their clubs.

Weston McKennie’s importance to the USMNT midfield has only been increased by the absence of Tanner Tessmann in the squad, meaning the Texan’s famed flexibility may be vital if he is to play in the double pivot midfield role next to Tyler Adams.

McKennie signed off a campaign in which he showed his worth for Juventus time and again — earning a new contract along the way — by impressing in their 2-2 draw at Torino.

Weston McKennie had an impressive season with JuventusMarco Bertorello / AFP via Getty Images

He played at right wing-back, and his 2025-26 numbers were strong. In 3,921 minutes for the Turin side in all competitions, he scored nine goals with eight assists. However, there was no Champions League qualification for Juve either — not what is expected at the Allianz Arena — and McKennie will join Pulisic in next season’s Europa League.

But on a personal level, the 27-year-old has proven his own doubters in Italy wrong, once more, and will report for World Cup duty in good form and confidence.


Adams secures European football

Injuries have meant Adams could not replicate quite those levels of influence in the Premier League with Bournemouth. But he signed off on a high in his team’s closing day 1-1 draw with Nottingham Forest. The result was enough to secure Adams and his team-mates a sixth-place finish and deserved Europa League football next season.

Watch

How USMNT players influenced the design of their World Cup jerseys

Henry Bushnell and Reuben Pinder

Adams used all his experience playing in his defensive-midfield role next to the 20-year-old Hungarian Alex Toth, making only his second start of the campaign. The American was a steadying influence and got about the pitch with plenty of energy. He had the most defensive contributions of any other player (17) according to Opta.

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Adams is another in the ‘golden-age’ 27-years-old-plus bracket who will come into the World Cup at a good moment.


Trusty wins domestic double

Moments can’t get much better for Auston Trusty in Glasgow either. After he helped Celtic to the Premiership title last weekend, he played his part again on Saturday as Martin O’Neill’s team lifted the Scottish Cup at Hampden Park.What You Should Read NextHearts, Celtic, Rangers. BedlamOver the last three weeks, The Athletic has covered the Split as Hearts sought to upend the accepted order and win the Scottish Premiership

Trusty started and played the entirety of a 3-1 win over Dunfermline to receive another medal and finish the campaign full of belief.

USMNT’s Mauricio Pochettino met with Milan over vacant head coach role

Mauricio Pochettino speaking at a press conference

Pochettino’s contract with the U.S. expires after this summer’s World Cup Rich Storry / Getty Images

By James HorncastleMay 28, 2026 Updated 8:41 am EDT

U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino met with representatives from Italian club AC Milan over its vacant head coach position.

The meeting took place last week ahead of the USMNT’s World Cup camp in Georgia, sources have told The Athletic. Pochettino’s contract with the United States Soccer Federation (USSF), signed in 2024, expires after this summer’s World Cup on home soil.The 54-year-old had been identified as a potential successor to Massimiliano Allegri, who left the club earlier this week, while Andoni Iraola — the head coach who is a free agent after leaving Bournemouth — is a leading candidate.Milan are conducting a thorough search with a view to realising the ownership’s ambition to revive the club and make them not only a force again but one of the most compelling football projects in the world.They parted company with Allegri, along with sporting director Igli Tare, chief executive Giorgio Furlani and technical director Geoffrey Moncada, in a radical shake-up of the club’s executive leadership on Monday.The changes have come after Milan missed out on qualification for the Champions League for a second successive season, finishing fifth in Serie A — Italian football’s top division.In March, Pochettino hinted he was considering staying in his role at the USMNT beyond the World Cup. “We are open,” Pochettino said. “We don’t have a contract for the future but why not if we are happy and the federation is happy?”What You Should Read NextUSMNT 2026 World Cup squad roundtable: Debating Pochettino’s choices, USA’s chancesWho should start? How far can they go? Who should’ve been included that wasn’t? Our writers answer the pressing USMNT World Cup questions

Pochettino replaced Gregg Berhalter as USMNT head coach following the side’s Copa America group stage exit in the summer of 2024.The Argentine began his managerial career at Espanyol in Spain, where he spent nine years as a player across two spells, before moving to England with a 16-month spell in charge of Premier League side Southampton.Pochettino left to take over at Tottenham Hotspur, whom he established as a top-four club in England’s top flight and led to the Champions League final in 2019, before departing fewer than six months later.He went on to coach Paris Saint-Germain, winning three trophies including the 2021-22 Ligue 1 title. Pochettino was sacked at the end of that season and then spent the 2023-24 campaign in charge of Chelsea, before moving into international management with the U.S. in September 2024.A potential move to Milan would see Pochettino reunited with USMNT winger Christian Pulisic, whose international teammate Yunus Musah is also contracted to the club but spent this season on loan at Atalanta.

5/21/26 Europe Leagues Final weekend, Arsenal win EPL, Women’s UCL Sat noon, US WC Roster Reveal Tue 3 pm on Fox, Pep steps down Sun?, Indy 11 home,

Notes

Awesome new commercial with Pulisic, Messi & Ochoa if you haven’t seen the US vs The World Series on HBO – its worth the watch. Gio Finally Scores for Gladbach his first of the season. Here’s why this guy might make the US team Berhalter from Distance. Pulisic with an assist finally in their 2-1 win over Genoa, AC Milan merely need a tie or win this Sunday to secure Champions League next season the last on Pulisic’s contract.  Fulham’s Jedi Robinson scored his first goal this season from the spot as Fulham’s 1-1 tie takes them out of Europe discussion. But Tyler Adams and Bournmouth – yes Bournmouth have qualified for Europe & have a chance for Champions League next season with Aston Villa’s Europa Cup win on Wed.(they gotta win Sun & have Villa lose). Even Prince William the future King of England was thrilled with  Villa’s Victory Neymar was named to the Brazil World Cup team and Brazil went nuts.  Crazy Pep Guardiola is stepping down at Man City with 20 Trophies in 10 seasons.

World Cup Roster Reveal Tues 3 pm

So the US will reveal the roster on Tuesday at Live on 3 pm on Fox (weird time to do it). So who do you have for the biggest soccer games of our generation? I have made my flights and will be on my way June 10th to LA – returning when we lose.

Shane’s US Roster

Goalkeepers: Matt Turner, Matt Freese, Chris Brady

Center-backs: Chris Richards, Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie, Auston Trusty

Flex defenders: Alex Freeman, Joe Scally

Fullbacks/wingbacks: Antonee Robinson, Sergiño Dest, Alex Freeman

Central midfielders: Tyler Adams, Tanner Tessmann, Cristian Roldan, Sebastian Berhalter

Attacking midfielders: Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Malik Tillman, Brenden Aaronson, Gio Reyna, Diego Luna, Tim Weah

Strikers: Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright

Last cuts: Max Arfsten, Jack McGlynn, Miles Robinson, Alejandro Zendejas, Aidan Morris


Indy 11 beat Ft Wayne in PKs – Host Lexington Sat 7 pm

Fort Wayne, Ind. – Indy Eleven goalkeeper Eric Dick made a diving save and Jack Blake, captain Aodhan Quinn, and Josh O’Brien converted their penalty kicks to give the Boys in Blue a 3-1 shootout victory in Prinx Tires USL Cup play at Fort Wayne FC on Saturday. Fort Wayne made its first penalty to take a 1-0 lead in PKs, but Blake responded to tie it, then Quinn made it 2-1, setting the stage for Dick’s stop.  O’Brien was successful to make it 3-1, and the next Fort Wayne attempt was off target to end it. Next Saturday is “Pups at the Pitch” at Carroll Stadium when Indy Eleven returns to USL Championship play vs. Lexington SC at 7 p.m. Ticket options include the new Desnuda Tequila DeckFamily Four-Packs, and Flex Mini-Plans. Indy 11, & former Carmel High and CDC GK Eric Dick Wins Shootout

Tryout Schedule


TV Schedule – Games on TV

Fri, May 22
2:45 pm Para+ Atalanta (Musah) vs Fiorentina
10 pm TUDN Mexico vs Ghana
SAT May 23
12 Noon CBSSN Barcelona vs OL Lyonnes (Heeps/Horan) Womens’ UCL
12N Para+ Bologna vs Inter Milan
2 pm ESPNU, + Bayern Munich vs Stuttgart (German Cup)
2:30 pm Fox St Louis City vs Austin MLS
3 pm ESPN+ Real Madrid vs Athletic Club
7 pm ESPN+ Indy 11 vs Lexington
7:30 pm Apple Cincy vs Orlando City
8:30 pm Apple Chicago Fire vs Toronto FC
9:30 pm Apple San Diego vs Vancouver Whitecaps

Sun, May 24
11 am ?? Leeds United (Aaronson) vs West Ham
11 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Arsenal
11 am NBCSN Notingham Forest vs Bournemouth (Adams)
11 am USA Fulham (Jedi) vs New Castle United
1 pm CBS KC Current vs Portland Thorns NWSL
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Cagliari
2:45 pm Para+ Juventus (McKennie) vs Torino
2:45 pm ESPN+ Villareal vs Atletico Madrid
5 pm Apple Columbus Crew vs Atlanta United
5 pm ESPND + Bay FC vs Chicago Stars NWSL
7 pm Fox Inter Miami vs Philly
9 pm Fox LAFC vs Seattle Sounders
9 pm CBSSN Pumas vs Cruz Azul
Wed, May 27
3 pm Para+ Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Raya Vallecano EUFA Conference Final
Fri, May 29
8 pm Prime Racing Louisville vs Denver Summit (Amazon Prime)
Sat, May 30 Champions League Final
12 noon CBS PSG vs Arsenal
1:30 pm Ion, Tubi KC Current vs Boston Legacy NWSL
4 pm Ion, Tubi Portland Thorn vs Utah Royals NWSL
6:30 pm Ion, Tubi Washington Spirit vs Seattle Reign NWSL
8 pm FSI Toluca vs Tigres Concacaf Championship
Sat, May 31
1 pm CBSSN Chicago Stars vs San Diego Wave NWSL
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
7 pm Victory Angel City vs NC Courage NWSL
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago Tix
Thur, June, 11 World Cup
3 pm Fox Mexico vs South Africa
10 pm FS1 Korea vs Czech Republic

Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Fri, June 19
3 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup
Thur, June 25
10 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup

Complete 2026 World Cup schedule featuring match dates and start times
NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule 


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US Men

Three USMNT Players Pochettino Can’t Forget About Ahead of World Cup
USMNT World Cup roster projection: Who are the sure bets and bubble players by
World Cup roster prediction: Projecting USMNT World Cup roster ahead of Mauricio
Morris & Boro to Wembley, Pulisic sharp, Yanks win Austrian double, & more
Scally & Reyna discuss Bundesliga season and World Cup hopes
Which USMNT players will be the most exciting to watch during World Cup?
Who is most pivotal to the USMNT’s World Cup success
U.S.’s Richards tears ankle ligaments before WCup
USMNT center back Chris Richards’ World Cup status in doubt after ankle ligament t


US Women & EUFA Champions League Final Sat

How the 2027 World Cup team is taking shape
Tobin Heath, Heather O’Reilly Join National Soccer Hall Of Fame Class Of 2026
Is Barcelona versus OL Lyonnes the UEFA Women’s Champions League’s
Europe’s biggest sides collide in Women’s Champions League final on
Six battles that will decide the Women’s Champions League final between
From Colorado to Lyon and back again: U.S. captain Lindsey Heaps gears up for final UEFA Women’s

EPL + England

‘Trust the process’: Inside Arsenal’s five-phase plan to win the Premier League title
After 8,060-day drought, Arsenal are deserved Premier League champions Mark Ogden ESPN
Arsenal’s Dowman, 16, becomes youngest PL winner

Weekend predictions: Will Tottenham or West Ham stay up? Will Bayern win German Cup
Julien Laurens
Twenty-two years in the making: How Arsenal celebrated title win
Arsenal bids farewell to ‘bottler’ label and Pep Guardiola with Premier League title
Arsenal clinches first Premier League title in 22 years
Guardiola set for talks with City chair over exit

De Zerbi: Spurs’ dignity on line in survival decider
Southampton expelled from EFL playoffs for spying

Southampton kicked out of Championship playoff final after spying scandal

MLS & US Open Cup

Orlando City SC, St. Louis CITY SC Advance to U.S. Open Cup Semifinals
USMNT’s Max Arfsten, USYNT’s Darren Yapi Power Columbus Crew, Colorado Rapids to U.S. Open Cup Semifinals

MLS on FOX! Messi & Son highlight pre-World Cup doubleheader
Matchday 15: Everything to know for this weekend’s biggest matches
Portland Timbers vs. San Jose Earthquakes: What to know for Walmart Saturday Showdown
Red Bull New York vs. New York City FC: What to know for Walmart Saturday Showdown
Columbus Crew vs. Atlanta United: What to know for Sunday Night Soccer
Lionel Messi dazzles in Inter Miami’s first win at Nu Stadium
Paul Rothrock finds purpose on hometown Seattle Sounders

GK

Indy 11, & former Carmel High and CDC GK Eric Dick Wins Shootout
Great Women’s Champions League Saves!
Best Saves | UEFA Champions League 2025/26
Top saves from the Champions League semi-finals | Video
GK Neuer, 40, makes Germany World Cup squad
Angelina Anderson with a Spectacular Gk Save vs. Kansas City Current
Germany goalie Manuel Neuer, 40, coming out of retirement

World Cup


Ancelotti’s Neymar pick for Brazil is an act of faith that could reap rewards

Could Japan’s recent run lead to World Cup surprise?
Why Erling Haaland, Norway could be World Cup dark horse
21 days to the World Cup: The FIFA policy requiring every stadium (except 1) to scrub its branding
2026 World Cup news live tracker: Squad announcements, injuries, key storylines and latest updates
2026 FIFA World Cup daily schedule: Every match date, kickoff time and venue for all 48 teams

Every 2026 World Cup squad announced so far — and when teams will reveal their rosters
21 days to the World Cup: The FIFA policy requiring every stadium (except 1) to scrub its branding

Reffing

Pressure of Reffing Scottish Title Game

Prez Cup Games Sun with Mallory, Lu & Matt
A little Girls DA Action at Grand Park Sat with the Speedway Brothers.



Chris Richards’ World Cup not in doubt despite USMNT star’s ankle injury: Sources

USMNT defender Chris Richards against Portugal

John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images

By Paul TenorioMay 21, 2026 Updated 5:22 pm EDT

U.S. men’s national team defender Chris Richards is not expected to miss the World Cup despite having suffered two torn ligaments in his left ankle only three weeks before the start of the competition, sources have told The Athletic.Richards’ club manager, Crystal Palace’s Oliver Glasner, revealed the extent of the injury on Thursday, but multiple sources briefed on Richards’ injury say that while a return for next week’s Conference League final may be “a day or two” too soon, they insist that the center back will be “good for the World Cup, 100%.”Richards, 26, appeared to twist his ankle in a substitute appearance for Palace against Brentford on Sunday. He received medical treatment on the pitch but finished the game, having come on after an hour. Glasner has ruled Richards out of the club’s final Premier League fixture, which is against newly crowned champion Arsenal, and said it is “50-50″ whether he will be able to return for Wednesday’s Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano.“He tore two ligaments in his ankle,” Glasner said in his pre-match press conference on Thursday. “I think it’s stable, but quite swollen, and we have to deal with the swelling. He has to get back on the pitch to be available, and it takes time.“He is in from sunrise until sunset having treatments and everything we can do that reduces the swelling, and of course we have a great medical department, so we will give our best and he will give his best — and then let’s see if we can get it done.”Richards is a vital member of the defense for the U.S, which opens its World Cup against Paraguay on June 12. After the announcement of Mauricio Pochettino’s World Cup roster on Tuesday, the U.S. plays Senegal (May 31) and Germany (June 6) in a final set of pre-tournament friendlies.Paul Tenorio is a senior writer for The Athletic who covers soccer. He has previously written for the Washington Post, the Orlando Sentinel, FourFourTwo, ESPN and MLSsoccer.com.

Promotion, relegation, and silverware.Americans Overseas

BY Brian SciarettaPosted American Soccer Now
May 19, 2026 1:00 PM

IT HAS BEEN a big week for Americans abroad as many of the top leagues in Europe are now over. But over the last few days we learned a lot. Christian Pulisic showed signs of his early-season form, Americans can thrive in Austria, Robinson is ready for the World Cup, and the USMNT is strong at forward.

But will start the column off today in England, where a “spy gate” has sunk Southampton and benefited Aidan Morris, who will get another crack at getting to the Premier League next season.

Morris & Boro back into playoff final

 In a shocking twist of events, Middlesbrough will get a chance to play in the Championship playoff final against Hull after Southampton were found guilty of spying on opponents throughout the 2025/26 season. The punishment is that Southampton would lose their spot in the playoff final and it would instead go to Middlesbrough, who lost to Southampton in the semifinal. In addition, Southampton was given a four-point penalty next season in the Championship.

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Southampton has the right to appeal, which could delay the game which is scheduled for May 23.

For Aidan Morris, he will get another crack at making it to the Premier League. The former Columbus Crew midfielder has been thriving at Boro where he has been a lock starter and a consistently good midfielder in the Championship. At one point it looked as if Boro would quality automatically but the club tumbled down the stretch and finished fifth.

Pepi & Balogun finish at 19

Ligue 1 and the Eredivisie concluded their seasons over the weekend and Ricardo Pepi and Folarin Balogun both had seasons to remember.

Ricardo Pepi played all 90 minutes for PSV and scored the final goal from the spot in a 5-1 pounding of Twente. With PSV having secured the title, Pepi was dominant down the stretch having scored six goals in his last five games (including goals in his last five games). He finished with 19 goals across all competitions (16 in the Eredivisie, 3 in the Champions League).

Folarin Balogun, meanwhile, was robbed of a goal when a 55th minute goal for Monaco was ruled an own goal instead of a goal from the American. It seemed like a harsh ruling. But it did not affect the result, which as a 5-4 Monaco loss to Strasbourg.  Balogun played 76 minutes in the game and finished the season with 13 goals in Ligue 1, 5 goals in the Champions League, and 1 in the Coupe de France for 19 across all competitions. Regardless, Mauricio Pochettino will have two in-form strikers to select at the World Cup.

Trusty wins Celtic title

 Auston Trusty won his second Scottish Premiership title with Celtic after a 3-1 win over Hearts. The game was much closer than the scoreline suggested as the game was 1-1 into the 87th minute, and Hearts needed just a draw to secure the title. But Celtic scored twice late after Trusty was subbed out.

Just about every neutral fan was supporting Hearts in this game to breakup the Old Firm’s 40-year grip on the top division of Scotland. But it was not to be as Celtic was clearly the better team in this game and down the stretch, where they didn’t lose over their last seven Premiership games.Trusty remains a bubble player for the USMNT World Cup roster but he is clearly trending up after having played over 2500 for a title-winning Celtic combined with the U.S. team being very shallow in central defense.

