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)

3/22/25 US Men lose to Panama face Canada Sun for 3rd, Mexico vs Panama NL Final, Euro Nations League has great games, Indy 11 Win 1st Game play at 7 pm

Indy 11 Win 1st, Face Lexington Tonite at 7 pm on ESPN+

Miami, Fla.- Indy Eleven scored three first-half goals off set pieces on its way to a 3-1 victory at Miami in its USL Championship season opener last weekend. Six players made their debuts for the Boys in Blue—Elvis Amoh, Hogan, Kizza, James Murphy, Bruno Rendon, and Oliver Brynéus. Rendon tied for team highs with six recoveries (with Maalique Foster) and three tackles won (with Aedan Stanley). Indy Eleven travels to Lexington SC today at 7 p.m. in a game streamed on ESPN+. The Boys in Blue host 2024 Champion Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC at Carroll Stadium to open the home slate on Saturday, March 29 at 7 pm. Single-game tickets are available for all matches via Ticketmaster. Season, Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here. For questions, call (317) 685-1100.

US loses to Panama 1-0 faces Canada for 3rd Sun 6 pm on Para+, Univision

I don’t even know what to say? Horrific Management, Horrific preparation, Horrific play! Those who were dogging Gregg Berhalter and begging for a foreign manager might need to rethink things. Pochettino was clueless in this game. Yes we are missing players but that was a B- team for Panama that absorbed pressure all game and countered to win 1-0. USa vs Panama Highlights The US had zero creativity in this game despite having 90% possession and 4 shots on goal. Musah at right back? Starting 2 #6s I mean — he got nothing right in this game. Yes the players were shit on this day – no spark, no aggression – only Pulisic seemed to friggin care they couldn’t score. But his subs? No Luna or Reyna at the 10 to try to find a pass on the subs. You can see now why POCH has NEVER won a trophy at any level. Sure he talks a good game working part time for 6M a year while still living in Europe. But I am not sure he has a clue. ESPN FC Questions Everything US Soccer Now for the players – this game lacked bite, lacked hard tackles, lacked what used to make the US strong – PRIDE. Not sure these millionaires playing overseas understand what US Soccer is supposed to be about. Always play like an underdog.

Sure we are missing huge players here – no Jedi Robinson was huge (the goal came from his side) and we had no movement down the left wing. No forwards up top (Pepi + Bologan are both injured) but Agyemang couldn’t hit the ocean from the pier on his 2 golden chances where was Haji Wright? I love Ream but if he starts the World Cup next summer the US will be out in 3 games. Oh and Matt Turner – its way past time for him to be replaced – I think Horvath is our best – but Matt can’t start again until he plays more in Europe. Men in Blazers Wrap Turner’s Goal I am so upset I don’t know what else to say. The US plays Canada and the man who should be our coach on Sunday at 6 pm. No one will be there again – who would pay money to watch this US team play (I was in LA last week-nothing about the game anywhere – but the Mexican’s bought all the tickets anyway). My buddy in The American Outlaws out there said they literally got no access to tickets.

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)

Was Turner out of spot on this one? Looked like a save-able ball during the game?

TV Schedule

Sat 3/22

1 pm Fox Sp 2 Modova vs Norway
7:30 pm Ion TV Washington Spirit (Rodman) vs KC (Chawinga)
8:30 pm Apple TV Salt Lake vs Dallas
10 pm Ion TV Bay FC vs Louisville NWSL
10:30 pm Apple TV Seattle Sounders vs Houston
10:30 pm Apple TV Vancouver vs Chicago

Sunday 3/23

3:45 pm FS2 Germany vs Italy NL
3:45 PM Fubo TV Spain vs Netherlands NL
4 pm Apple TV Austin vs San Diego
5 pm ESPN2 NY/NJ Gothem vs Orlando Pride (Marta)
6 pm Univision, Para+ USA vs Canada 3rd place NL
9:30 pm Uni, Para+ Mexico vs Panama NL FINAL

Mon, 3/24
3:46 pm FS 2 England vs Latvia WCQ
Tues 3/25
3:46 pm FS 2 Israel vs Norway WCQ
8 pm Telemundo Argentina vs Brazil WCQ
NWSL Schedule
MLS Schedule
USL Schedule

US MEN

Fighters wanted: USMNT effort called into question after Nations League loss to Panama
Yes, USMNT fans: It’s time to worry about the 2026 World Cup
Jeff Carlisle
Concacaf Nations League 3rd Place Preview – USA vs. Canada: Fated to pretend
2025 CONCACAF Nations League Finals: Scouting Canada
Concacaf Nations League Semi-Final: USA 0-1 Panama – The USMNT books a trip to the third place game
USMNT loses to Panama again in worst performance of Pochettino era Jeff Carlisle ESPN
For the USMNT and U.S., World Cup prep gets off to a ‘painful,’ sleepy start Harry Bushnell
USMNT flunks Mauricio Pochettino’s first test, loses 1-0 to Panama
USa vs Panama Highlights

Panama’s Cecilio Waterman celebrates epic goal with French legend Thierry Henry

WORLD

Netherlands vs. Spain UEFA Nations League Highlights | FOX …
Croatia vs. France UEFA Nations League Highlights | FOX …
Italy 1-2 Germany: Visitors come from behind to win first leg
Five big winners from Thomas Tuchel’s first England game
Seven things you might have missed from Thursday’s Nations League action
Thomas Tuchel coaches England to victory over Albania in his first game
One moment of magic enough for 10-man Argentina to unlock Uruguay
Kylian Mbappé’s barren spell continues for Les Bleus

Indy 11

#LEXvIND Preview
Recap-MIA 1:3 IND
United Soccer League (USL) Launches Division One & Promotion/Relegation
Blake & Hogan earn USLC “Team of the Week” honors
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Indiana Spotlight Partner for “Kick for a Cause”
Indy Eleven Announces 2025 Promotional Schedule – Tickets on Sale NOW!

NWSL

FIFA: Huge revenue gaps across women’s soccer
NWSL Power Rankings: Orlando Pride stamp authority in week
When did NWSL teams begin playing? Key years to know
Angel City, Wave draw on 2nd-half Thompson goal
Whitham, 14, becomes youngest player in NWSL
Angel City’s Leroux takes mental health break
López, Dumornay, Shaw lead best U21 women’s soccer players

MLS

Power Rankings: St. Louis CITY continue climb, Charlotte FC rebound
Ranking MLS’s 7 unbeaten teams: Who’s left standing?
Every MLS call-up: March 2025 international window
Concacaf Champions Cup 2025: Inter Miami, LAFC book quarterfinal series

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Early blockbusters headline NWSL
Temwa Chawinga #6 of Kansas City Current celebrates with teammates after scoring the team's first goal
Kansas City faces 2024 NWSL runners-up Washington on Saturday. (Kyle Rivas/NWSL via Getty Images)
The NWSL’s second match weekend promises some standout matchups, as last week’s winners look to build while its losers attempt to shift the energy.
Last year’s top-four finishers square off against one another this weekend, while a pair teams searching for their first points of 2025 will do the same.
What to watch: While not a carbon copy of the 2024 playoffs, these heavyweight clashes could set the early-days tone for 2025’s championship favorites.
Washington Spirit vs. KC Current, Saturday at 7:30 PM ET (ION): Each coming off big regular-season opener wins, KC travels to DC for a game with great potential for attacking fireworks.Gotham FC vs. Orlando Pride, Sunday at 5 PM ET (ESPN2): Orlando sit atop the NWSL table after battering Chicago 6-0 last weekend, but now face a pragmatic and talented Gotham side in a game with chess match written all over it.Chicago Stars vs. Houston Dash, Sunday at 3 PM ET (Paramount+): After suffering tough losses last week, both Chicago and Houston are eager to put their first points on the board with bounce-back performances.
Bottom line: With a number of teams already looking close to mid-season form, these early NWSL matchups really could have major implications down the line.

USMNT vs. Canada: A desirable matchup with undesirable third-place stakes

USMNT and Canada will meet in the Nations League third-place game

By Joshua Kloke March 21, 2025 1:25 pm EDT


INGLEWOOD, Calif. – Stephen Eustáquio began to look down at the floor in frustration before stopping to consider what lies ahead. It was less just a few hours after his Canada team came into their Concacaf Nations League semifinal against Mexico riding a wave of optimism and, they believed, preparation before a must-win match. That sense of optimism began to erode just 47 seconds after kickoff when Mexico scored the opening goal. It then disappeared completely with Mexico’s second goal to send El Tri to the final. The long-time bosses of Concacaf showed the savviness and experience Canada still lack.Canada’s midfield general knows this.“It’s experience,” he said of what Mexico has that Canada doesn’t right now. “It’s something that we will get in the future, we just have to continue to work.”

And when Eustáquio considered when the next opportunity to work, as it were, would come? That’s when his demeanor flipped.

“It’s a game against the U.S., and that motivates us a lot more,” he said of Canada’s opponent in the upcoming third-place game, following the U.S.’s stunning defeat in the other semifinal to Panama. “They’re our rivals. We beat them in (a September friendly). They want to beat us, and we want to beat them again.”U.S. vs. Canada: it’s the game so many at the Nations League – the Canadians especially – wanted. It’s just happening under wholly undesirable circumstances. The next chapter in this burgeoning rivalry will be more about avoiding catastrophe and humiliation rather than competing for a trophy. Both Canada and the U.S. should have woken up Friday morning feeling incomplete. With the World Cup a little over a year away, this third-place game offers each a chance to save face, and the opportunity to do so against an opponent equally as determined to set things back on course.

Against Panama, the U.S. couldn’t display the necessary work rate and emotion to properly influence the game, in manager Mauricio Pochettino’s estimation. A lackadaisical performance made for a wholly boring affair. Coupled with a premature Copa América exit, this group of skilled American players – many plying their trade for prominent European clubs – will aim to turn its talent into a more cohesive effort against Canada.The difference was the way they fight for the game,” Pochettino said of Panama. “They were hungry for every single ball. Every ball was the last one for Panama and, from the touchline, you feel that difference.”For the U.S., facing Canada presents a second match in which it can demonstrate the requisite enthusiasm, intensity and quality that’s been lacking, arguably dating back to the 2022 World Cup.“Just as we always do after games: We have to rest a bit, we’re going to watch back the game a little bit, see what we can improve on so we can get better and just get ourselves in the best physical and mental conditions to go again in a few days,” U.S. star Christian Pulisic said.

USMNT star Christian PulisicThe Nations League semifinals made for a night of long faces for Christian Pulisic and the U.S. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Imagn Images)

For Canada, it can probably sleep a little easier knowing the effort was front and center against Mexico. It dominated possession, tried to act as the aggressor by winning more duels and got close to goal on occasion. But once Canada got there, it faltered mightily. The questionable finishing and lack of quality final passes were once again Canada’s tactical undoing. Canada has now been shut out in half of manager Jesse Marsch’s 14 games in charge. The time to continue relying solely on his trusted forward pair of Jonathan David and Cyle Larin may have run out.

But beyond rectifying poor play in the final third, the intangibles will matter to Canada against the U.S. Canada knows its core is lacking a truly decisive win against the U.S. in tournament play. It may not be in a final, and perhaps a third-place match won’t carry the same clout, but this is an opponent the players have been eyeing, backed with supreme motivation.

“There’s no secret there’s a bit of a political issues surrounding this game more recently,” Canada’s Jonathan Osorio said. “There’s no hiding that it is the back of our mind. But at the end of the day, we are going to prepare for this game the best way possible: to go out and win.”

That’s been easier said than done for Canada. A group with talent that can stack up against the of the U.S., must show the kind of canny and game management that is necessary in pressure-filled, tournament situations. There was no doubting Canada’s intensity against Mexico. But the Canadians still lack the experience to turn intensity into quality attacking opportunities and close games out. The latter was alarmingly true earlier this summer as Canada squandered a lead in the Copa América third-place game against Uruguay.

“Now, it’s just that little bit of savviness that the best teams have and the best players have that we’re going to continue to push (for),” Marsch said.

Canada loses to Mexico in the Concacaf Nations LeagueCanada was left to grimace after a 2-0 defeat to Mexico in the Nations League semifinals. (Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

As Osorio alluded to, this match could garner more attention than the average third-place game because of the wider implications.

The strained political relations between the two longstanding allies – and World Cup cohosts – serves as a backdrop. How each team channels that aspect – or elects not to – will reveal plenty. The recent Canada-U.S. games at the 4 Nations Face-Off hockey tournament provided a window into what kind of intensity an inflamed political climate can create. There were three fights in nine seconds. Fans booing opposition national anthems. A final that went down as an immediate classic.

The third-place setting zaps some of the organic aura surrounding the game, but there should still be plenty of motivation considering each’s desire to respond to disappointment – and doing so amid the external factors.

Plus, outside of this summer’s Gold Cup, which will feature less-than-full strength squads given that FIFA has allowed clubs to take priority over countries for the expanded Club World Cup, this will realistically be each team’s final opportunity to play a truly competitive game before hosting World Cup games at home.

So no, there’s no trophy at stake. It’s not a final. But it’s still a matchup that both can use to apply to the games that truly matter in 15 months.

“Every game from now on,” Canada’s Jonathan David quickly and sternly answered, when asked about the third-place game, “is preparation for the World Cup.”

Yes, USMNT fans: It’s time to worry about the 2026 World Cup

  • Jeff Carlisle ESPN Mar 22, 2025, 08:00 AM ET

LOS ANGELES — In the wake of the U.S. men’s national team‘s 1-0 defeat to Panama in the semifinals of the Concacaf Nations League (CNL), it’s fair to say it’s time for USMNT fans to worry about the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The U.S. has shown flashes of stellar play since manager Mauricio Pochettino took over last September, especially in the CNL quarterfinal series with Jamaica. But Thursday’s semifinal exit exposed some old troubles. The USMNT’s lack of aggression to start matches, especially when the opposition cedes possession, remains a problem. That leads to an inability to break down tightly packed defenses. And though Panama has emerged in Concacaf as a tough-to-break-down unit, if the Americans can’t consistently get past the Canaleros, who have beaten the U.S. three straight times in tournament play, how can the USMNT expect to get out of a group at the World Cup? That isn’t to say that all hope is lost for the Americans — far from it. But with just 447 days between now and the start of the World Cup, Pochettino has little time and few opportunities to turn things around. This summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup — the USMNT’s only competitive games before the World Cup — has taken on increasing importance. It will allow Pochettino an extended camp to further familiarize himself with his players. The U.S. will also host friendlies against Turkey and Switzerland before Gold Cup matches to mimic the cadence of the World Cup.

The hope — which is not guaranteed based on Thursday’s performance — is that the players will get more experience in knockout games. But on this front, Pochettino’s plans are being undermined by the Club World Cup, with the Juventus duo of Weston McKennie and Timothy Weah, along with Borussia Dortmund‘s Gio Reyna, all possibly unavailable for the Gold Cup due to their respective clubs’ participation.

After that, and with no CNL scheduled for 2026, there are just four more international windows in September, October, November of 2025 and March of 2026, plus some pre-World Cup friendlies. That is a scant amount of time to further refine things.

And there is plenty this U.S. team needs to refine, especially with the ball.

To get a sense of how toothless the American attack was against Panama: The U.S. had 811 touches, the 11th time the Americans have had more than 800 touches in a game since September 2017. But they had an expected goals, or xG, of 0.68, making it the first time in that span that the U.S. had over 800 touches but an xG below 1.00. That shows the U.S. had plenty of time with the ball, but struggled to create dangerous scoring chances.

The return of several injured players would greatly help the U.S. cause. The U.S. has badly missed right-back Sergiño Dest, who has recently returned for PSV Eindhoven after suffering an ACL tear 11 months ago. Dest is the ultimate attacking wild card who can deliver the unexpected, either off the dribble or striking at goal. Left-back Antonee Robinson and his marauding runs down the flank were also missed against Panama.

The two absences have a massive effect on the way the U.S. plays. Joe Scally is a capable, defense-first option, but isn’t one to contribute much to the attack. That’s why in Dest’s absence, Scally usually stays home and allows the opposite full-back to get forward. But Yunus Musah seems miscast as a wing-back, given his distribution limitations.

The frontline has also been beset by injuries, with Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi out for long stretches. Their returns would increase the competition for places in attack that have lacked a certain spark.

All these absences lead to questions about the depth of the USMNT’s player pool. But in situations like Thursday’s loss to Panama, the U.S. would also be aided by Pochettino tilting the lineup more toward attack. Against a team bunkering in, Tanner Tessmann‘s presence in the midfield seemed redundant given that the defensively dependable Tyler Adams was back in the team. That would’ve freed a spot for a more creative player such as Reyna or Diego Luna in the middle.

Herculez Gomez calls USMNT’s performance ‘pathetic’ in loss to Panama

Herculez Gomez rips Mauricio Pochettino and the United States men’s national team in their loss to Panama.

Yet the team’s mindset might be Pochettino’s most difficult challenge. The U.S. manager pointed to a “lack of aggression” in the first half, which he described as “painful” to watch.

This was illustrated by the Americans’ touches in Panama’s box. The U.S. had 32 touches in the Panamanian penalty area. That ranks 12th in the USMNT’s past 35 games. But only nine of those touches came in the first half. When Tim Weah started occupying wider positions in the second half, the U.S. made more headway.

Pochettino needs to create competitive tension for playing time. But are the players who could take on bigger roles good enough to unseat any incumbents? Solving the aggression puzzle won’t be easy. Some players are proving not as capable as their club reputations dictated at one point.

Pochettino has attempted to bring in reinforcements, mostly from MLS clubs, and has talked up how they’ll get chances to impress. But until he gives those players more prominent roles, his words will feel empty.

Still, there are limits to how much Pochettino can do as a manager. At some point, the onus is on the players to improve, and channel the aggression required.

“You always learn more from setbacks than you do from games that, say, we would’ve won, that you’re papering over the issues that I think everybody saw in terms of getting behind and aggression and all that,” U.S. defender Tim Ream said. “There’s always teaching moments, there’s always learning moments in every game, every training, every day that you step on the field and we have to look at that and make sure that we take on board exactly what he wants, take on board exactly what he needs and that starts with the duels and the aggression and the intensity.”

The USMNT will miss a chance to defend their CNL title after winning the past three, but Sunday’s third-place game against a very motivated Canada will be an opportunity to put those lessons into practice.

With Alphonso DaviesJonathan David and Cyle Larin available, it seems likely Canada will be more adventurous than Panama in attack. But Pochettino shouldn’t change his entire starting 11. He should continue to establish chemistry. Playing time needs to be earned, as well. But there seems to be some opportunities for players.

Zack Steffen appears to be a clear choice in goal, given Matt Turner‘s suspect positioning on Cecilio Waterman‘s game winner, when he was shaded too close to his near post. Reyna or Luna in taking Tessmann’s place seems another obvious swap. Patrick Agyemang looked active in his 22 minutes against Panama.

At minimum, USMNT fans will want progress. That bar is low after the poor showing against Panama. But with just under 15 months left to the World Cup, the U.S. needs to show signs that it’s moving forward again.

Fighters wanted: USMNT effort called into question after Nations League loss to Panama

After getting easily bounced from the Copa America in the group stage, the USMNT is out of the Nations League in the semifinal with a loss to Panama. Mauricio Pochettino’s hire did not automatically reverse fortunes. Now it’s clear there is a lot of tough work to do with the team. 

BY Brian SciarettaPosted March 21, 2025
12:00 PM

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LAST SUMMER, US Soccer hired Mauricio Pochettino as head coach and following a poor Copa America showing, it was expected that this would advance the national team to be in its best possible position to compete at the 2026 World Cup, which it will cohost. Now, after an embarrassing 1-0 loss to Panama in California in the semifinal of the Nations League, the team and Pochettino face difficult questions and potentially even more difficult answers. With two straight ugly early eliminations in tournaments it hosted inside of a year, alarm bells should be going off.  There is always the temptation to be overly harsh following a loss. This is a team sport and upsets frequently happen. But the bigger problem for the USMNT wasn’t the loss. It was the effort. After the game, the comments from Pochettino were revealing because he wasn’t focused on the loss, but the fact that the U.S team was simply out-worked by a very disciplined and well-coached Panama team that deserved to win. “They were hungry for every ball like it as the last one,” Pochettino said of Panama. “You could feel the difference on the field.” He went on.

“We are the USA, but you cannot win with your shirt. You need to come here and be better and suffer and win the duels and work hard. If not, it’s not going to be enough.”“If you don’t have aggression, it’s impossible,” Pochettino said, “because the opponent knows that we are going to play into the feet. You are going to play safe. You are not going to take risk. If you want to play football, you need to take risks, you need to go forward, you need to win duels, sometimes 50-50.”It’s actually easy to envision a scenario way down the line when we look back on this loss and realize it was a good thing.  For a long time, the team’s short falls have been blamed on Gregg Berhalter or the series of interim coaches the team had after the World Cup or after the Copa America. Fans and people in the Federation seem to be under the impression that a good coach was what was separating this team from greatness.But now, there is nowhere for the players to hide.  The Federation broke the bank and went through extraordinary measures to hire Pochettino. Instead, we got a performance that was either equal or worse than we have gotten in the past with a number of coaches.This does not absolve Pochettino of blame. Sure, there are questions whether he needed more playmakers in the midfield to connect to the attack. Should he have started Joe Scally on the left side? Should he have started Matt Turner in goal with his lack of playing time. Those are fair questions. But they are a drop in the bucket of the real problem in as to why this team was outworked playing at home against Panama a year out from the World Cup? You can point out the talent on this US team, but talent only matters if you have desire when you step foot on the field to begin with. When you don’t, you get France at the 2010 World Cup. At least now, everyone’s eyes (players, coaches, fans, federation officials) should be wide open to the task at hand. The team is much further behind than many expected, maybe even Pochettino himself.

When he was hired, Pochettino spoke about when he played for Argentina. He emphasized that there was no difference between playing for his country in a friendly or in a World Cup – there was always maximum desperation for the shirt. He gave the impression that it was very important to him and, more importantly, it was instinctive to the Argentinian players. The loss against Panama revealed that the US team is missing some very basic requirements Pochettino demands or expects from his teams. There is a lot to break down from this game. 

Specifics of the game

The specifics of this game are not nearly as significant as the big picture problems, but they are worth discussing nonetheless because there were some serious tactical problems.The most obvious tactical mistakes was that there was no link between the midfield and the offense. The from line of Christian Pulisic, Josh Sargent, and Tim Weah were all poor. Despite it having been a front line that has played together for years, including at a World Cup, there was nothing going on with them. Sargent was a bit unlucky and was starved for service (8 touches over 68 minutes and 2 completed passes) but Weah and Pulisic were very ineffective. 

Weston McKennie had a decent moment when he set up Sargent in the first half for a shot off the post. Aside from that, McKinney struggled to be that link on a consistent basis.Scally and Musah were the outside backs and were tasked with pressing forward, but the opportunities with them were few and far between.There is some talk about the players who were not here or did not get off the bench. It is fair to note that the US team was missing some key players such as Sergino Dest, Ricardo Pepi, and Antonee Robinson. But any talk of them missing this game is to ignore the bigger problems. The US team had more than enough talent to win this game, and they were outworked across the board.

Now what?

After the team departs from camp next week, there is rightfully going to be a lot of talk about how this team will use this experience as a learning lesson for the future. Pochettino is going to have to strike a fine balance between not blowing everything up, but making a significant number of changes. The challenge Pochettino faces is that you cannot coach desire or passion – that needs to be instinctive for players upon arrival in camp. What is perhaps most disappointing for fans is that after the loss to Panama, Pachino said he wanted to make such passion and hard work part of the US teams DNA. But anyone who has followed this program for a long time will tell you that it used to be the team’s leading hallmark. In the years just before and just after the millennium, that was a key reason how they used to beat teams that were considered superior. It is how they advanced to the quarterfinal of the 2002 World Cup. It’s not that Pochettino has to make this part of the team’s DNA, it’s that it has been lost and he has to reinstall it.

Starting this summer, Pochettino will need to make changes and he will need to hold some of these players accountable. It begins with scouting the entire player pool, both domestically and abroad. 

There needs to be fewer lock starters and more of a need for the players to feel they need to continuously prove themselves in order to justify their selection to the team. This summer will be revealing in how Pochettino, after he has time to digest the March disappointment, how he makes changes. It would be very surprising if he makes only limited changes.  

The USMNT has the same problems now that it did under Gregg Berhalter and Pochettino’s mere arrival didn’t automatically improve things. He is going to have to take active measures.

Once Pochettino can find players he trusts, then he rectify the tactical shortcomings we saw against Panama – such has better fullback setups, having a true attacking midfielders to bridge the gap between possession and chance creations.  But many problems needs to be addressed before he gets to that point.

Third Place Game awaits

Before the players return to their clubs, the USMNT must play the third place game against Canada. It’s a game where participation offers only insult to injury. For Pochettino, this could very well serve as an important test and evaluation tool for players?

Any player wants to get called up for big and prestigious games, but who wants to play in a game that anything but important? The players who do could be the players that Pochettino wants in the future.

Expect Pochettino to make a lot of changes to the starting XI. He should give other players the opportunity to show what they could do. Fortunately for the USMNT, they will be playing a Canadian team that should be motivated to face the USMNT. Canada sees the USMNT as an important measuring stick and there is a growing rivalry between the two neighboring nations. Canada’s American head coach Jesse Marsch would love to kick the USMNT while it is down.

