6/21/25 US Men Win, play Sun 7 pm, USWNT roster drops, World Club Cup continues, Indy 11 host Vegas Sat 7 pm

Club World Cup Presents Surprises in the 1st Round

So I have to admit I did not think the Club World Cup would we be worth watching but boy was I wrong. Some of the games have been competitive – especially the South American teams. Of course awesome to see at least 1 MSL team Miami of course going thru to the Semi’s thanks to this sublime Messi free-kick  . If you haven’t watched yet – check out the games on TBS/TNT/Univision.

US Men face Haiti Sun 7 pm Advance to Quarter Finals of Gold Cup

The US men – I think the US men look like an un-organized pathetic shell of its former self. A 1-0 win over Saudi Arabia on this Chris Richards Goal yes a set-piece k No cohesive plan – no organized attack, no finishing and just average defense at best. Of course despite what the Fox pundits Lexi, Landon and Edu are forced to say – honestly we have 2 starters on this team – Adams & Centerback Chris Richards – I think Ream of course will make the team along with 3 or 4 more of these guys on this roster at the most. I think Tillman has shown some good things against these pathetic teams lets see how he does against top 50 competition if we get to Canada or Mexico. Man I would love to have to play both of them. Jesse Marsch beating the US would be a nice slap in the face to US Soccer. I assume Poch will play the kids vs Haiti (aka Carmel High Varsity) on Sunday. (lots of stories below)

USMNT GOLD CUP DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (club/country; caps/goals):

GOALKEEPERS (4): Chris Brady (Chicago Fire; 0/0), Matt Freese (New York City FC; 0/0), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace/ENG; 51/0)
DEFENDERS (9): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 3/0), Alex Freeman (Orlando City; 0/0), Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union; 0/0), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/FRA; 19/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 68/1), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 24/1), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 32/3), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel/GER; 4/0), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC; 43/3)
MIDFIELDERS (9): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 47/8); Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 44/2), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 0/0), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis/ESP; 18/0), Luca de la Torre (San Diego FC; 24/1), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; 4/0), Jack McGlynn (Houston Dynamo; 4/1), Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union; 0/0); Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 17/0)
FORWARDS (5): Paxten Aaronson (FC Utrecht/NED; 1/0), Patrick Agyemang (Charlotte FC; 4/3), Damion Downs (FC Köln/GER; 0/0), Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 4/1), Haji Wright INJURED -(Coventry City/ENG; 15/4)

Camps to Check out This Summer

Carmel High School Soccer Camp- Boys – Murray Stadium 6:30-8:30 pm
June 23-25 (grades 5-8th)  $125
July 21-23  $125
Questions? Please contact Coach Shane Schmidt at sschmidt@ccs.k12.in.us

Greyhound Girls Soccer Camp – Murray Stadium
Girls Jul 07 – Jul 09, 2025 at 9:00-10:30 $95 (5th-8th Grade) Register

Indy 11 Host Las Vegas Lights During Pride Night at the Mike Tonight 7 pm

Midfielder Jack Blake netted the game-winning goal in first half stoppage time off a smooth sequence from midfielder Aodhan Quinn to give Indy Eleven a hard-fought 1-0 victory over Pittsburgh Riverhounds & Carmel Goalkeeper Eric Dick last week. Defender Ben Ofeimu has been selected to the USL Championship Team of the Week for Week 15 after leading his team to its second consecutive clean sheet in a 1-0 win vs. Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC on Saturday. The Boys in Blue have had nine different players named to the Team of the Week in 2025! It is the sixth time that the 24-year-old Ofeimu has earned this recognition since he was acquired by Indy Eleven on April 11, 2024, and his third first-team selection.Indy Eleven hosts Las Vegas Lights FC on Saturday at 7 pm ET on WISH-TV and CBS Sports Golazo Network.

TV GAME SCHEDULE

GC=Gold Cup, WCC = World Club Cup in US

Fri, June 20
9 pm TBS Bayern Munich vs Boca Juniors WCC
10 pm FS1 Guatemala vs Panama GC

Sat, June 21

7 pm TV8, Golazo Indy 11 vs Las Vegas Lights FC
7 pm FS1 Curacao vs Canada GC
9 pm TBS River Plate vs Monterrey WC
10 pm FS1 Honduras vs El Salvador GC

Sun, June 22

12 noon Danz Juventus vs Wydad Casablanca WCC
3 pm univision Real Madrid vs Pachuca WCC
7 pm Fox       US Men vs Haiti Gold Cup
7 pm FS1 Saudi Arabia vs T&T GC
9 pm TNT Man City vs Al Ain WCC
10 pm FS1 Mexico vs Costa Rica GC

Mon, June 23
3 pm ?? Athletico Madrid vs Botafogo WCC
3 pm ?? PSG vs Seattle Sounders WCC
9 pm TBS Inter Miami (Messi) vs Palmeiras
9 pm Porto vs Al Ahly

Tues, June 24
3 pm Univision Bayern Munich vs Benfica
3 pm ?? Boca Juniors vs Aukland City
7 pm FS2 Guadaloupe vs Guatemala
7 pm FS1 Panama vs Jamaica GC
10 PM danz Chelsea vs ES Tunis
10 PM LAFC vs Flamengo
10 pm FS1 Canada vs El Salvador GC
10 pm FS2 Honduras vs Curacao GC

Wed, June 25

3 pm Danz Dortmund bs Ulsan
3 pm Fluminese vs Sundowns

Thur, June 26

3 pm Uni/TNT Juventus vs Man City
9 pm Pachuca vs Al Hitlal
9 pm TNT Salzburg vs Real Madrid
8 pm TBS, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland

Fri, June 28th

12 noon ?? Club WC QF 1A vs 2 B
4 pm :?? Club WC QF 1C vs 2D
7:15 pm FS1 Gold Cup QF
10 pm FS1 Gold Cup QF

Sun, June 29th

TNT, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland in Cincy

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USA

The USMNT is a mess. That’s the price of the U.S. becoming a ‘soccer country’
Concacaf Gold Cup: How every team can qualify for quarterfinals
Poch hails ‘humble’ Richards, expects decisive play
Richards saves the day for the USMNT on a night when the front line couldn’t
USMNT squeak past Saudi Arabia to book Gold Cup knockout round spot: What we learned
USMNT beats Saudi Arabia to clinch Gold Cup knockouts spot
Poch: USMNT not playing to get revenge on critics
Chris Richards’ goal sends USMNT through to Gold Cup knockout stage
2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup: Scouting Haiti
Is getting out of the Group Stage Enough for Poch?  Stadium Rant

No Winners in the Pulisic Drama
More Poch Shots at Pulisic  
USA vs. Trinidad & Tobago, 2025 Gold Cup: Man of the Match
Should these USMNT stars stay or leave their current clubs? | The Cooligans
Is the panic meter rising for USMNT ahead of World Cup? | The Cooligans
“It’s now or never”: How Malik Tillman’s winding USMNT road took him from Bavaria to America
Transfer talk  – US players – Pepi to Fulham, Musah, Downs?
‘Secret love for soccer’ put Freeman on U.S. path

USMNT outclassed by Switzerland in final Gold Cup tuneup: Did we learn anything?


US Women

Lavelle, Bethune, 4 newcomers in USWNT roster
European-based stars get summer rest as Emma Hayes calls in summer USWNT roster
Hayes giving overworked U.S. stars summer break


Club World Cup

🌎 Club World Cup: How teams can reach last 16
Club World Cup: Is European soccer’s superiority being exposed as a myth?

Is the Club World Cup important? Yes, just ask the South American teams

Bayern use late goal to top Boca, advance at CWC
LAFC out of Club World Cup after late penalty miss
Chelsea’s Jackson sorry for red: ‘I let you down’
Flamengo stun Chelsea in another big Club World Cup upset

Messi doesn’t play for Inter Miami as much as he could. Here’s why (and how Club World Cup fits in)
Club World Cup updates, odds: Real Madrid draw shows scale of Alonso’s task

MLS & USL

The making of Diego Luna, as seen through the eyes of his coaches
LAFC look ahead after “disappointing” Club World Cup elimination
USMNT aim to “change the narrative” with Gold Cup run

Goalkeeping


Real Madrid prepared to finalise veteran superstar’s contract in July – 

Monaco target André Onana but goalkeeper is keen to stay at Manchester United

Gk repalces Turner at palace

Reffing

Goalkeeper 8 Second Rule – FIFA Rule Change
FIFA Rule Change – PK GK Jump

Our Indiana Refs before they left for The Midwest Regionals in St Louis last weekend. Well done follks!

Referees at this month’s FIFA Club World Cup will wear ‘body cams’ with the footage used in broadcasts of the game – but only if the images are of non-controversial incidents, FIFA refereeing officials said on Wednesday. The match referees in the tournament will wear a small camera protruding from their earpiece which will be able to generate video from the referee’s point of view. But while broadcasters will be able to offer unique angles on goals and saves – as well as close-up live video and sound from the pre-match coin toss – viewers won’t get to see penalty decisions or other disputable moments from the new camera angle.

“The objective is to offer the TV viewers a new experience,” said Pierluigi Collina, the Chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee. Collina said that IFAB, which sets the Laws of the Game, had allowed a trial of the technology and suggested that footage of controversies might be part of a later phase in the future. “Let’s do things step by step. At the moment… this is a trial. We need to do something new and the simpler the better. So we fixed some rules within a protocol. We will offer these images in the future? Maybe when we learn to run, maybe not, maybe we will do,” he said. The live images will be broadcast via a private 5G network from the ref to the match production team, said FIFA Director of Innovation, Johannes Holzmuller, who said the live aspect would only be available in the six NFL stadiums being used for the tournament. What Club World Cup fans will be able to see are the VAR reviews, as seen by referees on the pitchside monitor, which will be broadcast on giant screens in the stadium. That video will then be followed by the referee announcing the final decision over the public address system and the television broadcast.

The tournament will also see the use of ‘enhanced semi-automatic offside’ technology which will use 16 cameras linked to AI technology and algorithms which will send an audio message to the assistant referee when an offside player touches the ball. The system will likely see the flag raised earlier for offside and reduce cases of play continuing after a clear offside until a later VAR review. The tournament will also be an early introduction of the new law that goalkeepers have eight seconds to release the ball after picking it up – or be punished with a corner. It replaces the previous law that keepers had six seconds to release the ball or give up an indirect free kick. The goalkeepers will be shown a five second warning by the referee who will count down showing the fingers of one hand.

USMN-B-T 1-0 Saudi Arabia. Remember People! It’s a Results Bizness 🦅Before an agonizingly empty stadium, our U.S. boys did just enough to overcome a weak Saudi Arabian squad who have been here for about five minutes but already seem to be the epitome of CONCACAF. The game itself felt like a chore to watch. The U.S. had 72% possession in the first half but conjured zero shots on goal against a physical opponent. The football was sparkless, tepid and lacking in ambition and ideas. To progress from the group will be a relief for Mauricio Pochettino but it is a bare minimum for a program who has won its first two games in this tournament 15 out of 18 times.Chris Richards Is a Great American 🙌The Crystal Palace giant out of Birmingham, Ala. was a man amongst boys in this game. That a pair of his blocks were two of the best three highlights on the night tells you all you need to know about the quality of the game. The other, of course, was his goal. A moment of stand alone quality, from the wicked Sebastian Berhalter set piece to the finish, first-time off a difficult bounce, which Clint called an elite striker’s technique. I am so happy for Chris. He is a lovely, thoughtful, sensitive human being who has had to grind his way out of Alabama, and summon a true tenacity to establish himself in the Premier League. He has a massive opportunity in this moment to become one of the true faces of the team. Watching him seize it is really edifying. Give that man all the commercial deals.Who Will Step Up, Fight, and Seize Their Chance to Make Themselves Undeniable? 🥊How was this performance so plodding? Pochettino has made it utterly explicit he wants players who will fight for him. So many of these boys have been gifted an unexpected opportunity they could never have dreamed of: To make themselves unignorable for that World Cup squad on home turf. Yet, the performance was flatter than the Texas Panhandle. The football was so deferential. No one seized their chance to grab a drowsy game by the throat and enforce their will upon it. Working out why that is will be the key for Pochettino. Malik Tillman has the skills and the club form to do that. Patrick Agyemang has the hype and the plaudits but was unable to summon the touch or the balance. All of these players have sacrificed so much to make it to this stage. One transcendent moment could change their lives. If only the football reflected that…I Do Love Me Some Diego Luna 🌔👦The one player who is running off the ball and trying to create a spark with his flicks and tricks. I ran into Diego in Austin and told him just how much we are hearing from so many of you about his fight, hustle, and mustache-tinged singular swagger. I asked him what goes through his mind when he gets on the ball, and he told me he tries to “be happy” and summon “the joy he felt playing as a kid.” I said that to Clint on last night’s show, and he said that when he was young his brother used to tell him, he “had to be serious about having fun.” A phrase I love and will think of whenever Diego is in possession.  Even Spinal Tap Drummers Think Our No 9 Position Is Doomed 🫠Haji Wright’s injury is a real concern for our boys. With Agyemang crying out for competition, Haji did not dress, left out of the squad with an Achilles issue. Kyle Bonn reported, “After a big sigh, Mauricio Pochettino on Haji Wright‘s injury: “We will communicate something on his injury in the next few days.”” It does not sound good. His absence will be painful. Twenty-year-old German-American Damion Downs, this could be your time…  Matt Freese Has Two Clean Sheets By Making Just One More Save Than You 🧤The goalkeeper battle between two Matts is psychologically intriguing. Matt Turner was the No 1 and has battled his way to a Premier League crevice, albeit with precious little playing time. For a player shorn of match practice, it must be an agony to have had a watching brief. NYCFC’s Harvard grad Matt Freese has been wicked smart in goal — two clean sheets off ONE SAVE TOTAL IN THOSE TWO GAMES. Guzan has to be watching and thinking that if he started smoking ciggies, he could maybe be the American version of Wojciech Szczęsny and make an unexpected return from exile. It Is Painful to See These Stadia so Empty for a United States Game On Home Turf a Year Out from the World Cup 😢Watching the United States walk out to gapingly empty terraces is an agony for all those who love the game in this nation. You have all made it clear as to the reasons—the unfathomable cost of tickets, the political climate, the absence of the big-named players, and the mediocre run of form. Make no mistake, there is an inertia around this program and even its most diehard fans at the worst possible time. The comment which hurts the most to read is: “If the players don’t care, then why should we?”  The media drumbeat going into this game was crickets. The only news stories gaining traction were those surrounding Tim Weah and Weston McKennie’s surreal White House visit. But the empty stadium spoke its own message so loudly and agonizingly. Something profound has broken between this team and its core fanbase and it cries out for a sincere and speedy effort to rebuild that trust and connection again. Anyone who followed them in the 2010 and 2014 cycles knows just how singular and beautiful that connection can be. We head to 80,000-capacity AT&T Stadium on Sunday night to play Haiti. (Chuckles “I’m in danger.”)🎟️ If you’re in the Dallas area and considering going to the game, use this link to get 10% off tickets to USA vs. Haiti🇺🇸 🇭🇹The Knockout Rounds Will Be Moment Of Truth Time 📊We may play Costa Rica or Mexico. To better days ahead for all of us. We need to make noise. We need to be able to dream. Our gents will next play against the NBA Finals Game 7. We cannot catch a break…  
  The Club World Cup Is Going to Be Some Turbulent Journey 🏆What a surreal sight this tournament has been. Hastily thrown together from an organization perspective and even more shoddily marketed. Having Gianni Infantino be the face of his own creation was an almost vanity marketing campaign, with iShowSpeed bolted on for clout. The oft-shockingly empty stadia have been a startling humiliation. The action has been a slow boil. With shattered players battling dry pitches and blazing conditions in unbearable heatBarney Ronay called it, “almost-football.” Action has been a slow boil. The only heat has mostly been of the brain-twisting, weather-induced kind. I will talk more about this surreal reality with Rory Smith on Monday in a Do It Live! after Seattle Sounders play PSG (kick-off @ 3 p.m. ET), but for now, congratulations to Inter Miami. They should not be in this tournament, as they were only jammed in for Messi marketing purposes, but they seized their chance, clipping a physically shattered Porto off this sublime Messi free-kick to become the first MLS team to beat a European opponent in competitive play. No small achievement.

Concacaf Gold Cup: How every team can qualify for quarterfinals

  • Dale JohnsonJun 21, 2025, 06:13 AM ET

The group stage at the Concacaf Gold Cup is well underway, and we’ll soon start to find out the first qualifiers for the quarterfinals.

Who can qualify on matchday 2, who has work to do, and what are the results to look out for?

Here’s how it’s all shaping up.

Qualified for quarterfinals (3/8): Mexico, Costa Rica, United States


Tiebreakers

1. Group points
2. Group goal difference
3. Group goals scored
4. Head-to-head in the game(s) between the teams in question
5. Goal difference in the game(s) between the teams in question
6. Goals scored in the game(s) between the teams in question
7. Disciplinary points (yellow and red cards)
8. Drawing of lots


*Kick off times show in ET (and in local time)

GROUP A

Group A

GPWDLGDPTS
1 – Mexico (Q)2200+36
2 – Costa Rica (Q)2200+26
3 – Dominican Republic2002-20
4 – Suriname2002-30
Top two countries qualify for quarterfinals

Saturday, June 14, 2025
Mexico 3-2 Dominican Republic

Sunday, June 15, 2025
Costa Rica 4-3 Suriname

Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Costa Rica 2-1 Dominican Republic
Suriname 0-2 Mexico

Sunday, June 22, 2025
Dominican Republic vs. Suriname, 10 p.m. (9 p.m.) – AT&T Stadium
Mexico vs. Costa Rica, 10 p.m. (7 p.m.) – Allegiant Stadium

The group was all wrapped up on Wednesday with Mexico and Costa Rica having both won their two fixtures.

It means that all that’s left to be decided when the two meet on Sunday is who wins the group.

Mexico have the better goal difference so will finish in first place with a win or a draw.

Costa Rica need a victory to climb into top spot.


GROUP B

Group B

GPWDLGDPTS
1 – Canada1100+63
2 – El Salvador101001
3 – Curaçao101001
2 – Honduras1001-60
Top two countries qualify for quarterfinals

Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Curaçao 0-0 El Salvador
Canada 6-0 Honduras

Saturday, June 21, 2025
Curaçao vs. Canada, 7 p.m. (6 p.m.) – Shell Energy Stadium
Honduras vs. El Salvador, 10 p.m. (9 p.m.) – Shell Energy Stadium

Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Guadeloupe vs. Guatemala, 7 p.m. (6 p.m.) – Shell Energy Stadium
Panama vs. Jamaica, 7 p.m. (6 p.m.) – Q2 Stadium

Canada are in control of the group, as the only nation to pick up three points from the opening round, and they will be through to the quarterfinals with a win over Curaçao.

No other team can advance on matchday 2.


GROUP C

Group C

GPWDLGDPTS
1 – Panama2200+46
2 – Guatemala210103
3 – Jamaica210103
4 – Guadeloupe2002-40
Top two countries qualify for quarterfinals

Monday, June 16, 2025
Panama 5-2 Guadeloupe
Jamaica 0-1 Guatemala

Friday, June 20, 2025
Jamaica 2-1 Guadeloupe
Guatemala 0-1 Panama

Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Guadeloupe vs. Guatemala, 7 p.m. (6 p.m.) – Shell Energy Stadium
Panama vs. Jamaica, 7 p.m. (6 p.m.) – Q2 Stadium

PANAMA

Win or draw: Qualify as group winners

Lose: Will definitely still qualify if Guatemala draw or lose.

If Guatemala win, three teams will have six points and it will go down to group goal difference. Panama (+4) look quite safe, however, as they would have to lose by 3 or more goals to go out behind Jamaica (0) and Guatemala (0).

JAMAICA

Win: Qualify if Guatemala draw or lose. If Guatemala win, three teams will have six points and it will go down to group goal difference. If Guatemala do win, Jamaica would need a victory by three or more goals to guarantee qualification — though they would also be through by winning by a greater margin than Guatemala.

Draw: Qualify if Guatemala lose. If Guatemala draw, places will first be decided on group goals scored, which Jamaica lead by one goal.

Lose: Can only qualify if Guatemala also lose, and it will again come down to goal difference, this time between Jamaica (0), Guatemala (0) and Guadeloupe (-4). Effectively, the team that loses by the lowest margin between Jamaica and Guatemala would be second (see Guadeloupe section).

If in each scenario goal difference finishes level between Jamaica and Guatemala (e.g. scorelines of 0-0 and 1-1 producing match goal difference of 2-2) then Guatemala are second on head to head.

GUATEMALA

Win: Qualify in second if Jamaica draw or lose. If Jamaica win, three teams will have six points and it will go down to group goal difference. As above, Guatemala would likely need to win by a bigger margin than Jamaica, though goal difference could still finish level.

Draw: Qualify if Jamaica lose. If Jamaica draw, places will first be decided on group goals scored, which Jamaica lead by one goal.

Lose: Can only qualify if Jamaica also lose, and it will again come down to goal difference, as above.

GUADELOUPE

Must beat Guatemala by at least two goals and hope Jamaica lose. If Jamaica lose by one goal, they finish second; if Jamaica lose by two or more goals, Guatemala will likely finish second having scored more goals.

If Guadeloupe win by three or more goals and Jamaica lose, Guadeloupe are sure to be second.


GROUP D

Group D

GPWDLGDPTS
1 – United States2200+66
2 – Saudi Arabia210103
3 – Haiti2011-11
4 – Trinidad and Tobago2011-51
Top two countries qualify for quarterfinals

Sunday, June 15, 2025
United States 5-0 Trinidad and Tobago
Haiti 0-1 Saudi Arabia

Thursday, June 19, 2025
Trinidad and Tobago 1-1 Haiti
Saudi Arabia 0-1 United States

Sunday, June 22, 2025
Saudi Arabia vs. Trinidad and Tobago, 7 p.m. (4 p.m.) – Allegiant Stadium, Las Vegas, NV
United States vs. Haiti, 7 p.m. (4 p.m.) – AT&T Stadium

UNITED STATES

Have qualified and will top the group with a win or draw against Haiti.

If the U.S. lose, Saudi Arabia would need to win with a goal-difference swing of seven goals to steal first place.

SAUDI ARABIA

Win: Qualify, almost certainly in second place

Draw: Qualify, as long as Haiti do not win (see Haiti section)

Lose: Cannot qualify

HAITI

Win: They have a couple of routes. Haiti qualify as long as Saudi Arabia do not lose to Trinidad and Tobago by five or more goals (which puts Trinidad and Tobago through). If Saudi Arabia draw, it comes down to goal difference and goals scored, and Haiti are through if they win by two or more goals. If Haiti win by one goal and goal difference is identical (e.g. 1-0, 1-1) then Saudi Arabia are second on head to head.

Cannot qualify with a draw or loss.

TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO

Win: Have to get the victory over Saudi Arabia, and they will be through if Haiti draw or lose. If Haiti win, Trinidad and Tobago must win by five or more goals to finish second on goal difference.

Cannot qualify with a draw or loss.


Club World Cup: Is European soccer’s superiority being exposed as a myth?

Henry BushnellSenior reporter

June 21, 2025 at 12:02 AM EDT·

7 min read7

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — European soccer’s superiority had, throughout the 21st century, become self-evident; inescapable and irreversible; extreme and presumed. It was apparent in the salaries and prices of players, in the exodus of talent from the Americas and Africa, in the prestige of the UEFA Champions League and, twice per year, on the field. At the former Club World Cup, the seven-team version played each winter, since 2007, European teams played 34 games. They lost once.

So they strolled into this expanded version, the 2025 Club World Cup, as heavy favorites. They negotiated outsize appearance fees. Their supporters assumed they’d waltz to the latter stages, untouched.

Instead, halfway through the group stage, they’ve been humbled.

In six games so far against South American opposition, they’ve lost two, drawn three, won one (finally, on Friday, thanks to Bayern Munich).

They have also dropped seven points to the Saudi Pro League, MLS and Liga MX.

Their early stumbles have delighted fans from other continents. They’ve surprised Western pundits. And they’ve ignited provocative debate around a simple question: Is the supposed supremacy of European clubs a myth?

‘They are good teams too’

On one side, there are the raw results and the performances here over the past week. Flamengo didn’t just beat Chelsea 3-1 on Friday in Philadelphia; at times, it pummeled the free-spending English Premier League giants. And Fluminense — Brazil’s 13th best team last year — didn’t just hold Borussia Dortmund to a 0-0 draw; it outplayed what was, a month ago, the hottest team in Germany.

In almost every single match between South American and European foes, there was evidence that the gap is slimmer than most Europeans (and non-Hispanic Americans) realize. Botafogo’s upset of PSG was a so-called “smash-and-grab,” but even smash-and-grabs require a certain level of physical, technical and tactical quality. Boca Juniors, similarly, bellied up to Bayern Munich on Friday and snatched a second-half equalizer, before conceding late. It was a “really tough game,” Bayern’s Harry Kane said postgame.

Flamengo's Bruno Henrique celebrates after scoring during the Club World Cup Group D soccer match between Flamengo and Chelsea in Philadelphia, Friday, June 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton)
Flamengo players celebrate during their statement win over Chelsea at the 2025 Club World Cup in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

There was also Monterrey 1, Inter Milan 1; and Al Hilal 1, Real Madrid 1, “a very balanced match,” as Al Hilal fullback João Cancelo said afterward.

On paper, per Opta, these were games between the 9th best team in the world and the 81st; between No. 15 and No. 238; No. 4 and 132; No. 7 and 131; No. 6 and 130; No. 8 and 77. On the field, though, they looked very different, and begged the question: Is Opta wrong?Are the assumptions of European preeminence wrong?Were we all wrong?

For four-and-a-half decades, after all, from 1960 until 2004, when the champions of South America and Europe met in the now-defunct Intercontinental Cup, the South Americans won 22; the Europeans won 21. Europe’s subsequent commercialization of the sport has seemingly shifted the balance of power, or at least wealth, but … perhaps the on-field gap never really widened?At this new-look Club World Cup, which everyone agrees is a better indicator than the old one, “the South American teams have caused big problems for some of the European teams,” Kane said, and perhaps the explanation is simple. As Kane’s teammate, Konrad Laimer, said: “Because they are good teams, too. Football is football.”

The European excuses

On the other side of the debate, however, there are excuses — or at least other explanations, some legitimate.There is the timing of this tournament, which falls at the end of 10-month European seasons, but mid-campaign for clubs from Brazil, Argentina and MLS. Whereas South American teams built up to the Club World Cup, weary European bodies and minds were ready to wind down. Most got a couple weeks off before reconvening with teammates 7-10 days before their Club World Cup openers, or after an international window. “There are many tournaments that they’ve had to play, and perhaps they’ll arrive with some fatigue,” Inter Miami forward Luis Suarez predicted before the competition began. “I think there will be some surprise results.”There is also the suffocating U.S. summer heat, which has seemed to affect European teams more than others.“We are used to the heat,” Al Hilal’s Brazilian winger Malcom said after his team hung with Real Madrid on a humid 90-degree afternoon in suburban Miami. Atlético Madrid’s Spanish midfielder Marcos Llorente, on the other hand, called an 88-degree afternoon in Southern California “impossible.”

There is travel to which the Europeans aren’t accustomed. There are distant time zones, and games that kick off after all their friends and family back home are asleep. There are all sorts of confounding variables that preclude the Club World Cup from being an accurate point of comparison.And most of all, there is the unavoidable sense, or narrative, that the European teams just don’t really care.Many players do, to be clear. But do they care, with every last ounce of their being, like some of their South American counterparts do?There has undoubtedly been an intensity gap that has neutralized the quality gap, and helped some South American sides show well. To them, these games are among the most significant in recent club history. To the Europeans, the Champions League and, in some cases, their domestic leagues were and are more prestigious.Public attitudes toward the Club World Cup have also colored this excuse. While European fans have stayed home, and in some cases slept through games, supporters of South American and North African clubs have filled stadiums with balloons, flags, banners and unceasing noise.

“We’ve all been a part of big moments; this is still something totally different,” Bayern head coach Vincent Kompany said Friday after experiencing the locura of Boca fans.

Kane confirmed: “It felt like an away game out there.”

That, too, is an equalizing factor.

The conclusion

None of that entirely explains the upsets. But there is nuance in the conclusion that the gap between Europe and the rest of the world is somewhat narrower than many thought — because there are also gaps within Europe and within that other broad category.There is a massive gulf, for example, between Bayern Munich, which ultimately outclassed Boca here on Friday night; and Porto, which finished third in the Portuguese Primeira Liga, closer to fourth-place Braga than to the top two.There is also a sizable gulf between Palmeiras or Flamengo, the two most powerful teams in South America’s richest league, and most of the other non-European challengers at this Club World Cup.

What we probably overestimated was the distance between the Portos and the Inter Miamis; between the Dortmunds and the Fluminenses; between the Benficas and Bocas; between the Chelseas and the Flamengos. Most of the teams Porto and Benfica play, weekend after weekend, are probably worse than the best of MLS — and certainly worse than Boca, River Plate and much of the Brasileirão. Some of the Brasileirão, and certainly the top two, meanwhile, could compete with the top halves of the top flights in Germany, Italy, Spain and France. They have enough money, enough intelligence, enough homegrown talent.There is still, though, a distance to the tippy-top.“There is an elite in football that is superior,” Flamengo coach Filipe Luis, who played for Atlético Madrid and Chelsea, admitted Friday. “Brazilian clubs are competitive at the second level of European football. Flamengo will not devalue themselves against any opponent. But the squads of the elite are better. That’s a fact.”What we underestimated, though, was how streetwise grit and pure desire and all the aforementioned variables could close the gap between those squads for 90 minutes. We underestimated how much a $100 million squad could trouble a $1 billion squad when it plays as an impassioned unit that’s “really emotional in some situations,” as Laimer said of Boca.South American teams have bumped and bruised and disrupted the sometimes-coddled Europeans here in Miami and Los Angeles, in New Jersey and Philly. They haven’t proven that they are better, but that they’re good enough to be better on a given day.

USMNT grinds way by Saudi Arabia into Gold Cup knockout stage

Chris Richards scores for the USMNT

By Paul Tenorio

125

June 19, 2025


AUSTIN, Texas — Center back Chris Richards made two sliding plays on either side of halftime — the first stopped a shot on a dangerous transition to keep the game scoreless and the second finished off an inch-perfect free kick – to lift the U.S. to a 1-0 win over Saudi Arabia on Thursday night in the Concacaf Gold Cup.

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The result sent the U.S. through to the tournament quarterfinals, though the group finale vs. Haiti on Sunday will determine if the Americans go through in first or second place in the group.

Richards’ finish saved the U.S. in what was otherwise a listless appearance in front of a barren home crowd at Austin FC’s Q2 Stadium. The lackluster environment is only the latest instance of what seems to be a real apathy around a team that will host the World Cup in less than a year. The U.S. played in front of empty crowds at the Concacaf Nations League in Los Angeles in March. The group opener on Sunday in San Jose was not a sellout either.

It is a lack of excitement caused as much by high ticket prices as the general performance of the team.

On the field, Thursday’s win gave the U.S. back-to-back victories for the first time since January camp. Results otherwise have left plenty to be desired. The American team has failed to excited fans or generate much enthusiasm or momentum.

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This Gold Cup is a chance to reverse that. But Mauricio Pochettino’s side needed to get results to start to build belief that it was headed in the right direction. The one-goal win over the Saudi did provide the result, if not necessarily the style points.

The U.S. tilted play through the left side and Max Arfsten in the first half, but the Columbus Crew wingback struggled to do much with his opportunities. The U.S. lost possession 60 times in the first half, per TruMedia, and Arfsten was responsible for 15 of those changeovers.

Saudi Arabia, a guest nation in Concacaf’s championship, had the best chances of the first stanza. Richards made a fantastic tackle in the 31s minute, sprinting back and making a last-ditch slide tackle to block Abdulrahman Al-Obood’s effort and keep the game scoreless.

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The U.S. worked possession looking for ways to break Saudi down, but created very little of note through the first hour of the game. Then right back Alex Freeman earned a free kick when he was fouled cutting centrally with the ball in the 62nd minute.

Sebastian Berhalter, the son of former U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter, who once spent a season on loan with Austin FC, stood over the free kick and served a low curling ball into the box, where Richards slid with his leg outstretched to direct the ball home.

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It was an important moment from the Crystal Palace veteran, who has been charged with being one of the leaders on this younger, inexperienced U.S. team.

The U.S. will close out group play on Sunday against Haiti at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, with that result, coupled with Mexico and Costa Rica’s Group A finale, determining the quarterfinal matchups. A draw will be sufficient for the U.S. to top the group. The U.S. hasn’t lost to Haiti in their last nine meetings, a streak that dates back to 1973.

(Top photo: Omar Vega/Getty Images)

Winning fosters USMNT belief at a time when fans need a team they can trust

Jun 19, 2025; Austin, Texas, USA; United States of America defender Chris Richards (3) celebrates after scoring a goal against Saudi Arabia in the second half during a group stage match of the 2025 Gold Cup at Q2 Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

By Paul Tenorio

74

June 20, 2025


AUSTIN, Texas — The U.S. men’s national team is just a few weeks removed from the bitterness of two friendly defeats, the second of which was particularly ugly. Not nearly enough time has passed to have forgotten completely the feeling those results wrought on the group.

That made it easier for Mauricio Pochettino to deliver his postgame message after the U.S. gutted out a not-so-perfect 1-0 win over Saudi Arabia on Thursday night to secure a spot in the Concacaf Gold Cup quarterfinals.

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“Enjoy that feeling,” Pochettino told the group. “Understand what that feeling is like and what you just had to do, all that emotion you put out on the field, because it doesn’t come easy. So you know what you have to do now. You need to continue to do and replicate that.”

It is one thing to believe that you have a process and that the process is working. It is harder to transmit that belief when the results are not going your way. That’s why the one-goal victory over Saudi Arabia was so important, even if it wasn’t pretty. The U.S. has now won back-to-back games. The confidence and belief in the group grows a bit more as a result. And Pochettino’s message resonates more, too.

“One of the important things to survive in this business … is to see things that maybe sometimes people cannot see,” Pochettino said. “And I think our point is not the knowledge about the game, is not about in the way that we want to approach the game, if we use different systems or not. It is to anticipate situations that people sometimes, like in all the business [don’t have] the possibility to see. That’s important. When everyone wants to destroy everything, sometimes you say, ‘No, we are [OK.]’ Because it’s difficult to defend when you don’t win. It’s difficult to say, ‘No, but we are in a good way.’ …

“I think [those bad results are part of] a process that is going to provide us the possibility to be more solid and bring the victories that we want.”

USMNT manager Mauricio PochettinoMauricio Pochettino has the USMNT into the Gold Cup knockout stage (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

Pochettino clearly came into this summer with ideas he wanted to transmit through his decisions — on whom to bring, on what to say publicly, on how the team sets up and who is starting. The results didn’t happen right away. Pochettino said he was calm. He told the group to keep trusting.

So Gold Cup wins over Trinidad and Tobago and Saudi Arabia matter. Not because of the quality of the opponent or even the level of the team. But because results are what help foster buy-in.

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“We lost two games, and then we lost another two games after. I was really, really relaxed. And you can ask the players after Switzerland, [I was] saying, ‘Hey, look guys, relax. Now it’s time to rest. Is to analyze the situation.’ And sometimes you need to be honest. And I think it was my mistake or our mistake, and [so I said], ‘Hey, calm, we are going to prepare, and for sure, we are going to arrive in a very good condition.’ And maybe these few words … when you tell [players] something and that [happens], then that is going to be a very good group, very united and [they are going to] trust each other and go and fight. Because we know that we are all [in it] together.”

Pochettino said his staff can sense it coming together. They can “smell it,” he said.

They have to hope that the positivity continues to permeate, because it was clear in Austin that the apathy around this program is very real. The results haven’t been good, and the vibes have been worse. Attendance at Q2 Stadium was just 11,727. That follows just 12,610 in San Jose, Calif., on Sunday against T&T. The optics probably won’t be any better vs. Haiti this Sunday at the cavernous AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

USMNT fans at the Gold CupUSMNT fans were conspicuously absent for Thursday’s Gold Cup match vs. Saudi Arabia (Photo by Noah Goldberg/Getty Images)

Fans are opting out of paying high ticket prices to watch a team that hasn’t been performing, which should be a glaring signal for U.S. Soccer. There is less than a year until the 2026 World Cup begins. The priority needs to be on getting full stadiums and generating momentum around the team. It puts enormous pressure on U.S. Soccer to set its ticket prices appropriately for its slate of friendlies in September, October, November, March and next June.

Price points haven’t been the only issue, though. The U.S. men need to get people to start believing that they’re worth coming out to watch.

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There wasn’t a ton on Thursday that fulfilled that narrative. The Americans had the ball for most of the game, generating 67 percent possession and 469 passes. And yet they mustered just five shots and 0.70 expected goals.

It was an imperfect performance. But Pochettino is more worried about finding the moments he can pull from the game that underline his message.

It was Chris Richards sprinting back and sliding to block a shot on a clear Saudi transition attack that could have led to a goal. It was Sebastian Berhalter mixing it up with the Saudi team. Most importantly, it was the final scoreline.

USMNT's Matt Freese and Chris RichardsUSMNT GK Matt Freese embraces Chris Richards after the latter’s hustle and tackle prevented a great Saudi Arabia chance (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

The simplest way to relay what Pochettino said is this: In this business, it’s the results that matter. That’s it. And that’s what the U.S. has been lacking over the last 18 months. They need to start winning games. The style points are just a bonus.

This U.S. group has holes. Of course it does. We know about the guys missing from this tournament. We know about the weaknesses that exist even when many of those players are present. That was on display against Panama in the Nations League in March.

With time ticking down toward the summer of 2026, it’s about finding the right mentality and the right combinations and the right belief to start winning again.

Pochettino was asked about that goal – about how to coach it into a team.

“It’s the hardest part of coaching, it is difficult because it takes time, because it’s a process,” Pochettino said. “Coaching the offensive, defensive, tactical, and game aspects is something any coach or every coach has sufficient knowledge to do. After that, it’s the values you transmit as a coaching staff. Not just me, but my entire coaching staff. That’s what we want to create, that environment or that relationship that has to exist. The habits. The habits we think should exist in a team that wants to compete for big things, which have to be fundamental. … Culture is created through the habits you have. Culture isn’t created by talking, culture isn’t created by giving theoretical lessons, it’s created with decisions, with actions. We often talk now with the players, about not talking on the field, but rather speaking with actions, because we can all communicate well, and all of us in a football environment have that ability to communicate. …

“It can be very nice to say things, but then you have to translate it onto the field. … That’s what truly dictates what we are. And that requires, as I was saying before, actions. Creating good habits, the habits that we think are fundamental to being competitive in any team. Because otherwise we would be a group of players who don’t come together. We wouldn’t be a team. We would be a group of players who play together, and nothing more. And to achieve a team, you need a foundation of values that we all agree to respect and follow.”

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Pochettino was then asked whether his team was there yet.

“We are currently under construction,” he said.

The 1-0 win over Saudi Arabia showed that. It was far from perfect. But it was a win. For a group that’s trying to become a team and craft its values, finding a way to get the three points was important.

The hope is that it now builds a little bit more. For the players in the locker room, for the players watching at home and for the fans who want to know whether they can start to believe again that this group of players can be the team they want it to be.

It will take a lot more — and there will most definitely be more setbacks. For now, this U.S. group will have to settle for a slight spark of belief that this can get back on track.

“It’s just that,” midfielder Tyler Adams said. “It’s belief.”

6/6/25 USMNT plays Sat, Tues on TNT, Euro NL Spain vs Portugal Sun 3 pm Fox, USWNT Rules, Carmel FC Tryouts & Champs

US Men Bring B Team Roster to Games vs Turkey on Sat 3:30 & Tues 8 pm vs Switzerland TNT

Sad to see that the US Men in their last competition before the World Cup at home next Summer – are once again bringing a B Team to the Gold Cup. Yes starters Matt Turner, Chris Richards (D) & Tyler Adams will be on hand but other than EVERYONE else is playing for the 3 or 4 spots left on what should be our World Cup team next summer. Sorry but I am still not convinced Poch is the guy to get us to the Final 4 or even Final 8 in the World Cup. It will be funny when Canada with Marsh & Asst Coach Mike Bradley finish higher/beat our pants off this summer.

USMNT GOLD CUP DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (club/country; caps/goals):

GOALKEEPERS (4): Chris Brady (Chicago Fire; 0/0), Matt Freese (New York City FC; 0/0), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace/ENG; 51/0)
DEFENDERS (9): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 3/0), Alex Freeman (Orlando City; 0/0), Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union; 0/0), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/FRA; 19/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 68/1), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 24/1), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 32/3), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel/GER; 4/0), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC; 43/3)
MIDFIELDERS (9): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 47/8); Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 44/2), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 0/0), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis/ESP; 18/0), Luca de la Torre (San Diego FC; 24/1), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; 4/0), Jack McGlynn (Houston Dynamo; 4/1), Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union; 0/0); Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 17/0)
FORWARDS (5): Paxten Aaronson (FC Utrecht/NED; 1/0), Patrick Agyemang (Charlotte FC; 4/3), Damion Downs (FC Köln/GER; 0/0), Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 4/1), Haji Wright (Coventry City/ENG; 15/4)

US Ladies – Youngsters Show They Can Win Too

Wow the US Ladies looked dynamite in their past 2 wins last week over China and Jamaica- the kids were really impressive vs Jamaica (highlights) as youngsters 21 YO Ally Sentanor (2 Goals), 17 YO midfielder Lily Yohannes, 20 YO Alyssa Thompson, & 19 YO Claire Hutton were simply fantastic. Again coach Hayes is proving there are alot of players capable of making our next World Cup team.

Euro Nations League Final – Spain vs Portugal Sun on Fox 3 pm

Wow – the Nations League Semi-Final between Spain and France was simply spectacular the 5-4 thriller in Bayern Munich was magisterial as Spanish GK Unai Simon was the difference. (Highlights).  The Finals match Portugal and the legendary Ronaldo (who scored the winner Wed vs Germany) and Spain with Ballon D’Or finalist Yamal.

Indy 11 hosts Pittsburgh Riverhounds and former Carmel High, CDC GK Eric Dick Sat, June 14
Indy 11 Summer of Soccer is a cool promo going on with tickets and a chance to win a free trip to the Indy 11 Charleston game.

Notes
Indiana Pacers Pascal Siakam from Cameron & Obi Toppin show their Soccer Skills at practice before win over OKC. Can’t wait to check out the Sports Bra when they open.  Messi was magisterial again last weekend with 3 assists & 2 goals vs Columbus.  Loved this from CBS pre Champions League – these guys are as good as the TNT crew of Shaq, Kenny & Barkley.  Vitinha (the 19 yo) was magical in the 5-0 win over Inter.  Man it was awesome to see PSG finally win a Champions League title – just 2 years removed from having Mbappe, Messi & – Manager Luis Enrique brought Paris the title – loved the tifo PSG unveiled pregame regarding his daughter. I have watched a few of the TST games with Patt McAfee on ESPNU check it out its pretty cool.  Nice to see Club World Cup ticket prices are coming down finally – $250+ to see these opening leg games was ridiculous (see below). Can’t wait to see former Carmel High & CDC GK Eric Dick – return to Indy to play the Indy 11 on Sat, June 14 for the Pittsburgh Riverhounds!

Congrats to the U17 Girls – coach Charles Switzer & Abby Donofrio


Carmel FC – 2025 Tryout and Evaluation Information 

Carmel FC’s scheduled tryouts and player evaluations for the 2025/2026 Season will be in the following dates: Birth Years: 2015 – 2007 on June 9th. To register to tryout please click on this link: https://system.gotsport.com/programs/941103K41?reg_role=player

June 9th and 10th (11U-19U) Tryouts

2015 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 7, 10:00am to 11:15am
2015 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 5, 10:00am to 11:15am”
2014 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 7, 12:00pm to 1:15pm
2014 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 5, 12:00pm to 1:15pm
2013 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 7, 2:00pm to 3:15pm
2013 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 5, 2:00pm to 3:15pm
2012 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 5A, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2012 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 7A, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2011 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 5B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2011 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 7B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2010 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 9A, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2010 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 1A, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2009 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 9B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2009 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 1B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
008 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 10A, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2008 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 2A, 5:30pm to 6:45p
2007 BOYS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 10B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm
2007 GIRLS: Shelbourne Soccer Complex, Field 2B, 5:30pm to 6:45pm

The 2011 Girls Gold went undefeated in the U14/U15 top flight @ St Francis Siege last weekend.
Congrats to the Carmel FC 2014 Boys who made the Championship Final against the top teams in the state in Presidents Cup last weekend.

Greyhound Girls Soccer Camp – Murray Stadium
Girls Jul 07 – Jul 09, 2025 at 9:00-10:30 $95 (5th-8th Grade) Register

Carmel High School Soccer Camp- Boys – Murray Stadium 6:30-8:30 pm
June 23-25 (grades 5-8th)  $125
July 21-23  $125
Questions? Please contact Coach Shane Schmidt at sschmidt@ccs.k12.in.us

GAMES ON TV SCHEDULE


Fri, June 6

2:45 pm fubo? Norway vs Italy WCC
7:30 pm Golazo Louisville City vs Utah NWSL
10 pm Prime Video San Diego vs Seattle Reign NWSL

Sat, June 7

12 noon FoxSp2 Andorra vs England WCC
1 pm CBS Gothem FC vs KC Current NWSL
3:30 pm TNT, Tele     US Men vs Turkey  
7 pm Ion Bay City vs Portland NWSL
9 pm Apple Free Colorado vs Austin MLS
10 pm Ion LA Angel City vs Chicago

Sun, June 8

9 am Fubo? Germany vs France 3rd place
2:45 pm Fox                Portugal vs Spain Nations League Finals
4 pm Golazo, Para+ Washington vs NC Courage NWSL
7 pm Apple Free Portland Timbers vs St Louis

Mon, June 9

2:45 pm FS2 Italy vs Moldova WCC

Tues, June 10

8 pm TNT, Peacock    US Men vs Switzerland
Fri, June 13
10:30 pm FS1 Portland Timbers vs San Jose MLS

June 13 – 29               GOLD CUP MEN

June 14
4:30 pm Fox St. Louis City vs LA Galaxy
7 pm TV 8 & CBS Golaso Indy 11 vs Pittsburg Riverhounds (Carmel GK Eric Dick returns)
7:30 pm Apple Free Columbus vs Vancouver
8 pm Univision Al Ahly vs Inter Miami Club World Cup
9:30 pm Apple Free Colorado vs Orlando MLS

Sun, June 15

3 pm Univision PSG Vs Athletico Madrid
6 pm Fox, Uni          US Men vs Trinidad   Gold Cup
8:15 pm FS1 Haiti vs Saudi Arabia GC
11 pm FS1 Cost Rica vs Suriname

Thur, June 19

6 pm FS1                     US Men vs KSA  Gold Cup

Sat, June 21

7 pm TV8, Golazo Indy 11 vs Las Vegas Lights FC

Sun, June 22

7 pm FS1                     US Men vs Haiti Gold Cup

Thur, June 26

TBS, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland

Sun, June 29th

TNT, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland in Cincy

US Men

What can fans expect from the Gold Cup this summer?
USMNT Gold Cup roster: Dest among missing stars, others see ‘big chance
For the USMNT, a successful summer is harder than ever to define

Dest latest USMNT absentee in Gold Cup roster
Walker Zimmerman, Paxten Aaronson, Nathan Harriel added to USMNT roster
USMNT’s Steffen (knee) set to miss Gold Cup
Injured Balogun dropped from U.S. Gold Cup squad
2025 USMNT Friendly: Scouting Türkiye Stars & Stripes
Taking a deep dive on Damion Downs as he prepares for his first USMNT call-up

US LADIES


What we learned about USWNT depth vs. China and Jamaica, from goalkeeper to forward

Emma Hayes has found her USWNT Triple Espresso alternatives
‘Momma Em’ helps LaBonta make USWNT history
Macario helps USWNT ease past China in friendly
Hayes: Starlet Yohannes has big USWNT future
Source: USWNT’s Albert leaving PSG for Lyonnes

Euro 2025 Power Rankings: England drop down; Spain top; Norway rise
Bonmatí: Why Spain can now match England, U.S.
England’s 10 days of turmoil leave Euro 2025 squad questions for Wiegman

Nations League Finals – Euro

Mbappé vs. Yamal: France and Spain dual in UEFA Nations League semifinal
Lamine Yamal adds further spice to clash with social media post
France vs. Spain guide: Schedule, how to watch and more
‘You’ve mistreated him’ – Luis de la Fuente goes to battle for Spain star

Lamine Yamal says he ‘did his talking on the pitch’ following historic performance vs France

Spain 5-4 France: a result not seen in nearly 60 years 💥

Holy Crap what a Game

WORLD

World Cup Qualifiers: Norway vs Italy – probable line-ups and where to watch on TV
Tottenham fire Postecoglou after Europa Win
Yamal makes Ballon d’Or ‘statement’ in Spain win
Brazil twice crushed Ancelotti’s World Cup dream. Now it’s one they share
Brazil held to scoreless draw in Ancelotti’s debut
Julián Álvarez fuels Argentina’s 1-0 win vs. Chile; Messi has quiet night
Julián Alvarez scores a delightful dink in Argentina’s win over Chile 🕷
World Cup 2026: Who is through and how does qualifying work?

Hendrick: “No valid argument for Mohamed Salah not win Ballon d’Or”

Happening in the US – Club World Cup

The Soccer Tournament (TST) 101: Dates, players, history
2025 Club World Cup power rankings: Where all 32 teams stand
The 2025 Club World Cup field is strong. This one would be better

Breaking down each major club’s Champions League need + LAFC clinch spot in Club World Cup!

Your complete guide to the Club World Cup stadiums 🏟️
2025 FIFA Club World Cup: Group F Preview
2025 FIFA Club World Cup: Group G Preview
2025 FIFA Club World Cup: Group A Preview Messi and friends take on a tough group.
Club World Cup poses new challenge for physical preparation

MLS

Whitecaps players, staff ill following CONCACAF Champions Cup
‘This feels amazing.’ Denis Bouanga scores in extra time to send LAFC to Club World Cup

LAFC stuns Club América to reach Club World Cup, becomes a perfect MLS representative

LAFC stun Club América to book Club World Cup ticket

LAFC book place in Chelsea’s group at Club World Cup

Sounders owner reportedly confronts players over ‘Club World Ca$h Grab’ shirts

Reffing

Ban  for life?
Yellow Card (after the play)


Goalkeeping

‘You’ve mistreated him’ – Luis de la Fuente goes to battle for Spain star
Best EPL Goals of the Season
USL Championship Save of the Week – Week 12
USL Jägermeister Cup Save of the Round – Round 2
How to Throw the Ball Properly  
GK Solo Training


The USMNT Summer of Destiny Begins 🇺🇸🙏
USMNT v. Türkiye (Saturday, 3:30 p.m. ET, TNT/HBO Max) 🇺🇸 🇹🇷
USMNT v. Switzerland (Next Tuesday, 8 p.m. ET, TNT/HBO Max) 🇺🇸🇨🇭
The World Cup is 370 days away. The United States Men’s National could not appear less ready. After the stinging humiliation of last summer’s Copa America, and the self-immolation of back-to-back Nation’s League losses to Panama and Canada, we head towards a Gold Cup, the last competitive games before the World Cup, with almost all our biggest names missing—some by their own choice. In their place, a squad filled with understudies that best resembles an NFL roster stuffed with replacements during the 1987 strike season. Everyone stay calm. 
Sergiño Dest is the latest USMNT star to pull out of the squad as he continues to return from a torn ACL, even though he made seven club appearances totaling 375 minutes at the back half of the season. “We determined the best decision is for the player to have an individualized training program for the summer so he can focus on being fully recovered and ready to perform next season,” Pochettino said. This sounds rational. But on top of the voluntary absences and unorthodox messaging around Christian Pulisic and Yunus Musah’s omissions from the squad, it just adds to a sense of inertia around the program.  
There are two schools of thought here: the rational sense that, for Pulisic, who has played 50 club games this season, “He’s too valuable long-term—let him rehab, lock in, and come back sharp for World Cup. It’s the smart move.” But there is also the context; this team has screamed into the abyss since the 2022 World Cup. The players themselves have admitted their fight and the program’s collective mentality has dropped. Pochettino has told them to leave their golf clubs behind, making it clear they have treated international duty like a vacation. This is a critical time for Poch to show he can sew his idea of Grinta—the willingness to suffer in the name of victory—into a squad whose recent displays have been the polar opposite of that. An all-hands-on-deck moment in which commitment, togetherness, and backs against the wall is the only way to go, if the squad is to spark an interest and belief, even amongst their natural diehard fanbase.  
At a time when we do not know who our starting goalkeeper, central defenders, and striker could and should be at the World Cup, this current reality makes our game feel so small in the United States. Either we are not the serious program that we aspire to be, or the Gold Cup is not a serious tournament.   
Having said that, as I wrote in our new United States Men’s National Team-obsessed newsletter, USMNT ONLY 🇺🇸 (subscribe here, and please share this link with your football loving friends), as Albert Einstein once said, “In the middle of every difficulty lies opportunity.” And for the young, raw squad members, including five first timers, this is an open audition for a World Cup place. A chance to force out a big, established name who has become complacent. They have been handed a chance to make the biggest tournament ever, on home turf, by training so hard they become impossible to ignore. The footballing equivalent of a golden ticket to the Wonka factory. Watch Diego LunaSebastian Berhalter, and Quinn Sullivan seize their moment.
Really Thoughtful Analysis of World Cup 2026 as We Hit a Year-Out
The World Cup hits the year-out mark this Wednesday. It will change football forever in this nation. We clatter towards it with the magical news Uzbekistan qualified for the first time in their nation’s history. This sits alongside the parallel narrative of geopolitics and the dark chaos of the travel ban. This Miguel Delaney piece was really a fascinating read: casting an eye on the new format FIFA has created for the tournament. I do believe the World Cup is going to make our host cities sing to the world, but the bloat of 48 teams in 12 groups of four is worth thinking about. The geographical scale, with games far, far away from teams’ bases and time zones. The 17-day group stage features 72 of the 104 matches, which will be played merely to return the field to its current size of 32 teams. Seventy percent of the competition will be spent eliminating a third of the field. 

LAFC Win the $10M Match
LAFC beat Club America 2-1 in dramatic fashion on Saturday night to book the final spot in the Club World Cup later this month. They’ll join Inter Miami and the Seattle Sounders as the only MLS teams in the tournament (all 8 groups here).
The game went a full 120 minutes after Igor Jesus headed home the equalizer off a Denis Bouanga corner in the 89th minute. Then, in the 115th minute, Bouanga sealed the game with a quick shot after a beautiful build-up from the Black & Gold. Here’s an up-close look at the goal celebration in front of the 3252’s with Steve Cherundolo fist pumping into the crowd. The atmosphere at this match was incredible. Club America fans came out in full force, occupying one whole grandstand. With so much at stake, it felt like a major European Cup final.
A record $1B in prize money will be distributed to the 32 clubs. Each team will receive $9.55M just for qualifying for the tournament, making that goal from Bouanga a nearly $10M goal. The players, however, aren’t happy with how that money is being distributed. Seattle Sounders players wore “World Cup Cash Grab” shirts in the warmups on Sunday. The MLSPA released a statement backing the players, saying they deserve more of the prize money. The players should always receive a sizable chunk of any money, but sigh… this is FIFA we’re talking about. Is anyone surprised? Apparently the Sounders’ owner angrily confronted the players in the locker room after the game.
LAFC kicks off their tournament against Chelsea in Atlanta on June 16th. Of course, we’ll have it all covered for you.


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On Tuesday, the Chicago Fire unveiled plans to build a brand new 22k seat soccer-specific stadium. The $650M stadium, set to open in 2028, will be privately funded and be located downtown in the South Loop. Fire fans deserve this. They finally have an owner who is willing to invest in the team. It is only right that one of America’s greatest cities has a world-renowned soccer stadium
USMNT Update
We’ve entered the offseason for our American lads playing overseas. Here are a few things you should know.
Christian Pulisic will likely renew his contract now that AC Milan has hired Max Allegri as the new head coach and Igli Tare as Sporting Director. Discussions are ongoing, and the contract is expected to be extended until 2030.
Josh Sargent is expected to leave Norwich City after being named to the English Championship Team of the Season. Premier League and Bundesliga clubs are both in the hunt for his signature after scoring 15 goals this season.
Gio Reyna will be leaving Dortmund after only playing 614 minutes all season. He’s been managing injury problems the last few years, but Dortmund don’t seem to value him even when he’s healthy. If Gio wants to be a starter next summer, he has to be playing consistently.
Atletico Madrid leads the race to sign Johnny Cardoso from Real Betis, but the $40 million asking price could be a deterrent. Tottenham are closely watching, but it appears Cardoso would prefer to stay in La Liga.

The Soccer Tournament (TST) 101: Dates, players, history

  • ESPN Jun 3, 2025, 02:30 PM ET

Teams around the world are taking the pitch for a third consecutive summer in Cary, North Carolina, for The Soccer Tournament. The 7-on-7 event features 48 men’s teams and 16 women’s teams in separate brackets with $1 million on the line.

Check out more key facts about the tournament below.

When is 2025 TST? How can fans watch?

The tournament runs June 4 through June 9. ESPN+ will stream 27 matches, with 20 matches available on ESPNU. Fans can catch the action in the men’s and women’s streaming hub.
Who has won TST?

Newtown Pride FC won the inaugural tournament in 2023. La Bombonera and U.S. Women took home the titles in 2024, the first year with split men’s and women’s brackets.

What are notable rules?

The Soccer Tournament features target score time, which means a game finishes on a final goal as opposed to when time ends. The target score is determined by adding one to the leading team’s score after the full-time whistle. A player from each team is removed from the field of play every three minutes until the target score is reached.

Which teams and players are participating in 2025?

Teams such as Club AmericaAFC Bournemouth and Borussia Dortmund will be fielding squads. Select men’s players include Sergio Agüero, Diego Godín, Andy Carroll, Nani and Sebastian Giovinco, while select women’s players include Hope Solo, Ali Krieger, Carli Lloyd, Allie Long and Heather O’Reilly.

Check out the ESPN soccer hub page for the latest newsscores and more.

USMNT Gold Cup squad: Dest out; Injuries shape Pochettino’s final 26-man roster

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino

By Jeff Rueter June 5, 2025Updated 3:44 pm EDT


Sergiño Dest is the latest core member of the United States men’s national team who will not be playing in the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup. The PSV right back missed nearly a year after tearing his ACL in April 2024 but was able to make seven appearances down the stretch as his team stormed back to win the Eredivisie. Nevertheless, managing that injury remains the priority rather than throwing him into the competition despite his appearance in training over the last week.“The technical, medical and high performance staffs have done a series of evaluations this week on all the players in camp, and in the case of Sergiño we determined the best decision is for the player to have an individualized training program for the summer so he can focus on being fully recovered and ready to perform next season,” head coach Mauricio Pochettino said a statement.Dest joins a long list of mainstays who are missing this Gold Cup, including Christian Pulisic, Yunus Musah, Folarin Balogun, and Antonee Robinson for injuries or personal reasons; Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Gio Reyna also miss out, as their clubs’ involvement in the Club World Cup precludes their international involvement. Josh Sargent was also omitted as a coach’s decision. As such, Pochettino didn’t have much work to do as he revealed the USMNT’s final squad on Thursday.Having initially called in a 27-man training squad that required a sole dismissal, Pochettino saw five players depart his camp. Goalkeepers Patrick Schulte (oblique) and Zack Steffen (knee) necessitated the late inclusion of 21-year-old Chris Brady. DeJuan Jones (lower body), Sean Zawadzki (knee) and Balogun (ankle) added to the departure list in defense and at striker.

Still, there are some mainstays of the 2022 World Cup and 2024 Copa América rosters to headline the survivors. Matt Turner projects to start in goal, making up for lost action as he played just four times (three FA Cup starts, one Carabao Cup start) on loan with Crystal Palace. Tim Ream, Chris Richards and Walker Zimmerman provide tournament experience at center back. Brenden Aaronson, Johnny Cardoso, Luca de la Torre and Malik Tillman had squad roles in those recent tournaments, while Haji Wright is the sole goalscorer from either preceding major tournament to be on this Gold Cup squad.With all of their games on home soil, the USMNT will face Trinidad & Tobago, Saudi Arabia — an invited guest of Concacaf who made significant financial investment in the North and Central American confederation before its participation was confirmed — and Haiti in Group D. The top two teams from each of the four groups advance to a three-round knockout bracket.The Gold Cup title has alternated between Mexico and the U.S. for every installment since 2011, when Mexico beat the U.S. in a second straight Gold Cup final, with the USMNT going on to win in 2013, 2017 and 2021. Given how the groups are configured, their rivalry could resume as soon as the quarterfinal stage if one team wins their group and the other finishes second. If both teams have an identical finish in the group, whether it’s first or second, the bracket wouldn’t put them together until a potential final.As for some of the other intriguing elements on the final squad (full roster listed below):

Alex Freeman: the next man up

Right back has remained a rotational role since Dest suffered his knee injury. Joe Scally started in his place at the Copa América, but a series of poor performances with the national team leave him off of this squad entirely. Nathan Harriel was the United States’ starter at the 2024 Olympics, but 20-year-old Alex Freeman projects to be better suited to make Pochettino’s lineup.A homegrown product of Orlando City SC, Freeman has vaulted up prospect lists with a breakout first half to the 2025 season. The son of former Green Bay Packer wide receiver Antonio Freeman, he stands 6-foot-2 and has impressive and agile mobility for his stature. Among 57 MLS fullbacks and wingbacks who already have 500 minutes this season, Freeman ranks second with 27 chances created, averaging 2.88 chances per 100 touches of the ball. Despite his athleticism and skillset, Freeman has already displayed impressive positional awareness and seldom ventured too far from his post in Orlando’s team shape.reeman is already attracting European interest despite only becoming a regular first-division starter three months ago. He could be on a fast track to become Dest’s understudy in time for the World Cup — and, depending on how Dest looks in his first full season back from injury, provide a worthy alternative at the position.