Pulisic sharp off the bench

 Christian Pulisic’s form is the biggest story in the world of the U.S. team right now. The Hershey native has been in a slump since the end of December. Entering this weekend, he has no goals or assists in 2026.Fortunately for both Milan and the U.S. national team, Pulisic had his best shift in months for Milan in a 2-1 away win over Genoa. He entered the game in the 76th minute and assisted on Zachary Athekame’s goal five minutes later.

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The win gives Milan a two-point cushion on a Champions League spot heading into the final game of the season. On Sunday, Milan will host 16th-place Cagliari.For the national team, the hope is that a good performance will now have Pulisic trending upwards into the World Cup. We will learn more this weekend. Regardless, it is hard to see the  U.S. team succeeding at the World Cup without Pulisic being at his best.

Weah returns from injury

 Tim Weah, 26, made his first appearance since April 26 on Sunday for Marseille in a 3-1 win over Rennes. Weah played 88 minutes at right back and was sharp throughout. Unfortunately, Marseille missed out on the Champions League with a fifth-place finish but will still participate in the Europa League next season.

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Despite the recent injury to Weah, his start on Sunday saw him surpass the 3000-minute threshold this season for the first time in his career. While he has been at Marseille on loan from Juventus, the expectation is that he will remain with Marseille on a permanent basis. For the national team, having Weah in solid form is a huge net presence as the team needs more wide attacking players.

 
Minor injuries to Aaronson & Richards

Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United extended their Premiership unbeaten run to eight games with a 1-0 win over Brighton & Hove Albion with a late stoppage time winner from Dominic Alvert-Lewin. That has lifted Leeds into 13th place heading into the final game of the season.

Aaronson started but hobbled off in the 60th minute. Fortunately, the injury does not seem to be major as Daniel Farke suggested it was a dead-leg that should have him ready for the finale, which will be against relegation-threatened West Ham.

Chris Richards hobbled off the field after the final whistle when his Crystal Palace team played Brentford to a 2-2 draw. Richards entered the game in the 61st minute and was quite during his time on the field. Fortunately, Richards is expected back for the finale against Arsenal. While it is a minor injury, it was a nervy moment for the USMNT who cannot afford to lose Richards for the World Cup. He is by far the team’s best central defender at the moment.

Robinson scores from the spot

 Fulham’s chances of qualifying for Europe are almost entirely dead after being held to a 1-1 draw against last-place Wolves.

The good news, for the U.S. team, is that Antonee Robinson scored his first Premier League goal just before halftime when he stepped up to convert a penalty inside the left post after a teammate drew the foul.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?dnt=false&embedId=twitter-widget-4&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=2056046689392144660&lang=en&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.americansoccernow.com%2Farticles%2Fmorris-amp-boro-to-wembley-pulisic-sharp-yanks-win-austrian-double-amp-more&sessionId=f872bf1fab13ec8498d0199e90e6014ac7022dc6&theme=light&widgetsVersion=6a3ad42b224df%3A1778106238597&width=550px

Even more importantly for Robinson, he went a full 90 minutes and looked healthy. He has been touch and go all season but looks ready for the World Cup.

Tracking title races, relegation: Arsenal clinch Premier League

May 19, 2026, 05:01 PM ET

The end of the European soccer season is fast approaching, and the battles for major honors, UEFA Champions League qualification and relegation are truly heating up.

Here’s where things stand across the English Premier LeagueSpanish LaLigaGerman BundesligaItalian Serie A and French Ligue 1, plus other key title races in the sport across the world. This story will be updated weekly through the season’s final day, so be sure to check back frequently for the latest information.

Last updated: May 19

Jump to:
Premier League | LaLiga
Bundesliga | Serie A | Ligue 1
Other races to watch


Premier League

Champions: Arsenal

Arsenal‘s 22-year wait to win the Premier League ended on Tuesday, as they were crowned champions with Manchester City‘s 1-1 draw with Bournemouth. Their last league title came via the famous “Invincibles” team of 2003-04.

Champions League race: Manchester CityManchester UnitedAston VillaLiverpool

The Premier League will be granted an extra place in the UEFA Champions League next season due to the UEFA club coefficient rankings. It means the top five finishers will play in Europe’s premier competition next season.

That was good news for Manchester UnitedAston Villa and Liverpool, who have been vying for Champions League qualification.

United cemented third place with a victory over Nottingham Forest last weekend, meaning they will return to European football next term after suffering the embarrassment of playing only 40 total games this season.

Aston Villa have cemented fourth place. That has repercussions for whoever finishes in sixth — had Villa finished in fifth and win Wednesday’s Europa League final, then sixth would have been granted Champions League football, too. However, Villa are too far ahead of fifth-place Liverpool for that outcome to happen.

It means only one more Champions League spot remains up for grabs. It will almost certainly go to Liverpool; Bournemouth would have to win their final match, hope Liverpool lose, and make up a six-goal deficit in goal differential to earn fifth place.

Europa League / Conference League hopefuls: ChelseaBrentfordEvertonBrightonAFC Bournemouth

Chelsea had been in the hunt for Champions League football until their form collapsed — so much so they sacked manager Liam Rosenior after just 106 days — and there is now a decent chance they miss out on European football altogether.

The club had a chance to secure a Europa League spot by winning the FA Cup, but they were beaten 1-0 by Manchester City in last weekend’s final. It means they must now qualify for Europe through the Premier League, but the competition has never before been so fierce in the final week of the season.

Just seven points separate Bournemouth (fifth) and Newcastle United (11th). Chelsea would move up to seventh with a win over Tottenham Hotspur on Tuesday.

It is worth keeping an extra eye on both Bournemouth and Brentford, who have both never qualified for European football before.

Crystal Palace could also earn a separate European spot by winning next weekend’s Conference League final.

Relegation battle: Wolves (R), Burnley (R), West Ham UnitedTottenham Hotspur

For two straight seasons, the three teams that came up from the Championship were sent straight back down the following season. This year, however, that won’t happen. Newly promoted Leeds have enjoyed a superb run of late, meaning their place in next season’s Premier League is safe.

Bottom-of-the-pack Wolves were officially relegated last month, and second-bottom Burnley joined the following week.

It means one more relegation spot looms, and West Ham are now most likely to be given it. Tottenham Hotspur can secure their survival with a victory over Chelsea on Tuesday. A draw would also all but mean they stay up due to their much better goal difference.

Should Spurs lose, it would mean they could still go down on the final day of the season if West Ham win at home to Leeds and they lose at home to Everton.


LaLiga

Champions: Barcelona

Barcelona clinched their second straight LaLiga title on May 10 by winning 2-0 against their fierce rivals, Real Madrid, in the final Clasico of the season.

Champions League: Real MadridAtlético MadridVillarrealReal Betis

All of the Champions League spots in Spain have been awarded. Rayo Vallecano’s run to the Conference League final sealed a bonus fifth spot for Spain and Real Betis.

Europa League / Conference League hopefuls: Celta Vigo, Real SociedadGetafeOsasunaAthletic ClubRayo VallecanoValencia

CONFIRMED: Real Sociedad

6. Celta Vigo (51, plus-4 goal differential)

7. Getafe (48, minus-6)

8. Rayo Vallecano (47, minus-6)

9. Valencia (46, minus-12)

10. Real Sociedad (45, minus-1)

By winning the Copa del Rey, Real Sociedad automatically qualify for next year’s Europa League.

Celta Vigo have essential confirmed their Europa League place as well. Getafe can seal a place in the Conference League qualifying rounds if they win their last match on Saturday vs. Osasuna — otherwise, the door is open for the teams below them.

Rayo Vallecano have made the Conference League final, and winning that competition would guarantee a place in next season’s Europa League, regardless of their league finish.

Relegation battle: ElcheGironaAlavesMallorcaSevillaLevanteReal Oviedo

13. Sevilla (43, minus-13)

14. Alaves (43, minus-11)

15. Levante (42, minus-13)

16. Osasuna (42 points, minus-5)

17. Elche (42, minus-8)

18. Girona (40, minus-16)

19. Mallorca (39, minus-13)

20. Real Oviedo (29, minus-31)

It’s absolute chaos at the bottom of the table. Girona, third-place finishers in LaLiga in 2023-24, are currently facing the drop, but they’ll be taking on Elche (the team directly above them in the table) in a true relegation six-pointer on Saturday. Mallorca are also in the relegation zone, but they could yet drag themselves out of it with a win over last-place Real Oviedo.

One thing’s for sure: This race will go down to the wire.


Bundesliga

Champions: Bayern Munich

Bayern Munich were crowned Bundesliga champions with a 4-2 win over Stuttgart on April 19. It was the second straight league title for the Rekordmeister and their 35th all time.

Champions League: Borussia DortmundRB LeipzigVfB Stuttgart

VfB Stuttgart‘s draw with Eintracht Frankfurt in the final matchweek, combined with TSG Hoffenheim’s loss, meant that Stuttgart sealed the fourth and final Champions League place. Hoffenheim and Bayer Leverkusen gain entry to the Europa League.

Freiburg have also made the Europa League final and will earn a spot in next year’s Champions League if they claim the trophy.

Relegated St. PauliVfL WolfsburgHeidenheim

16. Wolfsburg (26, minus-26)

17. St. Pauli (26, minus-29)

18. Heidenheim (26, minus-29)

The final weekend is sure to be a frenzied one in the relegation battle as well. The bottom three teams are tied on points and have similar goal differentials — whoever finishes highest in the table will participate in the promotion/relegation playoff with the third-place finisher of the 2. Bundesliga, while the other teams will be automatically relegated.

Wolfsburg and St. Pauli will clash in a true relegation six-pointer. Wolfsburg are currently ahead of St. Pauli based on total goals scored, so St. Pauli must win to have any hope of staying in the Bundesliga. Meanwhile, Heidenheim must win against Mainz and hope for a draw in the Wolfsburg-St. Pauli match; otherwise, their only chance of safety is winning by a large enough margin to overtake the other two teams on goal differential.


Serie A

Champions: Internazionale

Inter Milan clinched the Serie A title with a 2-0 win over Parma on May 3. Their 21 titles keeps them in second behind only Juventus (36).

Champions League: NapoliAC MilanComoJuventusAS Roma

CONFIRMED: Inter Milan

The race for the top four is going down to the wire. Napoli are still leading the pack beneath Inter — a draw or a win in their final match vs. Udinese will seal their Champions League place. AC Milan and Roma are currently in third and fourth, and they would clinch the Champions League with wins, as Como and Juventus trail them by two points.

Regardless of how everything turns out, it will have been a wonderful season for Como, who are two seasons removed from competing in Serie B.

Relegation battle: CremoneseLecceHellas VeronaPisa

17. Lecce (35, minus-23)

18. Cremonese (34, minus-22)

19. Hellas Verona (21, minus-34)

20. Pisa (18, minus-44)

The relegation fight has effectively whittled down to four teams. Two of the three teams going down have essentially been decided already — Pisa and Hellas Verona — but it figures to be a dramatic conclusion to the season for Lecce and Cremonese. If Cremonese better Lecce’s result, they will avoid relegation — their superior goal differential in head-to-head matches with Lecce this season would be the tiebreaker if they end up level on points.


Ligue 1

Champions: Paris Saint-Germain

There are no prizes for guessing who is top of Ligue 1 this season. Paris Saint-Germain clinched the title after defeating Lens in a top-of-the-table clash.

Elsewhere, Lens and Lille were granted a place in next season’s Champions League league phase, while fourth-place Lyon get admission to the Champions League qualification playoffs.

Relegation battle: Le HavreNiceAuxerreNantes (R), Metz (R)

14. Le Havre (35, minus-12)

15. Auxerre (34, minus-10)

16. Nice (32, minus-23)

17. Nantes (23, minus-23)

18. Metz (17, minus-44)

Like the Bundesliga, Ligue 1 automatically relegates its bottom two finishers, with the 16th-placed side entering a playoff against the third-placed Ligue 2 side. It means Nice will face Saint-Étienne in a two-legged contest to decide who plays in the French top-flight next season.

OTHER LEAGUES

Saudi Pro League: Will Cristiano Ronaldo win first major title in five years?

Cristiano Ronaldo is just 30 goals shy of his aim to reach 1,000 before he retires one day. Before then, though, Ronaldo is ticking toward another milestone: His first major trophy since winning the Italian Cup with Juventus in 2021.

After 20 straight league victories, his Al Nassr side looked set to steamroll to the title, but a defeat away to Al Qadsiah opened the door for Al Hilal. Al Nassr and Al Hilal met on May 12 and played out a 1-1 draw. Fast forward to this week, and Al Nassr can clinch the title with a win over Damac. Drop points though and it could allow Al Hilal to win the title on goal-difference.

The only trophy Ronaldo has won since his arrival in Saudi Arabia in December 2022 is the 2023 Arab Club Champions Cup, which is not recognized by FIFA.

Scottish Premiership: Celtic break Hearts

Scottish football is dominated by two Glaswegian giants: Celtic and Rangers. They’re archrivals, and between them, they have won every league title since Sir Alex Ferguson’s Aberdeen in 1984-85. But, amid disatrous seasons at times in Glasgow, that almost changed this season.

Rangers began the season with Russell Martin as manager, but he was sacked in October after winning just one of their opening seven league games. Celtic went through their own reckoning as Brendan Rodgers, who began the season as manager, resigned later in October, leading to 74-year-old Martin O’Neill stepping in as caretaker manager. They hired Columbus Crew boss Wilfried Nancy in December, only to sack him 33 days later as he won just two of his six league matches.

Meanwhile, Hearts, who finished in the bottom half of the table last season, enjoyed a superb season. They led the Scottish top flight for most of the season and still led as they travelled to second-place Celtic on the final day of the season, needing only to avoid defeat.

It wasn’t to be, though. Celtic pipped Hearts with goals in the 86th- and 97th-minute to earn a 3-1 win and lift the title. However, the game was marred by fan trouble at the end as Celtic fans stormed the pitch with two minutes to play, meaning the game could not be restarted.

Soccer

As World Cup Host, USMNT Embraces Chance to Take Soccer to the Next Level

The heat will be turned up on the U.S. as it hosts the tournament for the first time in 32 years. With a trendy coach and a strong nucleus of players, the opportunity to make a deep run is here.

Jon Arnold|8 hours ago SI

The 1994 World Cup opening ceremony did not get off to an auspicious start for soccer purists. Diana Ross, singing “I’m Coming Out” at what was meant to be the world game’s coming-out party in the United States, stepped to the penalty spot to have a go at converting the first goal of the tournament. The shot missed the mark by some distance, but the goal still theatrically split in half down the middle. The show went on, but it ended up being wildly upstaged by the tournament itself, with the spectacle of soccer hitting the target and helping to launch the game to greater renown. When the World Cup begins on June 11, the United States has a chance to show the world how much it has learned since Ross’s effort. The biggest showcase in the sport is finally back on U.S. soil in a totally different landscape than when Bill Clinton was in his first term. There is no coming-out party needed. The sport has arrived in the U.S. At least, that’s the idea. Like 1994, there will be cringey moments from entertainers; we’re getting the first World Cup final halftime show, curated by Coldplay and headlined by Shakira, Madonna and BTS. But the ball rolling in the U.S. men’s national team’s opener against Paraguay is a moment many have dreamed of for decades.

Home Cooking USMNT Digital Cover
Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

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It also will be a moment charged with expectation. Club owners, stakeholders and fans have long hoped this summer’s tournament would firmly move soccer out of the niche it has occupied for more than six decades in this country and take its place as a “major” sport. Or perhaps it could at least help convince the thousands of people who turn up for exhibition matches played by teams visiting from England or Mexico or who flock to bars in the early morning to watch teams from Germany or Spain that it’s worth tuning in to the local league as well—or at least subscribing to the streaming service it’s offered on. 

“We have an opportunity to inspire generations of people,” says USMNT defender Tim Ream. “From young to old, from diehards to casual fans to people who aren’t even interested in the game until the World Cup rolls around.”

The easiest path to that actually becoming a reality is a deep run for the U.S., one that sweeps up those periodic fans and turns them into the type of soccer supporters who will pay attention more than every four years. 

“You want to have success in front of your own fans because you know what it means,” says Cobi Jones, a World Cup veteran who played at the 1994 tournament and appeared in more matches for the USMNT than any other player. “You know that if you do have a successful World Cup, it allows for exponential growth of the game within your country.”

The U.S. vs. Brazil at the 1994 World Cup
As the 1994 host, the U.S. survived the group stage but then was eliminated by Brazil. | Chris Cole/Allsport/Getty Images

The U.S. heads into the tournament as the No. 16 team in the FIFA rankings, so seeing the team standing alone as the confetti falls July 19 at MetLife Stadium feels all but impossible. But a run to the knockout stage that truly captures the nation’s attention is within reach—especially with games played at an hour when it’s socially acceptable to grab a beer at a bar, as opposed to, say, the 10 a.m. kickoff for the Yanks’ last knockout game, in 2022 against the Netherlands. 

The goal is “to go as far as we can because obviously anybody and any team entering the World Cup is going there to win it and has plans to win it. That’s why we’re there,” midfielder Weston McKennie said in March. “That’s why we do what we do, because we compete. I think that’s the best way to describe success: for us to be proud of our performance.” 

Will the team’s pride match the public’s expectations? Can the USMNT do enough in this tournament to give a whole sport a boost? It will need everything to break right. It will need a number of superb performances from individuals and as a team. And it will need a guiding hand that leads the team to the correct decisions.

Following the Leader 

Wooing Mauricio Pochettino to the U.S. national team program in September 2024 felt like a coup. Predecessor Gregg Berhalter had played and coached abroad but hardly has the international cachet of the Argentine manager, nor had he produced anything close to the same on-field achievements. Pochettino, 54, has worked at some of the most important clubs in the world—including Tottenham Hotspur, which he took to the 2019 Champions League final, and Paris Saint-Germain, which won the Ligue 1 title in 2021–22.

EXPLORE THE 48 COVERS: Scouting Reports for Each World Cup Nation

On top of that, while Pochettino had no experience managing a national team, he had gone to the tournament as a player. The combination of a successful playing career, experience coaching prestigious clubs and actually being available to work through the summer of 2026 made him a home run hire—even if he wasn’t at all familiar with the idea of a home run. At least, that’s how it seemed at the time. 

It hasn’t all been sunshine in the Pochettino era. The U.S. lost both regional trophies on offer in 2025, falling to Panama in the semifinals of the Concacaf Nations League and losing to Mexico in the Gold Cup final. The rest of the year saw positive performances in friendlies, with a switch to a formation anchored by Crystal Palace standout Chris Richards that allows the wide defenders to aggressively join the attack.

In March, however, Pochettino’s side lost 5–2 to Belgium and 2–0 to Portugal, though the manager insisted the learning experiences against two top 10 teams will serve the Stars and Stripes at the tournament. 

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino
USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino has not been shy about experimenting tactically. | Andrew J. Clark/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images

“Even if it’s painful, it’s the only way to improve, the only way to learn, the only way to see how these top players and teams compete,” Pochettino said after the Portugal loss

Widely expected to return to a job in the European elite after the World Cup, the 54-year-old has generally been able to stay free from the types of tiffs that can plague international teams. He and star Christian Pulisic had a difference of opinion about how much the attacker should play during the summer of 2025, with the coach snapping, “Players need to listen and to stick with our plan.” That saga, though, is now well in the past.