The USMNT needs a test when it is at a low point. A loss to Canada with a poor effort would be a morale killer with just 15 months to go until the World Cup. It should be a gut check moment and you can learn a lot about a team and its players at its low points just as much as the high points.

Same Berhalter-era USMNT woes linger under Pochettino in Nations League debacle

Panama celebrates scoring vs USMNT

By Paul Tenorio arch 21, 2025


INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Two hundred and sixty-two days had passed since the last time the U.S. men’s national team players walked disappointed off of the field after a premature exit from an international ournament on home soil. Four hundred and forty-nine days remain for them to figure out why — and fix it. The USMNT’s stunning 1-0 loss to Panama on Thursday night felt like familiar territory for anyone who has followed this team over the last six years. The U.S. changed coaches after falling in the group stage of the Copa América last summer. Gregg Berhalter was out. Mauricio Pochettino was in. The players, though, remained largely the same. And some of the problems this U.S. team displayed under Berhalter remained the same.It was, perhaps, the biggest benefit of hiring Pochettino, one of the highest-profile coaches in the world, who arrived in the U.S. with a reputation for winning in Europe and coaching some of the world’s biggest clubs and players. The attention, and some of the blame, would have to start shifting onto a player pool whose reputation had been built up but now had to start delivering.The loss to Panama, the same team that sent the U.S. on its way to Copa elimination in Atlanta last summer, had some of the hallmarks and warning signs we have long seen from this team. The players struggle to break down organized teams that play in a low block. They sometimes fail to meet the moment emotionally. They too often lack a killer instinct.Pochettino’s press conference after the loss hit on all of those ideas.

“Did we control the game? Yes. Did we dominate the game? Yes. Did we play in the opposition half? Yes. Did we create some strategy to move the ball quickly and (have) good positional game in the opposite half? Yes. But you need aggression,” Pochettino said. “If you don’t have aggression, it’s impossible. Because the opponent always knows we are going to play into the feet. You are going to play safe. You are not going to take risks. If you want to play football, you need to take risks. You need to go forward. You need to win duels. Sometimes, 50-50, the ball, that is my ball. ….“We need to find a way to compete better. And that’s it. I don’t (want to say) I like this (loss), no. But it’s (worth paying) attention, because, OK, we are (the) USA, but you can’t win with your shirt. Or you cannot win if you play here (at a big club), there, or, I don’t know. You need to show (it). And you need to come here and be better and suffer and win the duels and work hard. If not, it’s not going to be enough.”

It was a stern warning for players with 15 months left until the biggest possible spotlight is on them at a home World Cup. A tournament they’ll open in this same stadium.The Americans had won several trophies in Concacaf in spite of those flaws. They took home all three previous versions of this Nations League tournament. They had a Gold Cup trophy, too. But after losing to the Netherlands in the group stage in Qatar in 2022, the U.S. didn’t seem to be growing. In the end, the federation made a coaching change to address those issues. In his first true test, though, Pochettino failed to equal what his predecessor – and even an interim stopgap – had accomplished.

USMNT manager Mauricio PochettinoUSMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino endures defeat to Panama in the Concacaf Nations League. (Gary A. Vasquez/Imagn Images)

If the Copa América wasn’t a wake up call on its own, then perhaps this was an even bigger warning shot. Changing the coach isn’t going to fix things on its own. Something else has to change.The U.S. started slowly in the first half. There was an overall lack of energy, and it hardly created much in the way of chances. The second half was slightly better. Second-half substitute Patrick Agyemang had two good looks at goal. But something was missing – bite and aggression. The U.S. didn’t seem ready to assert itself as the better team.“It was a perfect opportunity to start that rebuilding process right now,” U.S. midfielder Tyler Adams said. “It’s a bit disappointing in my eyes. I don’t know what we lacked exactly, whether it was that competitive nature, that mentality, but we need to look in the mirror before anything and just realize that when we have these types of games, we can’t wait for something to happen. We need to make things happen, put games on our terms.”Pochettino said this week that he preferred to learn lessons from winning games, but that sometimes the best lessons come in losses. Wins can allow you to paper over flaws. Losses fully expose those issues. They force you, as Adams said, to look in the mirror. Sometimes, they can be a turning point.This U.S. team learned a similar lesson early in the last World Cup cycle. They went on the road to Canada in a Nations League game in 2019 and lost, 2-0, in Toronto. A month later, the U.S. rocked their northern neighbor in the return leg, 4-1. They did so in part because of how they rebuilt the team’s mentality after the loss.“I think the message from that point on was intensity is the starting point,” former U.S. midfielder Sebastian Lletget said of the loss in Canada at the time. “We took a lot of pride in how we wanted to play and how we wanted to do things attacking wise — we felt like we had all the structure all down, but I think the mentality, I think that’s where we were lacking on that day. I think Canada sort of opened up our eyes to that.”Sound familiar?That loss in Toronto pushed the U.S. to a higher level. It showed that international soccer was as much about intensity as it was tactics, that talent or potential wasn’t enough on its own.On Thursday, Panama reminded the U.S. of that.Maybe, in the end, it will be a good thing. The U.S. must find a way to make it a turning point, rather than the continuation of a backslide.

Thierry Henry swarmed by epic Panama celebration as USMNT knocked out of Nations League finals
Cecilio Waterman struck the only goal of Thursday’s first semifinal deep into injury time then ran straight toward Henry.

(Top photo: Jayne Kamin-Oncea/Imagn Images)

The defensive breakdown that doomed the USMNT to defeat against Panama

INGLEWOOD, CA - MARCH 20: Panama celebrating their victory with Thierry Henry and Cecilio Waterman #18 during a Concacaf Nations League game between Panama and USMNT at SoFi Stadium at on March 20, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter March 21, 2025


Whenever you watch a game with a group and a commentator claims that a player “wanted it more,” you’re bound to hear a few scoffs.It’s a tried-and-true axiom rolled into a Bull Durham quote. In theory, every player at a sport’s highest level wants to succeed. If one player rises above an opponent to win an aerial duel, they may be able to credit their jumping reach, their strength, their reflexive timing or their raw height before even considering their intrinsic desire.And yet, rare occasions present themselves where passion and drive are at a perceived imbalance akin to a possession battle. Take, for example, Thursday night’s Concacaf Nations League semifinal between Panama and the United States men’s national team. The game was teeming with tension, as the USMNT hoped to exorcise its demons and avenge last summer’s defeat to their regional rival in the Copa América group stage.In the wake of that match, U.S. Soccer’s brass made an expensive bet that hiring Mauricio Pochettino to replace Gregg Berhalter would help get the program back on track to win such contests. The players on the field promised they’d “learn from it” and be better prepared, against Panama and other teams defending grittily in a low block.And yet, 266 days after that shocking defeat in Atlanta, the decisive moment for Panama sure seemed to embody that old cliché: Los Canaleros sure seemed to want it more.


Pochettino was the most obvious change from last summer’s sinking, but Thursday’s lineup presented a few more alterations.

First was the team’s shape, with the USMNT lining up in a 3-4-3 with a midfield box, rather than Berhalter’s preferred base 4-3-3. The emphasis was to retain possession in the middle against Panama’s usual 5-4-1 shape, ceding the wide areas as Tim Weah was asked to patrol in the left half-space.

Another was the personnel. Still without Sergiño Dest as he works back from his torn anterior cruciate ligament, the team saw its other first-choice full back — Fulham ace Antonee Robinson — exit camp before the Panama match with an undisclosed ailment. While Joe Scally struggled throughout his three Copa América games, Pochettino asked him to deputize for Robinson on the left.

It’s a spot Scally has played before, but seldom does these days; only 179 of his 2,017 Bundesliga minutes this year have come there, with the rest spent at right back. Unfortunately, the Borussia Mönchengladbach defender was exploited in the decisive sequence.

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The sequence begins with Christian Pulisic winning a header at the edge of the midfield third, hoping to head it down to Jack McGlynn. The ball takes a hop a yard in front of the Houston Dynamo midfielder, leaving him to swing a leg at it in vain.

Instead, it trickles towards Panama forward Cecilio Waterman. Four USMNT players immediately converge, desperate to force the ball off the striker’s foot and back into their own possession. Mark McKenzie unsettles Waterman, who prods the ball back into open terrain rather than ceding to his opponent.

Waterman’s poke rolls right into a patch with an amount of weight that puts the nearby United States players in a precarious spot. Most opt not to leave their posts, watching the loose ball as they follow conservative instincts and don’t open passing lanes. Ultimately, Scally stops his run toward the box and turns, but is beaten to it by one of the game’s final inclusions. Janpol Morales, a 26-year-old winger playing in Ecuador who debuted for Panama this month, is quicker to it and scampers to collect the ball in front of Scally. With one of his mere two pass attempts on the night, Morales gets the ball to his team’s chief string-puller, Adalberto ‘Coco’ Carrasquilla.

The standstill nature of the United States’ defending doesn’t just allow Morales to make a decisive impact. It also leaves Carrasquilla with ample time to survey his options as the game enters its final minute, allowing Waterman to leave the scene of McKenzie’s convergence almost entirely undetected, especially once Scally commits to chase the ball alongside Morales.

Even after Scally has fully committed to Morales’ run, Tim Ream fails to stick with Waterman as he backsteps toward the corner of the box. Usually, this is where Ream would expect to find Robinson, his long-time starting team-mate for the USMNT and Fulham. With Scally already playing out of position and now drawn into the heart of the park, Waterman is some distance from his nearest defender with the game on the line.

Carrasquilla might be surprised by how open Waterman is, as the midfielder decides to recollect his initial windup to ensure he gets the weight right on his pass. That proved wise, as Waterman struggled to trap the ball — although it only served to give his shot some additional momentum given the total lack of defenders nearby.

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Waterman’s shot comes in with considerable power and expert angling, spotting goalkeeper Matt Turner hugging his near post and instead opting to send it across goal. Turner’s lack of recent match involvement is perhaps relevant here, given his conservative positioning and inability to force a difficult shooting angle once Carrasquilla had readied his eventual assist.

This was just Panama’s third shot of the match, and its first on frame. Nevertheless, miscommunication, a second-rate effort to collect a loose ball and some tired legs gave Panama all it needed to beat the USMNT in another cagey matchup.

As the Panama players rushed CBS pundit Thierry Henry to celebrate, the United States was left to appreciate the scale of this fresh failure.

Throughout the broadcast, commentators Chris Wittyngham and Tony Meola highlighted this Panama squad’s lack of experience at the highest levels of club soccer. At one point, Wittyngham cited some recent history as defender César Blackman became the first Panamanian to play in a UEFA Champions League game — although it was immediately hedged that his team, Slovan Bratislava, finished second-bottom of the league-phase table.

When compared to the over half-dozen Americans whose teams advanced to the Champions League playoff round, it seemed to suggest a talent imbalance. Of course, that only gets a national team so far.

Pochettino’s gameplan was not enough to overcome Panama’s energy and spirit. (Robin Alam / ISI Photos/Getty Images)

A year ago, there were excuses: playing a man down, alleged second-cycle syndrome causing a downturn in form under Berhalter, and an uncalled foul forcing Turner to exit at halftime.

On Thursday, all three of those factors were answered in full. At few points in the preceding 93 minutes did the hosts play with the confidence and explosiveness that should accompany a tournament’s three-time defending champion. There was little evidence that taking orders from Pochettino helped them improve after the “lessons learned” under Berhalter.

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Handed a fresh opportunity to rectify one of the program’s worst results in recent memory, the team instead one-upped that showing with an even poorer showing. Only they can know whether they had wanted to succeed enough in this window. Still in the wake of last summer’s debacle in the Copa América, however, it’s a group running out of opportunities to provide reasons for optimism heading into a World Cup on home soil.

(Top photo: Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)
USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino not to blame for Nations League exit, Tyler Adams says

INGLEWOOD, CA - MARCH 20: Tyler Adams #4 of the United States turns with the ball during the CONCACAF Nations League semifinal match between United States and Panama at SoFi Stadium on March 20, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Felipe Cardenas March 21, 2025


INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Tyler Adams refused to blame head coach Mauricio Pochettino for the United States’ devastating 1-0 loss to Panama on Thursday as the squad came to terms with its sudden exit from Concacaf Nations League contention.“I’ve never blamed a coach in my entire career,” midfielder Adams said emphatically after Cecilio Waterman’s injury-time winner spurred Panama to a victory at SoFi Stadium. “I mean, the losses depend on the players unless you go out and try something completely random. … There was not a lack of communication after today. We knew exactly what we needed to do. We knew we needed to be competitive. I don’t think we were as competitive as we needed to be.”The USMNT’s exit dealt a massive blow to Pochettino’s feel-good process heading toward the 2026 World Cup. It will now face Canada in Sunday’s third-place game. The Argentine manager told reporters that the Panamanians were hungrier. At the international level, the consequences are dire.“We feel very disappointed because the way we approached the game wasn’t the right way,” he said. “In the first half, we were too comfortable on the pitch. We didn’t show aggression with the ball. We also didn’t show aggression in a defensive way. The first half was very painful to see.“This is not the way that we want to build this journey together. And moving forward, with the objective to play in the World Cup, the objective is to be competitive by seeing that this — it’s a good point to pay attention to — that this is not enough.”The Americans were sleepwalking in a poorly attended semifinal. Their lack of urgency was evident from the start, and despite perking in the second half and attacking with more purpose, Pochettino’s side always looked more timid. Panama relied on hard tackling and a commitment to defending in the low block and making the field as narrow as possible.

Weston McKennie claimed the USMNT needed more “nastiness” against Panama. (Robin Alam / ISI Photos / Getty Images)

“Knowing him, he brings a bit of that South American vibe into the group and that grittiness and makes it known to us that football isn’t always about being beautiful,” midfielder Weston McKennie said of Pochettino. “It’s always also about the grit, the desire, the nastiness that you put into the game, as well. … So I think it’s about time that our team starts doing that also.”Pochettino refused to blame the tame crowd atmosphere for the lackadaisical effort by his players. For a former player who was known as a cutthroat defender, he was perplexed by his players’ disappointing effort.“(The crowd) cannot be an excuse just because you didn’t have a full stadium with your fans,” he said. “Why weren’t we more aggressive? I think the analysis is simple. If we look at the duels won, it’s clear that we lost those to Panama. When the game is played in tight spaces, when winning duels is important, where recovering possession means you’re in a one-versus-one situation and you’re disorganizing the opponent, when possession is won consistently in the final third, that’s always going to favor a team as organized as Panama. And when you don’t show the best version of yourself, things get complicated.“Every single (duel) was the last one for every single player for Panama. We felt that from the touchline. We’re the USA, but we cannot win just because of the shirt.”

Thursday’s defeat rekindled memories of the Copa América defeat to Panama that ultimately sealed Gregg Berhalter’s fate. (Hector Vivas / Getty Images)

This isn’t a new problem for the USMNT. There were multiple occasions under former head coach Gregg Berhalter when a lack of steel and grit led to subpar performances. Pochettino’s assessment now places the spotlight directly on a group of players who are less than 15 months from taking part in a home World Cup.“It’s disappointing, of course,” winger Christian Pulisic said. “We obviously had the ball most of the game, but we just couldn’t create enough. We weren’t dangerous enough. And yeah, you know, they got one shot at the end, and that was the story.”Panama defeated the U.S. in a penalty shootout in the 2023 Gold Cup semifinals. The Central Americans then recorded a shock win over Berhalter’s side at the Copa América last summer. The defeat in Los Angeles on Thursday marked the third straight loss to Panama in a competitive match. Pochettino won his debut as U.S. head coach over Panama in a friendly last October.When a reporter reminded Pulisic of those facts, the AC Milan winger responded: “What do you want me to say? It’s tough. It’s tough. We want to win.” (Top photo of Tyler Adams: Robin Alam / ISI Photos / Getty Images)

Panama deals USMNT another deflating, exposing defeat in Nations League stunner

INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 20: Cecilio Waterman #18 of Panama celebrates after scoring a goal against the United States during the second half of a CONCACAF Nations League semifinal match at SoFi Stadium on March 20, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio arch 20, 2025


The goal came seemingly out of nowhere.The U.S. had actually shown a bit of life in what had been a mostly lifeless Concacaf Nations League semifinal. Patrick Agyemang, the substitute forward, had a couple of good looks at goal. Weston McKennie had just unleashed a shot from the top of the box.But Panama, which had been so disciplined defensively, pushed the ball down the field in stoppage time. On the counter, the ball found its way to the right side of the box to Panamanian forward Cecilio Waterman. He took control and picked out the far post, beating the outstretched hand of Matt Turner in the 94th minute.Waterman ripped off his shirt, jumped the boards and stood in front of Thierry Henry, pointing and screaming, “Eres mi idolo,” — “You are my idol” — into the face of the legendary French forward and CBS pundit before hugging him.A few minutes later the final whistle sounded, and just like that, the three-time defending Concacaf Nations League champions were dethroned. Panama had downed the U.S., 1-0, and secured a place in Sunday’s final against either Mexico or Canada.It was a second consecutive massive disappointment in international competition for the USMNT, which was knocked out of the Copa América last year in the group stage. Once again, Panama played a feature role in the exit. After coming up empty on his first real chance at a trophy as U.S. coach, Mauricio Pochettino now will be left to figure out a tough defeat.And instead of playing for a fourth straight title, the U.S. will play in a third-place game.“This is embarrassing,” legendary U.S. forward Clint Dempsey said in his postmatch comments on CBS’s broadcast. “You look at Copa América — hosting the tournament and not getting out of the group, and now look at this situation here on home soil, have an opportunity to win your fourth Concacaf Nations League — and Panama does it again. They are our bogey team. We weren’t good enough. We had four great chances. Of those chances you think we’d score at least one or two of those. We weren’t able to get it done tonight and it’s an embarrassment.”With just over one year left until it cohosts the 2026 World Cup, the U.S. clearly has much left to sort.Beyond the defeat, here are a couple of other thoughts on the result:

Crowd disappoints

The U.S. kicked off at 4 p.m. on a Thursday in Los Angeles. It was the start of March Madness as the NCAA tournament tipped off. Tickets were sold for the doubleheader, which meant anyone coming to see Mexico-Canada didn’t need to show up for the first game.Still, it was a bit jarring to see the swaths of open seats at SoFi Stadium at kickoff for the U.S.-Panama semifinal.The U.S. will play two of its three World Cup games at the venue in Inglewood. The hope is that they will draw a huge home crowd. And while Thursday’s crowd is likely no indication of what the World Cup atmosphere will look like, the lack of noise and excitement in the stadium contributed to a game that, at times, felt more like a friendly than it did a competitive fixture.

Robinson’s importance underscored by his absence

When left back Antonee Robinson withdrew from U.S. camp earlier this week with an injury, it was immediately clear that it would have a domino effect for the Americans.Robinson is not just the best left back in the U.S. pool, he is also one of the best players on the team — and there is no clear like-for-like replacement. Pochettino acknowledged as much with his lineup choices on Thursday against Panama. Joe Scally moved from right back to left back to replace Robinson, and Yunus Musah slid from a midfield position to right back for the U.S.Beyond the shuffling that had to occur to fill the hole on the left side, the U.S. clearly lacked the verticality and service that Robinson gives them from the left side. Without his runs on the left side, Tim Weah playing inverted was less effective. The U.S. tilted the attack to the right side through Yunus Musah, but Musah’s strength is carrying the ball forward more than looking for the final pass or cross — he ranks in the 99th percentile in progressive carries per 90 minutes and just the 48th percentile in progressive passes, per FBref.As a result, the U.S. struggled to take advantage of some of the space on the wings as Panama denied space centrally to Pulisic, Weah and McKennie.The U.S. seemed to figure it out a bit more in the second half with Weah staying a bit wider on the left side, but it wasn’t enough to find a goal.(Top photo: Michael Owens/Getty Images)

INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 20: Goalkeeper Matt Turner #1 of United States looks on during the second half of the Concacaf Nations League Semifinal match between United States and Panama at SoFi Stadium on March 20, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

Matt Turner and the challenge of being first-choice goalkeeper for the USMNT but not his club

Greg O’Keeffe

19

March 22, 2025Updated 3:41 am EDT

It is so often the way with goalkeepers — 90 minutes of relative inactivity, one big moment, then a whole lot of judgement.

For Matt Turner, that’s what came deep into added time at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday, when Panama took their only shot on target all game — from the right side of the penalty area, drilled to the bottom left corner; Turner, who had taken position to the right of his goal, could not get his gloves to it.

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“That ball can’t end up in the back of the net,” lamented former USMNT goalkeeper-turned-pundit Tony Meola.

Then, not long after the end of the home side’s 1-0 loss in that Concacaf Nations League semi-final, criticism of the goalkeeper appeared on social media, alongside stills of the goal questioning his movement.

Jack McGlynn and Tim Ream are dejected as Panama celebrate their late winner (Robin Alam/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

That the USMNT won’t now win a fourth consecutive Nations League final is not solely down to Turner. Thursday’s defeat was a collective failure.

And although Panama, who also beat the United States 2-1 in a pivotal Copa America group-stage meeting last summer to set up the host nation’s early exit from that tournament, have now become their bogey team, there will be tougher tests on the horizon for Mauricio Pochettino’s side as they build towards the 2026 World Cup, also largely to be played on American soil.

That is where Turner’s status as second-choice for his club — he has made only four starts this season for Crystal Palace, all in the domestic cup competitions rather than the Premier League — but the USMNT’s No 1 for their biggest games will come under further scrutiny.

It’s something he got asked about by reporters in the build-up to Thursday’s match.

“Obviously, my club situation isn’t ideal right now,” said the 30-year-old, who is on a season-long loan at Palace from rival Premier League club Nottingham Forest. “But I’m giving every opportunity that I have to play the utmost importance and trying to put good performances together, just control what I can right now and then let the chips fall where they may.”

Not ideal then, but neither is it unprecedented.

Sergio Romero was Argentina’s first-choice goalkeeper as they got to the final of the 2014 World Cup despite being second-string at Monaco of Ligue 1, the top division of French club football, and continued in his starting role for the national team despite going on to be the backup to David de Gea at Manchester United. Romero later described it as a “difficult situation”.

Former Palace goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey also had spells as No 1 for Wales, despite hardly playing in the Premier League at the back-end of his time at Selhurst Park. Hennessey was then second-choice for Burnley and Forest while still getting games for his country, including at the 2022 World Cup.

Romero reached the 2014 World Cup final despite being second-choice at his club (Mike Egerton/PA Images via Getty Images)

For the USMNT it is not a new situation, either.

One of Turner’s current understudies, Zack Steffen of MLS side Colorado Rapids, played in the 2021 Nations League finals win against Mexico and in qualifiers for the following year’s World Cup while spending most of his two complete seasons at Manchester City of the Premier League on the bench.

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“It’s come full circle,” says Matt Pyzdrowski, a coach and former goalkeeper who played professionally in the U.S. and Sweden, and is now The Athletic’s goalkeeping analyst. “Matt was playing regularly in MLS (for New England Revolution, before a July 2022 move to Europe with Arsenal) and trying to get ahead of Zack, who wasn’t playing as much as he’d like in England. Now they have kind of switched places.”

For large parts of Thursday’s game, Turner was less busy than he had been when playing 45 minutes of Palace’s 1-0 win over Norwegian side Hamarkameratene in a friendly last week.

In that practice game, part of Palace’s warm-weather training camp in Marbella, Spain during a break in their domestic schedule, he made two saves in the second half after replacing first-choice Dean Henderson at the interval. He touched the ball 17 times, only seven fewer times than in the 99 minutes, including added time, against Panama (24).

The questions come from the one decisive moment that did not go his way, meaning the U.S. will not play in Sunday’s final. But despite that setback, Turner has generally played well enough for the national team to retain his place in it, keeping high-profile errors at a bare minimum.

“It’s obviously a problem but, at the moment, I don’t think it’s a big problem because Matt has always performed for the USMNT,” says Pyzdrowski. “That’s the biggest thing you need to consider. If he was making lots of errors and not performing, then of course it would be a more pressing issue. But he has always done pretty well for his country despite not playing regularly at all for his club.”

Henderson, who is in the current England squad, and Turner warm up for Palace (Sebastian Frej/MB Media/Getty Images)

It remains to be seen whether Turner stays in the team for Sunday’s third-place play-off against Canada.

Patrick Schulte of Columbus Crew was in goal the last time the countries met, a 2-1 win for the Canadians last September in a friendly while the USMNT had Mikey Varas in interim charge. Had it been an important fixture, it is likely Turner would have been in the team that day in Kansas City and not on the bench. That means his performances for the national team are generally buoyed by the feeling of being trusted as a regular, according to Pyzdrowski.

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“It doesn’t matter who you are as a player, you just want to feel valued,” he says. “Then you feel more comfortable on the field and it’s important not to overlook it. Matt has built up a lot of credit with the national team.

“In a perfect world, he’d be playing every week, regardless of what that requires — if it’s going back to MLS — because he’d naturally be sharper. But at the moment it hasn’t caused him too many issues.”

Turner has largely been Palace’s cup goalkeeper this season, starting one of the three Carabao Cup matches they played following his late-August arrival and, more significantly, all three FA Cup ties to date. He will hope to retain his place in the quarter-finals on March 29 against USMNT team-mate Antonee Robinson’s Fulham.

The only potential downside to his inactivity in the Premier League, Henderson has been an ever-present for Palace to date and Turner’s last appearance in the competition was for Forest in January last year, is a potential lack of time facing key high-level-game scenarios.

“The biggest issue of not playing regularly is just rustiness,” says Pyzdrowski. “And the relationship with your back line and reading of the play — how deep the balls come, or crosses into the box.