Berhalter in for USMNT

Seven players on this Gold Cup squad could stand to make their USMNT debut by the end of the group stage. Perhaps most notable is Sebastian Berhalter, with the defensive midfielder having seen his stock soar along with the entire Vancouver Whitecaps squad under first-year head coach Jesper Sørensen.The son of Pochettino’s predecessor in the role, Gregg Berhalter, the 24-year-old can play defensive midfield but sees himself as best fitting in a more advanced box-to-box role. He’s got a knack for arriving late in the box to complete team attacking sequences that often involve him in their buildup, refining his first-touch shooting from just beyond 18 yards to give Vancouver another scoring threat beyond Brian White (who is among the strikers on this roster).hile he wasn’t far enough in his development to garner consideration under his father, the work he’s done with the Whitecaps makes him a deserving inclusion on Pochettino’s squad.

“It’s been my dream since I’ve been a kid, but I think it’s something that I’m just taking one game at a time,” Berhalter told The Athletic in late April. “Being around the national team so much — I think I’ve watched every recent game more than probably anyone else has. I just worry about winning games here and performing well.”

Here is the USMNT Gold Cup squad in full:

GOALKEEPERS: Chris Brady (Chicago Fire), Matt Freese (New York City FC), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace)

DEFENDERS: Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew), Alex Freeman (Orlando City), Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC)

MIDFIELDERS: Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Tyler Adams (Bournemouth), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Luca de la Torre (San Diego FC), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), Jack McGlynn (Houston Dynamo), Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

FORWARDS: Paxten Aaronson (FC Utrecht), Patrick Agyemang (Charlotte FC), Damion Downs (FC Köln), Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps), Haji Wright (Coventry City)

Pochettino likens Pulisic to USA’s Messi, addresses stars passing on Gold Cup

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino and Christian Pulisic

By Paul Tenorio The Athletic June 3, 2025


U.S. men’s national team coach Mauricio Pochettino said this week he hopes to instill in his team the type of urgency and desire to play for the national team that exists in other countries. Speaking on the Unfiltered Soccer with Landon Donovan and Tim Howard podcast, Pochettino cited some of the biggest names he has coached — Argentine legend Lionel Messi, French World Cup winner Kylian Mbappe and Brazilian star Neymar — as examples of top players who remain “desperate” to play for their respective national teams.“The people need to prioritize the national team,” Pochettino said. “We were talking about Argentine players, or Brazilian players or English players or Spanish players, they are desperate. Even Messi, even Neymar, even Mbappé for France, these guys are desperate to go to the national team. For them, when they go, they don’t see if it’s a friendly game, if it’s an official game, it’s a World Cup, it doesn’t matter, because the possibility to defend one time more your flag, your shirt. It’s about to feel proud. And that is the responsibility to us to translate.”The comments are striking after Christian Pulisic made the decision, in conjunction with U.S. Soccer, to skip this summer’s Gold Cup. Citing his heavy workload with AC Milan and the U.S. — Pulisic is one of just 10 outfield players in the top five European leagues to appear in 50 games in each of the past two seasons — Pulisic felt he needed the rest in order to be healthy for next summer’s World Cup.Donovan compared Pulisic to Messi in that he has the most eyeballs on him of any American player and asked how the staff could handle competing in the tournament this summer without Pulisic. Pochettino praised his team’s top player and said he does not question Pulisic’s commitment to the group or the country.“I think Christian in the last year showed a great quality,” Pochettino said. “He’s performing in Europe, also he’s performing with the national team. He’s a very talented player that can help us to win. You say people compare Messi with Christian Pulisic. I don’t want to be disrespectful with Messi or Pulisic, but I think in this country, Pulisic should be our Messi, because he’s an iconic player, the kids on the street for sure if you ask one soccer player in this country, it’s Pulisic.

“We have very good communication with our players. Christian is a very nice guy, is very committed to the national team and he wants to help and of course is desperate to play in the World Cup and arrive in the best condition. All these conversations that we were taking with the players, I think that was the best decision to help him because every player are in different circumstances, and even if I want Christian here or another player here – Antonee (Robinson, injured Fulham left back) or like this – I think no one or another teammate is going to see badly about if I’m saying that, because I think … sometimes you need to put the interest in the medium and long term than in the present.“Because for me after the March camp, if I say, ‘OK I don’t care about [anything], I want to win tomorrow,’ [there] is [a] consequence after, because I think we are all preparing and focused on the World Cup. And sometimes we need to be open and flexible in some decisions. When we talk about these types of decisions for us, it was a tough decision  … It was our decision in the end, because if you say you need to come — you cannot force the player to come — but I think I need to be fair and say it was a collective decision to try to find the best for the national team and the best for the player.”“We are building something and always when you are building something, always there are up and downs in this period. It’s true that we are a little bit disappointed. We were really excited after January. not because of the two (games) … but how the players, how the team showed the responsibility that we wanted to translate. Then with all the circumstances in March, it didn’t help us to show that.”The Gold Cup was meant to be an important team-building month for the U.S. under Pochettino, his first extended camp with the U.S. since taking over after last summer’s Copa América failure. Now it takes on new meaning as Pochettino evaluates his wider national team pool. That being said, Pochettino insisted the goal was still to win.

Ultimately, even without Pulisic and other starters — Robinson, Yunus Musah, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah, Folarin Balogun and Gio Reyna are also missing the tournament via injury, FIFA Club World Cup duty, or, in Musah’s case, personal reasons — the tournament serves as a step toward next summer’s World Cup.That is true for MLS players trying to break into the squad, but also for others, including World Cup starter Matt Turner. Pochettino said on the podcast he told Turner that the goalkeeper had to start finding minutes in order to be ready for the World Cup.“We are very open,” Pochettino said. “We don’t have fears to talk with the player. Sometimes it’s painful because you need to tell some players: ‘Look, you need to play.’ At the moment OK, so far it’s good, because we are checking your character, your personality, your capacity to be a leader, the leadership that you have, but at some point to be a leader you need to compete.”Pochettino also praised players like Diego Luna, who have started to show they bring value to the squad simply with their mentality and approach. Pochettino noted that Luna didn’t want to come out of the game after being elbowed in the nose during a January-camp friendly, then bloodied and taped up, assisted on a goal.Asked about who the leaders are on the team, Pochettino alluded to giving everyone a chance to prove their role — whether as a squad player, a starter or a leader.“When we arrived in October I think the picture changed in the national team. In the way that we like to translate the message and the way that we are open to give the opportunity to all the players to step up and show the character,” Pochettino said. “Because we don’t want to assume that because four years ago someone was captain now should be the captain, because the circumstance changed. I think we are very open and giving the opportunity to the group and the players that are involved to say, ‘Come on, show me.’ For me, it’s a natural process. Sometimes some players can surprise you and can step up.“The most important thing is to see in a spontaneous way who will step up when things are wrong, when the stress is there, when the pressure is there, who is going to say ‘Hey, I am here.’”There is, of course, an enormous amount of pressure on the team to perform in next summer’s tournament. The U.S. advanced to the knockout round in the 2022 World Cup with one of the youngest squads in the tournament, behind the belief that the payoff would come in 2026. Struggles in last summer’s Copa América, where the U.S. was eliminated in the group stage, and in this spring’s Concacaf Nations League, where it lost to Panama and Canada, have upped the stakes.“I feel the responsibility. We all feel the responsibility,” Pochettino said. “Knowing that it’s soccer or football, it’s about the joy, it’s about not to put too much pressure on the players, because the players need to perform. … But yes of course it’s a massive pressure. The mentality and the culture of this country is to win.“The size of this country puts you in a position that you need to deliver. You need to show that you are brave, that you are a winner, but not talking like I am now. It’s easy to talk. The most important is go and to show. Show on the pitch when you need to defend your flag there, fighting and being a team, that is a moment to say, ‘Yes we have quality, I am a good player, but now it’s about to defend your country.’” (Top photo: John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Image

What we learned about USWNT from wins over China, Jamaica

  • Jeff KassoufJun 4, 2025, 01:20 PM ET

It’s June, which means United States women’s national team head coach Emma Hayes is staring at her self-imposed deadline of figuring out the core of players on which she will rely going forward.A pair of comfortable victories — 3-0 over China on May 31, followed by 4-0 over Jamaica on Tuesday night — didn’t offer the same kind of revealing test Brazil offered in April, but Hayes continued to dole out debuts this window in her quest to find every possible solution. Hayes said prior to the two games that “we’re very much on track for identifying that core group” that she will develop on the road to the 2027 World Cup. She offered more specifics in the days that followed, including the most revealing clue yet about who will be the USWNT’s next No. 1 goalkeeper following Tuesday’s win over Jamaica.When I watch the team, they very much molded into an Emma Hayes team,” Hayes said after Tuesday’s victory. “That’s how I feel when I watch us. I feel like there’s a lot of composure to the performances.”Drawing too definitive of conclusions from these two games in a vacuum risks hyperbole, but the victories over China and Jamaica brought further confirmation of trends that were already developing.Who continues to establish themselves as part of that core, and who among the new players looks like they will stick around? Let’s look by position.


Goalkeepers: A clear favorite emerges

This moment of uncertainty and inexperience in goal is unprecedented in the USWNT’s 40-year history, but there is now a clear favorite to take the No. 1 job — something that could not be said previously.

Phallon Tullis-Joyce started both games for the USWNT this window, earning her second and third caps after her strong debut against Brazil in April. Tullis-Joyce wasn’t busy in either game as the USWNT dominated possession (including 82% against Jamaica, who had zero shots on target and generated 0.07 expected goals, per ESPN Research). That can be the life of the goalkeeper, however — especially for the USWNT against inferior opposition.Hayes tried to pour some water on the idea that any goalkeeper will be the No. 1 by stating it is necessary to develop multiple players for the role ahead of 2027. Yet she also made it clear how Tullis-Joyce is the leader.”I think it’s fair to say Phallon’s experience at this moment in time, with the current group that I’ve got, is ahead,” Hayes said. “I still want to develop the other goalkeepers, but I get a fair sense of where their level is, one in relation to each other, but two in relation to 2027.

“There’s no easy way to answer that question, because I don’t think it’s as simple as just saying you’re my No. 1 and develop one. I think it would be foolish of me to do that in case someone falls out of form or they get injured, or those things, but Phallon is doing a tremendous job with everything that I’m asking.”

Tullis-Joyce is the most in-form American goalkeeper at the club level — although Claudia Dickey‘s NWSL “data don’t lie,” as Hayes said recently before calling up Dickey for the first time — and she’s starting to establish the necessary relationships with her defenders.

The most recent games were also the first with all-world center back Naomi Girma available this year. Hayes noted after Tuesday’s match that it was important for Girma and Tullis-Joyce to “build connections.” There should be more of that in the future.

Defenders: Another debut in the books

Girma’s return brought a calming presence and experience to the back line. “Naomi is like getting the Rolls-Royce out of the garage,” Hayes said on Tuesday. “I mean, what an unbelievable football player — just like a Rolls-Royce is an unbelievable car.”Emily Fox shone as the high-and-wide fullback in Tuesday’s game plan against Jamaica, and she was rewarded with an assist on the opening goal as she pushed up to join the forward line in the attack. The newer faces on Tuesday were Tara McKeown, whom Hayes continues to test in different partnerships at center back, and Kerry Abello, who made her international debut at fullback.McKeown completed a game-high 101 passes (on 108 attempts) as she and Girma set a faster tempo from deep areas to maneuver around Jamaica’s lower defensive block. Tuesday was also the first time the two had played together.Abello’s debut on Tuesday was the most interesting. She has been a standout fullback and winger for the NWSL champion Orlando Pride over the past year-plus, and she enters the international scene as the USWNT is trying to figure out its depth chart at fullback, a quest that’s stretched through several cycles.Hayes said before this training camp that she has begun to see Abello round out her game as someone who can be an attacking fullback or a stay-at-home defender as Orlando builds out attacks in a three-back formation. Abello played that latter role against Jamaica, allowing Fox to push high with freedom, and nearly scored in the final minutes of her debut, which was relatively unremarkable (that’s a compliment). She looked like she fits just fine, as much as any debutant could in a game the USWNT thoroughly controlled from the opening kickoff.

Avery Patterson is also a strong challenger at the fullback position and at 22, has a bright future ahead. She came off the bench against Jamaica and delivered a picture-perfect assist to Lynn Biyendolo for the fourth USWNT goal.

Midfielders: The kids are all right

Let’s lay it out there again: Lily Yohannes is the real deal at 17 years old. Yes, she has plenty to work on, but her ceiling is so obviously high that Hayes’ biggest question is not “if,” but “where” in the midfield triangle she should play Yohannes in the long-term.On Tuesday against Jamaica, Yohannes lined up as the No. 10 instead of the box-to-box midfielder, and she delivered another signature through ball to lead to the USWNT’s first goal. Her vision is exceptional, and she makes it look casual. The next development of her game will be getting accustomed to some of the more direct, physical play like she experienced vs. Brazil in April.ellow teenager Claire Hutton also started against Jamaica to earn her third cap — this time as part of a double pivot in the middle alongside Sam CoffeyHutton once again looked like a more experienced player as she and Coffey checked into wide spaces to receive the ball and draw Jamaica out of its defensive shape.The USWNT has had a love-hate relationship with the double pivot in recent years, and the truth is that the exact setup will depend on the opponent. But it was effective again against Jamaica, and Hutton playing alongside Coffey provides balance and support. Both Hutton and Yohannes have the makings of players who can be fixtures with the USWNT for multiple cycles.

Forwards: A Cat and mouse game

Catarina Macario is the USWNT’s No. 9 for the foreseeable future, especially with Sophia Wilson out on maternity leave. The unique way in which Macario plays that position affects everything and everyone around her.Macario is more comfortable as a No. 10 and thus plays the striker role as a false nine — a role the USWNT has not consistently played with in recent memory. There’s a Catch-22 to that: It allows Macario to play freely, combining with her attacking midfielder and drawing center backs out of shape, but it also could mean there’s a void left in the strike space at times.

Hayes is savvy and has accounted for this by encouraging her wingers to take the vacant space on the inside, and nobody is doing that better right now than Alyssa Thompson. The 20-year-old Thompson oozes confidence on the ball one-on-one and likes to cut in and combine or shoot from the left flank — which is exactly what led to the USWNT’s second goal on Tuesday.

Ally Sentnor scored that goal and registered a brace, giving her four goals in eight caps. Sentnor is exceptional on the dribble; former USWNT winger Tobin Heath recently said Sentnor “has demonstrated Messi-like qualities.”Sentnor also can fire a powerful shot on a short run-up and without much space — a signature skill of another two-time World Cup champion winger, Christen Press. While she still needs to improve her shot selection and accuracy, but she is already producing for the USWNT at 21 years old. She will be part of the solution at wide forward alongside Thompson and Michelle Cooper, among others.

Lynn Biyendolo also scored a brace off the bench as she continues to fill any role that Hayes throws at her — Biyendolo’s 12 goals as a substitute are more than any other USWNT player since 2016, per Opta.

“We really wanted to be ruthless in the final third,” Hayes said on Tuesday. “I don’t think we started out like that, but I think we ended like that.”There are tougher tests to come, most imminently against Canada on July 2, but as Hayes said on Tuesday, there is a maturity to the USWNT despite its inexperience. The progress from this time last year is clear both in the depth of the player pool and the team’s patterns of play.By this time next month, Hayes will have identified her core for the 2027 World Cup. From here, that process looks right on track.

USWNT honors former captain Becky Sauerbrunn with bobbleheads, fireworks and a dominant win

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JUNE 03: Becky Sauerbrunn is honored during her retirement ceremony prior to the United States playing Jamaica during an international friendly at Energizer Park on June 03, 2025 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Asli Pelit The Athletic June 4, 2025


ST. LOUIS, Mo.—Former U.S. women’s national team defender Becky Sauerbrunn got a hometown hero’s welcome on Tuesday at Energizer Park ahead of, during and after the USWNT defeated Jamaica 4-0 to close out a successful international window.Having retired from professional soccer last December after a 16-year career, the former U.S. captain returned not only as part of TNT’s broadcast crew covering this friendly, but also to receive a proper send-off.“I’m not used to having a lot of spotlight on me for something like this, but it’s really about celebrating the people who got you here,” Sauerbrunn told reporters Monday.For someone who’s never been entirely comfortable in the spotlight, Tuesday night must’ve been overwhelming — in a good way. Sauerbrunn was born in St. Louis and developed her game here as a budding talent until she left for the University of Virginia in 2003. Her hometown sent her off in style with a celebration that included fireworks, a very realistic bobblehead, a standing ovation and a birthday cake (she turns 40 years old on Friday — June 6) fit for a legend.“You know you’ve made it when you’ve got a bobblehead,” U.S. head coach Emma Hayes told reporters in her pre-match press conference.A commanding presence at center back, Sauerbrunn made 219 appearances for the U.S., anchoring the backline to two Women’s World Cup titles and Olympic gold in 2012. It’s quite a legacy for someone who never sought the spotlight. And it’s one the current USWNT squad deeply respects and hopes to carry forward.As the team bid farewell to Sauerbrunn off the field, the next generation made sure she had no reason to worry about the future on it. Hayes’ squad delivered a dominant win, applying relentless pressure for 90 minutes, having 82 percent possession and allowing only two shots from the opposition.Though the accomplished defender never scored for her country, she came very close two years ago at the same stadium that bid her goodbye.On Tuesday, it was rookie Ally Sentnor who scored twice in the first half and Sauerbrunn’s close friend Lynn Biyendolo who added two more after she came on early in the second half. Meanwhile, the backline, Sauerbrunn’s old territory, was anchored by captain Naomi Girma, a fitting torchbearer for the legacy she left behind.“I know I just said nobody can (fill Becky’s shoes), but I think the next obvious person would be Naomi,” Biyendolo said. “The two things that they have in common are that they didn’t want the role, but it just found them. And I think that makes the best leaders, is somebody who just doesn’t want it, but is so natural at it.”Girma, now the most expensive transfer in women’s soccer history, had a rocky start at Chelsea after joining in January, left sidelined by a string of injuries. However, she is back and delivering. With both a Women’s Super League title and the FA Cup under her belt, she is proving to be worth every penny. As former Chelsea manager Hayes put it, bringing her back “is like getting the Rolls-Royce out of the garage.”Girma told ussoccer.com, “Becky was one of the best leaders this team has ever had.”That kind of legacy doesn’t happen overnight.

Girma has taken on a lot of the leadership responsibility left behind by Sauerbrunn. (Visionhaus / Getty Images)Listening to her former teammates after the match, it was clear: the trust and respect Sauerbrunn commands were built over years of grit, consistency and quiet leadership, beginning with her debut in 2008, when she earned her first cap against Canada at the Four Nations Tournament in China, playing with a broken nose.“Becky is a legend, an icon,” Kerry Abello, who made her debut Tuesday, said after the match. “The game of women’s soccer will never be the same without her.” Abello was eight years old when Sauerbrunn debuted back in 2008. Like many of the new generation of USWNT players, she grew up admiring her.On the pitch, Sauerbrunn was a tireless, dependable center back; off it, she was a steady leader who played a key role in collective bargaining negotiations with the U.S. Soccer, representing her fellow players at the table year after year, and helping the team achieve equal pay.She was always calm and composed, even when somebody made a mistake. “Becky doesn’t get mad often, but if you mess up, like pass to the wrong player… she’ll give you this look,” Biyendolo said after Tuesday’s match. “That ‘I’m not mad, I’m just disappointed’ look. That’s the Becky look.”Ask anyone who played alongside Sauerbrunn about the “Becky stare,” and they’ll know exactly what you’re talking about.Hayes didn’t get the chance to coach Sauerbrunn — she took over the team in May last year — but her admiration also runs deep, especially for how the defender has shaped the next generation.“It’s always nice when the people you leave behind talk about someone in such a way,” Hayes said. “I’ve got a locker room — not just the senior players, but less experienced players — that talk about her in the highest esteem, both as a leader and as a human being, and I don’t think you could want anything more than that in life.”(Top photo: Bill Barrett / Getty Images)

ST PAUL, MINNESOTA - MAY 31: Naomi Girma #4 of the United States advances the ball during the second half against China PR during an international friendly at Allianz Field on May 31, 2025 in St Paul, Minnesota. (Photo by Brace Hemmelgarn/USSF/Getty Images)

The USWNT basks in the return of Naomi Girma – their ‘security blanket’

By Jeff Rueter June 1, 2025


ST. PAUL, Minn. — Compared to the past few windows, Saturday’s 3-0 win over China was a game where the U.S. women’s national team looked in complete control.The attack kept the pressure on China at Allianz Field in St. Paul, Minnesota, continuing to threaten their defense as it frequently adjusted the height of its line of confrontation. Catarina Macario provided a goal and an assist; Lindsey Heaps and Sam Coffey scored from their midfield roles.However, head coach Emma Hayes’ post-match press conference started with a question about the long-awaited return of Naomi Girma and how the team benefited from her 90-minute shift.“We’ve missed her, we really have,” Hayes said. “Just in terms of the way we control the game; her, in a deeper space, just making decisions when to play forward, when not to.”As the first million-dollar transfer in women’s soccer history, this year has only intensified the scrutiny that comes with being one of the world’s best players in her position. Her time at Chelsea was not as smooth as the club and player had hoped. She exited her debut in early March with a calf injury, feeling the strain having gone nearly four months without playing a club match. Her first minutes back with Chelsea came in mid-April and this international window marked her first with the U.S. in 2025.“I gave her a hug after the game,” said midfielder Coffey, who scored her second U.S. goal against China. “Having her on the field is like having a security blanket, and just like being wrapped in it.”

Girma celebrates with Coffey and Heaps (Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

After some tense and at times disjointed performances against Japan in the SheBelieves Cup and Brazil in a pair of friendlies, the USWNT dominated the entire match on Saturday. The defense played its part, with Coffey shuttling around to shield the back-line and the partnership between Girma and Emily Sonnett giving goalkeeper Phallon Tullis-Joyce ample coverage whenever China reached the final third.Those threats were few and far between. The USWNT dominated the chance-creation game, generating 3.01 expected goals (xG) while holding China to 0.18 xG.“It does feel natural now,” Girma said of returning to the national team. “I mean, I was able to watch what we did before, and I think a lot of what Emma wants to do is layer on what we had done in the past year. I think the changes are good and easy for me to kind of adapt to, with that base knowledge of how we want to play.“It was just nice to be back on the field.”As was often the case during the triumphant run to Olympic gold last summer, Girma was at the heart of the team’s build-up. She logged a staggering 138 touches, per TruMedia, 41 more than the team’s second-most involved player (Avery Patterson, with the right-back notching 97 touches). Girma completed 95.3 percent of her 129 pass attempts, helping determine how the USWNT worked to break through China’s defensive structure.She also put in a defensive shift that embodied working smarter, not harder.She was not throwing herself into many challenges, though much of that work was done well before the ball even reached the U.S. defense. Still, she was quick on mop up duty, leading the USWNT with seven ball clearances (nobody else had more than three) while winning all three ground duels and her only aerial duel.

Girma listens to instructions from Hayes (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Having her in the back-line only helped the midfield feel more confident as they engaged defensively, with peace of mind that she was in position if they failed to win the ball.“I can’t put into words what she means to this team,” Coffey said. “I think everybody sees it on the field, but off the field as well. She’s just a joy in this environment and such a light for us. We have missed her so much. I thought she was exceptional today, as she always is.”In a year characterized by frequent rotation across Hayes’ squads and lineups, Girma’s return represents a different type of variable for the team. Throughout 2025, Hayes has called on a number of center-backs, each auditioning to be Girma’s primary partner. Sonnett represents a vital holdover from the team’s last World Cup win in 2019, having established herself as a hard-nosed veteran along the back-line. Emily Sams came off the bench against China, while Tara McKeown has earned five caps this year.The latter two in particular are emblematic of Hayes’ examination of her broader player pool, with both stepping into more important roles given positional absences. Not only has Girma been missing, but so has her partner last summer, Tierna Davidson, who tore her ACL in April.While Sams, McKeown, Sonnett and others have stepped into their roles, none can quite match the same comfortable benchmark established by Girma.

“I mean, she’s a world-class player,” Hayes said. “I thought she brought something to our performance that we’re looking for, so I’m delighted to have her back.”

Girma playing for Chelsea against Manchester United in the FA Cup final (Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Once she returned to playing regular minutes for Chelsea in mid-April, she was eased back into the fold. While Chelsea kept clean sheets in each of her final four performances of the WSL season, only two of those matches saw Girma play all 90 minutes.“It was a lot of transition for me,” Girma said on Friday regarding her first months with Chelsea. “I think it was a huge learning experience for me. You always have those moments in your career where you’re up and down, up and down, up and down, so it was definitely like that.“But I think it was a good five months of getting settled, getting to know my team-mates, getting used to playing there, playing with a new team, and living in a new country. So it’s been really positive so far, and I’ve really enjoyed it.”Girma logged her 46th cap, an impressive total for a 24-year-old defender who seems destined to be the bedrock of this team for years to come. With its world class center-back in the lineup, the United States put together its most composed performance of the year. Then again, that revelation hardly comes as a surprise given Girma’s floor-raising performances since her debut in 2022.

TAFC: The start of a PSG dynasty, MLS clubs mix with the big boys, and a Neymar nightmare

Paris Saint-Germain's Brazilian defender #05 Marquinhos (C) and teammates celebrate with supporters during a ceremony to present the trophy a day after Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) football club won the UEFA Champions League, at the Parc des Princes Stadium in Paris on June 1, 2025. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / POOL / AFP) (Photo by FRANCK FIFE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

By Phil Hay The Athletic June 2, 2025


Hello! Paris Saint-Germain are champions of Europe. Was it simply their night — or is this the start of something bigger?

On the way:


It May Be The Start Of A Dynasty

(Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

But, as ever, mixed emotions at PSG victory…

Two thoughts occurred as Paris Saint-Germain went 2-0 up after 20 minutes of Saturday’s Champions League final.

Number one was that it felt like we had the most savage result incoming from this fixture since Milan dismembered Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona in 1994. European Cups aren’t won like this — and we’ve never seen a defeat as wide as Inter’s eventual 5-0 thrashing in Munich.Number two was that PSG were fresh as wet paint, in comparison to Inter’s deadweight legs, as if the Italians were going to the well once too often. You’d be forgiven for thinking PSG had been on the beach for weeks — and to a certain extent, they had.Earlier in the tournament, Luis Enrique, the PSG head coach, joked about Ligue 1 being “the league of farmers”, a slur used to criticise the perceived lack of competition in France (where, it should be said, his club have been insanely dominant for years). Beating the best that Europe had to offer in the Champions League was a neat riposte.But at the same time, PSG wrapped up their latest Ligue 1 championship two months ago. That allowed them to tailor everything for Europe, while Inter toiled on numerous fronts, including a Serie A title race which went to the wire. What transpired was a total mismatch. Inter’s fabled defence was vaporised.

PSG’s domestic environment works for them. They’ve also created a phenomenally talented team, whose third goal against Inter was a coup de grace and a masterpiece. Not everybody will rejoice in their breakthrough year. There’s no getting away from the nature of the Qatari money which is fuelling them. But you have to ask: is this the start of a dynasty? Because their first European Cup won’t be their last, surely.


For Luis Enrique, for Xana

(Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

For Luis Enrique, Saturday was deeply personal. The death of his daughter, Xana, in 2019 formed a large part of the narrative in the build-up to the final. He wore a T-shirt in tribute to her after full time, and PSG’s ultras unveiled a huge tifo flag honouring them both (above).In purely coaching terms, he’s made PSG make sense. Finally crossing the Champions League rubicon is a demonstration of how a quality collective team can be greater than the sum of expensive individual parts. It’s incredibly telling that Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe haven’t been missed. And there’ll be no temptation whatsoever for PSG to return to that superstar-led model.Inter’s outlook from here is more sobering. They’re an older unit than PSG, and less sustainable. They might also lose head coach Simone Inzaghi, who is perfect for them but has Al Hilal trying to tempt him to Saudi Arabia. How much does he have left after a second Champions League final defeat in three years, this one so much more brutal than the 1-0 loss to Manchester City in 2023?


The darker side to PSG’s triumph

(Lou Benoist/AFP via Getty Images)

Sadly, full time in Germany was the catalyst for widespread civil disorder in France, with celebrations in Paris descending into violence. Police reported two deaths, close to 200 injuries and 500 arrests during intense rioting. Water cannon and tear gas were deployed. France’s interior minister, Bruno Retailleau, was choice with his language, saying: “Barbarians have taken to the streets of Paris.”

Tom Williams was in France for The Athletic and covered two nights of trouble on the streets. It cut a depressing denouement to an occasion PSG craved for so long — and thought might never come.


News Round-Up


Who’s Got Club World Cup Fever?!

Denis Bouanga scores for LAFC vs America(Luke Hales/Getty Images)

Three MLS teams made it. Who will do best?

Ticket sales for the Club World Cup are more pedestrian than FIFA would like — hence why it keeps dropping prices — but Saturday night’s play-in between Los Angeles FC and Club America sold out at a canter. Perhaps an actual ante helped.It was win-at-all-costs and LAFC did, despite the game looking lost. An equaliser in the penultimate minute and an extra-time decider from Denis Bouanga mean FIFA’s 32-team mash-up is complete, with LAFC nicking the final place. They’ll be a minimum of $10m richer for it.

Three Major League Soccer sides have qualified (cough, cough) for the Club World Cup: LAFC, Seattle Sounders and FIFA charity case, Inter Miami. I’ve been thinking about which of those sides has the best chance of progressing beyond the group stage — to which the answer can only be Miami, from a section featuring Brazil’s Palmeiras, Portugal’s Porto and Egypt’s Al Ahly.The variable in the United States is going to be squad strength, and how heavily the favourites commit at the end of hard seasons. Judging by Real Madrid paying £8.3m to get Trent Alexander-Arnold there, commitment levels will be high. But LAFC are in before the lock and they’ve landed on their feet in Group D. Not a doddle, but not beyond them.

  • Last night, before their MLS clash with Minnesota United, the Sounders’ squad wore T-shirts protesting the collective bargaining agreement which is limiting the amount they can earn from the Club World Cup. The labour union is backing their complaints.

MLS Mix With The Big Boys

Rubbing shoulders with the great, the good and those who are neither isn’t going to dent LAFC’s status — or their value. Forbes published its football rich list over the weekend, and LAFC popped up in 15th place, with a tasty $1.25bn price tag.

MLS franchises en masse are going well. Inter Miami ($1.2bn) and LA Galaxy ($1bn) also made the top 20, and a further five teams — Atlanta United, New York City FC, Austin FC, the Sounders and D.C. United — are in a top 30 which features only two clubs from Germany and one from France (you know who).

It’s a little counter-intuitive because revenues and TV earnings in MLS are nowhere near European levels — but the competition has the appeal of salary caps, the absence of relegation and less red tape around the building of stadiums and brands. Plus, if a circus act like Manchester United are the second most valuable team in the universe ($6.6bn, by Forbes’ calculations) then it’s best if Europe doesn’t throw stones.


Around TAFC

(Mohd Rasfan/AFP via Getty Images)


And Finally…

(YouTube/Fanatiz)

The only mentions of Neymar in Europe over the weekend were in reference to how much better off PSG are without him. But you didn’t think he’d keep out of the public eye for long, did you?Down in Brazil, 24 hours later, he was sent off during Santos’ 1-0 defeat to Botafogo, his punishment for the aberration you’re seeing above. It could prove to be his last appearance for Santos — his deal is about to expire — and he was evidently hell-bent on scoring just in case.As brazen handballs go, it’s a classic of the genre. With good grace (or no alternative), he apologised for it later.(Top photo: Franck Fife/Pool/AFP via Getty Images)

STUTTGART, GERMANY - JUNE 05: Lamine Yamal of Spain celebrates after scoring their side's fifth goal during the UEFA Nations League 2025 semifinal match between Spain and France at Stuttgart Arena on June 05, 2025 in Stuttgart, Germany. (Photo by James Gill - Danehouse/Getty Images)

Lamine Yamal and the curious finish that shows why he is different

Stuart James The Athletic – June 6, 2025Updated 5:40 am EDT

Lamine Yamal again. Adrien Rabiot again. Left-footed goals again.On a wild night in Stuttgart, where Spain and France played a game of basketball on a football pitch, the storyline had a familiar narrative running through it in more ways than one.It was 331 days ago when Yamal scored that goal against France in the European Championship semi-finals, his left foot sumptuously curling the ball into the top corner from 25 yards out, leaving Rabiot wishing he had not only got across quicker to try to block the shot, but that he had also chosen his words much more carefully the night before the game“If you want to play at a Euro final, you need to do more than he has done up until now,” the France midfielder said about Yamal, who was 16 years old at the time.

“Move in silence, only speak when it’s time to say checkmate,” Yamal replied on Instagram.Yamal posted again after scoring his wonder goal against France: “Checkmate”.What You Should Read NextPerfection, by Lamine YamalAs time travelled with the ball from out to inside the post, it opened a portal through which Yamal’s immense potential could be glimpsed

Eleven months later, it was Rabiot who scythed down Yamal from behind for a penalty that the 17-year-old calmly converted.

What is it with teenagers constantly wanting to have the last word, eh?

Except Yamal wasn’t quite finished. His second goal against France, 13 minutes later, put Spain 4-1 up and made him the standout candidate for the player-of-the-match award.

But it was a curious and highly unusual finish — well, unusual for anyone else, but maybe not for Yamal.

Some data first. In competitive games for club and country at senior level, Yamal has scored 31 goals and 29 of them have been with his left foot. His right foot isn’t, to borrow that old cliche, just for standing on. But it’s fair to say that he doesn’t use it much, which is why Philipp Lahm said what he did when telling The Athletic in April how he would try to mark Yamal.

“He has to be on his weaker foot at all times. He cannot have any space,” Lahm, the former Germany international, said.

One of Yamal’s two weaker-foot goals came in Barcelona’s 4-0 victory at the Bernabeu in October, after which he joked: “Real Madrid’s players didn’t know that I have a right foot too! I had to use it when needed.”

It looked like it would also be required against France in the UEFA Nations League semi-final on Thursday night, when Yamal broke into the penalty area in the second half after running onto a first-time pass from Pedro Porro. Holding off a challenge from France centre-back Clement Lenglet — Yamal’s wiry frame is deceptively strong — and with the angle against him, he somehow managed to slip the ball past goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

From a vantage point high up on the opposite side of the stadium — in other words, a long way from the goal — the first instinct was that Yamal had scored with his right foot, primarily because that was how it looked in the blink of an eye.

Indeed, that was still the assumption when a slow-motion replay started to be shown on the screen, partly because of the position of the ball, but also the fact Lenglet was on the inside of Yamal rather than the outside. By going with his left foot, Yamal surely risked the shot being blocked.

At least that was the theory.

Yamal had other ideas and instead of taking the more conventional route and shooting with his right, he prodded the ball beyond Maignan with his left.

It appeared as though the ball was almost pushed, which is why the soleplate of his boot is visible afterwards — Yamal has to work so hard to get enough purchase on the ball to send it past Maignan using this technique that his leg ends up horizontal after making contact.

It looks strange when you watch it back, but it was hugely effective and perhaps also goes some way to explaining why Maignan seemed to be caught slightly off guard and beaten in a way that you wouldn’t expect him to be in that scenario.In fact, the France goalkeeper ended up diving after the ball was already past him, which suggests that Yamal had taken him by surprise with such an unorthodox and instinctive finish.

It is also — and this is an area of his game where he is so different from his former Barcelona team-mate Ousmane Dembele, who genuinely has no idea which is his stronger foot — an example of how Yamal doesn’t suffer at all from being so dependent on his left.Why?First things first, his left foot is obviously a thing of beauty, whether passing, shooting or dribbling. There was a moment late in the France game, which Spain won 5-4, when Yamal was performing pirouettes in the centre of the pitch, the ball glued to his left foot to such an extent that the opposition left-back, Theo Hernandez, decided to change sport. Cue a rugby tackle.

Secondly, Yamal is able to improvise and use his left foot in so many different ways, including the ‘trivela’ — an outside-of-the-boot shot or pass that he executes brilliantly over a range of distances. Yamal uses that part of his foot with such precision that his technique doesn’t just negate the need to use his right, but at times it’s actually more efficient to play the ball with the outside of his left because it’s naturally in his stride pattern.What You Should Read NextLamine Yamal’s trademark trivela: Dissecting the Barcelona star’s work of artYamal is fast making the outside-of-the-boot pass known as the trivela his trademark. Where does it come from and how does he do it?

The mind wanders to other predominantly one-footed players, from Diego Maradona to Arjen Robben and Ricardo Quaresma.Ultimately, though, Yamal is one of a kind or, as the former Inter head coach Simone Inzaghi recently put it, “one of those talents that appear once every 50 years”.Against France, on his 20th cap for Spain, Yamal upstaged Dembele, one of his rivals for the Ballon d’Or, and Kylian Mbappe and Desire Doue, too.Next up for him is Cristiano Ronaldo when Spain take on Portugal in the UEFA Nations League final in Munich on Sunday.Ronaldo, for context, was another six months away from playing his first international match at Yamal’s age.(Top photo: James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images)

MLS’ Whitecaps suffer teamwide illness after Champions Cup final in Mexico

The Vancouver Whitecaps lose in the Concacaf Champions Cup final

By Paul Tenorio and Sarah Jean Maher June 5, 2025Updated 7:39 pm EDT


The Vancouver Whitecaps say a “significant number” of players and staff members fell ill with gastrointestinal symptoms following the team’s 5-0 loss to Cruz Azul in the Concacaf Champions Cup final on Saturday.At least 33 members of the traveling party were affected, a source familiar with the situation told The Athletic. The source requested anonymity due to the medical sensitivity of the situation. Only seven out of the 26 players who traveled did not present with any symptoms.The club canceled a training session on Wednesday out of precaution and instead held a modified individual closed session on Thursday.In a statement released Thursday afternoon, the Major League Soccer team said it was working closely with its medical team, local infectious disease consultants and Vancouver Coastal Health to monitor the outbreak. The club said each affected player has been provided with an individualized program by medical and performance staff to support their recovery and continued preparation.“The health and well-being of our players and staff remain our top priority,” the club said in its statement. “We are actively monitoring the situation and will provide updates as more information becomes available.”

The timing of the outbreak raises significant concerns about the Whitecaps’ ability to field a competitive roster for their scheduled match against their regional rivals, the Seattle Sounders, on Sunday in Seattle. The club has not yet announced whether the game will proceed as planned or if it will seek a postponement from MLS.What You Should Read NextCruz Azul dismantles MLS’s Whitecaps to claim Concacaf Champions Cup titleThis was never a contest, as La Maquina claimed a record-tying seventh Concacaf club title in emphatic fashion.

The situation is further complicated by the fact that nine Whitecaps players were already scheduled to miss Sunday’s game due to international duty. Canadian national team players Ali Ahmed, Sam Adekugbe and Jayden Nelson are among those training with the men’s national team ahead of the inaugural Canadian Shield tournament, per The Canadian Press.

The teamwide illness caps a disappointing week for the Whitecaps, who saw their impressive 15-game unbeaten streak across all competitions come to a crushing end with a resounding 5-0 defeat to Cruz Azul in Saturday’s Champions Cup final. Vancouver had been hoping to capture its first major continental trophy.

Cruz Azul’s dominant victory not only denied Vancouver the Champions Cup, but the trip created additional health challenges that could impact the team’s domestic campaign.

(Top photo: Kirby Lee / Imagn Images)


Curiosity and a new challenge drew former Bayern Munich Women’s coach to Angel City

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 04: Alex Straus, head coach of Angel City FC, speaks to media at Angel City Football Club Performance Center on June 04, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Melina Pizano/Getty Images)

By Asli PelitJune 5, 2025Updated 6:50 pm EDT


Alexander Straus, Angel City’s new head coach, didn’t arrive in Los Angeles on a whim. After turning down several chances to move to the U.S. in the past, he says this time, the stars aligned.

“Compared to other opportunities I’ve had, including the location, everything about this club, this team, which has been well documented all over the world in the media, intrigues me,” Straus told reporters on Thursday. “I think there is still a lot of work to be done, but it’s not done over 24 hours or one week or three weeks.”

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While leaving Europe wasn’t easy, Straus emphasized that curiosity and challenge played a major role.

“It’s a completely different culture. A different league. But football is a small world,” he said. “There’s this weird gap in understanding between Europe and the U.S. We don’t really know how good the best teams are on either side. I needed to find out. I’m halfway through my career, and I didn’t want to wait until I have grandchildren to take that leap.”Straus comes to Los Angeles after three years coaching German powerhouse Bayern Munich. He led the team to three consecutive Frauen-Bundesliga titles from 2022 to 2025. Before joining Bayern, the 49-year-old Norwegian coached SK Brann in the top flight of his native Norway, winning the league twice.The hiring marks a significant shift for the ambitious Los Angeles club, which is counting on his UEFA Champions League experience and understandingof youth development to steer an Angel City team that struggles with inconsistency.If you ask him, there’s no question Angel City will find success.“Whether it’s in one year or five, I don’t know, but it will happen. Everything around this club says it will,” Straus said. “I want to be part of that.”The move isn’t just professional for Straus. California, with its weather and culture, was a draw, but so was the promise of a project where the women’s team isn’t playing second fiddle. And Angel City worked really hard to convince him to join.“In Europe, even with clubs like Bayern or Chelsea, there’s still a men’s team getting the lion’s share. Here, at Angel City, we are the team. That’s rare,” he said. “The facilities, the focus, the fan base, it’s a powerful setup. That’s something America has ahead of Europe right now.”The team has already made a signing that feels aligned with Straus’ leadership. Last month, Angel City signed former Wolfsburg forward Sveindís Jónsdóttir, who was used to seeing Staus on the opposite touchline in the Frauen-Bundesliga.“I’d already been talking to Angel City, and I was trying to decide what I wanted to do, and then I saw that he’s gonna be the coach, and it made me more excited about Angel City, knowing how well he’s done for Bayern,” Jónsdóttir told The Athletic ahead of her signing. “I know his style of play. He can make every team look good and play well. It made my choice even easier.”

Angel City signing Sveindís Jónsdóttir saw Alex Straus’ success playing against his teams in Germany. (Martin Rose / Getty Images)

Though there may be an understanding gap between Europe and the U.S., according to Straus, the difference between domestic and international players isn’t a factor in his coaching.“It’s not about where they’re from, it’s about the environment they’re coming into,” he said. “We often overstate the difference between American and European (soccer). The structure is different. There is a wage cap. It’s a playoff league. But ultimately, it’s about creating a good environment for good players.”Still, the transition won’t be instant. Straus acknowledges that he has to build that environment in L.A.“It’s early days. I’m still the new guy in class,” he said jokingly. “We’re just starting to create the culture, the behaviors, the habits that we want.”Strauss arrived in LA last Sunday, and this weekend will mark his first with the full squad, with many players away on national team duty last week. He’s had time to get acquainted with the team during the last few months through hours of videos on Angel City’s games over the last couple of years. But he isn’t in a rush.“First of all, you need to know people, not the players,” he said. “The players I knew long before I came. I need to know the people and I need to know what makes them tick.”Backed by one of the NWSL’s most powerful ownership groups led by Willow Bay, Bob Iger, Julie Uhrman and Kara Nortman, Angel City is the league’s most valuable club and a sponsor favorite, thanks to steady attendance and good brand awareness. But despite its off-field dominance, the club now finds itself at a critical crossroads; it’s time to deliver results on the pitch.I wanted to see what we can do to get the legacy of Angel City to become like the other big sports brands in the city, to become the same here,” Straus said. “That excites me.”

(Top photo: Melina Pizano / Getty Images)

5/30/25 Champions League Finals 3 pm CBS, US Ladies play Sat 5 pm, US Men Pulisic to miss Gold Cup, Euro Nations League Finals Wed/Thur

News & Notes

I didn’t get a chance to properly write about American Chris Richard’s and Crystal Palace’s huge FA Cup victory 2 weekends ago. The moment is captured here Crystal Palace wins FA Cup on Radio. I have included the great story from The Athletic about Chris Richards showing just how it was for a kid from Alabama to make it big in soccer (see below). Also cool to see Liverpool lift the EPL Trophy again at Anfield my coaching pal Bill Spencer is thrilled. This scene with Arnold who is leaving his boyhood team for Real Madrid next season was touching – Trent Alexander Arnold last game at Anfield. Of course re-signed Forward Mo Salah won EPL player of the Year here are his (Goals). Must Watch this weekend – Champions League Sat 3 pm on CBS, US Women Sat 5 pm TBS, Miami & Messi vs Columbus Crew Sat 7:30 pm on Apple TV, Concacaf Champ Cup Final MLS vs Mexico Cruz Azul vs Vancouver Whitecaps Sun 9 pm on FS1. Friday on CBSSN friendlies for the ladies with England vs Portugal at 3 pm & Germany vs Netherlands CBSSN 5 pm.

Champions League Final Sat 3 pm Inter Milan vs PSG on CBS
So can PSG actually finally win a UCL title now that Messi, Neymar and Mbappe aren’t there? Amazingly the Parisians seem to be a better team now without the superstars as they march to their 2nd UCL finals ever. I think it will be a very even game — Inter Milan can and will score – but something tells me PSG pulls this off – 2-1 or something like that. (tons of stories below).

Pulisic pulls out of Gold Cup – US to send B+ team
Lots of controversy this week with US top stars not playing in the Gold Cup especially our talisman Christian Pulisic from AC Milan. You could argue this has been his best season overseas ever with near top of the league goals & assists. I for one do not understand – this is honestly THE LAST Competition before the World Cup next summer – he is our best player. Doesn’t he need to be there to help get us ready? Listen Juve stars McKinney & Weah (Club World Cup) and outside back Jedi Robinson (injured knee) are already missing – doesn’t that make it more important to be there? Bologan, Adams, Richards, Dest and most of our starting backline & GK are there. I just don’t understand why Puli thinks he shouldn’t be there. Does he need rest – of course he does – watch he’ll propose this summer. But as the best player on our team – he should be there. Renaldo would be there – Messi would be there – so should Pulisic. (More on this & Gold Cup prep below)

US Women play China Sat 5 pm on TBS, Tues vs Jamaica on TNT @ 8 pm
It will be nice having Centerback Girma back in the fold along with recent Champions League winners Emily Sonnett & Emily Foxx on the backline as the US ladies take on China and Jamaica this week. NWSL standout Lo’eau LaBonta of KC will get her chance to play for the US for the first time and Caterina Macario should be full strength but of course the US will be without the Holy Trinity.

U.S. Women’s Roster by Position (Club; Caps/Goals) June Matches vs. China PR & Jamaica
GOALKEEPERS (3): Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC; 0) Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals; 3), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United, ENG; 1)
DEFENDERS (8): Kerry Abello (Orlando Pride; 0/0), Crystal Dunn (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA; 159/25), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG; 66/1), Naomi Girma (Chelsea FC, ENG; 44/2), Tara McKeown (Washington Spirit; 5/0), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash; 2/0), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride; 3/0), Emily Sonnett (Gotham FC; 107/2)
MIDFIELDERS (6): Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC; 33/1), Lindsey Heaps (OL Lyonnes, FRA; 165/37), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Current; 2/0), Lo’eau LaBonta (Kansas City Current; 0/0), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC; 5/2), Lily Yohannes (Ajax, NED; 6/1)
FORWARDS (7): Lynn Biyendolo (Seattle Reign FC; 78/22), Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current; 4/1), Catarina Macario (Chelsea FC, ENG; 23/10), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville; 4/1), Ally Sentnor (Utah Royals; 7/2), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC; 17/1), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC; 3/0)

Good luck to all those teams playing in State & President’s and Challenge Cup games this weekend at Grand Park! Especially our Carmel FC teams below!

2012 Girls Gold, 2014 Boys Gold – President’s Cup
2008/9 Girls Gold, 2012 Boys Blue, 2014 Boys Blue, 2013 Girls Blue – Challenge Cup

Had a blast doing CYO Games this Spring – here with Mike Arrington & the Master Dave Howard on the southside for playoff Finals.
Register for Free for Carmel FC Tryouts

Carmel High School Soccer Camp- Boys – Murray Stadium 6:30-8:30 pm
June 23-25 (grades 5-8th)  $125
July 21-23  $125
Questions? Please contact Coach Shane Schmidt at sschmidt@ccs.k12.in.us

Greyhound Girls Soccer Camp – Murray Stadium
Girls Jul 07 – Jul 09, 2025 at 9:00-10:30 $95 (5th-8th Grade) Register

TV Games

Sat May 31st at 3 pm on CBS- Coverage starts at 2 pm

Fri, May 30

3 pm CBSSN England vs Portugal Ladies Friendly
5 pm CBSSN Germany vs Netherlands Ladies Friendly

Sat, May 31

CBS 3 pm                     Inter Milan vs PSG UEFA Champions League Final in Munich, Germany

5:30 pm TBS                US Women vs China
7:30 pm Apple Free Miami (Messi) vs Columbus
10:30 pm Unimas LAFC vs Club America (Club WC play-in game) LAFC vs Club America Preview

Sun, June 1

6 pm Apple Free Seattle Sounders vs Minn United MLS
9 pm Fox Sport 1        Cruz Azul vs Vancouver Whitecaps  CC Champions Cup Final

Tues, June 3

8 pm TNT, Max, Peacock       US Women vs Jamaica

Wed, June 4

2:45 pm Fox                Germany vs Portugal – Nations League Semi

Thurs, June 5

2:45 pm Fox                Spain vs France– Nations League Semi

Fri, June 6

730 pm Golazo, Para+ Louisville vs Utah NWSL
10 pm Prime San Diego vs Seattle NWSL

Sat, June 7

1 pm CBS Gothem FC vs KC Current NWSL
3:30 pm TNT, Tele      US Men vs Turkey  
7 pm Ion Bay City vs Portland NWSL
10 pm Ion LA Angel City vs Chicago

Sun, June 8

2:45 pm Fox                Nations League Finals
4 pm Golazo, Para+ Washington vs NC Courage NWSL

Tues, June 10

8 pm TNT, Peacock    US Men vs Switzerland

June 13 – 29               GOLD CUP MEN
Sat, June 14
7 pm TV 8 & CBS Golaso Indy 11 vs Pittsburg Riverhounds (Carmel GK Eric Dick returns)

Sun, June 15

6 pm FS1                     US Men vs Trinidad   Gold Cup

Thur, June 19

6 pm FS1                     US Men vs KSA  Gold Cup

Sat, June 21

7 pm TV8, Golazo Indy 11 vs Las Vegas Lights FC

Sun, June 22

7 pm FS1                     US Men vs Haiti Gold Cup

Thur, June 26

TBS, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland

Sun, June 29th

TNT, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland in Cincy

US Men

USA Soccercast, Episode 154: Christian Pulisic opts out of USMNT camp, Gold Cup
USMNT weekend roundup: Losing in the final S&S
USMNT to be without Christian Pulisic and other key players for the 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup
Wynalda Defends Pulisic Not Playing this summer  
Injured Balogun dropped from U.S. Gold Cup squad
Which USMNT players need to make a summer club move to prepare them for the World Cup?
USMNT weekend roundup: Palace & PSV trophy lifts
How the 1994 World Cup took shape and prepared America for 2026

US Women

Girma back in USWNT squad vs. China, Jamaica
2025 USWNT Friendly: Scouting China
No Morgan, no Rapinoe: The USWNT doesn’t have a face of the team now. Is that OK?
Sonnett & Emily Foxx when Champions League with Arsenal win over Barcelona
5 Things to Know – China vs USA
Naomi Girma Back on USWNT Roster for First Time in 2025

Louisville’s Fischer gets 3-match ban for hair pull
NWSL Power Rankings: San Diego Wave starting to look ominous

Champions League

How PSG moved on from Mbappé, Messi and Neymar — but got better
Champions League winners? Best moment? Star player? Pundits’ picks

From Man City To Barcelona – Inter Milan Road To Munich Shows They Fully Deserve To Be In Champions League Final

Inter Milan Will Break Club Goalscoring Record In Champions League If They Score Vs PSG In Final
Italy Star Argues ‘Inter Milan Gained Credibility Outside Italy Ahead Of Champions League Final Vs PSG

Report – Ex Bayern Munich Star Back Fit & Ready To Start PSG Vs Inter Milan Champions League Final
How Inter Milan’s ‘warrior spirit’ reignited a Champions League dream

Champions League final: Build-up as Inter and PSG fans arrive in Munich

From amateur to Champions League final: The stunning rise of Inter’s Denzel Dumfries

Ranking the 30 players who will decide the UEFA Champions League final

Club World Cup in US in June/July

Champions League and Club World Cup: A blockbuster Saturday of soccer’s contrasts On Saturday, the storied Champions League final and a brand new Club World Cup play-in spotlight soccer’s split between legacy and FIFA’s latest gamble.

Denis Bouanga’s goal in 115th minute sends LAFC to Club World Cup

Club World Cup 2025: Full schedule, fixtures, dates and venues for Chelsea and Man City
Complete guide to the Club World Cup stadiums 🏟️
LAFC vs Club America Preview Winner plays in Club World Cup

MLS

St. Louis City fire head coach Olof Mellberg 15 games into his MLS tenure

World

✅ Allegri returns to Milan for second spell, official statement 🔙
Official: Milan hire Allegri as new coach

Carlo Ancelotti highlights result which sealed Real Madrid dismissal

Ancelotti talks Real Madrid exit, Mbappe, Vinicius, Alonso – ‘After the Arsenal game, we…’

LAFC vs Club America Preview

Goalkeeping

Barcelona open to selling club captain if they succeed in landing top target
Dean Henderson’s Save vs Man City Saved Crystal Palace in FA Cup Win
GREAT Conference League Saves! 🧤😱 | Semi-finals Edition
Yes Yann Sommer was that good vs Barca – 10 saves
Emmi Martinez of Villa sees Red
Vasoline on your gloves to keep sticky ?
Good GK Activation/Stretching

June 16th: 9-4 / June 17th: 8-3 12383 Cyntheanne Rd, Fishers, IN $595 Register

Reffing

Man United vs Villa GK Save or Foul?
Offside or not?  
Yellow Card after the foul


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PSG-Inter: UEFA Champions League final preview, predictions

  • May 30, 2025, 09:51 AM ET ESPN

On Saturday, the 2024-25 European club season comes to an end with the traditional closer, the UEFA Champions League final. Held in Munich this year, the head-to-head is a tantalizing one that few expected: the “born again” Paris Saint-Germain, led by manager Luis Enrique and a young, hungry squad, taking on wily veterans Inter Milan, who have a unique formation, plenty of savvy stars and an underrated tactician in Simone Inzaghi. Both teams have taken down giants to reach the showpiece finale — PSG eliminated Liverpool and Arsenal in the knockout rounds, while Inter Milan fended off fancied Barcelona and Bayern Munich to punch their ticket — and now face a winner-take-all showdown.So who will win, and what storylines are bubbling under the surface? ESPN writers Mark Ogden, Gab Marcotti, Julien Laurens, Tom Hamilton and Bill Connelly walk you through what to watch for and give their picks for who will claim the prize Saturday night.


A final of youth vs. experience

The contrast is evident. Inter’s likely starting XI have an average age of 30 years and 4 months; Paris Saint-Germain’s is 24 and 7 months. Inter have eight players who featured the last time they were in the Champions League final, two years ago; Marquinhos is the only PSG starter to have played in a Champions League final at any time in his career. That’s the most obvious difference between Saturday’s finalists, and what impact it will have will depend heavily on how the game is played.

Editor’s Picks

A higher tempo evidently favors the fresh legs of PSG, whereas a slower, nervy grind ought to give Inter the edge, at least on paper. But both sides are far more multifaceted than they appear. Both can play a possession game, poking and prodding until the right opening appears — witness Ousmane Dembélé‘s opener against Arsenal, a result of 26 passes — but both can be direct and hit you going north-south. PSG have the speed of Dembele, Désiré Doué and Bradley Barcola; Inter have the chemistry of Marcus Thuram and Lautaro Martínez, a rare front tandem in the modern game. It’s not as simple, therefore, to liken it to a basketball game and suggest Inter want fewer possessions and PSG want more, because both coaches can and do mix things up. Rather, perhaps precisely because these teams are managed by two of the best around, we might see some myths get buried Monday night. Inter might show that the parameters of fitness and athleticism have changed and that top pros can go strong into their early 30s. PSG might show that experience is overrated relative to game intelligence and tactical instruction. So don’t just boil this down to experience vs. athleticism. There’s much more to it. — Marcotti


Battle of the superstar, MVP goalkeepers

The Champions League is usually all about the superstar forwards and their ability to win games out of nothing, from Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo to Mohamed Salah and Vinícius Júnior, but this time around, it could be decided by the goalkeepers.

Klinsmann hails Yann Sommer’s heroics in Inter’s semifinal win

Jurgen Klinsmann names Inter goalkeeper Yann Sommer as his man of the match after coming up with some huge saves to deny Barcelona.

Inter’s Yann Sommer and PSG’s Gianluigi Donnarumma were the players who got their teams over the line in the semifinals, and they have produced similar performances on the international stage with Switzerland and Italy, respectively.

Sommer, who spent a year in Munich with Bayern in 2023 after 11 seasons with Borussia Monchengladbach, replaced André Onana at Inter following the Cameroon international’s move to Manchester United two years ago, and the 36-year-old has been a clear upgrade on Onana, with his performance against Barcelona in Inter’s dramatic semifinal second-leg win producing at least five world-class saves. Donnarumma had a similar performance for PSG in their semifinal second leg against Arsenal, when he pulled off incredible saves from Martin Odegaard, Gabriel Martinelli and Bukayo Saka to keep Luis Enrique’s team ahead. Sommer and Donnarumma have had to bounce back from difficult periods in their careers to establish themselves as two of the world’s best, and they will both be looking to win their first Champions League title in Munich. If it goes all the way to penalties, it could be too tough to call between the two goalkeepers. Sommer was the hero of Switzerland’s Euro 2020 round-of-16 shootout win against France when he saved a Kylian Mbappé spot kick, while Donnarumma has won a remarkable six of seven shootouts for club and country, including the Euro 2020 final against England at Wembley, to give him an 87.5% success rate. — Ogden


Will Luis Enrique win another Treble?

Laurens: Enrique doesn’t get enough credit

Julien Lauren praises Luis Enrique’s impact on PSG and reveals details of his training sessions.

Back in 2015, Luis Enrique won the Treble (Champions League, LaLiga, Copa del Rey) with Barcelona and had an unstoppable front three of Lionel MessiLuis Suárez and Neymar. Ten years on, he has the chance to achieve another one, but with another club, and could equal something that only Pep Guardiola, his former club teammate at the Camp Nou, has done in the history of the game: winning two Trebles with two different clubs. Luis Enrique has had to wait 10 years to get another shot. That’s a very long time for a manager so obsessed with the game, though for him, it’s not just about winning; it’s about how you win, and this final will be very different than the previous one too. Then, Luis Enrique pretty much inherited Guardiola’s entire Barcelona squad except for Luis Suarez and Ivan Rakitic, who arrived the same summer as him, and the winning pedigree and mentality that came with it. For this PSG squad, it’s the opposite. This is his team. This is the Luis Enrique project, and this is only Year 1. The Asturian has built it all, getting rid of Neymar, Marco Verratti (just to name the two biggest names) and others because they didn’t fit with what he was constructing. He recruited the players he wanted (defender Willian Pacho, midfielder João Neves, playmakers Kvicha Kvaratskhelia and Désiré Doué) to complete his jigsaw and deliver on his ambitious style of play: high press, high intensity, fluidity within the structure, pace, and attacking flair. His team has been the best in Europe in 2025; they just have to finish the job on Saturday. — Laurens


How these teams reached the final

Simply watching these two teams as they advanced through the Champions League knockout rounds — PSG with ball pressure, steady buildup and an overwhelming tilt of the field, Inter with structure and substitutions and perfectly timed swipes of the sword — would give you a pretty clear impression that they thrive as polar opposites. The stats very much back up that impression.PSG are here because of pitch domination. After some early-season wobbles, they became maybe the best team in the world starting in December. Since Matchday 6, they’ve averaged the most points per game (2.45) with the most goals (30) and the best goal differential (plus-21). That includes a 7-0 win over Brest, yes, but also four wins in five games against the three teams in England (Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City).PSG have flooded teams with pure quantity: For the entire competition, they’re fifth out of 36 Champions League teams in shots per possession and third in shots allowed per possession. They’ve attempted 45 shots worth at least 0.2 xG and allowed 20, a plus-25 margin that ranks first. They just do more than their opponents: They’re first in ball recoveries (48.6) and take-ons per match (27.7), second in direct attacks (sequences starting in the defending half and producing a shot within 20 seconds) and third in buildup attacks (sequences that contain 10 or more passes and produce either a shot or a touch in the box).In short, they play like the young and endlessly aggressive team they are.

Inter, meanwhile, fill the role of the collective sturdy veteran. They win with quality over quantity: They attempt only 13.6 take-ons per match (35th), but they win 49.7% of them (third). They force 8.8 high turnovers per game (27th) but score 0.6 goals per game from them (ninth). They’re 15th in shots per possession but eighth in xG per shot, and they’re 22nd in shots allowed per possession but first in xG allowed per shot. Opponents have attempted more shots than them, but looking specifically at shots worth 0.2 xG or more, they attempt 2.3 (12th) and allow only 1.3 (third).

Inter force you to expend energy attempting to beat them with individual brilliance, and if you do so, they are almost always ready with a counterstrike. Just ask Bayern and Barcelona. PSG will almost certainly control large portions of the pitch and this match, but Inter are more likely to score from set pieces, more likely to win the ball in the air and almost certain to create random, high-quality opportunities that give them a chance at Champions League glory. — Bill Connelly


The omen of first-time winners in Munich

Dumfries: Champions League is the moment for Inter

Inter defender Denzel Dumfries and goalkeeper Yann Sommer look ahead to the Champions League final against PSG.

Munich has staged four previous European Cup/Champions League finals — three at the Olympiastadion, one at the Allianz Arena — and the German city has proved to be lucky for those teams aiming to be crowned European champions for the first time. That might be great news for PSG.

Nottingham Forest won the first of their two European Cups with a 1-0 victory against Swedish champions Malmo in 1979, while Marseille became the first (and so far only) French club to win Europe’s biggest prize by defeating AC Milan 1-0 in the Olympiastadion in 1993. Four years later, Borussia Dortmund made the short trip to Munich to take on reigning Champions League kings Juventus in their first-ever final, but despite the odds favoring Marcello Lippi’s formidable team, Dortmund cruised to a 3-1 win.