Getting along off the field is one thing. Getting everyone pulling in the same direction on it is another. 

Rather than continue to utilize the same formation in those March games that had worked in the fall, Pochettino experimented further. He played Pulisic as a center forward rather than his usual role as a playmaker. He went to a flat back four instead of a three-man back line and stuck Tim Weah, who typically plays in attack, at right back against one of the world’s best wingers, Belgium’s Jérémy Doku. 

The moves didn’t work out, but the competition also was much steeper. While plenty of fans perceived a regression, members of the team itself insist the enthusiasm remains high. “I feel like we are a lot closer than people think,” Pulisic said. “We put a lot of pressure on them in the first half of both the games. 

“We were able to create chances, which if I finish chances, which I know I’m going to, then things are going to be a bit different.”

Weston McKennie after a goal
Doubt has crept in after the USMNT lost its most recent friendlies to European powers Belgium and Portugal. | John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images

Putting the ball in the back of the net more often is the simplest fix in soccer, but the lessons learned from matches against the European squads may go deeper. The nature of the international game, Ream says, is that the friendlies are one thing, but the World Cup is another. “We understand where things went wrong, and we understand how and when and what we need to do to fix those things,” Ream says. “At the end of the day, the World Cup is the World Cup. Everything is completely different, and games that you played previously aren’t actually going to matter. You can’t think of all the bad things or the negative things or the momentum-sapping things that have happened because they don’t matter at that point.”

Pochettino will have to work quickly, though, to make sure the team is in the right place mentally ahead of the tournament and to determine how to get the most out of his group. While the USMNT won’t run into a squad as deep as its March opponents in the group stage, the knockout round will produce those types of matchups.

“I think now is the time to learn, to get better,” the manager said after the Portugal defeat. “I think the preparation for a World Cup has to be at the highest level, understanding we can get better. We have quality players, but we’ve got to improve, above all when we’re playing against top-level players.”

Pochettino has been in big moments before, and probably received more scrutiny in London and Paris than he’ll get this summer across the U.S., but this is by far the biggest moment he’s been in on the international stage. 

The Best Chance at Success 

Pochettino’s arrival isn’t the only reason for hope at this tournament. The USMNT should be hitting its stride. After the frustration at the failure to qualify for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, many young American players started to come through the ranks in MLS academies and make the jump to top clubs in Europe.

The U.S. has had players at important clubs before, but never in this quantity. Richards starts regularly in the Premier League, as does Fulham fullback Antonee Robinson. Pulisic and McKennie are regulars for historic AC Milan and Juventus, respectively. Forward Malik Tillman plays Champions League football for Bayer Leverkusen. The list goes on. Gone are the days when simply having the quality to play in Europe is enough to clinch a place on the team.

Antonee Robinson
U.S. hopes will be buoyed by European-based players such as Antonee Robinson. | Andrew J. Clark/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images

The roster largely came together in 2022, and while it always looked too young to make a major statement, the U.S. advanced from its group with a win and two draws. That included a disciplined defensive showing against England and a victory over Iran thanks to a Pulisic goal. In the first round of the knockout stage, however, the USMNT couldn’t cope with the speed of the Netherlands out wide and displayed a listless attack.

This year the field has expanded, meaning the groups are diluted to some extent. While the U.S. won’t want to take anything for granted, its round-robin opponents Paraguay, Australia and Türkiye all have weaknesses it can exploit. Additionally, having topped Australia 2–1 in an October friendly and beaten Paraguay by the same score a month later only will help with confidence.

But simply getting out of the group isn’t the standard for the U.S., especially with the big event taking place at home soil. “We want to show the world why we want to be one of the soccer powerhouses people talk about,” Richards says. “It takes good performances. When it comes World Cup time, we’ll be ready.”

With the Pressure on

Playing at home typically has helped teams at the World Cup. Pochettino cited South Korea’s run to the 2002 semifinal as inspiration for his team. 

But as 2026 World Cup cohost Mexico knows too well, sometimes that push from the crowd can become a burden. That relationship, long soured by high expectations and Mexico’s frequent trips to the U.S. for friendlies, hit a low in November when El Tri fans in Torreon booed the team off the field after a scoreless draw. “Maybe that’s why they always take us to the United States,” forward Raúl Jiménez said afterward.

That’s not the dynamic in the U.S., but the spotlight this summer will be brighter than it has been on any men’s team in the nation’s history. “It’s a different kind of pressure when you’re playing for your nation and playing for a World Cup and everything is riding on a few weeks,” Jones says.

Social media increases that pressure, as does the fact that there never have been so many former players with microphones getting paid to opine on the current generation. Some of the best ever to wear the USMNT jersey—including Clint Dempsey, Landon Donovan, Tim Howard and Alexi Lalas—will work in analyst roles during the World Cup. 

USMNT stars Weston McKennie and Christian Pulisic
Serie A stars Weston McKennie (right) and Christian Pulisic insist that the expectations they’ll face at home won’t impact their play. | Omar Vega/Getty Images

The players have shrugged off any criticism, noting the high expectations they have for themselves. “You guys want me to feel the pressure. That’s for sure,” Pulisic said in March, before the friendlies. “There’s pressure. It’s a World Cup. It’s not because of my position in the team or anything. I’m used to this. I feel privileged to be in this position. There’s pressure. I feel it. Yes. It’s there, but it’s nothing I can’t handle. I’m going to attack it head-on, and we are as a team.”

If the USMNT can shake off the pressure and advance through the field, it may succeed in its goal of further raising the profile of soccer in the country, especially ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. But no matter how good or bad the performance, the World Cup—the sport’s absolute pinnacle—will remain a singular event. Players can take the biggest stage only once every four years, with legacies cemented and moments magnified because of the significance of every kick, tackle or save. The tournament won’t return to North America during their careers.This is something so many have waited years and years to enjoy, and each of the 90-minute matches will be remembered forever.The moment is here. It’s up to the U.S. to meet it.     

      Picking the USA 2026 World Cup squad: A final projection of Pochettino’s 26-man roster

By Paul TenorioHenry Bushnell and Tom Bogert

May 21, 2026 Updated 6:54 am EDT

On May 26, U.S. men’s national team manager Mauricio Pochettino will step out at Pier 17 along the East River in Manhattan and announce his 26-man World Cup squad, which will be charged with representing the country on home soil.

Since his arrival to U.S. Soccer in September 2024, Pochettino has been intent to remake the culture around the national team. He wanted to redefine how players thought about call-ups. He believed it critical to root out complacency and entitlement, making every player on the roster treasure the opportunity to put on the crest.

The ultimate prize to those who bought in: the chance to be part of this summer’s World Cup.

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It has not been an easy path. Pochettino has used 71 players over nine international windows. He found a group of players at the Gold Cup in 2025, including new faces like Diego Luna, Max Arfsten and Matt Freese, all of whom have featured regularly since. He has challenged the “star” core of this national team — like 2022 World Cup veterans Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tyler Adams and Timothy Weah — to fight for their places.

The hope is it all comes together when the opening whistle blows on June 12 at SoFi Stadium.

Pochettino’s approach means it’s not so easy to pick a 26. Yes, there are quite a few players who seem like ‘locks.’ But the science of putting together a roster weighs a number of factors, from positional balance to locker-room chemistry. One decision in one position group can have a ripple effect that impacts the others.

Our writers have taken a shot at predicting Pochettino’s final squad below. This represents our best guess as to what Pochettino would do, not what we would pick if we sat in his chair. None of these projected rosters are the same, a sign of the guessing game still taking place with just a few days left until the team is announced.


Zavier Gozo at the FIFA U-20 World Cup

Zavier Gozo’s top international experience to date came at the 2025 FIFA U-20 World Cup, pictured here playing against France. Might a shock 2026 World Cup call be in the cards?Javier Torres / AFP / Getty Images

Paul Tenorio’s USMNT World Cup squad prediction

  • Goalkeepers: Matt Freese, Matt Turner, Chris Brady
  • Center-backs: Chris Richards, Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie, Auston Trusty
  • Flex defenders: Alex Freeman
  • Fullbacks/wingbacks: Max Arfsten, Antonee Robinson, Sergiño Dest, Tim Weah
  • Central midfielders: Tyler Adams, Tanner Tessmann, Cristian Roldan, Sebastian Berhalter
  • Attacking midfielders: Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Malik Tillman, Brenden Aaronson, Diego Luna, Gio Reyna
  • Strikers: Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright, Zavier Gozo
  • Last cuts: Miles Robinson, Alejandro Zendejas, Aidan Morris, Joe Scally, Jack McGlynn

Despite the tinkering in the March window, I think Pochettino is going to lean into the hybrid back line that builds out of a back three and defends in a four. I think Freeman’s versatility makes for an interesting choice between one of Pochettino’s favorite players, Arfsten, and bringing a fifth true center-back in Miles Robinson. Right now, I think he leans toward Arfsten.

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This team doesn’t have enough attacking threats, and that’s why I think Gozo is Pochettino’s shock pick for the World Cup. Gozo is exactly the type of player and personality to complement what Pochettino has built, even if it’s a longshot.

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Remember: when thinking about the bench, you can’t think just about role players. Those are important, of course, but you also have to consider the glue guys you want pushing players in training and going all-in for the team. This is where guys like Roldan, Berhalter, Luna, Wright, Gozo and Reyna are key. Are those players the ones you believe will push this squad even if they aren’t playing regularly? Will their fight to get on to the field make the team better?

When you consider this side of it, the last cuts start to be a bit more painful. The player I think loses out is Miles Robinson, who drops off the squad with Freeman and Tessmann providing enough cover at center-back.

One position to keep an eye on is goalkeeper. I think there could be another surprise there.


Gio Reyna sends in a cross vs. Paraguay

Gio Reyna starred vs. Paraguay in November. Might he get the chance again in the World Cup opener?Emilee Chinn / Getty Images

Tom Bogert’s USMNT World Cup squad prediction

  • Goalkeepers: Matt Freese, Matt Turner, Chris Brady
  • Center-backs: Chris Richards, Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie, Joe Scally, Miles Robinson
  • Fullbacks/wingbacks: Sergiño Dest, Antonee Robinson, Max Arfsten, Alex Freeman
  • Central midfielders: Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie, Tanner Tessmann, Sebastian Berhalter, Cristian Roldan
  • Attacking midfielders: Christian Pulisic, Tim Weah, Brenden Aaronson, Malik Tillman, Diego Luna, Gio Reyna
  • Strikers: Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright
  • Last cuts: Zavier Gozo, Aidan Morris, Auston Trusty, Alejandro Zendejas

For me, at least 17 roster spots are not up for debate. And those 17 will have a much more significant influence on whether the U.S. has a successful run at the World Cup — or doesn’t.Still, the final nine can play a part. There are a couple definite positional needs — third goalkeeper, fifth center-back, last deep-lying midfielder — but the others can go in a number of different directions.For the final center-back slot, Miles Robinson has athleticism and an ability to defend in space, and he can hold up if defending from a right-back role against the ball, but he has not played 90 minutes in a game since March 8, which is concerning. Trusty is the other option.

The last central midfield bid goes to Roldan, who may have been on the outside looking in before Johnny Cardoso’s untimely injury. Morris, who now finds himself playing for promotion to the Premier League, could very well be named to that last spot instead.There is flexibility within this team that informs other decisions. Weah can play attacking midfield or wingback. Freeman can play as a wide center-back or a wingback. The same can be said for Scally, who deserves to be on the roster — but so does Gozo, the RSL breakout star. To be clear: I would call in Gozo, but I think it is much more likely that Pochettino leaves him off.

For all the furor about Reyna’s lack of consistent minutes, he has gotten five consecutive Bundesliga appearances off the bench. He was also called to the March roster despite not playing at all around that time. By comparison, Tillman, long presumed a shoo-in for the team, started only one game since the March international break for Bayer Leverkusen.Pochettino could even opt for a fourth center-forward if he wants, though I don’t think he will. Balogun (19 club goals in all competitions this season), Pepi (19) and Wright (18) should have the spot covered.Keep this in mind, too: at the 2022 World Cup, the first with an expanded 26-man roster, six players did not see the field (two GK, four others). Another five played 45 minutes or less. That’s 42% of the team playing no more than a single half.


Alex Freeman dribbles against Belgium

Alex Freeman’s versatility makes him a likely World Cup selection for Mauricio PochettinoJared C. Tilton / Getty Images

Henry Bushnell’s USMNT World Cup squad prediction

  • Goalkeepers: Matt Freese, Matt Turner, Chris Brady
  • Center-backs: Chris Richards, Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie, Auston Trusty
  • Flex defenders: Alex Freeman, Joe Scally
  • Fullbacks/wingbacks: Antonee Robinson, Sergiño Dest, Tim Weah, Zavier Gozo
  • Central midfielders: Tyler Adams, Tanner Tessmann, Cristian Roldan, Sebastian Berhalter
  • Attacking midfielders: Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Malik Tillman, Brenden Aaronson, Gio Reyna, Diego Luna
  • Strikers: Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright
  • Last cuts: Max Arfsten, Jack McGlynn, Miles Robinson, Alejandro Zendejas, Aidan Morris

A few weeks ago, I felt like I knew where Pochettino was going with this roster. Now? I still feel that way for 21 or 22 spots, but picking the last few players will be agonizing.

The 15 locks, for me, are: Freese, Richards, Ream, Antonee Robinson, Dest, Weah, Freeman, Adams, Tessmann, Pulisic, McKennie, Tillman, Balogun, Pepi and Wright. And I see no reason to exclude McKenzie, Trusty, Scally, Roldan, Berhalter or Aaronson.

For the last few spots, it becomes a question of what Pochettino values more: USMNT track record or recent club form. If the latter, Gozo, McGlynn and Zendejas are in. If the former, Arfsten, Luna and Reyna are in.

The thought behind the projection above is that, by bringing both Scally and Freeman, you have:

  • Seven guys capable of playing in a back three (including Tessmann), which makes a fifth true center-back, Miles Robinson, unnecessary
  • Five capable fullbacks, almost all of whom can play wingback, so, rather than taking a sixth who probably wouldn’t see the field (Arfsten), you can choose Gozo for his unpredictability and attacking flexibility

You also then have extra room further up the field for Reyna (or Zendejas, or McGlynn).

I’ll admit, though, that this is tinged with wishful thinking. I still think it’s more likely that Pochettino picks Arfsten and not Gozo. I also think Reyna vs. McGlynn is a toss-up, and the calculus could change if Luna’s or Aaronson’s recent injury issues put their inclusions in doubt.


Inside the NWSL’s strategy to convert World Cup buzz into loyal fans

denver summit nwsl
The inaugural game for the Denver Summit drew 63,000 fans on March 28, 2026. (Taylor Banner/Taylor Banner)

Jon Springer Ad Age https://adage.com/ad-age-video-podcast/marketers-brief/aa-nwsl-cmo-rachel-epstein/?utm_source=cmo-strategy&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=20260520

May 20, 2026 05:00 AM EDT
Everyone on the bus. That’s effectively the NWSL’s strategy heading into the wave of global soccer attention around the FIFA World Cup, which begins next month. The National Women’s Soccer League plans to aggressively insert itself into the broader conversation, with a “Summer of Soccer” campaign built around key league events and a traveling bus tour designed to meet fans around the country, according to Rachel Epstein, the league’s newly named chief marketing officer.The NWSL’s 2026 season began March 13 and runs until the championship game Nov. 21. The league is pausing regular-season games from June 1 to 28 while FIFA World Cup group-stage games are played.“I am coming into a league with a tremendous foundation. We are in growth stage—up and to the right—and there is more to do,” Epstein said on the latest episode of the Marketer’s Brief podcast. “But I’m so excited about the opportunity and where we can go.”Epstein, who joined the league April 1 after overseeing women’s sports marketing at ESPN, said the NWSL enters this period with advantages previous women’s sports leagues lacked, including stronger ownership investment, rising attendance, and increasing support from brands. She also pointed to the importance of a broader women’s sports media ecosystem that has helped create what she described as a flywheel for fan growth and engagement.

New franchises began play this year in Boston and Denver, bringing the NWSL to 16 teams; new clubs have been announced for Atlanta and Columbus, Ohio, beginning in 2028.A key opportunity for the league now is converting broader soccer interest into lasting fandom, particularly among women audiences. Female sports fans often connect through player stories and personal affinity, which is why the NWSL plans to expand its own content and storytelling efforts, Epstein said. The goal is to create more pathways into the league at a moment when soccer itself is poised for heightened visibility in the U.S.

Subscribe to the Marketer’s Brief podcast on Apple PodcastsSpotifyAmazon Music/Audible and YouTube Music.

Ad Age Marketer’s Brief podcast transcript

Ad Age Marketer’s Brief host Jon Springer moderated this podcast episode with guest Rachel Epstein. Below is the transcript, which has been lightly edited for clarity.

“Audience growth is vital for me and for our league. It’s really important that we find and cement our brand in the hearts and minds of current fans and new fans.”

Rachel Epstein, chief marketing officer, National Women’s Soccer League

Leveraging the World Cup to grow the NWSL

Jon:​ Let’s start with the big question out there. The World Cup feels like a potentially transformative moment for soccer here in America. How much of an accelerant do you think that could be for the NWSL specifically?

Rachel:​ Yeah. I mean, it’s a huge opportunity for the NWSL and for soccer, right? Global moments like these, these big events, bring in waves of new fans—current fans, of course, core global football fans, but also new fans who come in, learn about the game, get excited about the game.

And then our job is to embed NWSL into that momentum and narrative in that window, and then bring them in—hang on to their new and growing soccer interest—and bring them into the NWSL, into our ecosystem.

Jon:​ Are there ways you’re going to do that specifically that we’ll see?

Rachel:​ Yes, absolutely. We have a whole strategy that we’re calling Summer of Soccer that will do just that. We’ll be driving conversation that integrates NWSL into the men’s World Cup conversation, that brings our voice and our personalities to games.

And we literally have a bus that will be making stops across the country, including our key tentpoles during those windows—our Challenge Cup, our return to play, our Queens Classic at Citi Field. All of that we are going to integrate into the men’s World Cup momentum and conversation.

Jon:​ Yeah, there’s a lot of brands and a lot of entities that want to draft on this event. Do you feel like there’s some competition where you’ve got to stand out among all the places and all the people that want to be a part of this?

Rachel:​ I don’t know if I think about it as competition. Obviously, there will be a lot of noise. But the good news is we are—and aim to be—the premier global women’s soccer league.

We have a really unique voice and territory that we own that allows us to be distinctive and really authentic in that space, alongside brands and other newer entrants into global soccer. We are already a core part of the ecosystem. We just want to ensure that our voice and personalities are heard and elevated during that time.

Also read: How brands are using access to break through World Cup clutter

Where the league is now—and how it’s different from past women’s soccer efforts

Jon:​ You’ve been at this job only for a matter of weeks. I wonder what your early read is on where the league is right now.