“I wouldn’t say that saving the ball and the speed of the ball is that much of a problem, because you get a lot of that in training. You get a ton of reps (in training) even when you’re on the bench. It’s more situations that can only arise in games.”

Those daily sessions between games are also different as a club’s backup ’keeper, though. “In training, the focus is really on the No 1, so the drills you do are suited to them,” says Pyzdrowski. “A lot of the situations Matt will be in during training won’t be with the guys who play every week (other reserves), so he’s not building those relationships.

“But then that’s the important thing with the national team: that he’s familiar with the setup and the guys there. He built that up over time and really earned his spot.”

Turner during Thursday’s defeat by Panama (Shaun Clark/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Veteran goalkeeper Andy Lonergan had spells as a backup, and even third-choice, towards the end of his career with top clubs such as Liverpool and Everton. He feels Turner’s extra physical freshness, in contrast to a ’keeper going through the grind of playing every weekend in the Premier League, should actually be a positive.

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“He’s fresh for these games, raring to go and experienced,” says the 41-year-old, now a player/coach at Wigan Athletic in League One, the third tier of English football. “I know Dean Kiely, who works with him at Palace and speaks very highly of him and says how good he is in training.

“He’s got hundreds of games behind him and has been at big teams now, so I don’t think he’ll be too concerned about the situation. He has no niggles, no injuries, and he comes to these USMNT camps champing at the bit. When you’re second-choice (at a club) but have something to work towards, like the cup games and then the international games, you have a good focus.

“Ideally you want to play all the time and keep that rhythm because it isn’t easy coming in every six weeks in the cup, and his last international camp was in November. But from his point of view, I don’t think it’ll be an issue.”

Pyzdrowski points out that, in theory at least, playing a Panama team ranked 36th in the world by FIFA (20 places below the United States) can be less taxing on a goalkeeper’s reflexes than a game in the English top flight. “International football is a little different from the Premier League,” he says. “A game against Panama will be different and have perhaps less intensity than a Premier League game, so that will also help him feel his way into it.”

Lonergan playing for Everton against Western Sydney Wanderers in a 2022 friendly (Brett Hemmings/Getty Images for Bursty)

Like Pyzdrowski, Lonergan’s only concern would be whether players in Turner’s situation can stay sharp for in-game situations.

“Speaking from experience, the only fear when I wasn’t playing (regularly) but was a cup ’keeper with a game in six weeks’ time is that, in training, you’re doing small-side games so your reactions are bang-on,” he says. “But it’s your distances with the back four, balls over the top and through balls where you could be a little bit out of sync.

“That was always my concern, because training and 11-a-side on full pitches are different. In training, you’re on autopilot, flying around, but in games those decisions are vital.

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“Through balls, distances and balls over the top are the hardest to practice as a ’keeper. You can do it in training but there are no consequences, whereas in a match if you decide to come (for a ball) and don’t get there, you’re in trouble. In training, you can keep doing it until you get it right.”

With the World Cup 15 months away, it could be that Turner — who made only seven appearances in his year with Arsenal before joining Forest, where he made 17 league starts last season — looks for a new team where he is more likely to be first choice. His loan at Palace expires in June and he has another two years to go on his contract with Forest, where Belgium international Matz Sels has established himself as a key player in goal as they make a surprise push for Champions League qualification.

“It’s not an unworkable situation as it is,” adds Pyzdrowski, who recently started a new role coaching the goalkeepers at Swedish top-flight side Malmo. “But the challenge it creates is because the goalkeeping position is so delicate, with so many small details. You really can only work on a lot of them in games.

“Goalkeeper training has evolved a lot in the last 10 years, in terms of the different repetitions and exercises you do compared to just lots of shots and volleys.

Turner catches a cross during Palace’s recent FA Cup win against Millwall (Rob Newell – CameraSport via Getty Images)

“Now it’s more match relevant, but even if you have one or two goalkeeper coaches and they’re taking shots at you, it’s not the same as a top-class striker coming at you, with the speed and accuracy. Yes, you’ll do some exercises with the team, but training just isn’t built around the number two or number three.

“You’re important and you have a role, but the coach needs guys on the team (the starters) working together to build those relationships.”

With the national team, those bonds seem as strong as ever. But to face the game’s very best at a World Cup just over a year away, Turner may decide he needs to increase his weekly workload.

Panama defeat conjures memories of USMNT’s most devastating losses

Christian Pulisic in the USMNT's loss to Trinidad & Tobago

By Pablo Maurer 0March 22, 2025 8:00 am EDT


The U.S. men’s national team’s 1-0 loss to Panama in the Concacaf Nations League semifinals was unquestionably a humiliating one. The USMNT, replete with stars playing abroad and coached by the reputable Mauricio Pochettino, looked listless against the Panamanians. Despite the fact that Panama has now beaten the Americans three times in the last 20 months, the result still felt like a gut-punch to the U.S. – the program and its fans.

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Not that many of them watched the match in person. Just before the anthems on Thursday, U.S. star Christian Pulisic was spotted grimacing at the large swaths of empty seats around SoFi Stadium. The dour atmosphere – it didn’t help that it was a 4 p.m. local time kickoff outside Los Angeles – only added to the heartburn surrounding the result. A significantly larger crowd turned up for the second match of the day, between Mexico and Canada.

Pochettino spent much of the run-up to the game doing media, offering bold predictions that the USMNT were real contenders to win the World Cup in 2026, which is a little over a year away. In other interviews, he spoke of returning to the EPL some day and yearned for a conversation with U.S. President Donald Trump. The Argentine is charming, for certain, but his guile will mean nothing if he can’t accomplish his stated goals. He was brought in in large part to motivate this “golden generation” of U.S. players, but very few of them looked committed or golden on Thursday night.

The loss is unquestionably the poorest result of Pochettino’s seven-match tenure to date, and the U.S. still has a chance to save a bit of face against Canada in the third-place game. A loss in that match, which certainly feels possible, would only add to the misery surrounding the USMNT’s recent performances, and with time running short when it comes to galvanizing the country around the sport and program, results like Thursday’s come with some added layers.

Perspective is important, though, and even a fourth-place finish in a Concacaf Nations League wouldn’t hold a candle to some of the U.S. men’s most devastating previous failures, ones that had massive consequences. If you’re the kind of fan that likes to lean into your grief, then keep reading.


Costa Rica 1, USMNT 0; May 31, 1985

By the time the USMNT’s final qualifier of the 1986 World Cup cycle rolled around, the whole of American soccer was in a tailspin. The North American Soccer League (NASL) — the first real, top-flight league in U.S. history — had closed up shop permanently just two months earlier. The national team was largely made up of players from the Major Indoor Soccer League, and they rarely played the outdoor game, outside of national team call-ups. Some team members even played in semi-professional leagues and held part-time jobs.

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Mexico, the dominant team in the region for decades, had already qualified for the 1986 World Cup as the host nation. In an era where only two teams from Concacaf qualified, the USMNT was looked upon as a favorite to advance. It needed only a draw against Costa Rica to advance to the next round of qualifying and take a step closer to a first World Cup berth since 1950.

The NASL’s collapse and public apathy toward the sport put the U.S. Soccer Federation in a bind and made ticket sales an essential revenue stream. Consequential matches in the U.S, even World Cup qualifiers, frequently felt like away games, with crowds full of immigrants from Latin American countries. Such was the case against Costa Rica.

“There was an agent that represented some of the (Costa Rican) players,” remembered USMNT’s Perry Van der Beck. “The federation sold this game to him. The stadium was just full of Costa Ricans — the halftime show, even, was just full of Costa Rican music, all aimed at the Costa Rican fans.”

The U.S. was led by head coach Alkis Panagoulias. Born in Greece, Panagoulias was a “token offering,” remembers former USMNT defender Alan Merrick, “who truly believed that the so-called ‘American spirit’ would carry us alone.” He was short of technical acumen and long on inspirational quotes.

“In this country, somewhere out there, maybe in Harlem or Los Angeles, there is the next Pelé,” Panagoulias once said. “And not just one — maybe 20 or 30.”

None of them was present against Costa Rica. The U.S. had the lion’s share of possession that day and played a bright opening half hour, yet the Costa Ricans pulled ahead on a lucky strike. USMNT forward Ricky Davis, along with fellow upstart Hugo Pérez, had a half-dozen decent chances for the U.S., all of which missed the mark.

Then, in the 73rd minute, a ray of hope: Defender Dan Canter fired in a shot that appeared to go in. The referee signaled for a goal, which was later waved off. It had hit the side netting, and 20 minutes later, the match ended. So did the U.S.’s hopes of qualification.

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“I don’t know where we go from there,” Davis told reporters after the match. “There was our best chance to make it to the World Cup. We won’t have another chance until 1990. Who knows where soccer in America will be by then?”

The defeat is among the darkest moments in U.S. soccer history, but it also marks a beginning. Panagoulias and a host of players would be shown the door, replaced by a generation of talent that would eventually lead the U.S. to its first World Cup qualification in 40 years.

Among the only players to survive that transition was Paul Caligiuri. Not only did the USMNT legend take place in one of the program’s darkest moments, he scored the famed “shot heard ‘round the world” against Trinidad and Tobago that qualified the U.S. for the 1990 World Cup in Italy.


Iran 2, USMNT 1; June 21, 1998

The USMNT entered the 1998 World Cup in France riding a wave of hype. It followed a respectable showing at the 1994 World Cup on home soil with a series of wonderful results: a shocking run to the semifinals of the 1995 Copa America, the country’s first (and still only) victory over Brazil a few years later and a host of other respectable encounters against legitimately good teams across the globe.

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Under the surface, though, cracks had begun to show. Some of the squad’s veterans, many of whom were part of the ‘94 cycle, had butted heads with head coach Steve Sampson over roster decisions and their dwindling roles. Sampson added fuel to the fire when he brought in a series of foreign-born players, much to the chagrin of the team’s veterans.

And infamously, Sampson excluded U.S. legend John Harkes from the final roster after learning that Harkes had been engaged in an affair with the wife of teammate Eric Wynalda. A difficult draw made the U.S.’s task in 1998 even more difficult, and after losing the opening match to Germany and with Yugoslavia looming, the USMNT’s second match against Iran became a must-win.

The game was framed by decades-old turmoil between Iran and the United States, and as matchday approached, things grew tense. SWAT teams and snipers were present in the stadium and FIFA had mandated strict protocols for how both teams interacted before the match. The U.S. and Iran, seeking to make a statement, took a team photograph together, with the Iranians presenting the U.S. players with white flowers.

USMNT and Iran at the 1998 World CupUSMNT and Iran pose together at the 1998 World Cup. (Photo by Nader Davoodi ATPImages/Getty Images)

For his part, Sampson made a half-dozen changes to his starting XI from the Germany loss and altered his formation, as well. The U.S. started the game on the front foot, nearly pulling ahead on a Brian McBride header, which hit the post. But the Iranians were opportunistic, and they grabbed a pair of goals on the counterattack. The 2-1 loss, combined with other results, eliminated the USMNT from the World Cup after two games.

The writing was on the wall for Sampson, who’d be dismissed not long after the tournament’s conclusion. Many of the club’s senior players, most notably veteran defender Alexi Lalas, sealed Sampson’s fate by publicly criticizing him in the press. The 1998 debacle marked the end of an era for U.S. Soccer, with many of the team’s highest-profile players, those who’d taken part in the 1994 World Cup, moving on for good.


Czech Republic 3, USMNT 0; June 12, 2006

It’s nearly impossible to overstate the hype surrounding the USMNT in the run-up to the 2006 World Cup. The U.S. had shocked the world with a deep run in 2002 and stormed through qualifying for the ‘06 tournament, booking a ticket to Germany with three matches remaining. The U.S. roster was a who’s who of American soccer royalty, maybe the most talented collection of American players ever sent to a World Cup.

The qualifying run had pushed the U.S. up to fifth in FIFA’s (deeply flawed) world ranking, which was uncharted territory for the lowly Americans. They’d done something even more improbable — cracked the consciousness of the general public in the U.S., the most elusive of challenges in American soccer. U.S. Soccer and Nike only intensified the buzz, plastering the team all over American airwaves and even deputizing one of the team’s young stars, Clint Dempsey, as U.S. Soccer’s official rapper.

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Even a truly difficult draw couldn’t dampen the spirits of the American faithful. Italy and Ghana were both respectable opponents but both seemed beatable. Rounding out the U.S. group was the Czech Republic, then one of the best teams in the world.

Any and all hype surrounding the U.S. evaporated within moments of their group stage opener against the Czechs. It was not the first time the two countries had met in a World Cup. In 1990, the U.S. played their first World Cup match in 40 years against what was then called Czechoslovakia, losing in a 5-1 bloodbath. Many considered it a miracle the U.S. had even qualified for that tournament and few paid the result any mind. Even fewer considered it any form of a humiliation.

But 2006 was a different story. The U.S. was comprehensively dismantled by a Czech side featuring names like Jan Koller, Petr Čech and Tomáš Rosický. After their showing at the ‘02 World Cup and despite the hype surrounding the squad, the USMNT managed just one shot in the drubbing.

An Associated Press match report said the U.S. looked like “a bewildered World Cup newcomer again,” and the result in the opener proved too much to overcome. The USMNT managed just a single goal in the tournament and was sent packing — along with the Czech Republic, the other casualty of the group of death.What You Should Read NextHow Clint Dempsey’s childhood in Nacogdoches inspired the USMNT’s 2006 hype video ‘Don’t Tread’Dempsey still has a soft spot for the song, as do many soccer fans in this country.


USMNT 1, Mexico 2; November 11, 2016

Few words in the language of American soccer carry as much weight as “dos a cero.”

The USMNT’s rivalry with Mexico is the stuff of legend, with the Mexicans holding a historical edge on their northern neighbors. Mexico was essentially unbeatable at the Azteca in Mexico City and El Tri often got the better of the U.S. in the states, as well. It wasn’t until the USMNT started playing matches of consequence against Mexico in Columbus, Ohio, that the U.S. had a true home-field advantage.

For a 15-year stretch, the U.S. were undefeated at Crew Stadium, going 8-0-3 and compiling a 6-0-2 in World Cup qualifiers at the venue. The greatest results came against Mexico. The U.S. won every match they played against the Mexicans by that 2-0, dos-a-cero scoreline during that stretch, creating a deeply important psychological edge that grew with every successive result.

By 2016, the thought that the U.S. would lose a match to Mexico in Columbus — even allow a goal there — felt borderline unthinkable. Yet something felt different ahead of the U.S.’s qualifier against the Mexicans that November, in no small part because of the presidential election only days earlier. Trump’s dangerous rhetoric about Mexican immigrants in the United States forced both teams to put sports aside for the moment. By the time the two sides posed together for a team photo as a sign of unity just before the match, the aura surrounding the match changed. By the end of the game, the mystique of Crew Stadium was gone.

Mexico's Rafa Marquez and Miguel LayunRafa Márquez gave Mexico its first World Cup qualifying win in Columbus in 2016. (Paul Vernon/AFP/Getty Images)

Mexican defender Miguel Layún gave El Tri their first goal in Columbus 20 minutes in before the U.S. equalized early in the second half through Bobby Wood. Mexico did not let up, though, and found the winner just a minute from full time. It came courtesy of a glancing header by Rafa Márquez, perhaps the most villainous player in the history of the rivalry to U.S. fans. It felt fitting. Four days later, the U.S. lost 4-0 in Costa Rica, and five days after that, manager Jurgen Klinsmann was fired, with qualification for the 2018 World Cup put in peril.

By the time the 2022 qualification cycle rolled around, Crew Stadium had been replaced with a gleaming new venue. It probably wouldn’t have mattered anyways — the USMNT chose to play their home qualifier against Mexico in Cincinnati instead, leaving Columbus and all of its accompanying magic in the rearview.


Trinidad and Tobago 2, USMNT 1; October 10, 2017

Few U.S. fans had heard of Couva (population 45,000) before the USMNT played a decisive World Cup qualifier there in the fall of 2017. Now, the little town in Trinidad is seared into the collective consciousness of every USMNT fan. The name alone is a trigger word.

It was there that a shocking result eliminated the U.S. from qualification for the 2018 World Cup, ending a stretch during which the U.S. had played in every World Cup since 1990.

The seeds of the defeat in Couva were planted by Klinsmann, who led the USMNT through a miserable qualification cycle. After losing to Mexico and Costa Rica in the opening matches of the final stage of qualification, Klinsmann was sacked and replaced by Bruce Arena.

Arena, by most metrics the most successful coach in USMNT history, set about trying to repair the damage. The U.S. breezed through a few games but stuttered late in the qualification cycle. Even still, it seemed in excellent shape entering the match in Couva, needing just a draw to book a trip to Russia.

Trinidad and Tobago entered the match with little to play for, having already been eliminated. But games between these two opponents are always tinged with that famous 1989 win, the one where Caligiuri put a dagger in the heart of the Caribbean nation. The U.S. did little to help its cause by posting video on social media of the field conditions in Trinidad, a jab many viewed as belittling and insensitive given the resources available to the tiny nation.

In turn, the Soca Warriors came to play. They scored first through an own goal by U.S. defender Omar Gonzalez. Things went from bad to worse after T&T right back Alvin Jones ripped a 35-yard curler by U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard. Pulisic, then 19, handed his team a lifeline with a goal early in the second half, but the U.S. never found an equalizer. Dempsey, reduced to a substitute, hit the post on the closest call.

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Elsewhere in the region, other teams had pulled off their own upsets. Panama and Honduras had beaten Costa Rica and Mexico, respectively. and earned the right to advance. The unthinkable, to many, had happened: the USMNT was eliminated. To this day, the loss remains the worst loss in USMNT history, based on ELO rating.

Arena resigned almost immediately. USMNT fans, who had long grown accustomed to qualifying in every World Cup cycle, called for widespread change. The match marked the end of the line for a generation of U.S. legends — Michael Bradley, Dempsey, Howard and Jozy Altidore among them – and ushered in the new.

(Editor’s note: A portion of this piece was repurposed from a previous Athletic article from this writer detailing past significant USMNT defeats)

(Top photo: Ashley Allen/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.

https://embed.bsky.app/embed/did:plc:syau5v2b5judqu4gbfxjdobd/app.bsky.feed.post/3lk4umrfkt22d?id=9539276038639817&ref_url=https%253A%252F%252Fwww.nytimes.com%252Fathletic%252F6203787%252F2025%252F03%252F14%252Fstate-of-the-nwsl-2025-season%252F&colorMode=system

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.

2/21/25 US Ladies win over Colombia, Champ League US Players eliminated, MLS season kicks off today, UCL 16 set,

US Ladies Win 2-0 over Colombia, Play Australia Sun 5 pm on TBS, Wed 10:30 pm vs Japan
It was nice to see the US look good vs Colombia with a whole lot of new faces on the field. A 2-0 SheBelieves Cup win over Colombia in Houston on Thursday night. Chelsea midfielder Cat Macario (back after 3 years from a torn MCL) and Utah Royals’ Ally Sentnor were the difference for the U.S., the latter scoring in her first start with the senior national team. US vs Colombia Highlights. I thought the whole team looked good – hard getting used to Captain Lindsay Horan being called her new married name of Heaps. The US really dominated play – Gothem’s Ashley Ryan had a couple of nice shots and an assist on the night playing in Rose’s role. Playing as the chief line-breaker behind Sentnor, Lindsey Heaps, and Ryan, 17 year old Lilly Yohannes continually slotted the ball between Colombian midfielders and defenders leading to the first goal. The D lead by Sonnet, Nighswonger were solid and Campbell was really not tested in goal. The US next plays Sunday at 5 pm with a match against Australia in Glendale on TBS. The final day of the competition is Wed vs Japan at 10:30 pm on TBS @ Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, Calif.

Champions League see’s Most American’s Eliminated
First it was AC Milan with Pulisic and Musah with a devastating loss at home to Feynord 2-1 knocking them out before the round of 16. Then Celtic with American centerbacks Cameron Carter Vickers and Aaron Trusty showing their quality but still barely losing at Bayern in the closing seconds. And of course the final had my precious Juventus losing a heartbreaking game at home to PSV 3-1 despite a goal from American Tim Weah and a full 120 for McKinney. Of course PSV has 4 American’s but only 1 is playing in RB Ledezma as the others are lost for the season (although Dest might return soon). Either way it was a heartbreaking 2 days leading into the Round of 16 as their were more Americans in the knock-out stages than ever before. As many as 9 American’s started in the knockout rounds and only a couple are moving thru.. 😦

MLS Season Kicks off 30th Season Friday night on Apple

So MLS is back underway in what is Messi’s 3rd year of a 3 yr contract with Inter-Miami. While Messi has sold out stadiums nationwide – MLS refusal to allow his games to be played on normal TV – in my opinion has drastically limited his impact. Yes you still need Apple TV and a $100 MLS Season pass to see MLS regular season games — and most of them are all played at the same time on Saturday nights. Absolutely clueless! I can’t say I am excited for the season — as honestly I watch about 1/10th the # of games I used to watch before Apple. I still love Seattle and try to follow Cincy, Miami and Atlanta United – but its so much easier to watch EPL – lets be honest. Anyway I have included a bunch of stories about MLS, season predictions and more. I will say Champions Cup games are on weeknights on Fox Sports 2 which many people have-I have included them on the TV schedule. Also rumor has it the Sunday night Games might be Free on Apple TV – trying to establish Sunday night Futbol by MLS.

Big Games this Weekend
Liverpool @ Man City on Sun 11:30 am leads the big games this weekend, along with New Castle vs Forest on USA at 9 am. American’s will face off Sat at 10 am on Peacock as Fulham & Robinson hosts Crystal Palace and Chris Richards. AC Milan w/Pulisic & Musah travel to Torino at Sat at 12 on Para+ in a must win, while Juve with Weah/Mckinney play Cagliari on CBS Golazo/Para+ at 2:45 pm on Sunday. MLS has LA vs Minn United on Fox at 4:30 pm Sat along with Miami vs NYCFC at 7:30 pm free on Apple TV.

Champions League round-of-16 draw

Club Brugge vs. Aston Villa
Borussia Dortmund vs. Lille
Real Madrid vs. Atlético Madrid
Bayern Munich vs. Bayer Leverkusen
PSV Eindhoven vs. Arsenal
Feyenoord vs. Inter Milan
Paris Saint-Germain vs. Liverpool
Benfica vs. Barcelona

Great to be back on the field at Grand Park for the Ladies Showcase this weekend with Justin & Clint.

GAMES on TV

MLS Opening Weekend – Apple TV Plus Games are Free this weekend if you have Apple – the others require Apple TV plus MLS Season Package for $99.

US Ladies

Hayes praises Macario’s ‘pride’ in USWNT return
United States beats Colombia to open SheBelieves Cup
Macario’s first goal in three years gives USWNT a level of optimism for 2025ttps://www.espn.com/soccer/league/_/name/fifa.shebelieves

Champions League

Champions League review: Club Brugge rise as Italians and Americans stumble
Real Madrid never doubted Kylian Mbappe’s quality despite slow start
Pep Guardiola sparks Real Madrid hopes of Champions League glory with post-defeat comments

Mbappe 10, Rudiger 7 | Real Madrid 3-1 Manchester City: Player ratings

⚽️Serie A’s worst in 10 years! Inter remains, but it’s already a failure ⚽️
Ex-Italy star slams ‘mentally dead’ Juventus in ‘deserved’ PSV defeat

💫 The Champions League’s latest Team of the Week has been revealed

Cash register rings in Eindhoven: PSV’s income in the Champions League amounts to 73.5 million euros

Thiago Motta under scrutiny after Juventus’ Champions League exit – report

Juventus boss Thiago Motta defends substitutes decision after Champions League exit

Bayern advances with late goal, while AC Milan gets bounced
Pep Guardiola ‘locked himself inside office’ after Champ League collapse this season, new report reveals

‘Man City’s surrender in Madrid marks end of an era’

MLS – Champs Cup

Champions Cup: Messi leads Miami past SKC; Sounders win in Guatemala
Ice Man: Yes, Lionel Messi can do it on a freezing cold night in Kansas
A LeBron-like takeover in MLS? Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami power play is now

MLS


5️⃣ reasons to be excited about MLS this season

🔮 Previewing the MLS Western Conference ahead of the 2025 season

🔮 Previewing the MLS Eastern Conference ahead of the 2025 season


San Diego FC’s counts on Mexican star Chucky Lozano to be a spark in its debut season

Commentary: Bruce Arena aims to achieve the seemingly impossible with San José

Houston Dynamo sign experienced MLS midfielder Nicolás Lodeiro
MLS rival? New top-tier men’s soccer league coming to the United States

USL announces intention to start new league at same tier as MLS

US MEN

Christian Pulisic responds to Milan exit reports
Pulisic: ‘I’ve never asked to leave Milan’

Report Milan looking to Paratici and Sarri for the future

GdS: Conceicao battling for his Milan future – the one objective he will be judged on

WORLD

Liverpool’s Injury Worries Grow with Gakpo Doubtful For City Clash

Reffing


New Ref Abuse Prevention Policy
Reffing for Carmel Dad’s Club this Spring
Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

Goalkeeping

Great Saves Champions League this week
Tuesday’s Best Saves
Inter Milan goalie Yann Sommer injures thumb ahead of key Serie A and Champions League games
Revealed – How Long Inter Milan Goalkeeper To Be Sidelined After Fracturing Thumb

‘I have a really special connection here’ – Dubravka signs new deal

USMNT midweek roundup: Womp womp

The week started with 13 Americans in Champions League, and ends with essentially 2.