Bayern Munich faced Chelsea on home ground in the 2012 final, but despite facing the English side in their own stadium, Bayern could not break the sequence of first-time winners in Bavaria as Chelsea sealed the first of their two Champions League titles with a penalty shootout victory at the Allianz.

So will three-time European champions Inter be able to deny PSG a first Champions League title in Munich this weekend, or will Luis Enrique’s team keep the sequence going?

One more bit of good news for PSG: Marseille clinched a French victory in Munich in 1993 by defeating a team from Milan in their second attempt at winning the competition. PSG face another team from Milan in Munich, one that’s also aiming to win the Champions League on the second attempt. — Ogden


Two incredible full backs, but only one can win

Can PSG be inspired by the Munich UCL final good luck charm?

Julien Laurens and Mark Ogden discuss what PSG will need to do to beat Inter Milan in the Champions League final.

Back in the summer of 2021, Achraf Hakimi and Denzel Dumfries passed like ships. Hakimi had enjoyed an incredibly successful 2020-21 season at Inter Milan and helped Antonio Conte’s side to the Scudetto. At the end of that term, he departed for PSG.

Hakimi’s replacement? Dumfries, signed for €15 million, a fraction of the eventual €71 million Inter Milan collected for Hakimi.

But now they’re back on the same pitch, and it’s no exaggeration to say the pair have been outstanding in this year’s tournament.

Dumfries was integral to Inter’s remarkable win over Barcelona in the semifinals, scoring twice in the first leg (including on that scissor kick), and then managing to tee up Lautaro Martinez for their opener in the return fixture in Milan. Hakimi has kept a close eye on Dumfries, saying last week: “He’s a great player. One thing I like about him is that he’s very strong in the air, while I’m terrible.” Then came the little dig, however, with Hakimi saying it’s “easier” to play wing back in a 3-5-2 than to handle a back four role.

Hakimi has been consistently regarded as the best right back in world football, and he has enjoyed another superb season for PSG, even scoring the winner against Arsenal in their semifinal.

The two had very different paths to the top: Dumfries played amateur football to age 18 before progressing to PSV and then Inter Milan, while Hakimi came through the Real Madrid academy. But if you look at the stats comparison between the two this season, they are close on many metrics, such as ground duels won and tackles per 90 minutes. Then comes the nuance: Hakimi has made 3.67 interceptions per 90, compared with Dumfries’ 1.27, and Dumfries has been far more dominant in the air (winning 71% of aerial duels to Hakimi’s 47%).

They are very different types of players, but one thing binds them: their desire to get into attack and influence the match. Which one will have the defining moment Saturday? — Hamilton


It’s prediction time! Who will win, and by what scoreline?

Inter Milan 2, PSG 1: As soon as Inter and PSG confirmed their spots in the final, I predicted a 2-1 win for Inter, and I am sticking with that. I believe PSG are the better team and more exciting to watch, but Inter are a tough, uncompromising side with a cutting edge up front, so I am backing their resolve over PSG’s flair to seal the win. — Ogden

Inter Milan 2, PSG 0: They knocked out the champions of Germany and Spain, so why not make it a trifecta with the champions of France, too? The bookies fancy PSG, and you can see why. But if the game comes down to set pieces (where Inter have an edge) and intangibles (experience, sure, but also the ability to get back up after being punched in the face), Inter can shade this. — Marcotti

Inter Milan 3, PSG 2: This is going to be tight, but Inter will edge it. They have the most underrated manager (Simone Inzaghi) in world football, and their ability to arm-wrestle the tightest matches into victory will come through again. — Hamilton

PSG 1, Inter Milan 0: We’ll just play the odds here. Inter will inevitably create a couple of good chances, but PSG will create more of them. — Connelly

USWNT has no face of the team now. Which player will step up?

  • Jeff KassoufMay 29, 2025, 09:15 AM ET

The U.S. women’s national team has always had an abundance of strong leaders and recognizable stars throughout its 40-year history. Many iconic players competed across multiple generations, with 14 of them accumulating 200 caps or more, and three eclipsing the 300 mark. Today’s USWNT, however, is marked by youthful inexperience, as head coach Emma Hayes experiments to decide who will join her on the path to the 2027 World Cup.

Hayes started the youngest USWNT lineup in 24 years against Brazil last month. She has doled out 23 first-time call-ups since being hired in November 2023. Fifteen players on the current roster have 10 caps or fewer, and the three goalkeepers have a combined four caps.

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All of which underscores this changeover in generations as a jarring moment in USWNT history: For the first time in a long time, there is no obvious face of the team or spokesperson for the larger group.

Alex MorganMegan Rapinoe, and Becky Sauerbrunn prominently filled those roles over the past decade, leading the USWNT to back-to-back World Cup titles and standing on the front lines of the fight for equal pay off the field. All three have retired in the past 18 months.

Transitioning generations is natural and necessary for any team, so is it even that big of a deal? Well, yes, it is, considering the uniquely high standards of a USWNT program that has won four World Cups and five Olympic gold medals — world records in both. It is not the first time that a new generation has had to pick up where its predecessors left off, but the player turnover happening in this cycle is arguably unprecedented.

“Sometimes we just assume that everybody knows what the demands or the standards are for a U.S. women’s national team player,” Hayes said recently. “But as I’ve mentioned, we’ve got a lot of new players that lack a lot of experience. We have to transfer that, and we have to transfer it in the right way.”

Last year provided clear evidence that the changing of the guard for the USWNT was going smoothly. Hayes officially took over the job in late May, and by mid-August, the team won the Olympic gold medal. Hayes said then that she couldn’t worry about the lack of time she had — her focus was short-term on the Olympics. Only during the past eight months has she had time to plot out her long-term vision for success.

During February’s SheBelieves Cup, Hayes sat down with Lindsey HeapsCrystal DunnEmily SonnettLynn BiyendoloTierna Davidson and Sam Coffey to discuss whether they see themselves as leaders — and how that might not matter, she said, because their teammates view them as leaders anyway. What followed was weeks of conversation among players and staff around how to transfer the “non-negotiables” of work ethic and effort — and what she frequently calls “the American DNA” — to a new group of players trying to establish its own identity. “Their insights are invaluable, and I lean on learnings from them to help this process,” Hayes said of her more experienced players. “It’s going to be a little bit unfamiliar at this moment in time, but I think we’ll go to the next place. I’m certain of that.” LaBonta: USWNT senior call-up ‘a dream for over 20 years’ Kansas City captain Lo’eau LaBonta reacts to her first ever senior call-up to the USWNT at 32 years old. Heaps is the USWNT’s captain and most experienced player with 165 caps. She is a passionate, often unheralded leader who organizes the team behind the scenes, as Hayes pointed out after the team’s Olympic triumph in August. Heaps is one of the few remaining (or, at least, healthy) bridges to the past generation of players. She came onto the scene ahead of the 2016 Olympics and was part of the 2019 World Cup-winning team. Only two other players from that 2019 squad are on the current roster: Sonnett and Dunn. Hayes confirmed last week that Naomi Girma is the vice-captain. Both Girma and Heaps have had to grow into more vocal roles. “I think it just takes time,” Sauerbrunn told ESPN. “If you look at some of the personalities on the team that have retired, that took us a while to get into that after Abby Wambach retired and Shannon Boxx retired [after the 2015 World Cup]. “You just kind of learn a little bit from the people ahead of you and then you have to go and learn on your own as you figure out what you’re comfortable with. Some people want to be the spokesperson, and some people are behind there in the weeds.” The USWNT doesn’t live in the weeds, however. It is the most famous women’s sports team on the planet, and the most successful women’s soccer team in history.

Sauerbrunn’s generation had to publicly fight the U.S. Soccer Federation and U.S. President Donald Trump as part of its years-long quest for equal pay, which increased attention and scrutiny on the USWNT. Sauerbrunn said she hopes the next generation doesn’t have to shoulder as much of a burden off the field — but she also said it isn’t really a choice.”It’s not even if they want to [take on those things], because I think they have a responsibility with this platform,” Sauerbrunn said. “But it’s what they’re comfortable doing within that platform.”Coffey, who has 33 caps, is the captain of the Portland Thorns and one of the USWNT’s several emerging leaders. She said her leadership looks different each day based on the USWNT’s needs, but she told ESPN “we’re in trouble when we’re quiet,” which means she is constantly a vocal source of positive reinforcement.Coffey barely played alongside the past generation of stars, but she still regularly seeks advice from Sauerbrunn, her former Thorns teammate, who she calls “the gold standard of what it means to be a leader.”Sauerbrunn was the USWNT’s captain at multiple points over the past two World Cup cycles. Rapinoe and Morgan were the faces of the team who became global superstars. Wambach previously filled that spokesperson and star role, and Mia Hamm — among others — before that.At 24 years old and already the vice-captain, Girma is clearly next in line as leader after Heaps. Girma has already taken on some of those duties, but there has been a void of experience around the team for simple reasons: injuries and other absences.Girma, who became the first player to fetch a $1 million transfer in January, effectively missed the last three USWNT camps due to injury. Davidson tore her ACL in March, days before the camp began for the Brazil games. Biyendolo missed the April games due to injury. Dunn was absent from club and country last fall for personal reasons. And Rose Lavelle has been sidelined all year.

All three forwards who led the USWNT to the Olympic gold medal — Trinity RodmanMallory Swanson and Sophia Wilson (nee Smith) — have been missing from the team since the gold-medal game, save for a goal-scoring cameo from Rodman in April. Wilson and Swanson are on maternity leave, and Rodman is sidelined again due to a chronic back injury.Rodman, 23, is emerging as a star who transcends sports into pop culture and is someone Sauerbrunn says could reach the star status of Rapinoe. “And with that, I think she’s going to develop the responsibility of being a spokesperson for the team when you are also the face of the team,” Sauerbrunn said.With iconic stories, hit Originals and live sports, there’s something for everyone on Disney+, Hulu and ESPN+. Get all three for a price you’ll love.

Rodman is electric when she is on the field, and the media attention she has attracted suggests she is already becoming The Next Big Thing™ for the USWNT. Staying healthy is her biggest challenge right now. She said earlier this year that she didn’t think her back would ever be 100% healthy.There is an argument that Hayes is the biggest personality on the team, which further reflects the volatile nature of the player pool. She won the first Ballon d’Or women’s coaching award last year, and she instantly commands attention, whether she’s in a locker room, boardroom or packed convention hall.Hayes has appeared to use her platform to absorb and deflect the external pressures placed on a team full of young, talented players like Rodman, Jaedyn Shaw, and 17-year-old midfielder Lily Yohannes. She has preached patience as the group discovers its identity. “I think you’re seeing that this less experienced team are growing up,” Hayes said after the team’s 2-1 win over Brazil on April 5. Who among them will take on the vaunted role as one of the next faces of the USWNT? The lack of an immediate answer is an unfamiliar, uncomfortable position for a team so accustomed to having one, but it isn’t necessarily something that needs fixing. It’s a natural step in the transfer process.

Records Across the Board and International Call Ups
The NWSL had a wild week 10, setting up this upcoming international window seamlessly for the action to come in Week 11. With the Pride returning to winning form with Banda’s first hat trick, the Current and the Wave continuing their top of the table dominance, and the Spirit hitting their fifth straight road win, there were 27 goals across the league last weekend.With 108 call-ups across 30 countries and all 14 NWSL clubs represented, this upcoming international window promises to be a busy one—for both players and fans.
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Gotham wins the inaugural CONCACAF W Champions Cup, punch ticket to new 2026, 2028 international competitions

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Champions League magic, Club World Cup controversy: A blockbuster Saturday of soccer’s contrasts

Henry BushnellSenior reporter May 29, 2025 at 10:21 AM EDT·

A blockbuster Saturday of soccer will begin with a game that needs no introduction. At 3 p.m. ET, 9 p.m. in Munich, the 2025 Champions League final will ignite. Inter Milan and Paris Saint-Germain will vie for the grandest prize in club football. Both are behemoths, rich and talented, so much so that they are also among the favorites at this summer’s Club World Cup.Which brings us to Saturday’s nightcap, a game that needs every introduction. At 10:30 p.m. ET, 7:30 p.m. in Los Angeles, LAFC and Mexican powerhouse Club América will vie for one last place in that Club World Cup.Globally, their 11th-hour playoff pales in comparison to the Champions League final. It has no precedent nor built-in prestige. It is a qualifier for an unproven tournament, one that neither LAFC nor América would have realistic hopes of winning. PSG and Inter, on the other hand, are playing to actually win a competition that’s far more prestigious. One will enter the Club World Cup perched on a throne that many consider to be atop the sport.

But here in North America, when Yahoo Sports asked TelevisaUnivision executive Olek Loewenstein about the Club World Cup’s most attractive teams, and specifically about where Club América would rank if it qualified, he didn’t hesitate.“Oh, No. 1,” Loewenstein said.That, in part, is why this novel game is happening — and why it is, in FIFA’s words, a “blockbuster bout” in its own right. LAFC’s BMO Stadium is sold out, with the cheapest resale tickets priced north of $200. While América regularly packs stadiums across the continent, even for friendlies, Saturday’s game brings unique stakes. The winner will get at least $9.55 million in guaranteed prize money, and a global stage that neither club has ever had. Hype, it seems, is building.But it’s a different type of hype than the one overtaking Paris, Milan and Munich.It has been manufactured in months, rather than developed over decades.And it epitomizes the contrasts between the UEFA Champions League and the Club World Cup, which is, in some ways, the UCL’s upstart challenger.

MUNICH, GERMANY - MAY 28: The official match ball is seen ahead of the UEFA Champions League Final 2025 between Paris Saint-Germain and FC Internazionale Milano at the Munich Football Arena on May 28, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Michael Regan - UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)
The stage is set in Munich — and so is the official match ball for the 2025 UEFA Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan. (Photo by Michael Regan – UEFA via Getty Images) (Michael Regan – UEFA via Getty Images)

The controversial Club World Cup playoff

Perhaps now is the time for the Club World Cup introduction, and the explanation of a playoff that, a month ago, did not yet exist. The field for the inaugural 32-team, quadrennial club tournament had been set since the fall. North America’s representatives were seemingly finalized when Pachuca won the 2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup, the region’s only known route to the Club World Cup.But then, in October, FIFA released the Club World Cup’s regulations. Article 10 prohibited the participation of two clubs who share an owner — which, for Pachuca and fellow Mexican club León, became a problem. Both are owned by Grupo Pachuca.In March, citing this rule, FIFA expelled León, the 2023 CONCACAF champs, from its tournament. León players decried the “grave,” “brutal injustice” — “football is stained by this,” James Rodríguez said — but FIFA was already considering replacements. Its rules gave it significant discretion. And its plan soon became clear.The Club World Cup’s qualification criteria gave FIFA five or six realistic options. It could choose the Columbus Crew or LAFC, the runners-up to Pachuca and León in the last two CONCACAF finals. Or it could turn to its CONCACAF rankings, where Club América was the top unqualified team; Costa Rica’s Alajuelense was the top team from a country with less than two participants; and the Philadelphia Union were the top team from a country with less than two standard qualifiers.The criteria stipulated that “a cap of two clubs per country is applied” to those attempting to qualify via rankings. FIFA ignored that stipulation, picked LAFC and América, and pitted them against each other in this one-off “play-in.”

It is, in many ways, the perfect high-stakes appetizer for the Club World Cup. It’s also par for the tournament’s course. With skepticism and resistance dogging its launch, and with a need to sell tickets, broadcast rights and sponsorships, FIFA has reached for star power. It gave Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami a “host country” berth in October. More recently, FIFA president Gianni Infantino has talked up the possibility that Cristiano Ronaldo could join one of the qualified teams less than three weeks before kickoff.

And now, FIFA will get either Major League Soccer’s most valuable club or Mexico’s winningest. LAFC was MLS’ pre-Messi glamor club. América is the continent’s most popular. They will duel in prime time for a place in Group D alongside Flamengo, ES Tunis and Chelsea.

The magic of the Champions League

The Champions League final, on the other hand, does not have a sexy headliner. It does not have Real Madrid, nor Barcelona, nor an English Premier League power. It is the first final without them or Bayern Munich in over two decades. Some casual American fans might not find it all that intriguing.And yet, it will almost certainly be the most-watched sporting event on Earth in 2025.Even with Lautaro Martínez and Ousmane Dembélé — rather than Ronaldo or Messi, or Vinicius Jr. and Kylian Mbappé — as the stars, it hardly needs hype manufactured.And it does not need to be sold as “the $26 million game,” even though its prize pot is larger than the Club World Cup’s. It is lucrative, and increasingly commercialized, yes, but its appeal is not about money. Its appeal is simple: It’s the Champions League.

There are surely some fans and soccer execs who are bummed that Barcelona isn’t playing in it. Ratings won’t break records. Narratives, beyond PSG’s unlikely resurgence and a possible first title, might not break through into the casual fan’s consciousness.But there is magic in this competition, and in this singular match. Magic sourced in simplicity. For 70 years, the best clubs in Europe — which are almost always the best clubs in the world — have battled for supremacy. And inevitably, special things have happened.So, you wouldn’t dare bet against more special things on Saturday. You might not know the magicians, yet, but you don’t need to; and soon, you will. Inter and PSG might not give us a 13- or nine-goal thriller, as they did in the semis and quarters, respectively; but they’ll surely give us drama, and emotions, all of which will sell itself.

Johnny Cardoso caps breakout season with a USMNT first in Conference League final defeat

USMNT and Real Betis midfielder Johnny Cardoso

By Jeff Rueter the athleitc – May 28, 2025


It wasn’t quite the history that Johnny Cardoso and Real Betis meant to make on Wednesday. Going in search of a first European trophy, the U.S. men’s national team defensive midfielder’s Spanish club blew a 1-0 lead against Chelsea and capitulated entirely in the last 25 minutes, falling 4-1 in the UEFA Europa Conference League final. Cardoso did, however, become the first American male to start in a major European final in the process, taking his usual place as the anchor of Real Betis’ midfield and playing 85 minutes.Wednesday’s final came almost four years to the day after Christian Pulisic became the first American man to play in a final on the other end of the UEFA spectrum, coming off the bench as his Chelsea side topped Manchester City to win the Champions League. That match was highly anticipated in spite of Pulisic’s rotational role with the Blues, arguably the high point of what became a frustrating spell in London for the winger.Just as the Europa Conference League doesn’t have the same pull as the Champions League, Cardoso doesn’t carry the same clout in U.S. circles as Pulisic, but then again, nobody in the pool can match Pulisic’s magnetism and high-level production these days. Nevertheless, Cardoso has been closely monitored by some of Europe’s biggest clubs, with his European stage offering a spotlight. Tottenham worked something of a “dibs” option on the midfielder when it sold Giovani Lo Celso to Betis in 2024, establishing a fixed fee of €25 million (£20.9m; $26.9m) should he further pique Spurs’ interest.

That clause expires at the end of June, and other clubs (including Manchester United and Atlético Madrid) are reportedly also monitoring the 23-year-old for a potential summer move, despite a February contract extension tying him to Betis through 2029-30. On the back of a capable individual showing on Wednesday, particularly in the first half, it’s plausible that Cardoso won’t be with Betis for much longer.

The Conference League final was the culmination of the latest step in Cardoso’s rapid ascent — one that makes him among the most intriguing players in the entire USMNT pool.


What Sets Johnny Apart

Most U.S. eligible players spend their formative years getting driven around to weekend soccer tournaments or slamming a ball off of a wall. Born in New Jersey and raised in his parents’ native Brazil, Cardoso cut his teeth playing futsal. The small-field alternative to soccer emphasizes technical prowess instead of open-space running, requiring its players to keep close control of a ball and make quick decisions in possession.Those instincts helped the midfielder as he began his professional career, debuting with Brazilian side Internacional days before his 18th birthday. He amassed 117 league appearances with the club, capping his tenure with a run to the 2023 Copa Libertadores semifinal, where he started both legs against eventual champion Fluminense.Soon, Cardoso had his suitors: Napoli, Brighton, Sporting and Galatasaray reportedly among them. Ultimately, he felt that Betis represented the best opportunity for launching his European career.“It was a question of feeling,” Cardoso told The Athletic in 2024. “I just had this hunch that it was the right choice. I thought I would be able to adapt to the city and felt Spain would suit my style of play. I am a very technical player, which comes from futsal. I read the game well and Spanish football is very positional, very organized. I knew that it would be easier to adapt here than in the Premier League, for example.”

Betis has been praised as a very technical side under Manuel Pellegrini, with the Chilean manager favoring players who can be nimble on the ball. Stylistically, it afforded Cardoso an immediate fit into the core of Pellegrini’s side while he adjusted from the Brazilian Serie A’s hard-nosed nature to La Liga’s more wide-open alternative. Based on his underlying numbers, that transition didn’t take long at all.

First, some footage. Early in Cardoso’s tenure, Betis was facing Cadiz in league play. Here, Cardoso found himself in a more advanced position than usual as Cadiz worked to force a turnover and spring a break.

Offering his teammate an outlet, Cadiz’s four-man convergence forces an eventually blocked pass. Cardoso anticipated a passing triangle, ignoring the initial pass to jump into the next passing lane.

If he gets his timing wrong, Cadiz will have a golden chance to open space and launch the ball upfield. Between his reading of the sequence and his somewhat gangly 6-foot-1 frame, which he positions to present a wide obstacle to his opponent’s anticipated pass, he’s able to stop this quick break before it can be sprung.

Johnny Cardoso plays for Real Betis

At this point, his work isn’t done. With Internacional, Cardoso gained plaudits for his ability to break lines with his passing. That much hasn’t manifested in his role with Betis — no midfielder in La Liga who has played at least 1,800 minutes since he debuted sends a lower rate of his passes at least five yards upfield than Cardoso’s 8.7%. Most often, Cardoso is asked to prod the ball to either of his box-to-box midfield partners to do the line-breaking worHere, the line is already broken. Keeping the ball on the ground, Cardoso dribbles upfield and spots a pocket of space between attacking midfielder Nabil Fekir and Willian José. As the ball skips just beyond Fekir, the Brazilian forward is in perfect position for an unmarked first-touch finish, as Cardoso has played the ball with ideal weight and pace.

Johnny Cardoso plays for Real Betis

When Betis tightens the screw and moves its midfield line into the attacking half, Cardoso doesn’t look out of place. His technical acumen allows him to create chances in a manner usually reserved for the sport’s attacking showmen.

When the ball is in Betis’ own half, those same close-control techniques can help him prevent making costly turnovers close to his own goal, as Fiorentina saw in the Conference League semifinal. He’s still a defensive midfielder, after all, so he isn’t shy about dropping a shoulder or swinging a leg to get around an opponent in the name of securing possession.


How Johnny Fits With the USMNT

This combination of tidy technician work and his rangy mobility has made him an ideal target for many clubs. It’s also what played him into Gregg Berhalter’s USMNT as the primary deputy to Tyler Adams, a long-needed alternative to the Bournemouth midfielder.

Depending on how Mauricio Pochettino wants to calibrate his midfield, there could be room for both defensive midfielders to start. They could set up as a stingy double-pivot to shield the USMNT’s often-unsettled back line, affording the defense more time to get its shape right while two tireless ball hawks offer protection. In this scenario, Weston McKennie could play more advanced in a three-man midfield.

At the very least, he’s a very viable option to step in if needed, especially after being tested at a higher level this season. One issue during the 2022 World Cup was Berhalter’s reliance on Adams, McKennie and Yunus Musah to start all four matches. By the round of 16, the youthful trio looked fatigued, giving the Netherlands more freedom to operate up the heart of the park than the USMNT had faced in the group stage.

Since Adams debuted, the U.S. has been at its best with him in the lineup. That may give him an edge over Cardoso if the co-hosts can advance into the knockout bracket, but it shouldn’t preclude Cardoso from getting ample run-out if he continues in his current form. If he can take his game to the next level, with or without a summer move, it’ll present Pochettino with a rare “good problem” as he works through the rest of the team’s ongoing headache areas. And with Cardoso part of the Gold Cup squad at a time when McKennie and Musah are absent, he should have every chance to make that case.

LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 17: Chris Richards and Matthew Turner of Crystal Palace celebrate with the trophy after winning the Emirates FA Cup Final match between Crystal Palace and Manchester City at Wembley Stadium on May 17, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Sebastian Frej/Getty Images)

What it’s like to watch your son win the FA Cup – by Chris Richards’ parents

Adam Crafton The Athletic May 24, 2025

Almost a week has passed since Carrie Richards watched her son climb the Wembley steps to be greeted by Prince William, and raise the FA Cup with his victorious Crystal Palace team-mates.The rush of adrenaline will take some time yet to subside. So, too, will the beaming pride felt by Carrie and her husband, Ken. They flew in from Birmingham, Alabama, to see their son, the 25-year-old USMNT defender Chris Richards, become only the third American to win the FA Cup — as part of the Palace team that defeated Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City. Matt Turner, the national team’s goalkeeper, also received a winner’s medal, albeit he was an unused substitute on the day.“ Saturday was the most surreal experience of my life,” Carrie grins, speaking on a video call with The Athletic from the family home. “Seeing the fans walking down Wembley Way… I have never seen anything like it. The stadium was electric. My heart was beating. If I had worn my Apple watch, it probably would have told me I needed to go to the emergency room, from the moment we got there to the moment we left.”The game itself was a nerve-shredding, nail-eviscerating experience. Palace had never won a major trophy in their history. This was City’s 14th appearance in an FA Cup final and they had won two of the previous six editions of the tournament. For Palace to win demanded extreme commitment, the players stretching every last sinew in red and blue. It needed supreme organisation, a splash of quality and also a little fortune.Palace scored the game’s only goal via their talismanic attacking midfielder Eberechi Eze, but also survived a red card review against their goalkeeper, Dean Henderson. He subsequently saved a penalty.

Henderson saves Omar Marmoush’s penalty as Richards watches on (Ed Sykes/Sportsphoto/Allstar/Getty Images)

Carrie says: “Even if we’d been two or three ahead, I don’t I think I would have felt any more comfortable! A few weeks back, we were 2-0 up against City and we still lost 5-2 (in the Premier League fixture).”Even after Palace survived 90 minutes of ordinary time, the fourth official’s board indicated 10 additional minutes for stoppages. Ken and Carrie blow out their cheeks. “We were counting down every last second,” she says. “I remember seeing we were down to three minutes, but there wasn’t a second where I was like, ‘OK, I can breathe now!’ until he blew the final whistle.”That was the starting pistol for an explosion of joy and abandon. Carrie, who was seated with the families of the Palace players, says: “Everyone was in tears. Everyone was hugging…”“High-fiving, too,” Ken interjects. “It was crazy. We were just ecstatic, there were lots of balloons going around.”The couple took in the scene. Multiple generations of families collapsing into each other on the terraces. Some players appeared to enter a trance; some sinking to their knees, others on their backs, exhausted, while more still embraced joyously. Messages from across the pond flooded into Carrie’s inbox. One photograph in particular, of royalty placing the winners’ medal around her son’s neck, kept coming through.She says: ‘What’s funny is all my friends were more impressed with him being greeted by Prince William. They were like, ‘Oh my gosh!’ Americans are so fascinated with the royal family!”

Prince William, Prince of Wales, presented the cup to Crystal Palace (Eddie Keogh – The FA/Getty Images)

Richards excelled in the Palace defence, muzzling City superstar Erling Haaland. He made four blocks, 12 clearances and won five duels. Not once did an opponent dribble past him.Before the game, his parents had sent their usual text messages. Ken says: “I tell him good luck. Trust your instincts, trust what you see, go out, play and have fun.”Carrie’s message was a little more sentimental. “I was telling him how proud I was. The coach Oliver Glasner told him this opportunity was not a burden, but a privilege. We just wanted Chris to stay in the moment, be present, enjoy every minute, because we knew or had been told that it could be a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”Carrie and Ken’s first pleasant surprise came when arriving at Wembley and seeing their son on the front cover of the match-day programme. As for how the Palace fans feel about him?“People were walking around with Afro wigs on and American flags,” Carrie laughs. “A whole group (of fans) were in the section of the stadium chanting ‘USA!’ That’s priceless.”

Richards at Wembley (Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

For the Richards family, this represented a milestone.Their collective story is one of devotion and sacrifice. Unseen to the ordinary fan is how families share in the emotional rollercoaster of professional soccer; matchday at the highest level can test emotions, but the journey to the summit requires patience, empathy and no little resilience. Richards was born into a comfortable household. His mum worked in a managerial paralegal-type role in a law firm, while his dad owned a moving transportation company that helped people with house moves. But when the economy crashed in 2009, and far fewer people moved home, the business went under.“We lost everything,” Carrie says. “We had to start completely over, from doing very well before to having absolutely nothing. We were definitely pinching pennies every week. I can remember one time even Chris getting in from practice and him handing me a letter that said if we didn’t pay his soccer fees, then he wouldn’t get to play that next week.“I was so embarrassed. We were just robbing Peter to pay Paul every week.”In the United States, life as a soccer parent can be exorbitantly expensive. Carrie and Ken say that Chris would often have games either out of state, or far enough away to require a hotel stay. He had two younger siblings who also required attention. “We were an average family and we were struggling to pay it,” Carrie says.Trips out of town would cost at least $500 for a weekend. Carrie or Ken would often volunteer to drive the passenger van for the team, because that was a way to have the cost of a hotel covered.“There was another player whose parents could never go, so they would split the hotel costs with us and they would stay in our room,” she says. “I don’t think him quitting was ever a question. For us, it was always just, ‘How are we going to do it?’ rather than, ‘Will we do it?’.”

A young Richards takes on his marker (Carrie Richards)

The family lived in Hoover, Alabama, around 10 miles south of Birmingham. A place where football is king — Hoover High School has 13 state titles — and soccer is seen as a curiosity. “Soccer here is probably the fifth most popular sport,” says Carrie. “It is only now (after the final) some people around us are starting to say, ‘Oh, now I understand what Chris achieved because he’s on the news’.

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“A few weeks ago, somebody asked me what I was going to London for. I said: ‘Oh, my son plays soccer in England’. And they’re like, ‘Oh he doesn’t want to play in the United States?’. So I think there’s still a lot of people around here just don’t understand the magnitude of playing in the Premier League.

“They’re like, ‘Oh, you’re going all the way to the UK for a game?’. Yes, the FA Cup is the oldest tournament in history! This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”


On Richards’ arms, he has tattoos of heroes including Martin Luther King Jr., Muhammad Ali and Barack Obama, but his first tattoo, written in Roman numerals, is the date he left home shortly after turning 16.He had not long been cut by FC Dallas when he was offered a place at U.S. Soccer Academy Development club Houston Texans SC. This was a step down to move forwards, playing in a non-MLS academy 10 hours from home.Chris, his mum admits, was “devastated” when Dallas let him go.Ken says, “I’m a little old school and I felt like he would do one of two things: he would give up or use it as fuel to push him on. That’s exactly what he did. Sometimes it’s good to have a little disappointment. It built a resilience which helped him as he left home and especially when he later moved to Europe.”

A delighted Richards with team-mate Jean-Philippe Mateta at Wembley (Julian Finney – The FA/Getty Images)

For both parents, letting their eldest boy fly the nest was a wrench. Houston found him a host family, the Eastons, who met Carrie and Ken once before taking in their son. They remain in touch to this day and describe the family as “just amazing”.“We were thinking that we have two more years to prepare him for life — to learn how to cook, how to make a doctor’s appointment,” says Carrie. “He moved 10 hours away to a family that we’d barely met in a city that we’ve never been to. We were praying for the best.“But he was saying: ‘We’ve got to do this’. So, OK, I’ve got to get on board. It was heart wrenching.“I cried every day for God knows how long. Every time we went to see him, I would cry when we left. He didn’t even have his driver’s licence yet. Our other son Christian was two, just a little baby, and he was missing his big brother. It was almost like he’d gone to college two years early. We mentally weren’t ready for that.”Ken smiles. “And there were so many people, family and friends, in our ears, saying, ‘Are you guys going to let them go? You guys are crazy. This is the worst idea you could have!’,” he says.Carrie continues, “We were second guessing ourselves, asking: ‘Is this the dumbest thing we’ve ever done?’.”

It turned out to be the opposite.Richards grew in height and quality while in Houston and his team racked up a string of impressive wins, including against the team who had released him. Dallas then invited him back and, after trials at Borussia Dortmund and Hoffenheim, he was signed by Bayern Munich just as he turned 18.

There were a handful of appearances for Bayern’s first team, as well as loan spells at Hoffenheim, before Palace spent an initial €12million (£10m; $13.5m) on Richards in the summer of 2022. This campaign has been his best yet, starting 28 games in Glasner’s exciting Palace team, particularly coming to the fore in a second half of the season in which Palace have shot up the Premier League table and claimed the FA Cup.

Carrie, Chris and Ken Richards with the FA Cup (Carrie Richards)

“It was very moving at the final to see how much it meant to the people of south London — for him to be a part of something that’s so historic,” says Ken. “He’ll forever be a part of that. Maybe 100 years from now, it’ll be maybe a trivia question: ‘Who’s the American centre-back when we won our first FA Cup?’.”

After the game, there was time for hugs, drinks and photographs at the nearby Boxpark, both with his parents and his girlfriend, who recently gave birth for the first time. His siblings watched from home, with his sister Mackenzie studying at college and younger brother Christian still at school. They sent explanations from across the pond when Carrie and Ken were trying to understand, amid little in-stadium communication, why the game had been delayed for a VAR review of Henderson’s handball outside the penalty area.

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But enough about Chris the footballer. What does Chris the person mean to his parents?

Ken pauses, his eyes moistening. “He’s such a good person. Everybody thinks highly of their kids but he really is a great person who cares about other people. He’s very humble, very considerate…”

Carrie jumps in: “He has a really good sense of humor.”

Ken nods: “Yes, he’s funny. There are so many adjectives I can use, but he’s special.”

Carrie says: “He would do anything for either of us, for his siblings. He’s loyal to the friends he grew up with.”

Richards and fellow USMNT player Turner parade the FA Cup around Wembley (Glyn Kirk/AFP via Getty Images)

As parents of an American soccer player, the next year brings excitement, with a home World Cup on the horizon in the summer of 2026.

“He was injured right before the World Cup in Qatar,” Carrie adds. “Since we had already taken off the time to go to the World Cup, we decided to go over and spend that time with him, because he was not in a good place emotionally at all. So we made sure we were there for him.

“When he was a little boy, he always had these little sticky notes on his mirror: he wants to achieve this or he wants to achieve that. Playing in the World Cup was one one of these. We would be so incredibly proud.”

Fulham and USMNT’s Antonee Robinson undergoes minor knee surgery

LONDON, ENGLAND - APRIL 20: Antonee Robinson of Fulham controls the ball during the Premier League match between Fulham FC and Chelsea FC at Craven Cottage on April 20, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

By Ali Ramplingn May 28, 2025


Fulham and U.S. men’s national team full-back Antonee Robinson has undergone knee surgery.Fulham confirmed the 27-year-old had undergone the operation on his right knee on Tuesday and described the surgery as “minor”.No exact timeframe has been given for his return but Fulham said he will undergo a period of rehabilitation to be ready for the start of the 2025-26 campaign.Robinson was not included in Mauricio Pochettino’s USMNT squad for this summer’s Gold Cup, having been given the summer off after a long season with Fulham.He made 38 appearances in all competitions and provided 10 assists — the most of any defender in the Premier League. This followed a 2023-24 campaign in which he provided six assists in the top flight and was named Fulham’s player of the season.What You Should Read NextAntonee Robinson: My game in my wordsThe Fulham and USMNT international talks us through his strengths and weaknesses — and Salah asking him how old he is…

Robinson featured in 36 of Fulham’s 38 Premier League fixtures this campaign but missed two of his side’s final five league matches through injury. He was also absent from the Concacaf Nations League finals in March due to tendinopathy.The left-back is one of a number of first-team regulars missing from the U.S. Gold Cup squad, alongside Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Tim Weah. Like Robinson, Pulisic was also given the summer off after making 50 appearances in all competitions for Milan this season, while McKennie and Weah both have club commitments with Juventus competing in the Club World Cup.The U.S. play Trinidad & Tobago, Saudi Arabia and Haiti in the Gold Cup group stages, which start in June.

5/2/25 Champs League Semis Tues/Wed spectacular on CBS, Indy 11 home Sat, Messi & Miami lose cup game to Vancouver

Captain America did it again as his goal vs Inter Milan help AC Milan advance to the Coppa Italia final at the Stadio Olimpico on May 14 where a win would insure a Europa League spot during this disappointing 9th place season. Word is he’ll sign on till 2029 with a new contract and a hefty raise soon. Chris Richards anchored the 3 man defense for Crystal Palace in 3-0 thumping of Aston Villa Highlights in their FA Cup Semi and will face Man City in the FA Cup Finals at Wembley Sat, May 17 with a Champions League spot on the line. Both American’s play Monday. Awesome Call on Wrexham Final Goal as they become 1st team to win back to back to back promotions. Also cool to see Eric Dick a former Carmel High, CDC, & Butler Goalkeeper will be on TV Wed night on CBS Sports Network as his Pittsburgh Riverhounds host MLS NYCFC at 7 pm in US Open Cup play. Sunday we get NWSL action Gotham FC vs Chicago Stars on CBS at 1 pm. Oh and Good Luck everyone playing in the Challenge Cup this weekend at Grand Park – I will be reffing all day Saturday on F12.

Champions League Tues/Wed, Europa Thurs

Wow do I love Champions League football – no my favorite teams are not alive, and there are no American’s in this year’s final 4 – but the excitement of the World’s Top Club competition is exhilarating! Arsenal is down 1-0 to PSG on the way to Paris Wed, while Barcelona and 17 year old Messi like Yamal will host Inter Milan Wed on Para+ after a spectacular 3-3 tie highlights in Milan on Wed. In Europa action the 3 English teams rolled at home looks to be an all English final with a Champions League spot on the line, while the lone American still playing Johnny Cordosa & Real Bettis take a 2-1 lead to Fiorentina. (see some fantastic saves in both Competitions in the GK section below) Buckle up this week folks – gonna be a doozy Tues/Wed.

Tues Champions League

Inter Milan vs Barcelona (3-3) on Para+, Univision
Wed Champions League
PSG vs Arsenal (1-0) on CBS & Para+ 3 pm
Thurs 3 pm Europa League on Para+
Man United vs Athletic Club
Bode vs Tottenham CBSSN
Djurgarden vs Chelsea
Fiorentina vs Real Bettis (Cordosa) (1-2)

MLS Miami falls to Vancouver in Champions Cup to face Mexico’s Cruz Azul in Final

Its was prime time MLS viewing on Wed night as Miami and Messi returned home down 2-0 to the hottest team in MLS the Vancouver Whitecaps. After scoring early everyone of course assumed Miami would come back like always and close out the series – everyone but Vancouver. Behind goals from Brian White and Sebatian Berhalter (yes GB’s son) the Caps – capped Miami 3-1 to win 5-1 on aggregate setting up the final with Mexico’s Cruz Azul on June 1st. On TV Sat struggling Atlanta will host Nashville winners of 2 straight at 2:45 pm on Fox, while you can check out San Diego’s new stadium vs Dallas at 9:15 on FS1 Sat. Meanwhile word is Man City’s Kevin DeBruyne is in talks with Chicago Fire while Paul Pogba seems to be leaning away from DC United.

Indy 11 home vs Detroit City 7 pm Mental Health Awareness Night on TV8.

The Indy Eleven made its USL Jägermeister Cup debut in impressive fashion with a 4-0 victory at Forward Madison FC to take an early lead in the Group 3 standings with three points, followed by One Knoxville SC with two.  Those two teams will meet on May 24 at Knoxville in the second of four Group Stage games.
Join us for a meaningful and impactful evening as Indy Eleven hosts Mental Health Awareness Night—a special event dedicated to raising awareness, reducing stigma, and supporting mental health initiatives in our community. Together, we’ll shine a light on the importance of mental well-being while the Boys in Blue take on Detroit City FC on the field.  Discounted Tickets: For the first 500 fans, tickets start at just $12 exclusively via This Link!  They play at the Philly Union Wed night May 7th in US Open Cup on Paramount+.

Congrats to the Carmel FC 2009 Boys Blue & Coaches for win at Terre Haute Tourney!

June 16th: 9-4 / June 17th: 8-3 12383 Cyntheanne Rd, Fishers, IN $595 Register

TV Games

Fr, May 2

2:45 pm Para+            Torino vs Venzia (Busio)

3 pm Peacock              Man City vs Wolverhampton

8 pm Amazon Prime   Washington Spirit vcs ACFC NWSL

10:30 pm Gola, Para   Seattle vs KC   NWSL

Sat, May 3

7:30 am USA               Villa vs Fulham (Robinson)

10 am Peaccok            Everton vs Ipswich Town

12:30 pm NBC            Arsenal vs Bournmouth (Tyler Adams) 

2:45 pm Golazo, Para Inter Milan vs Hellas Verona

3 pm ESPN+                 Barcelona vs Real Valladolid

2:45 pm Fox                Atlanta United vs Nashville SC MLS

7:30 pm Ion                 Portland Thorns vs Orlando Pride (Marta)  NWSL

7:30 pm TV? Indy 11 vs Detroit City @ the Mike

9 pm FS1                     San Diego vs Dallas  MLS   

10 pm Ion                    Utah Royals vs NC Courage NWSL

Sun, May 4

10 am CBSSN              Monza vs Atalanta  

11:30 pm Peacock      Chelsea vs Liverpool  

1 pm CBS                    Gothan FC vs Chicago Stars (Naher) NWSL

2:45 pm Para+,           Juventus (Mckinney, Weah) vs Bologna 

7 pm Apple TV            Sporting KC vs LA Galaxy

8 pm Golazo, Para+    San Diego Wave vs Bay City NWSL

Mon, May 5

2:45 pm Para+, FoxD Genoa vs AC Milan (Pulisic)

3 pm USA Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Nottingham Forest

Tues, May 6                Champions League

3  pm CBS, Uni         Inter Milan vs Barcelona

Weds, May 7              Champions League

3  pm CBS, Par+       PSG (1-0) vs Arsenal

7 pm CBSSN                Pittsburgh Riverhounds (Dick) vs NYC USL  

7:30 pm Para+            Philly Union vs Indy 11   US Open Cup

Thurs, May 8    Europa

3 pm CBSSN               Bodo vs Tottenham  

3 pm Para+, Uni         Man United vs Athletic Club

3 pm para+                 Real Bettis (Cordosa) vs Fiorentina

3 pm para+                 Chelsea vs Djurgarden

Sat, May 17

ESPN+?                       Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Man City FA Cup Final
Wed, May 21

Paramount Plus             Europa League Final in Balboa, Spain

Wed, May 28

Paramount Plus             Europa Conference League Final in Poland

Sat, May 31

CBS 3 pm                     UEFA Champions League Final in Munich, Germany

5 pm TBS                     US Women vs China

Sun, June 1

Fox Sport 1                  Cruz Azul vs Vancouver Whitecaps  CC Champions Cup Final

Tues, June 3

TNT, Max, Peacock       US Women vs Jamaica

Wed, June 4

2:45 pm Fox                Germany vs Portugal – Nations League Semi

Thurs, June 5

2:45 pm Fox                Spain vs France– Nations League Semi

Sat, June 7

3:30 pm TNT, Tele      US Men vs Turkey  

Sun, June 8

2:45 pm Fox                Nations League Finals

Tues, June 10

8 pm TNT, Peacock    US Men vs Switzerland

June 13 – 29               GOLD CUP MEN

Sun, June 15

6 pm FS1                     US Men vs Trinidad   Gold Cup

Thur, June 19

6 pm FS1                     US Men vs KSA  Gold Cup

Sun, June 22

7 pm FS1                     US Men vs Haiti Gold Cup

Sun, June 26

TBS, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland

Sun, June 29th

TNT, Peacock             US Women vs Ireland in Cincy

USA

Opinion: Bruce Arena and the weary take of staggering frailty on Mauricio Pochettino’s nationality
Christian Pulisic hits consecutive double-digit scoring seasons in 2-0 win over Venezia
Christian Pulisic’s decade-long European streak still alive as AC Milan advance to Coppa Italia final
USMNT weekend highlights: Puli goal, Luna brace, Sargent TOTS
SSFC Spotlight: Alex Freeman lighting up MLS
Poch will only select ‘right characters’ for USMNT

Marsch banned 2 games after red card vs. USMNT


Netflix to release “The 99ers” film on 1999 USWNT World Cup triumph
Atlanta a likely host for 2031 Women’s World Cup hints FIFA president Gianni Infantino
USWNT and Angel City FC superstar: A brief analysis on Alyssa Thompson
FIFA-funded study to begin research into possible menstrual cycle link to women’s knee injurie

American Forward Josh Sergant was elected to the Best 11 for the Championship this season

Champions League

Breaking down European semifinals: Arsenal vs. PSG, Barcelona vs. Inter predictions
Barça, Inter, Yamal deliver perfect Champions League night
How Yamal’s first 100 games compare to other phenoms’: Messi, Ronaldo, Mbappé
Inzaghi: Phenoms like Yamal ‘born every 50 years’
Thuram and Dumfries fuel return of ‘real Inter’
Sources: Barça’s Kounde to miss Inter 2nd leg
Barça battle back for draw in goalfest with Inter
Inter’s Martínez plays down Yamal-Messi links
PSG’s Dembélé shows Arsenal what they’re missing: a clinical forward
Arteta: Arsenal need ‘something special’ in Paris
The fatal errors that cost Arsenal against PSG
On a day when Messi and Ronaldo faded, Lamine Yamal filled the void

Europa League continues to offer Man United a lifeline for this season
Wins put Man Utd, Spurs on brink of unlikely final

Tottenham’s confusing season could still end with Europa League glory

How Premier League teams can qualify for Champions League, Europe this season
The secret behind Arctic Circle club Bodo/Glimt’s red-hot Europa League run
Where are the Champions League, Europa League and Conference League finals?

MLS

Inter Miami and an aging Messi ousted from CONCACAF Champions Cup
Lionel Messi continues to set attendance records during 2025 — here’s the full list
BREAKING: Club América and LAFC set to play Club World Cup playoff; Infantino ‘confirms’ FIFA plan
Inter Miami has little to show for Messi and its star-studded roster
Sources: Pogba eyeing Europe despite D.C. talks
Cruz Azul dispatch Tigres to reach the CONCACAF Champions Cup FinalOneFootball

EPL

Taking Palace to FA Cup final, Eze looks ready for next step
Chris Richards

World

Men’s soccer rivalries to know: El Clásico, Manchester Derby
Antonio Rüdiger could serve up to a 12-match ban after red card in Copa del Rey final
Cristiano Ronaldo fights back tears as Al-Nassr set to end season without a trophy

OFFICIAL: Jamie Vardy announces he’s leaving Leicester City after 13 seasons

NWSL & World

If parity is NWSL’s ‘superpower’ vs. Europe competition, is expansion its kryptonite?
Last-place Chicago Stars fire coach Donaldson
NWSL seeks to launch second division in 2026
NWSL MVP Tracker: Thompson leads USWNT in ranking, but other internationals dominate

How ruthless Chelsea romped to a sixth consecutive WSL title

Chelsea left ‘sad and frustrated’ after UWCL exit
Wrexham women lose cup final but take another step forward

Indy 11

Indy Eleven at MLS Philadelphia Union in Open Cup
Blake, Amoh Earn USL Jägermeister Cup Team of the Round Honors
Recap-MAD 0:4 IND
Indy Eleven Academy wins 3 National Championships!
Recap-IND 1:3 CHS
Foster repeats on USLC “Team of the Week”

Congrats to former Carmel FC Defender Maverick McCoy as his Indy 11 U19s continue to Win

Goalkeeping

Great Saves Donnarumma & Szczesny
Champs League Great Saves Wed  
Europa League Semi Final Great Saves
Cortious Saves vs Arsenal last round
Not Cool by Gigi Donnarumma fake falldown on Corner
Goal Kick Technique
How to Throw the Ball Properly  

Reffing

Copa del Rey final referee breaks down in tears after Real Madrid TV releases video bashing him
Real Madrid’s running battle with referees: How did it start? When will it end?
Did the VAR slip up with Evanilson’s red card vs. Man United?
Not Cool by Gigi Donnarumma

If this is offsides Soccer has a problem

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This Week in the NWSL
Records Fall and Rookies RiseThis past game weekend was perhaps the most action-packed weekend of the season so far, with dramatic comeback winners, rookie breakthroughs, and lots and lots of goals. Week 6 introduced 8 new goal-scorers to the books, with the NWSL now nearing 500 unique goal scorers in league history. The 40 club is also growing with the Spirit’s Aubrey Kingsbury and Houston’s Jane Campbell becoming the fourth and fifth goalies to have 40 career shutouts in the last two game weekends respectively. Casey Murphy needs one more shutout to add this milestone to her career. 

The search for record-breaking continues as Lynn Biyendolo is only one assist away from the most regular season assists in league history. Catch Lynn at home with the Reign as the Current joins them in a high-stakes match, where the Current seeks to extend their league record for consecutive multi-goal games. 

NC Courage complete historic stoppage-time comeback to beat undefeated KC Current

The North Carolina Courage delivered the upset of last Saturday night, storming back in the final minutes to stun the 5-0-0 Kansas City Current. This made the Courage the first team since 2017 to score both a game-tying and game-winning goal in the 90th minute or later.
 Read More     
San Diego Wave’s U-17 players make history

The Wave made history on Saturday night, all coming from their youth. For the first time in NWSL history, three 17-year olds started the same regular season match, and all three were U.S U-17 Youth National Team standouts. Read More
Must Watch: Gotham FC vs. Chicago Stars this Sunday

With Esther González leading the Golden Boot race, she will be a force to be reckoned with, although historically Chicago has the edge in this match up. On the Chicago side, Alyssa Naeher needs one more shutout for her 50 career shutout milestone.

Watch this Sunday on CBS at 1PM ET.  
 Read More
Esther González scores another brace

Esther González scored a first-half brace shortly after her teammate and rookie Sarah Schupansky scored within 3 minutes of kick off. This proves to be the third brace in her last four matches, making her a forward to fear this season.   Read More

USMNT Player Tracker: Pulisic saves Milan (again), Richards gets real, and Paredes setback

USMNT Player Tracker: Pulisic saves Milan (again), Richards gets real, and Paredes setback

By Greg O’Keeffe April 28, 2025 The Athletic


Across the Atlantic this week, the USMNT’s overseas contingent has savored titles (and tangerines) in Scotland and enjoyed the magic of the FA Cup at Wembley. But some things don’t change: once again, Christian Pulisic gave Milan something to cling to. Elsewhere, Johnny Cardoso and Paxten Aaronson turned heads in La Liga and the Eredivisie, but Wolfsburg’s Kevin Parades suffered a blow as he continues his return from a foot injury. Read on as this week’s USMNT Player Tracker brings you all the ups and downs of the players national head coach Mauricio Pochettino will turn to this summer.


Pulisic keeps Milan’s fading hopes alive

Pulisic’s nerves of steel meant Milan clung onto their hopes of Champions League football next season.The USMNT star was unflappable when presented with an early unexpected chance to score against Venezia on Sunday, on what manager Sergio Conceicao said was a small, dry pitch that wasn’t easy for his players.An error from the hosts at the Stadio Pier Luigi Penzo, when they gave the ball away cheaply in their own half, allowed Milan’s Youssouf Fofana to seize possession and play in Pulisic at close range. Of course, the 26-year-old stayed cool and put it in the back of the net, giving the Rossoneri a major boost after just five minutes.That was it for another agonizing 91 minutes, as Milan had to fight against the relegation-battling Venetians before Santiago Gimenez made it 2-0 in stoppage time at the end. Pulisic’s big moment earned him the nod from Milan fans as man of the match, and he also put himself in elite statistical company. According to Opta, the goal meant he is now only one of the three Serie A players to have been directly involved in at least 50 goals (31 goals and 19 assists) in the last two seasons in all competitions, alongside Atalanta’s Ademola Lookman (50) and Lautaro Martinez (54) of Inter. In terms of what it means for his club, they are still eight points away from the Champions League qualifying spots with four league games remaining. It will be a tall order to drag themselves ahead of the teams above them, not least Weston McKennie’s Juventus, who are currently fourth and also won on Sunday. But after springing something of a surprise win over rivals Inter last week to reach the final of the Coppa Italia, then winning in Venice, at least Pulisic and co are developing upward momentum in the closing stages of what remains a below-par season.

Jeff Rueter’s graphic of the weekend


Champ Carter-Vickers sets Rangers record straight

It was an altogether more decisive win for Pulisic’s international team-mates in Scotland on Saturday.

But USMNT defender Cameron Carter-Vickers probably did not envisage spending a few minutes picking tangerines off the field before later celebrating his team being crowned champions. Celtic’s 5-0 thrashing of Dundee United earned the 27-year-old a fourth title medal with Celtic in a game that was interrupted during the first half when Celtic fans threw the fruit onto the field as a protest against their opponents’ ticketing prices for the game. Around the 12-minute mark, the supporters in the away section threw the tangerines and unfurled a banner reading “£njoy th£ fruits of our labour”.

Staff clear tangerines from the Tannardice turf (Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

That aside, it was easy work for Carter-Vickers and his team, who have now won the Scottish top flight 13 times in the past 14 seasons.

Carter-Vickers was a happy man, then, but he disagreed when asked afterwards whether Celtic had to set the record straight in their next game, which happens to be against rivals Rangers, who have dented an otherwise glittering season by beating them twice.

“Yes. I mean, some people might say set the record (straight),” he told the Daily Record. “I wouldn’t personally use that kind of language because for me, it’s not just like one or two games in the season, but the whole 38.“And I think we’ve shown over the 38 games that we are the best team. But, yeah, we definitely want to win the game next weekend and put in a strong performance because, at the end of the day, we know it’s something that the fans care about and we care about also.“Of course we want to win. We want to win every game we play. And that’s no different for who it is.”It might have been a less perfect afternoon for Carter-Vickers’ U.S. team-mate Auston Trusty, who was benched and did not make it onto the field in the game that confirmed their title. Trusty, who recently became a new father, has not featured in three of his team’s four most recent games. On Saturday, manager Brendan Rodgers preferred Republic of Ireland defender Liam Scales ahead of him. But he did not let that spoil the fun for him and was on the fruit-free pitch to enjoy the post-match celebrations.

Carter-Vickers, Trusty, Jeffrey Schlupp and Arne Engels celebrate on a fruit-free field (Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)


Straight from the horse’s mouth

The Champagne wasn’t quite uncorked yet for another USMNT defender on Saturday, but it could be on ice. Chris Richards took his usual place in Crystal Palace’s indomitable back three at Wembley in their hugely impressive 3-0 FA Cup semi-final win over Aston Villa. The south London club will now face Manchester City in the final on May 17, after Pep Guardiola’s side beat Nottingham Forest 2-0 in the other semi on Sunday. Before Palace’s big win, Richards did the media rounds and chatted with Men in Blazers, who asked him about the USMNT’s woeful performances in March’s Concacaf Nations League semi-final and third-place games.

“I think the best adjective for what happened in the last camp was we got Concacaf’d,” he said. “We’re going to have to put this show pony-ness away.”

Richards and Ben Chilwell helped Palace shut out Aston Villa (Shaun Botterill/Getty Images)

Then asked why the U.S. players haven’t always been able to translate successful club form onto the international scene, he added: “One of the reasons I think that everyone has been so successful at their clubs is you’re in that environment every day. “I know it’s hard to emulate that when it comes to national team, but I think that’s why guys seemed so much more in tune or sharper — you’re playing with these guys every single day and when you’re coming to national team, these are guys you only train with, depending on flights, depending on times, maybe two days leading up to a game.

“I understand that’s what every national team is doing, so there’s no excuse, but we needed to be more competitive in the last camp and I think going forward, not just from the players’ aspect but from the coaching aspect… we kind of had a coming-to-Jesus meeting after the last game and we can’t let something like the last camp happen again — especially leading up to a World Cup.”What You Should Read NextChris Richards on USMNT and Crystal Palace ambition: ‘It would go berserk if we won a trophy’The defender from Birmingham, Alabama is part of a tight-knit group at Selhurst Park whose faith has strengthened team unity


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Ethan Horvath
Club: Cardiff City
Position: Goalkeeper
Appearances (all competitions): 18

Horvath experienced the low of relegation with his Welsh club on Saturday when their 0-0 draw with U.S.-owned West Brom sealed their EFL Championship fate.

It meant Cardiff will be in League One, England’s third-tier, next term, but the 29-year-old, who joined the Bluebirds in the winter transfer window, still made some excellent saves on a difficult afternoon.

Name: Kevin Paredes
Club: Wolfsburg
Position: Midfielder/wing-back
Appearances: 2

Paredes was so impressive on his return from long-term injury last time out, creating a goal in the 2-2 draw with Mainz, that he kept his place for Wolfsburg’s game against Freiburg on Saturday.

However, it was a difficult afternoon for Ralph Hasenhuttl’s side, who were reduced to 10 men after just 26 minutes and ended up losing 1-0. Despite the result, Paredes looked sharp again until he was forced off just past the hour with a hamstring problem.

That is believed to be a minor strain and while he is likely to miss the next game against Gio Reyna’s Borussia Dortmund, he should be back in contention for Wolfsburg’s final two fixtures of the Bundesliga campaign.

Paredes grabs Freiburg’s Patrick Osterhage (Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

Perhaps Paredes will have the words of the national coach in his mind after Pochettino said last week that the USMNT needs players to “fight for the people that would love to be in your position” and “the right characters to be really competitive”.

The 21-year-old, who fell to his knees and sobbed when his young U.S. side were knocked out of the men’s soccer tournament during last summer’s Olympics, is hoping that his will to win (and electric talent) catches Pochettino’s eye. Now he must end the season with Wolfsburg strongly and earn a chance to feature in the USMNT’s summer friendlies or Gold Cup campaign.

Name: Paxten Aaronsen
Club: FC Utrecht
Position: Midfielder
Appearances: 35

The 21-year-old is another young prospect hoping to gain more senior USMNT exposure this summer on the back of a strong season.

He grabbed an assist as Utrecht won 4-0 away at RKC Waalwijk in the Eredivisie. They’re now fourth in the table and level on points with Feyenoord in third. Aaronson has been a key part of this push for Champions League football, with seven league goals to his name so far and having created four more.

His success means the Dutch club, who loaned him for the season from Bundesliga side Eintracht Frankfurt, want to borrow the American again next season.

“We are in talks with Frankfurt,” said Utrecht coach Ron Jans recently. “We hope we can keep him for another year. It will take a few weeks before it is clear whether it will work.”

Whether Frankfurt are inclined to oblige remains to be seen.

Een jongensdroom die uit is gekomen voor Paxten Aaronson 💭

— ESPN NL (@ESPNnl) April 24, 2025


What’s coming up?

(All Eastern Time)

Johnny Cardoso is having a fine old time with his club Real Betis. They’re sixth in La Liga, on course for Europa League qualification and only six points off the Champions League qualification places.

Last Thursday, they thumped Valladolid 5-1, meaning they head into their Europa Conference League semi-final against Fiorentina on Thursday in fine fettle.

Cardoso’s performances have caught the eye and he has been praised by former USMNT player Charlie Davies.

“Johnny Cardoso: we have to talk about him now, at the moment,” Davies said on CBS Sports Golazo America. “(He’s) 23 years old, killing it at Real Betis, another massive goal for him at the club, and he was near perfect on the ball (in Betis’ previous win over Girona). I think he’s really found a good role within this team and Isco is the guy that makes this team tick, but in terms of being an outlet and being able to shuttle the ball across, he has great positioning.”

Watch them in that semi-final on Thursday (3pm, Paramount+).

Cardoso is enjoying his time with Real Betis (Alex Caparros/Getty Images)

By Saturday, we will know if Antonee Robinson has recovered from the knee pain that has plagued him lately to face Aston Villa in the Premier League (7:30am, Peacock Premium).

Given the load on him this season for club and country and the possibility of further football in the summer’s Gold Cup, it will be vital that the left-back’s minutes are managed carefully to prevent his knee issue becoming worse going into the World Cup year.

Also on Saturday, Bournemouth and Tyler Adams are charged with trying to end their season on a high after their promise stalled, leaving them in mid-table. They travel to second-placed Arsenal (12:30pm, Peacock Premium).

Finally, next Monday, see if Pulisic and Milan’s belated mini-revival can keep going when they take on Genoa (2:45pm, Paramount+).(Top photos: Getty Images)

Barcelona are the world’s most fun team to watch – because they are flawed

Raphinha right winger of Barcelona and Brazilcelebrates after scoring his sides first goal during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 Semi Final First Leg match between FC Barcelona and FC Internazionale Milano at Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys on April 30, 2025 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

By Pol Ballús May 1, 2025


“I am extremely proud of the performance my squad has put in, because tonight we faced one of the most offensive and beautiful teams in the world.”

Those were the words of Inter manager, Simone Inzaghi, after the first leg of a thrilling tie in the Champions League semi-finals. Six goals, an endless carousel of highlights and arguably the best game in the competition this season.

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Among all the things we learned on Wednesday night was the reassurance that Barcelona are the world’s most entertaining team — which does not mean the best.

How Lamine Yamal carried his team in a mind-blowing exhibition, the fact they scored three goals against a team that had only conceded four in 12 games in the Champions League this season, and the mentality the squad showed in coming back from a two-goal deficit, and then 3-2 down, were a treat to witness. But all of this happened because the Catalans were imperfect, as they have been throughout the whole season.

Since Hansi Flick took charge last summer, Barca’s approach in games has been enthralling but self-destructive. They are defined by a high defensive line, which they combine with a relentless counter-press. Flick’s system has been generally well adjusted during the season, and his squad’s offensive firepower has brought them to where they are right now — in sight of a remarkable treble of La Liga, Champions League and Copa del Rey (which they won in similarly ridiculous fashion last weekend).

But their football is a high-wire act, and it feels like every play in a game has only two potential outcomes: Barcelona suffocates their opponent and destroys them, or as soon as a team slides through their first line of pressure, they find a vulnerable defence to capitalise on.

That was perfectly exposed in the Inter game. Barca registered 19 shots against Inter. They scored three goals and hit the woodwork two more times. Meanwhile, Inter had seven shots, three of them on target which resulted in goals, and had a fourth one disallowed because Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s toe was somehow in an offside position.