Rachel:​ I am coming into a league with a tremendous foundation. And in my time at ESPN, I looked after women’s sports marketing there and worked closely with the league, so I have a really good sense of all the momentum it has and all of the upside there still is to drive toward.

We’re in growth stage—up and to the right—and there is more to do. But I’m so excited about the opportunity and where we can go.

https://www.tiktok.com/embed/v2/7636175021571935501?lang=en-US&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fadage.com%2Fad-age-video-podcast%2Fmarketers-brief%2Faa-nwsl-cmo-rachel-epstein%2F%3Futm_source%3Dcmo-strategy%26utm_medium%3Demail%26utm_campaign%3D20260520&embedFrom=oembed

Jon:​ One of your earlier experiences was also as part of the leadership team that founded WPS, which was a predecessor to NWSL. There’s a big change between what happened then and now. What was the impetus for the success you’re seeing now with NWSL and maybe some of the struggles or difficulties to get off the ground that some previous leagues may have had?

Rachel:​ Just that it’s apples and oranges, and it’s a totally different time. The structure of the business and our tremendous ownership groups, the investment—I think maybe that’s the most important thing.

There is really significant investment, patient investment that understands it takes time to grow, to build audience and drive enterprise value. There’s no comparison.

But on a personal level, that was early in my career. It was the place where my career in women’s sports began and was really formative—made me a soccer person.

So while it truly is apples and oranges in terms of the business, the way it’s structured, and all of the opportunity and advantage and growth that we have now, it still was very formative for me. I take personal lessons from that time. I took those lessons into my time at ESPN, and then I landed here. It really feels like the perfect fit.

Why women’s sports momentum looks different now

Jon:​ It’s really remarkable how we’ve seen women’s sports turn around from every perspective you can look at. And you mentioned investment, obviously, as one. Brands want to be involved now.

Rachel:​ When I think about the state of women’s sports—and I have a pretty long view on it from 14 years at ESPN—on a personal level, it’s just thrilling to see the momentum in the space and the health of it.

There are all of the metrics and indicators that make the headlines: exponential growth in expansion fees, valuations, attendance records—63,000 fans at our inaugural Denver Summit match—and the marketplace, as you mentioned, with greater demand for women’s sports than ever.

The NWSL is an active part of that marketplace, and we’re continuing to see that interest and build it, and build alongside our brands and partners.

I would just note that a quieter but really vital indicator, honestly, Jon, is a conversation like this with you. There is a burgeoning media ecosystem focused just on women’s sports. Obviously you’re not dedicated only to women’s sports, but there are dedicated podcasts and shows and documentaries and bylines and events all built for women’s sports—not as an adjacent add-on, but focused and dedicated to it.

That is a vital ecosystem. It creates the flywheel. You tell the stories, you educate new fans, you engage current fans, and all of that helps build audience, build value, bring more eyeballs, bring more investment.

So it’s both the headlines and that quieter infrastructure that are really coming together and indicate how healthy the women’s sports space is.

Also read: Inside the rise of agencies dedicated to women’s sports marketing

Who the NWSL fan is today—and who’s next

Jon:​ You mentioned the fans, and I’m wondering: Who is the NWSL fan right now, and how has that profile changed?

Rachel:​ We have a very passionate and committed fan base, there’s no question about it. And we’re seeing healthy growth across attendance and viewership. We have a tremendous opportunity—and you got at this a little bit around the men’s World Cup—but really over the next five years across the men’s World Cup, women’s World Cup [2027 in Brazil], Olympics [2028 in Los Angeles], and possibly, a 2031 women’s World Cup on our soil, to capitalize on that global soccer spotlight.

So a really committed current fan base, but what this next five years will propel is a massive wave of new fans. They’re coming into soccer because they’re rooting for their country, or they’ve come to know the breakout stars that these global events always give rise to.

We are extremely well positioned to convert that spotlight into sustained audience growth. So that’s the job in front of us, there’s no question. Our core women’s soccer fan is the best. We should build our brand around the ethos and spirit of that fan. But the opportunity to grow and expand is in front of us, and we’re going to do that.

Jon:​ Are there particular areas or demographics or groups that you are sourcing fans from?

Rachel:​ Look, without trying to be everything to everyone—that’s not how you do it—I should say that we invite all fans into the NWSL. There’s a huge opportunity, especially in this men’s World Cup window, to engage core international global soccer fans and bring them into NWSL. They understand world-class soccer. We have a world-class soccer product—the best in the world on the women’s side.

So that is an opportunity we want to take advantage of and build, in terms of that behavioral demo of a big, core fan of global soccer. One other thing I would add—and this goes a little bit to my time at ESPN—is the opportunity to actually drive female audience growth. I’ve said this before, but I’ll say it here: for a long time there was this conflation that women’s sports equals women’s fans, female fans. That is not true. Historically that has not been the case.

Many years ago at ESPN, there were not huge female audience numbers in terms of watching women’s sports. But it is an audience segment that is driving incremental growth right now. So that opportunity to drive female audience growth—say broadly 18 to 44—is a more recent one, and we want to take advantage of that.

It will look a little different on the younger side of that demo, in the way younger audiences—as I’m sure you’ve talked about countless times on this podcast—engage with content, what their fandom looks like, second-screen experience versus tuning into TV.

But irrespective of the breakdown of that female audience demo, there is a huge opportunity to grow there. And one of the ways that we can do that, and will do that, is by building out a robust content strategy and ecosystem. That is an opportunity in front of us, and we are going to do it.

It will drive storytelling and elevate our players—our current stars and new stars—and create entry paths for new fans. Female fans, just as a sweeping generalization, do fan a little bit differently. At ESPN we did a ton of research on this early, starting with the birth of ESPNW, which was really built to serve female audiences. Connection is key. It’s not that women aren’t watching the game on the pitch or on the court or on the field and loving all of the competitive excellence—that is true. But their way into interest and connection might look a little different.

It’s really through a sense of personal connection, whether it’s through a star athlete and their story, or through their family, or through their university or their hometown. Something about it often is personal, and then they come into the sport. So we need to create those pathways, and we will.

Building stars and a stronger storytelling engine

Jon:​ Maybe you could give me an example of how you’re telling these stories about your players and roping in fans that way.

Rachel:​ We have a tremendous foundation, but we have more work to do in terms of storytelling from a league-office perspective. So far, we’re counting a little bit on our partners to tell those stories.

ESPN has done a great job. Amazon and everybody we’re partnered with in our ecosystem have as well. The opportunity to really tell those stories from league platforms and through our owned media ecosystem is in front of us, and we are going to start—we’re beginning to build that out now.

Make no mistake, we have star players who are breaking through. I think everybody knows the names: Trinity [Rodman], Sophia [Smith], Mal [Swanson], and a whole swath of current stars. We also want to get fans in front of that rising class of stars. As we build out this content strategy and drive velocity and engagement with our current fans, and create those new pathways for new fans, elevating that new class of players and stars will be really important.

Brand, audience and what’s next

Jon:​ Do you have other priorities ahead of you?

Rachel:​ Audience growth is vital—you’ve heard it here—for me and for our league. Again, building on a great foundation, it’s really important that we cement our brand in the hearts and minds of current fans and new fans. What we stand for, the distinctive place and space we can own in the minds and hearts of fans to drive connection and loyalty and, ultimately, growth. We need to really cement that so that we get a little stickier, so that there’s a clear emotional connection. That work is in front of us, and I’m super excited about it.

Jon:​ I do have one question that we try to ask all our guests. If you could name one CMO out there, who would it be and what would your question be for them?

Rachel:​ This might be everyone’s answer right now, but I’m really impressed with what the Gap is doing right now. Fabiola Torres is the CMO. What a turnaround, right?

It’s a distinctive new strategy to really drive cultural relevance, which is an imperative for the league as well. I have a whole host of questions, but my question would just be: What did it look like to sell in, inside their walls, this new way of inserting Gap into culture and conversation? It’s unmissable right now, and all the way into Fashion Week and the Met Gala. So I think that would be my answer.

Prinx Tires USL Cup Recap – FW 2(1): IND 2(3)

Fort Wayne, Ind. – Indy Eleven goalkeeper Eric Dick made a diving save and Jack Blake, captain Aodhan Quinn, and Josh O’Brien converted their penalty kicks to give the Boys in Blue a 3-1 shootout victory in Prinx Tires USL Cup play at Fort Wayne FC on Saturday.

Fort Wayne made its first penalty to take a 1-0 lead in PKs, but Blake responded to tie it, then Quinn made it 2-1, setting the stage for Dick’s stop.  O’Brien was successful to make it 3-1, and the next Fort Wayne attempt was off target to end it.

Regulation play ended 2-2, with Quinn putting Indy Eleven on top in the 26th minute.  He stole an errant pass 30 yards from the goal and knifed diagonally through the defense and got a deflection back inside the area.  Quinn then chipped a left-footed shot from just outside the six that Fort Wayne goalkeeper Aurie Briscoe stopped, but the rebound came back to Quinn and he reacted quickly to bury it into the left side of the net to put his team up 1-0.

With the match even at 1-1 in the 64th minute, Blake and forward Bruno Rendon teamed up to put the Boys in Blue back on top.  Forward Loïc Mesanvi started the sequence outside the corner of the area, playing it diagonally back to Blake.  Blake then took one touch and played a pinpoint ball to the edge of the six, where Rendon volleyed it down just inside the far post for a 2-1 lead.

The goal is Rendon’s team-best sixth in all competitions in 2026, and he now has 11 goals in USL Cup play in three seasons–four more than anyone else in the history of the event!

Next Saturday is “Pups at the Pitch” at Carroll Stadium when Indy Eleven returns to USL Championship play vs. Lexington SC at 7 p.m.

Ticket options include the new Desnuda Tequila DeckFamily Four-Packs, and Flex Mini-Plans.

Located on the East Deck, the Desnuda Tequila Deck has an exclusive full-service bar and high-top seating providing panoramic pitch-side views for 50 people. It’s a social experience offering a wonderful place to hang out and take in the game!  Desnuda Tequila Deck seats start at $59 and include one FREE cocktail and bottomless chips, salsa, and guac.

The Family Four-Pack is available for all 2026 home games and can be purchased online only.  Priced at just $49, the Family Four-Pack includes four tickets, FREE parking, $20 in Concession Vouchers, and a 20% Merchandise Discount, along with access to the Fun Zone/Kids Activation Area.

Flex Mini Plans include vouchers to be redeemed for any 2026 regular season home match.

For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

  • Prinx Tires USL Cup Group 4
    Indy Eleven 2(3):2(1) Fort Wayne FC
  • Sat., May 16, 2026 – 7:30 p.m.
  • Ruoff Mortgage Stadium | Fort Wayne, Ind.
  • Weather:  Cloudy, 76 degrees
  • Attendance:  3,794

2026 Prinx Tires USL Cup Group 4
Indy Eleven: 0-1-1 (-1), 2 pts, #5 in Group
Fort Wayne FC: 0-1-1 (-2), 1 pt, #6 in Group

Score­­12FPK
Indy Eleven112(3)
Fort Wayne FC112(1)
  • Scoring Summary
  • IND – Aodhan Quinn 26’
  • FW – Taig Healy 33’
  • IND – Bruno Rendón (Jack Blake) 64’
  • FW – Jack Thomas (Kabiru Gafar) 90’+1
  • Penalty Kicks Converted
  • IND – Jack Blake, Aodhan Quinn, Josh O’Brien
  • FW – Lilian Ricol
  • Discipline Summary
  • IND – Jack Blake (caution) 15’
  • IND – Logan Neidlinger (caution) 39’
  • FW – Ian Abbey (caution) 44’
  • FW – Jeremy Garay (caution) 45’+1
  • IND – Paco Craig (caution) 68’
  • FW – Jack Thomas (caution) 79’
  • FW – Tiago Dias (caution) 83’

Indy Eleven Line-Up:  Eric Dick, Aodhan Quinn (captain), Paco Craig, Anthony Herbert, Logan Neidlinger (Makel Rasheed 78’), Jack Blake, Cam Lindley, Josh O’Brien, Edward Kizza (Noble Okello 74’), Loïc Mesanvi (Kian Williams 90’+2), Bruno Rendón (Dylan Sing (90’+2).

Indy Eleven Subs Not Used:  Reice Charles-CookAlejandro Mitrano, Hesron Barry.

Fort Wayne FC Line-Up:  Aurie Briscoe, Michael Rempel, Juan Solis, Tiago Dias (captain), Jayden Smith, Taig Healy, Javier Armas (Daniel Oyetunde 83’), Jeremy Garay (Emerson Nieto 63’), Ian Abbey (Kabiru Gafar 63’), Lilian Ricol, Clarence Awoudor (Jack Thomas 78’).

Fort Wayne FC Subs Not Used:  Bernd Schipmann, Reid Sproat, Nico Burns, Anthony Hernandez, Tyson Hagaman.

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5/15/26 FA Cup Final Sat 10 am ESPN2, EPL final wks, Indy 11 @ Ft Wayne Sat, Prez & State Cup weekend @ Grand Park

Notes

So the World Cup is less than 30 days away – and more details are coming in as Madonna, Shakira, BTS are set to headline final halftime show. Performers for the 3 Opening Games pregame have also been announced for the games in Mexico City on June 11, Toronto June 12 1:30 pm, & Los Angeles June 12 7:30 pm (I should be there), Speaking of World Cup coverage- heartwarming story on The Cantors- This father-son broadcasting duo is deep-rooted in the American soccer culture. US vs The World – Soccer Series on HBO has started also for US Fans – Paramount+ has a cool documentary (You Don’t Know Where I’m From, Dawg | Official Trailer) on US best soccer player ever – Clint Dempsey. Awesome new commercial with Pulisic, Messi & Ochoa. To the chagrin of HOAs everywhere, Lowe’s to sell 10-foot Messi yard decoration pre world cup. Cool Story below – Are we Ready for the World Cup? from Stars & Stripes.

MLS Salary’s Came out and Messi earns more than all other clubs’ wage bills except LAFC, all MLS Quarterfinals for US Open Cup are next week Tues-Wed eve.

The last time a team other than Rangers or Celtic won the Scottish league was 1984. Chasing a first Scottish title since 1960, Hearts really want to compete. Worth waking up to watch at 7:30 am on CBS Sports Network Saturday to see if Hearts can pull the upset at Celtic. Of Sat at 10:30 am gives us FA Cup Final with Chelsea playing Man City at Wembley on ESPN2. (Stories below).

Indy 11 win 2-1 Travel to Ft Wayne FC Sat 7:30 pm on ESPN+

Indianapolis – Indy Eleven used two second-half goals to rally from a halftime deficit to extend their USL Championship home unbeaten streak to seven (6-0-1) dating back to last season with a 2-1 win over Sporting JAX at Carroll Stadium. Indy Eleven resumes USL Cup play Saturday in their first-ever meeting at USL League One expansion side Fort Wayne FC at 7:30 p.m. on ESPN+. Saturday, May 23 is “Pups at the Pitch” at Carroll Stadium when Indy Eleven returns to USL Championship play vs. Lexington SC at 7 p.m. Ticket options include the new Desnuda Tequila DeckFamily Four-Packs, and Flex Mini-Plans. The Girls in Blue opened their 2026 USL W League season with a hard-fought 1-1 draw vs. rival Racing Louisville FC, they travel to new Valley Division member Toledo Villa FC on Saturday at 3 pm on SportsEnginePlay

Less than 1 month away !!!

Proud to see my Friend and Ref Assignor David Howard honored as Official of the Year by CYO!
The CYO awards ceremony at Saints Peter & Paul Cathedral where Dave received the Edward J. Tinder Officials of the Year award.


Fun reffing last weekend with Larry and Yousseff at Grand Park. Ready for State and President Cup games this weekend. Good Luck All!


TV Schedule – Games on TV

Sat, May 16
7:30 am CBSSN Celtic vs Hearts Scottish Championship
9:30 am ESPN+ Leverkusen vs Hamburger
9:30 am ESPN+ MGladbach (Reyna, Scally) vs Hoffenheim
10:30 am ESPN2 Chelsea vs Man City FA Cup Final
6″30 pm Tubi, Ion NC Courage vs Chicago Stars NWSL
7:30 pm ESPN+ Indy 11 @ Ft Wayne
7:30 pm Apple NYCFC vs NY REd Bulls
7:30 pm Apple Philly vs Columbus Crew
8:45 pm Tubi, Ion Denver Summit vs Orlando Pride NWSL
9:15 pm FS1 Seattle Sounders vs LA Galaxy
9:30 pm Apple San Diego vs Cincy
10:30 pm Apple San Jose vs Dallas
Sun, May 17
6:45 am Para+ Genoa vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
6:45 am Para+ Juventus (McKennie) vs Florentina

7:30 am USA Man United vs Nottingham Forest
9 am Para+ Inter Milan vs Verona
10 am USA Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Brighton
10 am Peacock Brentford vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
10 am NBCSN Everton vs Sunderland
12:30 pm USA New Castle United vs West Ham
1 pm ESPN+ Sevillia vs Real MAdrid
3:15 pm ESPN+ Barcelona vs Real Betis
6 pm ESPN2 Portland Thorns vs Angel City FC
9 pm Univision Pumas vs Pachuca
Mon, May 18
3pm USA Arsenal vs Burnley
Tues May 19
2:30 pm USA Bournmouth (adams) vs Man City
3:15 pm USA Chelsea vs Tottenham
7:30 pm Para+ Orlando vs Atlanta United US OPen Cup
8 pm CBSCN St Louis City vs Houston US Open Cup
Weds May 20
3 pm CBSSN Freiburg vs Aston Villa Europa League Finals
7:30 pm Para+ Columbus Crew vs NYCFC US OPen Cup
8 pm CBSSN Houston Dash vs SD Wave NWSL
10 pm CBSCN Colorado Rapids vs San Jose US Open Cup
Fri, May 22
3 pm Para+ Hull City vs Southampton Champ Playoff
10 pm TUDN Mexico vs Ghana
sAT May 23
12 Noon CBSSN Barcelona vs OL Lyonnes (Heeps/Horan) Womens’ UCL
2:30 pm Fox St Louis City vs Austin MLS
7 pm ESPN+ Indy 11 vs Lexington
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 Tix
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Fri, June 19
3 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup
Thur, June 25
10 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup

Complete 2026 World Cup schedule featuring match dates and start times
NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule 


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USA

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It’ll take more than home soil: why hosting isn’t enough for a USMNT World Cup run
Johnny Cardoso likely to miss World Cup due to ankle surgery
USMNT’s Scally to make club call after World Cup
Who on the USMNT ‘has that dog in them’? xDAWG can quantify that

Pulisic gives Milan, USMNT positive injury update

Reyna: Hard to answer if I should make U.S. team
USMNT’s Cardoso needs surgery, WC in jeopardy

Christian Pulisic on handling World Cup pressure: ‘This is exactly where I want to be’

All Time – USA Best 11 of World Cups – thoughts? Meola over Freidel, or Howard is nuts to me.