By Justin Moran@kickswish  Feb 21, 2025, 5:30am PST  

AC Milan v Feyenoord - UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Knockout Play-off Second Leg

Here’s a bullet-point rundown of the USMNT players whose clubs were in action this week (Monday through Thursday). Well, there were 13 Americans alive in Champions League on Monday, and now it’s down to just 6 (Dest, Tillman, Pepi, Ledezma, Reyna, and Cole Campbell). And of those six, Dest, Tillman, and Pepi are out injured, and Campbell hasn’t been involved with Dortmund’s first team squad in a while. So, it’s basically Reyna and Ledezma now.

I divided players by position groups (for me personally, that helps my depth-chart-oriented brain to process this information most usefully). Within position groups, players are listed in order of when their games took place.

Strikers

Kristian Fletcher’s goal for Nottingham Forest’s U21s on Monday. Would prove to be the winner in a 1-0 win over Stoke.

That’s now 3 straight games with a goal for the 19 year old. Really starting to hit his stride pic.twitter.com/UiO4jiZm9I— USMNT Source (@usmntsource) February 19, 2025

Paul Arriola scores the opener for Seattle! #ChampionsCup pic.twitter.com/9npTqCZAxa— Concacaf Champions Cup (@TheChampions) February 20, 2025

Wingers and attacking mids

  • Brenden Aaronson started and played 78 minutes for Leeds United in a 2-1 win over Sunderland at Elland Park on Monday. The game was 1-1 when Brenden came off the field, Leeds got the winning goal in the fifth minute of stoppage time.
  • Christian Pulisic started for AC Milan and played 63 minutes in their 1-1 draw with Feyenoord on Tuesday. Pulisic sent in a near-perfect cross to set up Milan’s only goal. Milan lost 1-2 on aggregate, and are eliminated from Champions League.

DREAM START AT THE SAN SIRO!

Santi Giménez stays hot for Milan with a scrappy goal inside the first minute against his former club pic.twitter.com/q2tzmpq9go— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) February 18, 2025

  • Djordje Mihailovic played the full 90 in the Colorado Rapids’ 2-1 Concacaf Champions Cup win over LAFC on Tuesday, scoring both Colorado goals. First, a penalty, to open the scoring, and then an 80th-minute free kick that curled into the top corner to give the Rapids a 2-1 lead heading into the second leg (highlights).

An absolute stunner by Mihailovic to extend the lead! ⚽ #ChampionsCup pic.twitter.com/2Yf0gal9p0— Concacaf Champions Cup (@TheChampions) February 19, 2025

  • Gio Reyna played 21 minutes off the bench for Borussia Dortmund in a 0-0 draw with Sporting CP on Wednesday. BVB advanced 3-0 on aggregate, and will continue their Champions League journey.
  • Cole Campbell was an unused sub for Dortmund against Sporting CP on Wednesday.
  • Tim Weah played all 120 minutes for Juventus in the 1-3 loss to PSV on Wednesday. Weah scored Juve’s only goal. The goal was initially ruled offside before eventually being given.

Timothy Weah’s first #UCL goal is an absolute THUNDERBOLT to restore Juve’s aggregate lead pic.twitter.com/E7ikJnIfpJ— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) February 19, 2025

  • Malik Tillman remains out injured for PSV, and missed their 3-1 win over Juventus on Wednesday.
  • Diego Luna wasn’t in Real Salt Lake’s squad for their 0-0 draw with CS Herediano on Wednesday.
  • Alex Zendejas played 84 minutes and scored América’s only goal in a 1-1 draw with León on Wednesday.

¡Minuto 10 y Zendejas abre el marcador a nuestro favor! pic.twitter.com/WQBDdttxLa— Club América (@ClubAmerica) February 20, 2025

  • Taylor Booth subbed on in the 106th minute to play 15 minutes for Twente in a 2-5 loss to Bodø/Glimt on Thursday. Twente lost 4-6 on aggregate, and are out of Europa League.

Center mids

  • Gianluca Busio played 33 minutes off the bench for Venezia in their 0-2 loss at Genoa on Monday.
  • Yunus Musah started and played 83 minutes for AC Milan in their 1-1 draw with Feyenoord on Tuesday. Milan lost 1-2 on aggregate, and are knocked out of Champions League.
  • Weston McKennie played the full 120 minutes for Juventus in the 1-3 loss to PSV on Wednesday, as Juve bowed out of Champions League.
  • Benja Cremaschi played 11 minutes off the bench for Inter Miami in a 1-0 win over Sporting on Wednesday.
  • Johnny Cardoso played 31 minutes off the bench for Real Betis in a 0-1 loss to Gent. Betis won the tie 3-1 on aggregate, and are moving on to the next round of Conference League.

Fullbacks

  • Reggie Cannon started for the Colorado Rapids and was subbed out in the 90th minute of their 2-1 win over LAFC in Concacaf Champions Cup on Tuesday (highlights).
  • Sergiño Dest was not in PSV’s squad for their 3-1 win over Juventus on Wednesday, but he is back in training!
  • Richy Ledezma started for PSV and played 78 minutes in the 3-1 win over Juve on Wednesday. A report on X claimed that USMNT staff was at the match, primarily to scout Ledezma.

Center-backs

  • Cameron Carter-Vickers played the full 90 for Celtic in their 1-1 draw away to Bayern Munich. Alphonso Davies’ goal in the fourth minute of second-half stoppage time was enough to eke out a 3-2 aggregate win for Bayern, knocking Celtic out of Champions League.
  • Auston Trusty also played the full 90 for Celtic in the 1-1 draw with Bayern.
  • Jackson Ragen played the full 90 for the Seattle Sounders in the 3-1 away win over Antigua GFC on Wednesday.
  • Miles Robinson played the full 90 for FC Cincinnati in a 4-1 win over Motagua on Wednesday in Concacaf Champions Cup.
  • Matt Miazga tore his ACL in October, he missed the Motagua game. FotMob lists him as expected to return in late June.

Goalkeepers

  • Diego Kochen was an unused sub for FC Barcelona in their 1-0 win over Rayo Vallecano at home on Monday.
  • Zack Steffen played the full 90 for the Colorado Rapids on Tuesday, making 7 saves and allowing one goal (from Aaron Long) in their 2-1 win over LAFC in Concacaf Champions Cup (game highlights).
  • Drake Callender was not in Inter Miami’s squad for their 1-0 win over Sporting KC on Wednesday. The club stated that he wasn’t 100% fit, making him unavailable for this match, but he appeared to be fully participating in training. Miami signed 38-year-old Argentine ‘keeper Oscar Ustari in September; Ustari got the start against SKC and kept a clean sheet.
  • Roman Celentano played the full 90 for FC Cincinnati in the 4-1 win over Motagua on Wednesday, making 4 saves (and conceding the one goal, obviously).

What were your takeaways from this weekend? What changes would you make to the format of these articles? Hit the comments to discuss.

MLS Predictions from Around the Web


American’s Tim Weah (who scored) and Weston McKinney were rated the best players in Juve’s loss.

Promising Champions League for USMNT stars turns dire in a flash

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 18: Sergio Conceicao, Head Coach of AC Milan, speaks with his player, Christian Pulisic, during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Knockout Play-off second leg match between AC Milan and Feyenoord at San Siro Stadium on February 18, 2025 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter The Athletic Feb 19, 2025


A once-promising UEFA Champions League campaign for Americans took a gruesome turn in the playoff knockout phase of the new-look competition after AC Milan, Juventus and Celtic’s eliminations took out a half dozen U.S. internationals in the process.

Although Borussia Dortmund have two U.S. players on their squad and PSV have four, both Dortmund players are late-game options at best, while PSV’s three-high profile Americans are all injured. The fourth at PSV, Richy Ledezma, started again at right back in Wednesday’s extra-time ouster of Juventus, but the 24-year-old earned his only call-up to the senior national team in 2020 and maintains eligibility for Mexico.In the meantime, high-profile core stars Christian Pulisic, Yunus Musah, Tim Weah and Weston McKennie are done with European competition this season, while Celtic center backs and U.S. hopefuls Cameron Carter-Vickers and Auston Trusty also won’t be tested by the continent’s finest anymore following last-gasp elimination at the hands of Bayern Munich (and Canadian goal-scoring hero Alphonso Davies).The final blow came Wednesday, when PSV outlasted Juventus, 4-3 on aggregate. This was the second consecutive day in which an Eredivisie side knocked off a team from Serie A in dramatic fashion, following Feyenoord’s surprising triumph over Milan.

It appeared Juventus were on their way through in the 63rd minute, when Weah, playing as a right back as he often does for the club, ran onto a cleared corner kick and connected with power and precision from 25 yards out. The linesman initially called the sequence off, spotting an offside Juventus teammate on the initial corner kick, but VAR intervened and left the center official to deem that Kelly did not influence the play in any phase. The awarded goal allowed Weah to become the fifth USMNT player to score in this season’s Champions League.

Weah was impactful throughout his shift, but a 74th-minute goal from Ismael Saibari forced extra time, while Ryan Flamingo put the tie away in the 98th minute on a scramble in front of goal following a well-executed free kick. The result sees PSV through to the round of 16 instead of Juve and another abrupt ending for Americans in Europe following a largely prolific run through the league phase.

With comparatively little laying ahead for marquee USMNT members in the Champions League now – Dortmund’s Gio Reyna and Cole Campbell join the PSV quartet in the last 16 – it’s worth examining how the full contingent fared up until the playoff round, digging into the numbers and finding a relative standing.


Through Wednesday’s knockout playoff second legs, USMNT-eligible players have logged 5,009 minutes across 82 games, with 53 of those shifts coming as starts. When they played, every American player had a record of at least .500 – meaning their teams won at least as many games as they lost when they were involved.Entering the round of 16, USMNT-eligible players’ involvement ranged from Trusty, who logged 815 minutes with Celtic, to Dortmund’s latest Yankee youngster, Cole Campbell, who made one 13-minute cameo. Extra time in Eindhoven helped the group exceed 5,000 minutes of play, comfortably eclipsing the previous high of 3,985 minutes logged in 2021-22. A year earlier, Pulisic became the first American man to play in a Champions League final, helping Chelsea beat Manchester City in Porto. Barring a surprising run to the final by either PSV or Dortmund, he’s likely to retain that distinction into 2025-26.

Understandably, an uptick in playing time helped the group set another record for goals scored in the Champions League by Americans (13; Pulisic led all U.S. scorers with four), an impressive feat reached well before the competition’s final four rounds. For context, American players scored 12 Champions League goals in the previous four editions – combined.

This season’s efforts ehaven’t been garbage-time scoreline-padders, either. Three goals proved to be game-winners, with Pepi swinging matches for PSV with both of his successful strikes and McKennie making the difference for Juventus on one occasion. Tillman, who keyed a comeback vs. Shakhtar Donetsk that Pepi finished off, also swung a result, playing a needed assist to Flamingo during the league phase. Weah’s strike on Wednesday was undoubtedly meaningful, even if its impact was short-lived.

So where does that baker’s dozen place the U.S. in the national golden boot race? Unfortunately, quite far from the podium places — but in impressive standing when given proper context.

Through the tournament’s playoff round, players from the U.S. are tied for the 13th-highest goal return, at level standing with Norway. Ten contingents above them are UEFA-affiliated nations, while the other two (Brazil and Argentina) have long been assimilated into the European game’s highest levels. As such, the U.S. has provided the third-most goals to this year’s Champions League of any non-UEFA nation, while they’ve chipped in more than any country outside of Europe and South America. Japan is next with 12 goals, while Guinea, Nigeria and Morocco are tied at 10.The fellow 2026 World Cup cohosts are a little further down the hierarchy. Canada is tied for 22nd with nine, most recently Davies’ late decider against Celtic, while all six of Mexico’s goals came from Santiago Giménez. The only other goal scored by a Concacaf player came from César Blackman, with the Panama right back scoring once for ŠK Slovan Bratislava.Some rationale for the Americans’ success this year is the inevitable result of the game’s globalization – an increase in opportunities from players who hail from beyond UEFA’s nations.

The new Champions League format also increases the number of paths into the competition. Teams operating a rung below their nation’s title favorites can still claim one of a healthy number of berths into the tournament field — teams of Dortmund, Juventus and Milan’s caliber at present. There is also more consistent access to the tournament for the best teams of perceived second-tier competitions, like the ones often dominated by Celtic and PSV. Any team that reaches the league phase is guaranteed more games than they enjoyed in the old group-stage format, with every participant playing eight games before the first wave of elimination.Still, none of this makes this week’s trio of eliminations any easier to digest. Milan will feel especially disappointed, having nearly finished high enough in the league phase standings to skip the playoff altogether. Ultimately, a tumultuous season that necessitated a December coaching change extended into Europe. Juventus will also rue its missed chances on Wednesday, having been just over a quarter of an hour away from reaching the round of 16. And while Celtic was a mighty underdog in its clash with Bayern, the Scottish giant performed admirably and nearly forced extra time at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday.As such, the USMNT’s best player (Pulisic), one of its most consistent attackers (Weah), two vital midfielders (McKennie and Musah) and two World Cup hopefuls at center back (Carter-Vickers and Trusty) are all left to watch the knockout bracket transpire like the rest of us.Perhaps Reyna has one last star contribution to make for Dortmund. Maybe Ledezma’s shifts at right back will work him into Mauricio Pochettino’s plans. After a week like this, however, those silver linings are hard to spot. The U.S.’s best chances to have another prominent player reach the Champions League final have all failed to materialize.(Top photo: Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

USMNT’s Christian Pulisic denies rift with Milan head coach Sergio Conceicao

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 18: Christian Pulisic of AC Milan looks on during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Knockout Play-off second leg match between AC Milan and Feyenoord at San Siro Stadium on February 18, 2025 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

By Colin Millar Feb 20, 2025


Christian Pulisic has denied any fallout with Milan head coach Sergio Conceicao and described such suggestions as “unacceptable lies”.Conceicao replaced Paulo Fonseca as Milan head coach on December 30 and oversaw a busy January transfer window, when five players — including Mexican striker Santiago Gimenez and loan arrivals of Joao Felix and Kyle Walker — joined the club.

USMNT captain Pulisic has not started the club’s last two Serie A games against Hellas Verona and Empoli, but did play from the start in both of the side’s Champions League play-off games against Feyenoord — which the Italian side lost 2-1 on aggregate.Following suggestions in the Italian media that he had asked to leave the club at the end of the season after a supposed rift with the 50-year-old head coach after last month’s Champions League loss at Dinamo Zagreb, Pulisic has responded via Milan’s social media.“I have never argued with the coach and I have never asked to leave,” Pulisic, 26, said.“I am very happy at Milan and I want to continue wearing this shirt. Reading these lies is unacceptable, but let’s all continue to remain united and fight together on the pitch, for the club and for our fans.”Pulisic has made 33 appearances in total in all competitions this season, scoring 12 goals and adding nine assists.Milan, who are seventh in Serie A, are back in action on Saturday with a league match away at Torino (Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

USWNT 2, Colombia 0: Macario scores in her return, Sentnor stuns with first goal

USWNT 2, Colombia 0: Macario scores in her return, Sentnor stuns with first goal

By Meg Linehan and Jeff Rueter Feb 20, 2025


The U.S. women’s national team’s 2025 opened up with a 2-0 SheBelieves Cup win over Colombia in Houston on Thursday night. Chelsea midfielder Cat Macario and Utah Royals’ Ally Sentnor were the difference for the U.S., the latter scoring in her first start with the senior national team. With plenty of rotation and debuts expected across the friendly tournament from head coach Emma Hayes, and a starting XI that was missing some of the team’s biggest names, the victory was a promising start to what should prove to be a year of evaluation.

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Beyond the two goalscorers, midfielder Lily Yohannes had a statement performance, making her first start for the team. Her passing game out of the midfield directly led to Macario’s opening goal, and she proved her mettle defensively against a tough Colombia team. In the waning moments of stoppage time, she nearly connected with Lynn Biyendolo with a pass off the outside of her foot that had a solid chance of being the third goal.

While Hayes has promised that she will allow Yohannes to develop on her own schedule, the 17-year-old’s performance showed she’s perfectly capable of fighting for a more consistent starting role on the USWNT.

Catarina Macario marks her return to the USWNT with a goal against Colombia. (Jack Gorman / Getty Images)

Welcome back Catarina Macario

This has been Macario’s third reintroduction to the USWNT pool, and she took full advantage of the moment. It wasn’t a shock that the European-based players looked a little sharper from the jump on Thursday, but Macario’s connection with Yohannes was immediately promising for the U.S.Her first-half goal was the final touch on a well-worked sequence that started with Yohannes, who sent a ball to Yazmeen Ryan. Streaking in off the right wing to a more central position, Ryan only needed to square it to Macario, who smashed it home from close range. The goal was her first with the national team since April 12, 2022, a whopping 1,045 days.“I just felt like it was a big weight off my shoulders,” Macario told the TBS broadcast after the game. “Just so happy, so thrilled to be scoring for the national team again, to be playing again. … It means the whole world.”It was Macario’s first goal in three years. She missed the 2023 World Cup and 2024 Olympics recovering from an ACL tear.

Macario offers so much more than goal scoring though. Colombia’s physicality didn’t throw her — a promising sign for Macario, who has grappled with injuries for so long — but it did limit her ability to create with the ball at her feet. As Just Women’s Sports reporter Claire Watkins pointed out during the game, Macario’s service on set pieces and corner kicks is something the USWNT could certainly benefit from. It could also potentially free up someone like Mal Swanson. With Megan Rapinoe’s retirement, the team could use a new dedicated set piece maestro, and Macario makes a compelling case.Macario exited in the 64th minute as Hayes continues to evaluate her pool of players. Is the Chelsea midfielder set for a repeat of her 2022 SheBelieves MVP performance? It’s probably going to come down to how many minutes she gets over the next week — but Thursday was a solid start for her 2025 campaign.

— Meg Linehan

Ally Sentnor celebrates scoring her first goal for the U.S. women’s national team. (Brad Smith / Getty Images)

Who is Ally Sentnor?

In a camp full of players looking to work into Hayes’ plans for the coming years, it’s important to make a lasting impression. Sentnor, 21, certainly made her mark on Tuesday, scoring a golazo early in the second half to put the U.S. ahead 2-0.

This year has hardly started, but she arguably submitted the highlight of her budding career in the 60th minute against Colombia on Thursday. Collecting a pass through the midfield from Tara McKeown, Sentnor beat one opponent on her dribble, then a second, as she cut from the left half-space into the central channel. From there, she looked up and saw an opening, uncorking a knuckling shot from over 25 yards out that caught Colombia goalkeeper Katherine Tapia flat-footed as it curled into the far upper corner.

The versatile attacking midfielder, who was Sports Illustrated’s SportsKid of the Year in 2019, a year before USC basketball star JuJu Watkins, played collegiately with the vaunted North Carolina Tar Heels, overcoming a torn ACL in her freshman year to earn first-team All-ACC honors in her two seasons before going pro. She became the final player taken first overall in the NWSL’s draft before it was eliminated in the most recent collective bargaining agreement, landing with the Utah Royals.In 2024, Sentnor kept on shooting. Utah needed her to step up from the opening whistle of its first match, as the club thrust her into a starring role. She relished the responsibility, tapping into the bag of tricks she worked to refine as a youth player. As she told the TBS broadcast, her diminutive size forced her to hone in on her technique, both in terms of dribbling and shooting quickly with power before her opposing mark could contain her.Sentnor kept busy as a rookie, finishing ninth among all NWSL players by attempting 68 shots in 1,866 minutes. She also played a key role for the United States at the U-20 World Cup, scoring three goals en route to a bronze medal finish last year, the nation’s best showing at the tournament since 2012. She was a deserving winner of U.S. Soccer’s Young Female Player of the Year award and earned two senior team appearances late in the year to cap a memorable year.

It was only her first start for Hayes’ side, but with her unpredictable ingenuity, Sentnor is bound to get a few more looks in this tournament and beyond. Two days after celebrating her birthday, it was a performance she and fans won’t soon forget.

— Jeff Rueter

Lily Yohannes earns her first start for the U.S. against Colombia. (Alex Slitz / Getty Images)

The Lily Yohannes era begins

Last year, Yohannes made history, becoming the third-youngest goalscorer in USWNT history. The then-16-year-old midfielder, playing against South Korea in a June friendly, calmly slotted the ball through a congested penalty box and into the net at Allianz Field. Although she didn’t score again on Thursday, her composure on the ball made her an undeniable standout.

The Ajax midfielder made her first start for Hayes in the SheBelieves Cup, donning the number 11 shirt in Sophia Wilson’s absence. It was Yohannes who sparked the sequence leading to Macario’s opening goal, spraying an inch-perfect lobbed pass into Ryan’s path.

Throughout the rest of her shift, she played with control and poise beyond her 17 years. Playing as the chief line-breaker behind Sentnor, Lindsey Heaps, and Ryan, Yohannes continually slotted the ball between Colombian midfielders and defenders. It wasn’t a case of an opponent being oblivious to one repeated trick, either. There were more lobbed balls over the back line and into the wings, as well as through balls rolling up the half-space hit with the outside of her foot and swift first-touch passes to pry the ball off an opponent’s boot.

For the fans who toughed out a brisk night in Houston, it was a display that radiated plenty of promise.

— Rueter

Tara McKeown makes her USWNT debut against Colombia in the SheBelieves Cup. (Maria Lysaker / Getty Images)

Trying out new players

Center backs aren’t often expected to rack up assists from the run of play. Their passing is often limited to short-range circulation, while a healthy portion of their passes are speculative launches that, statistically more often than not, miss their intended target.

As one veteran defender told me years ago: “I’m well aware I’m the last player fans pay to see on the ball.” Making her USWNT debut, Tara McKeown provided a compelling counterargument to that point.

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Earning her first senior cap as part of the starting lineup, McKeown played the ball that let Sentnor wreak havoc through Colombia’s midfield en route to her long-range goal. In the hour preceding that sequence, the Washington Spirit defender was tested often by Colombia, with Linda Caicedo and Mayra Ramirez looking particularly eager to test the 25-year-old. The United States’ clean sheet speaks for itself, with McKeown and center back partner Emily Sonnett also keeping possession moving whenever the ball went their way. It was a fine showing that warrants subsequent looks.

Also making her debut, Gisele Thompson came on in the 76th minute. The Angel City left back made her club debut last year, joining her older sister (United States winger Alyssa) to kick off her professional career. By the time she joined the action, the scoreline was already 2-0 with neither team showing the same attacking verve that typified the game’s middle half-hour. With new Arsenal signing Jenna Nighswonger getting the start, we could see Thompson make one of Hayes’ two remaining starting lineups at the SheBelieves Cup.

— Rueter

What’s next?

In the first match of the SheBelieves Cup, Japan throttled Australia with a 4-0 victory. Royals forward Mina Tanaka was a standout, scoring a brace and adding an assist in the win. Thanks to the goal differential, Japan is currently atop the table for the tournament, followed by the U.S.

SheBelieves Cup continues on Sunday.

Sunday, Feb. 23

State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona

  • Colombia vs. Japan – noon MT / 2 p.m. ET
  • USA vs. Australia – 3 p.m. MT / 5 p.m. ET

Recommended Reading

Catarina Macario and the USWNT moment she’s been working towards for years

HOUSTON, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 20: Catarina Macario #20 of USA celebrates the teams first goal with teammates in the first half in front of Jorelyn Carabali #16 of Colombia during the 2025 SheBelieves Cup at Shell Energy Stadium on February 20, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Jack Gorman/Getty Images)

By Melanie Anzidei Feb 21, 2025


HOUSTON—For Catarina Macario, the euphoria she felt makes the moment hard to remember.Seventeen-year-old Lily Yohannes had just floated the ball to fellow striker Yazmeen Ryan, who only needed a simple touch to put the ball exactly where Macario knew she needed to be. In one swift motion, Macario shot the ball past Colombia’s goalkeeper, finding the back of the net like she’d done countless times before. This time, though, was special.Macario’s return to the pitch is, of course, a significant milestone. The team’s overall performance against Colombia is also another, as Hayes continues to emphasize player development and experimenting with their roster.The sequence between Yohannes, Ryan and Macario was the first time the trio had played together in a competitive setting. Despite their limited experiences during practice, their chemistry offered a promising glimpse into the possibilities that lay ahead for the national team and its growing player pipeline.“That’s what I was most proud of tonight,” Hayes said. “The team kept really good structure considering they haven’t played together before. What I’ve learned from coaching is, the better structured your teams are, especially at the higher level, the better they feel about expressing themselves within it – but you have to give them that foundation.”

Hayes was happy with the performance (Jack Gorman/Getty Images)

That foundation appears to be bubbling.

Macario’s goal in the 33rd minute came just as the U.S. was finding its footing on the pitch against Colombia. This momentum continued into the second half, punctuated by Ally Sentnor scoring the team’s second goal in the 60th minute. This marked her first international goal, from an assist by Tara McKeown, who also enjoyed her national team debut that night.

“I felt it was a really important goal to really help us finish off the game,” said captain Emily Sonnett, who was honored for her 100th cap ahead of the game. “But I think that just really speaks to the younger players who are coming in, coming off the bench, but also how deep the pool is right now.”

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When Sentnor scored from outside the box, universal joy was evident on the players’ faces. The stadium erupted as players embraced the 21-year-old. Macario’s smile was so wide it was as if she had just scored another goal, too.