This is the price Flick has to pay in order to play like Barca do. The most extreme example is probably Yamal, a precocious talent who makes the difference like nobody else in the offensive end. However, that attacking output is offset by the knowledge that he will be less active in off-the-ball pressing or defending.

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Frenkie de Jong is similar. He is a luxury of a holding midfielder, a gifted technician that does not lose a ball, can split pressing lines driving the ball and is in the best form of his Barca career. However, as soon as he is not in possession, you will see him struggling to fill the gaps in defence, being as aggressive on duels as he should be and, therefore, making the team more vulnerable.

“We are not going to back down on our plan — in fact, I’d say the opposite,” said a source in Barcelona’s backroom staff — who prefers to remain anonymous in order to protect their position — in the build-up to the Inter game. “We’ll double our trust in the approach we have to the game. We’ll keep playing as radical as you’ve seen.”

Yamal is a genius on the ball but offers little protection (Lluis Gene/AFP via Getty Images)

Inter manager Simone Inzaghi went on the same line while speaking to Italian broadcasters after the game. “Barcelona’s strategy is very risky, but it pays off,” he said. “They’ve scored over 150 goals, have already won two titles, and are still competing for two more.”

What happened in the first leg of the Champions League semi-finals is not news to Barcelona. They arrived at the game after Saturday’s fascinating Copa del Rey final against Real Madrid, when they won 3-2 with a comeback sealed in extra-time.

A week earlier, they came back from 3-1 down against Celta Vigo to claim another injury-time win in La Liga. Over the last five games Barca played across all competitions, they have conceded 11 goals.

There might be an explanation behind this recent tendency, though: Barca players are exhausted, and some are injured.

Robert Lewandowski and Alejandro Balde were not available for the first leg, with backups Ferran Torres and Gerard Martin replacing them. Jules Kounde is very likely to miss the second leg through a hamstring injury suffered against Inter. Meanwhile, Pedri, arguably their most influential player, has spent so long on the pitch this season that he can hardly complete 90 minutes.

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“It’s not easy, when you play every three days, to train things as you’d want,” said Flick during his post-match media duties. “This is the situation. Kounde’s injury is also about playing every three days. It happens.”

It all comes at a time when Barca are facing some of the best squads in Europe as they pursue the treble. But the dressing room is not worried by that.

“It’s good to see what we do because we like to play attacking football, control the game and score goals,” said De Jong after the game. “We take some risks with that, but I think we also obtain many good things, so we will keep having the same mentality.”

De Jong says Barcelona will not sacrifice their principles (Carl Recine/Getty Images)

“We wanted more,” added Yamal. “I believe we could have won the game. I’m happy to help the team but I always want to win and that’s why I ended the game a bit bitter.

“But we will go again like we did today. We are focused on the second leg, and we’ll go right after them.”

Hold on tight: next Tuesday’s decider in Milan promises to be a must-watch.

(Top photo: Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Lamine Yamal’s first press conference: Messi comparisons, hair dye and silencing the critics

Lamine Yamal on Lionel Messi parallels: ‘I don’t want to compare me with anyone’

Barcelona’s Jules Kounde likely to miss Champions League semi-final second leg with injury

Inter Miami has little to show for Messi, star-studded roster

  • Lizzy Becherano ESPN May 1, 2025, 01:40 AM ET

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Chase Stadium was vibrating just moments ahead of the first whistle as supporters filled every seat, with chants echoing throughout the stands and pink Inter Miami CF flags waving in the air. By the 72nd minute, however, the Vancouver Whitecaps managed to completely silence the once lively cauldron with a fierce attack as the large scoreboard read MIA: 1, VAN: 3. The life that once coursed through the rows of Chase Stadium in the moments prior to the goals felt like a distant memory as fans succumbed to the disappointment of an elimination in the knockout round of yet another tournament. Once the referee blew the final whistle, those still left in the stands clapped, but the players ignored those efforts, choosing to exit the pitch with haste. Lionel Messi rushed into the tunnel with his head down, stepping into the darkness of Chase Stadium’s infrastructure to leave everything about this series behind him on the pitch.

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Inter Miami knew they faced an enormous challenge when entering the match with a 2-0 deficit from the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal first leg, but no one expected the final 5-1 aggregate scoreline.

When signing the Barcelona boys, Inter Miami co-owner Mas vowed continuous success would enthrall spectators at Chase Stadium and fans all over the world. Though the club saw immediate results when winning the inaugural Leagues Cup trophy, in 2023, Inter Miami could not keep up with expectations. With each passing season, the club finds new ways to strengthen the playing squad and provide Messi with the necessary tools to thrive in the final third in a bid to keep that initial promise of trophies. But efforts continue to fall short, paving the way for the same, tired concern: where is the silverware for this star-studded roster?

Just over a year ago, on April 11, Inter Miami fell 5-2 on aggregate to CF Monterrey in the quarterfinals of the Concacaf Champions Cup. Former head coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino blamed MLS roster rules, insisting the constraints of the American system held the team back from competing against Liga MX giants who overspend on every position. Despite the initial declarations, Inter Miami vowed to come back stronger in 2025.This year felt different for supporters as the club made several changes to the roster in hopes of finding success after the 2024 disappointments. The team incorporated players like Telasco SegoviaTadeo Allende and Maximiliano Falcón into the starting XI, while making necessary additions to the bench for depth. At the helm, Miami found new leadership to steer the club to triumph. Mesmerized by his football philosophy, Mas insisted Javier Mascherano would be the one to untap international stardom and guide the historic leap into the semifinals.”There is pressure here to win, and that pressure is going to continue. We expect it of ourselves, our coaches and players,” Mas said when introducing Mascherano as head coach in November 2024.To which the new coach reaffirmed: “I am convinced I can do it. I have no doubt.”But instead, history repeated itself as the team fell short and Inter Miami was once again eliminated just shy of the final.Inter Miami started the second leg strongly, kicking off the match with the energy of a team that needed a miracle to advance. Players chased every ball, won those 50-50 challenges that felt impossible in Canada, and connected well on the attack.By the ninth minute, Messi danced his way to the final third to find Luis Suárez and initiate the first goal-scoring play of the night. The pass from Messi to his former Barcelona teammate and current attacking partner ignited Suárez to connect with Jordi Alba — another Barça alum — for the left-back to fire truly home.

The goal made its way through the fantastic four, starting from Sergio Busquets, coming through Messi and Suarez before Alba found the net. But the magic fizzled out in the second half, after suddenly two defensive errors cost Miami two goals in the span of three minutes and ultimately the series. Those two goals dismantled the hope of a comeback for Inter Miami and, with that, the game plan Mascherano set out to complete through his players vanished.Instead, flashbacks of the 2024 Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinals match against Monterrey began to crop up. On April 11, 2024, the team entered the second leg at a disadvantage, needing two goals or more to secure a positive result. Though players arrived at the BBVA Stadium in Nuevo Leon, Mexico, anxious to live up to the expectations that the coach, squad and team executives set for fans, efforts disappointed. When Monterrey gained the lead, the Herons took an anemic hit and began unraveling.

Herculez Gomez and Cristina Alexander debate the biggest storylines and break down the best highlights that soccer in the Americas has to offer. Stream on ESPN+ (U.S. only)

This time around, the game felt no different.

After the 53rd minute, when Brian White and Pedro Vite scored within four minutes of each other, desperation became the leading contributor to decision-making. The deep concentration and man-to-man marking that defender Maximiliano Falcon discussed during the pre-match conference could no longer be seen on the field.Players resulted to shoving and physical tactics over technique, while Mascherano made rash decisions from the sidelines. The two goals forced the Miami boss to make key changes to the line-up, incorporating Allen Obando for Segovia, and Gonzalo Luján to replace Falcon for the first time since signing those players in pre-season.On the field, those in the attack began to sporadically shoot in the direction of the goal in hope of finding the back of the net. Even Messi, who knows how to read the field with precision to perfectly plan his next move, began involving himself in every aspect of the game with angst. The player who naturally prioritizes calculated plays over impulsive actions could not hold back from attacking every opportunity with frustration. He didn’t wait for players to find him in the final third for the determining goal-scoring opportunity, instead he went out of his way to find the ball himself across the entire pitch.

With patience, smarter decisions could’ve been made to connect passes and dance through defenders to beat the goalkeeper, as the team has done countless times this season.

Gomez: More important Inter Miami win Champions Cup than MLS

Herculez Gomez speaks ahead of Inter Miami’s Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal second leg vs. Vancouver.”In the span of three to four minutes they decided the series. We wanted to play a longer game, without rushing and with calm,” said Mascherano after the match. “We were one goal away from tying the series and what we pretended to do is have a long game.”The hardest part was done, which was to score the first goal. But this is football, especially in a semifinal. Two or three errors against a good opponent, obviously good because they reached the semifinal, but they end up hurting you and end up sentencing with the series.”The game plan dissipated and no amount of star power on the roster could save the club from elimination. Inter Miami have come to know this reality all too well. Mascherano couldn’t even rely on Tata Martino’s former excuse as the team played against three MLS teams and stood as one of the highest-valued rosters on this side of the bracket.After Wednesday’s match, Busquets vowed that Miami would come back stronger, like the team did in 2024.”We keep getting further and further every year,” he said. “But with that consolation although today it’s not much. We think ahead.”The difference this time around, however, is that time is running out, and the clock continues to wind down on the careers of Miami’s fantastic four. By 2026, the Herons may look wildly different as the contracts of Suárez, Messi, Alba and Busquets run through the end of the 2025 MLS campaign.Rumors continue to swirl, and talks remain ongoing about extending the contract of Messi, but his supporting cast may choose to retire come December, or play somewhere else, and Inter Miami will have little to show for their time in South Florida.One Leagues Cup trophy and a Supporters’ Shield is not the decorated silverware that Mas promised at the presentation of these players in 2023. Breaking the MLS record for most points scored in single season will not be enough for Inter Miami at the end of this star-studded chapter.Inter Miami still have three opportunities to win a trophy this season: MLS, the Leagues Cup and the Club World Cup. Wednesday night’s elimination has never made it more clear: this side has precious few chances left to win the silverware it so desperately craves.

Sebastian Berhalter’s arrival makes for a unique North American soccer plot twist

Vancouver Whitecaps standout Sebastian Berhalter

By Jeff Rueter pril 30, 2025 The Athletic


Study Sebastian Berhalter’s rapidly burgeoning goal catalog, and the majority of any clip’s duration leaves him out of the frame entirely.A breakout star on the Vancouver Whitecaps, currently the hottest team in North America, Berhalter is a regular starter as a right-sided central midfielder. He’s a vital part of the Whitecaps’ build-up, an increasingly expert progressive passer who rates among MLS’s best in the current season. Once the ball is among the forwards, he carefully picks his moment to arrive near the box. It’s a facet of his game that he’s been relishing in this year.Minnesota United was just the latest to learn about Berhalter’s late-arriving quality to open the scoring in their Sunday matinee.It’s perhaps a fitting calling card given Berhalter’s gradual rise as a player. Just shy of his 24th birthday, he was touted as a player to watch as a future MLS contributor but was often overshadowed. He didn’t break out before turning 20, as peers like Aidan Morris and Caden Clark may have, and he wasn’t a regular starter until landing with his third team in the league, joining Vancouver ahead of the 2022 season.These days, the son of former USMNT manager Gregg Berhalter is making a name all his own, among the headliners of a Whitecaps side entering the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinal second leg against Lionel Messi and Inter Miami in pole position.

“It’s kind of been a steady incline, and I think that’s something that’s kind of been consistent in my life,” Berhalter told The Athletic. “It’s never come for me all at once. I’ve had to work really hard to be where I’m at, so it’s kind of like — I don’t want to say it’s what I’m expecting, but it’s something that I have the confidence that if I just keep doing what I’m going to do, then eventually it’s going to come.”


The 2020 season was poised to be the dawn of Berhalter’s MLS career. He had just signed a homegrown contract with the Columbus Crew and was projected to earn MLS minutes. When the COVID-19 pandemic put the country into lockdown, however, his development went in an entirely different direction.

With the world displaying an abundance of caution, the sport stood still for clubs and countries alike. There were no games, no training sessions for young players to get their reps and be ready for a return to play. Sebastian headed to Chicago, joining his father and working under Gregg to refine his game as his professional career was just kicking off.Look beyond the family ties, and this was a rare chance for a still-developing young midfielder to get one-on-one guidance from an active national team coach. Throughout his upbringing, Sebastian had been told he’d need to forge his own path to reach his professional dreams.“That’s probably, when I look back at it, one of the most important times in my life, in terms of as a soccer player and as a person,” the younger Berhalter said of those sessions at a field beside Lane Tech High School.“He knows how to kind of keep me in check, how to push my buttons. It was fun, man. Looking back on it, that’s exactly what I needed. I needed to kind of be broken down a little bit, and that’s what he did.”Admittedly, Sebastian didn’t always “love it all the time.” There was no corner to cut, no eased expectations to keep the peace at that night’s dinner. These sessions were tailored specifically to bolster the young player’s chances of enjoying a successful career.

Ex-USMNT coach Gregg BerhalterFormer USMNT manager Gregg Berhalter now runs the Chicago Fire in MLS. (Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin/Imagn Images)

Among the most important takeaways from these sessions was helping Sebastian adjust his game to “physically, actually just grow into my body.” Speed was at the top of the list, recalibrating his stride and explosiveness to get as much from him as he could.“He did a great job, and I’m thankful for that,” Sebastian said, “because it was one of the only times in my life he’s really trained with me. He was super hands off (when I was) growing up. It was always, like, ‘You’ve got to do it by yourself.’ It kind of instilled that into me, my work ethic — ‘OK, if I want this, I’m gonna have to go get it.’”While he didn’t immediately parlay those lessons into a starting role, making nine league appearances as the Crew went on to win MLS Cup 2020, it was a vital crash course that provided a sturdy bedrock upon which to build out his technical skillset and mental acumen.When talking about those training sessions, Berhalter calls himself “one of the luckiest guys in the world.” If he feels he needs a keen observer to provide a tip or some advice, he’s able to pick the brain of the USMNT coach with the best winning percentage of anyone who has held the job on a permanent basis.There were times, however, when that status as a national team manager put Gregg and his family in a bright, if unwanted, spotlight — perhaps at no time more than after the 2022 World Cup.

Sebastian was in Qatar throughout the USMNT’s run, seeing his dad’s team advance from its group before falling to the Netherlands in the round of 16. Soon after, news broke that midfield star Gio Reyna — whose lack of utilization was a common talking point during the team’s run — had frustrated his teammates with a lack of effort in training before the opening match against Wales. Reyna apologized to the team later during the group stage, and the matter seemed resolved.

Public interest around Reyna’s situation sustained into early 2023, when Gregg Berhalter’s comments at a leadership symposium went public. He referenced the situation (omitting any player’s name) in what he said was supposed to be an off-record session. News also broke that Reyna’s parents, Claudio and Danielle, had called U.S. Soccer to bring up a domestic incident between Gregg and his now-wife, Rosalind, while the two were in college — a perceived attempt at blackmail against a coach who didn’t start their child at a World Cup.That the two families were close and had shared deep ties with each other made for, without a doubt, one of the ugliest off-field scandals in program history. Berhalter was ultimately re-hired for a second tenure after an independent investigation, and his dynamic with Gio Reyna was a frequent point of discussion through the rest of his tenure, which ended after the 2024 Copa América. While it was undeniably a difficult moment, Sebastian felt it ultimately strengthened the Berhalters’ bond.“I think it definitely brought our family closer together, everyone,” Sebastian said. “Because of that, we’re closer together than we were before, which is cool, just to see everyone have each other’s backs. Now we know that we’re a tight-knit family.”Berhalter unequivocally said he’s proud of his father’s work with the USMNT, adding that he took cues from how Gregg handled media scrutiny.“It just never affected him. It doesn’t matter what anyone says, you’re doing your job. It’s something that I definitely take with me,” he said.Given their similar ages and parents’ friendship, Sebastian and Gio (who is roughly 18 months younger) grew up as friends. When asked if he and Gio have spoken about the saga, or if their relationship is in a better place, Sebastian simply said “no,” not displaying a desire to elaborate.


Vancouver Whitecaps standout Sebastian BerhalterSebastian Berhalter has had plenty to celebrate in 2025. (Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin/Imagn Images)

To further Berhalter’s development after its 2020 MLS Cup title, Columbus sent him on loan to Austin FC for their inaugural season in 2021. Coached by Josh Wolff, a former assistant of Gregg’s with the Crew and USMNT, Sebastian Berhalter admitted he “got beat down a little bit,” but quickly assessed that it was what he needed to make it at the game’s highest level.

When Austin, whose sporting director at the time was Claudio Reyna, turned down the purchase option at the end of his loan, Berhalter was traded by Columbus to Vancouver for just $50,000 of allocation money — the lowest amount MLS allows teams to trade — with an additional $50,000 of performance metrics. Even when assuming he cleared those benchmarks, it’s among the best bargain acquisitions in recent memory.

Since joining the Whitecaps, Berhalter’s minutes have increased with each successive season, and he’s on track to eclipse his 2024 ledger of 2,021 in MLS competition. He has evolved into the archetypal box-to-box midfielder, a late-arriving number 8 who can keep the team moving towards goal while having an eagerness to track back and defend if possession changes hands. He’s part of an established core that have been together for multiple seasons, making movement patterns easier as many starters can dependably trust each other’s instincts.

“I think you see that when we play,” Berhalter said. “You can see it’s a group that’s been together for three to four years, and everyone trusts each other. Everyone believes in each other. We know each other so well. It’s nice to see that everything’s coming together.”

Goals like the opener on Sunday are also a byproduct of how the Whitecaps have had to adjust in the young season. Since 2021, Scotland international Ryan Gauld has been at the heart of Vancouver’s attack, among the best playmakers in MLS. However, Gauld picked up a knee injury in the team’s third game of the regular season, leaving reason to wonder if the club could maintain its form without its most important facilitator.Berhalter has picked up some of that responsibility, also benefitting from new coach Jesper Sørensen’s field-tilt machine that keeps more of Vancouver’s touches in the final third. As of April 29, he averages 37.4 pass attempts in the opponent’s half per 90 minutes, up from roughly 26 per 90 in each of the last three seasons. Despite the massive uptick in volume, he’s also displayed career-best accuracy, completing 87.9% of his attacking half passes and 79% of those attempted in the final third.

Vancouver Whitecaps stats

“It’s something I think I can do as a player, and it’s been fun,” Berhalter said of his increased utilization near the box. “I like arriving. I feel like when I arrive, I can still get back, so it’s not a big issue for me. I want to score, I want to assist, I want to help the team win games. I think that’s the most important thing, whatever role it is.”

“Arriving” is a word Berhalter uses often when talking about his progression over the past year or two, using movement to unsettle a defense as it establishes itself against an attack. Two players he studies closely in regards to arriving are Newcastle midfielder Sandro Tonali and Barcelona attacking midfielder Pedri.

“I think those two are ones that are a little bit different in ways,” Berhalter said. “But they both have that almost defining characteristic of having their specialties. With Tonali, it’s just powerful, being able to arrive (despite contact). Pedri, it’s the way he can take the ball anywhere and also still being able to arrive.”

He’s also a key figure on a team that’s often overlooked in the broader MLS landscape. Vancouver props up the upper-left corner of the league’s geography, some distance from other Canadian clubs in Toronto and Montreal while being overshadowed in the Pacific Northwest by a historic rivalry between the Seattle Sounders and the Portland Timbers. This year has even more weight to it for Vancouver, as the club is actively up for sale.

Berhalter stops short of branding his team an underdog, even as it squares off with the superteam on the opposite corner of MLS’s map. He said Vancouver “doesn’t need the media attention,” and has gotten used to not getting much over the past three seasons. When bringing a 2-0 advantage from the first leg to Miami, it’s highly unlikely that the moment will phase the Whitecaps.

“Yeah, it’s one game at a time,” Berhalter said. “That’s probably been the biggest thing, because when you have that many games, you can’t look too far ahead. Especially with opponents like Miami, you can tend to look ahead and be like, ‘Oh, we’re playing this guy, playing that guy.’ It’s been good. It’s honestly been impressive with this group, how we’ve handled this. I think just internally, everyone’s been really driven, really focused, and everyone knows what they need to do to get the job done.”

Sebastian Berhalter marks Lionel MessiSebastian Berhalter marks Lionel Messi in the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinals. (Photo by Anne-Marie Sorvin/Imagn Images)


The Berhalter family has never been more present in MLS, with Sebastian starring for an MLS Cup contender and Gregg attempting to rebuild the Chicago Fire as head coach and director of football. And we may again see a member of the family back with the USMNT given Sebastian’s play. Few midfielders in the U.S. pool are in as fine of form, and his two-way play and emergence stand in sharp contrast to the criticism U.S. players received after a shocking showing in March’s Nations League finals.

As of April 28, Berhalter said he hasn’t heard from manager Mauricio Pochettino or his staff about whether he’s being eyed for a possible call-up at this summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup. Then again, these things move quickly — Charlotte FC striker Patrick Agyemang hadn’t heard from the federation either until just before his debut in January. While Berhalter is level-headed as always with his answer, it’s clear how much it would mean for him to represent his country.

“It’s been my dream since I’ve been a kid, but I think it’s something that I’m just taking one game at a time,” Berhalter said. “Being around the national team so much — I think I’ve watched every recent game more than probably anyone else has (laughing) — but yeah, it’s not something I’m thinking about. I just worry about winning games here and performing well.”

Those wins keep coming for Vancouver, which sits atop the MLS Supporters’ Shield standings at the end of April. Goal contributions and good team results are providing plenty of highlights and moments to bookmark. So, too, did the team’s sole defeat to date in league play.

On March 22, with the Whitecaps among many teams carrying depleted rosters during the international window, Vancouver welcomed Chicago to BC Place. For the first time, Sebastian lined up against a team coached by his father. The Fire won 3-1.

Nevertheless, it was an unforgettable instance for a player who has earned his starting spot. Regardless of whether he breaks through with the U.S. before the World Cup, or at all, his form since becoming a regular in the Whitecaps’ lineup last year has cemented his arrival.

“I went to him before the game,” Sebastian said of Gregg, “and right after everyone shook hands, he just came over and said he’s proud of me. That was probably one of the coolest moments in my career, where you have your dad on the sideline telling you he’s proud of you.

“It was a cool moment. That gave me the confidence to just go have fun and enjoy it; you know, you’ve earned this.”

The prospect of a Man Utd vs Spurs Europa League final feels wrong – but is it really a shock?

The prospect of a Man Utd vs Spurs Europa League final feels wrong – but is it really a shock?

By Elias Burke ay 2, 2025Updated 5:28 am EDT


After Paris Saint-Germain burst Arsenal’s post-Real Madrid bubble in the Champions League on Tuesday, Thursday was England’s day in Europe.

In the UEFA Conference League, a heavily rotated Chelsea side hammered Djurgarden 4-1 on artificial turf in Sweden. In the Europa League, Manchester United produced one of the shocks of the competition, putting their five-game Premier League winless run behind them to beat Athletic Club 3-0 in Bilbao.

n the other side of the bracket, Tottenham Hotspur took care of business in north London, beating Norway’s Bodo/Glimt 3-1. Glimt are excellent at home, and the Arctic conditions and plastic pitch at the Aspmyra Stadion will act as a leveller in the second leg, but Spurs’ two-goal advantage makes them firm favourites to reach the final.

It won’t be the first time a Premier League club has come close to European glory in unusual circumstances — England has produced a few unlikely Europa League finalists over the years. In 2005-06, when the tournament was named the UEFA Cup, Middlesbrough reached the final while toiling in the league’s bottom half, finishing 14th. They knocked out Roma and Basel, among others, before losing 4-0 to Sevilla in the final.

Fulham’s run to the final in 2009-10 was arguably even more impressive, eliminating Italian giants Juventus 5-4 on aggregate in the last 16 despite only finishing 12th in the league.

United and Tottenham’s status and financial strength meant they were both among the strong favourites to win the tournament before it started, but if they both make it to Bilbao’s San Mames Stadium on May 21, given their domestic struggles, it will rank among the Premier League’s most prominent displays of strength on the European stage.

Ruben Amorim’s domestic struggles have been forgotten in Europe (Ander Gillenea/AFP via Getty Images)

Both sides are on course for historically poor Premier League seasons. After taking a 5-1 battering away to Liverpool on Sunday, Tottenham can no longer mathematically finish in the top half — the first time they’ll finish outside the top 10 since 2008 (also, coincidentally, the last year they won a major trophy, the League Cup).

Since breaking the top four in 2009-10, Spurs have established themselves as a near-perennial top-six club, but having already lost 19 times in the league (a club Premier League record), the prospect of restoring pride in the league is gone and winning the Europa League is the only way to save their season.Much of this narrative also applies to United, perhaps even unlikelier Europa League finalists. After a second-half collapse at Old Trafford in the quarter-final against Lyon, allowing the French club to come back from 2-0 down to lead 4-2 in extra time, United produced a fightback that was improbable even by their illustrious standards, scoring three times in seven minutes to win 5-4 on aggregate. Against all logic, both clubs, under the guidance of under-pressure head coaches, have displayed an ability to leave their weekend woes behind to step up on Thursday nights.

Should we be that surprised, though? The obvious caveat to any narrative regarding the “magic” of their European journeys, and the shock at seeing two teams who have struggled so badly in the Premier League stand on the cusp of a major trophy, is that Tottenham and United were the obvious favourites to reach this point given their financial strength.

The figures show that English top-flight clubs, particularly those in the ‘Big Six’, operate far above their Europa League competitors in terms of their transfer kitty and salary budget. Indeed, their resources dwarf many of the continent’s most prominent “legacy clubs”.

Tottenham have a vast stadium – and resources (Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

According to the Deloitte Money League, United’s revenue in the 2023-24 season of £655million (€770million; £$870m) made them the fourth richest club in the world. Tottenham, whose revenues totalled £523m are ninth. The next club from this season’s Europa League in this table are 20th-placed Lyon, with revenues of £224m.

This is also the first season under the new 36-club format where third-placed clubs from the Champions League have not dropped to UEFA’s secondary tournament, eliminating the chance of facing clubs who started in Europe’s premier club competition and may come closer to financial parity.

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None of that will matter to the players or their coaches, both of whom have been under intense scrutiny given their Premier League records. The prospect of reaching a European final will also not be lost on the supporters, many of whom have travelled the country watching their clubs fail on a weekly basis. Irrespective of how likely their chances of reaching the final were before the first ball was kicked in September, the fact they’re on their way to one is remarkable given the wider context of their seasons.

Those at Old Trafford for the quarter-final second leg will be reluctant to assume the final is a formality, as will the Spurs fans who watched Glimt beat Lazio 2-0 in the quarter-final first leg in freezing temperatures Ange Postecoglou’s players are not accustomed to.

But if they meet in Spain on May 21 and Chelsea join one of them in lifting a European trophy in Poland a week later, this unlikely-ish meeting will perhaps be the most convincing display yet of the depth of quality in England’s top tier.

(Top photos: Casemiro, left, and James Maddison; Getty Images)

Is Lamine Yamal already the best footballer in Europe? And if not, who is?

Is Lamine Yamal already the best footballer in Europe? And if not, who is?

By Oliver KayStuart James and more

110

May 2, 2025 12:10 am EDT


“Lamine is the kind of talent that comes along every 50 years,” said Simone Inzaghi after watching the 17-year-old Yamal shine against his Inter team during a breathless 3-3 Champions League semi-final first leg draw in Barcelona.

“One thing that amazes me in football is you always think that there is nobody better than Ronaldo and Messi, (Ruud) Gullit, (Diego) Maradona, a lot of people, and then Lamine Yamal arrives,” said Thierry Henry, the former Arsenal and Barcelona forward working for U.S. broadcaster CBS.

In the afterglow of a wonderful performance, in which he scored one beautiful goal, glided across the pitch, turned defenders inside out and showed off his range of tricks, there was no shortage of praise for Yamal.

Yamal bends in a beautiful Champions League goal against Inter (Joan Valls/Urbanandsport/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The draw with Inter was his 100th appearance and brought his 22nd goal (along with 33 assists). At the same age, Cristiano Ronaldo had made 19 appearances (featuring five goals and four assists) and Lionel Messi had made nine, scoring once.

All of which makes it easy to conclude that he is already the best player in Europe. Or as the former Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand put it: “As a pure football talent, I’m going as far as to say I think Lamine Yamal is on another level to any player playing the game in the top five leagues in world football.”

Excitement has long surrounded Yamal, from his moment of perfection at the Euro 2024, to the comparisons with Messi he is keen to avoid.

But is he already the best footballer in Europe? And if he isn’t, who is?

We asked our writers.


‘It is when, not if, he wins the Ballon d’Or’

If I could watch anyone play right now, it would be Lamine Yamal. Every time Yamal got the ball against Inter, you expected something to happen — and that something could be anything because of his incredible talent and the fact that he plays with so much freedom. His goal was breathtaking — a sinuous run and then a shot that was not just beautifully placed but executed in a way (taken early, minimal backlift) that left Yann Sommer, the Inter goalkeeper, rooted.

I actually enjoyed Yamal’s run a few minutes later even more. Poor Federico Dimcarco, who went sliding on by (totally off the pitch) as Yamal, the master of the chop, expertly dragged the ball back inside the wing-back. But for Sommer’s fingertips, we would be talking about another exceptional goal.

To say that Yamal is the best in the world right now, at the age of 17, feels like a big claim. There’s an argument that he needs to score more prolifically – he’s averaging close to one every three this season in all competitions (six goals in 30 appearances in La Liga), and for that reason, I’d put him behind someone like Mohamed Salah, whose numbers are astonishing. But Yamal is a genius and it’s a matter of when, not if, he wins the Ballon d’Or.

Stuart James


‘I’ve never seen a better 17-year-old footballer… but…’

He’s phenomenal and I love watching him. I would go so far as to say — with caveats to follow — that I’ve never seen a better 17-year-old footballer.

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo were incredibly talented, but they were not influencing games at the highest level at 17. What Yamal is doing is almost unheard of, but a word of caution: what Ansu Fati was doing at 17 was also extraordinary. Progression is rarely linear.

The Messi/Ronaldo period has created what is an unrealistic perception of what greatness is. In the 1990s and 2000s, “best in the world” was always a fairly fluid debate; back then, it was arguably Rivaldo or (original) Ronaldo or Zinedine Zidane or Paolo Maldini or Luis Figo or Ronaldinho or Kaka or, indeed, Thierry Henry at various points.

Messi and Ronaldo shifted expectations, but Yamal is doing things beyond them at 17 (Lluis Gene/AFP via Getty Images)

I expect the post-Messi era will be similar, with “best in the world” status more transient. This season has brought arguments, at various points, for Mohamed Salah, Raphinha, Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior — not forgetting Rodri, the deserving winner of last year’s Ballon d’Or. It’s wonderful to think a 17-year-old might be part of that conversation for years to come if he continues to develop.

Oliver Kay


‘I’d still put Salah ahead of him’

He’s the player I most enjoy watching at the moment and to turn a Champions League semi-final in the way that he did, against players of that calibre, clearly describes ability that should terrify everyone.

But the best? I would still put Mohamed Salah ahead of him, just on numbers and the consistency of his output. And longevity. Salah is still dominating opponents at 32, having been studied and strategised against for years, which is a hard value to quantify but clearly worth something.

It’s extremely close, though, and if you ask me again in a year, I will probably have changed my mind.

Seb Stafford-Bloor


‘Yamal is uniting generations’

My 10-year-old nephew Flynn is in his football mad era. Last year, he asked me who Steven Gerrard was, which made me feel extremely old. He never needed to ask me who Lamine Yamal was, though. If anything, he’s the one telling me all about him. This 17-year-old kid is uniting generations with his talent.

On Saturday, my nephew, who spent the afternoon watching his beloved Tranmere Rovers secure League Two status after a dismal season, asked if we could watch the Copa del Rey final. Who was the player he most wanted to watch? You guessed it. The magic.

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When we grow up, the vividness of imagination that we enjoy during childhood fades, but when watching a player like Yamal, we are all back in time and feel capable of anything. He’s the best right now and will be high up on that list for a long time to come.

Caoimhe O’Neill


‘Mbappe is still the man’

At the top of his game, there’s no better footballer in Europe than Kylian Mbappe.

Not since Cristiano Ronaldo’s early days in Madrid have we seen a player more capable of dominating defences with an equally potent blend of skill and physicality. Whether it’s done by a shifty stepover or brute force and world-class pace, he has more tools to find a yard of space in a crowded box than anyone. Twenty-two goals in 29 league appearances in his debut La Liga season is an excellent return, but such is his quality that we expect much more in the future.

Mbappe has done it on the biggest stages (David Ramos/Getty Images)

When he inspired France to World Cup glory as a teenager, it appeared he was the immediate successor to Messi at the top. At 26, he’s yet to win a Ballon D’Or. Still, while the crown is not undisputed, Mbappe is the man in European football in my eyes.

Elias Burke


‘Clearly Barcelona’s most important player’

Yamal’s tremendous solo goal in Wednesday’s Champions League semi-final first leg between Barcelona and Inter showcased the teenager’s tremendous dribbling ability and outstanding shooting prowess.

Barca’s youngest player is already their on-pitch leader — his goal against Inter was the game’s key moment, coming with his team reeling at 2-0 down.

Over the 90 minutes, he had the most shots (6), most crosses (10), and most dribbles (6) of any player on the pitch. Only midfield colleagues Pedri and Frenkie De Jong had more interventions than his 102.

A superb fingertip save from Sommer denied him a second wonder-goal. He set up chances for team-mates Ferran Torres and Dani Olmo, his dummy distracted the defence for Raphinha’s 3-3 goal, and he hit the crossbar with a late cross-shot.

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You keep having to remind yourself that he does not turn 18 for another few months. But he is already clearly Barcelona’s most important player, nothing seems to faze him at all, and the really scary part is that he can still get a lot better.

Dermot Corrigan


‘Let’s not forget Rodri’

Please, let’s not allow injury to make us forget Rodri’s existence. The Manchester City midfielder was Spain’s key player in their European Championship win last summer and is the reigning Ballon d’Or winner.

If we’re talking about right now with the blinkered definition of a player who has literally kicked a ball in the last 48 hours, then it’s Yamal, sure. If we extend it to a player who has graced the pitch in the past week, it’s Salah.

Rodri has been absent from the pitch and maybe our minds? (Michael Regan/Getty Images)

But if we take a step back and ask who the best player currently operating is, the understated Rodri is that man. He may not play in the most heralded of positions, slaloming through and curving shots off the post, but his job is to play the position of two men. He does that at an elite level.

Only this week, he returned to Manchester City training and could return before the end of the season. Rodri, I remember you, and look forward to seeing you soon.

Jacob Whitehead


‘Is he better than Vinicius Jr at full tilt?’

In the maelstrom around Real Madrid’s Ballon d’Or no-show and banners mocking him this season, it seems we might all have forgotten just how good Vinicius Jr really is.

When he is on top form, nobody comes close — in a very literal sense. Just look at the host of right-backs the winger has left in his wake while racking up 105 goals for Madrid.

That puts him ahead of Ronaldo Nazario as the top-scoring Brazilian in Madrid’s history and is even more impressive given how much he struggled to find the target at the start of his time in the Spanish capital.

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Vinicius Jr was unplayable in the first half of this campaign, best summed up by his devastating hat-trick in a 5-2 Champions League comeback win against Borussia Dortmund.

It seemed the 24-year-old was on a mission to claim the Ballon d’Or, so perhaps it is no surprise he has failed to hit those heights since missing out on football’s most prestigious individual award to Manchester City and Spain midfielder Rodri in October (although he did win FIFA’s The Best award in December). The fallout did him and Madrid no favours.

Having another galactico alongside him in Mbappe has also taken some of the shine off his role for his club. Even so, there are few other players who can terrify an opposition defence in the way he does. When Vinicius Jr is at full tilt, you know something special is about to happen.

Tomas Hill Lopez-Menchero

(Top image: Getty Images)

4/15 Champions League Quarter Finals Tue/Wed, Indy 11 US Open Cup Wed 7:30 pm @ the Mike, US Ladies Split with Brazil

Champions League Tues/Wed, Europa Thurs

Its the Final game of the Round of 8 in the Champions League today and Wed at 3 pm on Paramount+ as Aston Villa is just 2 goals down to PSG in their home tally 1-3, while Barcelona will travel to the Big Yellow wall – Dortmund (we’ll see if Reyna gets time after being told he can look for a new club this summer) with a 4-0 lead. Meanwhile Arsenal take a 3-0 lead to Real Madrid on Wednesday, while Bayern Munich travels to Milan down 2-1 to Inter – both games at 3 pm.

Tues Champions League
Dortmund vs Barcelona & Aston Villa vs PSG on Para+
Wed
Arsenal vs Real Madrid & Bayern Munich vs Inter Milan on Para+
Thurs 3 pm Europa League on Para+
Man United vs Lyonnais & Frankfurt vs Tottenham & Chelsea vs Warszawa & Athletic Club vs Rangers

Around the World Messi signs 2 more yrs w/Miami, Reyna free to go, US hosts 2031 WWC

Great news hearing that Messi has signed on to continue playing 2 more years with Inter Miami. In fact I am heading to Cleveland this weekend to see him play Sat vs Columbus at 4:30 pm. That means he will be there when Miami opens its new stadium next year and will be in Miami after the World Cup wraps up in the summer of 2026. Does this mean he’ll play 1 more World Cup for Argentina? Interesting to see what happens there – as Argentina qualified for the World Cup and pounded Brazil without Messi in the team. In other interesting news- Dortmund has given Gio Reyna permission to look for another team this summer. He’s gotten playing time but has not performed that well over the past few weeks. The US will need him in top form for the Gold Cup this summer. A must win event after getting pounded in Nations League.

Indy 11 host US Open Cup Game vs Miami FC Wed Apr 16 7:30 pm @ the Mike & on Paramount+

Indy Eleven: 1-1-2 (+1), 5 pts; 7th in Eastern Conference had their game at Hartford canceled on Saturday and will return home to face Miami FC in the US Open Cup 3rd round Wed night @ the Mike.  Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster. Season, Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here.  For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

GoalKeeper Training for Carmel FC Is outdoors starts next week

Coach James Pilkington will run sessions on Monday at Shelbourne 6-9 pm and Wed at Badger 6-9 pm

Stepping up to the A team – at the Boys Showcase @ Grand Park Sat with Alex F & Brent – always good to learn from the Best.

Hey look who hopped in on a cold Sunday at Grand Park Dave Howard joins (L-R) Pedro, Shane & Ruiz)

TV GAMES

Tues – Champions League
Dortmund vs Barcelona & Aston Villa vs PSG on Para+ 3 pm
Louisville City FC vs. Loudon United FC on CBS Sports Network 7 pm US Open Cup

Wed
Arsenal vs Real Madrid & Bayern Munich vs Inter Milan on Para+
Indy 11 vs Miami FC 7:30 pm @ the Mike & Para+ US Open Cup

Thurs 3 pm Europa League on Para+
Man United vs Lyonnais & Frankfurt vs Tottenham & Chelsea vs Warszawa & Athletic Club vs Rangers

USMNT midweek viewing guide:

Plus Johnny, Tessmann, and Brown in Europa and Conference Leagues on Thursday.

Tuesday

  • Borussia Dortmund vs FC Barcelona, 3p on Paramount+, FuboTV, TUDN USA, Univision USA, ViX: Gio Reyna and Dortmund host Barcelona in the second leg of this UEFA Champions League quarterfinal. Barça are up 4-0 on aggregate after the first leg in Spain last week. Diego Kochen is often in Barça’s squad. Cole Campbell has played with Dortmund’s first team this season, but not recently, and he’s currently out with a minor injury.
  • Chivas vs Puebla, 9:05p on Peacock, UNIVERSO, Telemundo Deportes En Vivo, FuboTV: Cade Cowell and Chivas de Guadalajara host Puebla in Liga MX.

Wednesday

  • Newcastle vs Crystal Palace, 2:30p on USA, UNIVERSO, Telemundo Deportes En Vivo, FuboTV, Sling TV: Chris Richards, Matt Turner, and Crystal Palace visit Newcastle United in Premier League action.
  • Monterrey vs Club América, 9p on TUDN USA, Univision USA, FuboTV, ViX: Alex Zendejas and América visit Rayados in Liga MX.

Thursday

  • Jagiellonia Białystok vs Real Betis, 12:45p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV, ViX: Johnny Cardoso and Betis visit Jagiellonia Białystok in the second leg of this Conference League quarterfinal. Leon Flach has been a regular starter for Jagiellonia Białystok since joining from the Philadelphia Union in January, but Flach was subbed off due to injury only 5 minutes into Jagiellonia’s game on Sunday. Betis are up 2-0 on aggregate.
  • Frankfurt vs Tottenham, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Nathaniel Brown and Eintracht Frankfurt are all even 1-1 with Tottenham Hotspur after the first leg of their Europa League quarterfinal.
  • Manchester United vs Lyon, 3p on Paramount+, TUDN USA, UniMás, FuboTV, ViX: Tanner Tessmann and Lyon visit Manchester United in the second leg of their Europa League quarterfinal, all tied 2-2 on aggregate.

Friday

  • Norwich vs Portsmouth, 10a: Josh Sargent and the Canaries host Portsmouth in the Championship.
  • Coventry vs West Brom, 10a on Paramount+: It’s a meeting of American forwards as Haji Wright and Coventry host Daryl Dike and Albion in the Championship.
  • Watford vs Burnley, 10a on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV: Caleb Wiley and Watford host Luca Koleosho and Burnley in the Championship.
  • Oxford United vs Leeds United, 3p on Paramount+: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds visit Oxford United in the Championship.

Also in action:

  • Middlesbrough vs Plymouth, 10a: Aidan Morris and Boro host Plymouth Argle in the Championship.
  • Sheffield United vs Cardiff, 12:30p on Paramount+: Ethan Horvath and Cardiff City visit Sheffield United in the Championship.
  • NK Varaždin vs Hajduk Split, 12:45p: Rokas Pukštas and Split visit Varaždin in Croatia’s top tier.
  • LASK Linz vs WSG Tirol, 1:30p on Onefootball: George Bello and LASK host Tirol in Austria’s top tier relegation group.


NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule
USL Schedule

— US OPEN CUP ON TV —

Atlanta (April 14, 2025) – Paramount+ and CBS Sports are set to kick off their partnership as the exclusive English-language broadcast home of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, U.S. Soccer’s National Championship, with unprecedented tournament coverage, beginning with the competition’s Third Round this Tuesday, April 15, and Wednesday, April 16. The entire 16-game Third Round slate – and every match onward to the tournament Final – will stream live on Paramount+. Six of those Third Round contests will also be simulcast via additional platforms; fans can watch four matches for free on CBS Sports Golazo Network, while two more contests will air on CBS Sports Network. The full broadcast schedule for the Third Round can be found below.

CBS Sports’ Open Cup presence will be bolstered across both days with studio shows featuring host Nate Bukaty and analysts Charlie Davies and Tony Meola, along with Mike Grella (Tuesday) and Michael Lahoud (Wednesday). Coverage from the studio will begin with Tuesday evening’s U.S. Open Cup Preview, a 30-minute look-ahead to the Third Round airing on CBS Sports Network at 6:30 p.m. ET. The studio crew will also take fans around the country with live analysis and previews on the Golazo Matchday show, airing between games on CBS Sports Golazo Network both Tuesday (9-10 p.m. ET) and Wednesday (9-9:30 p.m. ET) nights – pending the finish of the network’s early-window match. In all Third Round contests, 16 clubs from the Division II USL Championship will enter the tournament against a Second Round victor. That latter group includes 15 professional teams spanning the USL Championship (4), USL League One (9), and MLS NEXT Pro (2), in addition to El Farolito, which for the second year in a row is the last club standing from the amateur Open Division.

Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Broadcast Schedule – Third Round

Tuesday, April 15 (all times ET)

Columbus Crew 2 vs. Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC6:00 PMParamount+
U.S. Open Cup Preview6:30 PMCBS Sports Network
Louisville City FC vs. Loudon United FC7:00 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Network
Charlotte Independence vs. North Carolina FC7:00 PMParamount+
Portland Hearts of Pine vs. Rhode Island FC7:00 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network
Charleston Battery vs. South Georgia Tormenta FC7:30 PMParamount+
Union Omaha vs. San Antonio FC8:00 PMParamount+
CBS Sports Golazo Matchday9:00 PMCBS Sports Golazo Network
AV ALTA FC vs. Orange County SC10:00 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network
Tacoma Defiance vs. Oakland Roots SC10:30 PMParamount+

Wednesday, April 16 (all times ET)

Detroit City FC vs. Westchester SC7:00 PMParamount+
FC Naples vs. Tampa Bay Rowdies7:00 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network
Indy Eleven vs. Miami FC7:30 PMParamount+
FC Tulsa vs. Phoenix Rising FC8:00 PMParamount+
Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC vs. One Knoxville SC9:00 PMParamount+
CBS Sports Golazo Matchday9:00 PMCBS Sports Golazo Network
New Mexico United vs. El Paso Locomotive9:30 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network
Sacramento Republic FC vs. El Farolito10:00 PMParamount+ & CBS Sports Network
Las Vegas Lights FC vs. Chattanooga Red Wolves SC10:30 PMParamount+

A red-hot Third Round will have barely cooled off before the focus turns to the Round of 32/Round of 16 Draw, to be held this Thursday, April 17, as part of CBS Sports Golazo Network’s flagship program, Morning Footy, at 9:15 a.m. ET. Thursday’s Draw will combine a pair of Third Round winners with another pair of clubs entering the tournament from Division I Major League Soccer, all drawn from eight groups of four teams.  In addition to full matches and highlights, CBS Sports’ coverage will include studio programming on CBS Sports Golazo Network and the creation of ancillary content beyond games which will focus on markets and clubs in the competition, as well as the tournament’s rich history as the oldest ongoing national soccer competition in the United States. CBS Sports will also provide additional Open Cup editorial coverage on CBSSports.com, the Golazo Starting XI newsletter and across its @GolazoAmerica and @CBSSportsGolazo social accounts.

About the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup

Now in its 110th edition, the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup has crowned U.S. Soccer’s national champion since 1914. The history-filled tournament is conducted on a single-game-knockout basis and is open to professional and amateur teams affiliated with U.S. Soccer. In 1999, the oldest ongoing national soccer competition in the U.S. was renamed to honor American soccer pioneer Lamar Hunt.  The 2025 U.S. Open Cup winner will earn a berth in the 2026 Concacaf Champions Cup and have its name engraved on the Dewar Challenge Trophy – one of the oldest nationally contested trophies in American team sports – now on permanent display at the National Soccer Hall of Fame in Frisco, Texas. The 2025 tournament features a total purse worth $1 million that includes a $600,000 award for the champion.  Los Angeles Football Club of MLS is the defending Champion. The 109th edition of the tournament concluded on September 25, 2024, with LAFC beating four-time Champions Sporting Kansas City 3-1 at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles to become Open Cup Champions for the first time.

The official website of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup is ussoccer.com/us-open-cup. Fans can also follow the competition on X/Twitter and Instagram @OpenCup and Facebook @OfficialOpenCup.

Champions League


Real Madrid’s greatest UEFA Champions League comebacks



Reffing

Tanner, Casey and Shane Saturday at Grand Park for the Boys College Showcase actually warmed up a tad
Man Nate our Ref Assignor makes the BEST BRISKET I have ever had- here’s Shane – eating waay to much!

First time reffing with Mike Strang along with Matt and me Friday at the Boys College Showcase

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Champions League projections: How Arsenal steadily became 2024-25 tournament favourites

Arsenal's English midfielder #41 Declan Rice celebrates scoring the team's second goal during the UEFA Champions League Quarter final first leg football match between Arsenal and Real Madrid, at the Emirates Stadium, in London, on April 8, 2025. (Photo by Adrian Dennis / AFP) (Photo by ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP via Getty Images)

By Anantaajith Raghuraman 70 ril 15, 2025Updated 10:33 am EDT


Time can make fools of us all. Even supercomputers.

Barring some sensational results in the quarter-final second legs this week, there are probably only five teams left who can win this season’s Champions League (Arsenal, Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain, Inter and Bayern Munich). That’s a significant shift from the start of the season when, before a ball was kicked in the new-look format, The Athletic’s Opta-powered projections had Manchester City (25 per cent) and Real Madrid (18 per cent) as the most likely sides to lift the trophy. How are those projections calculated, you ask. Well, Opta’s win prediction model estimates the probability of each match’s outcome (win, draw or loss) by using a combination of betting market odds and Opta’s team power rankings. The odds and rankings are based on historical and recent team performances and the competition in its entirety is simulated 10,000 times to produce a final projection for each side.But not even models can anticipate things such as Rodri’s season-altering injury for City or Declan Rice suddenly discovering he can take direct free kicks like a Brazilian.

If slow and steady really does win the race, then Arsenal’s progression to tournament favourites, per our projections, looks to be well-timed. Here’s how the fortunes of the remaining eight clubs have fluctuated throughout the season.


Arsenal

Arsenal began the Champions League campaign behind Manchester City, Real Madrid and Inter with a six per cent chance of winning the competition for the first time. A 0-0 draw at Atalanta on matchday one, combined with other results, saw Bayer Leverkusen (who beat Feyenoord 4-0) overtake them. The next three weeks brought a 2-0 win over PSG and a 1-0 loss at Inter. Few were thinking of Arsenal as tournament favourites at this point.

But they won their final four league games 13-1 on aggregate to boost their title odds to 17 per cent, tied with Inter and behind only Liverpool (24 per cent) before the playoff round.

PSG’s elimination of Liverpool in the round of 16 and Arsenal’s convincing 3-0 win in Madrid last week mean they are now the (narrow) favourites to win it all, with a 27 per cent chance.

Whisper it quietly, but Arsenal could go all the way (Shaun Botterill/Getty Images)

It’s been a frustrating, injury-hit season for Mikel Arteta’s side, but after enduring a six-season absence from European football’s leading competition, they could — and should — follow up last season’s quarter-final appearance with their first trip to the semi-finals since 2008-09.What You Should Read NextArsenal are forging ‘football heritage’ in both the men’s and women’s Champions LeaguesBoth Arsenal’s men’s and women’s teams are marching on in the Champions League, laying the foundations for sustained success along the way


Real Madrid

Despite starting the season as the reigning champions and second favourites in our projections, Real Madrid stuttered and stumbled through the league phase in uncharacteristic fashion after winning 15 of their 18 group stage matches in the previous three seasons.

They needed late heroics to beat Stuttgart on matchday one before losing 1-0 to Lille in France and 3-1 at home to Milan either side of a 5-2 comeback win against Borussia Dortmund.

A chastening 2-0 loss at Liverpool on matchday five reduced Madrid’s title chances to six per cent, with a seven per cent chance of league-phase elimination.

Defeat at Lille is one of several Champions League low points for Real Madrid this season (Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images)

But Carlo Ancelotti’s side beat Atalanta, Red Bull Salzburg, and Brest in their final three matches to make the playoff round, where they thrashed Manchester City 6-3 on aggregate. That boosted their title chances to 11 per cent, behind only Liverpool, Barcelona, Arsenal and Inter.

But a poor display in north London last week has seen that drop to less than one per cent. There have been Bernabeu turnaround miracles in the past, but Madrid have just a three per cent chance of making it into the last four as it stands.


Barcelona

Barcelona were level with Arsenal with a six per cent chance of winning the title before the season began. A surprise 2-1 loss at Monaco set them back, but a statement win over Bayern on matchday three, combined with comfortable victories against Young Boys (5-0) and Red Star Belgrade (5-2) meant that figure jumped to nine per cent — just ahead of Arsenal’s eight per cent — at the halfway point.Relive a statement winBarcelona 4 Bayern Munich 1: Raphinha hat-trick gives Hansi Flick a triumphant night against his former clubWe analyse the key talking points from one of the most enticing matches from the initial stage of this season’s Champions League

They ended the league phase with three wins and a draw to finish second, but Barcelona’s title chances remained the same before rising to 20 per cent — the best of the teams left in the competition — after their 4-1 aggregate win over Benfica in the round of 16. Despite beating Dortmund 4-0 last week, they are now narrow second-favourites to win the title (26 per cent) behind Arsenal, who they could meet in the final in what would be a repeat of the 2006 edition.

Raphinha and Yamal have Barcelona flying high again (David Ramos/Getty Images)


Borussia Dortmund

Dortmund scored 10 goals in their first two Champions League matches this season, prompting early optimism and doubling their title chances to four per cent from two before matchday one. It was false hope, though, as losses to Real Madrid (5-2), Barcelona at home (3-2) and Bologna (2-1) in the next five games saw them fall out of the top eight.

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They beat Sporting CP 3-0 in the play-off round but were given just a 38 per cent chance of beating Lille after the first leg of their round-of-16 tie ended 1-1. Even so, they came from behind to win the second leg 2-1 but saw title chances boosted to only one per cent after they drew Barcelona in the quarter-finals (with Bayern Munich or Inter in the semis, were they to progress). A 4-0 first-leg defeat suggests the projection model was spot-on about Dortmund.

Dortmund’s chances of turning over a four-goal deficit are reflected in The Athletic’s projections (David Ramos/Getty Images)


Inter

Having started the competition with an 11 per cent chance of winning it (behind only Real Madrid and Manchester City), the only blemish on Inter’s league phase was a 1-0 defeat at Bayer Leverkusen on matchday six. They conceded just one goal in eight matches and recorded impressive wins over Arsenal and Monaco, which boosted their title chances to 17 per cent (tied with Arsenal for second) after the league phase was completed.

Feyenoord were a mere formality in the round of 16 and while their last-eight tie with Bayern is the closest on paper at 2-1, Inter have every reason to be confident, with an 85 per cent chance of progression to the last four. Can the 2023 runners-up go one better two years on?

Inter’s late win in Munich has boosted their chances of overall victory (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)


Bayern Munich

Bayern began the league phase with only a four per cent chance of winning the title, tied for sixth overall. That instantly improved (albeit only by one percentage point) after they thrashed Dinamo Zagreb 9-2 on matchday one, the second-highest number of goals in a single Champions League game behind Dortmund’s 8-4 win against Legia Warsaw in 2016.

Defeats to Aston Villa and Barcelona then dropped their chances to three per cent and increased the probability of a league-stage elimination to six per cent.

A run of four wins in their final five matches saw them finish 12th. They required a last-ditch Alphonso Davies winner to get past Celtic in the playoff round but comfortably trounced domestic rivals Leverkusen 5-0 in the round of 16.

Even so, last week’s home loss to Inter has left them with just a two per cent chance of winning the title in Vincent Kompany’s first season in charge.

Can Bayern turn around their tie in San Siro? (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)


Paris Saint-Germain

If Arsenal’s projections have shown steady progress, PSG have experienced a huge surge. Having started the season with a four per cent chance of winning the tournament, they won just one of their first five matches, losing to Arsenal, Atletico Madrid and Bayern while drawing with PSV. That left them with a 42 per cent chance of league-phase elimination and dropped their title chances to two per cent. It looked all but over for Luis Enrique’s side.

But a 4-2 comeback win against Manchester City breathed life into their European season, before a 10-2 aggregate destruction of Brest in the playoffs boosted their title chances to nine per cent. Defeating long-time favourites Liverpool on penalties in the round of 16 more than doubled it to 19 per cent and the 3-1 lead over Villa means they now have a 23 per cent chance of winning the competition for the first time.

If momentum wins you titles, then this season’s Champions League is surely PSG’s to lose.

Momentum is with PSG, but can they maintain it? (Bertrand Guay/AFP via Getty Images)


Aston Villa

Aston Villa have enjoyed their Champions League adventure, which understandably began with a less than one per cent chance of winning the title. They had memorable results against Bayern (1-0), Juventus (0-0), Bologna (2-0), RB Leipzig (3-2) and Celtic (4-2) to finish eighth and avoid the playoff round.

Their chances of winning the title ‘improved’ to one per cent after matchday eight and peaked at three per cent before the quarter-finals got underway. But a 3-1 defeat in Paris has seen that return to less than one per cent, with just a nine per cent chance of even making it into the semis.

(Top photo: Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images)

Jude Bellingham: Champions League comeback challenge ‘tailor-made’ for Real Madrid

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 26: Jude Bellingham of Real Madrid speaks to the media during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Phase MD5 training and press conference at Anfield on November 26, 2024 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Jess Hornby/Getty Images)

By Mario Cortegana April 15, 2025 11:16 am EDT


Jude Bellingham says the possibility of a historic Champions League comeback against Arsenal is a challenge ‘tailor-made’ for Real Madrid.The Spanish side trail 3-0 following last week’s first leg defeat in London but will still believe they can progress to the semi-final stage, having enjoyed multiple comebacks in the knockout stages in recent seasons.In 2021-22, Madrid came from 2-0 down on aggregate to eliminate Paris Saint-Germain in the last 16 and defeated Manchester City in the last four, despite trailing 5-3 on aggregate going into the final minute of the second leg.Bellingham, who was part of the Madrid squad that won the 2023-24 Champions League following two late goals to eliminate Bayern Munich in the semi-finals, was asked ahead of Arsenal’s visit what the most-repeated word in the dressing room was this week.“‘Remontada’ (Spanish for comeback),” Bellingham said. “Honestly, I’ve heard it a million times this week, I’ve seen a lot of videos on social media, and I’ve also heard it from you, the press.“It’s a night tailor-made for Madrid.”

Bellingham was then asked at what point Madrid’s players began believing in the possibility of a comeback.What You Should Read NextReal Madrid’s board must shoulder some blame for Arsenal thrashing – it’s not all on Carlo AncelottiIt is easy to single out the manager for Tuesday’s collapse, but he has been calling for reinforcements since the middle of last season

“Honestly, after the game it’s complicated because you have that difficult moment, analysing what you haven’t done well,” the England international said.“But as you talk about it and you see the confidence you get into all that. We have had previous experiences. These feelings are contagious. It was almost immediate, on the bus, even though we weren’t like we are now.”

Madrid head coach Carlo Ancelotti called on his side to play “with our heads, with heart and with guts”, while also speaking of the importance of using a “cool head”.“Madrid have all the resources to turn this tie around: quality, commitment, experience, the fans,” Ancelotti said.“We have to get the best out of each and every one of us. In previous years it’s not that people said we played spectacularly, and maybe that’s true because we want to be effective rather than spectacular.”Madrid will return to La Liga action four days after the Arsenal visit as they host Athletic Club of Bilbao.What You Sh

USMNT Player Tracker: Carter-Vickers’ piledriver, Pulisic the assist king and Richards’ consolation

USMNT Player Tracker: Carter-Vickers’ piledriver, Pulisic the assist king and Richards’ consolation

By Greg O’Keeffe April 14, 2025


It was another busy weekend for the United States’ contingent of players across Europe’s major leagues, as Cameron Carter-Vickers moved tantalisingly close to becoming the season’s first American title winner, Christian Pulisic got back to business and Malik Tillman’s comeback continued apace.Jump into this week’s analysis of how the USMNT emigres are faring as we run the rule over their fortunes ahead of a key summer.


Carter-Vickers unleashes hell

In another memorable season for Celtic, Cameron-Carter Vickers created one for the highlights reel on Saturday.The centre-back is on the brink of a fourth title winner’s medal in as many years in Scotland, and it is now a matter of when, not if, Brendan Rodgers’ side are crowned champions. That would have happened already had 10-man Rangers not mounted an unlikely recovery to secure a 2-2 away draw against Aberdeen on Sunday. Their 97th-minute equaliser is merely delaying the inevitable, though.During Celtic’s 5-1 demolition of Kilmarnock the previous day, Carter-Vickers scored a goal that he — or any of his team-mates — will do well to better before the end of the campaign.It was his first of the season and he did it in style: carrying the ball forward unchecked before unleashing an unstoppable long-range strike into the top right of the goal.t’s not the sort of thing you’d associate with the 27-year-old — as demonstrated by team-mate Alistair Johnston’s priceless reaction, looking completely stunned with his hands on his head.It had to be good simply to be considered the best finish of the game, as Celtic’s Japanese midfielder Reo Hatate had earlier scored his own contender for goal of the season from a similar range. But given Hatate is more of an attacking player with nine goals and four assists to his name already in the current campaign, we’re inclined to give the American’s stunner the edge.

Carter-Vickers celebrates with his Celtic team-mates (Andrew Milligan/PA Images via Getty Images)

From a USMNT point of view, it can only be a positive that a defender who appears to be part of Mauricio Pochettino’s plans — he featured in both of March’s Concacaf Nations League finals matches — is developing a consistent winning mentality with his club.“Before I came here, I played five seasons in the Championship down in England and that league is a lot more win, win, lose, lose,” he told the Daily Record, recalling his previous spells at Bournemouth, Luton Town, Stoke City, Swansea City, Ipswich Town and Sheffield United in England’s second tier while on Tottenham Hotspur’s books.“As a player, I’m used to not necessarily winning all the time and I understand that it’s actually very hard to win all the time, no matter who you’re playing. It’s definitely something we’ve done well over the last few years and something we want to continue to do.

“We’ve got one cup (the Scottish League Cup) in the bag so far, and are in a good position to get two more trophies domestically. Our Champions League campaign was a decent one and we showed we could compete at that level. Now you want to finish it in style.”It might be that winning the Scottish Premiership is less difficult than securing the title in some other top-flight leagues — Celtic have been its champions in 10 of the past 11 seasons — but for Carter-Vickers and U.S. team-mate, new father Auston Trusty, a regular who was on the bench at the weekend, it will be a first title with a predominantly American central defence.What You Should Read NextForty years of dominance and a 55th title on ice, but Scottish football is more than just Rangers and CelticCeltic will have to wait a little longer to draw level with Rangers on 55 league titles after late drama at Aberdeen delayed the inevitable


Pulisic and Leao’s creative tete-a-tete

In Italy, Milan’s season continues with more ups and downs than recently endured by the stock exchange.They may still be outsiders to qualify for next season’s Champions League, but Milan can at least continue to rely on Christian Pulisic. The USMNT star created his side’s second goal, with a dangerous corner kick, during a 4-0 away win against Udinese on Friday.It was Pulisic’s 10th league assist of the season (he has 11 in all competitions) and continues a friendly competition with influential team-mate Rafael Leao over which of them can emerge this season as the Milan squad’s most prolific provider.