EPL & FA Cup Final

Manchester City will almost be at full strength for the FA Cup final against Chelsea
FA Cup final preview: Man City or Chelsea? Analysis, predictions
Weekend predictions: Celtic to break Hearts in title decider? Man City to win FA Cup final?
Julien Laurens

Every Premier League team reranked: Explaining Man City rise, collapse of Chelsea and Liverpool
Dawson: Hearts want the Scottish title. What they want more is to compete every year
EPL relegation: Are Spurs or West Ham more likely to stay?

World Cup

One month out: Are we ready for the World Cup?
2026 World Cup viewer’s guide: Everything you need to know
World Cup Power Rankings: Who are the front-runners with 30 days to go?

2026 World Cup injuries tracker: Which stars could miss out, latest info


World Cup injury tracker: Which stars are going to miss out?
World Cup kit ranking: Which teams will look best in 2026?
Aggravation prompts fans to ask: Is World Cup worth it?

Neymar’s case grows for Brazil return after Copa call-up
🚨 De Ligt undergoes surgery and will miss the World Cup
France’s World Cup snub roster is worth nearly $349M
Deschamps refuses to rule out coaching Italy: ‘Everyone knows I’m available’
29 days to the World Cup: Who designs the kits?


GK

Will Matt Freese or Matt Turner be the USMNT’s World Cup goalkeeper?
MLS: Best Saves of the Week

Reffing

Ref under Police Protection 
Pressure of Reffing Scottish Title Game

Reffing at Grand Park with Ethan and .


Wrapping Up the CYO Regular Season with Rachel last week.

https://www.achievetestprep.com/career-paths/highschool-clep

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Looking to Get a Professional Company Headshot? Check out https://capturely.com/ Tell Rob The Ole Ballcoach Shane sent you and he’ll give you a deal.

Lowe’s to sell 10-foot Lionel Messi inflatable yard decoration that looks like him sort of

Lionel Messi, in a blue Lowe's jersey, kicks a ball in front of a goal with an inflatable Messi guarding it on the side. Inflatable Messi is also wearing a blue Lowe's jersey and holding a soccer ball.

The real Lionel Messi tries to evade his giant inflatable doppelganger. Photo courtesy of Lowe’s

By Larry HolderMay 14, 2026Updated 10:23 pm EDT

Run into Lionel Messi at a soccer stadium or randomly on the street, and he might feel larger than life despite only standing 5 feet 7. But soon you can have your own version of Messi at almost twice the size for less than $100.Lowe’s will begin selling limited-edition, 10-foot Messi lighted yard inflatables for $99, which will be available through the Lowe’s website starting May 18 for members of the company’s rewards program as part of its “Epically More Messi” campaign. Those living in the 11 U.S. World Cup host cities will be able to purchase a giant Messi inflatable in stores starting May 20.

With the World Cup in sight, we discuss what FIFA needs to do (and stop doing) to get ready.

by Donald Wine II May 11, 2026, 11:08 AM EDT Stars & Stripes

FBL-WC-2026-US-STADIUM

New York New Jersey Stadium (temporarily renamed from MetLife stadium) is seen from the inside ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, in East Rutherford, New Jersey on May 7, 2026. (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP via Getty Images)AFP via Getty Images

One month away. The sporting event that has been on the dawn of the horizon for four years is now almost here. The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11th from Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, and the pressure to perform is starting to reach its peak. It’s not just for the teams that are starting to assemble their final rosters in the coming weeks, but also for the tournament at large. For years, we have heard that this World Cup is going to be the biggest, the best, the most memorable. Now, the powers that be must follow through on that promise.

But, are we ready for the World Cup to kick off in a month? Are the United States, Canada, and Mexico? Is FIFA? Is the World Cup committee? Are we as fans? All of those questions likely have different answers and the level of readiness will vary. But in short, as the time ticks dow to kickoff, there is still a lot that needs to be done for North America to put on the greatest sporting event ever.

It starts with the overall excitement for the tournament, and for a lot of soccer fanatics, that’s not a problem. Even if their team is not in the tournament, life around the world will slow to a snail’s pace when the ball is rolled out to be kicked and the matches begin. But, some of that excitement has been dulled by money and politics, two things that the World Cup was always supposed to set aside for the greater cause of uniting the world to celebrate its favorite game.

The biggest thing that has lowered excitement and deterred many fans of the game, particularly here in North America from being all in for the World Cup has been the incredibly high costs to attend a match: the tickets, the travel, the hotels and home rentals, the public transit. Everyone seems to want to take financial advantage of the World Cup coming here with astronomical pricing. Even fan festivals in some cities are charging for entry with premium add-ons and many won’t even be open for all the matches of the tournament. FIFA vastly overestimated the premium American fans especially would pay to see a tournament match just a few miles from their home.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has been on record as saying that the 2026 World Cup would be like “104 Super Bowls in a month,” and recently said that they priced the game tickets accordingly because they felt American fans were used to paying a premium for sports. Infantino also went so far as to say, “You cannot go to watch in the U.S. a college game, not even speaking about a top professional game of a certain level, for less than $300. And this is the World Cup.” And that shows a fundamental lack of knowledge on what American sports fans routinely pay for games. Anecdotally, it’s much easier to pay less than $100 to get into almost any sporting event except for the Super Bowl than it is to exceed $300 to get into the same game unless you are opting for premium seat locations or amenities. With those statements, Infantino not only showed a lack of knowledge on what Americans will pay for a sporting event, but he also showed a wanton disrespect of how well educated the American soccer fan is on the game.


The United States has been the nation that leads all others outside of the home nation in tickets sold to every World Cup since we hosted for the first time in 1994. American fans routinely are relied upon to purchase tickets to big events that come to our shores. But because of this, American fans understand what World Cups usually cost. They immediately knew that an $1200 ticket for the USMNT’s opening match against Paraguay was over 3 times what people paid for the opening match 4 years ago in Qatar. They knew that a Cat 3 ticket to the USMNT match against Australia this year was twice as much as a Cat 1 ticket to see the USMNT play England in 2022. We’re the nation that has more access to soccer than any other, and because American fans travel for these games, they know what pricing is like everywhere. That was the biggest miss, and it’s costing them with all the reports of tickets going unsold because of the high prices. Hotels, flights, and public transit authorities jacking up the price of getting to and from the games in several cities has also put a damper on fan enthusiasm, and people are now just planning to wait and see if prices drop as inventory continues to remain unfilled.

So, what does FIFA and the World Cup committee need to do, besides consider drastically lower pricing? The biggest gap to fill is educating fans not familiar with attending World Cup on what to expect when the games begin. The education should have already begun months ago, but now is the second best time. Fans need to understand what it will be like attending the game, the security procedures, where people will access the stadium, how they can get there and the costs. There are many chances for people to get frustrated with the process, and lack of information should not be the reason for those chokepoints.

Let them know that the security perimeters are going to be vastly different from attending these stadiums for a NFL game or another soccer game. Let them know that they can’t bring in what they normally would for a routine sporting event at the same stadium. The last thing FIFA needs are entrances to be jammed by people who bring in items that normally are allowed in the stadium that are banned at the World Cup. Get them in the stadiums early by letting them know what will be there for entertainment prior to the match. Will they have screens to watch other games there? Other activations? Some of these stadiums are not close to anything else, so to not create a situation where tens of thousands of people try to enter the stadium at the last minute, bogging down security checkpoints, let them know the process and how long it can take so that people won’t miss the action on the field.

Finally, FIFA needs to get out of its own way. The World Cup is the uniter, the games on the field being the olive branches. The focus shouldn’t be on the revenue, but the action on the field. That’s what will carry in the minds of people long after the tournament is wrapped up. Lowering prices to get fans that generational moment inside the stadium is what’s necessary, but the focus shifted away from the game when the decision was made to price gouge at every turn. Get it back to the games, the teams, the players. We’ll do our part as fans, but as we tick down the days before kickoff on June 11th, soccer’s world governing body needs to do more. This is a pivotal moment in world sports history, and there’s a long way to go to ensure the moment is not fumbled.


USMNT weekend viewing guide: Break out the bubble wrap

Battling but hoping there’s no breaking by jcksnftsn S & S May 8, 2026, 10:31 AM EDT

OVIEDO, SPAIN – APRIL 23: (L-R) Alex Freeman of Villarreal , Javi Lopez of Real Oviedo during the LaLiga EA Sports match between Real Oviedo v Villarreal at the Estadio Municipal NMR Carlos Tartiere on April 23, 2026 in Oviedo Spain (Photo by Cesar Ortiz Gonzalez/Soccrates/Getty Images)Getty Images

With World Cup roster announcements coming up in just a few weeks and players already dealing with injury (we’ll get to those below) we’ll be watching through squinted eyes the last couple weeks of the season hoping that the injury bug doesn’t further derail World Cup hopes and dreams. While injury is definitely a concern there are still significant things to play for as well including promotion, relegation, and Champions League positioning. We’re covering it all in this weekend’s edition of the viewing guide:

Saturday

Middlesbrough v Southampton – 7:30a on CBSSN: Aidan Morris and Middlesbrough drew with Wrexham last weekend, dropping Middlesbrough to fifth place while Wrexham were eliminated from the playoff race. Middlesbrough will now host Southampton in the first leg of the promotion playoff semifinals. Middlesbrough defeated Southampton 4-0 at home back in early January while the two teams played to a 1-1 draw in Southampton early in the season.

Augsburg v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Noahkai is apparently already on ice, he hasn’t appeared in five straight matches and just one of the last seven for Augsburg who undefeated in their last five. Augsburg will be hosting Joe Scally, Gio Reyna and Borussia Monchengladbach who are mathematically safe from relegation and in eleventh place following their 1-0 win over Dortmund, a match which Scally once again started and went 90’ while Reyna came on for the final 20’, he has appeared in three straight matches.

Stuttgart v Bayer Leverkusen – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Malik Tillman saw just a handful of minutes off the bench in Leverkusen’s 4-1 victory over RB Leipzig last weekend and actually has fewer minutes since the start of April than Gio Reyna. Leverkusen have won four of their last five and have pulled into a three way tie for fourth place with two matches remaining, a grouping that includes this weekend’s host Stuttgart who are coming off a draw with the third team, Hoffenheim.


Fulham v Bournemouth – 10a on USA Network: Antonee Robinson started for Fulham against Arsenal last weekend but Fulham fell 3-0 to the league leaders. Robinson had appeared as a substitute in the prior two matches and looks to be in a rotation with Ryan Sessegnon. Fulham are in eleventh place and will host Tyler Adams and Bournemouth who moved into sixth last weekend following their 3-0 win over Crystal Palace with Tyler Adams getting his first start since early March.

Wolfsburg v Bayern Munich – 12:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Kevin Paredes was on the bench for Wolfsburg as they fell to Freiburg last weekend. He had made a brief substitute appearance the the prior week in his clubs scoreless draw with Gladbach. Wolfsburg are currently in the relegation playoff spot, tied with St. Pauli for direct relegation. Those two teams will meet next weekend to decide the fates of Paredes and James Sands but first Wolfsburg must stay within shooting distance as they host Bayern Munich who are coming off a disappointing Champions League semifinal matchup with PSG midweek but have lost just once and drawn five times in their dominating Bundesliga campaign.

Atletico Madrid v Celta Vigo – 12:30p on ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso and Atletico Madrid were also eliminated in Champions League action midweek and adding injury to insult Cardoso was injured in training in the following days and his World Cup hopes are now in doubt as he deals with a high ankle sprain that will keep him out the remainder of the La Liga season. Atleti are in fourth place and can lock up next seasons Champions League spot with with a win over sixth place Celta Vigo on Saturday.

Lecce v Juventus – 2:45p on Paramount+: Weston McKennie and Juventus hold a one point lead over Roma for fourth place and the final Champions League spot from Serie A after their 1-1 draw with Serie B bound Hellas Verona. They will need to bounce back quickly as the travel to Lecce to face the seventeenth place side that can secure their safety with a win.

Real Sociedad v Real Betis – 3p on ESPN Select: Pellegrino Matarazzo and Real Sociedad are suffering from a bit of a cup hangover as they have lost twice and drawn once in their three matches since winning the Copa del Rey. Sociedad are in ninth place four points back of the top six with four matches to play. They host fifth place Real Betis on Saturday afternoon.

Sunday

Celtic v Rangers – 7a on CBSSN: Auston Trusty has started the last two for Celtic after missing four straight. Celtic are in second place, trailing Hearts by three points with three matches to play in the Scottish Premiership and they will have an Old Firm Derby to contend with on Sunday morning.

Mallorca v Villarreal – 8a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Alex Freeman has started two straight matches for third place Villarreal who defeated Levante 5-1 last weekend. Villareal will now travel to Mallorca to take on the fifteenth place side that are just two points removed from the final relegation spot. As an aside the La Liga relegation battle could be quite something down the stretch. Deportivo Alaves currently sit in 18th place, the final relegation spot with 36 points (just three points ahead of Levante). There are six teams within three points of them, including a logjam of three on 38 points, a group that includes Mallorca.

Crystal Palace v Everton – 9a on Peacock: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace completed their semi-final victory over Shaktar Donetsk on Thursday, winning 2-1 on the day and 5-2 on aggregate. Palace advanced to the UEFA Conference League final where they will face Rayo Vallecano near the end of May. With the extra cup schedule and not much to play for in terms of the EPL standings Richards saw a rare rest last weekend in Palace’s 3-0 loss to Bournemouth, coming off the bench for the final 14’. Prior to last weekend Richards had played nearly every minute for Palace outside of the four match stretch where he dealt with a foot injury at the turn of the year.

Koln v Heidenheim – 11:30a on ESPN Select: Kristoffer Lund picked up his second assist of the season as Koln drew with Union Berlin last weekend a result that guarantees their safety with two matches to play. Koln will host Heidenheim on Sunday, a team that could technically still pull into the relegation playoff position over the last two weeks, though no higher.

AC Milan v Atalanta – 2:45p on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic and AC Milan are limping into the end of the year, falling 2-0 to Sassuolo last weekend with Pulisic appearing as a substitute. Milan have scored just one goal as a team in their last five matches and as you’ve likely heard Pulisic himself hasn’t found the back of the next this calendar year. Milan are in third place, just three points ahead of Roma and in danger of missing Champions League qualification again if they cannot find some goals over the final three matchdays of the season. On Sunday they will host Atalanta who are in seventh place, ten points back of Juventus and the top four. Yunus Musah saw five minutes off the bench last weekend in Atalanta’s scoreless draw with Genoa, it was his first appearance in the last four matches.

Le Havre v Olympique Marseille – 3p on beIN Sports: Tim Weah was serving a yellow card suspension last weekend as Marseille fell to relegation threatened Nantes 3-0. Marseille dropped to seventh place and their slide to end the season, with just one win in their last six matches, has dropped them out of contention for Champions League qualification. Marseille still have a chance to make Europa League or Conference League but will need a result as they travel to take on a Le Havre side that are looking to secure their safety.

Monaco v Lille – 3p on beIN Sports: Folarin Balogun was back on the scoresheet last weekend, scoring the first of Monaco’s two goals in a 2-1 win over Metz, a week after seeing his eight match scoring streak snapped. The win also snapped Monaco’s three match winless streak and moved them to sixth place. They will host fourth place Lille who they trail by four points with two matches remaining.

Toulouse v Olympique Lyon – 3p on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Tanner Tessmann’s teams will face off in Ligue 1 play on Sunday and while McKenzie and Toulouse don’t have much to play for Lyon are currently in third place, the final Champions League spot in Ligue 1, and leading Lille by just two points. Unfortunately, Tessmann was not included in the squad last weekend when Lyon defeated Stade Rennais 4-2 as he is apparently dealing with an injury that will now sideline him for the final matches of the season.


🇺🇸 Americans Abroad roundup 🇺🇸

  • Christian Pulisic’s rough stretch continued as he missed AC Milan’s 3-2 loss to Atalanta with a glute injury. Milan’s slide is becoming a real concern, with the club now barely hanging onto a Champions League spot and questions starting to swirl around both the team and Pulisic’s form heading into the World Cup.
  • Sergiño Dest reminded everyone exactly what he brings to the USMNT setup. The PSV fullback delivered a brilliant cross from the left side for Ricardo Pepi to head home in PSV’s 4-1 win, showing both his creativity and versatility after recently returning from injury.
  • Ricardo Pepi kept his strong season rolling with another goal for PSV, his 14th of the campaign. With Balogun also red hot, the USMNT striker competition heading into the World Cup is getting very interesting.
  • Gio Reyna finally had a breakthrough moment, scoring his first Bundesliga goal in nearly a year and a half for Borussia Mönchengladbach. It may not completely change his World Cup outlook, but it was a much-needed reminder of the quality he still possesses.
  • Auston Trusty played a key role in Celtic’s huge 3-1 Old Firm comeback win over Rangers. The USMNT defender was strong defensively and helped keep Celtic’s title hopes alive heading into a dramatic finish in Scotland.


Other notes:

Alex Freeman made the bench for Villarreal but did not feature.

FA Cup Final betting preview: Man City favourites to beat Chelsea

Folarin Balogun’s hot streak cooled off in Monaco’s tough 1-0 loss to Lille, though he still has 8 goals in his last 10 Ligue 1 matches.

In other Ligue 1 news, Mark McKenzie’s Toulouse pushed past Lyon in a 2-1 victory — Tanner Tessmann did not play due to a minor injury (he is out for the club season but reports have him available for the World Cup squad… whew)

Tyler Adams came off the bench early in Bournemouth’s 1-0 win over Fulham, while Antonee Robinson played 90 minutes for the other side.

Weston McKennie put in another solid shift, this time in the number 10 position, as Juventus beat Lecce 1-0.

Chris Richards went the distance in Crystal Palace’s 2-2 draw with Everton.

Aidan Morris played all 90 minutes in Middlesbrough’s Championship playoff draw with Southampton.

Malik Tillman featured for about half an hourin Bayer Leverkusen’s 3-1 loss to Stuttgart.

Yunus Musah was an unused substitute in Atalanta’s win over Milan.

Rayan Cherki slides on his knees to celebrate

Rayan Cherki celebrates scoring for Manchester City Gareth Copley/Getty Images

By Graham RuthvenMay 14, 2026 11:30 pm EDT

FA Cup final day is one of the most cherished on the English football calendar. While the Wembley showpiece might not have the luster it did in past decades, Chelsea and Manchester City would relish getting their hands on the oldest trophy in club football.

This might be particularly true for Chelsea, who need to salvage something from a season that has quickly slipped through their fingers.Indeed, the Blues are on to their third manager of the campaign, with interim boss Calum McFarlane in charge for Saturday’s final. Chelsea’s only two wins in their past 11 games both came in the FA Cup, against Port Vale and Leeds United.

Chelsea are 21/10 to lift the trophy, reflecting how they are widely seen as underdogs against a Manchester City side that, in contrast, has improved over the course of the season.

Jeremy Doku could be City’s primary difference-maker, having scored four goals in his past four appearances. The Belgian is 11/4 to score at any time against Chelsea.