“That’s such a big moment,” Macario said. “Whenever anyone scores the first goal for the national team, that’s unforgettable.”

Macario exited the match four minutes later, with an emotional Hayes embracing her for her own unforgettable moment.

Hayes recalled telling her: “Everybody is super happy, super proud, and I’m sure everybody back in Chelsea is, too.”

(Top photo: Jack Gorman/Getty Images)

1/31/25 Champions League Playoffs excite, Big games in EPL, Arsenal vs City Sun 11:30, Milan Derby Sun 12 noon, Former CFC Player signs with Indy 11

Champions League Drama on Final Group Day Gives us Interesting Knockout Round Match-ups

Not sure these were the match-ups that UEFA was imagining when they laid out this new Champions League format. Sure Liverpool, Barcelona, Arsenal, Inter Milan, Leverkusen are all automatic qualifiers in the top 8 but just look at the huge teams having to battle just to get to the final 16? Real Madrid vs Man City in the Knockout Stage ?? Are you kidding? Of course some would argue how could City even make this stage after only winning 2 games in the first 7? Knockout rounds start the 2nd week of Feb while the top 8 wait around till March to play.

Why Don’t The Soccer Gods Get it ?

It certainly was an exciting Champions League Final Group stage day with all the games being played at the same time – serious drama as Man City stayed alive, & AC Milan fell out of the top 8. Too bad you could only watch a couple of them (seriously I had 3 TVs with 2 games with American’s and the Golazo show on). Man you futball/Soccer IDIOTS sure could learn a lesson about actually putting on a tournament. You can’t play all the games at one time – people can’t watch them. Its STUPID!) Imagine starting the games at say 4 pm in Europe, then 6:30, then 8:30, then 10 pm? That’s 4 primetime slots – where the entire world could try to watch say 3 or 4 games at a time. Hey Para+ maybe a 4 way split screen like the NCAAs? You could show 4 games at a time per time slot. European Futbol is so far behind the NFL in this sense – its laughable.

Big TV Games this Weekend

Lets Start with Arsenal vs Man City Sun 11:30 am – of course its on Peacock not USA – thanks NBC – NOT. Anyway can Arsenal keep their hold on 2nd in the table or will they let Man City climb back in the race?

At the same time on Sunday we get the Milan Derby – as Inter and AC Milan face off in the San Siro at 12 noon on CBS Golazo and Para+ – AC Milan fell from 6 to 13th in the Champ League table with their horrific loss Wed despite Christian Pulisic’s 4th Champion’s League goal this campaign (an American record). AC seems to be reeling under new coach Canseco – as most of the players are complaining he’s too mean and has lost the lockerroom? Of course AC was in disarray the last time two faced each other in the Cup when Pulisic saved the day and they won 3-2. Full layout of Americans overseas in games below including Tyler Adams & Bournemouth playing Liverpool Sat at 10 am on USA Network. Bournemouth stands in a tie for 6th with Chelsea and is playing some of the best ball in the EPL now that a healthy Tyler Adams at Dmid. He’s honestly one of the top #6s in the league when healthy. Dortmund and Gio Reyna travel to Heidenheim needing a win Sat at 9:30 on ESPN+. Gio got 26’ off the bench midweek against Shaktar Donetsk and contributed a lovely Backheel assist as BVB went on to win the Champions League match 3-1.

Huge Congrats to Former Carmel FC Player Maverick McCoy son of former CFC Coach Wade McCoy for signing a USL Academy contract with Indy 11. In fact he started in the preseason friendly yesterday.

GAMES ON TV

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Leading the way

USMNT players aren’t just making the squad, they’re being recognized as leaders

Saturday

Watford v Norwich City – 7:30a on Paramount+

Josh Sargent scored two goals last weekend in his first start since returning from injury two weeks ago. The USMNT needs Sargent to stay healthy and regain his scoring form as they are likely to be down a couple of options for the Nations League competition in the March window.

Udinese v Venezia – 9a on CBSSN and Paramount+

Gianluca Busio and Venezia played Hellas Verona to a draw last weekend and remain four points back of them for safety. Venezia have just sixteen points through twenty-two matches and look likely to head back to Serie B next Fall. They will be facing eleventh place Udinese on Saturday who are looking to snap a five match winless streak.

Stuttgart v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN+

Joe Scally was back in the starting lineup, one week after getting a rare day off. Borussia Monchengladbach won the match 2-0 to move to eighth in the table and they will now travel to fourth place Stuttgart looking to string together some wins.

Bayern Munich v Holstein Kiel – 9:30a on ESPN+

John Tolkin saw his first Bundesliga minutes last weekend in a substitute appearance for Holstein Kiel who held Wolfsburg to a 2-2 draw. Kiel remain two points back of Heidenheim for the relegation playoff position and will face a stiff challenge this weekend as they face league leading Bayern Munich.

Heidenheim v Borussia Dortmund – 9:30a on ESPN+

Gio Reyna was an unused substitute last weekend in his first match under new management but got 26’ off the bench midweek against Shaktar Donetsk and contributed a lovely Backheel assist as BVB went on to win the Champions League match 3-1. Dortmund have just one win in their last eight league matches and currently sit in eleventh place though just six points back of fourth place Stuttgart. They face a Heidenheim side that are flirting with the relegation zone with just fourteen points through nineteen matches.

St. Pauli v Augsburg – 9:30a on ESPN+

James Sands has started the past two matches for St. Pauli, both wins, and the six points have pulled the club up to thirteenth place, six points clear of the relegation playoff position. They will face Augsburg who are one spot, but five points, ahead of them in the Bundesliga standings. It has been a quick transition for Sands who joined St. Pauli in January

AFC Bournemouth v Liverpool – 10a on USA Network

Tyler Adams notched two more assists last weekend in Bournemouth’s 5-0 thrashing of third place Nottingham Forest last weekend. The Cherries are now in seventh place and will face league leading Liverpool on Saturday morning. Adams has started three straight for Bournemouth who are undefeated in their last eleven matches. Liverpool won the first match between the two sides, 3-0 back in September before Adams had returned from his offseason injury.

Newcastle United v Fulham – 10a on Peacock

Fulham and Antonee Robinson fell to Manchester United 1-0 last weekend with Robinson once again wearing the captains armband for the Cottagers. Despite the loss Fulham remain in tenth place, they are eight points back of this weekends opponent, Newcastle United, who are in fifth place following their win over Southampton last weekend.

Leeds United v Cardiff City – 10a on Paramount+

Brenden Aaronson started and went the full 90’ yet again for Leeds United last weekend in their scoreless draw with third place Burnley. Aaronson has started every match since Leeds’s third game of the season and is already over 2,300 minutes in league play. Leeds remain in first place, with a two point advantage over Sheffield United, heading into their matchup this weekend against eighteenth place Cardiff City who defeated Derby County last weekend and are undefeated in their past seven league matches.

Union Berlin v RB Leipzig – 12:30p on ESPN+

Jordan Pefok started yet again last weekend for Union Berlin but has yet to find the back of the next this season. Berlin fell to St Pauli 3-0 and they have suffered defeat in seven of their last nine matches, with just one win in that period. Berlin face fifth place RB Leipzig who are tied on points with Stuttgart.

NEC v PSV – 3p on ESPN+

Ricardo Pepi started for PSV on Wednesday scoring a goal and adding an assist in a 3-2 victory over Liverpool in Champions League play. Unfortunately Pepi was injured before coming off and is now set to miss the next 1-3 months, likely knocking him out of Nations League action. The Pepi injured, combined with Malik Tillman already missing out may mean that Richard Ledezma is the lone American suiting up for PSV as they take on NEC in league play, looking to maintain their five point advantage over second place Ajax.

Sunday

Juventus v Empoli – 6:30a on Paramount+

Weston McKennie wore the captains armband for Juventus midweek and Tim Weah played the full 90’ at rightback as the team fell to Benfica 2-0 but still qualified for the knockout stage of the Champions League. Juventus fell to first place Napoli last weekend 2-1, suffering their first Serie A defeat of the season.

Manchester United v Crystal Palace – 9a on Peacock

Crystal Palace fell to Brentford 2-1 last weekend though Chris Richards did get his fifth straight start. Palace are eleven points clear of the relegation scrap and two points behind this weekends opponent, Manchester United who are coming off a 1-0 win over Fulham.

AC Milan v Inter Milan – Noon on Paramount+

Christian Pulisic scored yet another goal, his twelfth across all competitions this season, on Wednesday. Unfortunately, Yunus Musah received his second yellow of the match less than forty minutes in and Milan would fall 2-1 playing down a man the rest of the way to Dinamo Zagreb. Pulisic also scored last weekend in Milan’s 3-2 win over Parma. They will now host Inter Milan who are in second place, three points back of Napoli. AC Milan has defeated Inter twice this season, once in league play as well as in the Supercoppa Italiana final with Pulisic scoring in both matches.

Olympique Marseille v Olympique Lyon – 2:45p on beIN Sports

Tanner Tessmann has not made it off the bench in Lyon’s past two league matches but did get the start on Thursday as they face Ludogorets Razgrad in Europa League action. Lyon are in sixth place and taking on second place Marseille this weekend.

Real Betis v Atheltic Club – 3p on ESPN+

Real Betis defeated Mallorca 1-0 last weekend with Johnny Cardoso getting his fifth straight start and once again playing the full 90’. Betis pulled into tenth place with the victory and will now host fourth place Athletic Club.

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USA

Pepi injured, wild Champions League week for Yanks, Tessmann’s award, Miggy returns, and more
Pulisic scores, Musah sent off as AC Milan falls to Dinamo Zagreb in Champions League
Christian Pulisic scores, but Yunus Musah’s red card …
Pulisic scores, Musah sent off in AC Milan Champions …
Ricardo Pepi injures knee after scoring Champions League winner for PSV Eindhoven

US striker Ricardo Pepi to be sidelined ‘a long time’ with knee injury

Analysis: Assessing January camp after USMNT downs Costa Rica 3-0

Crystal Dunn signs 2-year deal with Paris Saint-Germain after departing Gotham
Inside Naomi Girma’s move to Chelsea: From early success to breaking transfer records

Jenna Nighswonger departs Gotham for Arsenal

With another USWNT player going abroad, should NWSL panic?

Champions League

What worked? What didn’t? Reflecting on the UCL league phase ESPNFC
Carlo Ancelotti plans key defensive injury return against Manchester 
Diego Simeone unconcerned by potential Real Madrid ‘double game’

The road to Decimosexta is more challenging than ever for Real Madrid

Photo – Ex Bayern Munich Veteran Celebrates Inter Milan 3-0 Monaco Champions League Win: ‘We Are Top 8!’

Manchester City will face Real Madrid again as a rivalry is renewed in the Champions League
Champions League draw: Manchester City to face Real Madrid in knockout phase

Manager: It’s an exciting prospect to take on one of Europe’s top teams


Champions League play-offs draw analysed: Manchester City face Real Madrid, relief for Bayern Munich, Milan and Juventus

Champions League play-offs draw analysed: Manchester City face Real Madrid, relief for Bayern Munich, Milan and Juventus

By Sam LeeRory SmithOliver Kay and more Jan 31, 2025


It has been a Champions League semi-final three times over the past decade and a quarter-final once, but this time Manchester City will face Real Madrid in the competition’s new play-offs round — with the winners over two legs next month advancing to the last 16 in March.That blockbuster tie coming at such an early stage of the competition is surely not what UEFA envisaged when it revamped the tournament’s structure this year, meaning only the top eight sides from the 36-team opening phase qualified automatically for the last 16.But City and Madrid have paid for their poor performances in Europe this season, with the English champions particularly close to going out altogether as they trailed in the last of their eight games.Now, both have the chance to make amends by knocking out opponents they will see as major rivals in their bid to go on and win the competition.Elsewhere among the eight ties, Celtic meet Bayern Munich and there is an all-French contest between minnows Brest and serial domestic champions Paris Saint-Germain.The first legs of the play-off matches will take place on February 11 and 12, with the returns a week later.Sam Lee, Rory Smith, Oliver Kay, Seb Stafford-Bloor and Dermot Corrigan analyse the key talking points from today’s draw.


City in rare position of being underdogs

Real Madrid will hardly be relishing a tie against Pep Guardiola’s men, given how dangerous they can still be, but it is a very different Manchester City this season, one ravaged by basically all of the half-decent teams they have played in the past three months — apart from the Chelsea game last week, when they ruthlessly exploited the spaces afforded to them by their visitors’ high press.

Madrid are unlikely to do that, because they have generally sat back and waited for City and tried to hit them on the break in their recent meetings.

With the remarkable exception of a 4-0 semi-final second leg defeat in Manchester to a side on their way to the treble in 2023, that approach has been enough to undo even City at their top level. This is an “old” City team, in Guardiola’s own words, and they really struggle against counter-attacks.

Guardiola is praying that many of his injured players return between now and the first leg in about 10 days. City can also register three new signings to play in the tie, although as it stands only Omar Marmoush is likely to contribute.

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Madrid are favourites, then — overwhelmingly so if those injured City players do not come back to fitness quickly.

Sam Lee


Real Madrid will hope pace gives them the edge

The stark look on the face of Real Madrid’s director of institutional relations Emilio Butragueno when the draw was made said it all.

Madrid were facing Manchester City yet again — for the fifth time in the past six seasons in this competition — in a play-off round they know they should not really be part of. But Carlo Ancelotti’s defending champions are paying the price for losing three of their eight league-phase games, with the slips away at Lille and at home to Milan now especially damaging.

Ancelotti’s big-name attackers Vinicius Junior and Kylian Mbappe could do a lot of damage to a City defence which has suffered against counter-attacks all year but he said outright this week that he did not want another meeting with City, aware that, whatever happens, they will be two physically and emotionally draining games. Especially with all the focus that ex-Barcelona player and manager Guardiola coming back to the Bernabeu always brings.

Vinicius Jr will be a huge threat to a City defence that has been unusually vulnerable this season (Harry Langer/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

There is also an awareness at Madrid that, should they progress past City, they will either play neighbours Atletico or Bernabeu old boy Xabi Alonso’s Bayer Leverkusen in the last 16 — another super high-profile tie which they would rather have avoided at that stage of the competition.

Dermot Corrigan


Bayern avoid City and a nightmare week

Given how Bayern Munich stumbled through the league phase, this could have been a lot tougher.

There is healthy respect for Celtic and their place in the game — RB Leipzig were soundly beaten in Glasgow in November, so nobody will underestimate the challenge ahead — but the two legs of this tie occur either side of a critical Bundesliga game away to champions Leverkusen, and so being drawn against Manchester City really would have made that a nightmarish week. It would also have been appropriate punishment for a sloppy start in this competition. October’s loss to Barcelona was very ugly. The defeat at Feyenoord last week was arguably worse.

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The other German side involved in this draw, Borussia Dortmund, are now under new management, with Niko Kovac appointed this week to succeed Nuri Sahin. They will see their draw as favourable, too, given that Sporting CP are still suffering in the wake of Ruben Amorim’s November departure to take the Manchester United job. Expect to see a more cautious and resilient Dortmund emerge by the first leg.

Two weeks ago, Sporting would rightly have fancied their chances — particularly for the opening game in Lisbon — but with that coaching change and the potential for some new-manager bounce, that is now a much tougher proposition. One caveat, though, is that Kovac won’t have Felix Nmecha. The influential midfielder is out for the rest of the season through injury and, barring some dramatic transfer activity in the coming days, his orchestrating will be extremely difficult to replace.

Still, a very good draw for the German clubs. The two extra games are a burden, but they could have been far more attritional.

Seb Stafford-Bloor


Milan and Juventus breathe a sigh of relief

That sound you can hear is a sigh of relief: relief for Juventus and Milan that they will not have to face each other in the Champions League play-offs; relief for Thiago Motta and Sergio Conceicao, the respective managers, that their team will not have to risk the humiliation of being eliminated by Italian rivals; relief from everyone who sat through the dreadful 2003 final between those two at Old Trafford and is still triggered by the experience.

Neither Milan nor Juventus needed that sort of strain at what has become a distinctly delicate point in their seasons. For the first time since he took charge in the summer, there is a scintilla of pressure on Motta, the man tasked with restoring Juventus to some sort of primacy at home and abroad.

His unbeaten domestic record fell at the weekend, as Juventus surrendered a lead at Napoli; all of a sudden, the 13 — yes, 13 — draws his team have registered in 22 Serie A matches look less like a platform for an imminent recovery and more like a sign of ongoing decay. Remaining in the Champions League for as long as possible is vital not just for the financial rewards, but for morale. A free-running PSV pose a challenge, but not an insurmountable one.

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Milan, too, will see Feyenoord as the least worst option. Conceicao has only recently been installed as manager, replacing Paulo Fonseca at the turn of the year, and results so far have been mixed. Not as mixed as Feyenoord’s, though: Brian Priske’s side beat Bayern Munich 3-0 last week, then collapsed to a 6-1 loss at Lille. The chances are Priske will not still be in charge by the time Milan travel to Rotterdam for the first leg.

In truth, though, neither of these two looks likely to be the last Italian side standing in the 2024-25 Champions League.

Atalanta, having missed out on automatic qualification for the last 16 only by a point, would have been confident of beating either of their potential opponents Club Brugge and Sporting. Although the Belgians are probably the more exacting of the two, Gianpiero Gasperini’s team stand as overwhelming favourites to go through.

If they do get through to play Aston Villa or Lille in the round of 16, it’s fair to say nobody left in the competition will want to face them.

Rory Smith


Liverpool, Barcelona and plotting a path to the final

There are still a lot of either/ors, but at this stage it feels like the potential benefits of finishing first and second in the league phase are becoming clearer for Liverpool and Barcelona.

Another draw on February 21, after the play-off round is completed, will determine which of those two will play the winners of the Brest-PSG tie and which will meet either Monaco or Benfica. Beyond that, one of them could potentially face Aston Villa, Borussia Dortmund, Lille or Sporting in the quarter-finals, while the other could potentially be up against Villa, Dortmund, Atalanta or Club Brugge.

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GO DEEPER

Eighteen Champions League games, one unusual assignment: watch every match (in five-minute segments)

Nobody will want to play PSG in the next round — and Liverpool know from bitter experience in the Europa League last season what difficult opponents Atalanta can be — but it feels like finishing in the top two has brought a slightly easier-looking passage to the semi-finals.

By contrast, whoever gets through that Manchester City vs Real Madrid tie will face either Bayer Leverkusen or Atletico Madrid in the round of 16 and then, if they progress again, one of Juventus, PSV, Arsenal and Inter in the quarter-finals.

I’m just looking at the bookmakers’ odds to win this competition and City’s and Madrid’s are drifting. That sounds about right.

Oliver Kay


The draw in full

Brest v Paris Saint-Germain

Monaco v Benfica

Juventus v PSV

Feyenoord v Milan

Manchester City v Real Madrid

Celtic v Bayern Munich

Club Brugge v Atalanta

Sporting CP v Borussia Dortmund

(Top photos: Getty Images)

USMNT Player Tracker: Pulisic on the spot, commanding Adams and Sargent sticks to the plan

USMNT Player Tracker: Pulisic on the spot, commanding Adams and Sargent sticks to the plan

By Greg O’Keeffe

Jan 27, 2025

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Christian Pulisic’s spot-kick composure, Tyler Adam’s unstoppable momentum and Josh Sargent’s sparky revival all play a part in this week’s USMNT player tracker.

Throughout the season, we will bring you updates on the USMNT players plying their trade in various leagues around Europe.

With a home-soil World Cup on the horizon, we’re keeping tabs on how they perform every weekend.


Issue of the weekend

Cometh the hour, as usual, cometh the man.

Pulisic was a game-changer yet again for Milan in their important win on Sunday. The USMNT star became his club’s joint top goalscorer in the league as he whipped in the penalty that got them back on level terms with Parma in a close contest they eventually won 3-2 in added time.

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It was proof that Milan can count on him to lead by example when the chips are down.

“It is our job to score, we want to help the team in any way, through goals or assists,” he told broadcaster DAZN afterwards. “We have to keep going like this.”

Pulisic places the ball on the spot before equalising for Milan against Parma (Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

The 26-year-old’s display was not perfect. He was guilty of a few overhit crosses (unusually, none of his five deliveries found their target) and had a complete air swipe when Alvaro Morata’s ball found him in the area early on.

But the man who has never missed a penalty in his senior career had the guts to make the difference when it counted and the example set with his nerveless sixth Serie A goal of the campaign inspired the team.

Pulisic wasn’t the only American making the difference as Milan gave their top-four hopes a boost at San Siro. It was Yunus Musah’s cute pass in the 92nd minute that slipped through the Parma defence to allow Tijjani Reijnders to make it 2-2 before Samuel Chukwueze secured the dramatic winner three minutes later.

Musah’s pass carving through the Parma back line was his second assist of the season. Milan are now only five points behind Lazio, who are fourth with a game in hand on the Roman club.

Musah provided an assist (Nicolo Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Player of the weekend

Tyler Adams is performing at a level for Bournemouth that is turning heads across the Premier League.

His two assists in their emphatic 5-1 thrashing of title dark horses Nottingham Forest on Saturday made him the first American to create three goals across successive Premier League games.

Adams has spoken about thriving within coach Andoni Iraola’s controlled chaos and he is a key part of the surging momentum that is currently overwhelming opponents.

Adams celebrates with Justin Kluivert (Glyn Kirk/AFP via Getty Images)

His tigerish display at the Vitality Stadium on Saturday, as compelling defensively as it was creatively, wrote his name into most pundits’ teams of the weekend.

It is perhaps no coincidence that Bournemouth’s impressive run of form, which has them seventh in the table and in contention to qualify for European competition, stems from his return from injury in November.

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Quote of the weekend

“If you could see his eyes looking at me when we’re about to replace him after that second goal, he was not satisfied with that,” said Norwich’s Danish head coach Johannes Hoff Thorup. “That was not what he wanted.

“But we had a plan beforehand that it was a maximum 65 minutes with him, no matter what, because we cannot take any risk. The last thing we need is to have another injury with him. We need to still be careful, but 65 minutes, two goals, that’s a step in the right direction.

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“He’s a quality player. It’s not even up for discussion. So of course when we lose him and he’s not available, it will mean a difference to the team. Simple as that. He’s quality and he’s also quality for the players.

“He’s a big voice in the dressing room and he always responds well to the way that we prepare the game. He’s able to suggest some adjustments or small details that we can correct when he’s in the game. To have him around the team means so much to the group.”

Thorup explained to local news outlet The Pink ’Un why he was willing to upset USMNT striker Josh Sargent to ensure the club carefully managed his return to full fitness after the 24-year-old’s brace in Norwich’s 5-1 Championship win over Swansea City.

Sargent scored a brace against Swansea (Stephen Pond/Getty Images)


Jeff Rueter’s graphic of the weekend

Last week, Michael Cox took no pleasure in examining the 10 most wasteful shooters in Europe’s top five circuits.

The cutoff was 22 shots, a figure reached by an unfortunate Bundesliga defender. On Saturday, another player in Germany’s top flight upped his “shots in vain” tally to 22 attempts and has a pedigree that really makes us all expect a better return.

Jordan Pefok was a shrewd dual-national commitment during Gregg Berhalter’s time as USMNT manager. Before Folarin Balogun made his decision between the USMNT, England and Nigeria, it was Pefok who gave the strike corps fresh reinforcements ahead of the 2022 World Cup.

He was in form with Swiss giant Young Boys and a move to Union Berlin in the months preceding the Qatar tournament was supposed to, if nothing else, see another U.S.-eligible forward in good standing to challenge.

As it was, he didn’t make the World Cup squad and has scored just four goals in 48 appearances with Union. This year, he hasn’t rippled the net in 889 minutes of league action.

Poor Pefok. His latest blank came in his team’s 3-0 reverse at St. Pauli on Sunday. He is getting in dangerous areas — an average shot distance of 11.5 yards is peak centre forward behavior — and only four of his 22 attempts have been blocked. That 0.13 xG per attempt rate is nothing to scoff at either. Among the Bundesliga forwards who average a lower xG per shot than Pefok are Harry Kane (0.12), Lois Openda (0.12) and new Manchester City signing Omar Marmoush (0.09).

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Granted, all three of those men have been more accurate than Pefok’s 31.2 per cent on-target rate.

At 28, Pefok is unlikely to have a better chance to make a World Cup squad than next summer. Form like this will hardly keep him in the conversation given a deep pool of strikers.

Jeff Rueter


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Antonee Robinson
Club: Fulham
Position: Left-back
Appearances (all competitions): 23
Goals: 0

The USMNT defender created a chance and won both of his tackles, according to Fotmob, against Manchester United, but the captain could not inspire Fulham to victory at Craven Cottage, as they lost 1-0 on Sunday.

Name: James Sands
Club: St. Pauli
Position: Midfielder
Appearances: 4

The American stood out on only his second start for St. Pauli, writes Seb Stafford-Bloor.

He played 90 minutes against Union Berlin on Sunday evening as his new club won only their second home game of the season. Sands spent the first half in a midfield two with Jackson Irvine, before dropping into the centre of a back three in the second half after an injury in defence.

His big plus so far has been his versatility, particularly with St. Pauli battling injuries in midfield and defence.

Sands (right) leaps into an aerial challenge with Union Berlin’s Andras Schafer (Christian Charisius/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Against Union Berlin, they were missing probably their most influential player, Eric Smith, who usually plays in the middle of the back three and is charged with carrying and distributing the ball. Sands can do much of what Smith does, in both parts of the pitch, and it’s quite a compliment that Smith was not badly missed.