Pulisic prepares to take a corner at Udinese (Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

“We have a good competition between the two of us,” Pulisic told DAZN after Portugal international Leao also grabbed a goal and assist against Udinese. “He’s fantastic when he plays like that.”

Milan are in ninth, eight points behind Weston McKennie and Tim Weah’s Juventus, the team currently occupying fourth spot, which is the last place in Serie A that brings Champions League qualification.


Chris Richards’ silver lining

It may not have been as spectacular as another U.S. defender’s goal at the weekend but, in the Premier League, Chris Richards was in on the act, too.The Crystal Palace centre-half was in the right place to guide in Adam Wharton’s corner from close range to put his team 2-0 up at Manchester City on Saturday.It was his first Premier League goal of the season and the highlight of a solid performance — for the 25-year-old at least. That 21st-minute header was about as good as it got for the Londoners, with City turning it around thereafter and going on to win 5-2, a rare setback in recent weeks for Oliver Glasner’s otherwise upwardly mobile outfit.“We just didn’t do everything to the highest level,” he told TNT Sports after the game. “That is what we’ve done so well, for the last probably two or three months. We’ve been really strong defensively and we’ve taken our chances up front.“We definitely want to be fighting for one of those (European) spots. We still can do it in the league and we can also do it in the cup. We just want to take them one game at a time. But I think everybody can see the European spots are up for grabs right now.“So we can’t let it dent our confidence. We have four or five more games in the next two weeks. We are disappointed with today, but we have a chance to get a little bit of retribution on Wednesday.”

As he says, Palace can make amends in midweek, albeit they face another difficult away game — against Champions League-chasing Newcastle United.

Richards nods in Palace’s second at the Etihad Stadium (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

Jeff Rueter’s graphic of the weekend


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Josh Wynder
Club: Benfica
Position: Defender
Appearances (all competitions): 1

The 19-year-old celebrated a landmark in his promising Benfica career by making his senior bow for the Portuguese giants in the nation’s top knockout cup competition last week.

Wynder came on in the 76th minute of a 5-0 victory at fourth-division Tirsense, and gave a good account of himself. The Kentucky-born centre-back, who has had one senior USMNT call-up so far, is said by Portuguese media to be in contention for more regular first-team football at the Estadio da Luz next season.Name: Gio Reyna
Club: Borussia Dortmund
Position: Midfielder
Appearances: 22

How Reyna must pine for the days of youthful potential being enjoyed by Wynder in Lisbon. While he’s not exactly long in the tooth at 22, it does seem a while ago that we spoke of the USMNT playmaker in those terms — in European football at least. The promise of Reyna’s time in the Bundesliga has flatlined this season and he was an unused sub again on Saturday, as Dortmund got a 2-2 away draw against league leaders Bayern Munich. He hasn’t played in the league now since March 1 and three different managers, in a turbulent season for the club, have yet to consider him a regular. Reyna does tend to get more action in the Champions League, and played 22 minutes of Dortmund’s 4-0 quarter-final first-leg thumping at Barcelona last week. There might be another runout in the second leg at home on Tuesday with the tie surely already over, but the noise about him needing to move on in the summer if he wants regular football is only increasing.

Reyna, centre, in training at Dortmund (Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images)

Name: Malik Tillman
Club: PSV
Position: Midfielder
Appearances: 29
Goals: 13

Having scored on his first start in almost three months against Groningen, Tillman continued his encouraging comeback from an ankle injury with another goal — this time it was a tap-in, but they all count — in Saturday’s 5-0 thrashing of Almere City. It may be too late to help PSV retain their Dutch league title, with Ajax nine points ahead of them in first place and only five games to go, but Tillman’s impressive return will be good news for Pochettino.he goal aside, there was plenty to like in his performance against Almere: backheels, smart interventions and two almost-assists.


What’s coming up?

(All Eastern Time)

He may have been frustrated again at the weekend, but Reyna might get another chance to impress new coach Niko Kovac and show what he can do on the biggest stage when Barcelona come to town on Tuesday (3pm, Paramount +). It’s hard to see Dortmund overturning a 4-0 first-leg deficit in the second leg of this Champions League quarter-final, even with home advantage, but Kovac was buoyed by the weekend’s draw with Bayern and wants to see his players continuing to perform as they did in Munich. “We have to do more. Against top teams, you have to push yourself to the limit, which we didn’t do in Barcelona,” he said.Speaking of tough tasks, that daunting trip to Newcastle we mentioned for Palace and Richards is on Wednesday (2.30pm, USA/Universo). Despite the eventual scoreline, there were flashes of promise in Palace’s loss at outgoing champions City, and Richards and company have shown the sort of spirit this season which suggests they won’t let that result get them down for too long.Manchester United’s blundering campaign continues to implode and it’ll be interesting to see if Tanner Tessmann gets the chance to make things worse for the Premier League giants in the finely-balanced second leg of their Europa League quarter-final against Lyon at Old Trafford on Thursday. It finished 2-2 in the first leg in France and, while Tessmann wasn’t involved, he came off the bench in Sunday’s 3-1 Ligue 1 defeat of Auxerre and will hope for more minutes against Ruben Amorim’s men.It should be a simpler Thursday evening for Johnny Cardoso and Real Betis in their UEFA Conference League quarter-final’s second leg. They beat Jagiellonia Bialystok 2-0 in the first game and head to Poland for the decider smarting from a 2-1 loss against Villarreal in La Liga on Sunday, when Cardoso was taken off after 71 minutes.(Top photos: Getty Images)

For Pochettino and USMNT, Gold Cup is a time to reboot, not experiment

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino

By Felipe Cardenas April 11, 2025Updated April 14, 2025 The Athletic


When Gregg Berhalter took a largely MLS-based squad to the 2021 Gold Cup, the decision was part of Berhalter’s grand plan to expand the U.S. player pool ahead of the 2022 World Cup. Momentum was on his side. Berhalter had celebrated a Concacaf Nations League title over Mexico (a 3-2 extra-time win in Denver) with his full senior roster, and the young Americans were viewed as a promising generation of European-based players ahead of the World Cup in Qatar.The nominal U.S. B-team reached that Gold Cup final and handed a veteran Mexico side a second consecutive final defeat to lift the continental trophy. It was arguably the highest point of Berhalter’s tenure. The squad’s depth was celebrated, and the U.S. was hands down the strongest team in the region.Four years later, the tides have turned against the Americans. The U.S. is drowning in a sea of heightened expectations ahead of the 2026 World Cup, which it will co-host with Mexico and Canada. Manager Mauricio Pochettino, after just eight games in charge, is in need of a signature win after the U.S. finished fourth in the Nations League finals.The Europe-based players, led by Christian Pulisic, Tyler Adams, Tim Weah and Weston McKennie, are under increased pressure after their poor performances in Los Angeles in March. The unheralded U.S. team at the 2021 Gold Cup showed fight and grit in their defeat of Mexico, something that has been lacking ever since Pochettino replaced Berhalter last fall.It will all come to a head in June when the U.S. faces Trinidad & Tobago, Haiti and guest nation Saudi Arabia in Concacaf’s premier tournament, with the groups confirmed in Thursday night’s draw.

Make no mistake: the U.S. has to win this Gold Cup. And Pochettino has to take his strongest-possible squad, not an experimental one. He is in dire need of positive energy and will have no excuses as the U.S. will once again play a tournament comfortably held on U.S. soil. The Americans won’t face hostile crowds unless a matchup against Mexico materializes in the knockout rounds. But they wouldn’t face Mexico in Guadalajara or in Mexico City. The U.S. will still be at home – not that it was much of a help in last summer’s pre-Pochettino Copa América or last month’s Nations League finals.

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Nevertheless, the group is beyond manageable. If an overconfident or uninterested U.S. team flops this summer, the pitchforks won’t necessarily be out for Pochettino, but his reputation, and that of the players, will take another hit. No matter how secure his job is, or how large his contract buyout may be, Pochettino must lead the U.S. to a trophy. Not to save his job, but, rather, to fend off the growing sense of negativity around the senior national team – at a time when galvanizing the country around this team is paramount.His previous record as a manager who punched above his weight in Europe made for a nice story when he was hired by U.S. Soccer. Right now, however, his inexperience at the international level, and his lack of knowledge of American soccer and the types of players the country produces, is shining far brighter than his résumé.Pochettino looked befuddled at his players’ casual approach in losses to Panama and Canada last month. He was at a loss of words and asked the American soccer public to have patience just 426 days before the 2026 World Cup.“I don’t want the people to feel pessimistic,” Pochettino said after the 2-1 loss to Canada in the Nations League third-place game at SoFi Stadium. “Disappointed? Disappointed, we are all. And the fans need to feel the disappointment that we didn’t win. But I don’t want to allow (them) to feel pessimistic, because I think we have good players. We are going to find a way to perform. And for sure we are going to compete in a different way. And (at) the end, we are going to get different results than Thursday and today.”

USMNT star Christian PulisicChristian Pulisic and the USMNT struggled in the Nations League finals. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Because Borussia Dortmund and Juventus will participate in the Club World Cup this summer, Pochettino will be without playmaker Gio Reyna, who plays sparingly for the German club, and McKennie and Weah, who are key players for the Serie A giant. FIFA has given participating clubs player priority over national teams, so barring any transfers, they won’t be available. Pulisic, however, will be, as AC Milan is not in the Club World Cup. If Pochettino is thinking about giving Pulisic the summer off, he should reconsider.Pulisic didn’t end the Nations League unscathed. His performances were muted as team captain. His messaging, though, was on point, albeit it painfully obvious after a tremendously disappointing tournament. Pulisic should not be given a pass this summer.

“Obviously, the feeling is not good right now,” he said after last month’s loss to Canada. “We need to turn it around and we can hopefully build some momentum this summer, because we really do need it and with big, big tournaments ahead.”

For whatever reason, the Gold Cup has gradually lost its prestige. Nations League has soaked up the narratives and is growing in popularity, despite its young history as an official competition. That should not matter. The Gold Cup will be the last opportunity for Pochettino to test his players in a tournament environment before their opening match at the World Cup. Certain places on the squad, namely in midfield, at center forward, at center back and at goalkeeper, should be up for grabs.

That puts Pochettino in a complex position. If he’s going to experiment, he better get it right. If he’s going to demote a player, say like starting goalkeeper Matt Turner, the replacement has to elevate the team. If Real Salt Lake No. 10 Diego Luna is viewed as a viable alternative for a World Cup-bound team, then the 21-year-old must take a major stride as a creative player this summer. In Los Angeles last month, the U.S. side was void of leadership on the pitch.

“The mentality has to change,” Adams said before the Canada game. “We’ve had good talks about where we are and where we need to go, just an honest evaluation and then there needs to be a response.”

There wasn’t a response against Jesse Marsch’s Canadian side. Adams talked like a team leader, but he was among the squad’s most subpar performers. The Gold Cup will be a referendum for the Bournemouth midfielder, as well. The expectation is that he will be joined by fellow Premier League standout Antonee Robinson.

Fulham's Antonee Robinson and Liverpool's Mohamed SalahU.S. fullback Antonee Robinson was hailed for his performance against Liverpool and Mohamed Salah. (Photo by Henry Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images)

The 27-year-old missed Nations League through injury, but he has since reclaimed his starting position with Fulham, and is widely considered as one of the best left backs in England. Robinson’s direct play, speed and service were missed last month, and Pochettino will be relieved if Robinson is fit for competition this summer. He has no like-for-like replacement on the U.S., and, along with Pulisic, Robinson will be counted on at the Gold Cup to provide a higher level of play in a key position.

When Pochettino was hired, the Gold Cup was viewed as an important dress rehearsal before the 2026 World Cup. After underperforming at the Nations League, this is no time to experiment with the player pool. The U.S. and Pochettino must now approach the Gold Cup as a test of their dwindling fortitude. Regional foes like Mexico, Costa Rica, Panama and Canada are eagerly waiting for an opportunity to bury the Americans in their own mediocrity.

If Pochettino and his players don’t punch back this summer, the pessimism that the former Tottenham manager wants to stamp out will further engulf a program that’s swinging and missing more often than expected.What You Should Read NextUSMNT frustrations boiling over as World Cup clock keeps on tickingExpectations of this U.S. group are growing, especially with a World Cup on home soil. So why does it feel like progress has been stunted?

(Top photo: Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images)

Emma Hayes is putting her USWNT players in the frying pan. Who can handle the heat?

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 08: United States head coach Emma Hayes, Sam Coffey #17 of the United States and Crystal Dunn #19 of the United States  during pre-game activities prior to game vs Brazil at PayPal Park on April 08, 2025 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Tamerra Griffin 41 ril 9, 2025


Compared to the bright, breezy environment of SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles for game one, the United States women’s national team’s (USWNT) swift rematch with Brazil at San Jose’s PayPal Park carried an inverted energy, atmospherically and competitively. The latter ended in a 2-1 defeat for the U.S. before a packed house of 18,000 in California’s Bay Area on Tuesday night, the booming, sold-out crowd competing with the periodic sound of planes touching down at the nearby airport. The first, in the sunshine of Saturday afternoon, brought 32,303 people to a venue that holds 70,000 to see what turned out to be a secure 2-0 win for the hosts.Match two also embodied the classic traits of a return fixture against the same opponent, with noticeable changes to the previous lineup. But as U.S. head coach Emma Hayes has reiterated throughout this window, experimentation was going to be the prevailing theme of these two fixtures. She is working toward identifying a core group of players by the end of June who will eventually compete in the 2027 World Cup.“I wanna put players in the frying pan and I want you to feel the heat,” Hayes said in her post-game news conference late Tuesday night. “This camp was always about expanding and experimenting (with) that player pool. I really feel like that is becoming so clear to me on which players I think are really ready for us right now, which ones are not.”With that mandate, this could, arguably, have been a period better enjoyed behind closed doors for the team.Of the 22 players (including alternates) selected for the 2024 Olympics, headlined by Sophia Wilson, Mallory Swanson and Trinity Rodman as the Triple Espresso forward line, only 10 made the most recent roster. The starting 11 on Tuesday averaged just 17 caps and formed the youngest USWNT roster in 24 years. It was bound to look as challenging as it felt — especially when that group, unlike Saturday’s squad, was tasked with handling 2023 National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) MVP Kerolin Nicoli for 90-plus minutes.

Brazil’s Kerolin Nicoli was a threat all evening. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images)

When caterpillars retreat to their cocoons, part of the process of transformation can be aesthetically unbecoming and grotesque. For the USWNT, though, that metamorphosis is happening in real-time and out in public view. The revolution is being televised, and Hayes is unconcerned with how it might look to an untrained eye.“We could play 11 relatively experienced players now and build those connections, there’s no problem,” Hayes had told reporters on Friday. “But if we get to a World Cup in two years and all of a sudden, an Ally Sentnor or Lily Yohannes are completely underprepared, then you’re going to say, ‘Well, why didn’t we give them the opportunities in that period?’”Hayes shared that Sentnor — a 21-year-old striker and No. 1 NWSL draft pick of the Utah Royals in 2024 who is known for scoring long-range bangers — had told her that February’s SheBelieves Cup finale, which saw the USWNT fall to Japan 2-1, had been the most difficult game she’d played in her career. The manager also pointed out Yohannes, whose skill and promise as a midfielder became popular knowledge following her Champions League debut at 16 (she is now 17) for Dutch club Ajax, had not been involved in the U.S. youth national team system very long and thus has limited experience with international competition outside of Europe.

“It’s a completely different situation that we have to expose them to,” Hayes continued, “and if I put on the field (a lot of) 17, 18, 19, 20-year-olds, I’m setting them up to fail, in my honest opinion, so we have to drip-feed it in, whether it’s some of them in one game, some of them in another game, (or) some of them from the bench.” The four halves of soccer against Brazil this week have provided that.Saturday’s game kicked off with the five most-capped players on the roster — Lindsey Heaps, Crystal Dunn, Emily Sonnett, Emily Fox and Rodman — in the starting 11. The second half, however, saw the entries of Yohannes and 20-year-old Jaedyn Shaw, plus a national-team debut for Houston Dash defender Avery Patterson, 22. Last night, by contrast, 31-year-old Sonnett was the most-capped player at kickoff with 106. Next in line? Midfielder Korbin Albert with 25, aged 21.Claire Hutton watched the first match from the bench as an unused substitute, then started the second to double her number of international caps. The 19-year-old, who plays for the Kansas City Current, roamed about central midfield Tuesday night with Albert and distinguished herself with her brave defending and positioning, according to Hayes.“We’ve done a lot of film with her this week, a lot of detailing,” said Hayes. She added that the Americans’ goal, scored by Catarina Macario in the first minute of the game, came as a result of Hutton stepping up further away from the back line, allowing her to intercept the ball and initiate the decisive counter-attack — something Hayes and the coaching staff have been working on with her.Hutton, for her part, spoke with Sentnor, who did play in that first match, on the team’s flight up to the Bay Area from LA. The pair are good friends. She knew what she experienced Tuesday night would be “a whole different beast” compared to Saturday.“It’s international football. You’re gonna get clobbered if you take too many touches on the ball,” Hutton said. “So it’s just a learning moment and a moment to move forward on.”

It’s no secret that the state of the USWNT’s midfield has for years been shrouded in concern, but the teenager’s aggression toward an opposing team that relishes one-versus-one duels demonstrated for Hayes that she is suited for this level.

“For a 19-year-old to play like that against Brazil is a superb performance from her. One in which I know she is ready to progress with us,” Hayes said.

The USWNT fell to a defeat against Brazil in San Jose. (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)

And while the second half of Tuesday’s game saw the return of more veteran players — Heaps, Sam Coffey, Dunn and Alana Cook, and even Shaw, subbed on for her 25th cap — Hayes found the group’s performance flat. The USWNT’s expected goals figure for the second half was zero, and Hayes said only one player broke into the top 10 for pass completion.

Patterson’s determined performance as a left back crackled with possibility, but concerns remain in the middle defensively — both in terms of the ongoing audition to be Naomi Girma’s co-conspirator and the ability of both goalkeepers who played in this window, Phallon Tullis-Joyce and Mandy McGlynn, to distribute the ball with precision.nt“I think both her (McGlynn) and Phallon have had the opportunity to play against a top opponent, just like Jane (Campbell) had the opportunity to play against a top opponent with Japan, and I think it’s fair to say I’m a lot clearer,” Hayes said Tuesday night.It’s hard to imagine these players returning to their clubs after these two games without stacks of notes and feedback from Hayes and, for the younger set, the veteran teammates around them.“Every time I go into camp, it’s definitely a learning experience and developing as a player,” 19-year-old defender Gisele Thompson told reporters in the mixed zone. “I think I can learn so much from all of these players, especially Crystal, (and) Emily Fox. They’ve helped me so much along the way. Just being in these camps helps me as a player, even (at) club.”Thompson and Hutton both spoke of confidence in their reflections on camp, how the experience and what they learned from it bolstered their toolbox as players, imbuing them with excitement about how they’ll integrate their notes.“That was a battle. I’ve never played a game like that before,” Hutton said of last night’s game, the beginnings of a laugh escaping from her response in the mixed zone. “So knowing that I had that, I can do anything now.”(Top photo: Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

USWNT forward Alyssa Thompson’s resurgence on the field is a lesson in resilience

Apr 5, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; United States of America forward Alyssa Thompson (11) celebrating forward Trinity Rodman’s (2) goal against Brazil at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bailey Holiver-Imagn Images

By Tamerra Griffin ril 7, 2025Updated April 8, 2025


This is Alyssa Thompson’s moment.

That much was palpable when she received the ball left of the center circle from defender Crystal Dunn during the U.S. women’s national team’s 2-0 win over Brazil on Saturday in front of 32,303 people in her home city of Los Angeles.

For anyone who has watched the 20-year-old attacking player during her three seasons across town with Angel City FC in the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL), her path might as well have been cut into the field at SoFi Stadium with a lawn mower: straight to goal.

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One feint sent a Brazilian defender sliding out of the play and Thompson exploited the space left behind. By the time she reached the top of the 18-yard box, the moment had begun to feel like what could one day be considered vintage Thompson, much like the goal she scored for Angel City before the international break. But rather than aim for the goal, Thompson delivered an assist that split two more defenders to reach an oncoming Trinity Rodman, who knocked the ball past Brazilian and Kansas City Current goalkeeper Lorena in the sixth minute.

“That was the perfect ball to a perfect finish. I think we read each other’s minds in that moment,” Rodman said after the match.

Trinity Rodman and Alyssa Thompson celebrate the opening goal against Brazil at SoFi Stadium. (Bailey Holiver / Imagn Images)

Her direct attacking style aside, Thompson’s short journey from being voted Gatorade Player of the Year at high school level in 2021 to this moment has been anything but linear.

She was the first overall pick in the 2023 NWSL Draft and the youngest player on the USWNT’s World Cup roster in a matter of months. Her standout rookie season rolled into her first senior call-up, however, and things quickly changed.

Thompson made just two appearances off the bench in the defending champion United States’ ill-fated run to the round of 16 at that World Cup, playing just 17 minutes in a tournament that saw very little squad rotation by coach Vlatko Andonovski. The World Cup crash led to Andonovski resigning and the youngest member of the squad getting left out of the roster to regain form, with mixed results, for her club.

After new coach Emma Hayes took the reins midway through 2024, Thompson watched the USWNT’s Olympic gold medal run from home. Instead of a summer in France, she worked to hone her skills, and after five goals and two assists in seven NWSL games, Thompson got the call from Hayes in October. And she didn’t waste her shot.

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The then-19-year-old scored her first senior international goal 39 minutes into a friendly against Iceland in Austin. The joy was apparent on her face as she leaped into the arms of substitute Sophia Wilson on the sideline.

“I feel like last year, and the last couple of years, I put a lot of pressure on myself,” Thompson told reporters last week. “I think just coming in this year, I just wanted to be confident in my abilities and know what I bring as a player, and not compare myself to other people. I think that has helped me a lot, just knowing that if I’m playing like Alyssa Thompson then I’ll be able to put a good foot forward for my team.”ach month since, Thompson has been finding and learning ways to sharpen her craft. And, with the marquee front three of Wilson, Rodman and Mallory Swanson, who headlined that Olympic triumph, down to just Rodman for now, Thompson found another moment to make her case on Saturday.Hayes acknowledged Thompson’s journey ahead of the match as a cautionary tale of how a mistimed moment can obscure a player’s potential, especially from an outsider’s perspective.“I hope that we can look at someone like Alyssa Thompson’s situation, i.e. a 17-year-old coming into the program probably underprepared for that because the level is so much higher, to then have a journey which is pretty normal for a young player. But I think she’s in the best place she has been in terms of her start to the season,” Hayes said.But the former Chelsea manager also expressed her intention to continue elevating the characteristics that make Thompson an attacking threat as she progresses through national team camps and racks up minutes on the field.“Since October we’ve been working so hard positionally with her to get her to have a better understanding of what to do and when, and saying, ‘Listen, at the top level, you’re a great one-v-one specialist, but when you’re playing the top players in the world, they know how to drop off of you in a certain way where they don’t give you a one-v-one opportunity, so how do you link with others?’,” Hayes said.There were glimpses of those areas of growth in Saturday’s match, particularly in some of Thompson’s unsuccessful attempts to take on the well-read Brazilian and Olympique Lyonnais central defender Tarciane. Still, she created dangerous scoring opportunities that contributed to the team’s 2.72 expected goals (xG) figure.

Alyssa Thompson has worked herself back into the U.S. team after a long absence in 2024. (Bailey Holiver / Imagn Images)

Hayes has seen the gap close between where Thompson was six months ago and where she is now, and part of that comes through in her instinctive thinking.“When you play for me, I will overload you to take a player to another level tactically, but that means for a period of time, there’s a lot of thinking going on, a lot of processing,” Hayes said. “There’s a lot of conscious thinking, whereas I feel like with Alyssa now, she understands that, so she’s able to do it more naturally.”Thompson is still at the beginning of her professional career and it’s important to consider: managing internal pressure, brewing confidence and resisting the urge to compare herself to others. These are all tall orders for most teens (and adults) even when they haven’t faced the challenges she has. But they, too, have led to the moment Thompson is now enjoying, and she credits her teammates with supporting her through it.“They believe in me so much and I attribute a lot of my success to them because their help and reassurance has really helped me become the player that I am right now,” Thompson said.Angel City captain and defender Ali Riley has viewed Thompson’s journey from a unique vantage point.The 37-year-old Los Angeles native attended Harvard-Westlake, the same high school Thompson and her younger sister and Angel City teammate Gisele did, and experienced that same World Cup in 2023, though Riley played for co-host New Zealand (she was born in LA but her father is from New Zealand). Riley was quick to refuse credit for any guidance she’s given the elder Thompson and made clear her progress is just as promising as her ceiling — as a player and as a face of the sport.

Angel City teammate Riley has had a front-row seat to Alyssa Thompson’s rise. (Kiyoshi Mio / Imagn Images)

“Even when we look at how much she’s grown, her performances on the field, what’s so special about her is that this is the beginning,” Riley told The Athletic. “I think she has the personality and the eloquence to be someone who can speak about being a woman in sport, being a woman of color in sport. She’s so good about speaking about her experience growing up, the value of representation.”

Riley, who hasn’t played since last season because of nerve damage in her left leg, added that Thompson was voted into the team’s leadership group this year.

When Thompson went through a bit of a scoring drought during that 2024 season, Riley said she faced criticism from “keyboard warriors” on social media who picked through her stats and body language with a fine-tooth comb. Now, Riley said, “when she scores, she doesn’t seem relieved, she’s genuinely happy.”

So far, that happiness has shown up as cheeky TikTok goal celebrations with her sister Gisele and fellow Angel City striker Casey Phair on the sidelines. Other times, it’s a full-throated rebel yell.

For Thompson to enjoy another stellar performance in her hometown on Saturday only sweetened the moment — topped off with one of those yells after assisting fellow Southern California native Rodman.

“I love playing in LA,” Thompson said in the mixed zone following the match. “Being here is amazing for the club, and I’ve never played in LA with the national team, so being able to feel that comfort from my city and my family and friends, I just felt like I could be more like me, and I knew what I could do.”

(Top photo: Imagn Images)

U.S. Soccer, NWSL see 2031 Women’s World Cup as ‘catalyst’ for growth and league expansion

LYON, FRANCE - JULY 07: (EDITORS NOTE: Image has been digitally enhanced.) Carli Lloyd of the USA celebrate with the trophy following victory in the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup France Final match between The United States of America and The Netherlands at Stade de Lyon on July 07, 2019 in Lyon, France. (Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images)

By Meg Linehan April 5, 2025Updated April 8, 2025


LOS ANGELES — The United States has not yet formally won the bid to host the 2031 Women’s World Cup but various figures from the U.S. Soccer Federation and the NWSL are already looking six years ahead to harness the power of hosting the tournament.

“It gives us something to work towards that we know from history can change the interest level in women’s soccer,” NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman told The Athletic before the U.S. women’s national team face Brazil on Saturday, a rematch of the 2024 Paris Olympics gold medal match.

AdvertisementFIFA president Gianni Infantino said on Thursday that the U.S. submitted the only “valid bid” to host the 2031 tournament before the governing body’s deadline. FIFA later announced that the U.S. submitted a joint bid with “other member associations from Concacaf (to be confirmed in due course).”

The longer runway allows for significant planning time, especially with the potential to build upon hosting the 2026 men’s World Cup alongside Mexico and Canada, and the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

U.S. Soccer CEO J.T. Batson stressed that the bid includes growing the game across the region through Concacaf participation, and pointed to Friday’s announcement of Washington Spirit owner Michele Kang doubling down on her investment in U.S. Soccer with a $25 million contribution. Batson said this will allow the federation to be better prepared for 2031.

“Your ability to use the World Cup as a catalyst is before, not after,” Batson said. “So starting way early on, that is something that we’re really excited about.”

Michele Kang with U.S. Soccer CEO J.T. Batson. (Mike Lawrence / Getty Images for USSF)

Details about what the bid includes are thin, with Mexico absent on paper after their previous co-host billing from the 2027 bidding process. However, Batson called the U.S. a “co-host” rather than a host. Many of the details, he said, depend on the tournament potentially expanding to a 48-team endeavor, which he said is something U.S. Soccer has been “passionate supporters for.”

“We think it would be incredible for growing the women’s game,” Batson told reporters on Friday.

“One of the things we hear from folks who lead federations around the world is they view the Women’s World Cup as an opportunity for them to 1. make a World Cup, and 2., really go compete in a way they wouldn’t be able to on the men’s side,” Batson said. With U.S. Soccer president Cindy Parlow Cone now a member of the FIFA Council, it’s another chance for the federation to advocate for tournament expansion.

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Beyond U.S. Soccer, the NWSL stands to benefit from the third Women’s World Cup on home soil — and the first with a professional league in a position to take advantage of the tournament bump.

“Hopefully, this will be a catalyst for a lot of cities,” Kang, whose Washington Spirit was a beaten finalist in the NWSL last year, said following the SheBelieves Summit at a small media roundtable. “Even from an infrastructure perspective, I’m trying to convince our area that the World Cup is coming and Washington, D.C. could be the center of women’s football, not just government and political power. We’re trying to use that as an opportunity to expand the presence and get women’s football squarely in the mainstream.”What You Should Read NextEmma Hayes: USWNT in ‘dreamland’ as United States set to co-host 2031 Women’s World CupFIFA confirmed that a joint bid from U.S. Soccer and other Concacaf member associations was the sole expression of interest for 2031.

Angel City CEO and co-founder Julie Uhrman was enthusiastic about what hosting the World Cup could offer all levels of the sport.

“It’s more visibility for women’s football, it’s more access to see incredible athletes,” Uhrman said. “Then the idea that most of them play in the NWSL, and you can continue to see them every single month following the World Cup, it’s a huge opportunity, not only for the league but to grow the sport from the grassroots level all the way to the professional level.”

Existing and potential NWSL markets stand to benefit six years down the line, a landscape that Berman has aspirations to expand as large as the NFL.

With Denver and Boston entering the league in 2026 before the men’s World Cup, there are no signs that the NWSL will stop there. Berman said that while expansion plans have been based on the league’s business, a 2031 World Cup in the U.S. could provide an additional filter for the league to consider.

“I’m very confident that our expansion will continue between now and then, so this will certainly give us even more reason to be bullish on our expansion plan,” Berman said. “Seeing how the country reacts to the men’s World Cup next year will be really important. We’re already working closely with FIFA and the host committees, even though it’s the men’s World Cup, to capitalize on it being here. Through that, we can formulate a plan that will take us through 2031.”

(Top photo: Alex Grimm / Getty Images)

3/15/25 USMNT Nations League Finals Th, Indy 11 Start Away @ Miami Sat 6:30, UCL Final 8, NWSL Kick-off

Wow what a busy weekend and of course I am on the road so not as much as I would like this week. Lets start by saying Champions League continues to deliver in whatever format its in. Both the Indy 11 & NWSL kick off this weekend (I will be at the Angel City game Sun eve). I don’t have time to give them the full rundown and will try to do season premiers on both next week. Of course the US Men have Nations League Finals on Thurs on Paramount Plus- not real TV?? at 8 pm on Thursday night vs Panama. The Canada vs Mexico game will follow at 10 pm on Para+. Don’t ask me how our US team in playing in Tourney play and the game is not on TV? UNBELIEVABLE. Of course the other factor is these game were set to go head to head with the first weekend of NCAA March Madness. To say the idiots who run soccer in this country are dumb might be the UNDERSTATEMENT of a lifetime.

Champions League
I am sad that huge games between Atletico Madrid & Real Madrid and Liverpool & PSG were played in the round of 16 rather than an Elite 8 or deeper in the tourney. Both were classics and spectacular end to end play along with spectacular goalkeeping and both ended in shootouts. Sad to see Liverpool & Atletico out so soon. Big fellow Ref question – Was Atletico Robbed when this crucial 3rd kick in the shootout was ruled as a double touch by VAR?  Atletico basically lost the game on that call as they can’t find a way to beat Real Madrid again in Champions League play.  Rules changes are being considered because of it – see last story below.

Indy 11

The Boys in Blue open the USL Championship regular season on Saturday, March 15 at Miami FC at 6:30 p.m. on ESPN+. Saturday is the 14th all-time meeting between the two sides, with Miami holding a 6-5-2 edge. The Boys in Blue have won the past four meetings. Coach Sean McAuley enters year two leading the Boys in Blue with 15 players returning from last year’s squad that earned the franchise’s first home playoff game since 2019 after advancing to the semifinals of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. The Indy Eleven home opener is 2 weeks away.  Get the exclusive Home Opener Ticket Pack starting at $29, which includes tickets to the home opener March 29 vs. Colorado Springs (with on-field access), the U.S. Open Cup match on April 15 or 16, and a flex ticket for a match of your choice. Awesome to see Maverick McCoy a former Carmel FC player on the Roster as a 17 year-old academy player. Go Maverick – I know his dad Wade McCoy a former CFC Coach is proud as are we!

  • Goalkeepers (3):  Reice Charles-Cook, ^Ryan Hunsucker, Hunter Sulte
  • Defenders (9):  Pat Hogan, ^Maverick McCoy, Finn McRobb, James Musa, Josh O’Brien, Ben Ofeimu, Bruno Rendon, Aedan Stanley, Hayden White
  • Midfielders (7):  Jack Blake, Oliver Brynéus, Cam Lindley, James Murphy, Logan Neidlinger, Aodhan Quinn, Brem Soumaoro
  • Forwards (5):  Elvis Amoh, Elliot Collier, Maalique Foster, Edward Kizza, Romario Williams
  • ^USL Academy Contract

US Men Look to Win 3rd Straight Nations League Title Next Week

So the USMNT and new Manager Poch have a big task ahead as they look to secure their 3rd straight Nations League title starting Thur night vs Panama 8:30 pm on Paramount plus. The winner will face the winner of Canada vs Mexico which is played right after our game. The final is Sunday night at 10 pm on Para+. No real surprises on roster selection – waiting to see who will start in the middle defense will the Celtic duo outperform Richards & McKensie? Who starts along with Adams & Mckinney in the middle? I will have more on this including my line-up choices later in the week.

DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (club/country; caps/goals)

GOALKEEPERS (3): Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew; 3/0), Zack Steffen (Colorado Rapids; 30/0), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace/ENG; 49/0)

DEFENDERS (8): Cameron Carter-Vickers (Celtic/SCO; 18/0), Marlon Fossey (Standard Liege/BEL; 1/0), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/FRA; 17/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 67/1), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 23/1), Antonee Robinson (Fulham/ENG; 50/4), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 19/0), Auston Trusty (Celtic/SCO; 4/0)
MIDFIELDERS (6): Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 42/2), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis/ESP; 18/0), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; 3/0), Weston McKennie (Juventus/ITA; 58/11), Gio Reyna (Borussia Dortmund/GER; 31/8), Tanner Tessmann (Olympique Lyon/FRA; 6/0)
FORWARDS (6): Patrick Agyemang (Charlotte FC; 2/2), Yunus Musah (AC Milan/ITA; 45/1), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan/ITA; 76/32), Josh Sargent (Norwich City/ENG; 27/5), Timothy Weah (Juventus/ITA; 42/7), Brian White (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 3/1)

NWSL Season Stars this Weekend

The NWSL kicks off this weekend after an offseason packed with player movementcoaching hires, emerging storylines, and one compelling sneak peek. Orlando enters 2025 as the reigning NWSL Shield and Championship winners while Kansas City forward Temwa Chawinga defends her MVP award — but outside contenders are bound to keep 2024’s titans on their toes. Big games to watch this weekend.

Kansas City Current vs Portland Thorns Sat 12:45 pm on ABC. The MVP and Kansas City will host a rebuilding Portland Thorns team on national TV.

Gotham FC vs. Seattle Reign, Saturday at 10 PM ET (ION): See how the tension plays out between teams on either side of one of the offseason’s biggest trades, after Gotham sent veteran forward Lynn Biyendolo and goalkeeper Cassie Miller to Seattle while receiving promising young midfielder Jaelin Howell in return.
Angel City vs. San Diego, Sunday at 6:50 PM ET (ESPN2): The SoCal rivalry heats back up between two work-in-progress teams, as Angel City begins anew under an interim manager while San Diego charts a new course with both a new coach and some big-name departures.

Champions League Chances to Win as we Enter The Quarter Finals

For Carmel Dad’s Club Refs — and want to be refs — check out the below. New Refs can learn to ref for free – at the new Ref Classes then ref rec games this spring after training with older officials. Its a great way to break into reffing without having to pay quite as much to start.

TV SCHEDULE

US PLAYERS ACROSS THE WORLD
Saturday

Werder Bremen v Borussia Mönchengladbach – 10:30a on ESPN+

Joe Scally missed Borussia Mönchengladbach’s 3-1 loss to Mainz last weekend due to yellow card accumulation, but should be available and back in the starting lineup on Saturday as they travel to take on Werder Bremen. ‘Gladbach fell to ninth place with the loss, seven points back of Mainz and five points back of fourth place Eintracht Frankfurt. Their opponent this weekend is 12th place Werder Bremen who have won two straight, including a 2-0 win over second place Bayer Leverkusen last weekend.

Augsburg v Wolfsburg – 9:30a on ESPN+

Kevin Paredes has returned to training but remains unavailable for Wolfsburg and Noahkai Banks has seen just 9 minutes in the last four matches for Augsburg (albeit all last weekend) so it seems unlikely that we’ll have an American take the field on Saturday as 11th place Augsburg host 7th place Wolfsburg.

AC Milan v Como – 1p on Paramount+

Christian Pulisic scored two goals last weekend in AC Milan’s 3-2 win over Lecce but the team remains in ninth place heading into their matchup with Como this weekend. Yunus Musah was also once again starting in the midfield for Milan and it will be interesting to see his continued usage for both club and country, USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino has recently expressed that Musah can really be played all over the right side of the field, from rightback, in the midfield, or on the wing. However, Musah seems to have performed better for his club in the midfield though that is a crowded position for the USMNT.

RB Leipzig v Borussia Dortmund – 1:30p on ESPN+

After two straight league starts Gio Reyna did not make it off the bench last weekend in Borussia Dortmund’s 1-0 loss to Augsburg last weekend and just a handful of minutes on Wednesday as they saw out their 2-1 victory over Lille in the second leg of their Champions League matchup. With the win over Lille BVB continue on in this years Champions League competition but they remain in tenth place in Bundesliga play and seem unlikely to qualify for next year’s competition. They have a chance to gain ground this weekend as they face sixth place RB Leipzig who are four points ahead of them in the table. Leipzig have drawn three of their past four league matches.

Bournemouth v Brentford – 1:30p on USA Network

Tyler Adams and Bournemouth drew 2-2 with Tottenham on Sunday to stretch their winless streak to three matches. Bournemouth have fallen to ninth place with the recent rough stretch and are five points out of a top five finish. They host twelfth place Brentford this weekend who are coming off a 1-0 loss to Aston Villa.

Sunday

Venezia v Napoli – 7:30a on Paramount+

Gianluca Busio did not appear for Venezia last weekend, the first match since August that he has failed to see minutes in, and just the fourth match that he hasn’t started in that same time. Venezia picked up their third straight draw, against Como, and they remain well within the relegation zone, five points from safety, as they have won just three times in 28 matches this season. They face second place Napoli on Sunday who are just a point back of league leading Inter Milan.

Leganes v Real Betis – 9a on ESPN+ and ESPN Deportes

Johnny Cardoso was not included in the squad on Thursday as Real Betis defeated Vitoria Guimaraes 4-0 in UEFA Conference League action, casting some doubt on his availability for the USMNT Nations League camp just around the corner. There is no indication of a major injury but if the club is choosing to rest or be cautious with Johnny then perhaps it could impact his national team opportunities as well. Betis have won four straight league matches, all of which Cardoso started and they are in sixth place, three points back of fifth place Villarreal and eight back of Athletic Club and Champions League qualification. They face a Leagnes side that is just a point ahead of Alaves in the race to avoid relegation.

Fulham v Tottenham – 9:30a on USA Network

Antonee Robinson and Fulham fell to Brighton last weekend and look to bounce back against 13th place Tottenham who are coming off a 2-2 draw with Bournemouth. Robinson once again started and was wearing the captains armband last weekend. He did pick up his seventh yellow card of the season but the EPL rules allow for 10 in the first 32 matches before a player faces a two match suspension.

Olympique Lyon v Le Havre – 10a on beIN Sports

Tanner Tessmann has started five straight matches, continuing in the starting lineup after the suspension of his manager, and Lyon have won four of the five matches including last weekends 2-0 win over Nice to move within four points of the third place team and the Champions League qualification position. This weekend they face a Le Havre side that are in the relegation playoff position, a point back of straight safety and a point ahead of Saint-Etienne for straight relegation in a tight relegation playoff race.

Strasbourg v Toulouse – 12:15p on beIN Sports

Mark McKenzie started yet again for Toulouse last weekend and is approaching 2,000 Ligue 1 minutes for the team this season. Toulouse drew 1-1 with high flying Monaco, who had put up nineteen goals in their past six matches. Toulouse are in tenth place and will travel to take on seventh place Strasbourg on Sunday. Strasbourg have won four of their last five, and haven’t given up a goal over that span, their only blemish being a scoreless draw with Brest three weeks ago.

Fiorentina v Juventus – 1p on Paramount+

Juventus lost for just the second time last weekend, fa 4-0 stinker to Atalanta that left Juve in fourth place, six points back of their third place opponent. Tim Weah once again started at rightback but was pulled 54’ minutes in with Juve down 2-0. Weston McKennie also started the match and went the full 90’ playing as an attacking mid. Juventus will face Fiorentina this weekend, on Thursday Fiorentina reversed a 3-2 first leg deficit to Panathinaikos in UEEF Conference League action, winning 3-1 to move on 5-4 on aggregate.

INDY 11

2 Indy Eleven matches to air on CBS Sports Network & ESPN2
Indy Eleven finishes preseason with third straight victory
Indy Eleven brings back goalkeeper Hunter Sulte on loan from Portland Timbers
Indy Eleven Reveals 2025 Under Armour Kits
Indy Eleven Announces 2025 USL W League Schedule

USMNT

Mauricio Pochettino names USMNT Concacaf Nations League roster with eye on defending title
Adams, Reyna return to USMNT for CNL finals
USMNT midweek roundup: Zendejas, White score in CCC
USMNT to face Türkiye, Switzerland in June friendlies

NWSL

NWSL team-by-team preview: Can Orlando Pride repeat as champions?
As the NWSL brings in foreign talent, international players savor new opportunity
NWSL club BOS Nation FC to announce new name soon following fan backlash
NWSL 2025 cheatsheet: Big questions, schedule highlights and how to watch this season

How to watch the 2025 NWSL Season: Schedule, channels and more

Three NWSL trades that could define the 2025 season

NWSL 2025 predictions: Pride looking for repeat, top newcomers and more

2025 NWSL season preview: Stars, storylines and teams to watch after league’s biggest year

Angel City believes it finally has right chemistry to be competitive amid rebuild

GK

Great Saves Champions league 2nd Leg Rd of 16
Arsenal’s Raya receives Save of the Month nomination
New 8 Second Rule Coming GK
Kicking Side Volleys

Reffing

New 8 Second Rule Coming GK
Was Atletico Robbed when this crucial 3rd kick in the shootout was ruled as a double touch by VAR? 

New Ref Abuse Prevention Policy
Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

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Pochettino addresses his inclusions, snubs for USMNT’s Nations League squad

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino

By Paul Tenorio The Atletic ar. 11, 2025Updated Mar. 13, 2025


Several times over the course of his press conference on Tuesday, U.S. men’s national team coach Mauricio Pochettino invoked the idea of “trust” to describe his selection process for the team that will compete for a fourth consecutive Concacaf Nations League trophy next week.

The trust earned by players like forward Patrick Agyemang during January camp. The trust he wanted to return to players like Diego Luna, to build the confidence and belief in a player who showed well in January and now will get his first shot with the full team. The trust and relationship he wanted to build with a player like Gio Reyna, who got his first call-up under Pochettino despite struggling for minutes and form at Borussia Dortmund; and Tyler Adams, who similarly will get his first look after returning from a back injury.

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Ultimately, it’s in the trust of communicating what Pochettino and his staff want from the team — and that the players can understand and execute those core tenets.

“It’s clear that many of the players here have won this competition,” Pochettino said. “And you always lose a little bit of hunger when you win, right? In this case we want to keep that hunger and try to instill in the players that you have to keep winning. You have to keep competing and keep winning.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Reyna, Adams return as Pochettino crafts U.S.’s Nations League finals squad

The U.S. will have two opportunities to compete for trophies between now and next summer’s World Cup. Both are Concacaf competitions: this spring’s Nations League and the summer’s Gold Cup. It put more value on this roster and its coveted roster spots.

A few familiar names were left off the team. Alejandro Zendejas is in top form at Club America in Liga MX, with five goals and five assists in the Clausura so far. He also scored two goals and had two assists in December’s Apertura semis and finals and was probably the biggest surprise snub if only because of his form. Brenden Aaronson, who was part of the 2022 World Cup roster, was also left off. Others on the outside looking in included center back Miles Robinson and midfielder Aidan Morris.

Pochettino said it’s down to the increased competition at each spot. Asked specifically about Aaronson, he shed some light on the depth chart.

“Brenden we know very well, but we decided to bring other players in that place,” Pochettino said. “We have players in that position like Gio Reyna, Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Diego Luna. Too many players for only one position. The (idea) was to provide balance. … We (are talking) about him, but we can talk about many other players that were in the preliminary list.”

The answer reinforced the obvious. For every player who misses out on a team, there’s another player given a chance to prove they belong. Pochettino called six players who were a part of January camp and will now get a chance to validate their place among the senior squad in the biggest international windows.

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That includes Luna and Agyemang. “(Diego is) a player we followed from the day we signed with the USA national team,” Pochettino said. “We want to give another possibility. … I think it’s important for him to feel confidence from us, and I think he was good in the January camp and we want to provide the possibility to train with us again.

USMNT's Patrick AgyemangPatrick Agyemang, center, was a star of January camp for the U.S. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

“Talking about Patrick he’s still a little bit raw, a player that you can feel that he can evolve and learn a lot,” Pochettino continued. “But the potential and the characteristics, if he continues his progression, we can talk about in the future a very good striker. Now it’s up to him. We were so happy about January camp, I think he showed we can trust him. He scored, but not only his scoring, his work ethic in the camp, the way that he can press, he worked for the team. All these things that I think meant we were focused on him, to give the trust and calling him now is to show that we really believe in him.”

The roster also includes a few familiar faces for U.S. fans who haven’t yet had a chance to prove themselves to Pochettino. That includes Adams, whom Pochettino praised but also said would have to “prove that he’s better than” others in a midfield that includes Tanner Tessmann, Johnny Cardoso, Yunus Musah and Weston McKennie.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

USMNT Player Tracker: Pulisic finds his mojo, another Richards shut out and Dest returns

It also includes Reyna, who is still trying to find his way at the club level. He’ll get a chance to set things right in Nations League, a tournament that has been kind to him in the past. Reyna has five goal contributions across three Nations League finals. Despite not being in prime form, Pochettino said it was important to get Reyna in because he wouldn’t be able to participate in the Gold Cup. He’s instead due to be playing for Borussia Dortmund in the Club World Cup, which will be going on concurrently with the national team’s regional competition.

FIFA ruled that clubs have priority over players in this summer international window as it tries to push its new club competition, meaning Reyna and Juventus players Weston McKennie and Tim Weah are likely to e with their club teams rather than with the U.S.

“Everyone recognizes that his talent (is there),” Pochettino said of Reyna. “Of course, he’s improving, but he needs to improve. And of course he can do better. We need to push him, but we need to understand how he thinks, what he likes, (what) he (doesn’t) like. It’s important to create this relationship for the future if we are going to have the (possibility) again (for him) to join us. We want to win this competition, and I think he can help. That is why he is with us. But at the same time, I think he can do better. We are going to try to create this relationship, to try to discover and how to help.”

It makes this March window important on a number of levels — from team success, to individual performances and enhancing competition ahead of next summer’s all-important World Cup.

(Top photo: Ronald Cortes/Getty Images)

Five Questions for Week 2 in the USL Championship
We’ve got another 11-game slate of action this weekend in the USL Championship, including Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC’s home opener and a regional rivalry clash in Northern California.Here are five questions we have ahead of the action.1. Can Colorado Springs get Marco Micaletto and Anthony Fontana more involved?We saw a great example of how Colorado Springs can be an effective attacking force in the opening minutes of its contest in El Paso when Marco Micaletto’s run into space behind Locomotive’s back line resulted in a penalty that Micaletto converted. The challenge? Both Micaletto and Anthony Fontana were limited in their influence overall, combining for only 28 passes overall and one chance created.Both Fontana and Micaletto can be difference-makers, but they’re going to need more opportunity on the ball to do so. At home against a strong Detroit City midfield, they’re going to need to be more active for the defending title-holders to pick up their first win of the season.2. Will Lexington SC maintain its perfect start in Orange County?Lexington SC produced one of the best performances of the opening weekend, becoming the first team to win its inaugural game in the USL Championship since 2018 with a 2-0 win at home to Hartford Athletic. Central to that was a stellar defensive display that didn’t allow a shot on target, providing the foundation for Head Coach Terry Boss’ side.Lexington should get a much sterner test this Saturday when it visits an Orange County SC side that put up a four-spot in its opening night victory against Oakland Roots SC. If the visitors can come away from Championship Soccer Stadium with a result, it’ll add to the belief this side can be an immediate contender.3. Can FC Tulsa break its duck against the Rowdies?When it comes to FC Tulsa, there are some clubs that simply have proven an obstacle too great to overcome. While the history between Tulsa and the Tampa Bay Rowdies is relatively limited – the sides have played five times in league play – the Scissortails have only emerged with one point from those encounters, losing four times.After breaking a seven-year winless streak against Phoenix Rising FC last week with a hard-fought 1-0 win in the desert, however, the hope is the tide is turning under new Head Coach Luke Spencer. It’s early for statements, but Tulsa picking up its first win at home to Tampa Bay in its home opener would be an eye-opener.4. Will Monterey Bay FC or Oakland Roots SC give us something to believe in?It’s fair to say the opening games of the season for both Monterey Bay FC – a 1-0 loss at San Antonio in which the side didn’t officially record a shot on target – and Oakland Roots SC – a 4-2 defeat at Orange County SC in which the side’s defense looked as fallible as a season ago – wasn’t what either club was looking for.The NorCal rivals meet at Cardinale Stadium on Saturday night (10 p.m. ET | CBS Sports Golazo Network) aiming to deliver their first points of the season. Hopefully we’ll be able to walk away with a bit more optimism about at least one of their directions by the end of the night.5. What does Loudoun United’s second act look like?On this week’s USL All Access, our friend Devon Kerr described Loudoun United FC’s performance at Birmingham Legion FC as “awesome,” and we’re in complete concurrence. The combination of Abdellatif Aboukoura and Zach Ryan led the way in the final third, and it was hard to find a weak link in the lineup.There was the mitigation that Birmingham Legion FC looked subpar, however, which means we’re curious as to what United’s second outing of the season looks like against a North Carolina FC side that was solid in its debut against Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC. If Loudoun comes away with another result and positive performance, we’re in for a re-evaluation of where this club might sit in the East’s hierarchy.

Champions League projections 2024-25: Who will lift the trophy in Munich on May 31?

Champions League projections 2024-25: Who will lift the trophy in Munich on May 31?

By The Athletic UK Staff


The Champions League has a new format for 2024-25. Forget group tables, instead we saw a 36-team league stage being contested from September through to January. But now that has been completed, who has the best chance of progressing to the final in May and lifting the trophy? Throughout the season, we will publish projections — powered by Opta data — to show how teams are expected to perform. These will update after each matchday. The competition’s expanded format might take a little time to get used to, but these projections can show you how it might all unfold.

Last updated March 13, 2025 at 8:56 AM

State of the League: Before the NWSL can take on the world, it must find its place in the U.S.

Apr 13, 2024; Cary, North Carolina, USA; The NWSL Logo before the game between the North Carolina Courage and Portland Thorns FC at WakeMed Soccer Park. Mandatory Credit: Jaylynn Nash-USA TODAY Sports

By Meg Linehan The Athletic Mar. 14, 2025Updated 10:49 am PDT


The narrative around women’s sports has changed drastically over the past few years, expedited by the current political climate in the United States.

Right now, the WNBA is out in front in a way the NWSL — on the cusp of its 2025 season — can only dream of.

The NWSL doesn’t have a Caitlin Clark-esque marquee player, but Clark has served as an amplifying factor more than a foundational one. It’s also a transitional time for the NWSL when it comes to minting new stars that can transcend the league or make the cover of Time or Vogue. The leading candidate, Trinity Rodman, discussed her desire to play in Europe at some point in the same week she graced a Times Square billboard for the league.

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The NWSL has always talked a big game about being the best in the world. In 2025, it wouldn’t hurt to take a step back and figure out how to truly matter in the U.S. first — though such an undertaking isn’t guaranteed to be fully under its control.

“We’ve talked about becoming really laser focused on our key initiatives. Everything that we’re doing right now from a business perspective is focused on cultural relevance and storytelling,” NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman said in her state of the league presser ahead of the Challenge Cup.

In theory, all of this makes sense — the part that worries me is that the scaffolding is being built upon brands rather than the league itself. Berman highlighted two new deals with e.l.f. Cosmetics and Alex Cooper’s Unwell, “both of whom are exactly within the strategy that we deployed for the offseason to really get after our next generation of fans.”

She pointed to “share of mind, share of wallet and cultural relevance” as vehicles for the league’s strategic plan in a meeting with The Athletic on Tuesday, saying the league has key results they monitor to see how much they are moving the needle. The NWSL measures awareness (via brand tracker surveys both aided with leading questions and unaided), how marketable their players are, how the league resonates from a public relations perspective and sentiment on social media.

While the NWSL feels bigger and more successful than it’s ever been, it’s hard not to compare it to a league like the WNBA — and some of those tensions still come out of the NWSL working in real time how it communicates its ultimate goals beyond being the best in the world.What you should read nextNWSL 2025 cheatsheet: Big questions, schedule highlights and how to watch this seasonWhat you need to know at the start of the 2025 NWSL season

This offseason was also full of mixed vibes

Worries over player departures, especially center back Naomi Girma, dominated the conversation, but the league also launched its 16th expansion team in Denver with a whopping $110 million fee and plenty of buzz. They released a four-part series, “For the Win,” going behind the scenes of last year’s playoffs with media rights partner Prime Video. The league also settled with three attorneys general regarding past systemic failures to protect its players from abuse, even as it grapples with the present — most recently launching a formal review into Bay FC’s coaching staff.

There’s no such thing as a quiet offseason in the NWSL, but that’s a lot on top of all the usual free agency moves and trades — and the first winter where teams had to sign young players without the mechanism of the NWSL college draft.

Despite the activity, it feels like the NWSL is heading into a new season with a little less momentum than usual — not ideal for a league that wants to be a driver of culture.What you should read nextHow an influx of elite youth players to NWSL is impacting the college soccer landscapeWith more teenagers going pro, college soccer is left to soul search – and consider the risks.

Before the NWSL can achieve that cultural relevance though, they need eyeballs. Last year, they failed to crack the one million viewer threshold for a game. The championship got close, peaking at 1.1 million viewers up against college football, but averaged 967,900; 1.5 million watched the Skills Challenge, a number helped tremendously by NFL game lead-ins. For comparison, the WNBA regular season averaged 1.2 million viewers across ESPN platforms, up 170 percent from the previous year. Their most-watched game, Indiana Fever at Chicago Sky on June 23, averaged 2.3 million viewers.

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This has to be the year the NWSL reaches that 1 million view milestone, and TV numbers for regular season games need to be up, too. This year, much like last year, feels like the NWSL is getting closer to an answer to those big-picture questions.

With the addition of two teams next year, the league has a decent runway to 2026, when it will need to figure out how to insert itself into the conversation of the men’s World Cup on home soil or provide audiences with counter-programming.

How the economic outlook could affect the league

The NWSL’s growth and destiny as a professional league are also not immune from the current state of affairs in the United States, especially if a potential economic recession comes into play.

According to a recent report by The New York Times, strategists at Goldman Sachs have increased the chances of a U.S. recession to 20 percent in the next year, and any slowdown here could then raise the risks of a global recession, according to analysts at JPMorgan Chase.

Every domestic professional league is likely watching the economic outlook closely, but historically, all three professional women’s soccer leagues in the U.S. have had to contend with the impacts of a recession. The NWSL has survived a short but steep recession before, getting through the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, but this is now another time of uncertainty and volatility. While there were many contributing factors to the demise of its predecessor, the WPS, the league was constantly on unsteady footing financially, with an average salary of $25,000 in its final year.

Continued inflation or any meaningful signs of a recession could impact everything from ongoing and potential brand partnerships to fan purchasing power. During the Great Recession in 2009, the WNBA even had to retract a team, the Houston Comets.

The NWSL was one of the first leagues to return to play amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (Jeffrey Swinger / USA TODAY Sports)

Women’s sports, for better or worse, have always been viewed as a more affordable option for a fan compared to men’s sports. While that may still technically be the case, as premium options become the norm and demand rises, the NWSL will have to ask itself who’s attending their games and what the get-in price is. Will it be sustainable in the long run for younger fans — especially the Gen-Z audience the NWSL so desperately craves?

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So far, at least, there haven’t been many signs of economic activity negatively impacting the NWSL. For instance, the Washington Spirit just opened up the upper deck due to demand for new season ticket holders, despite the impact of widespread federal worker layoffs across the metro area led by the Department of Government Efficiency.

But couple that volatility with a presidential administration that has made the “protect opportunities for women and girls to compete in safe and fair sports” a focus, and the NWSL — and any other women’s professional league — could suddenly find itself in a very precarious place. One of President Donald Trump’s first executive orders was to ban transgender women and girls from competing in women’s sports.

Last year, the league was briefly tested in its response to other bad-faith attacks when author JK Rowling falsely accused Orlando Pride forward Barbra Banda of being ineligible to compete in women’s divisions. Her eligibility has never been seriously questioned nor revoked. Banda was being honored as the BBC’s women’s footballer of the year, but the NWSL failed to support her. It’s something the league has since worked to remedy.

Around the NWSL ecosystem, the conversation has already started. Last week, Canada international Vanessa Gilles, on loan to Lyon from Angel City, said she was working on extending her time in France.

Canada defender Vanessa Gilles said she’s unlikely to return to Angel City from Lyon at this time. (Maria Lysaker / USA TODAY Sports)

“I don’t see myself going back to the United States with the current geopolitical situation,” she told Le Progrès. “It’s a bit complicated to go back there as a Canadian.”

It’s an entirely reasonable position, but not one the NWSL has a decent answer to yet.

There’s a bit of a pretense of a business-as-usual approach across the league, but that sentiment could crumble at any moment with little warning.

Sports are an escape, but they cannot be completely divorced from society. The NWSL wants its spotlight in 2025, but that won’t come without the increasing creep of U.S. politics into the league and women’s sports as a whole.

(Top photo: Jaylynn Nash / USA TODAY Sports via Imagn)

NWSL players to watch: Key performers for every team in 2025

NWSL players to watch: Key performers for every team in 2025

By Jeff Rueter Mar. 11, 2025Updated Mar. 14, 2025 11:57 am PDT


For a few more days, all 14 NWSL teams will refine their preseason preparations. Every team can credibly dream of reaching the title game a year after the Orlando Pride went from regularly missing the playoffs to winning it all.

The rising level of talent in the NWSL means every team has more than one player they can hitch their hopes to heading into the 2025 season.

This is not necessarily intended to be a guide to each team’s most important or impactful player — we’re not looking at Barbra Banda, Temwa Chawinga or Trinity Rodman here — nor is this a speculative guess of which unknown squad members will catch us all by surprise. Instead, the following analysis is a hodgepodge of high-end performers, players looking to bounce back from tough 2024 seasons and invaluable options who often fly under the radar. All are welcome; let’s dive in.

All data was pulled from TruMedia via StatsPerform (Opta).


Angel City: Alyssa Thompson

When a player earns a World Cup roster spot at 18, their careers get judged differently than most of their peers. Thompson struggled at the start of 2024, failing to score before the Olympic break. She broke her scoring slump in the first game back, netting a brace against San Diego Wave to kick off a burst that yielded five goals from five NWSL appearances. Thompson also chipped in with seven assists despite her team missing the postseason.

Thompson has been tricky with the ball at her feet since her debut in 2023 but her confidence grew further last year, seeing her take on more responsibility. She attempted nearly twice as many take-ons (86 in 2024 vs 46 as a rookie), had three game-winning assists and one match-winning goal. She returned to the U.S. women’s national team after the Olympics and will likely remain in head coach Emma Hayes’ plans this year.

Interim coach Sam Laity will lead Angel City until at least June, so the squad’s holdovers will be invaluable amid change and uncertainty to start the season. Although Thompson only turned 20 years old in November, she’s been a regular starter for two seasons and projects to be even more valuable in 2025. With Christen Press and Sydney Leroux continuing to offer help in the attack and veterans’ insight off the pitch, Thompson could hit even greater heights in her third season.

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Bay FC: Racheal Kundananji

There have been 10 games when a player has notched double-digit shot attempts since 2021. Nine of the 10 were active members of the USWNT. The only exception, and the sole 10-shot firer of 2024, was Kundananji, as Bay FC closed its regular season by cementing a playoff place against the Houston Dash.

Signed to a then-world-record transfer fee, the Zambia international had an up-and-down debut NWSL season. Kundananji scored in her debut (also against the Dash), then netted just once more before the Olympics. She finished the year in fine form, however, scoring twice and adding two assists in Bay’s final three regular season games to lead the team to the playoffs in their expansion season.

Getting a full preseason with the team, Kundananji has forged better relationships with her returning teammates. She can also play free from certain pressures that come with a record transfer, as Naomi Girma now bears that mantle.

Chicago Stars: Ally Schlegel

This has been another trying offseason for Chicago fans. The team made a few major moves in the middle of 2024, but it doesn’t entirely explain away a mostly dormant offseason. Question marks also surround the availability of the team’s marquee player, Mallory Swanson.

While summer signings Ludmila and Julia Grosso will begin their first full seasons at Chicago, the club put Schlegel front and center for its jersey release. This wasn’t a choice devoid of merit, either. Schlegel quietly tied Swanson with six non-penalty goals to lead Chicago, while her 13 chances created from open play only trailed Swanson on the squad.