Doku is the most prolific dribbler in the Premier League and could give Chelsea all kinds of problems, no matter if Malo Gusto or Reece James start at right-back. Doku has the one-on-one ability to embarrass any defender in world football.

Rayan Cherki was in sparkling form the last time City met Chelsea, contributing two assists in a comfortable 3-0 win for Pep Guardiola’s title-chasers.

The way Chelsea have fared under Liam Rosenior and McFarlane, there is frequently space in front of the defensive line to exploit — see Ryan Gravenberch’s strike for Liverpool at Anfield last weekend.

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This could be where Cherki does the most damage, with the French playmaker 13/5 to find the back of the net at any point at Wembley. Chelsea might have to man-mark him to stand any chance of keeping him quiet.

Then there is Erling Haaland. It says a lot about the Norwegian’s goalscoring ability that many believe he has endured an underwhelming season, despite notching 37 goals in all competitions for City – including three in this competition.

City are 4/11 to lift the FA Cup this weekend and have not lost to Chelsea in their past 14 meetings, winning 11 and drawing three. The omens are not great for McFarlane and his players heading into the encounter.

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Nonetheless, Chelsea can take some encouragement from the way they controlled large portions of Saturday’s match away to Liverpool, when most had predicted another loss.

On their day, Chelsea’s midfield trio of Moises Caicedo, Enzo Fernandez and Cole Palmer are capable of controlling any match against any opponent, including Manchester City.

Their best chance of stopping Guardiola’s side might be to control as much possession as possible, meaning McFarlane could once again deploy a box midfield of Caicedo, Fernandez, Palmer and Andrey Santos like he did at Anfield.

Marc Cucurella’s mobility down the left wing will be key for Chelsea. They need the Spaniard to exploit the space behind Matheus Nunes in order to impose themselves as an attacking force.

Chelsea have kept just one clean sheet in their past 15 games in all competitions, and so there could be value in backing over 2.5 goals by Manchester City at 12/5.

Upsets can happen, especially in this cup, where the fabled magic of the competition frequently compels underdogs to perform above their usual standards.

Fatigue could be a factor. While Manchester City rested some players as they took on Crystal Palace on Wednesday evening in the Premier League, Chelsea have had a week off entirely since drawing away to Liverpool.

If Chelsea can somehow extend Saturday’s match into extra time, perhaps they could have the edge on a Man City side that is still in hope of snatching the Premier League title away from Arsenal.

Chelsea are 14/1 to win the FA Cup final in extra time, and the same price to win the match on penalties. The Blues have won four of their past six penalty shootouts, stretching back to the 2022 UEFA Super Cup against Villarreal.

Having already won the Carabao Cup, a domestic double is a very realistic possibility for Manchester City. Everything points to another trophy being lifted by Guardiola and his players at Wembley.

USMNT Tracker: Reyna finally off the mark, Trusty’s derby delight but more worries for Pulisic

A laughing Gio Reyna of Borussia Monchengladbach

Gio Reyna is finally off the mark this season Alex Bierens de Haan/Getty Images

By Greg O’KeeffeMay 11, 2026

Gio Reyna is finally off the mark for Borussia Monchengladbach this season but there was a worrying new injury for Christian Pulisic — while Auston Trusty helped Celtic win in the Od Firm derby against Rangers and keep the stage set for a nail-biting Scottish title race thriller.

Welcome to this week’s USMNT Player Tracker.

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Reyna finally scores

It was a consolation goal for his team, and the simple finish that Gio Reyna rolled into the net on Saturday could help sooth his personal frustrations.

Reyna scored his first of the season for Borussia Monchengladbach at the end of a 3-1 defeat at Augsburg, his first domestic goal since January 2025.

Gio Reyna scoring his first of the season for Borussia MonchengladbachLeonhard Simon/Getty Images

The 23-year-old forward had started the contest, as usual, on the bench. But although it made no difference to the result, the American was in the right place at the right time to score a right-footed shot from the middle of the box into the bottom-right of the net and take a symbolic step forward.Could that moment have come just at the right time to move the dial in his favour when it comes to World Cup selection?

Mauricio Pochettino values him. Reyna has featured in the USMNT’s last four fixtures, with Reyna scoring a superb header in the first of them, November’s 2-1 win over Paraguay.Selecting him to be part of the squad for the defeats by Belgium and Portugal, Pochettino later said, was reward for his “fantastic” form in November“Before the last decision, for the last roster for the World Cup, I think it’s good to see players that maybe are not playing too much,” said the USMNT head coach in March.What You Should Read NextUSA World Cup hopeful Zendejas heroic, but America’s Liga MX playoff comeback comes up shortAlejandro Zendejas delivered once again in a high-pressure situation for Mexican giant América, whose season ends in heartbreak

Well, Reyna is certainly in that category. He has started only four Bundesliga games for Gladbach this term, often used as a substitute by coach Eugen Polanski. In total, he has played 486 minutes in the league.Against Portugal and Belgium, he got a total of 31 minutes from the bench, and failed to do much of note in disappointing games that his team were already losing.That’s why moments like Saturday could still count. If they are indicative of a sharpness and prowess that remains ready when unleashed, they are much-needed positive optics for Pochettino to keep in mind as he begins to finalise his plans for the summer.Reyna could do with another moment in Gladbach’s last game of a disjointed campaign — they are currently 13th and finish against Hoffenheim on Saturday.


Pulisic injured and Milan struggling

Speaking about the need for a late revival, albeit in different circumstances, Christian Pulisic may also be feeling the pressure ahead of Milan’s next three games.Not to secure his spot on the World Cup roster, that’s practically a given. But the way things are going, he and Milan may not make next season’s Champions League.Their Scudetto hopes have long crumbled, and now Max Allegri’s team are making hard work of securing the top-four finish they need to play in Europe’s top competition next term.Their latest setback was the 3-2 defeat by Atalanta on Sunday. That’s now just one win in the Rossoneri’s last six games, and Pulisic’s personal struggle to rediscover top form has been well documented. What You Should Read NextWill Christian Pulisic’s crisis of confidence at Milan carry over to USMNT’s World Cup?The USMNT star’s scoring drought is up to 16 games with AC Milan, leaving plenty to wonder whether he’ll hit top form this summer

It didn’t improve yesterday, when he missed out on selection because of a muscle injury reported in training in the days prior.

The mood music around the American suggests it is not a serious problem. It is not something that should have Pochettino sweating. But the 27-year-old, who last week was on the cover of Time magazine, has dismissed any talk about his goal drought as “bad questions”.He prefers, he said in the article, to shut down the doubters by scoring. Missing another chance altogether on Sunday is not going to ease his frustration, or fourth-placed Milan’s worries, as their loss allowed Roma (on a three-game winning run) to move level with them on points.


Trusty’s Old Firm success

Things are shaping up nicely for a thrilling conclusion in Scotland, and USMNT defender Auston Trusty is going to play his part.

The 27-year-old centre-back and his Celtic team-mates came from behind to beat Rangers and win a pulsating Old Firm clash 3-1 on Sunday.

Auston Trusty and Celtic are involved in a thrilling title chaseIan MacNicol/Getty Images

Neutral romantics will probably still root for first-placed Hearts in the Scottish Premiership title race, but as Celtic moved within a point of them (and will face them in the final game of the season on Saturday), nobody will be taking their eyes off the drama.

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For Trusty, who had a game-long battle with Rangers’ attacker Youssef Chermiti but came out on top in the end, it will mean he is at full sharpness going into June.


What’s coming up this week?

This weekend marks the end of the domestic season for Americans in the Bundesliga. See if Gio Reyna can produce another positive reminder of what he’s about against Hoffenheim (Saturday, 9:30am, ESPN+) or whether Malik Tillman can sign off on a positive note for Bayer Leverkusen in their last match with Hamburg (Saturday, 9:30am, ESPN+).

Watch

How USMNT players influenced the design of their World Cup jerseys

Henry Bushnell and Reuben Pinder

Chris Richards and Crystal Palace kept their own momentum going on Sunday. They’re already in the Europa Conference League final later this month, but they didn’t take their foot off the gas in the Premier League, coming from behind twice to get a 2-2 draw with Everton. See how Richards & Co can do in a big title-reckoning game against Manchester City (3pm, Wednesday, Peacock Premium) before they take on fellow Londoners Brentford on the weekend (10am, Sunday, Peacock Premium).

Finally, Milan have to start winning again against Genoa on Sunday. See if Christian Pulisic can recover and help them (Sunday, 9am, Paramount +).

Greg O’Keeffe is a senior writer for The Athletic covering US soccer players in the UK & Europe. Previously he spent a decade at the Liverpool Echo covering news and features before an eight-year stint as the paper’s Everton correspondent; giving readers the inside track on Goodison Park, a remit he later reprised at The Athletic. He has also worked as a news and sport journalist for the BBC and hosts a podcast in his spare time.

Who will Mauricio Pochettino pick for the USMNT World Cup roster?

Time to predict who Poch will bring in. by Donald Wine II Stars & Stripes May 12, 2026, 8:59 AM EDT

United States v Belgium - International Friendly

ATLANTA, GEORGIA – MARCH 28: Folarin Balogun #20 of the United States runs the pitch during the International Friendly match between United States and Belgium at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on March 28, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)Getty Images

We’re a month away from the United States Men’s National Team stepping onto the field at SoFi Stadium for their opening match of the 2026 World Cup. In a couple of weeks, we will know who will be some of those guys that step out onto that field. On May 26th, U.S. Soccer will announce the USMNT World Cup roster, and 26 players will see their dreams realized of making a World Cup on home soil.

But, who will make the roster? Who will USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino call upon to represent the United States at the world’s tournament? There are probably 35 players who could conceivably have a shot at one of the 26 roster spots. Ultimately, it’s up to Pochettino to decide who those guys will be that he thinks can advance far and try to become the first team to win a World Cup on home soil since France in 1998.

So, who will Mauricio Pochettino choose for his 26-man roster? Let’s predict who will receive the coveted tickets to the World Cup.

Goalkeepers (3): Chris Brady (Chicago Fire), Matt Freese (New York City FC), Matt Turner (New England Revolution)

Matt Freese is the starter for the USMNT, and Matt Turner will be the main backup. Those two things seem to be givens at this point. The real question will be who will be selected as the third goalkeeper. Chris Brady has the leg up as he was named to the roster in March over Patrick Schulte, who was added as an injury replacement for Roman Celentano. In the end, Chris Brady edges out Schulte due to his form on the club level.

Misses cut: Patrick Schultz (Columbus Crew), Roman Celentano (FC Cincinnati)

Defenders (8): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew), Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Alex Freeman (Villarreal), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Auston Trusty (Celtic)

Chris Richards, Antonee Robinson, and Tim Ream are the locks of the defensive unit to make the team. After that, there are guys that have clearly played their way into Poch’s plans. Alex Freeman, Max Arfsten, Mark McKenzie, and Auston Trusty are guys that Pochettino trusts and will get the call. Sergiño Dest, who returned to action with PSV recently, shows he’s fit enough to make the team and it’s welcome news for the USMNT.

Misses cut: Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Tristan Blackmon (Vancouver Whitecaps)

Midfielders (9): Tyler Adams (Bournemouth), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough), Gio Reyna (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders), Tanner Tessmann (Lyon), Malik Tillman (Bayer Leverkusen)

There are some guys who are locks for the midfield: Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie, and Malik Tillman. The rest could change around depending on form down the stretch or, in the case of Johnny Cardoso, injury likely ruling him out of the World Cup. With Johnny likely sidelined this summer (and he was still a question mark to make the roster despite his form for Atlético Madrid), Aidan Morris gets onto the roster. Tanner Tessmann, Diego Luna, and Sebastian Berhalter feel like they will be solidly on the roster. Cristian Roldan will also be a guy on the roster as Pochettino finds him dependable and able to be versatile and provide cover for many midfield positions.

The final player, and the most controversial, is Gio Reyna, who Pochettino has said in no uncertain terms that his form for the national team is outweighing his lack of form and minutes in 2026 on the club level. He’s started to play better for Borussia Mönchengladbach recently, but Reyna will be included on the roster for what Poch believes he can do in that national team jersey.

Misses cut: Johnny Cardoso (Atlético Madrid), Yunus Musah (Atalanta)

Forwards (6): Brendan Aaronson (Leeds United), Folarin Balogun (Monaco), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Tim Weah (Marseille), Haji Wright (Coventry City)

The forward group might be the one that is in the best form, with the exception of the face of the team: Christian Pulisic. He’s been in a slump lately and hasn’t scored for the USMNT since November 2024. The USMNT will need one of the faces of the World Cup to deliver this summer. Tim Weah is a lock for the roster, and Brendan Aaronson makes it as a forward, but will also have an opportunity to provide relief in the midfield. Because of Patrick Agyemang’s terrible Achilles injury that has sidelined him for the year, Mauricio Pochettino avoids his biggest obstacle: choosing between several center forwards that are in peak form and scoring goals. Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, and Haji Wright (who can also play out on the wing) will all make the team convincingly.

Misses cut: Alex Zendejas (Club América), Josh Sargent (Toronto FC)

The World Cup will be here shortly, and we’ll know the roster shortly. For 26 guys, a dream comes true. For others, that dream is shattered if they don’t hear their name called on May 26th.

It’s Gozo time: Why USMNT should turn to uncapped teen for the World Cup

Real Salt Lake breakout star Zavier Gozo

Rob Gray / Imagn Images

By Paul Tenorio May 14, 2026

When Mauricio Pochettino names his final U.S. World Cup roster in less than two weeks, he should make room for at least one surprise.Yet it will only truly be a shock for those who haven’t been paying attention.Real Salt Lake’s Zavier Gozo, an uncapped 19-year-old winger, scored twice on Wednesday night in a 3-0 win over the Houston Dynamo. It was a performance that only added to what has been a breakout season, a continuation of the promise he showed last year when his overhead kick against LAFC put him on the map.AdvertisementThat highlight-reel finish was a preview of the dynamic and creative presence Gozo has in front of goal. He only reinforced that on Wednesday with his eighth and ninth goal contributions (five goals, four assists) of the season.Is there risk in introducing any new player to a core group this late in the World Cup process? Sure. But simply put: Gozo would undoubtedly make the U.S. World Cup team better.Pochettino’s preferred group lacks true game-changers. It’s why he has called in Gio Reyna despite the player’s continued struggles to stay healthy, effective and on the field. The U.S. coach understands there will be moments in this World Cup where he will look down the bench in search of someone who can add a spark — someone whose energy and presence alone boosts the team because it knows the player can pull out something different when the moment calls for it.The search should be over. Gozo is that player.

Zavier Gozo celebrates in front of Real Salt Lake fans

Zavier Gozo has given RSL fans plenty to cheer this seasonJamie Sabau / Imagn Images

And it’s not just about what he brings on the field, though certainly we can start there.Gozo has the physical profile to compete at the highest levels of the game. It’s why he has drawn interest from the likes of Atlético Madrid and Aston Villa, per The Athletic’s Tom Bogert — and why multiple sources around him and around the league expect the Utah native to be sold for eight figures this summer. He can run by defenders with pace. He can body up in the box when needed. He never plays afraid.

And that’s where what he does around the box becomes an important part of the conversation. Gozo tries things. He tests goalkeepers. He creates opportunities for himself — and for others.His finish earlier this month against the Portland Timbers was a good example of his savvy in front of the net. Gozo was a late runner in a counterattack. As he approached a rolling pass near the top of the box, he moved his eyes central, to where Diego Luna was lurking. It was enough to get the goalkeeper to lean to his right just a touch, and Gozo laced a shot inside the near post.His feel and creativity around goal were even better a month earlier against Sporting Kansas City, when he received a pass at the top corner of the box, flicked it up to himself and snapped a volley inside the upper corner of the far post, a brilliant finish that doubled RSL’s lead.Against Atlanta United in March, he showed another layer to his game, bringing the ball down out of the air in stride, dribbling at and then past a defender and onto his left foot, where he curled a shot to the far post.Time and time again, Gozo does stuff in games that makes you stand up. It has a similar feel to other top young players who have come before in MLS, guys like Alphonso Davies and Tyler Adams, who simply seemed as though they were too good for this league.Gozo is clearly ready for more, and Pochettino has a chance to give him the ultimate stage to prove it.As his profile has grown, so has his place on the U.S. radar. Pochettino’s right-hand man, assistant coach Jesús Pérez, hinted as much last weekend.“(Watching a) few players, young players on both sides today,” Pérez said when asked on Apple TV why he was scouting FC Dallas vs. Real Salt Lake. “Very important for us to keep an eye on some of them. Obviously Luna is the one that has been more games with us, but there are a few other players that caught our eye and it’s important to be here today.”It’s not a stretch to conclude that Gozo is among that cohort, nor would it be unprecedented to call in a teenager without any senior caps to a World Cup squad.

Zavier Gozo celebrates an RSL goal

Zavier Gozo, center, and Diego Luna, right, have teamed to great effect at the club level. Is country next?Rob Gray / Imagn Images

At the 2022 World Cup, 10 players made appearances aged 20 or younger with two or fewer pre-World Cup caps, according to TruMedia. That includes the Netherlands’ Xavi Simons, who made his debut in the knockout stage against the U.S. at 19.

Trent Alexander-Arnold had one cap when he made his World Cup debut in 2018 at age 19. Thomas Müller had two caps when he made his World Cup debut in 2010 at 20 (and scored five goals to win the Golden Boot). Christian Eriksen had three caps when he made his World Cup debut in 2010 at 18.

Experience is not an excuse when a player is both the right fit and ready for the moment.

It’s not even a unique scenario for the U.S.

Joe Scally made the World Cup squad in 2022 at 19 despite having just three senior caps. Julian Green (19, two caps) and DeAndre Yedlin (20, four caps) made the U.S. team in 2014, with Green scoring a knockout-stage goal and Yedlin emerging as a breakout player for the U.S. at the tournament.

Yedlin, now Gozo’s RSL teammate, is a great example of what the U.S. might be able to get from the young winger at the tournament. This U.S. team is not the young group of Qatar anymore. It could benefit from a wide-eyed youngster who comes in and injects a sort of awe, excitement and determination into the group. Yedlin’s supersub role added a different element for the U.S. in Brazil, and he impacted the game by helping set up the Americans’ second goal in a 2-2 draw with Portugal.

Zavier Gozo and Brooklyn Raines celebrate at the 2025 FIFA U-20 World Cup

The most international experience Zavier Gozo, right, has came at the 2025 FIFA U-20 World CupJavier Torres / AFP / Getty Images

It was perhaps symbolic that Yedlin is the one who assisted Gozo’s first goal on Wednesday, which further reinforced his World Cup case. The U.S. has spent this last cycle searching for something different for a team that went into Qatar with such promise, but came out clearly needing more to truly make a run.

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The U.S. has been practically begging for a player like Gozo to bolster the attack. Close your eyes and imagine that scenario late in the game: it’s the 75th minute against Turkey, and the U.S. needs a goal to secure a result. It may be crazy to consider given the extent of Gozo’s high-pressure international experience is last fall’s FIFA U-20 World Cup, but there are few players in the current pool that would instill more belief coming off the bench to make something happen than him.