The variation in Sands’ passing was invaluable. The 24-year-old can play short up the pitch and out to the touchline but also possesses the ability to deliver a long diagonal pass to provide a nice switch of play. It was not a coincidence that this was probably St. Pauli’s slickest passing performance of the season and the most balanced attacking I’ve seen from them at Bundesliga level.

By full time, the industrious Sands had also run 11.5km.

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Name: Johnny Cardoso
Club: Real Betis
Position: Midfield
Appearances: 24
Goals: 1

The 23-year-old helped Real Betis put a three-game losing run behind them as he impressed in the 1-0 win at Mallorca on Saturday. He won eight duels and made four passes into the final third.

Name: Noahkai Banks
Club: Augsburg
Position: Defence
Appearances: 4
Goals: 0

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The 18-year-old dual German and U.S. national was excellent on his full debut for the Bundesliga outfit. According to Fotmob, Banks was the most accurate passer (98 per cent accuracy) to play 45 minutes or more in the 2-1 victory against Heidenheim.

Name: Ricardo Pepi
Club: PSV
Position: Striker
Appearances: 28
Goals: 17

Pepi came on from the bench once again to score an important goal as defending champions PSV beat NEC Breda 3-2.

According to Opta, his 1.45 goals per 90 minutes this season (11 goals in 683 Eredivisie minutes) is the second-highest among players to play at least 500 minutes in the top 10 European leagues this season, behind Bayer Leverkusen’s Patrik Schick (1.50).

Pepi (left) celebrates after scoring his team’s third goal against Breda (Jeroen Putmans/ANP/AFP via Getty Images)


1/24/25 USMNT Wins both games, Champions League Drama wraps Wed 3 pm, Full UCL Explanation of what’s next, Huge games for American’s overseas along with Man City vs Chelsea Sat.

US wins twice and may have found some diamonds in the Rough in January

U.S. got excellent games from both of its No. 9s. Patrick Agyemang tallied in both games, while Brian White opened the scoring against Costa Rica. Young Philly Midfielder Jack McGlynn was arguably the best player in camp and had a goal and assist vs Venezuela & a solid 45 min vs Costa Rica. Patrick Agyemang Goal vs Costa Rica  Jack McGlynn goal vs Venezuela. Luna finally got his chance and impressed assisting a goal 2 min after he returned from a broken nose – Poch Funny on Luna Broken Nose & Grit. Brian Jones also looked good at left back and might have earned a callup behind the US best defender Jedi Robinson. I also thought Veteran GK Zach Steffen of Colorado was excellent (Great Save Zach Steffen vs Costa Rica) and might give Matt Turner a run for the gloves in March when the US hosts the Nations League semi-finals. Here are highlights for both games in case you missed. USA vs Venzuela Highlights USA vs Costa Rica Full Highlights .

Lots of stories below.

A big Thanks for those who have Re-Certified to Ref In 2025 – like me – I can’t wait to get back on the fields in February!

Champions League Drama Continues until the last Matchday of the First Round Wed at 3 pm on Para+

Wow amazing to see PSG come back in the last few minutes to almost eliminate Man City from the competition. What an amazing final day of action it will be as automatic places in the top 8 and top 24 are still up for grabs. The Top 8 of which only Liverpool and Barcelona have secured will get the month of Feb off – while #s 9-24 battle it out for the final 8 slots in the Sweet 16 in March. All of the final day games of group play will be on Wed at 3 pm on Paramount+. Full details & Stories below.


UEFA Champions League permutations: Which teams can qualify for last 16? Who could get knocked out?

Going to be An Exciting Wed afternoon this week Final Day of Group Stages – so many slots open

US Men

Agyemang & Co. make January case for future USMNT involvement
USMNT cruises past CONCACAF rivals Costa Rica in friendly showdown
Steffen’s return sparks USMNT win over Costa Rica
United States men beat Costa Rica as Agyemang strikes again
USA 3-0 Costa Rica – A fun win to end the 2025 January window
USA vs. Venezuela, 2025 friendly: Man of the Match

How to rate USMNT’s win in friendly vs. Venezuela
MLS-heavy USMNT side claims win over Venezuela
Luna’s unconventional route has led him to USMNT opportunity

US Ladies & NWSL

USWNT’s Naomi Girma pioneering $1M transfer should surprise nobody
NWSL releases 2025 schedule: Decision Day returns, regular season longer than ever
Ask your WSL transfer deadline day questions

Champions League 1/29 3 pm


UEFA Champions League permutations: Which teams can qualify for last 16? Who could get knocked out?

UCL yields final-day conclusion: Man City must win after PSG collapse
Pep: City down to ‘last chance’ to avoid UCL exit
4 bad stats that have Man City on brink of Champions League exitSquawka
Maresca: Man City rival Guardiola needs support
Roma fall to sixth place in UEFA standings

Ancelotti: ‘Good news’ for Madrid if City exit UCL
Leão earns AC Milan narrow win over Girona
Bayern stunned by Feyenoord, facing playoff round
Celtic beat Young Boys, reach UCL knockout stage

Champions League Table & chances to advance Going Into the Final Opening Round Games Wed, Jan 29 3 pm on Para +

World

Preview: Chelsea Travel to Man City for High-Stakes Premier League Game
Five reasons PL’s ‘Big Six’ era is over
FA blocks Wrexham’s chance to compete in Europe
Kyle Walker completes loan move to AC Milan

Reffing

A big Thanks for those who have Re-Certified to Ref In 2025
Norwegian leagues vote to scrap VAR after widespread fan backlash
Bad Decision Does Not Mean you’re a Bad Ref
Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13

GAMES ON TV

Wednesday – 1/29 Champions League Final Group Matchday

  • Dinamo Zagreb vs AC Milan, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Christian Pulisic, Yunus Musah, and Milan look to solidify their top 8 place in Champions League.
  • Juventus vs Benfica, 3p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, FuboTV (free trial), ViX: Weston McKennie, Tim Weah, and Juve are 17th of 36 in Champions League going into this final matchday.
  • PSV Eindhoven vs Liverpool FC, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Ricardo Pepi, Richy Ledezma, Esmir Bajraktarević, and PSV are 19th of 36 in the Champions League.
  • Borussia Dortmund vs Shakhtar Donetsk, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Gio Reyna, Cole Campbell, and BVB are 14th of 36 in Champions League.
  • Aston Villa vs Celtic, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Cameron Carter-Vickers, Auston Trusty, and Celtic are 18th in Champions League.

VfB Stuttgart vs PSG, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Anrie Chase and Stuttgart are barely inside the playoff places, and can’t afford to lose their match as the UCL league phase draws to a close.

Thursday

  • Lyon vs Ludogorets, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Tanner Tessmann and Lyon are 5th in Europa League standings, but can’t afford to rest on their laurels this final matchday.
  • Roma vs Frankfurt, 3p on Paramount+, CBS Sports Network, TUDN USA, UniMás, FuboTV, ViX: Nathaniel Brown may miss this match due to illness, but he and Frankfurt are fairly comfortable in second place of Europe League, and should advance.

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Grab a cup of joe

There is a solid lineup of matches this weekend including an early start on Sunday if you want to catch the Milan duo in action. So grab your coffee and let’s get rolling.

Saturday

Norwich City v Swansea City – 7:30a on Paramount+

Josh Sargent has returned from a two month layoff to appear in the last two Norwich matches though both have been losses, most recently 2-0 to league leading Leeds United. Norwich were in eighth place when Sargent went out but have fallen to twelfth place and will face fifteenth place Swansea City this weekend.

Mallorca v Real Betis – 8a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+

Johnny Cardoso has started six straight matches across all competitions but Betis have lost the past three including a 5-1 Copa del Ray thumping at the hands of Barcelona and, perhaps more concerning, losses in La Liga play to relegation threatened Real Valladolid and Deportivo Alaves. Betis travel to Mallorca this weekend to take on the sixth place side that have suffered a three match loosing streak themselves.

Borussia Dortmund v Werder Bremen – 9:30a on ESPN+

Borussia Dortmund are going through another rough stretch, losing four straight across all competitions and have decided to move on from Nuri Sahin so american’s Gio Reyna and Cole Campbell will start life under a new manager on Saturday, though Mike Tullberg has the role only on an interim basis. Reyna has appeared in eleven straight since returning from injury, including starts in Champions League action at Bologna and hosting Barcelona. BVB face ninth place Werder Bremen who are a point ahead of them in the Bundesliga table heading into the weekend.

Mainz 05 v Stuttgart – 9:30a on ESPN+

Lennard Maloney has moved out of the relegation playoff spot and up to sixth place in the Bundesliga table thanks to a transfer that has him moving to sixth place Mainz. Mainz face off against fourth place Stuttgart this weekend who hold a one point lead over Leipzig for the final Champions League spot.

Bournemouth v Nottingham Forest – 10a on USA Network

Tyler Adams went 90 minutes again last weekend and picked up an assist in Bournemouth’s 4-1 win over Newcastle. The win moved Bournemouth into seventh place, a point back of Newcastle and Manchester City. They now take on Nottingham Forest, who obviously are in third place, and tied on points with second place Arsenal.

Napoli v Juventus – Noon on Paramount+

Tim Weah came on as a halftime substitute for Juventus last weekend and scored his fifth Serie A goal of the season as Juventus defeated AC Milan 2-0. Weah then started midweek as Juve settled for the draw with Club Brugge in Champions League action. Weston McKennie started last weekend and went the full 90, then came off the bench on Tuesday with Juventus looking for the decisive goal. Juventus face league leading Napoli this weekend, the teams played to a scoreless draw the last time they met, back in late September.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Bochum – 12:30p on ESPN+

Joe Scally got a rare match off last weekend as Borussia Monchengladbach fell to Bayer Leverkusen 3-1. Scally had started every match for Gladbach heading into last weekend. Gladbach will be looking to snap a three match loosing streak as they face last place Bochum this weekend.

PSV v NAC Breda – 12:45p on ESPN+

Richard Ledezma was the only member of the USMNT trio starting for PSV last weekend as they fell to PEC Zwolle 3-1 with Ricardo Pepi coming in off the bench and Malik Tillman not included in the squad. PSV bounced back midweek, hanging on for a 3-2 away win over Red Star Belgrade despite playing nearly half the match down a man. With the league loss last weekend PSV’s lead for first place is down to just one point over Ajax.

Sunday

AC Milan v Parma – 6:30a on Paramount+

Christian Pulisic missed out on Milan’s matchup with Juventus last weekend but did get 15’ off the bench midweek in their 1-0 win over Girona. Yunus Musah started both matches on the right side. After the loss last weekend Milan are in eighth place in the Serie A table and need to string together some wins in the second half if they are going to qualify again for Champions League play.

Crystal Palace v Brentford – 9a on Peacock

Chris Richards has started four straight including last weekend’s 2-0 win over West Ham. Palace have ten points from those four matches and have moved into 12th place, a point ahead of West Ham and Manchester United and a point back of this weekend’s opponent, Brentford, who are coming off a 2-0 loss to Liverpool.

Toulouse v Montpellier – 11:15a on beIN Sports

Mark McKenzie continues to start for Toulouse, he’s nearing 1,500 minutes already halfway through the season. Toulouse and Lyon played to a scoreless draw last weekend as Toulouse remains in eighth place heading into their match against bottom of the table Montpellier who they defeated 3-0 earlier this season.

St Pauli v Union Berlin – 11:30a on ESPN+

James Sands got his first start for St. Pauli last weekend since joining the club two weeks ago. St Pauli defeated Heidenheim 2-0 in the match to pulll three points clear of them and out of the relegation zone. They remain three points back of this weekend’s opponent, Union Berlin and Jordan Pefok who are in 13th place. Pefok has started three straight matches, including last weekend’s 2-1 win over Mainz, snapping a ten match winless streak. Pefok is still looking for his first goal on the season.

Fulham v Manchester United – 2p on USA Network

Antonee Robinson and Fulham were winners again last weekend, defeating Leicester 2-0 to maintain their top ten position in the EPL. Robinson again wore the captains armband which he has been sporting quite a bit lately. Fulham have a seven point lead over this weekend’s opponent, Manchester United, who defeated Rangers on Thursday in Europa League action but fell to Brighton & Hove Albion last weekend in league play.

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Which teams are in the hunt to qualify automatically for the Champions League last 16?

18 teams are still able to finish in the top eight and qualify automatically for the last 16:

Arsenal, Bayer Leverkusen, Aston Vila, Inter Milan, Brest, Lille, Borussia Dortmund, Bayern Munich, Atletico Madrid, AC Milan, Atalanta, Juventus, Benfica, Monaco, Sporting Lisbon, Feyenoord, Club Brugge, Real Madrid, Celtic, PSV Eindhoven and Club Brugge

Which teams cannot advance to the last 16 automatically, but can still reach the playoff round?

Benfica, Paris Saint-Germain, Sporting CP, Stuttgart, Manchester City, Dinamo Zagreb, Shakhtar Donetsk

Which teams have been eliminated from the Champions League?

Young Boys, Slovan Bratislava, Red Bull Salzburg, Sturm Graz, Red Star Belgrade, Girona, RB Leipzig, Sparta Prague and Bologna cannot qualify for the playoff round and will be eliminated from Europe (no dropping down to the Europa League anymore) for the rest of the season.

UEFA Champions League tables — Latest standings from 2024-25 league phase

  • Top eight spots qualify directly for knockout rounds
  • Positions 9-24 are matched up in two-legged playoff ties
  • Positions 25-36 are eliminated from all European competitions
  1. Liverpool — 7-0-0 — +13 GD — 21 points — Advance to round of 16 (seeded)
  2. Barcelona — 6-0-1 — +15 GD — 18 points — Advance to round of 16 (seeded)
  3. Arsenal — 5-1-1 — +12 GD — 16 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (seeded)
  4. Inter Milan — 5-1-1 — +7 GD — 16 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (seeded)
  5. Atletico Madrid — 5-0-2 — +11 GD — 15 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  6. AC Milan — 5-0-2 — +4 GD — 15 points Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  7. Atalanta — 4-2-1 — +14 GD — 14 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  8. Bayer Leverkusen — 4-1-2 — +6 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  9. Aston Villa — 4-1-2 — +5 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  10. AS Monaco — 4-1-2 — +3 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  11. Feyenoord — 4-1-2 — +2 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  12. Lille — 4-1-2 — +2 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  13. Brest — 4-1-2 — +2 GD — 13 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  14. Borussia Dortmund — 4-0-3 — +8 GD — 12 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  15. Bayern Munich — 4-0-3 — +6 GD — 12 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  16. Real Madrid — 4-0-3 — +5 GD — 12 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  17. Juventus — 3-3-1 — +4 GD — 12 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  18. Celtic — 3-3-1 — +1 GD — 12 points — Assured of at least a playoff spot (unseeded)
  19. PSV Eindhoven — 3-2-2 — +3 GD — 11 points
  20. Club Brugge — 3-2-2 — -2 GD — 11 points
  21. Benfica — 3-1-3 — +3 GD — 11 points
  22. Paris Saint-Germain — 3-1-3 — +2 GD — 10 points
  23. Sporting Lisbon — 3-1-3 — +1 GD — 10 points
  24. Stuttgart — 3-1-3 — -1 GD — 10 points
  25. Manchester City — 2-1-4 — +2 GD — 8 points — Can’t qualify for last 16 directly, but may reach playoff round (unseeded)
  26. Dinamo Zagreb — 2-2-3 — -8 GD — 8 points — Can’t qualify for last 16 directly, but may reach playoff round (unseeded)
  27. Shakhtar Donetsk — 2-1-4 — -6 GD — 7 points — Can’t qualify for last 16 directly, but may reach playoff round (unseeded)
  28. Bologna — 1-2-4 — -5 GD — 5 points — Eliminated
  29. Sparta Prague — 1-1-5 — -12 GD — 4 points — Eliminated
  30. RB Leipzig — 1-0-6 — -6 GD — 3 points — Eliminated
  31. Girona — 1-0-6 — -7 GD — 3 points — Eliminated
  32. Red Star Belgrade — 1-0-6 — -10 GD — 3 points — Eliminated
  33. Sturm Graz — 1-0-6 — -10 GD — 3 points — Eliminated
  34. Red Bull Salzburg — 1-0-6 — -15 GD — 3 points — Eliminated
  35. Slovan Bratislava — 0-0-7 — -18 GD — 0 points — Eliminated
  36. Young Boys — 0-0-7 — -20 GD — 0 points — Eliminated

Agyemang & Co. make January case for future USMNT involvement

  • Jeff CarlisleJan 23, 2025, 09:51 AM ET ESPN

The annual January camp for the U.S. men’s national team has reached its conclusion, and while the full scope of its success or failure won’t be known for some time, the initial reaction is positive. The USMNT came away with wins over Venezuela and Costa Rica by 3-1 and 3-0 scores, respectively. The U.S. looked solid on both sides of the ball and was deserving of its victories.

Yet the takeaways from these matches skew more toward individual performances than the result, although the two often go hand in hand. And while those initial assessments usually focus on up-and-comers, there is an opportunity for the revival of some international careers that were thought to be dormant. It is those players who often have a better chance of an immediate recall than some of the newbies. That’s as good a spot as any to lead off with in terms of which players were the winners of the camp.

Steffen makes his case to be No. 1

Matt Turner has been solid in his recent USMNT performances, but his lack of playing time with Crystal Palace has left enough of an opening that a goalkeeper hitting top form could make a push to take over. Based on Wednesday’s encounter against the TicosZack Steffen could very well be the player to provide that challenge. The Colorado Rapids No. 1 certainly has plenty of experience. He was the starter for much of the 2022 cycle before losing his spot to Turner, which was followed by Steffen’s shocking omission from the World Cup roster. The way back has been difficult. Desperately in need of playing time, and coming off a knee injury, Steffen had to give up on his European dream to return to MLS. There were certainly some early struggles in Colorado, but Steffen has been on U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino’s radar since the Argentine was hired, coming into both of the previous camps, although he didn’t see the field. Given that the January matches were played outside of an international window, an opportunity beckoned against Costa Rica, and Steffen took full advantage.

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Steffen’s appearance on Wednesday was his first in a USMNT uniform since the end of 2022 World Cup qualifying, when the Ticos beat the U.S. His memories of this window’s match were far brighter. Steffen delivered three saves on the night, two of which were outstanding efforts to deny Alejandro Bran in the 37th minute and Allan Cruz 11 minutes after halftime. This is just a first step. As Pochettino put it with regard to all the players in the January camp, “They need to push themselves now, they need to come back to their clubs and be the best.” Steffen appears to be ready.

A tale of two strikers

Over the course of the two games, the U.S. got excellent performances from both of its No. 9s. Patrick Agyemang tallied in both games, while Brian White opened the scoring against Costa Rica. Of the two, White is the more polished performer. The timing of his runs is better and his movements more subtle. That sense of anticipation explains how he has been able to score 71 goals in 196 league and cup appearances, first with the New York Red Bulls and more recently with the Vancouver Whitecaps. It makes sense. At age 28, White is entering his eighth professional season compared to Agyemang, who is beginning his third. Agyemang has the higher upside, though. He’s four years younger, and at 6-foot-4, he has the kind of frame — as well as deceptive mobility — that is a nightmare for defenders to deal with. It’s expected that he’ll become more refined as he adds experience.

RSL pair shine in midfield

If there was one enduring image of this January camp, it was the sight of Diego Luna with cotton stuffed up his nostrils after suffering a broken nose thanks to a wayward elbow from Creichel Pérez. Then, just seconds after re-entering the match because of his injury, it was Luna who received the ball in midfield, ran at the Ticos’ defense, and laid in a perfect through ball for White to latch onto and finish. Luna’s perseverance personified the competitiveness and spirit that Pochettino has been preaching since he took the job last September. Afterwards, during a postgame interview with TNT, Pochettino said that Luna had “big balls,” which sent the TNT crew into howls of laughter. In his subsequent interview with the rest of the media, Pochettino’s comments were more G-rated.[Luna] showed great character because he wanted to stay,” the U.S. manager said. “He wanted to play.”he only pity was that Luna did have to come off at halftime because of his injury. Yet his 45-minute stint showed enough for Pochettino to at least keep an eye on the Real Salt Lake midfielder going forward. Luna is ready for the next step and remains the most intriguing prospect to come out of the January camp. He was by no means the only midfielder to shine, though. Emeka Eneli, Luna’s club teammate, was a force in more of a defensive midfield role, providing plenty of steel against a side known for its bite. Eneli also proved adept at connecting his passes and assisted on the second U.S. goal, a very sharp finish from Caden Clark. That said, Eneli looked a bit labored at times in terms of his recovery defense. It is still preseason for all of these players, which explains why there were some uneven displays from the likes of Matko MiljevicIndiana Vassilev and Benjamin Cremaschi.

Jack McGlynn proved to be arguably the player of the camp, riding his goal and assist against Venezuela into another composed performance in 45 minutes of work against Costa Rica. Not only was his passing sharp, but his eight recoveries led the team. Fresh faces emerge to challenge familiar backline

The U.S. defense contained more familiar names than any other part of the field, and Shaq MooreTim ReamMiles Robinson and Walker Zimmerman all acquitted themselves well across two matches. The only goal conceded came from a set piece. It was a pair of relative newcomers who caught the eye, though. George Campbell looked strong against Venezuela, even when he ventured forward. DeJuan Jones earned his 10th cap and was given license to get forward as much as possible from left-back. He took advantage, and dazzled with a gorgeous, outside-of-the-foot pass that sprung Agyemang for his stoppage-time tally. Will it be enough to get called up in March for the Nations League semifinals? Jones finds himself battling a numbers game, as do many of his teammates in this camp. There just don’t appear to be too many spots open, but Pochettino has accumulated plenty of data. For the likes of Steffen, McGlynn, Agyemang and Luna, there is a greater level of comfort at bringing them into the full team should the situation arise.

USMNT beats Costa Rica 3-0 with goals from Brian White, Caden Clark and Patrick Agyemang

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - JANUARY 22: Patrick Agyemang #7 of the United States celebrates scoring with Tim Ream #13 during the second half against Costa Rica during an international friendly at Inter&Co Stadium on January 22, 2025 in Orlando, Florida.  (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Felipe Cardenas Jan 22, 2025 The Athletic


The U.S. men’s national team recorded a 3-0 win over CONCACAF rivals Costa Rica on Wednesday in Orlando. It was the second consecutive win for Mauricio Pochettino’s reserve squad. Goals from Brian WhiteCaden Clark and Patrick Agyemang spearheaded the team’s second consecutive win in less than a week.The U.S. team started its January camp matches last Saturday with a 3-1 win over Venezuela in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Pochettino will be pleased with the side’s effort and comprehension of his ideas. Across two matches, the U.S. was generally well-organized and committed to Pochettino’s high-intensity style of play. The Americans were sharper and more direct than both of their opponents, both of whom fielded experimental teams.But for Pochettino, the objective was to win both matches. It sounds simple, but the Argentine head coach has made a habit of referring to the expectation to win that dominates American sports culture. Against Costa Rica, creative midfielder Diego Luna, a player who has not yet maximized his opportunities with the national team, produced the first goal of the night. After taking an inadvertent elbow to his nose in the 17th minute, which left him bloodied, the Real Salt Lake No. 10 threaded a pass to White three minutes later.After the match, Pochettino told TNT’s crew exactly what the conversation with Luna on the sideline sounded like.

“I was very surprised because his nose was broken,” said Pochettino. “I didn’t want to say too much. He said ‘Please coach let me keep playing.’ I asked the doctor who said it was okay. The first action (Luna) had an assist and we scored. I said ‘big balls.’ He showed great character.”

In his first start with the national team since 2022, goalkeeper Zack Steffen made two spectacular saves to keep Costa Rica at bay, including an opposite-hand save while fully stretched. It was a solid performance for Steffen whose form has gradually gotten better since joining the Colorado Rapids in 2024. Steffen was supported by an experienced back line that featured Miles RobinsonTim Ream and Walker Zimmerman.

In the 78th minute, Clark smashed a left-footed strike into the top corner of the Costa Rican net to end a spell of disjointed play from both teams. Poor giveaways and sloppy play affected the second half, but Clark and Ageymang put the game on ice. It was a fair result.“We are very very happy. It was a good performance, very professional,” Pochettino told TNT after the match. “To work with new players and try to find the way to perform with good lines and the quality we showed today, this team when I watch, it looks like we’ve worked (together) for six months. The attitude and capacity to adapt to new ideas has been amazing. The (players) are pushing to be in the national team.”

January camp has come to an end and while not many headlines were made over the last month, plenty of players earned valuable minutes under the new U.S. manager. Pochettino and his staff will now focus on preparation for the semifinal round of the CONCACAF Nations League in March. The U.S. will face Panama on March 20 in Los Angeles, while the other semifinal pits Mexico against Canada.

USMNT beats Venezuela 3-1 in friendly to open 2025: Who stood out?

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA - JANUARY 18: Patrick Agyemang #7 of the United States celebrates scoring with teammates Max Arfsten #15 and Brian Gutiérrez #17 during the first half against Venezuela at Chase Stadium on January 18, 2025 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Jeff Rueter Jan 18, 2025 The Athletic


The United States men’s national team won its first game of 2025, beating Venezuela 3-1 in a friendly at Chase Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. A pair of goals late in the first half gave the hosts a comfortable lead heading into the break.