It’s difficult to see how the Stars could contend if Swanson isn’t starting. She led the team with 49 shots (no one else took more than 28) and was again top with 31 chances created (more than double her teammates). All of that was symptomatic of a one-note attack in head coach Lorne Donaldson’s first season, but Schlegel, Ludmila and Jenna Bike will be eager to make their impacts in the final third. With her trademark pink headband, Schlegel won’t be hard to spot — especially if she keeps bagging goals.

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Gotham FC: Rose Lavelle

Lavelle is the USWNT’s chief facilitator. Her eye for a clever pass is unparalleled, and the team’s chance creation suffers whenever she’s missing. At the NWSL level, however, a different side to Lavelle’s game emerges: a volume shooter who dribbles to get herself into range.

She may need to tap into her international job description in the 2025 season. Gotham said goodbye to its two top run-of-play chance creators this offseason, as Yazmeen Ryan and Delanie Sheehan are off to revive the Dash. Left back Jenna Nighswonger also left for Arsenal in England, leaving the squad with one less capable crosser.

Gotham has had another free-wheeling offseason, with other key departures including Lynn Biyendolo and Crystal Dunn. The club replaced Biyendolo with center forward Gabi Portilho, which could leave Lavelle playing closer to midfield than the front of the attack. That would put her in a prime position to pull the strings, and it could help catalyze Gotham’s efforts to return to the NWSL championship final. She just needs to get healthy first after offseason ankle surgery.

Houston Dash: Diana Ordóñez

After the 2022 season, Ordóñez was among the most lauded young players in the league. She excelled as a 20-year-old rookie, scoring 11 goals for the North Carolina Courage and bagging a brace in her international debut with Mexico against Anguilla.

Houston pushed hard to bring her into the fold, landing her in a pre-draft trade. While she had a more obvious leading role with her new club, the drop in squad caliber hampered her scoring output.

The graphic above compares her goalscoring output to expected goals (xG) across a rolling 900-minute sample. The blue line is the one that changes scorelines, and the annual swan dives in form are an obvious concern. However, she was hardly equipped to get those kinds of shooting looks, as the Dash’s chance creation across her two seasons has never met the service she enjoyed with the Courage.

With Ryan and Sheehan joining her in Houston, Ordóñez projects to benefit greatly. After scoring just three goals in 2023 and five in 2024, the creative reinforcements could vault her back to double-digit output.

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Kansas City Current: Bia

From the first match at CPKC Stadium, the Current was arguably the league’s most watchable team for neutral viewers. The attack whirred from the opening whistle, led by Chawinga. Vanessa DiBernardo put in the best year of her career in midfield. In the season’s first quarter, however, Chawinga shared top billing with her strike partner, Bia.

The Brazilian forward was a handful in the season’s early weeks, tied with Chawinga with four goals in the Current’s first five matches. Her form returned to Earth as May and June progressed, and a stress fracture in her foot ruled her out of Brazil’s Olympics squad in early July.

In the playoffs, with Bia still recovering and Debinha looking less impactful than in past seasons, opponents were happy to pester Chawinga and persistently challenge the Malawian with foul-worthy contact. Having Bia back to her best would give defenders more to worry about in transition and on set plays, and would open up space for Chawinga to wreak more havoc.

North Carolina Courage: Tyler Lussi

Six years removed from winning a second straight NWSL title, the Courage’s path to title contention is going through the field’s central channel. After trading for Ashley Sanchez last winter, the Courage returned to the trade market to bring in USWNT playmaker Jaedyn Shaw from San Diego, offering her a role in a system that caters to the 20-year-old’s game. Even with 2023 MVP Kerolin among the departures, North Carolina should again compete in the upper third of the table.

Sanchez and Shaw want to get on the ball, willing to roam from side to side and drop into midfield to facilitate. The United States internationals are also happy to shoot from outside the box. This often requires a teammate to do more thankless work running off the ball and dribbling down the flank as the central playmakers find their pockets of space.

That job description matches Lussi’s style of play. Her expert reading of a game and dribbling help her teams advance upfield.

The 30-year-old has the kind of downhill compass that is vital to ease the pressure on Sanchez and Shaw, as it’s easier to make a defense backpedal in the less congested wide thirds of the field. Lussi has the potential to set a new career high mark with assists, but her movement should allow her to bag a handful of goals as well.

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Orlando Pride: Angelina

Orlando’s emergent 2024 had many headliners. Banda was unstoppable and a worthy MVP finalist. Marta cannon-balled into the fountain of youth to help the Pride win its first NWSL title. Seb Hines was a worthy coach of the year, while defender Emily Sams went from an unsung starter to an Olympic gold medalist.

And yet, the midfield was often overlooked when discussing this team’s greatest strengths. That’s not to criticise Angelina, who was industrious and consistent in the heart of the park. The Jersey City-born midfielder made a defensive impact across the pitch, was a consistent chance-creator and vital line-breaking passer in the team’s build-up.

The 25-year-old Brazil international has already built a winning track record and will expect a similar high standard for herself and her team alike. Banda and Marta will undoubtedly still fill the highlight reels, but much of what they can do depends on players like Angelina.

Portland Thorns: Anyone who’s available for selection

Among the league’s most consistent franchises since debuting, Portland will follow a tumultuous 2024 with even more uncertainty this spring. Christine Sinclair and Becky Sauerbrunn have retired, while the team placed three starters — Morgan Weaver, Marie Müller and Nicole Payne — on the season-ending injury list late in February. As if that wasn’t enough change for one offseason, star striker Sophia Wilson (nee Smith) announced her pregnancy in early March. 

That’s an overwhelming amount of attacking quality now missing from last year’s side.

Of the players shown above who helped Portland crash the box, only Canada international Jessie Fleming, United States international Olivia Moultrie and second-year forward Payton Linnehan return. Sam Coffey gives the Thorns arguably the league’s best defensive midfielder. Japan international Hina Sugita may also be relied upon heavily, and Deyna Castellanos has arrived after a frustrating year with Bay. Still, this figures to be another season with plenty of questions to answer for the Thorns.

Racing Louisville: Uchenna Kanu

This season will be Louisville’s fifth in the NWSL. For four years running, Louisville has finished ninth in the standings — a feat that’s increasingly impressive as the league continues to expand, but a place that has never been enough for a playoff berth.

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The squad has undeniable quality. The midfield looks especially robust, with Savannah DeMelo and Ary Borges pulling the strings. Taylor Flint is among the league’s best defensive midfielders. Emma Sears has broken through with the USWNT and is among the league’s best players in transition sequences thanks to her considerable speed and dribbling ability. All those skill sets are great for build-up and chance generation, but Louisville has often gone begging for a consistent goalscorer.

While Kanu featured in a few roles last year, most often as a left-sided attacking midfielder, her shifts up front may give head coach Bev Yanez her answer at striker. The Nigeria international converted five of the seven shots she placed on goal, while her goalscoring record with Tigres UANL (20 goals in 30 games) shows what she can do. If she can get closer to that return, Louisville may finally finish in a playoff position.

San Diego Wave: Kailen Sheridan

Not much went to plan for San Diego in its fourth season. As Alex Morgan played the final season of her illustrious career, the 2023 NWSL Shield winner plummeted to the wrong end of the table. The Wave played under three coaches while Morgan and Girma closed their tenures at the club.

The Wave is looking to rebound under former Arsenal coach Jonas Eidevall. Adriana Leon is the new projected star striker, but Sheridan represents an invaluable presence in the locker room. Not only is she Leon’s international teammate, which should help as the forward readjusts to the league, but she also has the high-level track record and leadership chops to give Eidevall someone to lean on.

She’s also still among the world’s best goalkeepers. Even as San Diego’s once-stout defense wobbled in 2024, Sheridan performed well above expectations. The 29-year-old is the undisputed most important player at the Wave.

Seattle Reign: Jordyn Huitema

Huitema broke through early, debuting internationally as a 15-year-old and making Canada’s 2019 World Cup squad just after her 18th birthday. The hype machine did its thing and projected her as Canada’s answer up top, but she hasn’t put up the goalscoring numbers that typified her predecessor, Sinclair. Huitema has scored 23 goals in her 88 caps for Canada, but she’s scored just 10 times for Seattle across her first three seasons.

Huitema has expert movement in the final third and consistently gets into good scoring areas, with her average shot distance since joining the Reign ranging from 11.2 yards to 12.8 yards. Her shot placement is the concern.

Most great strikers spray the ball to any area of the goalmouth, high and low, to keep a goalkeeper guessing. Last year, Huitema did the opposite, placing 74 percent of her shots on target low and in the middle of the goal.

With Biyendolo joining Seattle this winter, it could afford Huitema more space to set up her shots. If so, it could lead to the kind of goal return that many expected from the Canada international when she first broke out.

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Utah Royals: Mina Tanaka

tah Royals: Mina Tanaka

Tanaka could hardly have started 2025 in finer form. The Royal scored four goals in Japan’s first two games of the SheBelieves Cup to tie Swanson’s 2023 record for the three-game tournament. She started in Japan’s 2-1 victory to capture the team’s first SheBelieves trophy.

The forward made her NWSL debut midway through the 2024 season, joining Utah in July. Although she scored just once, it was the second time she had played outside of Japan. With an offseason to acclimate, she should also have a clearer role under head coach Jimmy Coenraets.

Both Tanaka and fellow SheBelieves star Ally Sentnor love a shot from deep, but Tanaka projects to be more willing to play in a more advanced role as a striker. Her deftness on the ball and quick decision-making will make her an exceptional focal point for the Royals in 2025.

Washington Spirit: Hal Hershfelt

While Croix Bethune was a no-brainer to win rookie of the year, she was far from the only first-year player to carry the Spirit to the NWSL championship final. Many were surprised to see Hershfelt among Hayes’ alternates for the 2024 Olympics, but the selection only clued more of us in on how impactful the midfielder already was for her club.

Drafted out of Clemson, Hershfelt was selected using the pick that Washington obtained when they traded Sanchez. In her first professional season, Hershfelt played with tenacity and confidence, getting stuck in across the pitch while playing with positional awareness that rarely left Washington without cover.

Hershfelt was also an aerial threat on set pieces, most memorably saving the Spirit’s season with a late equalizer in the semifinal against Gotham. The mix of high-octane defending and aerial threat in attack begs comparisons to Julie Ertz, and the 23-year-old would be a worthy regular alternative to Coffey for the USWNT.

(Top photo: Imagn Images)

Julian Alvarez penalty decision could spark law change; UEFA to discuss with FIFA, IFAB

MADRID, SPAIN - MARCH 12: Julian Alvarez of Atletico de Madrid scores the team's second penalty in the penalty shoot out, which is later ruled out following a VAR Review due to an improper kick, during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 Round of 16 second leg match between Atletico de Madrid and Real Madrid C.F. at Estadio Metropolitano on March 12, 2025 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images)

By Colin MillarAlex Brodie and more Mar. 13, 2025Updated Mar. 14, 2025 10:03 am PDT


The law that saw Julian Alvarez’s penalty controversially ruled out against Real Madrid could be reviewed with UEFA releasing a new video of the spot kick.

The footage of the penalty, posted on the governing body’s website, shows the ball move slightly after being touched by the Atletico Madrid forward’s standing left foot before he strikes it with his right.

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Alvarez thought he had scored from the spot during the penalty shootout in his side’s Champions League last-16 second-leg defeat before a video assistant referee (VAR) intervention saw it chalked off.

Real Madrid went on to advance through to the quarter-finals.

On Thursday, UEFA said Atletico had contacted them about the decision and that they will discuss the law with FIFA, the world governing body, and the International Football Association Board (IFAB), which determines the laws of the game.

UEFA released the video of the penalty on its website on Thursday (UEFA)

In a statement, UEFA said: “Atletico Madrid enquired with UEFA over the incident, which led to the disallowance of the kick from the penalty mark taken by Julian Alvarez at the end of yesterday’s UEFA Champions League match against Real Madrid.

“Although minimal, the player made contact with the ball using his standing foot before kicking it, as shown in the attached video clip. Under the current rule (Laws of the Game, Law 14.1), the VAR had to call the referee signalling that the goal should be disallowed.

“UEFA will enter discussions with FIFA and IFAB to determine whether the rule should be reviewed in cases where a double touch is clearly unintentional.”

Atletico head coach Diego Simeone was left angered by the decision and claimed there was insufficient evidence for VAR to overturn the on-field referee’s initial call.

“The referee said when Julian got to the penalty spot he touched the ball with his standing foot, but the ball did not move,” he told reporters after the game.

“I’ve never seen a penalty where they’ve called the VAR, but well, they would have seen that he touched it. I want to believe they saw he touched it.

“Did you see him touching the ball twice? Please, whoever was present in the stadium and saw him touching the ball twice, the ball moving, please come forward and raise your hand. I don’t see anybody with their hand raised so that’s all I have to say… next question.”

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The IFAB laws of the game prohibit the player taking the penalty kick from playing the ball twice before it has touched another player, the ball stops moving or goes out of play.

Article 14.1 reads: “The kicker must not play the ball again until it has touched another player. The penalty kick is completed when the ball stops moving, goes out of play or the referee stops play for any offence.”

Alvarez’s penalty was ruled out after a VAR intervention (Florencia Tan Jun/Getty Images)

The law was designed to stop players from dribbling towards goal from a penalty kick and was applied in January 2023 when then-Fulham striker Aleksandar Mitrovic slipped as he went to strike the penalty against Newcastle United and kicked it into his standing leg.

Mitrovic’s penalty goal was disallowed and a free-kick was awarded to Newcastle.

UEFA introduced in-ball technology for Euro 2024 last summer to help improve the accuracy and speed of decision making.

European football’s governing body have confirmed to The Athletic that no in-ball technology was used to assist in overturning the decision to award Alvarez’s penalty with the new system only in place for the men’s and women’s European Championships but not the Champions League.

The decision was made solely using cameras in the stadium. The semi-automated offside system in place also utilises cameras only.

An Atletico statement on Friday detailed the “tremendous frustration” the club feel over the decision and threw their support behind a changing of the law.

A club spokesperson said: “For us there is an error in the use of the VAR that has caused tremendous frustration and damage to our fans and the efforts of our players. We consider that there is no clear movement as indicated in rule 14 and that in 45 seconds you cannot resolve an action that more than a day later is still unclear.

“But we are aware that even if this error is demonstrated in the use of the VAR it will never change the final result of the tie. We believe that the football family must work together to prevent such an error from happening again.”

Real Madrid will now play Arsenal in the quarter-finals of the Champions League with the fixtures to be played over April 8 and April 16.

1/17/25 USMNT Sat vs Venezuela TNT 3 pm, Champions League back Tu/Wed Para+, Juve vs Milan Sat 12 noon, Congrats to CFC Team

Happy New Year – The Ole Ballcoach is back! Sorry I needed a solid Holiday break. But now that the US is playing this weekend and Champions League is back I figured its time to get back to it.

US MLS Only Team faces Venezuela Sat 3 pm on TNT, Telemundo and Max

A full MSL squad of mostly youngsters on hand for Poch as they face Venezuela on Saturday during the January Camp for the US. While Europe is going full speed – this is a fine time to get the MLS players together in camp and see if 1 or 2 can make a name for themselves. I like defenders Neal in the middle and Tolkin at left back to battle for inclusion on the full team soon while Luan and Mcglynn also have a chance to show something. Worth the watch just to see the youngsters I guess. Here’s my guess on starters.

Champions League Starts back up Tues/Wed

So it certainly has been an interesting Champions League we enter game 7 and the teams fight for those top 8 valued buy slots and top 24 overall in hopes of continued playing. Champions League Standings thru 6 games full schedule below. I will update UCL Stories on Sunday.

My Dinner on the Way home from Training at the Badger Indoor Facility Thursday night was a Bowl of Brunswick Stew from Racks BarBQ in Carmel on the corner of 131st Street & Hazelldell Parkway. Tell em the Ole Ballcoach Sent you and get 20% off!! Grab some Ribs and Pork and Stew on the way home from Training or Winter Indoor League at the Badger Fieldhouse. You won’t regret it !!

Brunswick Stew from Racks BBQ in Carmel

Huge congrats to our Carmel FC 2009 Boys coached by Jeremy Slivinski for their fine showing at the Disney Showcase in late December as they just missed the Championship round by 1pt after a 1-1-1 mark against some of the best teams in the Southeast.

Also congrats to our ODP Goalkeepers headed to Memphis in Feb Tim Paciorek 2009, Levi Simpson 2012 Boys, Olivia Aft 2012 Girls. Carmel FC Welcomes New AD of Soccer Operations Michael Caine

Pulisic scored a goal and had a hockey assist in AC Milan’s 3-2 win over Inter in the Super Cup.

US Men

Can Pochettino really transform the USMNT’s mentality — and how will he do it? ESPN
The U.S. trio hoping to follow Yamal from La Masia to Barcelona stardom
USMNT defender Tolkin makes move to Bundesliga
Jesus Ferreira, Jalen Neal and John Tolkin depart USMNT January Camp
2025 USMNT Friendly: Scouting Venezuela
Pulisic ruled out of Milan-Juve clash with injury

WORLD

Could Nottingham Forest really ‘do a Leicester’ and win the Premier League? ESPN Chris Wright
Can Chelsea End Their Slump Against Wolves?

Manchester City sign Erling Haaland to record contract

Premier League predictions, odds: Week 22 of the 2024-25 season

Man City’s Premier League title defence is over: Foden

Nottingham Forest will not win title – but they can reach Champions League

AC Milan 1-1 Cagliari: Five things we learned – same issues persist as big chances go begging

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

Champions League Standings thru 6 games
Atletico Madrid dealt injury blow ahead of Champions League return

Emerson believes Milan are ‘too strong’ to not finish in Champions 

Juventus Eye Crucial Champions League Win Against Club Brugge

GK

Ex-Liverpool goalkeeper Loris Karius tries to reboot career at struggling Schalke
Good GK Stretch
Cold Weather Aide for GK
Best MLS Saves in 2024
Emmi Martinez Spec Save

Reffing

PK or no?  
Bad Decision Does Not Mean you’re a Bad Ref
Yellow or Red
Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

GAMES ON TV SCHEDULE

Sat, Jan 18                 

7:30 am USA               New Castle vs Bournmouth (Adams)  

10 am USA                  West Ham vs Crystal Palace (Richards, Turner)

10 am peacock            Leicester City vs Fulham (Robinson)

10 am peacock            Brentford vs Liverpool

11:30 am ESPN+          MGladbach vs Bremen

12 noon Para, Fox D  Juventus (McKennie & Weah)  vs AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah)

12:30 pm USA             Arsenal vs Aston Villa

12:30 pm ESPN+         Leverkusen vs Borussia Monchengladbach (Scally)

2:45 pm CBS Galazo    Atalanta vs Napoli

3 pm ESPN+                 Getafe vs Barcelona

3 pm TNT. Tele           USA Men vs Venezuela (Friendly)

6 pm FS1                     FC Juerez vs Cruz Azul  (Liga MX)

10 pm Apple ?             Inter Miami vs America

Sun, Jan 19                

9 am USA                    Everton vs Tottenham  

9 am PEacock              Man U vs Brighton  

9 am peacock             N Forest vs Southampton  

10:!5 pm am ESPN+    Real Madrid vs Palmas

11:30 pm USA             Ipwich Town vs Man City  

2:45 pm Para+            Inter Milan vs Empoli

Mon, Jan 20               

3 pm USA                    Chelsea vs Wolverhampton  

12:45 pm Para+          Monaco vs Aston Villa  

Tues, Jan  21           Champions League

12:45pm Para+          Atalanta  vs Sturm Graz

3 pm Para+                 Liverpool v Lille    

3  pm Para+                Atletico Madrid vs Bayern Leverkusen

3 pm Para+                 Bologna vs Dortmund (Reyna)

3 pm Para+                 Red Star Belgrade vs PSV (Pepi, Tllman)

3 pm Para_+               Club Brugge vs Juventus (McKennie & Weah)

3 pm Para+                 Benefica vs Barcelona

Wed, Jan 22                            Champions League

12:45 pm Para+,TUDN RB Leipzig vs Sporting CP

12:45 pm Para+          Shakhtar vs Brest

3 pm CBSSN               AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah) vs Girona

3 pm Para+                 Celtic (CCV) vs Young Boys

3 pm Para+                 Real Madrid vs Dortmund UCL

3 pm Para+                 Arsenal vs Dinamo Zagreb  UCL

3 pm Para+                 Real Madrid vs RB Salzburg UCL

3 pm Para+                 PSG vs Man City

7 pm TNT US Men vs Costa Rica friendly

Thur, Jan 23                     Europa

12:45 pm CBSSN         Porto vs olympiakos  

12:45 pm Para+          offenhiem  vs Tottenham

3 pm Para+ TUDN       Man United vs Rangers  

3 pm Para+                 Fenervbahce vs Man United 

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What a Fantastic Year Jedi Robinson is having for Fulham – 3rd in the league in Assists the Fulham captain with 9 from Left Back. Rumors rampant that a January transfer might be in order – Liverpool perhaps. Only if he’s guaranteed to play for me .

USMNT’s Christian Pulisic avoids injury, scans reveal no muscle tear

AC Milan's American forward #11 Christian Pulisic applauds during the warm up ahead of the Italian Serie A football match between AC Milan and Cagliari at the San Siro Stadium in Milan, on January 11, 2025. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP) (Photo by PIERO CRUCIATTI/AFP via Getty Images)

By James Horncastle Jan 15, 2025


USMNT captain Christian Pulisic has avoided injury after being substituted off with muscle fatigue on Tuesday.Pulisic was substituted off at the break for Milan during their Serie A match at Como, having appeared to sustain an injury to his left calf area, but scans on Wednesday ruled out a muscle tear.The former Chelsea winger was seen clutching the back of his leg after a collision with Como defender Marc-Oliver Kempf just before half-time. The American received a kick to his left calf and immediately signaled to the bench that he needed to be substituted. He was replaced at the break by Alex Jimenez.Pulisic is having a productive season for Milan, with his 10 goals and seven assists from 23 appearances both team highs. The 26-year-old sustained an injury to his right calf in early December that kept him out for around a month and caused him to miss five games for his club.Pulisic returned on January 3 and helped his side win 2-1 against Juventus in the Italian Super Cup semi-final, scoring a penalty. He also scored in the 3-2 victory over rivals Inter in the final as Milan lifted the trophy for an eighth time.Pulisic’s international team-mate Yunus Musah was introduced as a half-time substitute during the Como game, which Milan won 2-1. That victory lifts Sergio Conceicao’s side to seventh in the Serie A table, five points behind fourth-placed Lazio.Milan’s next game comes against fifth-placed Juventus on Saturday.

USMNT vs. Venezuela January Friendly Preview

A tradition unlike any other Stars & Stripes -By Parker Cleveland@Cleveland_FC  Jan 17, 2025, 6:00am

USMNT Training

It’s mid-January which can only mean one thing, time for a USMNT friendly which generally has little consequence and even littler attendance. Ah yes, January camp. It will be Mauricio Pochettino’s first foray into the wild world of friendlies that the national team participates in outside of FIFA windows. Over the years there has been much said about why this is a valuable or useless exercise.

On the valuable side there’s the idea that it gives MLS players who might be in the national team picture a chance to get into shape ahead of the domestic season. There’s also the fact that it’s a chance for the manager to call in players who otherwise wouldn’t get a close of a look with the national team so he can evaluate them during their club offseason. Poch will also be able to evaluate how his tactics will work with players he typically wouldn’t call in against teams whose manager is evaluating how his tactics will work with players he typically wouldn’t call in. Plus, it’s fun [sic] to watch soccer on a sleepy January afternoon.

The useless exercise argument boils down to – basically the same points as to why it might be valuable. That got a new wrinkle this week as Jurgen Klinsmann said words about why the federation scheduled the kinda cynical cash grab camp in the first place. As for this camp, the USA finds itself taking on Venezuela in the first match. The roster includes a lot of talented and promising young players, at the very least, and a few veterans to set the tone. While it might seem that the match is something of a… whatever Klinsmann described it as, there are some players worth paying attention to.

Matko Miljevic was a surprise inclusion not only because his performance in MLS and more recently in Argentina was subpar, but also because he holds the distinction of being banned from a Canadian indoor soccer league for punching a guy while under contract with CF Montreal. MLS barely tolerates players having health conditions so his contract was terminated. He moved to Newell’s and his play there sees him now out of contract. Poch is doing him a bit of a favor by including him so it will be interesting to see if he gets any playing time as an attacker or otherwise does anything ignominious on the pitch. Attacking midfielder Diego Luna is another player to keep an eye on during this window. He’s coming off of a breakout year and took home Young Player of the Year for Real Salt Lake. Luna had 8g/12a in 2219 minutes and is a player with solid potential should he continue to improve his game.

Tactically, the USA should manage to keep a lion’s share of the possession. That means watching to see how the team might break Venezuela down could very well be the main aspect of the game to pay attention to. Otherwise, expect some new faces and a bunch of subs as the game goes on.

More From Stars and Stripes FC

USMNT has a World Cup longshot ticket up for grabs – here are the main contenders

Newly appointed US Men's National Team head coach Argentine Mauricio Pochettino speaks to the media at a press conference on September 13, 2024, in New York. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter Jan 15, 2025


The 2026 World Cup is 17 months away. Nations around the world are in the thick of qualification, hoping to secure a place in the expanded 48-team field. Meanwhile, as one of three automatically qualified host nations, the United States men’s national team is using this time to maximize their home advantage.

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Since Mauricio Pochettino took the helm of the USMNT in September, he’s had two camps to size up several World Cup hopefuls. His squads in October and November had considerable overlap, with several mainstays looking like World Cup certainties, including Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Folarin Balogun and Antonee Robinson.

His squad for the January camp skews far more speculatively as the Argentine surveys the depth of his player pool, with games on Saturday against Venezuela in Fort Lauderdale on Saturday and on January 22 against Costa Rica in Orlando.

More than a dozen spots are seemingly set in stone but don’t discount the chance of a late riser crashing the World Cup squad. At this point in 2013, few would have projected that Jürgen Klinsmann’s roster in Brazil the following year would include John Brooks, Julian Green or DeAndre Yedlin. Likewise, Gregg Berhalter’s squad for Qatar in 2022 included a couple of players (Joe Scally and Haji Wright) with minimal international experience.

Julian Green’s selection in 2014 stunned many but he scored against Belgium in the round of 16. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Internationally, Theo Walcott came from nowhere to be picked for England in 2006, Samuel Eto’o was a raw newcomer for Cameroon in 1998, and Pele was unknown to the wider world when he destroyed the field as a 17-year-old in 1958, leading Brazil to its first title.

In that spirit, here are a dozen players who haven’t debuted for the USMNT but have an outside chance of piquing Pochettino’s interest. Realistically, only one or two (if any) of these players will make the squad for the 2026 World Cup. Considering the hardship the team endured in 2024, any player who could raise the overall level can’t be discounted — and remember, things move quickly in international soccer.

It’s all an open tryout, with every action for club and country being closely assessed.

(Players participating in this year’s January camp are indicated with an asterisk (*) by their name upon first mention.)

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Forwards

The state of the forward roles is healthier than four years ago. Pulisic and Tim Weah have cemented themselves as dependable first-choice options on the flanks. After the 2022 cycle was headlined by struggles at center forward, the striker pool now has several players starting regularly and scoring often — Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Josh Sargent, Brandon Vazquez and Wright, who can also play out wide.

Nevertheless, the depth on both wings is concerningly thin. We can’t overlook alternatives at center forward, either. In-form strikers have previously landed on USMNT World Cup squads, including Herculez Gomez, Robbie Findley and Edson Buddle in 2010, before Chris Wondolowski made the cut in 2014.

Patrick Agyemang* is among the most intriguing members of Pochettino’s squad for January camp. The 24-year-old had led the line for Charlotte FC in 2024 with downhill determination and impressive finishing. No MLS player was more direct in possession, as 34.3% of his 338 carries made it at least five yards closer to goal. He also outperformed his expected goals (xG) by +1.74, finishing the regular season with 10 goals and five assists. He is a rung below the favoured quintet of USMNT strikers, but Agyemang has a unique skill set that works well against a low defensive block and is less reliant on accurate crossing service.

Patrick Agyemang has intriguing potential. (Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images)

The established forward pool includes a few players who regularly look to get on the ball, including Pulisic and Gio Reyna (who will hopefully play more as a No. 10 instead of out wide). That leaves a need for confident off-ball operators who can collect long passes on the wing and allow the team’s top goalscoring options to get into dangerous areas to collect the next ball. Two uncapped options fit that profile, albeit with some differences in their approaches.

Since Balogun committed to the USMNT in 2023, few multi-national eligible players have been more coveted for this program than Luca Koleosho. The 20-year-old winger, born in Connecticut to a Nigerian father and an Italian-Canadian mother, could have four options for his senior international career. All but Nigeria have called Koleosho into a youth camp.

Koleosho is a consistent starter for Burnley in the English Championship. He has mostly been used on the right but can operate on either flank and, while his end product still requires refinement, the less glamorous parts of his job come naturally. He carries the ball well (as illustrated above), can dribble past opponents with ease and is excellent at receiving passes in danger positions. He hasn’t committed his international future but playing in a North American World Cup under Pochettino is a sweet sales pitch.

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Griffin Yow is another capable off-ball operator, and has a bit more polish than Koleosho. Yow, 22, was a member of the 2024 Olympic squad and is regularly involved with Westerlo in the Belgian Pro League. He is a confident shooter, taking 3.2 attempts per 90 minutes over the past 12 months, and offers proactive front-line defending — vital for closing out a game.

Midfielders

McKennie, Tyler Adams and Yunus Musah are regulars for their clubs, making midfield the strongest area of Pochettino’s squad. Several alternatives have established themselves in the pool, most notably Johnny CardosoLuca de la Torre, Malik Tillman and Aidan Morris. However, injuries have plagued several of these options, and a more specialized alternative could come in handy.

Daniel Edelman was a surprise omission from the Olympic squad, having captained the under-20s to a 2022 CONCACAF Championship triumph that secured a place in the field. Nevertheless, 2024 was a strong year for Edelman, who came through the New York Red Bulls youth system. He became a consistent midfield anchor as the team returned to MLS Cup for the first time since 2008. Tidy in possession and tireless out of it (as illustrated in the graphic below), he could provide cover at defensive midfield.

Emeka Enelihad a breakout second season with Real Salt Lake, finding a true home in defensive midfield after initially playing as a full back. His passing kept RSL whirring and he also provided a proactive defensive presence. At 25, he’ll need to make a strong first impression to reach the World Cup. He could emulate the mid-career breakthrough path previously taken by another RSL midfielder, Kyle Beckerman.

Few American players made more headlines in 2024 than the Philadelphia Union’s Cavan Sullivan, who broke Freddy Adu’s record as the youngest player to make an MLS appearance after signing a pre-agreement with Manchester City. He’s still a prospect, having made three MLS appearances while spending most of his time in MLS Next Pro.

Cavan Sullivan’s youth and inexperience make him a World Cup longshot. (Caean Couto/USA Today)

Still, Sullivan has been appraised to have as high a ceiling as any player in the pool, nearing a level previously hit by Pulisic and Reyna. If — and it’s a big if — Sullivan is selected, he could be in line to make some World Cup history. He will be 16 years and 256 days old when the tournament kicks off, and any appearance would make him the first man to appear in a World Cup before their 17th birthday. The current record holder is Norman Whiteside of Northern Ireland, who scored in a victory against Spain in 1982, days after making his tournament debut at 17 years and 40 days. Last summer’s remarkable European Championship performances from Lamine Yamal, who turned 17 during the event’s final week, have put youthful excellence firmly in the spotlight.

Perhaps more likely is that Cavan’s older brother Quinn Sullivan cracks the rotation in time for the tournament. While his younger sibling commanded more attention, Quinn, 20, was among Philadelphia’s best players. He scored five goals and added 11 assists (eight from open play, illustrated below), with the latter figure leading all MLS players under 21.

He’s in direct competition with Reyna, Tillman and Brenden Aaronson, but shouldn’t be counted out if he continues to refine his approach in the final third.

Defenders

While the midfield is teeming with options, the USMNT’s defensive depth chart is concerningly lean by comparison. Ironically, only left back — the weakest position for decades — seems has a clear starter and one or two established backups.

The program’s lack of depth at right back was exposed in 2024, as Sergiño Dest’s injury left the USMNT short at the Copa America. The senior team has a few established center backs — including Chris RichardsCameron Carter-VickersTim Ream and Auston Trusty — but its dearth of young up-and-comers influenced under-23s coach Marko Mitrović to use two over-age spots in the position (Miles Robinson and Walker Zimmerman) at the Olympics.

George Campbell* will partner with new club teammate Jalen Neal (who has six caps) as part of the January camp, with Neal being acquired by CF Montréal last week. Campbell logged nearly 2,300 minutes as Montréal finished ninth in the East and was solid (35th among MLS defenders with 900 minutes or more) in the ratio of aerial duels he won. Campbell also performed above average with his tackling win rate, and his short-passing acumen could help fit into a possession-heavy game model.

Another option from MLS is Jackson Ragen, a finalist for MLS’ defender of the year award in a breakthrough season with the Seattle Sounders. Ragen is a steady bedrock, winning 67% of his aerial duels while being more difficult to dribble past than most in his position. The 26-year-old is also adept at consistently breaking lines with his passes and is a threat to win headers on set pieces. 

Although uncommitted internationally, Anrie Chase could bolster the position group if he elects to represent the U.S. instead of Japan. The 20-year-old center back has broken through with Stuttgart this season, logging 734 minutes in the Bundesliga and 138 in the Champions League. Chase is a very good ball-playing defender (as illustrated below) who has performed around the league average defensively.

Although he has represented Japan at youth levels, Chase told Sportiva that he “(hasn’t) ruled out the possibility” of representing the United States.

While Antonee Robinson is arguably the best left back in this season’s Premier League and is capably backed up by Kristoffer Lund, securing Nathaniel Brown’s international future would benefit the pool. The German American has started regularly for Eintracht Frankfurt since early November, scoring three goals and registering three assists in 10 Bundesliga appearances at left wing back. He has been no defensive slouch in this (relatively small) sample, either, and could be a worthy understudy beneath Robinson.

Considering the lack of alternatives to Dest, perhaps it’s time to right historical wrongs and look at Ryan Hollingshead. Among the finest American players to never feature for the USMNT, the 33-year-old has probably been the best right back in MLS since joining LAFC in 2022. He can also provide cover on the left, and can carry the ball on either flank (below).

He’s as much of a longshot as anyone on this list (save, perhaps, for Cavan Sullivan), but a grizzled veteran finally getting his chance is the stuff of Hollywood.

goalkeepers

The age of excellent bald American goalkeepers is long behind us, with eight years having passed since Tim Howard’s international retirement. Worryingly, the better-coiffed successors to Howard have struggled to find regular action at a high level. Matt Turner has made just two appearances on loan at Crystal Palace (both in cup competition). Gabriel Slonina’s loan at third-division Barnsley was cut short due to a finger injury and he is back at ChelseaEthan Horvath was replaced in Cardiff City’s lineup in early September.This position feels concerningly close to being an open competition. While Patrick Schulte* will hope to add to his two caps this month, a couple of uncapped alternatives also warrant examination.

Matt Freese* was among the best goalkeepers of any nationality in the 2024 MLS season, helping New York City FC outlast Cincinnati in the playoffs, including some shootout heroics. Freese “prevented” 11.1 goals compared to the xG on target he faced, trailing only goalkeeper of the year Kristijan Kahlina. He still has some work to do to claim crosses, and his new club coach (Pascal Jansen) didn’t ask his goalkeepers to play many short passes at AZ, but he has a similar profile to Turner and has fared far better than Zack Steffen in the same league.

The successor to Slonina in Chicago, Chris Brady made strides to improve his cross-stopping approach in 2024 during another poor season for the Fire. He also refined his approach in possession playing out of the back (above), and figures to further that development under new Fire coach (and former USMNT boss) Gregg Berhalter. Brady won’t turn 21 until March, but may be closer to more regular senior international involvement than Slonina.

Other uncapped ‘keepers to watch include Roman Celentano, who is a starter for perennial contender Cincinnati and is a dependable shot-stopper, and Diego Kochen, who is now first-choice for Barcelona Atletic (the club’s B team) and among the most promising teenage ‘keepers in the world.

(Top photo: Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

USMNT’s next opponent Venezuela: Where sports and politics intertwine

Venezuela's players gather during a penalty shoot-out in the Conmebol 2024 Copa America tournament quarter-final football match between Venezuela and Canada at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on July 5, 2024. (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP) (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

By Felipe Cardenas Jan 16, 2025


On Saturday, the U.S. men’s national team will face Venezuela in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The friendly is an opportunity for the United States to build positive momentum under new head coach Mauricio Pochettino. With the 2026 World Cup finals, which the U.S. will co-host with Canada and Mexico, a little over a year away, Pochettino will look to identify squad alternatives from a group of players with little fanfare.

For the visiting South Americans, the match comes amid intense political upheaval back home. Last week, Venezuela’s autocratic president Nicolas Maduro was sworn in for another six-year term, despite accusations that he stole the latest election. Opposition leaders Edmundo Gonzalez (forced into exile in Spain) and Maria Corina Machado (recently detained and then released by Maduro’s security force) have urged Venezuelans to continue to fight for their freedom.

Venezuela’s dream of qualifying for its first-ever senior World Cup is still alive. Now they must balance their ambition to play on the sport’s biggest stage with the stinging reality of the country’s future.

(Editor’s note: The story below was originally published on Oct. 8, 2024)


As Venezuela gleefully navigated their way towards the 2024 Copa America quarterfinals in the United States, playing attacking and fearless football, the players’ South American homeland was bubbling with tension amid heightened political turmoil.A democratic election was set to take place on July 28 in which Venezuela’s authoritarian President Nicolas Maduro would face a formidable challenge from the country’s opposition party. There was hope that a fair election would finally take place in Venezuela.The country has been gripped by the left-wing populist ideology that Maduro and his predecessor, the late Hugo Chavez, have used to rule since 1999.For an even longer period, the men’s national soccer team has been a source of disappointment.Venezuela has never qualified for a senior World Cup, and the Venezuelan Football Federation (FVF), which has for decades been riddled with corruption, has failed to maximize opportunities for the sport to grow there. The occasional run of good form and some positive results against South America’s giants have always been overshadowed by Venezuela’s penchant for poor performances in World Cup qualifying and Copa America.In a country where baseball is far and away the most popular sport, football/soccer has always teetered on the edge of obscurity. But recently, by way of a young and energetic team, Venezuela had gotten up off the proverbial mat.

Venezuela’s Yordan Osorio celebrates victory against Jamaica at the Copa America (Aric Becker / AFP via Getty Images)

When the Copa America kicked off in mid-June, Venezuela were seen as a dangerous side with nothing to lose.Led by Argentine manager Fernando Batista, the side known as La Vinotinto, because of their wine-red home kit, won a group that included Mexico, Ecuador and Jamaica. Venezuelan expats in the United States followed the team feverishly, many of them crying tears of joy as Batista’s side battled their way into the knockout stage.The 2026 World Cup, to be held in the U.S., Mexico and Canada, has been expanded to 48 teams for the first time in the tournament’s history. Six of South America’s 10 nations will qualify automatically. The side finishing seventh will take part in a six-team intercontinental play-off tournament, from which two sides will earn the right to play at the World Cup.This new format has potentially opened the door for Venezuela to finally qualify for football’s biggest international competition.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Baseball is Venezuela’s national sport – but the 2024 Copa America shows why that might be changing

Venezuela began qualifying last September with a 1-0 loss against Colombia, but then earned wins over Chile (3-0) and Paraguay (1-0), and an inspired 1-1 draw with Brazil.Two more draws, at home against Ecuador (0-0) and away to Peru (1-1), temporarily placed Venezuela within the automatic qualifying berths. But ‘Mano tengo fe’ (‘Brother, I have faith’) not only became a rallying cry for Venezuelan supporters of their national team, it also gave those who yearn for political change in the country hope that their voices and votes would be heard.

Protesters against the Maduro regime take to the streets of Venezuelan capital Caracas in July (Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)


Venezuela were knocked out of the Copa America quarterfinals by Canada on penalties on July 5. Three weeks later, violence erupted throughout Venezuela following the elections on July 28.Maduro claimed victory, and his third consecutive term, despite the Democratic Unitary Platform’s (PUD) outright negation of the results. The PUD then announced their candidate, Edmundo Gonzalez, had earned 70 per cent of the vote, a landslide win. But the Venezuelan Supreme Court ruled Maduro the winner. Before the election, Maduro had warned of a “bloodbath” if he lost. That came to fruition even as he celebrated his controversial victory, as clashes connected to protests led to the deaths of at least 23 people. Following the election, governments around the world refused to recognize Maduro’s win, urging the president to allow the democratic process to take place.Instead, Maduro made threats and jailed protestors and opposition leaders. Four journalists were detained by Venezuelan authorities and charged with terrorism. They all face up to 30 years in prison.

Venezuela’s National Guard move in to quell protests in Caracas in July (Yuri Cortez/AFP via Getty Images)

Also arrested was Carlos Chancellor, 64, father of Venezuela national-team defender Jhon Chancellor.

The elder Chancellor is a local opposition leader who, according to reports in Venezuela, was the first political prisoner of Chavez.The arrest of Chancellor senior brought to light the close ties between football and politics in the country. In Venezuela, it was suggested by local reporters and opposition leaders that national team players were asked by the FVF to not comment on the election or Chancellor’s situation on social media. The FVF has yet to respond having been asked to confirm those reports.A scan of several of the current squad’s social media accounts lent credence to that suggestion, as players stayed away from Chancellor’s situation and merely posted support for Venezuela as a country rather than a particular political party. Jhon Chancellor, currently playing for Ecuadorean side CD Universidad Catolica, has not commented on his father’s arrest. His official presentation as Catolica’s new signing, however, was postponed when news first broke of his father’s detention.Americo De Grazia, a former government official and a close ally of Carlos Chancellor, first revealed details of the arrest on August 7. “The dictatorship maintains its repression,” De Grazia posted on X. “Maduro remains standing with bullets, not votes.”

Jhon Chancellor (centre) warms up before the Copa America quarterfinal against Canada (Omar Vega/Getty Images)De Grazia himself was detained a day later and, after being reported missing by his family, his daughter revealed he had been taken to Venezuela’s notorious prison El Helicoide. De Grazia has not been heard from since.One Venezuela-based football reporter — who requested anonymity to protect his identity out of fear of reprisals by Maduro’s government — told The Athletic that, upon hearing of Chancellor’s arrest and disappearance, he did not post about it on social media because “doing so is like putting a knife to my throat. The police would be outside of my house 20 minutes after posting that”.Asked about the status of the elder Chancellor’s situation and the silence that followed, the same reporter said that it’s a difficult subject to broach. “That’s a question that the entire country wants answered,” the reporter said regarding Chancellor’s arrest.Venezuelan members of the press tend to avoid asking players, coaches and FVF officials questions related to Maduro to avoid any consequences.

“I don’t think a Venezuelan reporter will dare ask (Batista) or a player a question about the current situation in the country,” the reporter said. “There’s fear, but we have to continue to do our job. I was raised under Chavisimo (the Chavez regime), so I understand all of this, but I’ve never seen it like this. There has always been repression, but not like people being taken from their homes because of a tweet.”

President Nicolas Maduro speaks to his supporters in Caracas in July (Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)

The 61-year-old Maduro has been accused by the opposition in Venezuela of ruling like a dictator since becoming president in 2013.

In 2020, he and 14 other Venezuelan government officials were charged by the U.S. government with corruption, drug trafficking, narco-terrorism and other criminal offences stemming from Maduro’s connections to Colombia’s leftist terrorist group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

“Today we announce criminal charges against Nicolas Maduro Moros for running, together with his top lieutenants, a narco-terrorism partnership with the FARC for the past 20 years,” said U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S Berman in a statement at the time. Maduro responded on X by accusing the U.S. and Colombian governments of conspiring to “fill Venezuela with violence”.

However, Maduro, to those who support him, is a loyal patriot.

He is also an avid sports fan and has had allies within Venezuela’s sporting organizations for years, including the FVF. The football federation’s senior vice-president, Pedro Infante, is a former Maduro-aligned congressman and the country’s ex-minister of sport. In September, Infante was among 16 Maduro allies sanctioned by the U.S. government in response to voter fraud following the recent elections.Nevertheless, the FVF is enjoying a resurgence as the country’s political strife worsens. Federation president Jorge Gimenez, 37, whose tenure began in 2021, was re-elected in April through to 2028. He ran unopposed. Gimenez is a well-known construction entrepreneur and former president of the Venezuelan club Deportivo Lara.He is widely responsible for regaining the trust of private investors and corporate sponsors after the federation was embroiled in the 2015 FIFA corruption scandal, which resulted in the arrest and trial of former FVF president Rafael Esquivel. He pleaded guilty in U.S. federal court to seven counts of racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy and was later banned for life by FIFA’s ethics committee.“We can have a debate about that private capital, but there has been a modernization of the Venezuelan Football Federation,” said Esteban Rojas, a Caracas-based journalist who covers football for AFP News Agency. “Today, there’s stability within the federation that was non-existent in years past. Before, there was an open war for control.”

Venezuela’s football setup has made significant strides since Gimenez took over. The country hosted the 2024 men’s Pre-Olympic tournament last winter, although Venezuela failed to qualify for the Olympic Games in France.

The senior team has grown younger, though, and the federation has expanded its scouting network beyond the nation’s borders by recruiting players from abroad with Venezuelan heritage. Securing Batista as manager was seen as an astute decision by Gimenez after dismissing former head coach Jose Pekerman in 2023. Batista was an assistant on Pekerman’s staff and is a respected developer of young talent.

Fernando Batista (Juan Mabromata/AFP via Getty Images)

Still, Gimenez has his own links to Maduro — a worrying sign the FVF may not be free of the latter’s influence. Gimenez, through various businesses he owns, also has ties to the PDVSA, Venezuela’s state-owned oil and natural gas company. His allegiance to the current regime became public in 2020 when he was a passenger on a private jet that flew from Caracas, Venezuela’s capital, to its Spanish equivalent Madrid with several government officials, including Maduro’s vice-president Delcy Rodriguez, aboard. Gimenez has not commented publicly regarding his participation in that trip.

Then, last December, during an event at the Palacio de Miraflores, the headquarters of the Venezuelan government, Maduro introduced Gimenez as “the one responsible for taking us to the 2026 World Cup”.

“I always tell the national teams that you’re the silent godfather of the Vinotinto,” Gimenez replied. “You’ll become the first president to take Venezuela to a World Cup.”Late last month, Rojas asked Gimenez how the federation would be impacted following news of Infante’s sanctioning by the U.S. government. “FIFA and CONMEBOL have not taken a stance,” Gimenez replied. “Everything stays the same for us. What’s important is that we enjoy football and leave politics aside.”But football and politics are one and the same in Venezuela.

A man walks past a mural depicting President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas (Raul Arboleda/AFP via Getty Images)

Argentina are Venezuela’s next World Cup qualifying opponents, with Thursday’s match set for the 52,000-seat Estadio Maturin, Venezuela’s largest stadium.With diplomatic relations strained between Maduro’s government and Argentina’s right-wing administration — Maduro has prohibited Argentine aircraft from flying above Venezuelan airspace — Lionel Messi and the defending world champions will train in the U.S. before the match, at MLS club Inter Miami’s facilities in Fort Lauderdale.And all of this backdrop coincides with Venezuela’s recent dip in form.The team have not scored in their last two qualifying matches, including a 4-0 defeat away to Bolivia, and are winless since defeating Jamaica 3-0 in their final group match of the Copa America. After initially rubbing shoulders with Argentina, Colombia and Uruguay in the CONMEBOL standings, Venezuela are now sixth on 10 points, just a point ahead of Paraguay and Bolivia.After facing Argentina, Venezuela will travel to Asuncion for a pivotal away match against the resurgent Paraguayans next Tuesday (early Wednesday UK time).The dream of qualifying for their first World Cup is still alive, and the faith that Venezuelans have remains strong, but their confidence is shaken.While the opposition party continues to dispute the election result, and with peace still elusive, the stakes have never been higher for the Vinotinto.

(Top photo: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images)

Emma Hayes’ priorities for a busy USWNT camp. Plus, Marta’s back in Orlando

Emma Hayes’ priorities for a busy USWNT camp. Plus, Marta’s back in Orlando

Full Time Newsletter ⚽| This is The Athletic’s weekly women’s soccer newsletter. Sign up here to receive Full Time directly in your inbox.

Emily Olsen here with Meg Linehan. It was a difficult week for many, especially those in Los Angeles. Hopefully, we can balance the hurt with some hope — welcome to Full Time!


L.A. Wildfires

USWNT forced to move camp

Sports are not immune to the effects of the devastating wildfires impacting much of Los Angeles.

The U.S. women’s national team was set to gather this week alongside a group of under-23 prospects at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, Calif., roughly 30 miles south of the Pacific Palisades and Altadena neighborhoods — areas that have both seen extensive damage. Late Friday, U.S. Soccer moved the camps to Inter Miami CF’s training facility in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., where the U.S. men are currently training.

L.A.-based teams in the NHLNBA and NFL have also made schedule adjustments or postponements amid the fires. The NFL moved the wild-card playoff game between the Los Angeles Rams and Minnesota Vikings, set for tonight at 8 p.m. ET, from SoFi Stadium to State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Ariz.

The fires have impacted individual athletes, too: Soccer stars Carlos Vela and Ali Riley are among those who shared they lost their family homes. The Los Angeles Times has a list of resources for wildfire evacuations, recovery and how to help.

Finding hope amid loss

Riley has captained Angel City FC and the New Zealand national team. I watched her play in front of a packed Eden Pack in Auckland, New Zealand, to open the 2023 World Cup and listened to her postgame speech about the meaning of the moment. She laid bare her soul with rainbow nails and tears of joy. That’s just who Riley is. She’s never shied from showing her heart — one that beats deeply for her hometown of L.A.

Last week, the 37-year-old shared something different, posting photos of the rubble that used to be her parents’ home in the Palisades.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Ali Riley (@rileythree)

“This was our home,” Riley wrote in a post on X. “How is this real. It can’t be real.”

Despite the devastation, Riley also shared joy. She posted videos of her parents and, this weekend, wedding photos and videos as she married former Swedish footballer Lucas Nilsson.

“I’ve never felt love like this,” Riley wrote. “We hugged, cried, danced and laughed. My parents are incredible.”


Meg’s Corner

Marta’s not leaving! 

The Orlando Pride finally finished one of their most crucial pieces of business this offseason, re-signing Marta to a two-year deal. There were no mentions of a potential retirement on the horizon for the 38-year-old, or even a last dance, when Orlando won the Shield and championship last year.So our mission — and we should all accept it — is to once again witness greatness while we can. We must appreciate everything else Marta brings to Orlando, the NWSL and the sport in general.And we can start with the contract extension announcement video. Did it have shades of Sam err’s Chelsea announcement with the fake-out of a potential departure or retirement? Sure. But Marta’s intensity is on a whole new level because her emotions for the city and club are so authentic  — and because no one loves a good joke more than the captain.Now in the pantheon of images of Marta, alongside all the goals and the celebrations, I’m going to permanently have the one of her dancing in front of fireworks lit up just for her over the Inter&Co Stadium in Orlando. What an absolute legend.

🎧 The latest from the “Full Time” podcast: Gotham GM Yael Averbuch West discusses the team’s recent flurry of news.


Notables

Hayes looks to remedy a ‘lost generation’

As we’ve said before, this year is one Emma Hayes can actually use to take stock of what the U.S. player pool has to offer.

Hayes’ biggest issue? A “lost generation” of under-23 players and a gap she is “desperate” to bridge before the next World Cup.

“None of us know what the roster is going to look like in 2027, so I’m desperate to make sure that we’ve got more players that are in a better position that can help us compete for the highest level,” Hayes said last week. 

In addition to the 26 players called into the senior camp this month, 24 under-23 players were named to a “Futures Camp” which will also be coached by a very busy Hayes, who will bounce between training sessions.

I also recommend this piece from the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Jonathan Tannenwald, who was in the crowded conference room where Hayes said she “loved nothing more than the rest of the world writing us off” at the Olympics.

Orlando Ramirez / Imagn Images

Canada appoints Stoney as next head coach

Former San Diego Wave head coach Casey Stoney is Canada’s next head coach.

The Canadians have been without a permanent coach since the federation’s Olympic drone spying scandal (former head coach Bev Priestman was officially fired in November).

Stoney, 42, most recently led San Diego to a 2023 NWSL Shield and an NWSL Challenge Cup victory before a seven-game winless streak in 2024 led to her firing. Meg says Stoney’s jump to the international game is “no surprise”:

At first glance, it’s a perfect match considering Stoney’s reputation as a defensive-minded coach and Canada’s history of winning games and tournaments on gritty defending. There’s also the sheer fun of potential matchups between Canada and the USWNT with Stoney and Hayes on the touchline.

Stoney said she’s “used to derby games” and welcomes the opportunity to compete against Hayes and the U.S.

Nelson alleges abuse while playing for the Royals

Former Utah Royals goalkeeper Carly Nelson alleged she experienced “emotional and psychological abuse” during her time with the club in a post on social media Friday.

Nelson, who’s from Utah, joined the Royals after being traded from the Orlando Pride in December 2023. Nelson was regularly listed as an excused absence on game day and later took an extended mental health leave. A year after joining the club, the team announced that Nelson would not return for the 2025 season.

Nelson says there’s more to the story. Utah said it takes any allegations counter to “creating a positive and supportive experience” with the “utmost seriousness and urgency.”


Full Time First Looks

Good news: We recently shared the story of Celine Haidar, the 19-year-old Lebanese midfielder who suffered a serious head injury during an Israeli airstrike in Beirut. Haidar has since woken from a coma she was in for nearly two months.

Life after playing: In 1998, Julie Foudy was in the prime of her playing career with a potential path to medical school on her horizon. However, a chance encounter with a sports broadcast producer set her on a decades-long career in commentating. Now, the World Cup winner is helping other former and active players do the same.

On the move: USWNT forward Jaedyn Shaw is headed to the North Carolina Courage. Equalizer Soccer was first to report the move, which is expected to be announced this week. The move reportedly came at the 20-year-old’s request.

Attempting to make sense of a confusing Premier League season

Oliver Kay and Mark Carey

Jan 14, 2025

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There is little let-up in football’s ever-expanding schedule, but its sprawling nature allows just the occasional pause for reflection.

The past week has brought some big occasions in the Carabao Cup and FA Cup. Next week offers the unfamiliarity of European competition in January. This midweek Premier League programme has crept up almost undetected, yet much has changed since the last round of fixtures: managers have come and gone at West Ham United (Julen Lopetegui out, Graham Potter in) and Everton (Sean Dyche out, David Moyes back for a second spell); the beginnings of an unusually busy winter transfer window at Manchester City; a heightened state of anxiety at Arsenal in advance of Wednesday’s north London derby.

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Just past the halfway stage, how has the Premier League’s 2024-25 season been for you?

If you are a Liverpool fan, then the answer will likely be one of cautious excitement. Nottingham Forest? Unexpected thrills. BournemouthFulham or Brentford? Fun. Newcastle United? Much better than five weeks ago. Chelsea? Much worse than five weeks ago. Manchester City? The type of nightmare you thought was in your distant past. Manchester United or Everton? The type of nightmare that has haunted your present for too long. Southampton? Chastening. Arsenal or Tottenham Hotspur? Maddening, in different ways, but ask them again after 10pm on Wednesday.

Some seasons take shape almost immediately. This one has been more peculiar. Manchester City’s nosedive in late 2024 is one reason for that, but there have been others. One team after another has looked strikingly impressive for four or five weeks before stumbling into difficulty. The only consistency — of the right type — has come from Liverpool and, to widespread amazement, Nottingham Forest.

What do we read into this? Are Liverpool really as strong as their commanding lead implies? Are Forest, who have the lowest share of possession in the top flight, as good as their run of six consecutive wins suggests? What on earth do we make of Manchester City’s struggles? And is all of this the sign of the high-quality, ultra-competitive league we demand? Or one where standards have slipped?


One consequence of Manchester City’s golden era under Pep Guardiola is that it has distorted expectations. It has normalised the abnormal.

Of the eight highest points totals recorded in the Premier League era, seven have come in the past nine seasons: Manchester City three times (including a record-breaking total of 100 points in 2017-18), Liverpool three times (only one of which yielded the league title) and Chelsea once (under Antonio Conte in 2016-17). The only previous team to have surpassed 91 points in a 38-game top-flight season was Chelsea under Jose Mourinho in 2004-05 (95 points).

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This season has so far felt more… normal. As impressive as Liverpool have been so far under Arne Slot, they have not had quite the imperious look of their team that won 97 points under Jurgen Klopp in 2018-19 (only to finish a point behind City) and 99 points a year later. That side, with Mohamed Salah, Roberto Firmino and Sadio Mane in the forward line, was relentless. This one, with Salah joined by any two from Luis DiazCody GakpoDiogo Jota and Darwin Nunez, looks slightly less formidable.

But that has been the way of things of late. Between 2009-10 and 2015-16, no Premier League champion reached the 90-point mark. There followed a period between 2016-17 and 2019-20 when the title was won with totals of 93, 100, 98 and 99 points. Manchester City’s subsequent four titles in a row were won with 86, 93, 89 and 91 points. The standard remained extremely high, but in points terms, not as high as Klopp suggested in 2019 when he told reporters Liverpool would have to be “perfect” if they were to be champions.

Right now, Liverpool are on course for 92 points — a tally Arsenal and Forest, their closest challengers, can only reach by winning 17 and drawing one of their final 18 matches. They have also won six games out of six in the Champions League, beating Real MadridMilan and Bayer Leverkusen among others.

But as Slot pointed out on Monday, it is folly to imagine the second half of a season will simply mirror the first. “There’s more at stake,” the Liverpool manager said. “That’s what sometimes you feel. That’s why you sometimes see more shocking results in the second half of the season and that’s why we need to improve.”

The chasing pack will hope that Liverpool, held to a 2-2 draw at home by Manchester United last time out, can be pegged back. Forest, already performing beyond their wildest pre-season expectations under Nuno Espirito Santo, will hope to clip the leaders’ wings at a loud, passionate City Ground on Tuesday evening.

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Welcome to Nottingham – a city that is once again daring to dream

Every UK bookmaker already has Liverpool at short odds-on to be champions — a view shared by Opta’s “supercomputer” predictive model, which puts their chances at 88.9 per cent. But even their most bullish supporter might say that sounds rather presumptuous given they face away trips to eight of the 10 teams ranked immediately below them in the table at present. Both Manchester City and Arsenal can testify to the difficulty of a trip to Bournemouth. In both cases, an unexpected setback at the Vitality Stadium proved hard to shrug off.

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Manchester City’s slump was so extreme, winning only one out of 13 matches in all competitions between late October and late December, that Opta rate their chances of a fifth consecutive league title at just 0.2 per cent. Pep Guardiola has been even less optimistic than that: “No chance”.

Mikel Arteta will not entertain talk of a regression in Arsenal’s standards, but he accepts his team have left themselves with an awful lot of work to do and that they must ensure they are ready to capitalise — “we have to continue to be like a hammer, be there every day, every day, every day”— if Liverpool stumble. So far in 2025, his own team have not looked ready to honour their side of the bargain.

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Arsenal and their recurring problem of allowing defeat to turn into a slump


How strong is the Premier League right now?

The usual answer, in any given season, at just about any point in history, is that it is not as strong, as competitive or as entertaining as it used to be — an inevitable view, accompanied by the sweet smell of nostalgia, but one at odds with the reality of the league’s growing financial (and consequently on-pitch) strength.

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‘Take me back to the 2000s’: Premier League nostalgia and the perils of comparing different eras

Manchester City have drastically underperformed this season, but before that two-month tailspin, they had lost just one of their previous 50 matches in all competitions (the FA Cup final against Manchester United last May). They have also won their past three games in a manner that suggests they will be a force in the second half of the season — and that, even if the damage to their Premier League title defence looks irreparable, they remain one of the strongest teams in Europe.

Last season’s European competition brought a few jolts to Premier League pride, with no English club getting beyond the quarter-finals of the Champions League or the Europa League, while Serie A and the Bundesliga claimed the highest coefficient ranking (and with it an extra ticket for this season’s Champions League).

Manchester City’s struggles apart, this season’s new-look Champions League, with Liverpool top, Arsenal third and Villa fifth in the 36-team Champions League standings, has brought a resumption of what passes for normal service these days.

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Twenty First Group, a sports intelligence firm that advises clubs and investors, uses a machine-learning algorithm to generate a rating for every team in world football. From there, it calculates the strengths of each league.

Using its “World Super League” model, the Premier League is nearing its peak in quality this season, with a rating of 761. Only once before (the Premier League in 2022-23) has any league’s average quality been rated higher.

Some of us have a tendency to hark back to the late 2000s when the Premier League’s “Big Four” of Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester United were consistently reaching the later stages of the Champions League. Twenty First Group’s model proposes that, in terms of overall strength, La Liga was stronger at that time and remained so until 2016-17 (and that the Bundesliga was second-strongest between 2009-10 and 2012-13), but that the Premier League has been strongest since 2017-18. All of that sounds reasonable to me.

To put Twenty First Group’s data into perspective, in 2008-09, only nine Premier League teams were ranked among the world’s top 50. The fact this number fell in the first half of the 2010s, to a low point of seven between 2011-12 and 2013, reinforces the feeling that competition regressed quality-wise around this time, overshadowed not just by La Liga but by the Bundesliga.

Since the late 2010s, it has risen significantly, with 14 Premier League teams currently ranked in the world’s top 50. Broadly speaking, though these rankings fluctuate from week to week, this suggests a mid-table team in the Premier League is roughly as strong as a top-five team in La Liga or a top-six team in Serie A.

So they should be given their financial advantage. Six Premier League clubs featured in the top 10 of Deloitte’s Football Money League, which ranks clubs by revenue. Extend that to the top 30 and there are no fewer than 14 Premier League clubs. Brighton & Hove Albion (23rd) made more money in 2022-23 than all bar four clubs in Italy, three in Spain, three in Germany and two in France.