When Pochettino took over the U.S., he insisted that he was always watching everyone. He has proved in his time here that he has no fear about shaking things up. In fact, that’s exactly what he has set out to do. His message has been clear and consistent: Every player in the pool has a chance, they just have to show they deserve it on the field.

Taking Gozo to the World Cup would show just how serious Pochettino is about that message. But beyond that, the teenager deserves to be at the World Cup. And he has a manager brave enough to make it a reality.

It might just be the biggest payoff of Pochettino’s earn-it approach with this group.

5/4 Champs League Tu/Wed CBS, MLS CCCF Tu/Wed, Europa Tu/Wed, Indy 11 vs Jax H 7 pm, El Classico Sun 3 pm ESPN, Wrexham just misses Champ Playoffs

Champions League Semi’s Leg 2 Tues Atletico @ Arsenal (1-1) 3 pm on CBS/Univ
Wed PSG @ Bayern (5-4) 3 pm on CBS & Univision

My god I love Champions League – last Tues’ 5-4 thriller between PSG and Bayern Munich was spectacular and down to the last minute – both teams are good at scoring so it was an up and down affair with little defense and 1 huge Horrible call for a handball on PSG that lost the game. (9 goal thriller Highlights). Many are calling that the best semi-final ever played – thank goodness this is a 2 legged affair as the 2 giants will square off at Bayern Wed 3 pm in what is must watch TV on CBS. The other Semi was equally fun if not as high scoring as my Atletico Madrid tied Arsenal 1-1 at home (Highlights). Atleti should have had another as they pushed for the lead but settled for the tie – It will all be decided at the Emirates. Despite the lead, the prediction market projects Bayern have a 56% chance of winning within 90 minutes, with PSG at 26% and a draw at 19%. The French side is two goals away from matching the all-time Champions League goal record (45) in a single campaign, albeit in an expanded competition, set by Barcelona in the 1999-00 season. Bayern are three goals away. Preview I see Bayern winning at home 4-2 to take it 8-6 overall.

UEFA Champions League semi-finals (May 5): Arsenal vs. Atletico Madrid (Agg 1-1). Arsenal beat Atletico 4-0 at the Emirates during the league phase of this year’s competition, and the Spaniards have lost six of their last seven away games against English sides in the Champions League. However, Atletico have faced English teams in three previous Uefa semi-final ties and won all three, as well as six of their last seven Uefa semi-final ties overall. Of course American Johnny Cardoso (Johnny on his shirt) . See possible line-ups here. Preview As for this draw I see reluctantly agree Arsenal will probably win this 2-1 at home to take a 3-2 overall win into the finals in Budapest on May 30th. Coverage starts at 2 pm on CBS — 12:30 pm on Paramount plus also David Beckham and Friends will have an alternate broadcast on Para+ as well as pregame and postgame inclusion. Set those recorders early – take a late lunch or call in sick to school – Champions League Semi-Finals are here baby !!

UEFA Champions League semi-final leg 2 (May 6): Bayern Munich vs. Paris Saint-Germain, agg 4-5, 3 pm ET. The first leg saw the highest scoring European Cup semi-final match since Eintracht Frankfurt beat Rangers 6-3 in 1959-60. While Bayern trail by one goal going into this match, PSG have lost more away games against the German side (5) than any other opponent in major European competition. However, when losing the first leg in five previous semi-finals, Bayern have been eliminated each time. See possible line-ups here.

Indy 11 lose 1-0 to Tampa Bay – Host Jax Sat 7 pm

St. Petersburg, Fla. – Indy Eleven battled the only undefeated team in the USL Championship to the final whistle in a 1-0 setback at the Tampa Bay Rowdies on Saturday.  That snapped the Boys in Blue’s five-match unbeaten streak dating back to the season opener on March 8. Midfielder Cam Lindley’s free kick from long range to the far post in the final minute of second half stoppage time was headed by forward Bruno Rendon toward the near post, but Rowdies keeper Jahmali Waite tipped it wide with his right hand to keep the Boys in Blue from equalizing.The Boys in Blue return home to Carroll Stadium for “The World’s Game Night” vs. expansion club Sporting JAX on Saturday, May 9 at 7 p.m. Ticket options include Family Four-Packs and Flex Mini-Plans. The Family Four-Pack is available for all 2026 home games and can be purchased online only.  Priced at only $49, the Family Four-Pack includes four tickets, FREE parking, $20 in Concession Vouchers, and a 20% Merchandise Discount, along with access to the Fun Zone/Kids Activation Area.

NWSL Stays with Summer Schedule / Women’s Champs League Final 4

Great news that the NWSL is keeping the summer schedule – I really think their TV deals with CBS/ESPN/ABC/Prime Video & Tubi will only grow – as Fox would be nuts not to add some NWSL games with the Women’s World Cup being next year in Brazil then to follow in 2031 in the US. Will be interesting to see if the USL stays with the summer schedule and gains ground on MLS with them moving to a fall schedule. (Listen I am a soccer fan -but I will not Watch MLS over College Football or the NFL). MLS is going to severely limit their fans and stadium availability and TV coverage *(though NO ONE WATCHES MLS NOW – just ask your kids). Dang shame – I hope MLS doesn’t go the way of the NASL. Congrats to Lindsay Heaps (Horan) who along with Lily Yohannes helped OL Lyonnes advance to the Champions League finals vs Barcelona May 23.

Notes

Champions League Tues/Wed 3 pm on CBS/Univision is must Watch TV this week. In case you missed it here’s the 9 goal thriller Highlights from PSG vs Bayern last week. They play Wed. This vlog from the Leti vs Arsenal game gives you a sense for what’s its like at a Letico game.  I was blown away in 2018 when my family went to the most electrifying pro event we have ever witnessed an Atletico Madrid game. We sat in just this location in the Caldron their old stadium. With over 80K fans Atletico’s Metropolitan Stadium is one of the loudest in the world.  Speaking of Letico – Gotta love this as Deigo Simeone’s kid sings Atletico Madrid’s Fight song – Atletico Song by Simione’s kid. (here Atletico Song with words). Not to be outdone here’s some Arsenal chants along with fight song. Arsenal vs Atletico Semi- Final Leg 2 anthem.

Sunday gives us El Classico as Barcelona can win La Liga with a win at home over Real Madrid at 3 pm on ESPN & ESPND. For fans of Ryan Reynold’s We Are Wrexham out there – Wrexham AFC narrowly missed out on a fourth consecutive promotion during the 2025-26 season, failing to secure a Championship playoff spot on the final day. After a final-day draw against Middlesbrough, Wrexham finished 7th, missing the top-six playoffs by one point after Hull City overtook them, ending their immediate Premier League promotion hopes. Its 100% MLS teams now in the US open Cup QF – Schedule. Hey the World Cup is just over 2 months away – and don’t worry – while I hope to be in LA for the opening group stage games – I will still be running a pool. Details soon.

Had a blast doing Cup games last weekend at Grand Park — looking forward to more Cup Games – next Weekend.
Bens S and my fellow Gator Jakob B did a full run of 4 Challenge Cup games last Sat @ Grand Park. Guess who forgot his hat – had to go to the emergency black hat instead. Dang it was cold Sat AM – always 15 degrees cooler on the feels at Grand.
7 Weeks and Counting to the Start of the World Cup !! So Excited as we try to follow the US from site to site.

TV Schedule – Games on TV


Tues, May 5
3 pm CBS, Para+ Atletico Madrid vs Arsenal USL Semi
9:30 pm FS1 vs Tigres UNAL 1 vs Nashville SC 0 CCC Cup
Wed, May 6
3 pm CBS, Bayern Munich vs PSG (4-5) UCL Semi
7 pm CBSSN NY Red Bulls vs NYCFC US Open Cup
10 pm Victory+ Washington Spirit (Rodman) vs Houston NWSL
9:30 pm FS1 LAFC vs Toluca CCC
Thurs, May 7 Europa League
3 pm Para+ Nottingham Forest vs Aston Villa
3 pm Para+ Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Shakthar Donesk 1-3
Fri May 8
3 pm USA Dortmund vs Frankfurt
8 pm Prime Orlando Pride vs NC Courage NWSL
Sat, May 9
7:30 am ?? Liverpool vs Chelsea
9:30 am ESPN+ Ausburg vs MGladbach (Reyna & Sally)
9:30 am EPNS+ Stuttgart vs Leverkusen (Tilman)
10 am USA Fulham (Jedi) vs Bournemouth (Adams)
12 noon Para+ Lazio vs Inter Milan
12:30 pm NBC Man City vs Brentford
12:30pm ESPN+ Atletico Madrid (Cardoso) vs Celta Vigo
1 pm Apple Miami (Messi) vs Toronto
2:45 pm Para+ Juventus (Mckinney) vs Lecce
7 pm ESPN+ Indy 11 vs Jax 6:30 pm
8pm Tubi Gothem vs Boston Legacy NWSL
9 pm FS1 Nashville SC vs DC United
10:30 pm Apple Seattle Sounders vs San Diego
11:15 pm CBSSN Cruz Azul vs Atlas
Sun, May 10
9 am Peacock Everton vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
9 am USA Nottingham Forest vs New Castle
11:30 am USA West ham United vs Arsenal
12 pm Para+ Parma vs Roma
12:30 pm ESPN KC Current vs Chicago Stars NWSL
2:45 pm {Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Atalanta
3 pm ESPN Barcelona vs Real Madrid (el Classico)
4:30 pm Apple NYCFC vs Columbus Crew
7 pm Victory+ Seattle Reign vs Washington Spirit (Rodman) NWSL
Mon, May 11
3 pm USA Tottenham vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
3 pm Para+ Millwall vs Hull City (Champ Playoff)

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 Tix
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Fri, June 19
3 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup
Thur, June 25
10 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup

Complete 2026 World Cup schedule featuring match dates and start times
NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule 


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Champions League

Arsenal trio not in team training ahead of Champions League semi-final second leg
‘Good news’ for Arsenal as Ødegaard, Havertz fit

Bayern to debut new home kit with gold fringe vs. PSG in UCL semifinal
How a new UEFA rule could help Arsenal reach the Champions League final
Atleti play fresh XI in LaLiga pre-UCL 2nd leg
PSG, Bayern Munich show how fun soccer can be. Why don’t we see this more often?


Why the Champions League tells us nothing about the Premier League
Who are top scorers in Champions League this year?

USA

USMNT World Cup roster watch: Sergiño Dest is back, but the real concern is the back line
USMNT’s Dest Returns
Mauricio Pochettino to Reveal USMNT World Cup Roster on May 26
It’ll take more than home soil: why hosting isn’t enough for a USMNT World Cup run
USMNT Form Check – who’s hot and cold as the World Cup approaches

MLS


Six MLS teams have booked their spot in the US Open Cup quarter-finals (More) |
The primary group hoping to purchase the Vancouver Whitecaps and relocate the MLS club to Las Vegas is being led by Grant Gustavson (More) | 
San Jose roll on, Atlanta correct course & more from Matchday 10
MLS Year-End Awards: Favorites for MVP, Coach, Newcomer & more
LAFC stun Toluca in Concacaf Champions Cup semifinals
Nashville SC drop Leg 1 to Tigres in Champions Cup semis
Matchday 11: Everything to know for this weekend’s biggest matches
Who can save Inter Miami?

World

The madcap 13 minutes that could cost Manchester City the title
Manchester City cede title advantage to Arsenal after Guehi’s Gerrard moment
Carrick hits outstanding new benchmark for English managers in Liverpool win
Van Dijk slams ‘unacceptable’ Liverpool season

GK

The Best Semi-Final 1st Leg Saves From Europa & Conference …
Great saves: Champions League semi-final, first legs
Tim Howard WC GK Record 
MLS: Best Saves of the Week

Awesome to See Ochoa back on the Mexican National Team for the World Cup !!


Reffing

Horrible call PSG vs Bayern

Bruno, Mkwananzi & I catching some GLC games at Zionsville on Sunday. Good Mexican food after as well.

NWSL & Women’s Champs League

Power rankings NWSL
Bonmatí returns and Barcelona beats Bayern to reach 6th straight Women’s
Women’s Champions League semi-final second-leg report, highlights: OL Lyonnes 3-1

NWSL moves to maintain summer calendar

The NWSL calendar is staying put, as the league announced it will not shift to the previously proposed fall-to-spring schedule anytime soon. The Board of Governors declined to vote on any significant changes this week, committing to the current spring-to-fall schedule until at least 2030.“This does not close the door on future change, but any such change would not occur sooner than 2031,” the NWSL stated. (See full release) Big picture: While US men’s league MLS is shifting next season’s framework to mirror Europe’s transfer market, benefits for the NWSL’s flip appear slim — and faced significant pushback. The players union publicly opposed the idea after ESPN reported the impending vote, saying necessary league-wide infrastructure to winterize facilities doesn’t yet exist.“NWSL has made the right decision to provide stability and certainty over the calendar footprint,” said NWSLPA executive director Meghann Burke. (See full report)

Kim Little of Arsenal (C) and Leah Williamson of Arsenal (C) lift the trophy and players of Arsenal celebrate their victory following the FIFA Women's Champions Cup 2026 Final matchArsenal won January’s inaugural international club competition. (Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images)

FIFA Women’s Champions Cup heads to Miami

The Women’s Champions Cup is heading Stateside, as FIFA announced plans to stage the 2027 international club competition’s final phase in South Florida. Running January 27-31, the semifinals, third-place game, and final are set to take over the Miami area, though specific venues have yet to be announced.ESPN’s Jeff Kassouf reported Florida was expected to host the inaugural January 2026 event, but eventual winner Arsenal pushed for London.

Big picture: The 2027 tournament serves as the second official warmup for the 2028 Women’s Club World Cup, when six teams from different confederations compete for a world title. Gotham took third in 2026, and has a shot to represent Concacaf once again as regional Champions Cup winner alongside the Washington Spirit, Club America, and Pachuca. (See full FIFA release)

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USMNT midweek viewing guide: Reaching for the final

Follow along with all the USMNT action this week. by Justin Moran May 4, 2026, 9:39 AM EDT

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Atletico de Madrid v Arsenal FC - UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Semi Final First Leg

MADRID, SPAIN – APRIL 29: Viktor Gyoekeres of Arsenal battles for possession with Johnny Cardoso of Atletico de Madrid during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Semi Final First Leg match between Atletico de Madrid and Arsenal FC at Metropolitano Stadium on April 29, 2026 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by David Price/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)Arsenal FC via Getty Images

Midweek action is here. All kickoff times are in EST. Let’s get into it!

Tuesday

  • Arsenal vs Atlético Madrid, 3p on CBS, Paramount+, TUDN, Univision, Fubo (free trial), ViX: Johnny Cardoso and Atléti are even 1-1 with Arsenal going into the second leg of this Champions League semifinal.
  • Toronto FC vs Atlético Ottawa, 7:30p on FS2, Fubo: Josh Sargent and Toronto host Atlético Ottawa in a preliminary round of the Canadian Championship.
  • Tigres vs Nashville SC, 9:30p on FS1, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Matthew Corcoran and Nashville are down 0-1 to Tigres going into the second leg of this Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal.

Wednesday

  • CF Montréal vs Calgary Blizzard, 7:30p on FS2, Fubo: Jalen Neal and CF Montréal host Calgary Blizzard in a preliminary round of the Canadian Championship.
  • Botafogo vs Racing Club, 8:30p on beIN Sports, Fubo: Matko Miljevic and Racing Club visit Botafogo in Group E of Copa Sudamericana.
  • Toluca vs LAFC, 9:30p on FS1, TUDN, UniMás, Fubo, ViX: Timothy Tillman and LAFC are up 2-1 on Toluca going into the second leg of this Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal.

Thursday

  • Crystal Palace vs Shakhtar Donetsk, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Chris Richards and Palace are up 3-1 on Shakhtar going into the second leg of this Conference League semifinal.

Friday

Standard Liège vs OH Leuven, 2:45p: Marlon Fossey and Standard host Leuven in the Belgian Pro League.

Paderborn vs Karlsruher, 12:30p on ESPN Select, Fubo: Santiago Castañeda and SC Paderborn host Karlsruher SC in the 2. Bundesliga.

Venezia vs Palermo, 2:30p on Fox Soccer Plus, Fubo: Gianluca Busio and Venezia host Palermo in Serie B.

Champions League semi-final second legs: The numbers to know

Paris Saint-Germain fans display a tifo while fireworks are set off prior to the Champions League semi-final first leg between PSG and Bayern Munich (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

By Sukhman Singh

May 5, 2026 3:20 am EDT

We were served up an all-timer of a game at the Parc des Princes last week, and the second leg promises more of the same. For Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich, the 2025-26 season will be measured by the Champions League. The contest resumes at the Allianz Arena on Wednesday, with PSG holding a one-goal lead.wenty-four hours after the fireworks in Paris came a different sort of game. Diego Simeone’s Atletico Madrid and Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal, two coaches who have built reputations on defensive identity, played out a tense, attritional first leg that finished 1-1.Two ties, two shades of intensity. A reminder that the same sport can grip you in entirely different ways. The second legs will decide who walks out at the Puskas Arena in Budapest on May 30. But who will be in the final? Here are the numbers and trends that may give us a clue…


Arsenal v Atletico Madrid (agg 1-1)

Diego Simeone has rarely walked into a Champions League knockout against a side more defensively drilled than his own. Under Mikel Arteta in the European competition, Arsenal concede just 0.65 goals per game across his 37 matches in charge, the lowest ratio of any manager in the competition’s history with 20-plus games. Atletico, on the other hand, have evolved. They have scored 35 goals in this Champions League, their highest in a single edition, and arrive at the Emirates as the most attacking iteration of Simeone-ball we have seen.

At the Metropolitano, Atletico produced 2.22 expected goals. Only Aston Villa in December (2.52) have managed more against Arsenal in any competition this season. The threat ran through the strike partnership of Antoine Griezmann and Julian Alvarez, two forwards given the freedom to roam, with a chemistry that comes alive in transition. Alvarez alone accounted for 1.00 xG, more than any other player on the pitch. He scored his penalty, and now has 14 goal involvements (10 goals, four assists) in 14 Champions League games this season, making him the first Atletico player ever to reach double figures for goals in a single edition.

Gyokeres scored in the first leg and has 21 goals for Arsenal this seasonDan Mullan/Getty Images

While Atletico’s strike partnership is symbiotic, intricate and cerebral, Arsenal have an explosive focal point in Viktor Gyokeres — a different model of striker entirely. He is an orthodox shoulder-runner, explosive and vertical in his movement: a wrecking ball among the finesse around him. In Madrid, he buried his penalty. Against Fulham at the weekend, he scored twice and added an assist, all in the first half. He now has 21 goals in his debut Arsenal season.

The contrast with Alvarez extends from profile to involvement, and it showed clearly in Madrid. Gyokeres had 15 touches. Alvarez had 49. The two strikers have two very different jobs. One pins the last line. The other drops deep to facilitate and dictate, weaving himself into the very fabric of Simeone’s build-up.