The crowd seemed to skew favorably for the South American visitors, with their efforts to progress upfield garnering far louder support than the home side. Although Venezuela was able to sully the USMNT’s efforts to keep a clean sheet, La Vinotinto didn’t seem particularly likely to threaten the result at any stage.

A host of fresh faces

The international friendly came in the middle of the USMNT’s annual January camp. Mauricio Pochettino gave eight players their senior debuts in the fixture, while all three goalscorers opened their international accounts Saturday.

The United States worked to strike early, with Charlotte FC forward Patrick Agyemang drawing a penalty in the second minute. Matko Miljevic, a midfielder who is currently without a club, stepped up to take the penalty kick, with a poor effort being comfortably saved by goalkeeper Wuilker Faríñez. Philadelphia Union homegrown midfielder Jack McGlynn found a breakthrough in the 37th minute, scoring his first goal in his second USMNT cap by placing a shot from roughly 30 yards out just inside the post.

WHAT A MOMENT. WHAT A GOAL!

Jack McGlynn puts us ahead in style!#USMNT x @VW pic.twitter.com/2lVHMGRURJ

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) January 18, 2025

Agyemang scored on his debut two minutes later, finishing a one-man fast break by outrunning his defensive mark before catching Faríñez with his legs akimbo for a tidy nutmegged finish. The goal saw Miljevic get credited for an assist, as his defensive disruption sprung the ball free into Agyemang’s path.

“Such a surreal moment,” Agyemang told TNT after the game. “I think every kid dreams to make a debut for their national team. To be able to score, I can’t put it into words. I think the excitement is still there. I can’t even believe it.”

Miljevic got a debut goal of his own in the 64th minute, progressing the ball into the attacking third and passing wide to McGlynn before running toward the top of the box and placing a finish to Faríñez’s far post.

All players to debut Saturday were: Agyemang, Miljevic, George Campbell (defender, CF Montréal), Max Arfsten (defender, Columbus Crew), Brian Gutiérrez (midfielder, Chicago Fire), Caden Clark (midfielder, CF Montréal), Emeka Eneli (midfielder, Real Salt Lake) and Indiana Vassilev (forward, St. Louis City).

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An emphatic introduction

Agyemang could not have made a stronger first impression under Pochettino. The Charlotte forward was among the biggest breakout domestic players in the 2024 MLS season, scoring 10 goals and adding five assists, outperforming his expected goals by +1.74.

The 24-year-old striker carried that momentum to start 2025 off right. His movement frustrated the Venezuela defense throughout his 65-minute shift, from the drawn penalty two minutes into the match to his goal just over half an hour later.

UNSTOPPABLE from Patrick Agyemang to double the lead!#USMNT x @VW pic.twitter.com/BxMB1B16Lx

— U.S. Soccer Men’s National Team (@USMNT) January 18, 2025

After the game, Agyemang was all smiles speaking with the TNT pitchside analysts. After USMNT legend Damarcus Beasley gave a helpful hint as to how to hold the broadcast microphone, the striker spoke about the confidence Pochettino seemed to display ahead of his debut.

“Obviously, it’s a little intimidating coming into your first camp,” Agyemang said. “Pochettino told me straight away, ‘I like your game. I want you to play exactly how you know to play. Don’t have to feel pressure to do anything specific. Know your defensive roles, but at the end of the day, just show what you can do.’ And I was able to do stuff.”Striker is among the strongest and deepest positions in the USMNT pool these days. Folarin Balogun, Josh Sargent and Ricardo Pepi are regularly called into camps and scoring with their clubs when healthy, while Brandon Vázquez returned to MLS to ensure he was a club’s main man during the final 17 months before the 2026 World Cup.Still, Agyemang could feasibly work into Pochettino’s plans in short order. Standing 6-feet-4, he became the tallest USMNT goalscorer in eight years and is a threat to win aerial balls given his size. However, he profiles more closely to Balogun’s approach to the role, a more finesse-based forward who can sprint past any opponent and prefers having the ball played to his feet rather than winning headers in the box and in build-up like Pepi, Sargent and Vázquez.(Photo: John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

Champions League projections: Are we heading for El Clasico in the last 16?

Champions League projections: Are we heading for El Clasico in the last 16?

By Thom Harris Jan 23, 2025 The Athletic


With just one round of fixtures remaining of the inaugural 36-team Champions League league phase, two-thirds of the competition are still awaiting their fate. Nine teams, including GironaRB Leipzig and Bologna, are definitely out. One club — PSV — will definitely finish between ninth and 24th, consigning them to a two-legged play-off in February, while Liverpool and Barcelona are safely through to the round of 16. For everyone else, it comes down to the last game.All 18 fixtures take place at 8pm GMT (3pm ET) on Wednesday. With an average of 58 goals across the previous gameweeks and so many sides jostling for position, get ready for two chaotic hours. ith the help of The Athletic’s Opta-powered Champions League projections, we attempt to map out the final day.


City still have it in their hands

For all the drama of Manchester City’s spectacular collapse in Paris — the ninth time they have lost after leading this season — it leaves Pep Guardiola’s side in much the same position as where they started.

Their chances of elimination before kick-off were down at nine per cent according to The Athletic’s projections; that has jumped to 36 per cent following their 4-2 defeat, but the picture remains clear. Beat Club Brugge on Wednesday and City are through. Anything less and they suffer an incredibly embarrassing early exit.

Matters are slightly more complicated for Paris Saint-Germain, but a win over Stuttgart on the final day will do it. They should also be through with a draw given one of Club Brugge and City, who face each other, will finish below them — either City on points or Brugge on goal difference.

That being said, a trip to take on last season’s Bundesliga runners-up will not be straightforward. Stuttgart are also chasing points — or at least protecting their goal difference — to confirm their passage through. Sebastian Hoeness’ side have hit good form in recent weeks, with a comfortable 3-1 win over Slovan Bratislava making it four victories in a row and Deniz Undav and Jamie Leweling recovering from injuries over the winter break.

Will Guardiola and Luis Enrique’s sides both make it through to the knockout stage? (Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)

The real fun starts when trying to predict potential opponents for the knockout games. City’s most likely position is 21st, meaning they would play the 11th- or 12th-placed team in their play-off. According to the projections, that is most likely to be Bayern Munich or Juventus — but 18 other teams could finish in either of those two positions and City could finish in a further eight qualifying spots.As it stands, Liverpool and Barcelona’s reward for finishing first and second would be a heavyweight last-16 tie with one of Bayern, Real Madrid, Barcelona or Celtic.Fortunately for Arne Slot and Hansi Flick, the table should shift significantly on matchday eight.


Barcelona’s legendary turnaround

Despite seven wins from seven, having conceded just two goals, Liverpool still do not have top spot sewn up, but it took another minor miracle to take it to the final day.With a sensational 5-4 win over Benfica — twice coming from two goals down before securing a stoppage-time win — Barcelona sealed their place in the top eight, still with a 9.9 per cent chance of overtaking the league leaders on the final day per The Athletic’s projections. They need to beat Atalanta and hope Arne Slot’s side are defeated at his former Eredivisie title rivals PSV.Barcelona’s comeback was extraordinary in more ways than one. This was only the second time a team have won a Champions League game despite conceding four goals — along with Borussia Dortmund’s 8-4 win over Legia Warsaw in November 2016 — while it was the third time Barcelona have scored five goals in a match in nine days.What’s more, Raphinha’s bizarre finish to pull it back to 3-2 was only the third header scored from outside the box in the competition’s history.If the Brazilian’s first was fortunate, his match-winning goal was typical of one of Europe’s most prolific forwards this season. Racing clear and finishing confidently at the near post, it was Raphinha’s 31st goal contribution of the season in just under 28 full games of action. Once again, his fitness and relentless running in behind (illustrated by the graphic below) paid off.

Hansi Flick’s side are almost guaranteed a top-three finish and given the uncertainty on potential opponents, it might even be worth rotating for the visit of Atalanta next week, Barcelona’s eighth game of the month.


Anything Barcelona can do…

Not content seeing their domestic rivals take the limelight, Atletico Madrid launched a late comeback of their own at the Metropolitano, snapping Bayer Leverkusen’s 11-game winning streak with a dramatic 2-1 win.Julian Alvarez‘s late strike was the ninth decisive goal that Diego Simeone’s men have scored after the 90-minute mark this season, having beaten Barcelona and PSG with seconds to spare. It was also the fourth time that former City forward Alvarez has popped up with a winner and he now has as many Champions League goals (six) as he has managed in La Liga.The 24-year-old was clinical again, needing just five touches in the penalty area to continue his hot streak in front of goal, illustrated in his shot map for the season below.

It’s a result that lifts the Spanish side above Leverkusen in the table, but both are in strong positions for automatic qualification. Following a fourth successive win in the competition — the first time they have managed that since 2016 — Atletico have an 82 per cent chance of finishing in the top eight.Leverkusen are not far behind, with a 75 per cent chance before a winnable game against already-eliminated Sparta Prague.


A famous win for Feyenoord

Arguably the biggest winners from this week’s action were Feyenoord, who are mathematically safe after an impressive 3-0 win over Bayern Munich. It hasn’t been plain sailing domestically for coach Brian Priske, who was dealt the unenviable hand of succeeding Slot, but a stunning point at the Etihad sits alongside last night’s result as one of the finest in the club’s recent history.

Santiago Gimenez celebrates his second goal against Bayern Munich (Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)

Santiago Gimenez opened the scoring with an emphatic finish after a flowing move that started from the goalkeeper — just one of three shots that Feyenoord kept on target all evening. The Mexican has scored 11 goals since his return from injury in late November, adding a second from the spot just before half-time.Bayern were wasteful — as Harry KaneLeroy Sane and Jamal Musiala missed from point-blank range — illustrated by the expected goals (xG) step chart below. They also controlled 80 per cent of the ball and completed almost four times as many passes on the way to their third away defeat in the Champions League this season despite perfect home form.

Remarkably, Feyenoord’s chance of progressing automatically to the last 16 (13 per cent) is now greater than the model predicts for Bayern (nine per cent). Victory against winless Slovan Bratislava shouldn’t be an issue for Vincent Kompany’s side on the final day but results need to go their way if they are to creep into the top eight.To whoever draws Bayern in the play-off round: unlucky.


Best of the rest

Inter practically sealed their passage through to the last 16 with a 1-0 win over Sparta Prague. Still with a record of having let in just one goal, there is now just a two per cent chance that the Serie A champions fall into the play-off spots.

Atalanta continued their storming campaign with a 5-0 win over Sturm Graz, their second five-goal win of the tournament. They have a 66 per cent chance of holding on to a top-eight berth, with a tricky trip to Barcelona on the final day.

Aston Villa fell to a disappointing defeat at Monaco, leaving their automatic qualification in the balance. They need to beat Celtic at Villa Park while hoping one of the other six teams on 13 points, or any of the three sides above them, drop points. Opta gives them a 52 per cent chance of climbing back into the top eight and a 48 per cent of heading into a playoff with — as it stands — Sporting CP or Stuttgart.

Real Madrid recorded a much-needed 5-1 win over Red Bull Salzburg to keep them safe from a shocking league-stage exit. They have a 93 per cent chance of finishing in a play-off spot — a massively daunting opponent in February. And it may have been too little too late, but Leipzig and Bologna picked up their first Champions League wins of the campaign. Thijs Dallinga and Samuel Iling-Junior scored within 60 seconds for the Italians to complete a remarkable comeback win over Dortmund that saw Nuri Sahin lose his job.

Tyler Adams boosts USMNT optimism with return to top form, has Bournemouth flying

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 14: Tyler Adams of AFC Bournemouth passes the ball under pressure from Cole Palmer of Chelsea during the Premier League match between Chelsea FC and AFC Bournemouth at Stamford Bridge on January 14, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter Jan 23, 2025 The Athletic


The mark of a good defensive midfielder is when you hardly notice their presence. They’ve snuffed out an opponent’s attack before the crowd can begin to anticipate a box entry. Their passing is so metronomic that it puts a viewer in a daze. Even the most game-changing of defensive actions look tidy when handled with masterful precision.Tyler Adams is a good defensive midfielder, as has been established for nearly five years now after his breakthrough with RB Leipzig. Despite this, he lacks that “blink and you’ll miss his work” air about him. The reason for this is simple: his clubs and country fare noticeably better whenever he’s involved.Bournemouth is the latest beneficiary of Adams’ play. They played their first seven games of the season without Adams as he recovered from back surgery in July. Since then, Andoni Iraola’s side has seemingly gone from strength to strength: 10 games unbeaten, dating back to a 4-2 win at Wolves on Nov. 30, with a 2.2-points-per-game clip over the period that only trails Nottingham Forest among Premier League sides.Adams’ return has been highly anticipated by Bournemouth in part because he was hardly available in his first season. The club signed him after Leeds United were relegated, hoping he would be a more dependable midfield anchor than Jefferson Lerma, who was leaving for Crystal Palace.

Tyler Adams has contributed to Bournemouth’s superb recent form. (Justin Tallis/AFP via Getty Images)

So great was their faith in the former New York Red Bull that he was their only defensive midfield reinforcement in the three windows following Lerma’s exit. The need for cover was immediately pronounced, as Leeds’ overuse of Adams left him with a torn hamstring that ended his season in early March. Even as he missed nearly all of 2023-24, Bournemouth focused its recruitment on the forward and defensive lines.After his surgery rehab, Bournemouth has been more willing to ease him back into action. He was slowly reintroduced in late October: one unused appearance on the bench, then two substitute shifts, then his return to the lineup in mid-November.

Starting with that galvanizing win at Molineux, Bournemouth’s 10-game heater yields ample data suggesting Adams has played a significant part. Since Nov. 30, Bournemouth has increased its ball recovery rate by 3.1% (to 58%) from the previous 12 matches, improved the average xG per shot faced from 0.105 to 0.085, and upped its pressing intensity of passes allowed per defensive action made (or PPDA) from 11.2 to 9.3.

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“It’s a controlled chaos,” Adams told TNT Sports after last weekend’s win at Newcastle.  “We want to make the game as chaotic as possible but controlled for us. We try to overwhelm the opponent as much as possible but for us, it feels normal. We’re running all over the place.

“We know I have the freedom to step, I know center backs are coming with me. It’s trust, but you have to have the nuance to it as well. You can’t go flying into tackles all over the pitch. You have to be smart, because we know we can leave ourselves vulnerable at times.”

Adams has looked back to his best. His 12.43 ‘true’ tackles per 1,000 opponent touches — combining raw tackle data with instances when a defender is either shaken by the ball-handler or commits a foul in the process — since Nov. 28 trails only Alexis Mac Allister and João Gomes among all Premier League players (min. 500 minutes played). His ‘true’ tackle win rate of 55.3% exceeds both of them, while he also ranks highly in interceptions and blocked passes per 1,000 opponent touches (4.5, 5th among 61 qualified midfielders) and aerial win rate (64.3%, 15th).

Even more eye-catching than the data are the results themselves. Since returning, Adams has participated in: a 1-0 win over Tottenham, a 3-0 win at Old Trafford, a 2-2 draw at Stamford Bridge, and last weekend’s 4-1 blowout at St. James’ Park. Adams was particularly immense in the most recent result, making a mark all over the pitch in a vintage display.

The run has made Iraola among the hottest names in coaching. It has also reinforced the abilities, individually and as a collective, of Adams and his teammates.

“The system that we play, you have to be a certain type of player to fit into the style,” Adams said last weekend. “You have to have the mentality to press, run, and compete.”

Thankfully for Bournemouth, those traits fit Adams to a tee. The next trick is to keep him available for his national team’s biggest tournament in over three decades.


One can assume that Adams and USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino have spoken several times since the Argentine’s appointment in September. Unfortunately, Adams’ back injury prevented him from featuring in either of Pochettino’s first two camps before year’s end.

Adams last played for the national team that he co-captains in early July, when he started the Copa América group finale against Uruguay. The match felt doomed before it kicked off, as the previous game’s shock defeat against Panama made advancing from Group C a near impossibility. It was the only time that Adams played a full 90 minutes in the tournament, having played the opening half against Bolivia and Panama. 

As The Athletic wrote in the weeks following the USMNT’s early exit, Adams clearly looked below his usual standard across the competition. His lack of involvement in the preceding months left the USMNT’s crucial midfield cog with significant rust. It’s quite understandable why: Adams had logged just 118 minutes for Bournemouth and 96 minutes for the United States dating back to Jan. 1, 2024.

USMNTElimination at the Copa America group stage ended Gregg Berhalter’s tenure. (John Dorton/ISI Photos/Getty Images for USSF)

In the Copa, Adams was far less effective than usual when tackling opponents. Comparing to another small sample — his 360 minutes in Qatar — his duel win rate dropped from 61% to 53%; his ‘true’ tackle win rate fell from a robust 64.7% to a paltry 37.5%. Concerningly, he was forced to commit fouls more often, possibly a side effect of being below his opponents’ fitness standard: from 1.96 fouls per 1,000 opponent touches at the World Cup to 2.89 per 1,000 touches at the Copa América.

This almost certainly wasn’t a case of a player regressing over 18 months. Adams won’t turn 26 until mid-February. Instead, his and Bournemouth’s shared inability to avoid injuries in the months preceding the tournament left him without time to adequately prepare. Compare that to the months preceding the 2022 World Cup, when he’d logged 1,167 Premier League minutes for Leeds in the season’s first half, and it’s clear how much more ready his body was for hard-labor tournament shifts.

Bournemouth and the USMNT have a shared interest in ensuring that Adams’ recent stretch of consistent, high-level play can be sustained for longer than a couple of months at a time. The United States will need all of its best players in fine form to make a deep run when the 2026 World Cup comes to North America. When drafting the USMNT’s projected strongest lineup for that summer, it’s hard to come up with even a few names who are as vital to making it all work as Adams.

For Bournemouth, that may also mean finding adequate cover before the January window closes. Billing was loaned to Napoli as other attacking options surpassed him on the depth chart. The fact that Adams has quickly partnered well with Lewis Cook and Ryan Christie shows that any two starters from the trio complement each other. During this 10-game run, however, no other player beyond these three has logged a single minute in the engine room.

Tanner Tessman’s emergence has given the USMNT midfield options. (Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/Getty Images for USSF)

For the USMNT, Adams may require rest and rotation whenever he has been heavily utilized before an international window. Thankfully, Pochettino has more depth in defensive midfield than his predecessor Gregg Berhalter. Johnny Cardoso, Tanner Tessman and Aidan Morris have all progressed since the 2022 World Cup. None is quite as industrious of a ball-winner as Adams, but each can take a shift to ease the toll on Adams’ legs.Adams is invaluable to the USMNT, a quintessential “glue guy” with strong leadership attributes and level-headed relatability. Having him as part of each ensuing Pochettino camp will ensure he’s in sync with his teammates even if his minutes must be managed during friendly windows.With respect to the next handful of windows, none comes close to matching the magnitude of the 2026 World Cup. Entering that tournament with Adams below optimal fitness, or seeing him miss outright due to injury, would be among the worst imaginable setbacks Pochettino could face.(Top photo: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)

USMNT midfielder Weston McKennie has what he wants this January – no transfer talk

Turin, Italy - December 11: Weston Mckennie of Juventus Fc celebrates after scoring his team's second goal during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Phase MD6 match between Juventus and Manchester City at Allianz Stadium on December 11, 2024 in Turin, Italy. (Photo by Sportinfoto/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

By Greg O’Keeffe 5h ago The Athletic


Weston McKennie arrived, like clockwork, into Manchester City’s penalty area and timed his volley with precision. It was apt for a player who sometimes compares himself to a wristwatch. In one glorious instant, to extend the metaphor, he became a very valuable one. McKennie’s December goal to seal a dramatic Champions League win for Juventus against City reminded everyone at the Italian club about the wisdom of keeping the 26-year-old American after yet another summer of speculation over his future.

Fast forward a month and the winter transfer window has brought a pleasant change for the Texan. Speculation? What speculation? Rather than links with a move elsewhere, as has been the case in previous windows, all the talk surrounding McKennie in Juventus’ home city of Turin this week is about how he can help the team win arguably its most important game of the season at league leaders Napoli tomorrow.With typical honesty, McKennie admits his career path has long toughened him up to the process.“It’s definitely nice,” he said of the lack of exit rumors, in an interview with The Athletic on Thursday.“I have dealt with it most of the time in the summers, so cross my fingers that it doesn’t pop up again come this summer time.

Coach Antonio Conte’s Napoli team sits top of Serie A (Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

“To be here is always a dream for me, at this high level and a club with so much history and the caliber of players in the past, and to even play with some of those players and legends. So it’s nice to not hear any noise about it for now.”Even during the second summer of suggestions he was just not quite good enough for Juventus to keep, McKennie seemed to remain sanguine. Now, he is eyeing a personal best for goals in a season, with four in all competitions already (his top tally is six, in his 2020-21 debut campaign with Juventus), and admits he is enjoying proving his worth.“Like anything in life, once you experience it a couple of times, you know how to deal with it,” he says. “I learned at a young age, when I made my first move from FC Dallas to Germany (joining Schalke at age 17), that football is a business and people, or teams and clubs, will have use for you until they don’t have use for you and then you’re just an investment.“It’s just like a watch: you buy a watch and hope it appreciates in value and when it’s time to resell it, you can resell it. You may not use it as much anymore after a little bit.

“After many experiences of it, you get used to it and just try to respond. The only thing you can do to respond to it is prove people wrong and that’s something I feel like I’ve been able to do in the past two seasons and I hope it continues.”

Some supporters have chosen a different object to reflect McKennie’s appeal.

One commenter beneath an Athletic article compared him to a useful Swiss Army knife and it is easy to see why. During his time at the Turin giant, he has played almost every outfield position. Although he prefers a central-midfield No. 8 role, this season has often seen the right-footer deputize ably at left-back.

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It means a different set of demands than operating in midfield, but McKennie says it has never felt like an onerous switch.“I’ve always been someone that wants the best for the team and the club. I’m not a super-selfish person, so whatever I’m asked to do I don’t mind doing,” he says. “As long as I’m playing, I’m happy.“I don’t find it hard to adapt. I feel I’ve always had a good understanding of the game and played for a while now, so it’s pretty easy. If you’re playing the right-back position or left-back you stay with the line, you press when you can, or don’t press, get out of situations, you make passes just like in any position.

This January, McKennie seems more settled at Juventus during the transfer window (Diego Puletto/Juventus/Juventus FC via Getty Images)

“If you play midfield, you do the same thing: press when you can, make sure you stay in the middle of the field and make passes. If you play striker, you just make sure you’re not offside, so you’re staying with the line again. You don’t need to overcomplicate anything.”Unsurprisingly then, McKennie has not spent his spare time studying videos of other left-backs.“I don’t watch football,” he says. “When I’m finished with training, I go home and watch movies, TV shows, and disconnect completely. I’ve never watched a World Cup or Champions League final. Nothing.“It’s something I’ve always done. We watch enough film in training to have an understanding of things. I love football, trust me — it’s given me the life that I have: to be able to travel and not have to worry about things maybe other people have to worry about. To be able to help my family when I can — but football is not my life.“I like to do other things outside of football, I’m a human being. It’s not a case of 24/7 eating, thinking, breathing soccer. I have a life outside of the game.”

McKennie certainly speaks often from experience and he is slightly older than the 25.7 average age of his club’s squad.Juventus have one of the youngest rosters in Serie A this season and as one of their ‘elder’ statesmen, the USMNT international believes he knows how they will curb their costly habit of drawing games.

On one hand, coach Thiago Motta’s outfit is unbeaten in 21 league matches this season, but they sit only fifth in the table, two points off the top four places that mean Champions League qualification, after eight wins and, remarkably, 13 draws.“We’re not in a terrible position, but it’s not great either,” McKennie says. “When you hear a team has gone unbeaten, they’re usually in first place. In our case, that’s not it. I think it comes down to little moments of concentration and shooting ourselves in the foot. We can close out a game and win a game, but there can be that little slip-up or missed clearance that seems to be happening at the moment.“Obviously it’s a bit different because we’re a young team compared to the (Juventus) teams before us and so there’s also an experience difference. We don’t go out there to tie games. But obviously, teams before us had the (Giorgio) Chiellinis and (Leonardo) Bonuccis, (Paulo) Dybalas and Cristianos (Ronaldo). They have won big things and they knew how to win.

Cristiano Ronaldo brought his skills to Juventus in 2018 (Nicolo Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“Winning is not always going to look pretty and it may not always look the way people want football to be played. But if you’re winning 1-0 and there’s five minutes on the clock, then sometimes it’s the right thing to take the ball to the corner and waste time.

“We are eager and young and want to score goals so we are still trying to attack and sometimes leaving little holes here and there. But we’re making mistakes we can’t make.”

To go with his nous, McKennie has maintained an attacking threat this term despite playing in defence. As well as those four goals, including that sensational strike against City, he’s contributed three assists.

“I have always had it,” he says. “I have had it in storage, I guess you could say.

“Everything in life is like when it’s clicking, it’s clicking, and if it’s not, then it’s not. You can take many players in the world of football, or other sports, that have one crazy season when everything just falls for them and they’re always in the right place at the right time.“I have worked for that and trained my whole life to be in the best position to do that, but it’s like I say: when it clicks, it clicks. Hopefully, it continues and I can potentially pull off a season-best.”McKennie is a regular for the national team but, like most senior squad members based outside of the U.S., was not involved in new head coach Mauricio Pochettino’s camp this month that featured wins over Venezuela and Costa Rica and was a chance for other players, many from Major League Soccer, to show the Argentine and his staff what they can do.“It seems like it was a successful camp and I wouldn’t be surprised if I see one or two players from this camp in the next camp in March,” McKennie says. “I’m glad the players who were in camp were able to do their part and keep the pride for the team.”If results under new management have started to restore the team’s standing, it was necessary after a sobering summer when they flopped at a home Copa America, being eliminated at the end of the group phase.Now the dust has settled on that tournament, how does McKennie, who started all three of the USMNT’s games, reflect on the experience?“Obviously, we could have done way better than what we did,” he sighs. “I think we all know that. Silly mistakes. I can speak for myself, in that I didn’t have the best tournament or help the team as much as I knew I could.