When you look at the inequality that the Premier League’s financial power has brought to the transfer market across Europe, with so much talent flowing towards these shores, it is surprising English clubs are not even more dominant.

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‘It’s madness’: How Premier League transfer spending is viewed in Europe

But that is another argument. What this is not, despite some localised difficulties in Manchester in particular, is a weak Premier League. The data suggests the level at the summit is not as strong as it has been in recent seasons, but that the average standard across the league is higher.

Manchester City’s struggles can be said to have undermined the quality of the league in one way but underlined it in another. The number of teams taking advantage of their struggles in late 2024 — Bournemouth, Brighton, Tottenham, Liverpool, Crystal Palace, Manchester United, Aston Villa, Everton — is evidence of a league in which every club has talent on the pitch and on the touchline. If you coast, you will be punished.


Five weeks ago, Alan Shearer wrote a column for The Athletic expressing concern for Newcastle, saying his former club now seemed to be “drifting” under their Saudi Arabian ownership and at a crossroads under Eddie Howe’s management.

He felt the initial post-takeover momentum and a sense of purpose had been lost. With Howe’s team 12th in the Premier League, after two wins in their previous 11, many supporters were privately expressing the same concerns.

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And look at them now. They have won their past eight games across all competitions, including away to Manchester United and Tottenham in the Premier League and Arsenal in the Carabao Cup semi-final first leg. A run of four winnable games lies ahead in the Premier League — Wolverhampton Wanderers and Bournemouth at home, Southampton away, Fulham at home — and suddenly their fans are dreaming of returning to the Champions League (and, even more longingly, glory in the Carabao Cup).

Newcastle’s ups and downs reflect the unpredictability of a league in which fortunes and form seem to be fluctuating like never before.

Sometimes it seems to come down to discrepancies in the fixture list, allowing teams to capitalise on a gentle run of games before the going gets tough again. But often it is nothing of the sort; Brighton and Fulham emerged with great credit from a daunting run of games, only to stumble in a series of matches they were expected to win. Aston Villa lost just one of their first nine games, juggling domestic and European commitments impressively, but have been stop-start over the past couple of months.

By mid-December, Chelsea seemed to be emerging as the team best placed to challenge Liverpool, having won six and drawn two of their previous eight matches. Since then, they have drawn with Everton and Crystal Palace and lost to Fulham and Ipswich Town.

It is a league full of talented but flawed, imperfect teams, almost all of them potent in attack (and particularly on the counter-attack) but few of them anything like so adept when forced to play on their opponents’ terms.

That is where Forest have been so impressive. They have had, on average, the lowest share of possession of any Premier League team so far this season, but they defend in numbers and attack as incisively as anyone. As Slot said in his pre-match news conference on Monday, Nuno “has done a great job at implementing a style of play that suits their players”.

Slot admitted he was surprised in September when Forest inflicted what remains his only Premier League defeat as Liverpool manager, but said that result was no longer “such a shock to me as it was then”.


The trip to Nottingham on Tuesday looks like a serious test of Liverpool’s credentials. Should Forest beat them for a second time this season, the sense of excitement at the City Ground will develop into something more, leaving those long-suffering supporters to wonder just how far this season might take them.

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Football has changed an awful lot since the late 1970s, when they conquered England and then Europe (twice) under Brian Clough, but the opportunity to dream is still there.

There are parallels with the 2015-16 campaign when Leicester City came from nowhere to win the Premier League title. Those parallels include the underperformance of several leading teams. Back then, Chelsea were in post-title meltdown under Mourinho; Manchester City and Manchester United were drifting in their final campaign under Manuel Pellegrini and Louis van Gaal respectively; Arsenal were doing likewise as Arsene Wenger’s tenure neared its end; Liverpool were only just getting going under Klopp; Tottenham were progressing quickly under Mauricio Pochettino but, unlike Leicester, were unable to capitalise on the opportunity.

After 20 games, Forest have the same number of points (40) as Leicester had by the same stage of their historic title-winning campaign. The difference is that Forest are six points off the top, having played one more game than the leaders, whereas at that stage in 2015-16, Leicester were only two points behind first-placed Arsenal.

Chris Wood’s 12 Premier League goals have helped Nottingham Forest to third in the Premier League (Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images)

That was the season that, more than any other, perpetuated the idea of the Premier League as an ultra-competitive league where anyone can beat anyone. It was also a season in which, as shown on the European stage as well as domestically, the bigger clubs fell drastically short of expectations, creating a once-in-a-generation opportunity that Leicester seized in the most wonderful style, not just winning the title, but doing it by a 10-point margin.

Could 2024-25 bring something similar to the East Midlands? So many of the ingredients are there in a competition laced with unpredictability. There is jeopardy almost everywhere, not least in the risks that so many teams take when trying to play out from the back.

Forest, as Slot pointed out on Monday, have no interest in inviting such jeopardy. They appear happy to leave the chaos to others and stick to the serious business of winning matches.

As do Liverpool, content to keep racking up the points and avoid the kind of melodramas seen elsewhere. On one hand, the “best league in the world” hype demands wild twists and unpredictability. On the other hand, it requires its top teams to demonstrate quality and supreme focus and to keep standards high.

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So far, at least, Liverpool have only looked interested in setting standards. If it is real unpredictability you want in the second half of the campaign, someone is going to have to do what Forest did to them at Anfield back in September. On a cold January night in Nottingham and throughout the months ahead, Liverpool will hope to keep the drama to a minimum.

 (Top photos: Getty Images; design: Will Tullos)

he six moments of madness that sum up a Clasico defined by disarray

The six moments of madness that sum up a Clasico defined by disarray

By Anantaajith Raghuraman

Jan 13, 2025

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You rarely see a team score directly after an opposition corner — a heavy touch somewhere along the way, a misplaced pass or defenders tracking back in numbers often result in lost momentum and missed opportunities.

The Supercopa de Espana final between Real Madrid and Barcelona on Sunday saw both teams score from the other’s corners in the first half alone.

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That summed up a chaotic first half (extended by 10 minutes of stoppage time) and set the tone for a match that often had the feel of an exhibition. It ended in a record-extending 15th Supercopa for Barca, who put four goals past Madrid in consecutive games for the first time in Clasico history, running out 5-2 winners.

Here, The Athletic breaks down six moments that summed up a match defined by disarray.

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The Briefing: Real Madrid 2 Barcelona 5 – Yamal and Co inflict a historic humiliation


It took less than five minutes for Madrid to open the scoring through some direct play from Kylian Mbappe and some slack defending from Barcelona (a consistent feature of the first half for both teams).

Hansi Flick’s side had forced two good saves from Thibaut Courtois through Lamine Yamal and Raphinha in the opening four minutes. Raphinha took the corner that was the result of the second of those stops, which Federico Valverde cleared. The ball fell in between Vinicius Junior and Marc Casado, with the Brazilian winning possession and charging forward before finding Mbappe.

Vinicius Jr’s pass put Mbappe into a one-vs-one against left-back Alejandro Balde (no offside concerns this time), who was indecisive. Mbappe feasted on that indecision, cutting inside and then out before clipping a finish over goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny to make it 1-0.

The goal was thoroughly avoidable from a Barcelona point of view but, before the chaos, they had discovered two Madrid weaknesses. Raphinha’s shot came after Gavi ran off Eduardo Camavinga’s shoulder to get to the byline and float in a cross for the former Leeds United winger, who wandered into the space left between makeshift centre-back Aurelien Tchouameni and right-back Lucas Vazquez.

A combination of Camavinga’s slackness and that area of uncertainty between Tchouameni and Vazquez proved to be Madrid’s downfall later in the half.

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There was some calm for the following 15 minutes, a period littered with errors from both teams and Mbappe going down with an apparent knock (the 26-year-old eventually played on), which made the game seem like an exhibition instead of an emotionally charged Clasico and final. But the tide was starting to turn, with Barca repeatedly dragging Madrid players out of position.

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Hansi Flick has created an oasis of calm amid institutional chaos at Barcelona

Their reward was a Lionel Messi-esque moment of Yamal magic that levelled the scores.

The goal was made possible by Robert Lewandowski’s neat pass and Yamal filling the space created by Gavi’s off-the-ball movement to drag Camavinga out of position.

The equaliser did not bring composure to the game. As a re-energised Barcelona pressed higher, Madrid were forced to go long, resulting in another bizarre sequence two minutes later.

A throw-in, after Szczesny came out of his area to clear a long ball, saw Vinicius Jr find Jude Bellingham, who passed to Vazquez on the right. Vazquez’s shot was blocked by Balde, but Madrid worked the ball to Valverde for another try. His attempt was weak but got deflected behind for a corner.

Tchouameni outjumped Kounde from the set piece to force a save by Szczesny, with the rebound spinning away beyond the post with Vazquez lurking.

This second corner was cleared at the near post before a third one was met by Tchouameni again, this time with space for an acrobatic kick from the France international which got blocked.

All in all, a sequence that would not have been out of place in a mid-season friendly played in the Middle East.

Barcelona’s clever play, and more slack defending, led to a third chaotic moment in the 33rd minute. Throughout the opening half hour, Lewandowski dropped to receive the ball with back to goal, with Camavinga or Antonio Rudiger stepping out to close him down, leaving space in behind for Barca to exploit.

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Madrid’s back line was woeful against Barca, but they won’t sign a defender. Why not?

On this occasion, a long ball from centre-back Pau Cubarsi was chased by Gavi instead of Lewandowski, with Rudiger winning the header. The tactical disorder of the game saw this fall straight to an unmarked Lewandowski, with Camavinga confused about whether to go after him or track Gavi.

As Barca recycled possession, Gavi stayed forward, with Yamal and Lewandowski occupying Camavinga’s attention. When Kounde’s cross deflected off Ferland Mendy into the box, Gavi was in position to reach the ball first and Camavinga, having failed to initially track him, lazily stuck a leg out, catching the Spain midfielder with his studs.

Having exploited that first weakness, Barca smelled blood and exploited a second less than two minutes after Lewandowski scored from the resulting penalty as Raphinha ghosted into the space between Tchouameni and Vazquez again to head home a Kounde pass.

Madrid’s desperation grew. They threw men forward, leading to yet more gaps in midfield.

These following screengrabs from the second and fourth minutes of added time in the first half emphasise just how much space Barcelona now had to dictate proceedings, and the potential pitfalls of Carlo Ancelotti playing Mbappe, Vinicius Jr, Bellingham and Rodrygo together in attack.

Madrid were not done contributing to the chaos, though.

Exhibit four from the first half arrived after Madrid worked the ball to the right, loading up on Balde. This negated Barcelona’s high line and allowed Bellingham to slip Rodrygo in. He then cut one back for Vazquez, who tried to backheel it.

Balde intercepted but mishit his clearance, with Casado beating Mbappe to the ball but heading towards his own goal. Szczesny, unsure whether to catch or clear with his feet, was caught in an awkward position. Rodrygo, who was offside, slipped and allowed the ’keeper to gather.

That was quickly followed by a fifth moment of chaos — one which seemed unavoidable by this point.

Ronald Araujo, who had replaced an injured Inigo Martinez in the 28th minute, hacked at a routine clearance from a Mendy through ball to give Madrid a corner in the ninth minute of stoppage time. Rodrygo played a one-two with Camavinga before trying to find Valverde on the edge of the box.

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Yamal anticipated his underhit pass and intercepted just beyond the D, with Raphinha and Balde now sprinting forward alongside him. Yamal found Raphinha, who cut inside Valverde. Balde then took the ball off his Brazilian team-mate’s toes before slamming a finish into the bottom corner to make it 4-1.


That end to the first half could not have been worse for Madrid — and they did not enjoy much respite after their trip back to the dressing rooms.

On 48 minutes — 90 seconds after Rodrygo volleyed a Vinicius Jr cross behind via the woodwork — Barca had their fifth goal.

Lewandowski dropped again to drag Rudiger out of position, allowing Casado to feed the ball to Raphinha after he ghosted in behind Tchouameni — the same errors from the first half happening again. He then did what Mbappe had done to Balde for the Madrid goal, stepping inside and outside an opponent, Tchouameni in this case, before lashing home.

You would imagine making it 5-1 would be enough to kill the game, with Barcelona happy to control proceedings and Madrid defaulting to damage limitation and Ancelotti did bring on centre-back Raul Asencio to replace Vazquez — but Barca gave them a glimmer of hope with a sixth moment of chaos in the 54th minute.

Raphinha attempted a ‘trivela’ pass just as Madrid began pushing men forward after a set piece. This was blocked by Asencio and fell to Bellingham, who beat Pedri in the air and passed to Mbappe as he ran in behind. The Frenchman took the ball past an onrushing Szczesny, who caught Mbappe’s trailing foot just outside the area.

After a VAR review, referee Jesus Gil Manzano sent the Barca ‘keeper off.

The resulting free kick was not taken until a full three minutes later, with Barcelona given time to bring on Inaki Pena to play in goal.

Pena was promptly beaten by Rodrygo, who arrowed a shot in off the replacement goalkeeper’s fingertips and the inside of the post to make it 5-2.

The remaining 30 minutes, with 11 men chasing the game against Barcelona’s 10, brought the calmest period of a frenzied contest, although did still have its moments.

The football cliche that previous results do not matter seems particularly relevant to El Clasico: the last 10 matches in the rivalry going back to the start of the 2022-23 season have produced a combined 40 goals and five wins for each team.

But with two lop-sided wins in a row against their rivals in the two most recent meetings, Flick’s team seem to have thrived in that chaos.

(Top photo: Movistar Plus/Wyscout)

11/18/23 (updated) USMNT plays Jamaica Mon Nations League QF, Messi out in 1st round of MLS playoffs, NWSL Semis Sat/Sun, GK Jordan Farr signs with DC United, Nations League

US Men Nations League QF vs Jamaica Tues Mon 8 pm TNT

So the US found a way to win at Jamaica – giving the Poch his first win on the road in Concacaf something GB only did twice in over 5 years. The US scored early with Pepi scoring on his best chance in the first 5 minutes – the US then held on with Turner making some fantastic – saves including a PK save in the first half. I honestly thought the US went too defensive in the 2nd half and were lucky to get out with the 1-0 win – it should have been 2-1 Jamaica. But sometimes its better to be lucky than good. The US will hopefully go for the win with perhaps a 2-0 or 2-1 win at home. I thought Brandon Vasquez really blew his chance – at center forward – as he had 2 chances to put the game away and missed on both. Pepi is showing he is the guy right now at the 9 slot. I am excited to see how adding Tim Weah on the right wing will change things. I expect Musah to perhaps drop back into the 6 or 8 slot replacing the injured Cardoso. Ream is from St Louis and he’s the captain – expect to stay with the same pairing with McKensie who played his best game in a US Uniform in the first round.

Nice to see young GK of the future 18 YO Diego Kochen of Barcelona in camp – a guy who can use his feet and might just be starting at Barca by 21.

MLS – Messi and Miami lose first round finale to Brad Guzan and Atlanta United Next Round Sat/Sun

So Messi & MLS star studded Miami is out of the playoffs as they were stone-walled in the 3rd and final game of the first round series at home by former US standout Brad Guzan in a 2-3 loss –hi-lights. It will be interesting to see what impact this has on the MLS Playoffs – for me personally – now that all the remaining games will be behind the Apple MLS firewall I am done watching. Sorry MLS but you have done this to yourselves – not even your playoff games are being watched by kids in America. I just can’t fathom the stupidity of paying so much for Messi to join MLS and then not letting anyone see it on free TV. I for one have checked out MLS – out of site – out of mind.

NWSL Has Fantastic Playoff Round in Semi-Finals

Now an American soccer league with a clue – the NWSL- actually has a clue as 3 of its four games this weekend were on network TV – ESPN, CBS, and ABC along with 1 on Prime. I actually watched both of Sunday’s games – since MLS wasn’t on – the game were exciting! Top seeds stole the show in this weekend’s NWSL quarterfinals, as all four higher-ranked teams advance to the semis in style.
No. 1 Orlando blasted No. 8 Chicago 4-1 behind star Barbra Banda’s brace on Friday before Golden Boot winner Temwa Chawinga’s eighth-minute goal secured No. 4 Kansas City’s 1-0 victory over No. 5 North Carolina on Saturday. While tactically different, Sunday’s doubleheader followed similar scripts: Goalless first halves for No. 2 Washington and No. 3 Gotham led to 1-1 scorelines before the East Coast powerhouses emerged with late 2-1 wins over No. 7 Bay FC and No. 6 Portland, respectively. Lavelle Wins it in Stoppage Time for Gothem FC.

USMNT Roster for Nations League Semis vs Jamaica :

Goalkeepers: Diego Kochen (FC Barcelona Atletic), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew), Zack Steffen (Colorado Rapids), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace)

Defenders: Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Auston Trusty (Celtic)

Midfielders: Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Tanner Tessmann (Lyon), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

Forwards: Cade Cowell (Guadalajara), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Brandon Vázquez (Monterrey), Tim Weah (Juventus), Alex Zendejas (Club América)

Absolutely Thrilled to see that Former Carmel FC GK Coach and Indy 11 GK Jordan Farr signs with DC United in MLS. He comes off a successful 2 seasons at the Tampa Bay Rowdies where they went to the playoffs each season.

GAMES ON TV

Thur,  Nov 14

2:45 pm FS 1               Greece vs England Nations League

2:45 pm TUDN            Israel vs France

2:45 pm fubu               Belgium vs Italy         

8 pm TNT, Peacock    Jamaica vs USA  NL QF #1

9 pm Galazo, Para+    Costa Rica vs Panama QF #2

Fri,  Nov 15

2:45 pm FS2                Denmark vs Spain Nations League  

2:45 pm FS2                Portugal vs Poland  

7 pm 6:30 pm Golazo Surinam vs Canada QF#4

9 pm Uni, Para+          Honduras vs Mexico QF #3

Sat,  Nov 16

12 noon CBS               Washington Spirit vs NY/NJ Gotham FC  NWSL Semis

2:45 pm FS2                Netherlands vs Hungary  NL

Sun Nov 17

12 pm ?                      England vs Ireland

2:45 pm FS2                Italy vs France NL

3 pm ABC                    Orlando Pride (Marta) vs KC Current  NWSL Semis

7:30 pm Apple             Vancouver vs LAFC

Mon, Nov 18

2:45 pm FS2                Croatia vs Portugal  

8 pm TNT, Peacock    USA vs Jamaica NL QF

9 pm Para+                 Panama vs Costa Rica NL QF

Tues Nov 19  

2:45 pm FS2                Bosnia vs Netherlands NL

2:45 pm TUDN?           Hungary vs Germany  NL

7 pm Telemundo         Argentina vs Peru  WCQ

7:30 pm Para+            Canada vs Suriname   

9:30 pm Para+            Mexico vs Honduras QF

Midweek USMNT action is here. Let’s get into it!

Thursday

  • Eintracht Braunschweig vs St. Pauli, 6a: Mexican-American forward Johan Gómez, an FC Dallas academy product, has 0 goals and 1 assist in 7 matches to start the 2. Bundesliga season with newly-promoted Braunschweig. This match is a friendly.
  • Jamaica vs USA, 8p on TNT, UNIVERSO, truTV, Max, Peacock, Telemundo Deportes En Vivo, The main event. The USA travel to Kingston, Jamaica to take on the Reggae Boyz in the Concacaf Nations League quarterfinals.
  • Bonaire vs El Salvador, 8p on Paramount+: El Salvadar are in Nations League B, they visit Bonaire in Group 1.
  • Costa Rica vs Panama, 9p on Paramount+: The Ticos host Panama in another Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal.

Friday

  • Mönchengladbach vs Preussen Münster, 7a: Joe Scally was included in the USMNT roster for this international window, so he won’t be with Gladbach for this friendly.
  • Suriname vs Canada, 6:30p on Paramount+: Jesse Marsch and Canada visit Suriname in the third Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal.
  • Honduras vs Mexico, 9p on Paramount+, FuboTV, TUDN USA, Univision USA: Honduras host El Tri in the final Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal.

USMNT

Analysis: Pepi strikes early as USMNT win leg one in Jamaica 1-0
Weah ‘moved on’ from red card in Copa elimination
ESPN Jeff Carlisle Poch: Playing in MLS no barrier to U.S. selection

Aaronson, Pepi, & Weah highlight positive weekend for Yanks in Europe Scouting Jamaica Tim Weah scores for Juve as dad George looks on
USMNT forward Sargent out 8 weeks after surgery

Manchester City register interest in Premier League US star left-back valued at £40 million
Cole Campbell breaks through at Borussia Dortmund

MLS

Clock ticking for Messi as Miami suffer biggest shock in MLS postseason history A Messi situation: What is Inter Miami’s future after shocking upset? Messi: Miami will ‘come back stronger next year’ Messi, Miami suffer stunning 1st-rd exit to Atlanta1dLizzy Becherano
Arena makes MLS return as San Jose coach, GM
Jeff Carlisle ESPN

Not even Messi could save Inter Miami from injury, depth issues In dismissing Curtin, the Union are no longer MLS’s model club

US Women & NWSL Playoffs

Lily Yohannes, 17, picks USWNT over Netherlands

NWSL’s Big Four win dramatic quarterfinals, set up semifinals full of star power Lavelle Wins it in Stoppage Time for Gothem FC Gotham FC’s home playoff win exemplifies its ‘swell of momentum’ on and off the field Forget the stars, it’s NJ/NY Gotham FC’s depth that is so key Lavelle, Gotham top Thorns, end Sinclair’s career Rodman, Spirit beat Bay FC, reach NWSL semis Andonovski: Opposition ‘targeting’ KC’s Chawinga Orlando Pride dominate Chicago Red Stars in 4-1 victory Banda’s brace sends Pride into NWSL semifinals Wave make NWSL’s 1st signing direct from NCAA Canada fires Ladies coach Priestman over drone scandal

Goalkeeping

Former Carmel FC GK Coach and Indy 11 GK Jordan Farr signs with DC United in MLS
🥇 History made as MLS announce Goalkeeper of the Year 🧤

With 8 saves in the Finale Brad Guzan Won the Game as Atlanta downed Messi’s Miami
How to Save a Penalty

Huge Congrats to former Carmel Dads Club/Carmel High & Butler GK Eric Dick with the shutout Record for the Pittsburgh Riverhounds of the USL.

Reffing

Premier League ref David Coote suspended over video of crude rant at Jurgen Klopp
Webb admits to VAR error before Ten Hag sacking
ESPN

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Pulisic, Weah headline USMNT squad for Concacaf quarterfinal

  • Jeff Carlisle, U.S. soccer correspondentNov 10, 2024, 10:00 AM ET

United States men’s national team manager Mauricio Pochettino has named a 25-player roster to compete in the Concacaf Nations League quarterfinals this week against Jamaica. Among those included are AC Milan‘s Christian Pulisic and the Juventus duo of Weston McKennie and Timothy Weah. Advertising

The quarterfinal matchup will be contested over two legs, with the first leg to be played in Kingston, Jamaica, on Nov. 14 and the second leg contested in St. Louis four days later. In 10 meetings in Jamaica, the U.S. has a record of 3-1-6. Players will report to the camp on Sunday and Monday, with the team departing Wednesday afternoon for Jamaica. Pochettino will have a greater number of first-choice players available compared to last month’s international window, the Argentine’s first in charge. Weah is recalled for the first time since his red card against Panama in the Copa América, and his subsequent suspension will carry over into the first leg in Kingston.”We select 25 players on the roster and we try to find the best balance, thinking not only about [performing] today if not to build something for 2026,” Pochettino told a news conference on Sunday. “That is the main objective. Of course the objective is always about to win because we need to be competitive but it’s important because we are not going to have too many camps to see players.” Other returnees include Crystal Palace defender Chris RichardsFulham defender Antonee Robinson and Real Betis midfielder Johnny Cardoso. Pochettino will also get his first looks at Barcelona Atletic goalkeeper Diego Kochen and CD Guadalajara forward Cade Cowell. However, a host of regulars miss out for the U.S. with fitness concerns. Bournemouth midfielder Tyler Adams just recently returned to play after a lengthy injury layoff due to back surgery. Monaco forward Folarin Balogun continues to recover from a separated shoulder, while Norwich City striker Josh Sargent recently underwent groin surgery that is set to sideline him for up to eight weeks. Coventry City’s Haji Wright also suffered an ankle injury late in Sunday’s match against Sunderland.”He [Adams] is a highly important player for USA, for us, and I consider him personally a very important player for the future of this team. But the most important thing now is to see the progression. He came from a difficult moment. Yesterday, he played 60 minutes, 65 minutes,” Pochettino said.”I think it was important for him to see and for us so happy to see the evolution of him. But in the same time we know very well that we need to look after him if we want to have him in the best condition for 2026.”The injuries to Balogun, Sargent and Wright mean plenty of eyes will be on the group of forwards which in addition to Cowell includes PSV Eindhoven’s Ricardo Pepi and Monterrey FC’s Brandon Vázquez.

The roster does seem light on outside defenders, with just Robinson and Joe Scally having extensive experience in those roles. That hints that Pochettino may resort to playing with three defenders plus wingbacks, though Richards and Charlotte FC defender Tim Ream have played at outside back in the past in a four-back system. The USMNT is aiming to win its fourth straight CNL, having previously claimed every edition of the tournament since the first final was held in 2021.

USMNT Nov. training camp roster:

Goalkeepers: Diego Kochen (FC Barcelona Atletic), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew), Zack Steffen (Colorado Rapids), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace)

Defenders: Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Auston Trusty (Celtic)

Midfielders: Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Tanner Tessmann (Lyon), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven)

Forwards: Cade Cowell (Guadalajara), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Brandon Vázquez (Monterrey), Tim Weah (Juventus), Alex Zendejas (Club América)

Mauricio Pochettino calls up Nations League roster, including Tim Weah, Chris Richards

BETHESDA, MD - JUNE 3: Tim Weah and Chris Richards of the United States battle for the ball during USMNT Training at the Landon School on June 3, 2024 in Bethesda, Maryland. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Paul Tenorio Nov 10, 2024


U.S. men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino has called up 25 players for his first competitive games in charge, a set of Nations League quarterfinals against Jamaica, including his first look at two regulars with the team, Tim Weah and Chris Richards. Weah and Richards join Johnny CardosoDiego Kochen and Cade Cowell as five players who will get their first look under Pochettino this month.The U.S. will face Jamaica in Kingston on Thursday, November 14, and then in the return leg in St. Louis on November 18.Christian Pulisic, Antonee Robinson and Weston McKennie are in the squad, though the team will be without a few injured players including Gio Reyna, Josh Sargent and Sergiño Dest.

Inside Pochettino’s first month in charge of USMNT: Mate cups, meetings and a chance encounter

Another notable absence is Tyler Adams, who made his first start for Bournemouth on Saturday since returning from injury. Adams has played just 100 minutes since July 1, however, and with a short window, it allows him to stay at the club and continue building his fitness. “He is an important player for USA, for us, and I consider him, personally, a very important player for the future of this team,” Pochettino said explaining Adams’ omission. “But the most important thing now is to see the progression. “He came from a difficult moment yesterday, played 60-65 minutes, I think it was important for him to see, and for us (we were) so happy to see (his) evolution. “But in the same time, we know very well that we need to look after him if we want to have him in the best condition for 2026. I think it is important to build that relationship.”

Adams is still working his way back to full fitness (Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

Elsewhere injuries to Haji Wright, Folarin Balogun and Sargent have opened the door for other forwards to stake their claims for a regular roster spot. “It’s true these types of injuries have opened opportunities for other players to get more minutes,” Pochettino added. “It’s a great opportunity for (Ricardo Pepi) to get the opportunity to play and show his talent.“Of course (we’re) disappointed with Haji, Sargent and Balogun injured and can’t be in the squad, but it’s a chance for (Pepi) and Brandon Vazquez to fight for their spot on their team.”Following his red card against Panama on June 27 during the Copa America, Weah will serve the second game of his two-match suspension during the first leg in Jamaica.The U.S. beat Panama and lost to Mexico in their first two games, both friendlies, under Pochettino last month. These Nations League games present the first test in official competition. The U.S. won the first three CONCACAF Nations League titles.Jamaica nearly eliminated the U.S. from the 2023-24 Nations League in the semifinals before a late brace from Haji Wright lifted the U.S. to the win.The group includes eleven players aged 23 and younger: Cardoso, Patrick Schulte and Tanner Tessmann (23); Gianluca BusioAidan Morris and Malik Tillman (22); Cowell, Yunus Musah, Ricardo Pepi, and Joe Scally (21); and Kochen (18).


USMNT Player Tracker: The return of the Brothers Aaronson, Pepi progress and outsider Weah

USMNT Player Tracker: The return of the Brothers Aaronson, Pepi progress and outsider Weah

By Greg O’Keeffe 11/11/24 The Athletic


The Aaronson brothers’ resurgence, Ricardo Pepi’s progress at PSV Eindhoven and Tim Weah’s striking instincts all feature in this week’s USMNT Player Tracker.Throughout the season, we will bring you updates on the U.S. players plying their trade in various leagues around Europe. With a World Cup on home soil on the horizon and new national team boss Mauricio Pochettino monitoring from afar, we’re keeping tabs on how they perform every weekend.


Issue of the weekend

At relatively tender ages, they have already endured many of the European game’s ups and downs. But, after coming through challenging times last season, the Aaronson brothers are having something of a moment.

Last year Brenden, 24, and younger brother Paxten, 21, faced uncertain futures. The former was loaned out by recently relegated Leeds United after his dream move to England appeared to sour, and found himself in another relegation fight at Union Berlin in Germany.Paxten was also surplus to requirements at his club, Eintracht Frankfurt, and was sent out on loan to Vitesse Arnhem in the Netherlands.Neither, though, let the disappointment hold them back. Brenden helped his German club to stave off the drop, while Paxten played all but one game for his temporary team and contributed four goals — albeit enduring the other side of a relegation fight with Vitesse finishing bottom of the Eredivisie.

This time around, though, they are thriving.Brenden is adding plenty of value back at Leeds where the supporters have embraced him, and his four goals have helped the Yorkshire club into third place as they chase promotion back to the Premier League.

Brenden has made a positive impact back with Leeds (MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Paxten returned to the Dutch top flight via another loan, to Utrecht, and now he’s in an upwardly mobile outfit — the club is second in the table ahead of Aja and Feyenoord — and he is the team’s top goalscorer with four (and one assist).It was his close-range volley against Heracles on Friday that proved the only goal of a tense game in which he was the star man. The midfielder also created two chances according to Fotmob.Big brother Brenden started his 13th consecutive game for Leeds on Saturday and also tasted victory as Daniel Farke’s team beat Queens Park Rangers 2-0.It was no surprise the latter was included in Pochettino’s first competitive USMNT roster, albeit perhaps more of one that Paxten missed out.

Brenden Aaronson exclusive: ‘All I care about is getting Leeds United promoted’

However, if the younger sibling maintains this form, he cannot be far from adding to his solitary senior cap.


Player of the weekend

Ricardo Pepi heads off on international duty with a spring in his step having made another notch on his season’s goal-count at PSV. He was not going to let the chance of a rare start — and the flipped dynamic that saw his club’s usual starting centre-forward, Luuk de Jong, on the bench instead — pass him by without a flourish. So ‘El Tren’ provided the laser-guided finish that gave the defending champions the lead against NAC Breda on Saturday in what went on to become a routine win.“He was very threatening, constantly looked for depth and was sharp in finishing,” said a satisfied manager Peter Bosz to the PSV website. “He played well. That’s not surprising because he’s a good player. Only he is unlucky that Luuk de Jong is in front of him.“I do think he deserves more minutes than last season.”

Pepi celebrates with Ismael Saibari (Joris Verwijst/BSR Agency/Getty Images)

Pepi now has the same number of goals as De Jong (six) this season, but from just 420 Eredivisie minutes compared to the club captain’s 696.It’s enough to wonder how much longer a budding virtuoso can carry on playing second fiddle.

Quote of the weekend

“I play in attack. I’m happy. It’s a big thing for me, I feel like a striker. I prefer the outside role. Today I am happy, but for the team, we have to continue like this because when we play like tonight, we are strong. Now the game against AC Milan awaits us, it’s important, also for me and for my family history.”Tim Weah’s father George played 147 times for the Rossoneri across four highly successful seasons. He scored 58 goals, won two Serie A titles and the Ballon d’Or in 1995.Weah Jr scored his fourth goal in eight Serie A appearances this term for Juventus on Saturday as they beat Torino 2-0 in the Derby della Mole. Deployed on the right of the attack, he made himself a menace and also won praise from manager Thiago Motta, who was happy with Weah’s form when he moved further forward after regular starter Dusan Vlahovic was substituted.

Weah celebrates his goal against Torino (Nicolò Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“I think Weah is doing very well at the moment,” said the Juve boss to his club’s website. “But (Francisco) Conceicao is always an extra weapon. He can help us in the match and we can alternate them, or use them together.“For the role of centre forward in the absence of Vlahovic, I’ll evaluate match by match. It’s impossible to say an exact name at the moment.”


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Tyler Adams
Club: Bournemouth
Position: Midfielder
Games (in all competitions): 3

Another key moment for Adams in his return to full fitness as he made his first start of the season for Bournemouth.

The USMNT star played 67 minutes as his team lost 3-2 against Brentford, but he had a busy game with one chance created and more tackles (four) than any team-mate, according to Fotmob.

Name: Tanner Tessmann
Club: Lyon
Position: Midfielder
Games: 9

Tessman got onto the field as a second-half substitute to sample the atmosphere of a Ligue 1 derby win as Lyon beat bitter rivals Saint-Etienne on Sunday. He had a bright cameo with three passes into the final third, and the American won both of his two ground duels.

Lyon gears up for the Rhone-Alpes derby (Olivier Chassignole / AFP via Getty Images)

Name: Johnny Cardoso
Club: Real Betis
Position: Midfielder
Games: 15

Cardoso created a goal for striker Vitor Roque as Real Betis drew 2-2 with Celta Vigo on Sunday. It was his first assist in nine La Liga games for his team so far this season.

Name: Christian Pulisic
Club: Attacker
Position: AC Milan
Games: 15
Goals: 7

Such is his sensational form at present, it is rare to see a Milan game when the USMNT hero does not get on the scoresheet. But he was relatively subdued as Milan drew 3-3 at Cagliari on Saturday — even if he did play a part in the team’s third goal when his shot was palmed away for Tammy Abraham to convert the rebound and make it 3-2.

The 26-year-old was withdrawn on 82 minutes by manager Paulo Fonseca, and wasn’t on the field when Gabriele Zappa’s late goal snatched a draw for the hosts to leave Milan frustrated.

Pulisic had started in a central role behind 16-year-old striking prospect Francesco Camarda, and at times seemed to miss his ability to drift inside from his usual wide position.

Name: Haji Wright
Club: Coventry City
Position: Striker
Games: 16
Goals: 6

Another week, another goal for Wright. The striker helped Coventry draw 2-2 at Sunderland just days after manager Mark Robins was sacked.

His near-post finish — that’s six goals so far this term — pulled one back for the visitors, who went on to grab a point, but a late ankle injury spoiled the striker’s day. He hobbled off the pitch but then needed a stretcher to get to the treatment room, and he will not be involved in the USMNT games against Jamaica during the international window.

Wright departs on a stretcher (Steve Welsh/PA Images via Getty Images)

What’s coming up?

We enter an international break now but, when domestic fixtures resume in a fortnight, you can watch Antonee Robinson in action for in-form Fulham against Wolverhampton Wanderers 0n Saturday, November 23 (10am, Peacock Premium).

Also that day, Pulisic and Yunus Musah could go head-to-head with Weston McKennie and Weah as AC Milan face Juventus (12pm, Peacock Premium). The following day, Joe Scally and Borussia Monchengladbach face St Pauli in Bundesliga (Sunday, 11:30am, ESPN+).

MLS Final Table

MLS playoffs without Lionel Messi and Inter Miami could be a welcome reality check

MLS playoffs without Lionel Messi and Inter Miami could be a welcome reality check

Paul Tenorio Nov 11, 2024 The Athletic

Lionel Messi is out of the Major League Soccer playoffs after Inter Miami, the No 1 seed in the Eastern Conference, suffered a stunning opening-round loss to ninth-seeded Atlanta United.It is a disaster for MLS and the league’s media partner, Apple. The most popular athlete on the planet is out of the playoffs after just one round, before even the quarterfinals.Perhaps, though, it is also a blessing in disguise.From the moment Messi announced in summer 2023 that he was coming to MLS, the league has had dueling directives. The first was to maximize the moment and leverage Messi’s presence to bring new fans to the product. But the second job was more important: build on that initial pop and keep as many fans as possible around when the now 37-year-old is gone.Even optimistically, it’s tough to envision Messi playing more than two more seasons in Miami’s pink jersey — and the remainder of these playoffs will now be a test of whether MLS is succeeding on that second front.Inter Miami are undoubtedly maximizing their Messi moment, or at least doing everything in their power to do so. They have squeezed every dollar out of the salary budget to build a team around him. They circumnavigated the globe in preseason, bringing in millions in profit, to grow their brand. They have announced some of the biggest sponsorship deals in MLS history. They’ve also won two trophies in two seasons: the 2023 Leagues Cup and the 2024 Supporters’ Shield, the latter by setting a record for most points earned in an MLS regular season.On-field success is never guaranteed, as the result of that best-of-three series against Atlanta shows, but Miami are doing everything they can to try to win — and to grow their fanbase, both locally and globally.

(Nathan Ray Seebeck/Imagn Images)

The league, meanwhile, has benefited from Messi’s presence, too.

MLS has set records this year in total attendance, average attendance, season-ticket sales, sold-out games and the number of matches with crowds of over 40,000 — numbers boosted not just by Messi’s presence, but also by having more teams in the league than ever before. MLS also boasted about increases in sponsorship revenues, record retail sales (driven by people buying Messi’s jersey, which ranked No. 1 globally for all Adidas football/soccer shirts) and record social and digital media audiences.

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Apple, which also partnered with Messi as part of his contract to come to MLS, has seen benefits, too. Last season, which the Argentine arrived halfway through, Inter Miami owner Jorge Mas tweeted that subscribers to MLS Season Pass on Apple TV had doubled in the first month of Messi in MLS, with the Spanish-language audience growing more than 50 percent.The fear is that those numbers might be a commercial blip. If MLS has a plan on how to fully leverage those audiences, we haven’t seen it yet.

Just days after Messi was officially unveiled as a Miami player, Mas delivered a line that spoke to the optimism over the transformation he might bring. “Evolution is inevitable,” Mas said. “And change is likely.”It has been nearly a year and a half since that moment, and MLS’s ideas on how to evolve aren’t yet clear. The league is discussing changes, including potentially flipping to a fall-spring calendar from the current February-December one but there has been little hint as to how it intends to grow the on-field product.

Last year, FC Dallas owner Clark Hunt told The Athletic that MLS was “studying” the Messi effect to “understand how that’s going to impact the league long-term, how it’s going to grow not only our fanbase in the stadiums each weekend, but also how it’s going to grow our media subscriptions through Apple”. The league was having “substantive conversations about the way we can move the league forward,” he said.

Those conversations are still ongoing.

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Meanwhile, it feels like the bounce from Messi’s arrival has worn off, beyond the sold-out stadiums around the nation when Miami and company are in town. Whereas every Messi highlight was on SportsCenter in his first months in MLS, his impact in the 2024 season, no less fantastic on the field, has felt less mainstream. Messi’s jerseys are everywhere, but MLS as a product is far less ubiquitous.

(Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

MLS and Apple have not shared viewership or subscriber numbers. (Apple also does not share numbers for its MLB broadcasts.) It is therefore impossible to know whether Messi’s impact on subscribers has continued to grow, remained stable or fallen. Or whether Messi’s presence in the league has meant an uptick in viewership for games that don’t involve Inter Miami.

That last part is crucial.

This season’s MLS playoffs, now down to eight surviving teams, include four from the two biggest media markets in the country in New York and Los Angeles. Also represented are Atlanta, where MLS arguably resonates the most locally, and Seattle, where it traditionally has mattered in a big way. The final two, Minnesota and Orlando, are the league’s small-market success stories.

In many ways, Messi’s absence aside, this playoff field now sets up exceptionally well for MLS to showcase its product.

But will MLS resonate without Messi? Will people actually tune in to the remainder of the playoffs?

Historically, the answer has been no. At least not in a way that compares to other major American sports leagues. Or even to the very best soccer numbers for Mexico’s Liga MX, the Premier League in England and the Europe-wide UEFA Champions League. MLS has its loyal fanbase, but that level of viewership needs to grow substantially.

The 2024 postseason now will serve as a reminder of what MLS’s reality looks like without Messi. When the viewership data rolls in, will those with access to the numbers behind the scenes truly evaluate what they mean for the league’s future and the best path forward? Will it accelerate change? The league will be behind a paywall on Apple through 2032. MLS has to entice fans not just to watch its product, but to pay to do so. Bringing the world’s most popular player to its league was certainly one way to get them to do that. Figuring out how to keep those fans, and to get more to sign up, has always been the harder task.

Where did Miami go wrong and what does playoff exit mean for Messi and Martino?

“I wouldn’t say that the timing is when Lionel Messi leaves MLS, it’s really about what do we want to be by 2027,” MLS commissioner Don Garber said last year in his state-of-the-league address. “We’re going to have the eyes of the world on us (for the 2026 World Cup, when the majority of games will be played in the U.S. as it co-hosts with Canada and Mexico), and the soccer market here in the United States is going to be exposed to the entire global soccer and football community.“What is the product that we deliver?”The final two weeks of these playoffs — and Messi’s absence from them — is a crucial opportunity to evaluate exactly that.

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. Follow Paul on Twitter @PaulTenorio

Lily Yohannes picks USWNT over Netherlands: What Ajax teen’s decision means for Emma Hayes’ squad

SAINT PAUL, MN - JUNE 4: Lily Yohannes #6 of the United States celebrates her goal during a game between Korea Republic and USWNT at Allianz Field on June 4, 2024 in Saint Paul, Minnesota. (Photo by Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Steph Yang and Callum Davis Nov 11, 2024 The Athletic


Ajax teenager Lily Yohannes has committed to represent the U.S. women’s national team at international level.The 17-year-old midfielder was born in Springfield, Virginia, but moved to the Netherlands with her family in 2017 and was working toward eligibility to possibly represent the country as a Dutch citizen.In a social media post confirming her decision, she wrote: “After much consideration, I have decided to commit to represent my country, the United States.“The U.S. is my homeland, my birthplace, and where my extended family resides.“These strong connections have driven me to honor my roots and proudly commit to U.S. Soccer.”She added: “I want to extend my deepest gratitude to the United States and Dutch Football Federations for their unwavering support and patient guidance as I made my decision regarding my international future.“Their dedication and encouragement have been invaluable, and I extend my heartfelt thanks to both Federations.”Having progressed through the youth ranks at Ajax, Yohannes signed her first professional contract at the age of 15. She scored five goals in 20 appearances in 2023-24 and has netted two goals in six Eredivisie Women’s league games so far this term.In November last year, aged 16, she became the youngest player to start a Women’s Champions League group stage game. In June, she scored in her first appearance for the USWNT after being handed her debut by head coach Emma Hayes in 2-0 friendly win over South Korea.

FIFA rules allow players to switch international allegiance as long as they have played no more than three competitive senior games for a country before the age of 21. A switch was not necessary in Yohannes’ case.

‘Yohannes’ decision comes at the perfect time’

Analysis by Stephanie Yang

Yohannes’ declaration for the USWNT felt a bit like an inevitability after her debut for the United States against South Korea.In that game, Yohannes entered as a substitute in the 72nd minute and scored just 10 minutes later, finding some separation between herself and a defender in the box and picking out a cross that she placed through several players into the net.While friendlies do not cap-tie players, Yohannes did not appear to be a part of the Netherlands’ plans this year, with head coach Andries Jonker saying in late October that he was unable to invite her into camp, presumably due to eligibility reasons.All the same, Hayes kept any discussion of Yohannes close to her chest, saying on an October 17 call, “There has been communication post-Olympics between Lily and us at the Federation, so I’m always optimistic, but I don’t like to pressure anybody in this situation.Now that Yohannes has made her decision, it’s the perfect time for her to make herself available to Hayes, who has been on a tour of the U.S. to observe players at NWSL clubs and most recently gave seven players their first caps in one international window.Hayes has said repeatedly that this is a learning and planning period, allowing as many players as possible to come into a lower-stakes environment and ease them into the roster ahead of the 2027 World Cup.Though Yohannes only has one cap, in that game she was entrusted to deal with a fair amount of pressure in midfield, including defending Korean legend Ji So-yun. She could become an important central attacking midfielder for the U.S. with her vision and ability to play in forwards.Multiple teammates at her club, Ajax, and in the U.S. have complimented her ability to pick out passes and create with the ball, although it’s clear she still needs some seasoning as a pro — normal for any 17-year-old, no matter how mature.She has time now to get that seasoning at the international level; the next set of U.S. friendlies are a good opportunity to call in Yohannes for further evaluation as the U.S. will be traveling abroad to play England and the Netherlands in the November FIFA window. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

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9/27/24 Pulisic Shines @ Milan, Indy 11 home, Champions League is back, CHS plays final home games this weekend,

NEW CHAMPIONS LEAGUE KICKS OFF

Man its cool to have Champions League back – the first round was fantastic – I am going to be honest and say I am not quite sure that I understand how it all works – but it looks like we are going to have better games along the way in what used to be the group stages. Man City and Inter was classic – as was Pulisic scoring the first goal for AC Milan before they fell to Liverpool 3-1. Lots of stories below.

This Week AC Milan and Pulisic face Bayern Leverkusen (German League Champs) on Tuesday at 3 pm on Para + while Dortmund and Reyna face Celtic and Aaron Trusty on CBS SN at 3 pm. Of course the big game of the week is PSG hosting Arsenal at 3 pm on Paramount+. Wed gives us Folarin Balogun and Monaco visiting Zagreb in Champions League 3pm Para+ and Weston McKennie and Juve visit Leipzig in Champions League 3 pm on Para+.

High School Season’s Mostly Wrap-up this Weekend as Regionals Start Oct 7th

The 3rd Ranked Carmel High Girls hosted senior night Wed night – a proud moment as all 9 seniors started playing at Carmel FC as kids. The Girls play their final home game at Murray on Sat at 11 am before traveling to Zionsville for Regionals. The Carmel Boys have moved tonight’s game to Monday night at Murray stadium.

Carmel High Girls Seniors and their parents on Senior Night. All former Carmel FC players.
Carmel Senior GK Mary Grace Knapp with parents. Proud former member of Carmel FCGKU.

Carmel Senior Rosie Martin with former Carmel FC Coach Andy Martin and sister and former CFC & Carmel High player Cici Martin.

INDY 11 Home vs Miami FC Sat 7 pm

Indy Eleven opens a two-match homestand vs. Miami FC on Saturday at Carroll Stadium. The Boys in Blue enter the final six games of the regular season in sixth place in the Eastern Conference with an 11-10-7 record and 40 points.  The top eight teams in the East qualify for the playoffs that begin the first weekend in November, with the top four teams hosting. For information on all ticket options visit the Indy Eleven Ticket Central.  For questions, please email tickets@indyeleven.com or call (317) 685-1100.

My High School Reffing season is about to wrap up — games this weekend and a few next week.

Always special to get to work with the Master Dave Howard (L) along Todd Coulter (R) with at Heritage Christian Thurs

Always fun reffing with Riley Cheatham (F) and newbie Joshua Larsh (B) at Lawrence Central

TV GAME SCHEDULE

Champions League Tues/Wed

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

HomeAwayTime/TVStreamingVenue
team logoStuttgartteam logoSparta Praha12:45 pmParamount+Mercedes-Benz Arena
team logoRB Salzburgteam logoBrest12:45 pmParamount+Red Bull Arena
team logoBorussia Dortmundteam logoCeltic3:00 pmParamount+Signal Iduna Park
team logoBayer Leverkusenteam logoAC Milan3:00 pmParamount+BayArena
team logoArsenalteam logoPSG3:00 pmParamount+Emirates Stadium
team logoInterteam logoRed Star Belgrade3:00 pmParamount+Stadio Giuseppe Meazza
team logoBarcelonateam logoYoung Boys3:00 pmParamount+Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys
team logoPSVteam logoSporting CP3:00 pmParamount+Philips Stadion
team logoSlovan Bratislavateam logoManchester City3:00 pmParamount+Stadion Tehelne pole

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

HomeAwayTime/TVStreamingVenue
team logoShakhtar Donetskteam logoAtalanta12:45 pmParamount+Veltins-Arena
team logoGironateam logoFeyenoord12:45 pmParamount+Estadi Municipal de Montilivi
team logoAston Villateam logoBayern Munich3:00 pmParamount+Villa Park
team logoDinamo Zagrebteam logoMonaco3:00 pmParamount+Stadion Maksimir
team logoLiverpoolteam logoBologna3:00 pmParamount+Anfield
team logoLilleteam logoReal Madrid3:00 pmParamount+Stade Pierre Mauroy
team logoBenficateam logoAtletico Madrid3:00 pmParamount+Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica
team logoSK Sturm Grazteam logoClub Brugge3:00 pmParamount+Merkur Arena
team logoRB Leipzigteam logoJuventus3:00 pmParamount+Red Bull Arena

US Men Champions League & Europa League Mid Week games

Tuesday

  • Leverkusen vs AC Milan, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Christian Pulisic, Yunus Musah, and Milan are on the road against Xabi Alonso’s Leverkusen in the UEFA Champions League.
  • Borussia Dortmund vs Celtic, 3p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV (free trial), ViX: Going into this matchup, it looked like Cameron Carter-Vickers would be healthy and Gio Reyna would be out injured, but things have flipped, with CCV not traveling with Celtic due to an injury, and Reyna making a surprise return for Dortmund.
  • PSV vs Sporting CP, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Malik Tillman, Richy Ledezma, Ricardo Pepi, Michael Bresser, and PSV host Sporting CP in Champions League.

Also in action:

  • Burnley vs Plymouth, 2:45p: Luca Koleosho and Burnley are at home in the Championship.
  • Cardiff vs Millwall, 2:45p: Ethan Horvath has been on the bench for several of Cardiff’s recent games.
  • Coventry vs Blackburn, 2:45p: Haji Wright and Coventry host Blackburn, who include young dual-national fullback Leo Duru, but Duru has only played in cup competitions so far this season.
  • Norwich vs Leeds, 2:45p on Paramount+: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds pay a visit to Josh Sargent and the Canaries in this Championship game.
  • Barnsley vs Wycombe, 2:45p: Gaga Slonina, Donovan Pines, and Barnsley host Wycombe in League One play.
  • West Brom vs Middlesbrough, 3p on Paramount+: Aidan Morris and Boro visit West Brom, where Daryl Dike is recently back in training.

Wednesday

  • Dinamo Zagreb vs Monaco, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Folarin Balogun and Monaco visit Zagreb in Champions League.
  • RB Leipzig vs Juventus, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Weston McKennie and Juve visit Leipzig in Champions League. Tim Weah is doubtful, as he was still training separately on Monday due to an injury.

Also in action:

  • Charlotte FC vs Chicago Fire, 7:30p: Brian Gutiérrez, Chris Brady, and the Fire visit Tim Ream and Charlotte in MLS action.
  • NYCFC vs FC Cincinnati, 7:30p: Miles Robinson, Lucho Acosta, Roman Celentano, and FC Cincy visit Matt Freese, James Sands, and NYC.
  • Toronto FC vs New York Red Bulls, 7:30p: John Tolkin and the Red Bulls visit Toronto.
  • Columbus Crew vs Inter Miami, 7:45p on FS1, FOX Deportes, FuboTV, Sling TV: Benja Cremaschi and Miami visit Patrick Schulte, DeJuan Jones, and thew Crew.
  • Houston Dynamo vs New England Revolution, 8:30p: Noel Buck, Peyton Miller, and the Revs visit the Dynamo in this MLS game.
  • Nashville SC vs DC United, 8:30p: Walker Zimmerman, Shaq Moore, and Nashville host Ted Ku-DiPietro and DC.
  • Colorado Rapids vs LA Galaxy, 9:30p: Jalen Neal and the Galaxy are on the road against Cole Bassett, Djordje Mihailovic, and the Rapids.
  • Real Salt Lake vs Minnesota United, 9:30p: Diego Luna and RSL host Minnesota in more MLS action.

Thursday

  • Legia Warszawa vs Real Betis, 12:45p on Paramount+: Johnny Cardoso and Betis are on the road to kick off Europa Conference League.
  • Rangers vs Lyon, 3p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV, ViX: Tanner Tessmann and Lyon go to Scotland for their second Europa League match this season.

Also in action:

  • Heidenheim vs Olimpija Ljubljana, 12:45p on Paramount+: Lennard Maloney and Heidenheim host Slovenian visitors Olimpija in their Conference League opener.
  • LASK Linz vs Djurgården, 3p on Paramount+: George Bello and LASK are at home to begin their Conference League season.

Friday

  • Augsburg vs Mönchengladbach, 2:30p on ESPN+ (free trial): Joe Scally and Gladbach visit Augsburg to kick off the Bundesliga weekend.
  • Hellas Verona vs Venezia, 2:45p on Paramount+; Gianluca Busio and Venezia visit Verona in Serie A.
  • Sunderland vs Leeds, 3p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds visit Sunderland in the Championship.

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Building blocks

Players look to build on their early season output.

By jcksnftsn  Sep 27, 2024, 10:11am PDT  

Venezia v Genoa - Serie A

There’s a real rollercoaster happening for USMNT fans trying to tack players across Europe to start the season. Some players are off to a hot start – Christian Pulisic continues to put up goals, Weston McKennie is inevitable – while others are already dealing with injury and some appear to already be out of favor. With so much going on we’ll try to give you the rundown of where you might be able to watch this weekend to see players performing:

Gio Reyna will not return this weekend but is progressing well and according to Nuri Sahin he could be available Tuesday for the team’s Champions League matchup against Celtic.

Saturday

Derby County v Norwich City – 7:30a on Paramount+

Josh Sargent started and went 90’ for Norwich City as they defeated Watford 4-1 last weekend. Sargent has played all but one minute across six matches for Norwich to start the season.

Wolfsburg v Stuttgart – 9:30a on ESPN+

Kevin Paredes remains out for Wolfsburg who fell to Bayer Leverkusen last weekend 4-3. Wolfsburg have just one win in their first four matches and currently sit 13th in the Bundesliga table.

Mainz v Heidenheim – 9:30a on ESPN+

Lennard Maloney started and played 71’ last weekend for Heidenheim as they fell to Freiburg 3-0. It was Heidenheim’s second straight loss by at least two goals. This weekend they face a Mainz side coming off a 3-2 win over Augsburg.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Union Berlin – 9:30a on ESPN+

Joe Scally and Borussia Monchengladbach face off against fellow USMNT member Jordan Pefok and Union Berlin this weekend. Scally has played every minute for Gladbach to start the season but the team has just one win and has suffered three defeats to start the season. On the other end of the spectrum, Union Berlin are undefeated to start the season with a pair of wins to go with a pair of draws. Pefok picked up his first goal contribution of the season last weekend with an assist in the 23’ but was removed at the half with Berlin up 2-0.

Everton v Crystal Palace – 10a on Peacock

Chris Richards was back in the starting lineup for Crystal Palace last weekend as the team held Manchester United to a scoreless draw. Richards return to the lineup came one week after he did not make it off the bench. 24 year old Maxence Lacroix has started all three matches since joining Palace and Marc Guehi (also 24 years old) is a locked in starter so it appears that Richards is in a battle with Nathaniel Clyne for playing time as the third centerback. Palace are still looking for their first win of the season and are currently sitting in sixteenth place, three spots ahead of nineteenth place Everton who picked up their first point of the season last weekend with a 1-1 draw with Leicester City.

Nottingham Forest v Fulham – 10a on Peacock

Antonee Robinson and Fulham picked up their second win of the season with a 3-1 victory over Newcastle last weekend. Robinson has played every minute to start the season for Fulham who have lost just once and currently sit in tenth place

Willem II v PSV Eindhoven – 10:30a on ESPN+

Malik Tillman picked up two goals last weekend in PSV’s 3-1 win over Fortuna Sittard while Ricardo Pepi came in for the final ten minutes of the match and Richard Ledezma was not included in the squad due to a minor injury and is expected to be available again this weekend as undefeated PSV take on a Willem II side coming off a 3-2 loss to Utrecht.

Genoa v Juventus – Noon on Paramount+

Weston McKennie has now started two straight matches for Juventus while Tim Weah has come off the bench in the past three since returning from injury. Juventus have played three straight scoreless draws in league competition but they are undefeated on the season and just two points back of the league lead as they have yet to give up a goal this season. They are facing a Genoa side that has just one win and four goals through five matches so this could be another low scoring affair.

Le Havre v Lille – 1p on beIN Sports

Emmanuel Sabbi came off the bench last weekend in Le Havre’s 3-1 loss to Monaco. Sabbi has appeared in three of his teams five matches to start the Ligue One season.

Monaco v Montpellier – 3p on beIN Sports

Folarin Balogun picked up his first goal of the season last weekend in Monaco’s 3-1 win over Le Havre. Monaco are undefeated to start the season and are in a three way tie for the Ligue One lead early in the season.

Sunday

Celta Vigo v Girona – 8a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+

Luca de la Torre continues to be left out of the picture at Celta Vigo with the explanation being given that he continues to deal with injury. However, preseason statements that de la Torre was no longer in the clubs plans leave the situation uncertain and he may need a transfer come January. After a hot start, winning their first two matches, Celta have dropped their past two and four of their last five matches.

Toulouse v Olympique Lyon – 9a on beIN Sports

Mark McKenzie and Tanner Tessmann could square off in France if McKenzie, who missed Toulouse’s most recent match, is able to return from injury. McKenzie had started three straight before he was sidelined. Tessmann did not make it off the bench in last weekend’s 3-2 loss to Marseille but saw 22 minutes midweek in Lyon’s 2-0 win over Olympiacos in UEFA Europa League play. It was Tessmann’s longest appearance of the season to date.

Roma v Venezia – 9a on Paramount+

Gianluca Busio scored his first goal of the season and Venezia recorded their first victor last weekend in a 2-0 win over Genoa. Venezia remain in the relegation zone even with the win and they face a tough Roma side this weekend though the side also picked up their first win of the season 3-0 last weekend over Udinese.

Real Betis v Espanyol – 12:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+

Johnny Cardoso returned midweek to get the start and play a full 90’ as Betis drew Las Palmas 1-1 on Thursday. Betis are in 11th place and will face 14th place Expanyol on Sunday, a side just two points back in the table early in the 2024-25 season.

Strasbourg v Olympique Marseille – 2:45p on beIN Sports

Caleb Wiley has missed two straight matches for Strasbourg, both of which ended in draws. His side remain in tenth place headed into their matchup with a Marseille side that has yet to suffer defeat and are tied with Monaco and PSG for the league lead.