The first leg was defined by two contrasting halves. Atletico were under the cosh in the first, and Simeone used half-time to change both personnel and shape. He switched from a back four to a back three, with Robin Le Normand replacing Giuliano Simeone alongside David Hancko and Marc Pubill. The effect was almost immediate. Atleti drew level and seized control: possession climbed from 48 per cent to 55 per cent, and their xG rose from 0.22 in the first half to 1.99 in the second.In the first half, Atleti’s midfield pairing of Koke and Johnny Cardoso was overrun by Arsenal. Declan Rice, as he has been throughout the season, was metronomic. His 83 passes, 12 line-breaking passes and 12 progressive carries were the most of any player on the pitch in all three categories.

The head-to-head reads in Arsenal’s favour. Atletico have shipped 16 goals in seven Champions League away games this season and lost six of their last seven away games against English sides. The 4-0 defeat at the Emirates in October is their joint-heaviest in continental history.

The new UEFA format rewards the top two league-phase finishers with the home leg in the semi-final. Tuesday will test whether Arsenal can convert that reward, at the same stage where they were knocked out last year.


Bayern Munich v Paris Saint-Germain (agg 4-5)

PSG take a one-goal lead to the Allianz Arena, and the precedent in two-legged ties favours the Parisians. Bayern have lost the first leg of a UEFA two-legged semi-final on 10 previous occasions and overturned the deficit only once — more than 40 years ago. They have lost their last five two-legged Champions League semi-finals. PSG, by contrast, have won 36 of their 43 previous UEFA two-legged ties when winning the first leg, and 14 of 17 when the lead was a single goal. An 82 per cent conversion rate.

The first leg was scintillating, and neither manager intends the second to be any different. Both Vincent Kompany and Luis Enrique have hinted, in their own ways, at more of the same.What unfolded in Paris was not random. It was controlled chaos: a breathless exchange of punches across 90 minutes. Both teams pressed man-to-man with relentless intensity, and the game became a chain of one-on-one duels.Michael Olise celebrates after scoring against Paris Saint-Germain in the first legAnne-Christine Poujoulat / AFP via Getty ImagesThe only space was behind the defensive lines, so both teams played long passes at almost double their season average to exploit it. In midfield, Aleksandar Pavlovic and Joshua Kimmich played 24 line-breaking passes between them, more than PSG’s four midfielders managed combined (17, of which Vitinha contributed seven). It was the only time this season a midfield facing PSG has out-line-broken Vitinha.Possession told the same story. PSG average 64 per cent possession in this Champions League, the highest of any side in the competition. In the first leg, though, they had just 43 per cent. PSG concede an average of 17 touches per game in their own box across this Champions League campaign. Against Bayern, they conceded 52. The xG read 3.06 to Bayern, 1.90 to PSG.

The underlying numbers suggest Bayern had the better game. PSG had five shots on target and scored five goals, a mark of exceptional finishing.

When the press creates one-on-ones, talent decides and the talent on the pitch was supreme. Bayern’s front three of Harry Kane, Michael Olise and Luis Diaz have hit 100 goals across all competitions this season, only the third trio since 2013-14 to reach the mark.

PSG’s three of Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Desire Doue and Ousmane Dembele are arguably the most fluid attacking unit in Europe. They chop and change, switch flanks, drag defenders into empty space, and become impossible to defend against in full flight. Kvaratskhelia has been involved in 15 Champions League goals this season, a record by a PSG player in a single campaign.

Bayern have lost just one of their last 29 Champions League home games. They have won all six this season, and have averaged five goals per game across their last eight at the Allianz. The fortress is intact. Both sides also walk in fresh. PSG and Bayern rotated heavily over the weekend, with Luis Enrique resting almost his entire expected XI for Lorient, and Vincent Kompany doing the same against Heidenheim.


Barcelona one point from La Liga title ahead of El Clasico after Real Madrid beat Espanyol

Vinicius Junior pointing at himself

Vinicius Junior scored twice in 11 minutes against Espanyol Judit Cartiel/Getty Images

By Colin Millar and Tomás Hill López-Menchero May 3, 2026

Barcelona will be crowned La Liga champions if they avoid defeat against Real Madrid in the upcoming El Clasico. Hansi Flick’s side require just one point to take an unassailable lead over second-place Madrid, who defeated Espanyol 2-0 on Sunday. Vinicius Junior scored twice in 11 minutes in the second half of the fixture to keep Barca from taking the title this weekend. Barca are 11 points clear of Alvaro Arbeloa’s side with four rounds of matches remaining, with the visitors needing to win at Camp Nou if they are to keep alive the mathematic possibility of catching their rivals. If Barca were to win, it wold be the first time that a La Liga title was decided in a Clasico.Madrid could be without Ferland Mendy — who went off injured in the 14th minute of the Espanyol victory — and Kylian Mbappe, who sustained a hamstring injury last week. “We’ll see how Mbappe is this week,” Arbeloa said in his post-match press conference. “After last week’s tests, it looked as though it might take a bit longer.”Since February, Madrid have fallen behind their rivals with league defeats to Osasuna, Getafe and Mallorca, alongside more recent draws against Girona and Real Betis.Barca, meanwhile, have won each of their last 10 league matches following a mid-February defeat to Girona, to pull clear of Madrid.That run has allowed Flick’s side the possibility of crowning their season with clinching the title against their rivals next Sunday at Camp Nou.

Mendy went off injured early in the first half on SundayJosep Lago / AFP via Getty Images


Analysis

By Real Madrid correspondent Mario Cortegana

Real Madrid’s win only seemed to postpone the inevitable — Barcelona’s La Liga title win, which they could wrap up in next week’s Clasico at the Camp Nou.

Arbeloa’s team appeared uninterested during the first half before the individual quality of their players made the difference. Within the first four minutes, Espanyol failed to score from two opportunities.

The overall impression was the same as usual for Madrid in La Liga this season, and especially since their Champions League quarter-final elimination to Bayern Munich. This was a side who didn’t press, moved the ball slowly and allowed their opponents to attack them with ease.

Victory won’t quieten the noise around a side plagued by serious internal problems. This week, a veteran player treated the squad and staff to lunch at Madrid’s Valdebebas training ground, but the atmosphere behind the scenes is far from ideal.

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TV cameras caught left-back Alvaro Carreras laughing when Arbeloa turned to Fran Garcia instead of him to replace the injured Ferland Mendy in the first half. The previous matchday, captain Dani Carvajal had also been seen apparently criticising Trent Alexander-Arnold’s defensive work from the dugout.

A personal trip Kylian Mbappe took to Italy while recovering from a muscle injury did not help either, and has not gone down well internally. Mbappe remains a doubt for El Clasico.

For all those reasons and more, these three points solve nothing, and in fact could lead to an even more painful situation next week — Madrid watching their eternal rivals win the league, and celebrating in their faces, for the first time in the history of El Clasico.What You Should Read NextReal Madrid and Jose Mourinho: For Florentino Perez, it just makes senseThe 63-year-old Mourinho is Florentino Perez’s favoured candidate to replace Alvaro Arbeloa as Real Madrid manager


How significant would this be for Barcelona?

It goes without saying, but winning the title with victory in El Clasico against their arch-rivals would be particularly satisfying for Barcelona fans.

It would also confirm their recent dominance over Madrid domestically. Flick won a domestic treble of La Liga, Copa del Rey and Supercopa de Espana titles in his first season with the Catalans last year, finishing four points ahead of their biggest rivals in the league and beating them in both the Copa and Supercopa finals.

Barcelona’s main aim this season, however, was a first Champions League title since 2015. After reaching the semi-finals last year before being beaten by eventual runners-up Inter, they made the quarter-finals this time but suffered a 3-2 aggregate defeat by Atletico, with red cards shown after VAR reviews hampering them in both legs.

Diego Simeone’s team also beat them in the Copa del Rey semi-finals, including a 4-0 thrashing in the first leg. Barca almost mounted a spirited comeback in the return but a 3-0 home win was not enough to see them through to the final, where Atletico lost on penalties to Real Sociedad. Injuries to key players have hampered them, as Flick commented on in his post-match press conference on Saturday.

Barca could win at Camp Nou against their rivalsMaciej Rogowski/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images

“We had to manage a lot of injuries,” he said when asked about the biggest difficulties this season. “That’s a thing we need to make better next season. But how the team is playing is fantastic. They improved a lot in these things. It makes me feel positive for the future. It is a young team with a lot of potential. We have just started our project and we want to move on.”

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Still, winning the title in a match against Madrid would be hugely celebrated on the streets of Catalonia — and there is a chance the season could get even better. Winning their remaining four matches would mean matching the joint-record 100 points total the late Tito Vilanova’s Barca team achieved in La Liga 2012-13, a year after a Jose Mourinho-managed Madrid side had also finished with the same figure. But there will still be a sense of regret that they were not able to get over the line in Europe’s premier competition.What You Should Read NextWhen can Barcelona win La Liga? Could they do it in El Clasico against Real Madrid?A second Spanish league title in two seasons is in Barca’s sights after they opened up a 14-point lead to Real Madrid


What is the view from Real Madrid?

This has been an awful season for Real Madrid, which started with hope under new coach Xabi Alonso but looks certain to finish with his January replacement, Alvaro Arbeloa, overseeing a trophyless campaign. The fact that could be confirmed in El Clasico only underlines how galling this season has been for the side from the Spanish capital.

Madrid played out a thrilling Champions League quarter-final with Bayern Munich but were ultimately undone in the second leg in Germany after a late red card for Eduardo Camavinga. From being level in the tie as that match headed for added time, they lost 6-4 on aggregate thanks to 89th- and 94th-minute goals from Luis Diaz and Michael Olise.

Arbeloa’s position is very much in danger and widespread changes are expected at the Bernabeu over the summer. The Athletic reported last week that former Madrid coach Mourinho is club president Florentino Perez’s favoured candidate to return for a second spell in the dugout.

The effects of finishing a second consecutive season with no major trophies will certainly be felt by Madrid fans — particularly if they ‘lose’ La Liga to Barca in a Clasico.

Colin Millar|Senior Editor

A history of Diego Simeone’s touchline antics

Atletico Madrid head coach Diego Simeone celebrates

Diego Simeone is always a compelling watch on the touchline Soccrates Images via Getty Images

By Andy Jones

May 5, 2026 12:12 am EDT

Nobody in football works the touchline quite like Atletico Madrid head coach Diego Simeone.

The Argentinian’s actions are often as absorbing and compelling as what happens on the pitch.

The latest installment came during the Champions League semi-final first leg against Arsenal last Wednesday, particularly after the away side were awarded a second penalty of the game in the 80th minute, when Eberechi Eze went down under a challenge by David Hancko.

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As Danny Makkelie waited for instructions from the video assistant referee (VAR) Dennis Higler, Simeone could be seen trying to grab the Dutch referee’s attention by waving his arms in the air and imitating the ‘TV screen’ VAR signal.

Makkelie was advised to review the incident and, after watching it 13 times, reversed his decision. Footage on social media showed Simeone being prevented from approaching the referee while again waving his arms in his direction as the official studied the pitchside screen.

“I thought the behaviour of Diego Simeone and his assistants when the referee was trying to come over and look at the monitor was atrocious,” said former Liverpool, Real Madrid and England midfielder Steve McManaman, who was working as a pundit on the game for TNT Sports.

Simeone’s response to the overturned decision, keeping the score at 1-1, was to try to pump up his players. After the final whistle, with the sides still level at that scoreline, fan videos on social media appeared to show him confronting Ben White after the Arsenal defender walked across the Atletico club badge near the tunnel entrance.

Just a normal day at the office, then, for the 56-year-old Simeone, who lives and breathes every second of the action as if he were still playing.

Atletico have carried the ‘dark arts’ label during his 15-year spell in charge and reflect Simeone’s intensity on the touchline, where he plays the role of the pantomime villain to perfection.

They may have changed in footballing terms from rugged defenders to a more free-flowing outfit, but their boss, who regularly wears an all-black suit, shirt and tie during games, has not.

He can also be a joker. When asked before the second leg against Arsenal at the Emirates whether superstition was the reason for Atletico changing their London hotel from the one they used before the 4-0 league-phase defeat at the same ground in October, Simeone said: “We’re better now than we were in October. And the hotel was cheaper. That’s why we changed.”

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Before what is sure to be an emotionally-charged match tonight (Tuesday), The Athletic has looked back at some of his most memorable touchline moments.


It is probably not a surprise that we begin with a game involving Atletico’s neighbours Real Madrid, given how many times the 15-time European champions have knocked their city rivals out of the Champions League — and it doesn’t get more high profile than the competition’s 2014 final.What You Should Read NextDiego Simeone, Atletico Madrid and a Champions League ‘obsession’ fuelled by painThe 56-year-old manager has twice suffered Champions League final heartbreak with Atletico. He wants to put that right

Simeone’s side had been moments away from the trophy that night in Lisbon, until Sergio Ramos headed a 93rd-minute equaliser. Madrid then ran out 4-1 winners thanks to three more goals in extra time but, after Cristiano Ronaldo scored their fourth from the penalty spot, his team-mate Raphael Varane kicked a stray ball in the direction of the opposition dugout.Simeone controlled the ball before firing it back in the defender’s direction, with Varane having to duck to avoid it. The Atletico coach then went onto the pitch in an attempt to confront the France international, before being escorted back off it by his own staff members and players.“Varane provoked me by kicking the ball at me,” Simeone told his post-match press conference. “Us older guys don’t like people doing that kind of thing to us. I also made a mistake with my reaction. He’s a young guy with a bright future.”Three months later, against the same opponents in the second leg of the Supercopa de Espana, Simeone learnt another valuable lesson — don’t tap the fourth official on the back of the head.After 25 minutes, home side Atletico were leading 1-0 (and 2-1 on aggregate) but Simeone took issue with the amount of time it took his defender Juanfran to be allowed to return to the pitch after getting treatment for a cut lip.The Argentinian repeatedly gestured on the sidelines and then, when fourth official Antonio Santos walked past him to return to his position, tapped him on the back of the head twice.

Simeone was shown a red card, and eventually left the field after further protests, then apologised for his actions after the game. He received an eight-match suspension — four for touching the linesman’s head, two for protesting, one for sarcastically applauding his sending-off and another for remaining in the stands instead of heading down the tunnel.

Diego Simeone was shown a red card in 2014 for tapping fourth official Antonio Santos twice on the headDani Pozo/AFP via Getty Images


As an 11-year-old, Simeone had been a ball boy at a 1982 game featuring Argentine sides Velez Sarsfield and Boca Juniors, when he was sent off for throwing an extra ball on the pitch to try and confuse Boca goalkeeper Hugo Gatti as Velez tried to launch a counter-attack.Thirty-four years later, there was more ball-boy controversy involving Simeone, but this time as a manager.As Atletico and Malaga approached half-time in a La Liga game in April 2016 with the scores level, the latter launched a counter-attack. From close to the Atletico dugout, a second ball was thrown onto the pitch, halting play.

It was not initially clear who the guilty party was, although TV footage found the culprit to be a ball boy. Simeone did not return to the bench after half-time due to La Liga rules that state that a head coach is responsible for the behaviour of his bench personnel and other staff.Whether Simeone was involved or encouraged the ball to be thrown on remains a mystery, although footage appeared to show him turning towards the ball boy before the Malaga move was stopped.“It’s clear that the referee took the correct decision, following the rules,” Simeone, who was later banned for three matches for the incident, said post-match. “He did what he had to do, sending off the coach. It was a kid who was beside us, but that does not change anything.”There have been other occasions when Simeone has been unable to resist getting involved.During a Champions League semi-final against Bayern Munich 10 years ago, he ended up tussling with winger Franck Ribery while engaging in a verbal back-and-forth with their manager Pep Guardiola.More recently, he has clashed twice with Real Madrid forward Vinicius Junior this season, during Atletico’s 2-1 defeat in the Supercopa de Espana semi-final in January and then in a 3-2 league loss in March. The Brazil international played a key role in his side winning both games.In the first incident, TV footage appeared to show Simeone goading Vinicius Jr after an Atletico penalty appeal, suggesting Madrid president Florentino Perez wanted to sell him.The pair exchanged words when the winger was substituted after 81 minutes and both received yellow cards. Real’s then head coach Xabi Alonso said that his Atletico counterpart wasn’t “an example of a good sportsman”, and Simeone again apologised for his actions four days later in a press conference.

In March, Simeone took issue with Vinicius Jr’s actions as he was substituted in the 87th minute, with the player raising his arms and encouraging the Bernabeu crowd to increase the noise levels.

England supporters will doubtless remember the former Argentina midfielder’s role in David Beckham’s red card during their 1998 World Cup round of 16 tie. But while his antics are regularly criticised in England and by rival fans, they come from a mentality of wanting to win — and he is beloved by his players.

Simeone’s competitive edge is never clearer than in his goal celebrations.

Perhaps his most controversial one was against Juventus in a 2019 Champions League round-of-16 first leg win. When Jose Maria Gimenez opened the scoring for Atletico, Simeone turned to the crowd and grabbed his crotch, which he later explained was because his side “have balls”. Simeone was fined €20,000, and another apology was issued as he said the gesture came “from the heart”.

Cristiano Ronaldo, meanwhile, appeared to imitate the move after scoring a hat-trick in his side’s return leg victory, and also received a €20,000 fine.

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Against Barcelona in the quarter-finals of this season’s Champions League, Simeone performed a ‘go to sleep’ gesture towards Barca fans in the closing stages of the second leg to indicate the tie was over.

As much as he enjoys celebrating goals, however, he does not always respond well to setbacks, as those near the away dugout at Anfield found out in the aftermath of Virgil van Dijk’s winner in Atletico’s 3-2 league-phase defeat to Liverpool earlier this season.

Simeone appeared to be angered by the home supporters, with footage showing him heading towards the same section of that stand twice.

Stewards and staff members had to restrain him and, when his attention turned towards the fourth official, with Simeone appearing to gesture towards the crowd, it was not long before he was shown a red card.

After the game, Simeone described his reaction as “not justifiable” but said he had been insulted throughout the match.


The only moment of the game Simeone has no interest in engaging in is the traditional post-match handshake with his opposite number. He is often the first to leave the scene once the final whistle blows, making a beeline for the dressing room.

It is something those who face him regularly in Spain are used to, but former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp was not aware of that when his side played Atletico in the Champions League in 2021.

Klopp was left looking bemused as he held out his hand while watching his counterpart hurry away…

…before sarcastically offering a thumbs-up and wagging his finger in the direction of the tunnel.

Klopp initially aired his frustration during his post-match media duties but was then informed of Simeone’s routine and said in his press conference: “He’s running off and I could have just turned around. He doesn’t do anything wrong, and I’m not overly happy with my reaction, to be honest.”

Simeone offered his own explanation as to why he does that.

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“I always go without shaking hands at the end of the game,” he said. “I don’t think it’s healthy or natural, because there will always be one (of the managers) who’s not happy with the game. I always leave quickly if I lose or win.”

With Atletico’s semi-final against Arsenal finely poised, the cameras are likely to be trained on Simeone once more tonight.