US Men

Achievement Unlocked: Christian Pulisic – Milan Derby Legend USMNT and Real Betis midfielder Johnny Cardoso reportedly linked with a transfer to AC Milan Mauricio Pochettino has a different approach for the mindset of the USMNT USMNT to play home Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal leg in St. Louis USMNT drops to 18th in FIFA world rankings

Champions League Returns For Round 2 Tuesday
Arsenal Set to Face PSG in Champions League Amidst Historic Winning Run, Stat Shows

PSG could be without 6 players against Arsenal
Arsenal vs. PSG: Expert Reveals Expectations for Champions League Clash

Barcelona fans banned for next Champions League away match by UEFA for racist behavior
Barcelona youngster hoping to get minutes on his return to a ‘special ground’
Inter Milan Legend Argues: ‘Good Showing Vs Man City From Inter, But Lagging Behind In Serie A’
Athletic coach Ernesto Valverde: “Roma are very strong, they’re built for Champions League.” Mbappé expected to be fit to face Milan in Champions League despite fresh injury

World

Real Madrid plan 4-4-2 derby tactic with Luka Modric return
Real Madrid given Eduardo Camavinga injury boost ahead of Atletico Madrid battle
Why Arsenal now believe they have an edge over Man City in title race – report
Man City secures ‘significant victory’ in legal battle against Premier League

Reffing

Young Ref Daughter makes Dad Proud Yellow or Red?   You Cost us the Match Ref
Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over

Pulisic Makes History Again 🇮🇹; Is Gio Returning Sooner Than Expected? 🇩🇪PLUS: Brenden Aaronson assist, Weston’s first league start
   
Another week, another milestone for Christian PulisicLast week it was scoring at the San Siro against Liverpool in the Champions League. Now he’s gone and followed that up by becoming the first American to ever score in the Derby della Madonnina, in AC Milan’s 2-1 win over city rivals Inter Milan on Saturday. And what a goal it was. A moment of tenacious, skillful, individual brilliance. Best solo act from Pennsylvania since Taylor Swift.Pulisic started the goal by impressively bodying Henrikh Mkhitaryan off the ball in midfield. Then he accelerated and hit a seam in the Inter defense, slicing his way past three defenders before sliding in for the toe poke past veteran goalkeeper Yann Sommer.The goal was one thing, but the joy and passion shown by CP11 in the immediate aftermath was truly something to behold — confidently shushing the Inter fans before having cups of beer thrown at him, and later joyously celebrating the match-winner with his teammates. We have entered a new age of an all-conquering Pulisic, with the appreciation shown by the club and fans of Milan apparently having unlocked his true greatness, as well as joy for the game.The change in Milan Pulisic compared to Chelsea Pulisic is recognized not just by fans, but by those within the game as well. Puli’s former Chelsea and AC Milan teammate, Olivier Giroud, spoke to CBS about what has changed for the USMNT star, and why he is hitting such heights at the San Siro.“I think he’s got more trust in his game. More confidence,” said Giroud. “He plays with more freedom. He’s playing every single game. He’s a very important player for Milan, at Chelsea he was in competition with so many wingers.”A smiling Pulisic also hit the interview circuit himself recently, doing a quick-fire sitdown with Goal in which he talked about: the player he wanted to be growing up (Luis Figo), the best player he’s ever played with (N’golo Kante), and the best player in the world right now (Lionel Messi).But the ultimate reward of a great goal — and moment — like this in a massive derby? Diretta Stadio bringing the hilariously awe-inspiring “Puli! Puli! Sic! Sic!” chants back to the studio show. May these days of Ameri-calcio Wonder never end.Americans Scoring From the South of France to Sittard:Pulisic wasn’t the only Gen Zeagle doing great things in Europe. Or even Italy, for that matter.Gianluca Busio scored the match-winner in Venezia’s 2-0 win over Genoa, which came just after he also won a penalty (which was saved) for the home side. Busio received a hefty 8.5 Fotmob rating for his efforts, all of this in his 100th appearance for the Canal Boys.Folarin Balogun is back in the goals. The USMNT forward scored his first of the season for Monaco in the French League side’s 3-1 win over Le Havre on Sunday. With the victory, Monaco are undefeated (4W 1D 0L) and level on points with PSG and Marseille for first place in Ligue 1. Fellow USMNT forward Emmanuel Sabbi was a 79th minute substitute for the visitors.Malik Tillman had a brace in PSV’s 3-1 win at Fortuna Sittard on Sunday, including a free kick that was so sweet it had the away fas singing his name afterwards, with one of the genuinely great player chants we’ve heard in a while. Afterwards, Tillman admitted it was his first free kick, with “hopefully more to come.” (Ricardo Pepi was an 80th minute substitute in the win, while Richy Ledezma missed the game entirely, though latest reports are that he’s suffering from a slight bruise, and should be available for the Eindhoven side this coming weekend.)Men in Blazers@MenInBlazersPITCHSIDE VIEW OF MALIK TILLMAN FREEKICK showcasing the perfect strike from 22-year-old.One of the two goals scored by the USMNT attacker on Sunday that left PSV fans singing his name at final whistle  7:08 PM • Sep 24, 2024  78 Likes   3 Retweets  0 RepliesNews and Notes:Good news out of Dortmund, as manager Nuri Sahin said that Gio Reyna could return by early October. “[Reyna] is on the right track. He might be able to play before the international break.” 💪Brenden Aaronson had the assist on Leeds’ second goal via a lovely through ball (watch here), in the Yorkshire side’s 2-0 win at Cardiff on Saturday. After being named Player of the Month for August, Medford Messi now has two goals and one assist in six games for Leeds. 🤍Last Fulhamerican Standing Antonee Robinson may not be long for the Cottage, as latest reports have Liverpool joining Manchester United in the quest to sign the USMNT left back during the January window.Weston McKennie got his first Serie A start of the season in Juventus’ scoreless draw with Napoli. Tim Weah subbed on at halftime for the Bianconeri. Jordan Pefok had an assist in Union Berlin’s 2-1 win over Pellegrino Matarazzo and TSG Hoffenheim. It was the 28-year-old’s first goal contribution of the season. Marlon Fossey was back in action at right wingback for Standard Liege in the Belgian side’s scoreless draw with Union St.Gilloise on Friday. The 26-year-old USMNT right back recently spoke to our own Herculez Gomez on VAMOS about his appreciation for the sport of football. “If there’s one thing these injuries have taught me over the years, it’s to be grateful to just train every day.” (Listen to the full interview here.)Excellent Americans Abroad goal out of Argentina, as Alan Sonora (26; Buenos Aires) hit the sideways volley match-winner in Huracan’s 3-0 win over Lanus.Bob Bradley has been fired by Stabaek with seven games left in the season in Norway’s second division. The club released a statement that seemed genuinely grateful for the work Bradley has put in over his two stints with the team. “Bob will forever be a special part of the club’s history — a wise football head with enormous work capacity and great commitment.” ❤️Parting Shots:Great report out of the Netherlands, as FOX Soccer’s Doug McIntyre had the chance to speak with Sergiño Dest about the PSV right back opening a mini pitch in the neighborhood in which he grew up in Almere, a small city outside of Amsterdam. In the article, Dest talks about the importance of small-field soccer in developing ball control and dribbling. “[The pitch is] small, so you can go alone or with a couple friends, and you learn how to not just punch the ball forward and run. You have to control it in tight spaces. You can run a little bit, but you need to find other solutions to beat your opponent.” Dest hopes to open one in the U.S. ahead of the 2026 World Cup, hopefully helping to create next-gen skill merchants back here on home soil as well.

NWSL

Even GOATs understand the struggle.Weekend matchups could shift the standingsGotham's Tierna Davidson dribbles past KC's Temwa Chawinga
Gotham faces Golden Boot leader Temwa Chawinga’s Current on Saturday. (Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)With five regular-season NWSL matchdays left, every point counts as teams jockey for postseason seeding, with this weekend’s lineup potentially shifting the standings.After Spirit star Trinity Rodman exited last week’s match with a back spasm, the forecast for Friday’s tilt between 10th-place Angel City and second-place Washington went from fairly uneventful to fairly uncertain.If Rodman’s deemed unfit to play, ACFC could capitalize on the striker’s absence in an effort to snatch up the three points needed to catapult them over the postseason cutoff line.On Saturday, an early afternoon battle pits third-place Gotham against fourth-place Kansas City, with a second-place spot possibly on the line.And while North Carolina’s fifth-place positioning is all but guaranteed, their Saturday evening match with sixth-place Chicago will see the Red Stars looking to enhance their own playoff security.Golden Boot bigs headline MVP buzzOrlando's Barbra Banda kicks the ballOrlando’s Barbra Banda could claim this season’s MVP award. (Erin Chang/ISI Photos/Getty Images)Awards races are heating up going into the NWSL’s final stretch, with 2024 Golden Boot race frontrunners Temwa Chawinga and Barbra Banda leading the charge for MVP.With 16 goals, Chawinga’s on pace to lap ex-Red Star Sam Kerr’s 2019 single-season scoring record of 18.With 13 goals of her own, Banda tied Orlando teammate Marta’s 2017 franchise best, while her six game-winners put her on par with the NWSL’s single-season record.Even considering Portland’s struggles, Sophia Smith’s 11 goals and six assists on the season can’t be discounted. Despite her season-ending injury, Washington’s Croix Bethune still seems like a lock for Rookie of the Year with five goals and a league record-tying 10 assists.Meanwhile, Pride keeper Anna Moorhouse and her single-season record 12 shutouts leads the Goalkeeper of the Year campaign.West Coast clubs top NWSL valuationsAngel City's Sydney Leroux and Meggie Dougherty Howard celebrate a goal against the Chicago Red Stars
New valuations show California franchise Angel City FC ahead of the pack. (Harry How/Getty Images)On Wednesday, Sportico dropped their latest NWSL valuations, indicating that the league’s recent Westward expansion is paying off in droves.Despite their short tenures, all three California teams landed in the list’s top four.Led by Angel City’s $250 million valuation, San Diego clocks in third at $132 million, with 2024 newcomer Bay FC debuting at $121 million.Breaking the trend is Kansas City, up 141% over last year with a $182 million valuation alongside a 259% jump in revenue growth.Averaging $104 million per team, the league’s 14 clubs are now worth a combined $1.46 billion, representing a 57% increase over last year.

Marc-Andre ter Stegen is out for the season – so what’s Barcelona’s plan?

VILLARREAL, SPAIN - SEPTEMBER 22: Marc-Andre ter Stegen of FC Barcelona warms up during the Spanish league, La Liga EA Sports, football match played between Villarreal CF and FC Barcelona at La Ceramica stadium on September 22, 2024, in Valencia, Spain. (Photo By Ivan Terron/Europa Press via Getty Images)

By Pol Ballús and Laia Cervelló Herrero

Sep 23, 2024

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Barcelona will be without their captain and goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen for the rest of the season after the German suffered a serious knee ligament injury in Sunday’s 5-1 victory at Villarreal.

The Catalan club didn’t include an expected date for his recovery when announcing that he underwent surgery on Monday, but one expert consulted for this article puts the timeframe at between eight to 10 months and that view is reflected by club sources.

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Losing Ter Stegen is a huge blow for Hansi Flick’s Barca, who have started the new La Liga season in impressive form with six victories from six games.

Here, our Barcelona correspondents Pol Ballús and Laia Cervelló Herrero answer some of the key questions around his injury — and detail the club’s current plan to replace him.

How bad is Ter Stegen’s injury?

Ter Stegen, 32, ruptured a patellar tendon in his right knee against Villarreal on Sunday. On Monday, Barca confirmed he had undergone a successful operation on the area.

Lluis Puig, head of the physiotherapy department at Barcelona’s Hospital de l’Esperit Sant, says the surgery will likely have involved reconstruction of the tendon — a process that would rule him out for the rest of 2024-25.

Barca and Villarreal players react to Ter Stegen’s injury (Eric Alonso/Getty Images)

“When this tendon is completely ruptured, it is reconstructed,” Puig says. “The recovery means that for the first two months you have to be very careful when it comes to gaining mobility, so as not to put too much tension on the area so that it heals well.

“As this fixation becomes more solid, you can gain more mobility. It is a slow recovery, which will require a very painstaking process — even more so for a goalkeeper who has to jump, dive and do intensive work which puts the area in jeopardy. The recovery will easily be between eight and 10 months.”

Barca sources — who, like all those cited here, preferred to speak anonymously as they did not have permission to comment — reflected a similar timescale, saying they expected Ter Stegen to be out for at least eight months.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Barcelona briefing: Ter Stegen’s injury overshadows Villarreal rout

Ter Stegen has had problems with his right knee before, having previously suffered from tendonitis. Twice he had operations to help with this. In August 2020, he underwent surgery because he had been in pain throughout the season. He returned in November.

In May 2021, he underwent what Barca described as “a therapeutic procedure on the patellar tendon in his right knee” and was back by August.

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Now he has suffered a far more serious injury.

Who will replace him?

As happened last season when the German was ruled out with a back injury, his immediate replacement will be Inaki Pena.

The 25-year-old was born in Alicante and joined Barcelona’s youth ranks at the age of 13. He progressed through all levels until, in January 2022, he left on a six-month loan to Galatasaray. The deal was very successful and it included an impressive Europa League performance against his parent club.

Pena also covered for Ter Stegen last season (Jose Miguel Fernandez/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

That helped convince Barca to offer him a new contract — a deal until 2026. That extension meant Barcelona allowed another great La Masia prospect, Arnau Tenas, to leave in the summer of 2023. Tenas ended up joining Paris Saint-Germain.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Inaki Pena: Who is the Barca goalkeeper stepping up in Ter Stegen’s absence?

Sources who worked with Pena at La Masia describe him as a goalkeeper with a very similar style to Ter Stegen  — a player comfortable passing the ball out from the back and with a calm personality.

He will now have another chance to prove he has what it takes.

How did Barca do without Ter Stegen last year?

Ter Stegen has been a key player for Barca for years. He was arguably the biggest contributor to their 2023-23 La Liga title and this summer, following the departure of Sergi Roberto, he became club captain.

Last term, the German was out for three months with lower back problems that required surgery and Pena took his place. In total he played 17 games — 10 in La Liga, three in the Copa del Rey, two in the Champions League and two in the Supercopa de Espana — and conceded 32 goals, keeping three clean sheets.

There had been real worry among fans over Ter Stegen’s absence, but concerns quickly settled down and in the dressing room Barca’s players started to call Pena ‘the German’ after he came in. This was after positive early performances against Porto in the Champions League and Atletico Madrid in La Liga in November.

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But Pena’s time in the team coincided with Barca’s toughest spell of the season — one that included heavy home defeats by Girona and Villarreal. The latter sparked Xavi’s decision to announce he would step down at the end of the campaign (a decision he would eventually reverse, before being sacked).

Who are the other options?

Perhaps the most interesting profile is that of United States youth international Diego Kochen.

The 18-year-old, Miami-born goalkeeper was called up for the senior U.S. national team for the first time last month, but he is yet to play at that level. He joined Barca in 2019 and signed a professional contract with the club in 2022. La Masia sources describe him as a very bright prospect — and say he is the academy goalkeeper most likely to progress into a first-team option.

There is a but, however. Kochen suffered a hamstring injury last week, which was expected to keep him out for about a month.

The opportunity afforded by Ter Stegen’s long-term absence might come just a bit too soon for Kochen, who only made his debut with Barca’s reserve side (Barcelona Atletic, who play in Spain’s third tier) last season.

Diego Kochen made the Barcelona bench for their match at Athletic Bilbao in March (Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

This term, the club’s plan was for the young American to stay with Barca Atletic so he can experience more playing time with them. Ter Stegen’s injury means we will have to keep an eye on whether that plan now changes.

With Kochen out of action for now, the back-up to Pena will be Ander Astralaga, at least initially. The 20-year-old joined Barca from Athletic Bilbao in 2018 and has played for Spain at under-18 and under-19 level. Last season he made 19 appearances for Barca Atletic. He has already been a part of first-team squads over the past year and will have a bigger role now.

We should also mention Hungarian 18-year-old Aron Yaakobishvili, known as ‘Yako’ at Barca. He was expected to be the team’s under-19 goalkeeper this season, with the plan for him to play in the UEFA Youth League, as well as offering support with Barca Atletic whenever needed. Now he might see his status upgraded and play on a more regular basis with the second team.

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Could Barca sign someone else?

If Barca want to add a new goalkeeper before the January transfer window, it will have to be a free agent.

Back in February 2020, Barca were able to make an ’emergency’ signing outside the transfer window, bringing in Danish striker Martin Braithwaite from Leganes after meeting his €18million buyout clause. But La Liga rules no longer allow such ’emergency’ moves to be made.

Goalkeepers available on a free right now include 37-year-old ex-Real Madrid goalkeeper Keylor Navas, former Liverpool stopper Loris Karius, Spaniard Sergio Rico (who has not played since his life-threatening accident), Norwegian Kristoffer Klaesson (who made a handful of Premier League appearances for Leeds) and La Masia product Jordi Masip (now 35, he last played for Real Valladolid).

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Sergio Rico was trampled by a horse. This is the incredible story of how he cheated death

Barca senior executives will hold a meeting to discuss how to react to Ter Stegen’s injury. The current expectation is for them not to go after a new player now, but the situation will be reassessed before the next transfer window in January.

Barcelona have struggled to register new signings because of La Liga’s rules on salary spending, but the competition body’s rules do allow clubs to temporarily register replacements for injured players. Barca have already taken advantage of this twice this season — with Dani Olmo and Inigo Martinez (following injuries to Ronald Araujo and Andreas Christensen).

If Barca were to again find themselves struggling to register Olmo and Martinez in January (when they have to be registered again), they could theoretically seek to apply this same rule following Ter Stegen’s injury. However, club sources say they still plan to stabilise the financial situation by then, suggesting that a possible way to do this will come via a re-negotiated sponsorship deal with Nike.

(Top photo: Ivan Terron/Europa Press via Getty Images)

Gianni Infantino promises to announce FIFA Club World Cup venues by end of September

By Adam CraftonSep 20, 2024


FIFA president Gianni Infantino promised global broadcasters in a video call on Friday that venues in the United States for the FIFA Club World Cup next June and July will be announced by the end of September, increasing the pressure on his organisation to finalise negotiations with stadiums and cities across the country within 10 days.The Athletic revealed on Thursday that Infantino had called the emergency briefing with broadcasters as he sought to persuade them of the merits of the tournament, with football’s world governing body FIFA seeking billions in TV revenue to fund participation and prize money for competing clubs. Broadcasters have, however, so far been reluctant to get anywhere near FIFA’s demands for the tournament.

A global streaming deal with Apple was originally reported by The New York Times to be close but that did not materialise. FIFA then launched a media rights tender in July for both the 2025 and 2029 editions of the tournament in the hope it would raise interest and competition.

The 32-team tournament will take place in the U.S. next summer but venues, training bases, sponsors and broadcasters are yet to be announced. Clubs are also increasingly impatient to learn how much they can expect to receive from the competition, with Europe’s largest sides budgeting for UEFA Champions League-style returns from competing in FIFA’s revamped tournament. It is not known at this stage where the 2029 competition will take place.

The majority of the venues next year will be on the east coast of the U.S., with the west coast largely blocked off for the CONCACAF Gold Cup which is happening also between June and July next summer.

The Athletic has previously reported that MLS side Seattle Sounders are expected to play at least one Club World Cup game at Lumen Field, a 68,000-seater stadium that is home to NFL team Seattle Seahawks, the Sounders and Seattle Reign of the NWSL, but this is expected to be the only west coast venue.We have also previously reported that a mix of NFL and MLS venues across New York, Miami, Atlanta, Chicago, Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Nashville and Cincinnati have been under consideration.

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Certainty over the venues will provide some comfort to broadcasters amid a spate of concerns that have plagued the organisation of the tournament, but it remains to be seen whether the TV networks will show the same enthusiasm for the competition as Infantino.He was joined on the call by Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi, who is also the chair of the European Clubs’ Association, while executives from Manchester City, Atletico Madrid, Juventus, Porto, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund and Red Bull Salzburg also showed support.FIFA declined to comment but confirmed it expects to announce venues within weeks and that further announcements are hoped for ahead of the draw, which will take place in December.

5/24/24 USMNT camp roster, Italy/Spain Final weekend, Indy 11 home Sat advances in US Open Cup, Full TV Game Schedule

Indy 11 Advance in US Open Cup, Host Phoenix Sat @ Home

Indy Eleven is on to the Quarterfinals of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup for the first time in club history after a 3-0 defeat of USL Championship rival Detroit City FC on Wednesday night at Carroll Stadium they will travel to face Atlanta United July 9 or 10. The 11 return home this Sat at 7 pm @ the Mike vs Phoenix for Racing Indy Night. *Eleventh Anniversary Ticket Special Available While Supplies Last – Tickets Start At $5.25 (Offer valid online only.) or watch on CBS Sports Galazo Network.

Roster Set for US Men’s Friendlies

 U.S. Soccer announced the 27-man roster for the United States Men’s National Team ahead of two friendlies to prepare for Copa América. The team will report to Washington, DC on May 28th. The roster will come together for friendlies against Colombia on June 8th in the DC area and on June 12th against Brazil in Orlando. For the most part, it will be the pool that USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter selects the final roster for Copa América, which is due June 15th. The final Copa América roster must be a minimum of 23 players but can have up to 26 players.

GOALKEEPERS (3): Ethan Horvath (Cardiff City), Sean Johnson (Toronto FC), Matt Turner (Nottingham Forest)

DEFENDERS (9): Cameron Carter-Vickers (Celtic FC), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Genk), Shaq Moore (Nashville SC), Tim Ream (Fulham FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Antonee Robinson (Fulham FC), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach)

MIDFIELDERS (8): Tyler Adams (Bournemouth), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Gio Reyna (Nottingham Forest), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven), Timmy Tillman (LAFC)

FORWARDS (7): Brenden Aaronson (Union Berlin), Folarin Balogun (Monaco), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Josh Sargent (Norwich City), Tim Weah (Juventus), Haji Wright (Coventry City)

Roster for US Women’s  Friendlies

The United States Women’s National Team has a roster for Emma Hayes’ first matches in charge. Today, U.S. Soccer announced the 23-player roster for two friendlies against South Korea on June 1st in Colorado and June 4th in Minnesota.

GOALKEEPERS (3): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash), Aubrey Kingsbury (Washington Spirit), Casey Murphy (North Carolina Courage)

DEFENDERS (7): Tierna Davidson (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC), Casey Krueger (Washington Spirit), Jenna Nighswonger (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Emily Sonnett (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Sam Staab (Chicago Red Stars)

MIDFIELDERS (6): Korbin Albert (Paris Saint-Germain), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC), Hal Hershfelt (Washington Spirit), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon), Rose Lavelle (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Lily Yohannes (Ajax)

FORWARDS (7): Crystal Dunn (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Catarina Macario (Chelsea FC), Alex Morgan (San Diego Wave FC), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC), Sophia Smith (Portland Thorns FC), Mallory Swanson (Chicago Red Stars)

TRAINING ROSTER (3): Croix Bethune (Washington Spirit), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns), Kate Wiesner (Washington Spirit)

Congrats to Bill Spencer’s Carmel FC U12 Gold Girls on their way to Challenge Cup Finals Weekend
Congrats to the 2009 Girls Blue Team headed to Challenge Cup Finals See More https://carmelfc.teamapp.com/articles?_list=v1

2024/2025 Tryout and Evaluation Information
Carmel FC will be hosting tryouts for new and existing players on the following dates:

  • Tuesday, June 4th @ Badger Soccer Complex (46033) @ 5:00PM – 7:00PM → Age groups: 8U, 9U & 10U (2018/2017, 2016, 2015)
  • Monday, June 10th @ Badger Soccer Complex (46033) @ 5:00PM – 7:00PM → Age groups: 11U and above (2014+)

For registration: https://system.gotsport.com/programs/1360T6715?reg_role=player

Games on TV 

Fri 5/24

8 pm Amazon Prime                  Bay FC vs NY/NJ Gothem (Williams, Mewis) NWSL

Sat, May 25

10 am ESPN+              FA Cup Final Man City vs Man United

12 para+                     Juventus (Mckinney, Weah) vs Monza

2 pm ESPNU                       Kaiserslautern vs Bayer Leverkusen  German Cup

2:45 pm Para+                   AC Milan (Pulisic, Musah) vs Salernitana

3 pm ESPN Des, ESPN+  Real Madrid vs Real Betis

7 pm CBS Galazo        Indy 11 vs Phoenix Rising @ the Mike

8:30 pm ESPN+            Memphis 901 vs Pittsburgh (Eric Dick GK)

10 pm Ion                    Utah Royals vs KC Current NWSL

Sun, May 26                       Final Day Spain/Italy

9 am ESPN+                        Getafe vs Mallorca

12  Para+                              Atalanta vs Torino  

12 CBSSN                             Napoli vs Lecce

3  pm ESPN Des, +            Sevilla vs Barcelona

1 pm CBS                             Houston Dash (Campbell) vs KC Current NWSL

Wed,  5/29

730 pm CBS Galazo          Louisville City vs Detriot City  USL

10:45 pm FS1                      LAFC vs Minn United     

Sat, June 1                           

3 pm CBS                    Champ League Final Real Madrid vs Dortmund

5 pm TBS                              US Women vs Korea

7 pm ESPN+                Pittsburgh (Eric Dick) vs Indy 11

10 pm ESPN+               Sacramento vs Tampa Bay Rowdies (Jordan Farr GK)

Sat, June 1                           

3 pm CBS                    Champ League Final Real Madrid vs Dortmund

5 pm TBS                              US Women vs Korea

Tues, June 4

8 pm Tru TV, Max, PC     US Women vs Korea

Sat, June 8

5:30 pm TNT, Tele            US Men vs Colombia

Tues, June 11

8 pm ???                              US Men U23 Olympic Team vs Japan

Wed, June 12

7 pm TNT, Tele US Men vs Brazil  

Fri, June 14                 Euro 2024 Begins

3 pm Fox                              Germany vs Scotland

Sat, June 15

9 am                                      Hungary vs Switzerland

12 pm Fox                           Spain vs Croatia

3 pm Fox                              Italy vs Alabania

Sun, June 16

9 am  FS1                             Poland vs Netherlands

12 noon FS1                        Slovenia vs Denmark

3 pm Fox                              Serbia vs England

Thur, June 20                     COPA America Starts

8 pm Fox                              Argentina vs Canada COPA

Sat, June 22

6 pm Fox                              Ecuador vs Venezuela

9 pm Fox                              Mexico vs Jamaica COPA

Sun, June 23

6 pm Fox, Univision   USMNT vs Bolivia  COPA America

9 pm FS1                              Uruguay vs Panama COPA

Thur, June 27

6 pm Fox                     USMNT vs Panama COPA

Mon, July 1

9 pm Fox, Univision   USMNT vs Uraguay

Sat July 13                          

3 pm TNT, Tele                  US Women vs Mexico

Tues,  July 16                    

7:30 pm TNT, Universo  US Women vs Costa Rica

July 24 starts US U23 Men & US Women In Olympics

(American’s in Parenthesis)

How to Watch Indy Eleven USL Championship Action

Copa America TV Schedule

Euro 2024 TV schedule

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(Photo: Brad Smith/Getty Images for USSF)

Heading over to the Badger Field for Training or Games?  Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ

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US Men

Sargent returns for USMNT’s pre-Copa tuneups Jeff Kassouf

Berhalter names 27 players for USMNT pre Copa Training camp

Jesse Marsch named Canada Men’s National Team head coach
Marsch: Wasn’t treated well in USMNT coach hunt
ESPN

US Women

USWNT coach Emma Hayes arrives in America with her work cut out ahead of Paris Olympics
Emma Hayes aims to replicate her Chelsea success with U.S. women’s soccer

What USWNT fans can learn from Hayes’ final season at Chelsea

Exclusive with USWNT coach Emma Hayes: ‘I’m ready for the adventure of a lifetime’ David Hirshey & Roger Director, special to ESPN

Who is the best young player in the NWSL? Ranking every player 19 and younger Jeff Kassouf

US Woman’s Soccer Coach is literally Pepe Guardiola & Carlo Ancelotti combined trophy wise

Indy 11

2024 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Quarterfinals to Stream on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV

Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Recap – IND 3:0 DET

Stanley Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

USL W League Recap – IND 10:0 STC

USL W League Recap – IND 3:3 KHR

USL W League Recap LOU 1:3 IND

World

Leverkusen completes historic unbeaten season
Beaten Leverkusen hope to ‘find themselves’ in German Cup final

Three La Liga talking points ahead of final weekend

Pink slip: Copa coaches get 6th sub for concussion

EPL

How important is FA Cup final for Ten Hag’s future?
FA Cup final preview: Man City v. Man United

Pochettino’s Chelsea exit sealed over ‘last supper’

Why Pochettino left Chelsea, and what it reveals about the club
Source: Bayern close to Kompany agreement
Rob Dawson
Why do Bayern Munich want Vincent Kompany? The relegated manager might make more sense than you think

Goalkeeping

A little rain means its diving practice – last week’s next to last workout with some of the Carmel FC Older Group.

Great Saves MLS

The Effort Every Goalkeeper would like in front of him

Reffing

PK Hits the Post – You Make the Call

Yellow / Red or nothing – You Make the Call
Lucas Paqueta: West Ham midfielder charged over four allegations he got deliberate yellow cards

Good Luck to Matt Antisdel as he moves on to Arizona – we’ll miss you Matt !

Boys in Blue move on to U.S. Open Cup Quarterfinals against Atlanta United

INDIANAPOLIS (Wednesday, May 22, 2024) – Indy Eleven is on to the Quarterfinals of the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup for the first time in club history after a 3-0 defeat of USL Championship rival Detroit City FC on Wednesday night at Carroll Stadium.Indy Eleven opened the scoring by way of a Detroit City own goal off a Benjamin Ofeimu cross from the right side. The Boys in Blue have scored their first goal in the 14th minute or earlier in each of their three U.S. Open Cup matches this season (CHI 4’, SA 2’).
The home team would tack on two more in the first half with Douglas Martinez finding Augi Williams (33’) for the tally and Aedan Stanley connecting on a corner to Ofeimu (36’). Williams now has a pair of Open Cup goals for Indy this season, while Stanley has a team-best two assists.
Indy Eleven continues the streak and is unbeaten in its last eight matches, dating back to the Third Round win over Chicago Fire FC II on April 17. The Boys in Blue also become the second Indiana club in the history of the tournament to reach the Quarterfinals (Indianapolis Inferno 1992). 
The Boys in Blue will play out of the East Division in the Quarterfinals on the road against Atlanta United (MLS) July 9 or 10.

2024
Third Round | April 17, 2024 | Chicago Fire FC II (MLS NEXT Pro) 0:1 Indy Eleven (USLC)
Round of 32 | May 8, 2024 | Indy Eleven 2:0 San Antonio FC (USLC)
Round of 16 | May 22, 2024 | Indy Eleven (USLC) 3:0 Detroit City FC (USLC)

Remaining U.S. Open Cup Schedule         
Quarterfinal | Tuesday, July 9 – Wednesday, July 10                  
Semifinal | Tuesday, Aug. 27 – Wednesday, Aug. 28             
Final | Wednesday, Sept. 25

Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup | Round of 32
Indy Eleven 
3:0 Detroit City FC
Wednesday, May 
22, 2024 – 7 p.m. ET
Carroll Stadium | Indianapolis

Scoring Summary 
IND – Own Goal 14’
IND – Augi Williams (Douglas Martinez) 33’
IND – Ben Ofeimu (Aedan Stanley) 36’

Discipline Summary 
IND – Ben Ofeimu (caution) 7’
DET – Devon Amoo-Mensah (caution) 61’
IND – Jack Blake (caution) 65’
IND – Max Schneider (caution) 90+1’

Ian Darke’s Premier League team-by-team season grades

  • Ian Darke, ESPN.com writerMay 21, 2024, 01:00 PM ET

Manchester City and manager Pep Guardiola are insatiable. Six out of the last seven Premier League titles, including an unprecedented four in succession, and you know that by August, they will be hungry for more. How does Pep do it? Not even he can explain it.But City did not have things all their own way in what was a thrilling season featuring a record number of goals. So how did your team rate? Here are my end-of-season grades.


MANCHESTER CITY

First place, 91 points

Manchester City can lay claim to being the greatest Premier League team ever after winning four in a row.

EDITOR’S PICKS

Erling Haaland won the Golden Boot again despite missing two months with injury, Phil Foden was Footballer of the Year, and Rodri has gone 50 league matches unbeaten. But the clincher in City’s faultless final stretch was the return to fitness of pass-master Kevin De Bruyne.

City are in line for more history on Saturday if they defeat Manchester United and complete a league and FA Cup double. However, the 115 financial charges issued to the club by the Premier League in February 2023 remain as the elephant in the room. GRADE: A

ARSENAL

Second place, 89 points

A magnificent effort to total 89 points — their best since Arsene Wenger’s “Invincibles” 20 years ago. Declan Rice‘s signing from West Ham United was inspired, and Kai Havertz silenced his doubters. However, not even a run of six straight wins at the end of the season was quite enough. GRADE: A-

LIVERPOOL

Third place, 82 points

The bombshell news on Jan. 26 that Jurgen Klopp would be leaving at the end of the season came with Liverpool five points clear at the top of the table. But while winning the League Cup and always looking dangerous in attack, the Reds’ defending was often less convincing. Despite an initial boost in form following Klopp’s announcement, Liverpool seemed to run out of stream in costly defeats by Crystal Palace and Everton. GRADE: B+

How Slot can use Ten Hag’s struggles to adapt to the Premier League

Mario Melchiot shares his advice for Arne Slot ahead of his first season in the Premier League as Liverpool manager.

ASTON VILLA

Fourth place, 68 points

Aston Villa will be deliriously happy at a top-four finish and a place in next season’s UEFA Champions League. Unai Emery’s team was lethal at times at Villa Park, with Ollie Watkins developing into an elite striker with 19 goals and 13 assists. The Villans were less convincing on the road, however, and the 6-2 aggregate loss to Olympiacos in the Europa Conference League semifinals was a reality check. GRADE: A-

TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

Fifth place, 66 points

Fifth place in a first year without Harry Kane, the team’s talisman who left for Bayern Munich, was no calamity, but disappointing in the context of their early-season charge to the top with 26 points from the first 10 games. Manager Ange Postecoglou’s adventurous and attractive style of play made him an instant hit with supporters, but the apparent absence of a Plan B means the honeymoon is probably over. GRADE: B-

CHELSEA

Sixth place, 63 points

Assessing Man United’s worst-ever Premier League finish

The ESPN FC Live team grade a Premier League season to forget for Manchester United, who finish way outside a Champions League spot in eighth.

Mauricio Pochettino’s departure by “mutual consent” comes as a big surprise after the club’s excellent finish to the season. It looked like he had found a winning blend after months of erratic form, but his exit — apparently amicable — suggests either he and owner Todd Boehly see the future rather differently. Or Pochettino has other plans. GRADE: B-

NEWCASTLE UNITED

Seventh place, 60 points

Eddie Howe’s side finished strongly to claim seventh place, but they need Man City to win the FA Cup on Saturday in order to clinch a European place. A long injury list and a less-than-watertight defence away from home meant the Magpies could never hit last season’s heights despite 21 goals from Alexander Isak, third-top scorer in the league. GRADE: C+

MANCHESTER UNITED

Eighth place, 60 points

It was Manchester United’s worst finish of the Premier League era, and as a result, the Red Devils will need to beat Man City in the FA Cup Final to salvage a berth in continental competition next season. Injuries in defence certainly played a role in the team’s lackluster performances, but United lacked shape or identity with opponents storming through a vacant midfield. Head coach Erik ten Hag will do well to survive the winds of change sent blowing through Old Trafford by new minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe. GRADE: F

Pickford: Everton kept fighting as a team after the points deductions

Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford explains how his team kept a positive attitude even after getting hit with a points deduction from the Premier League.

WEST HAM UNITED

Ninth place, 52 points

Eye-catching wins as at Arsenal and Spurs coupled with fearful beatings in four other London derbies meant this was a topsy-turvy season for West Ham. Manager David Moyes leaves memories of some great European nights and lofty finishes in the league. But despite the menace of Mohammed Kudus, Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta, the Hammers’ form was patchy, with no clean sheets since Jan. 2. GRADE: C+

CRYSTAL PALACE

10th place, 49 points

New boss Oliver Glasner inspired an electric finish to the season, guiding Palace to six wins in their final seven games to sneak into the top half of the table. The Eagles were a different side after gifted duo Eberechi Eze and Michael Olise finally got fit and firing, while Jean-Philippe Mateta was a revelation with 16 goals. Can they keep these stars together at Selhurst Park for another go next season? Given the interest from bigger clubs, it will be a challenge. GRADE: B+

BRIGHTON & HOVE ALBION

11th place, 48 points

Roberto De Zerbi’s reign ended with one win in his final 10 games. Injuries did not help, but there is no hiding from the fact that a talented team regressed this season — having finished sixth in 2022-23 — and the restless De Zerbi tinkered too much with his starting XI, which ultimately cost them. GRADE: C-

AFC BOURNEMOUTH

12th place, 48 points

A triumph for Spanish tactician Andoni Iraola in his debut season, especially after a poor start that had observers wondering if the Cherries had made a mistake bringing him in to replace Gary O’Neil. Pleasing football, 48 points, a comfortable midtable finish and 19 goals for Dominic SolankeGRADE: B+

FULHAM

13th place, 47 points

You feared for them after losing top scorer Aleksandar Mitrovic to the Saudi Pro League but, despite fading into 13th place, Marco Silva’s team was never in trouble. The emergence of Rodrigo Muniz to fill the boots of Mitrovic was important. Some top displays included a 2-1 win at Arsenal.

Overall, there will be no complaints at Craven Cottage. GRADE: B

WOLVERHAMPTON WANDERERS

14th place, 46 points

One of the few teams to beat Manchester City, Wolves might have finished higher in the table if the speedy Pedro Neto played more often alongside Hwang Hee-Chan and Matheus Cunha. Manager Gary O’Neil kept them well clear of the relegation zone, but one win from the last nine games rather spoiled the upbeat mood. GRADE: C+

EVERTON

15th place, 40 points

Three home wins in a week — including a terrific display in the Merseyside derby — clinched the Toffees’ survival in the Premier League. That was quite an achievement for Everton boss Sean Dyche in the face of a points deduction after an independent commission found the club had breached Profit and Sustainability Rules, a dearth of goals, and ongoing doubts about Everton’s alleged takeover. The blue half of Liverpool desperately needs some calmer times. GRADE: B-

BRENTFORD

16th place, 39 points

You know Brentford and their supporters are happy the club stayed up after a difficult season blighted by a long injury list and the suspension that ruled out top striker Ivan Toney until January. He will likely move to another club during the summer transfer window, giving likeable manager Thomas Frank a chance to refresh his squad. GRADE: C

NOTTINGHAM FOREST

17th place, 32 points

One stat above all others sums up Forest’s struggles: They kept only one clean sheet in the last six months of the season. But they kept their heads just above the relegation zone thanks to a trifecta of attacking talent, Chris Wood, Callum Hudson-Odoi and Morgan Gibbs-White. They were just enough to compensate for a bloated squad, VAR rows, and a change of manager from Steve Cooper to Nuno Espirito Santo. GRADE: C-

LUTON TOWN

18th place, 26 points

A fairytale with an unhappy ending as the Hatters return to the English Championship. Head coach Rob Edwards and his team won lots of friends, but not enough points, and ran out of road with only one win after January. GRADE: C

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BURNLEY

19th place, 24 points

Teams like to copy Pep Guardiola’s tactic of playing out of the defense, but it isn’t easy — unless you have City’s caliber of players — which is exactly what Burnley discovered this season. Indeed, it all looked a little naive from manager Vincent Kompany and his players. After winning the Championship at a canter in 2022-23, the Clarets were expected to do better but went straight back down. GRADE: D

SHEFFIELD UNITED

20th place, 16 points

A shadow of the team who were promoted, Sheffield United conceded a whopping 104 goals this season. One of the weakest teams in Premier League history, the Blades need a major reset. GRADE: F

USMNT roster questions: How to replace Dest and who will make Copa America cut?

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - MARCH 24: Tyler Adams #4 of the United States  celebrates with Tim Weah #21 and Gio Reyna #7 during the the Concacaf Nations League Final against Mexico at AT&T Stadium on March 24, 2024 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Stephen Nadler/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Paul Tenorio and Tom Bogert

May 21, 2024


Yesterday, we took your questions right after the USMNT squad was announced for the training camp and friendlies that will precede the 2024 Copa America. The squad contains 27 players and the final group of 26 that will play in the Copa America will likely come from this list.Nturally, you all had questions. We tried our best to answer them based on what we’ve reported about this team over the years. Here are some of the bits from that session.


In case you missed it…


Quintin R. asked: What is the reasoning for calling 27 into camp? Expecting injury or someone not to be fully fit come June 23? Seems odd to leave one guy at home.

Paul Tenorio: My guess is that it’s about getting a closer look at Tillman considering the central midfield depth chart is stacked for the Olympics, too. Plus it provides some insurance as the U.S. evaluates the health and availability of Tyler Adams and Josh Sargent.

“Timmy made a good impression on us in January,” Berhalter told us earlier today. “When we’re looking at this roster versus the Olympic roster, there are some other guys that were in contention as well, but we felt like the balance of it would be better to keep them with the Olympic group and move Timmy to the senior team,”


Adam F. asked: Why is Shaq Moore on this roster?

Paul Tenorio: Bryan Reynolds is going to be on the Olympic squad and Berhalter said that of the right back options, he valued Moore’s ability to defend in one-on-one situations.

“We know he’s getting back to his form right now,” Berhalter said. “He has been out for a while, but he’s been able to get on the field now and get some more minutes and he’s a guy when we were looking at our matchups this summer, a lot of these wingers are very good one-v-one and we think that’s a strength of his, so there’s something we took into consideration.”

Berhalter also said they are looking at Weah, McKennie, Musah and center backs as potential right back depth options.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Who replaces Sergiño Dest for the USMNT?


Henry K asked: Could we potentially see Pulisic slide over to the right wing position and have Weah stand in as a right back to replace Dest?

Tom Bogert: It definitely feels like a possibility, right? It’ll probably depend on the matchup, but it seems like an option.

It’s worth noting that Christian Pulisic played the majority of his minutes on the right for AC Milan this year and was excellent. Obviously, he has different responsibilities with the national team (and he’ll be playing in a different system,) but he’d be plenty comfortable on that side.

The most ultra-attacking lineup from this roster has Weah at right back, Pulisic right wing, Gio Reyna at the No 10 and Wright at left wing.

Pulisic has played well at right wing for AC Milan this season (Getty Images)

Paul Tenorio: Berhalter said one of the main tasks of the training camp ahead of the Copa America is figuring out what they want to do at right back.

“Obviously with Sergiño going down, we have to figure out the right back situation and there’s a couple of different options we can look at,” Berhalter said. “We have like-for-like with Joe Scally and Shaq Moore. We have a winger that can play there with Timothy Weah, who’s played that for his club. We have center midfielders who can play there with Weston and Yunus, and then we have center backs that we’re looking at, can they play there? So, we just wanted the ability in this training camp to have options, to have flexibility. Some of it may revolve around a back three. But the first objective is to see how we’re going to fill that right back position because we know we’re going to be missing Sergiño.”


Austen B. asks: Out of attacking, midfield, and defense, where is the USMNT most likely to challenge the contenders and mostly likely to struggle? I know the USMNT has not had great success scoring against top competition (at least in the World Cup), yet to me their midfield and attacking was still a “strength” in that they have been able to keep possession and put pressure on opponents, whereas the defense seems to lack lock down defenders and at times show lapses against dangerous attacks.

Paul Tenorio: I think yours is a fair assessment. The area where the U.S. has been best against top opponents is in midfield. MMA was the clear winner at the World Cup in its ability to match up against England, especially. The U.S. was quite dangerous at times in transition, they got into the right spaces, but the final pass (and sometimes the pass before the pass) was lacking. I’m thinking of against Wales specifically and I wrote about it then.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Re-watching USMNT vs. Wales reveals a better performance than initially thought

Can the U.S. be more dangerous in the Copa America? Can they be more deadly with chances in the final third? We’ll see. And I definitely have concerns with defending on the right side of this lineup.


Seth R. asks: Does this roster give you any hints as to what overage players will be selected for the Olympics squad?

Paul Tenorio: I think it gives hints not just at overage players, but also some of the younger players who could play a role.

Berhalter mentioned Kevin Paredes, Aidan Morris and Bryan Reynolds as players who they see as getting more minutes at the Olympics than they would here. I think all three would have probably made this team if there was no Olympic tournament.

Overage players I think are under consideration: Zimmerman, Auston Trusty and Brandon Vazquez, among others.


Zendejas has played well for Club America but misses out on the USMNT roster (Alfredo Moya/Jam Media/Getty Images)

Collin J. asks: With Alejandro Zendejas playing well for Club America, why is he off the roster while a struggling Brenden Aaronson is on it?

Tom Bogert: It’s definitely a tough omission for Zendejas and probably disheartening on a personal level — what more could he have done? Zendejas has 14 goals and eight assists in 3,176 minutes this season for Club America and will play in the Clausura final.

Unfortunately for him, the winger position is loaded and now has a new, versatile entrant in Haji Wright (who had spent his time with USMNT at the No 9 before excelling at left wing with Coventry this year).

It’s tough for Zendejas that, if he had stuck to his original international allegiance with Mexico, he might have been a starter at the Copa America for them rather than fighting to make the U.S. roster.


Jody R. asks: If both Adams and Sargent are unable to go, who do you think the next man up would be? Pefok?

Paul Tenorio: If Sargent can’t go, I doubt there’d be a like-for-like sub there. You’d probably just roll with Pepi-Balogun-Wright as your No 9 options and carry an extra midfielder or add a winger.

I think if Adams goes down, there is probably just a plan to keep Tillman on the squad as a midfielder who can provide depth at several spots.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Dest, Tillman and Pepi: The USMNT trio who became league champions at PSV


Adam T. asked: Why is Gregg Berhalter obsessed with MLS players? 

Paul Tenorio: There are four MLS players on the 27-man roster, one of which I would expect not to make the Copa roster (Tillman), the other of which is an injury replacement for the injured Sergiño Dest (Shaq Moore) and probably would not have been on the squad if not for the Olympics taking a Euro-based right back (Bryan Reynolds), the third of which is the third goalkeeper.

Miles Robinson is basically the top MLS player on this squad and judging him off the league he plays in probably is more of a you problem than a Berhalter problem.


Harry P asks: Any insight into (reigning MLS MVP) Luciano Acosta potentially switching allegiances and joining the USMNT?

Tom Bogert: Acosta remains in the process of becoming a United States citizen (and thus eligible to represent the USMNT), but it’s taking a bit longer than they hoped because when Lucho left the D.C. United to sign with Atlas, he left the country and would not have qualified as a resident at that time. Acosta has argued he couldn’t come back because of COVID-19 (Lucho signed with Atlas in December 2019), but the government didn’t see it that way. TBD on timing, but this is definitely still in the works.

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One key reason Acosta is getting citizenship is the hope to play for the USMNT.

“Obviously (I would accept a USMNT call-up), if it came,” Acosta told us last year when we revealed he was in the citizenship process. “It’s one reason I started the process.”

(Top photo: Stephen Nadler/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

USWNT head coach Emma Hayes talks Olympic roster preparations and the role of NWSL

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 23: (EDITOR'S NOTE: This image has been digitally altered.) United States Women's National Team head coach Emma Hayes poses for a portrait on May 23, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Meg Linehan7h ago


On Wednesday, U.S. women’s national team head coach Emma Hayes arrived at Newark airport just outside New York City following a fifth-consecutive successful title run with Chelsea in the Women’s Super League. She was only in New York — a place she considers home, previously spending seven years in the U.S. developing as a young coach — for a short time.“I’m lucky to be born in England, but made in America,” Hayes said on Thursday to the Today Show.On Tuesday, she named the roster for her first USWNT camp, causing some excitement by listing Crystal Dunn as a forward. She’ll have two chances to stand on the U.S. sideline next month with a set of friendlies against South Korea in Denver and Saint Paul.“I want to focus on the performance. I want to get to know the players. I want to make sure that, in the limited time we have together, we make the most of it,” she said from a tall stool inside Studio A at Rockefeller Center. “And for me, pressure is a huge privilege.”By Thursday morning, Hayes was making the rounds with American media, confident as she sat for half a dozen television interviews before settling in front of a round table of USWNT coverage regulars.Hayes spoke for nearly an hour with three things becoming clear: the transition process has been slowly happening since November, she sees NWSL and USL Super League as crucial parts of the USWNT’s development, and nothing is set in stone — especially not the Olympic roster.

Easing into the role

“Everything, to be honest,” Hayes said when detailing what U.S. interim head coach Twila Kilgore shared with her during the transition process. She rattled off a list of lessons from the 2023 World Cup, team personnel, and the collective bargaining agreement with the USWNT Players Association. “Culture, traditions, I want to maintain and uphold the right things.”Hayes’ conversation with Kilgore also touched on the games the USWNT has played so far this year and the finer details like the timeline of a roster selection process.“We’ve been on many long calls late at night,” she said, referencing the time difference between the U.S. and England. “Certainly been to bed quite late in the last few months, but she’s been a humongous help.“I feel like I’ve been able to quietly get to know the job without being in the job, and I think that’s really helped every little detail, whether it’s processes on game day to how they operate in the hotel to which kit they wear. When I go into camp, I know all of these things.”Her brief trip to the U.S. last November helped too, and most of the time between now and the Olympics has already been planned thanks to Kilgore’s information and what Hayes saw firsthand.“All the May camp preparation is done, all the sessions are planned,” she said. “All of the June schedule is planned out in terms of our meetings, our meeting points. July is planned. Everybody is clear on what’s going on — now it’s about getting the players.”

The American women’s soccer ecosystem

Before taking the USWNT gig, Hayes had provided an outside assessment of the team’s 2023 World Cup performance in a column, focusing primarily on player development and the fact that the team was “massively short of creative talent.” Asked if she would continue to be critical of the program, Hayes expressed that she, like any coach, wants more for the team and federation.

“That’s clear for everyone to see,” she said, gesturing widely. “I don’t always view that as a negative thing. Sometimes you need something like that in life to serve as a reminder if you don’t grow. I always say all the time, what got you here won’t get you there. It’s an opportunity now to evolve.”Hayes said the focus needs to be on improving day in and day out, which isn’t limited to U.S. Soccer.“We need our league, the NWSL, to be hugely competitive. We need the USL (Super League) for lots of reasons, a development pathway for players that don’t necessarily make the NWSL to come in and to be given a place to play,” she said. “That in itself will create competition. Competition is healthy.”That synergy was apparent Thursday as Hayes’ media availability took place at NWSL’s offices. (The league made sure she had access to NWSL+, the league’s streaming platform.) While she watches and will continue to games across the league, it’s a feat she admitted she can’t do on her own.“Across the breadth and depth of this country, that cannot be covered solely by me,” she said. “There will be a coaching and analytics team that will be scattered across the country.”Hayes added that she has seen a noticeable tactical improvement across the league this season.“We have to compete with what’s going on in Europe, and I see lots of good developments in the (NWSL). I’ve seen good international players come into the league. All of these things have to happen in order for the U.S. team to compete at the top level,” Hayes said. “My job is to make sure that I work together with all of those stakeholders so that together, we have got the experience of what’s been done in Europe to be able to say look, we have to drive to the next space.”

Assessing all options, including  forward Crystal Dunn

Hayes spoke about the roster for her first camp but did not touch on too many individual players that did or did not make the cut. Crystal Dunn’s name came up a couple of times, however, thanks to the fact that Dunn is joining the forward pool in Colorado and Minnesota.

“I don’t publish the order,” Hayes said, smiling. “I had nothing to do that with.” She paused, holding the joke as long as she could before finishing, “I’m being cheeky.”

Hayes coached Dunn at Chelsea during the 2017-2018 season, but she said she’s seen the conversations about Dunn’s position over the years as well. Hayes knows how important it is for Dunn to “find a home” on the field.“For me, it’s less about, ‘Is she going to play in that position?’” Hayes said. “I would like to see her a little bit further forward this time around knowing I already know what she can do at left back.”

Dunn isn’t the only player Hayes is evaluating. She said the 18-player roster for the Olympics is not decided, and what she sees in camp will take her a step closer to knowing that final list. It’s part of why she didn’t want to comment on any individual player.

“I have to analyze players and analyze which players are closest to making that roster,” Hayes said. “I need to see it, feel it, be around it to get a sense of the tactical understanding of everyone — see where everybody is at.”

Hayes will focus on the process and the performance. She’s learned to focus on that over her years of coaching. She’s less worried about where a team is today; it’s where a team is at the end that counts.

“Are the USA at their best possible position today?” She rhetorically asked the group of reporters. “No, but it’s about where we finish when we need to that matters to me. So I want to focus on that instead of where we are in the world rankings, where we are in comparison to Spain”

Even though she’s been watching the team from a distance since she got the job in November, the time with players in June will show her how much of a gap between the team today and the team at the Olympics can be closed. She wants to be realistic about it.“I’ve come from a club level and what I have learned is the best development is done at club level,” she said addressing prospective USWNT players via the reporters in the room. “So go back to your clubs, play, compete, get healthy, and put yourself in the best possible place.(Photo: USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Emma Hayes, the long goodbye and the legacy

Katie Whyatt May 19, 2024

It was, after about half an hour, feeling like an office party at a karaoke bar. Chelsea’s travelling support were rolling through all the hits and by the end, Emma Hayes was taking requests. “We want five!” they said. Duly it arrived. “We want Fran!” came the calls, and on went Fran Kirby for her final game in a Chelsea shirt. When she scored Chelsea’s last goal, on 85 minutes, it felt like Chelsea were bending the world to their will. “What’s the score?” the fans asked Hayes repeatedly, and gladly she held up her fingers in immediate reply. It took her a little longer for goal six, probably from the extra effort of taking both hands from her pockets.

Emma Hayes’ side won 6-0 at Old Trafford on the final day of the season (Alex Livesey – The FA via Getty Images)

The only omission from their setlist was a chorus of oles. Had it been against a bigger rival, they might have whipped those out after the second goal arrived inside nine minutes but, as it was, Chelsea were too focused to break off for that kind of interlude.It helps when Manchester United barely showed up, let alone with the energy to gatecrash. Hayes’ leaving party was exactly that, and the force of it all was such that United’s decision to parade their FA Cup trophy at full time to fans unable to travel to last week’s Wembley final felt like witnessing a proposal at somebody else’s wedding. It had all the hallmarks of one: the Hayes kids flinging confetti at each other, Sam Kerr and Erin Cuthbert striking comedy poses in front of the trophy as if in a photo booth.Even Hayes seemed a touch delirious, at one point turning to her bench and mouthing: “Who scored?” and shrugging towards her players during one particularly rampant patch. Certainly, she was taken aback by the ludicrous nature of it all, the ease with which, on its final day, it all fell into place. To emerge from this season with a fifth successive league title is, to put it one way, a bit of a leap in plot terms, given where we were a month ago, and rich with irony given it was her nemesis, Arsenal manager Jonas Eidevall, who opened the door for her to write her ending with a 2-1 win over runners-up Manchester City this month, a match that tilted the title race in Chelsea’s favour.

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GO DEEPER

Emma Hayes: Victorious, elated, tired

Still, a sunny stroll was a nice change for Hayes given the pace of the past few months, and how quickly it looked like her final season at Chelsea would fall apart. Hayes had been hoping for a quadruple until losing the Continental Cup to Arsenal in March — the game that ended with her shoving Eidevall at full time in response to the “male aggression” she said he had exhibited on the touchline — and her decision to recite a poem in lieu of an apology at her subsequent press conference seemed to precipitate a wider unravelling and betray a more muddled line of thinking.Within a fortnight, the quadruple had halved to a double after a defeat to Manchester United in the FA Cup. To attend Hayes’ post-match press conference was to see a more guarded, circumspect figure, one visibly wary about saying the wrong thing. In the end, she did: her remarks that “nobody died” and that the goal for the end of the season was for everybody to get out alive did not play well with a fanbase anxious given recent events.These were rare missteps for Hayes, a manager who, if anything, has given the impression over the years of being frustrated by too much good press rather than the reverse (the title of her audiobook, To Kill the Unicorn, is about curing the delusion of the manager as a mythical being who has all the answers). So came the backlash. This season has been the most bruising of Hayes’ career from a PR perspective and the stakes have been so much higher given the number of eyeballs on her since it was announced in November she would take over as manager of the U.S. women’s national team this summer.“Sometimes I wish I was in the old, old days where maybe it was a small press pack,” Hayes said in her final press conference before playing United. “I actually did that early on. You could sit and have little off-the-record conversations, but also share good things. Now, it’s just an exercise of not tripping up. You say too much and get whacked for it. You don’t say enough then it’s just something dull, a repetitive function that we have to serve.”She continued the theme after the match. “If I wasn’t a football manager or had to do a press conference every three days, I’m that person in the social group who sits in the corner. I’m not front and centre in my life. I don’t live like that. So I find some of this job really, really hard because I just want a quiet life. That’s what I’m most looking forward to — being out of the British media, having a different life and being in a situation where I only have to do this and games every six weeks.”Hayes will know it has been a slog for the women’s game to reach this point in the public consciousness. The sport has exploded over the past two years in particular and with the publicity has come scrutiny that Hayes probably felt underprepared for.As the face of the WSL and the sport’s loudest advocate, she has felt it more than most managers. Opposition fans grow weary at the focus on Hayes and Chelsea and the woman at the centre finds being used as a rent-a-quote burdensome, for all she understands the need to keep pushing for more. There is, though, no obvious heir to her role as a mouthpiece for the sport as a whole. Aston Villa’s Carla Ward is taking a career break for similar reasons to Hayes’ desire for a break. City’s Gareth Taylor feels too guarded, United’s Marc Skinner too emotional and Eidevall too explosive on the field. Someone shaping a club to the extent Hayes has feels less likely in the era where women’s teams continue to move in-house. Maybe they won’t make them like her anymore.Not that Hayes could be persuaded to stay. “I categorically cannot carry on,” Hayes said on Saturday. “I don’t have another drop to give, whatever it is. When you deal with people, I have such high standards for myself that maintaining that has become impossible. I can’t keep up with the demands from players on a daily basis in terms of their emotional needs, in terms of everything. I found that to be gruelling this year.”

The moment Chelsea were confirmed as WSL champions (Darren Staples/AFP via Getty Images)

She detailed discussions with Chelsea’s sporting directors over improving player care and performance psychology. For those who want to find something deeper in Hayes’ departure, maybe there is a lesson here: after Chelsea’s 8-0 win over Bristol City on May 5, she had warned that female coaches would continue to leave the game if football did not appreciate their wellbeing. “If you’re a parent, forget about it,” she said. She would love to see a duo of two mothers or co-head coaches. “You have to give up a lot in this job,” she went on. “I don’t wish it on anyone.”In time, maybe the game will reflect that it failed one of its greatest managers; maybe this is just the reality of management, at this point in the WSL’s life. Maybe it just has to be that consuming. Maybe it’s different for women. In any case, the next generation will benefit from Hayes’ wisdom, even if Hayes has been burned out by it all.“Staying on top of emotion is something I’m really good at,” she said at her final press conference. “Sometimes, I really hate that. You have to do that a lot as a manager, which is probably one of the reasons I’m leaving this job. I miss Emma, and feeling like I don’t have to watch every word I say or worry about what my body language looks like in every situation because the camera’s on me.”Her final few weeks at Chelsea engendered a kind of ‘grieving’ among her family members who had taken the club to heart. Often, Hayes declined to talk about it with any finality “because I don’t want to cry because I have to do my job”. She had learned to “kick the emotions in the back of my head” but imagined “sobbing my heart out” at some point on Sunday, once it was all over and after she had hosted a barbeque for her son Harry’s birthday.

That has been the odd dichotomy of Hayes’ tenure: a winning machine but always with the disclaimers — maybe even anchors — that she is human, too. After exiting the Champions League at the hands of Barcelona in April, Hayes’ eyes brimmed with tears; her press officer mouthed: “You OK?” before they plunged into a short press conference where Hayes took only six questions. At the Football Writers’ Association dinner to honour Hayes, she teared up while thanking her late father, Sid, the one who had told her to go out and make the English game into what had been built in the United States. An underappreciated facet of this season is that Hayes has trundled through it all while grieving for her father. The menopause, Hayes has said on more than one occasion, has also presented unique challenges.

“Don’t think I’m not, like, feeling it,” she said after her final game at Kingsmeadow. “Today was really, really hard for me to coach. Really, really hard. There was a lot going on.”

Still, Chelsea did the job that night: fans ordered goals and Chelsea served them like they were waiting tables. Even when Guro Reiten managed a hat-trick on 77 minutes, Hayes was urging Chelsea back to the centre circle to rack up the goals that would put them in control on the final day. As the PA system reminded the crowd when the teams came back from the break that this would be the final 45 minutes at Kingsmeadow for Hayes, Kirby and Maren Mjelde, the evening bubbled with a sense of purpose, the mood music changed entirely after City’s 2-1 defeat by Arsenal in the earlier game.

The win put Chelsea in control of their own destiny, albeit not always convincingly, and half the time it was tricky to work out what Hayes was thinking. She conceded the title live on Sky, flanked by upcoming striker Aggie Beever-Jones, after a 4-3 defeat by Liverpool.

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She insisted later that the interview — which Sky pundit Karen Carney called “weird” — was not an attempt at a mind game. You half-believe Hayes, given the sincerity with which she later insisted she expected City to win, but initially, she conceded it was “the right tactic” for her to “take the pressure off” her own players before City played.

Over the past year, Hayes has pulled so many tricks that looking for the real meaning sometimes felt like untangling a cat’s cradle. At the least, she is adept at spinning situations to Chelsea’s advantage, and maybe all the strangeness served to take the spotlight from the players. She insisted it was her squad who spearheaded the title charge after City’s slip-up, but it’s hard to believe Hayes was truly willing to abandon all hope: “It all came from them. They never gave up that belief… I learned so much from them today. I really did. I learned a lot about the importance of belief.”

Hayes allowed herself some time to rest on Sunday, then will move to her new in-tray. She is exhausted, but the thought of going to an Olympics, she says, is “not tiring” and will re-energise her. She has USWNT player and staff calls on Monday, a call with U.S. leadership teams on Wednesday, a flight to New York and press obligations on Thursday in Denver, a meeting with staff on Friday, and a first meeting with the team on the following Monday.

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It is a full-circle moment given the call from Sid that started it all: when out in Atlanta and bowled over by the 1996 and 1999 U.S. teams, he told Hayes to get out there. When she finally does, it will be with the hope of a simpler life, and maybe a team already used to celebrity and fighting culture wars, with players who will be masters of the things that have most jaded Hayes in her final few years in England. Still, Hayes will likely prove unignorable: it is difficult to imagine how she will ever be less box office as long as she is herself.

It’s been equally difficult, over the past few weeks, to try to understand Hayes’ legacy. When she announced her departure, it was easy: an immeasurable impact on a sport and a club. May onwards made for a strange time to quantify it all given the events post-Continental Cup final, and the view among opposition fans that what happened there irreparably damaged her reputation. Hayes is no longer a universally-liked figure. Furthermore, she has never won the Champions League as a head coach, let alone built a European dynasty a la Lyon or Barcelona. To what extent those will exist as asterisks on her roll of honour might only become clear if an English team wins the Champions League in the coming years. Deeming a return to club management “unlikely”, Hayes seemed to pass up on ever doing so.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Emma Hayes: Victorious, elated, tired

You can’t believe it bothers her much. Knowing that she has nothing more to give is in itself closure. Hayes is simply too exhausted to summon regrets and what-ifs. Is she the greatest domestic manager the women’s game has known? Certainly in the WSL era; more broadly, her only rival is Vic Akers, Arsenal’s European Cup-winning manager for whom Hayes was assistant coach, and who pushed the game forward in a similarly visionary way. Hayes endured more scrutiny and greater competition at a more transformative time for the women’s game. It will take a while for anyone to catch up to seven league titles, five FA Cups and two League Cups.

Memory is a slippery thing. In five years, will anyone still read the footnotes at the bottom of title five? That they did it without Sam Kerr, that Arsenal and Stina Blackstenius half won the title for them, that the off-field sideshow threatened to consume it all?


More on Emma Hayes, the incoming USWNT head coach…


This has been a gruelling season for a club beset by injuries and it feels like they’ve made it over the line by constant reinvention and sheer force of will since losing Kerr and her replacement, Mia Fishel, to anterior cruciate ligament injuries at the start of the year. Had Chelsea won the FA Cup this year, it would have been their fourth in a row. That underlines the breadth of their dominance.

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The Manchester United manager, Skinner, mused afterwards that the days of clubs winning five titles in a row are “gone”. He said: “I’ve seen the growth from no teams, not professional, all the way to teams that have had the advantage because they professionalised quicker. In the era when it has been professional, Chelsea still managed to deliver that situation. It leaves a space and hopefully, we can fill that space going forward.”

His point was probably that Hayes’ departure and the relentlessness of her dominance leave the door open for others as Chelsea transition but it seemed muddied by his concession that even in the professional era Chelsea stayed ahead of the pack and found a new edge. That constant reinvention gave the illusion that Hayes and Chelsea could go on forever. Hayes has pulled back the curtain on it all to show a coach and players barely limping over the line, and one not always given to enjoyment.

Still, a video of Hayes and son Harry, in a hotel room, singing about winning five titles in a row did the rounds on Saturday night. As with Hayes, there is always a point, a message. That one: I will enjoy this, and I don’t care what anyone else thinks.

(Top photo: Naomi Baker – The FA via Getty Images)