“I’m just trying to have the type of performances I have for Juventus and translate them to the national team. That’s how you become a top player, someone that’s consistent and not just someone who conforms to one or the other. I don’t want that type of legacy.”

Still, McKennie emphasizes the importance of not dwelling too much on the past.

Looking forward, this weekend brings a challenge in the shape of a trip to in-form Napoli and the chance to get a result that could move Juventus back into those Champions League qualification spots.

“We definitely want to go there and leave a mark,” McKennie says. “It’s not like we’re afraid to go down there and play. The Juventus name holds some weight as well. But the name of Juventus can only carry you so far and it’s the players that have to take the next step and pull out a win and not another draw.”

Napoli are riding high during a campaign with three former Premier League players, including Scotland internationals Scott McTominay and Billy Gilmour, previously of Manchester United and Brighton & Hove Albion respectively, in their midfield. After his spell in England on loan at Leeds United in the second half of the 2022-23 season, what does McKennie make of more English-based players, a group joined this week by Manchester City’s Kyle Walker signing for Milan, moving to Italy.

Scott McTominay has adapted well to life in Serie A (Ivan Romano/Getty Images)

“From my experience in England, you can expect players that run a lot, are technically sound and are rough,” he says. “The Italian league has always been known for its defence and I think players like that making jumps here and other big players from other countries doing the same coming to teams like Napoli, Milan and Juventus just shows the quality is growing.

“Italians really love Italian players and want to keep Italians in their league, but I think it’s become a little bit more open-minded and foreign players are adapting better. They enjoy it and the lifestyle is amazing here. It’s not always gray (weather), like England. You can have some sunlight and you’re close to many good things, so I think that’s why more players are coming here and being successful.”

On Saturday evening, McKennie hopes he and compatriot Tim Weah can help Juventus spoil the mood in Naples, but beyond that, he is as wary of looking too far forward as he is about going over old memories, good and bad.

“It’s like my Manchester City goal,” he says. “I was tagged in lots of stories for it on my Instagram that night and I probably saw it like 100 times. That was enough for me. Searching it back and looking for it? No.

“Juventus is a club that always has expectations and needs to be in the Champions League. But right now we’re not trying to focus on what the end of the season looks like. Think too far ahead and you can lose that concentration.

“It’s like when people ask me about the World Cup (next year, which the United States is co-hosting with Canada and Mexico, and staging the majority of matches). I always say life is life and anything can happen. I can speak about it all I want and (then) maybe I’m not even playing at it or on the roster.

“At the end of the day, we can only take on what is in front of us.”

(Top photo: Sportinfoto/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

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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GO DEEPER

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)

11/29/24 USWNT plays England Sat 12:30 TNT, US Keeper Naeher to retire, Pulisic, Pepi, Score in Champs League, Orlando & Marta win NWSL, MLS Semi’s Sat

US Ladies Travel to England Sat 12:20 on TNT, then face Dutch Tues
Excited to see the US ladies headed to Europe to face solid competition – though this is a mighty young and inexperienced roster Hayes is carrying over. Man I would love to see at least part of the Triple Expresso trio in England – but all 3 will be missing after draining NWSL Seasons. Also with US GK Alyssa Naeher announcing her retirement from international football after this 2 game set – interesting to see 2 new keepers in the mix this time – including youngster Phallon Tullis-Joyce the Man U keeper. (nice story about her below- along with tons on the game & Naeher). I’m guessing we lose a close one at England with so many players missing – but of course I won’t question our Gold Medal winning Coach – I trust she’s doing what’s right here. Cool Behind the Crest with the US Ladies. Man we are going to miss Naeher – seriously her saves and PK saves at critical times in the 2019 World Cup and this summer’s Olympics rank her as perhaps the best overall US GK ever. Naeher’s best moments (more below under GK)

Nice to See US Players Making a Difference in Champions League this week
Love the first goal for AC Milan by Pulisic – Pulisic Scores another Champ League Goal here it is in proper Spanish – much better of course Capitan Ameri’ca. Also 2 American’s helped PSV come from behind to win 3-2 as Tilman scored 2 and Pepi scored the winner in stoppage time. Champion’s League Talk on Galazo.

NWSL Ends Fantastic Season with Orlando & Marta Winning the Championship
Wow what a season for the Orlando Pride and NWSL – as Orlando won the Championship in KC over the Washington Spirit as over 1 million watched on CBS on a Saturday night head to head with College Football. The skills competition pulled another 1.5 million eyeballs Sun afternoon and was the most watched sport not called NFL on Sunday. The first Women’s Soccer Specific stadium in KC hosted 20K rowdy fans as Brazilian Superstar Marta finally brought home a trophy for Orlando. NWSL Final Highlights. In my eyes the NWSL is doing everything MLS is too stupid to do. With games on CBS, ESPN, & Prime – their 240 million dollar package is putting USWNT and world stars in front of a growing female audience begging for more coverage. Unlike MLS – NWSL doesn’t have MOST of their games behind a paywall – as only Prime’s Friday night games do that. Congrats NWSL – it was great seeing your playoff games on Real TV – keep up the good work !!

USWNT roster (club; caps/goals) vs England & Netherlands

Goalkeepers (3): Mandy Haught (Utah Royals FC; 1), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United, ENG; 0 -Cool story about her below), Alyssa Naeher (Chicago Red Stars; 113)

Defenders (9): Tierna Davidson (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 64/3), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG; 60/1), Eva Gaetino (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA; 1/0), Naomi Girma (San Diego Wave FC; 42/2), Casey Krueger (Washington Spirit; 59/0), Alyssa Malonson (Bay FC; 1/0), Jenna Nighswonger (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 17/2), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride; 2/0), Emily Sonnett (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 101/2)

Midfielders (6): Korbin Albert (Paris Saint-Germain, FRA; 20/1), Sam Coffey (Portland Thorns FC; 26/1), Hal Hershfelt (Washington Spirit; 2/0), Lindsey Horan (Olympique Lyon, FRA; 159/36), Rose Lavelle (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 108/24), Lily Yohannes (Ajax, NED; 1/1)

Forwards (6): Yazmeen Ryan (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 2/0), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC; 2/1), Ally Sentnor (Utah Royals FC; 0/0), Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave FC; 19/8), Alyssa Thompson (Angel City FC; 11/1), Lynn Williams (NJ/NY Gotham FC; 73/20)

Shane, Mike Arrington & T Ray Phillips at the Girls Showcase last weekend at Grand Park Friday- man I love reffing with these guys. And of course the chow – this time Chili was fantastic – thanks Nate !!

TV GAME SCHEDULE

Sat, 11/29
12 noon ESPN+ Dortmund vs Bayern Munich
12 pm TNT, Telemundo USWNT @ England
12 pm CBS Golazo AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Empoli
12:30 pm USA West Ham vs Arsenal
3:30 pm ESPN Des Real Valladolid vs Atletico Madrid
7:30 pm Sirius XM, apple Orlando City vs NY Red Bulls
8 pm Univision Cruz Azul vs Tijuana
10 pm Apple LA Galaxy vs Seattle Sounders
Sun, 11/30
8:30 am USA Chelsea vs Aston Villa
8:30 am Peacock Tottenham vs Fulham (Jedi)
11 am USA Liverpool vs Man City
12 pm CBSSN, Para+ Fiorentina vs Inter Milan
2:45 pm Para+ Lecce vs Juventus (McKinney, Weah)
Tues, 12/3
2:45 pm TNT? Netherlands vs USWNT
2:45 pm ESPN2 Bayern Munich vs Bayer Leverkusen
3 pm PAra+ AC Milan (Pulisic & Musah) vs Sassuolo
3 pm CBSSN France vs Spain (Women)
Weds, 12/4
2:45 pm ESPN+ RB Leipzig vs Frankfurt
3 pm ESPN+ Athletic Club vs Real Madrid
3:15 pm Peacock Arsenal vs Man United
3:15 pm USA Aston Villa vs Brentford
Thurs, 12/6
2:30 pm Peacock Fulham (Jedi) vs Brighton
3:15 pm USA AFC Bournemouth vs Tottenham
Fri, 12/7
12:30 pm Para+ Inter Milan vs Parma
2:45 pm PAra+ Atalanta vs AC Milan (Pulisic & Musah)

US Ladies

How the USWNT is spending Thanksgiving in London ahead of England clash
Yohannes in for USWNT, Rodman, Smith left out
https://prosoccerwire.usatoday.com/story/sports/uswnt/2024/11/18/uswnt-roster-three-takeaways-squad-england-netherlands/76403789007/ WC, Olympic champ Naeher retiring from USWNT
Naeher: ‘Nervous’ to tell Hayes about retiring
Alyssa Naeher announces retirement from USWNT
Why is Alyssa Naeher retiring from USWNT? Star goalie explains decision to walk away
Hayes: I was ‘unwell’ before taking USWNT role
U.S. to face Japan, Australia in SheBelieves Cup
Emma Hayes’ USWNT rebuild is just getting started
Olympics are over, World Cup is in three years: What questions must USWNT answer now? EPSN

Champions League

The 5 most interesting stats of Matchday 5 https://sports.yahoo.com/soccer/champions-league/scoreboard/ Christian Pulisic — playing the best soccer of his career — delivers again Real Madrid is floundering in the Champions League, but the format could save it Dortmund’s Gittens closes in on unique UCL feat for an Englishman
Amorim enjoys ‘special’ first Man Utd win despite ‘anxiety’

Spurs boss Ange Postecoglou comments on “frustrating” late draw versus Roma

Real Madrid is floundering in Champions League. The format they hate might save them Real Madrid lost to Liverpool on Wednesday, its third defeat in five Champions League games.

American’s Ricardo Pepi scored the game winner for PSV after Mark Tillman scored the first 2 goals in the 87th & 90th minutes to beat Shakhtar Donetsk in Champions League action.

MLS

https://www.mlssoccer.com/news/mls-cup-2024-odds-who-s-the-favorite-to-win-it-all
Conference finals predictions: What’s our ideal MLS Cup? Who will surprise?
MLS playoffs conference semis: Galaxy the last giant standing
Seattle stun LAFC on the road; Red Bulls sucker punch NYCFC
Galaxy put six past Minnesota; Atlanta crash out in Orlando

NWSL

Banda the difference as Orlando Pride crowned NWSL champs
NWSL Championship Weekend Wins Fans, Sets Viewership Records

Marta has lived through long, lean years. Now she has another title

Orlando Pride: A historic journey to their first NWSL Championship

NWSL title match was most-watched game in league history: How media rights deal shaped its success

Marta’s resurgence, the clean sheets, the unbeaten run – Orlando Pride’s NWSL championship seemed destined

Kansas City Current’s Temwa Chawinga wins NWSL MVP

GK

Alyssa Naeher announces retirement from USWNT
“I have to say” – Del Piero singles out Aston Villa player for his performance vs Juventus

USWNT’s rock, goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, is retiring from international soccer

Why is Alyssa Naeher retiring from USWNT? Star goalie explains decision to walk away
Naeher’s best moments
Great Saves Naeher

World

Growth of Bayern-Dortmund rivalry has made Klassiker must-see TV
It’s time for Pep Guardiola to unleash a Manchester City legend on Sunday

“Not a good sign” – Liverpool duo now doubtful for Manchester City clash as Slot delivers worrying update

Analysis: What Liverpool’s ‘Dominant’ Real Madrid Victory Means for Man City Clash
Preview: Premier League Heavyweights Collide at Anfield

Reffing

Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13
Reffing the Best Job for High School Kids Ever
Become a Licensed High School Ref

USMNT’s Ricardo Pepi reflects on ‘most important’ goal of career in PSV’s ‘crazy’ Champions League win

EINDHOVEN, NETHERLANDS - OCTOBER 26: Ricardo Pepi of PSV celebrates 1-0 with Malik Tillman of PSV  during the Dutch Eredivisie  match between PSV v PEC Zwolle at the Philips Stadium on October 26, 2024 in Eindhoven Netherlands (Photo by Photo Prestige/Soccrates/Getty Images)

By Nnamdi OnyeagwaraNov 28, 2024


Ricardo Pepi said his stoppage time winner against Shakhtar Donetsk was the most important goal of his career after he and USMNT team-mate Malik Tillman played instrumental roles in PSV’s “crazy” 3-2 comeback victory in the Champions League.The Dutch side had trailed 2-0 in the latter stages at the Philips Stadium on Wednesday before Tillman, 22, scored two goals in the 87th and 90th minute of the game to level proceedings. Pepi, 21, who came on at half-time, scored in the 95th minute to complete a dramatic comeback and secure all three points for PSV. Game-winner Pepi told PSV’s official club website: “I think definitely this one (is the most important goal of my career). It’s up there for sure. I think this one is important, we needed the three points and now we’re in a good spot to make it to the next round.“Emotions are all over the place, I was very happy. It was a crazy game, a lot of emotions in the game. It doesn’t feel real. I’m just very happy to help the team.

“It was crazy, to be honest, but I feel like we have something special in our group. We don’t stop until the final whistle blows. “That is something very special that we’ve worked on. At the end of the day, the result went our way and tonight was something very special.“As a striker, it is always important (to score goals) It’s a special feeling.”Tillman echoed Pepi’s sentiment, saying: “I think ‘disturbed’ is the only right word. What an amazing comeback, I’m really speechless. I’ve never seen Philips Stadium explode like this before.“I literally had goosebumps. To win a game like that, that’s just indescribable. Also all credit to Pepi. Bizarre that he scores so often at important moments.”

The victory leaves PSV 18th in the Champions League league phase.Tillman’s move to PSV from Bayern Munich was made permanent this summer while Pepi joined the club in the summer of 2023 from FC Augsburg and the pair are enjoying successful campaigns for the Dutch side.Tillman has scored eight goals and provided four assists in 19 games for PSV this season, while Pepi has scored 11 goals and provided one assist in 18 games, helping PSV to the summit of the Eredivisie.PSV, who are five points clear at the top of Eredivisie, face second-placed Utrecht on Sunday.

USWNT vs. England, 2024 Friendly: Scouting England

By Brendan Joseph  Nov 28, 2024, 6:00am PST  Stars and Stripes —

England v South Africa - Women’s International Friendly

As the reigning Olympic gold medalists and top-ranked team in the world, the United States Women’s National Team reeled off three consecutive friendly victories over Iceland and Argentina. There are two remaining fixtures this year, against a pair of opponents that should provide a slightly sterner challenge than the previous foes. The first, England, has ascended to elite status in the footballing world and produced consistent results since claiming the 2022 UEFA European Championship, with the chance to lodge a resounding exhibition result. London’s historic Wembley Stadium, a 90,000-seat venue with a HATKO Hybridgrass Carpet surface, is set to host.

This is the 20th all-time meeting between the two nations, with the USWNT holding a 12-5-2 advantage but failing in the most-recent match-up (1-2) in October of 2022. Ranked second internationally by FIFA, England booked a ticket over the summer to the 2025 UEFA European Championship with a second-place finish during qualifying in a difficult Group 3, drawing twice with Sweden (1-1, 0-0), grabbing two wins against Ireland (2-0, 2-1), and splitting results with France (1-2, 2-1). Recent friendly results include a defeat to Germany (3-4) and a tight result against South Africa (2-1).

The “unrivaled” Sarina Wiegman was appointed to the manager position in August of 2020 and stepped into the role in September of 2021, “succeeding Phil Neville at the end of his term” after “honoring her commitment to the Netherlands FA.” The 54-year-old former midfielder from The Hague earned 104 caps and served as captain for her birth nation before embarking on a coaching career that included stops at Ter Leede, ADO Den Haag, and the Oranje (Orange). Since taking over England, she has continued to add to her career legacy that includes two UEFA Women’s Championships, a Women’s Finalissima, and two runner-up finishes at the World Cup in 2019 and 2023.Here it is!

Your #Lionesses to face & this November and December…— Lionesses (@Lionesses) November 19, 2024

For the friendlies against the USWNT and Switzerland, Wiegman named a 24-player roster that is missing several notable talents. The domestic Women’s Super League is home to 18 of the call-ups, while three are on the books at National Women’s Soccer League clubs. Lauren James, Ella Toone, Niamh Charles, and Lauren Hemp are out due to various injuries. Maya Le Tissier was initially included in squad but was removed due to a concussion and replaced by Lotte Wubben-Moy.

GOALKEEPERS (3): Mary Earps (Paris Saint-Germain), Hannah Hampton (Chelsea), Anna Moorhouse (Orlando Pride)

DEFENDERS (9): Lucy Bronze (Chelsea), Alex Greenwood (Manchester City), Millie Bright (Chelsea), Leah Williamson (Arsenal), Jess Carter (NJ/NY Gotham FC), Esme Morgan (Washington Spirit), Lotte Wubben-Moy (Arsenal), Gabby George (Manchester United), Millie Turner (Manchester United)

MIDFIELDERS (7): Keira Walsh (Barcelona), Fran Kirby (Brighton & Hove Albion), Georgia Stanway (Bayern Munich), Jess Park (Manchester City), Grace Clinton (Manchester United), Laura Blindkilde Brown (Manchester City), Ruby Mace (Leicester City)

FORWARDS (5): Beth Mead (Arsenal), Chloe Kelly (Manchester City), Alessia Russo (Arsenal), Jessica Naz (Tottenham Hotspur), Aggie Beever-Jones (Chelsea)

Under Wiegman, England are praised as becoming “tactical chameleons” with the variations and flexibility to line up in a few different formations, notably pulling out an unexpected 3-5-2 during tournament play. She uses a “team-first” style with a “clarity of tactics” and “zonal defending with three midfielders” that also “allows players to improvise and make mistakes.” The squad has been trained to handle pressure, with practice matches featuring intentionally incorrect refereeing decisions in order to cause a heightened emotional state. According to The Mastermind Site, the high-possession attack is generated from “progression out of the back” through the centre-backs that builds with “short, sharp passes,” while the defense has struggled to handle the transition and “drops into [the] mid-block quite early.”

Projected England Starting XI (via BuildLineup.com)

Due to both injuries and the ravages of time, Mary Earps appears to be slowly losing her grip on the number-one role, replaced by relative-to-the-position youngster Hannah Hampton. The 24-year-old Chelsea goalkeeper is comfortable coming very far off of her line to claim the ball and has the athleticism to leap for crosses and beat out taller opposing strikers. Standing at five-foot-eight, she has the size and length to cover the goalmouth and displays solid reflexes on short-range opportunities, standing firm when facing an onrushing opponent. Her work in possession is beyond serviceable, playing line-drive passes at a variety of distances while under pressure, hitting deep kicks from restarts, and taking an active role to build out of the back.

The experienced Alex Greenwood is highly influential in possession with frequent distribution as “an exceptional progressor” but can also win her fair share of headers and “produces positive moments in the final third.” The 31-year-old Manchester City centre-back will often push forward into the midfield in order to serve as a safety valve for her pressured teammates and get the ball into the box. Leah Williamson was forced to miss the World Cup with an anterior cruciate ligament rupture but has regained her spot in the starting lineup, resuming her status as “the ultimate ball-playing defender” with a “delightful passing range” and “reliability under pressure.” She is reasonably strong in the air and utilizes her read of the opponent during the build-up and when blocking lanes, coming in from behind and stepping forward at the right moments. Imposing veteran Millie Bright could also feature in proceedings, describing herself as playing “on the front foot” and providing “power and a penchant for scoring spectacular volleys.” The five-foot-ten Chesterfield native “reads the game well,” is a constant danger on set pieces, dispenses “thunderous tackles,” and finds teammates with long-range efforts that will bypass multiple lines.

Lucy Bronze’s first Chelsea goal is a SCREAMER! pic.twitter.com/9rUQW1KkUX— Chelsea FC Women (@ChelseaFCW) September 27, 2024

Artfully praised as “a stalwart of quiet calm,” Jess Carter has lined up in a variety of roles over her career due to her high level of athleticism, comfort on the ball, and ability to pick her moments for individual brilliance. The 27-year-old NJ/NY Gotham FC defender constantly presses forward and overlaps on the outside but can also move centrally in both phases of the game, best described as a somewhat reluctant fullback. One of the squad’s veterans, Chelsea’s Lucy Bronze is “a serial winner and versatile [talent]” with an attacking mindset guided by “pace, core strength, and composure in possession.” As a two-way player, she is strong in the air, plays a constant barrage of accurate passes, swarms the opponent’s lanes, and makes a crucial impact in the final third with delicate crosses.

Versatile and “brilliant” Barcelona midfielder Keira Walsh boasts excellent “passing quality, range, and vision” but is also a master manipulator of space, serving as a metronome with a high usage rate. She can find any teammate on the field and has just enough guile on the ball to avoid pressure, spinning and darting around both halves in order to buy time. One of the creative roles is occupied by Georgia Stanway of Bayern Munich, a dynamic option who racks up assists for club and country by leading the transition and “working well in tight [areas].” Her aggressive nature will produce some crushing yet sometimes dangerous challenges, but the regular highlight-reel finishing and long-distance shooting are more than enough to merit constant inclusion in the lineup. There is also Jess Park, who has been getting an extended run with the squad and made two starts during EURO qualifying, earning praise as a “skillful, creative player with an eye for goal.” Hailed as “the future for England and Manchester City,” the multi-faceted option is a pacy, offensive machine with a daring nature that challenges both centre-backs and fullbacks alike.That is a CLASSIC Beth Mead goal #BarclaysWSL @ArsenalWFC pic.twitter.com/aG0Zymo2WO— Barclays Women’s Super League (@BarclaysWSL) November 8, 2024

Beth Mead is slowly moving out of her peak years, but the Arsenal forward can still grab the spotlight with her “ability to create chances, penetrate opposing back lines, and receive between the lines,” with the utilization of intuitive timing. She is equally comfortable on the inside and the outside of the field, with darting runs that slalom toward the center or physical battles in the box. Despite wanting for playing time at Manchester City, Chloe Kelly has been a reliable option off of the bench for England and should pick up a start due to several absences, providing the potential danger for a long-range blast. The 26-year-old attacker is always looking to cut inside and hit a searching shot with either foot but can also hang on the wing and pick out teammates with accurate crosses.

Former University of North Carolina Tar Heel Alessia Russo is the main scoring threat at the top of the formation and has found the back of the net five times this season. The 25-year-old Arsenal forward “is a very good dribbler and provides dangerous passes,” while also shooting frequently and winning aerial duels with “excellent positioning inside of the box.” As expected of a player with her abilities, she is dangerous with both feet, reads the opponent quickly, and can finish at any distance when given a yard of space. Marc Lamberts praises her progression of possession, high level of distribution, and prolific nature, enabling her to slot into a variety of roles and match the manager’s tactical shifts.

After a few less taxing friendlies, the USWNT has the privilege of a true test against a program that spent the past decade ascending into the elite level. England has a talented squad and a wily, experienced manager, which should provide a compelling physical and tactical match-up. The added bonus of the fixture taking place at Wembley adds interest for both fan and neutral viewer, although crucial absences on both sides dampen proceedings.The match is scheduled for Saturday, November 30th at 12:20 p.m. Eastern, 9:20 a.m. Pacific. Viewing options include TNT, Universo, truTV, Max, Peacock, and Fubo TV (free trial).

Why USWNT coach Emma Hayes was so happy in the basement of a London pub: ‘I’ve got my mojo back’

Why USWNT coach Emma Hayes was so happy in the basement of a London pub: ‘I’ve got my mojo back’

By Charlotte Harpur The Athletic = Nov 25, 2024


The first time Emma Hayes introduced herself to the US Women’s National Team (USWNT) she put a photo up on the big screen.The photo showed the intersection on Camden High Street, north London, just outside a pub called the World’s End. Hayes said to the players: “This is Camden, England. This is where I’m from. This is what made me.”

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So when Hayes returned to the UK ahead of England vs USWNT at Wembley on Saturday, U.S. Soccer decided to use the pub as the setting for her pre-match press conference. A press conference in a pub — that must be a first.

So, at 11am on a Monday morning, The Athletic was weaving our way down a pub’s staircase, round the bar, past some less-than-salubrious toilets, into Underworld, a black-walled basement club where Hayes spent much of her youth dancing until 3am.“I remember many an evening we would come in here, and thankfully it still smells of fart and feet,” said Hayes, who’d been greeted with a ‘Welcome back Emma’ sign outside. “It was a big indie place for me back in the day and I definitely have not seen this place in the daylight so that’s refreshing.”Although the music blaring from the speakers remains the same, the agenda and vibe at this time in the morning were slightly different — not least the fact that tea, coffee and pastries were being served.With a table and mics set up where Hayes used to rock and roll, the head coach looked out to a bizarre mix of her mum, sisters, school friends, former and current colleagues, and the international media.Asked how she felt to be in the Underworld with those closest to her, every word captured on camera, navigating questions from coaching at Wembley to Donald Trump, from USWNT’s Thanksgiving plans to the homophobic abuse aimed at her former player Sam Kerr, from developing the national youth team strategy to Hayes’ top tourist tips, Hayes said simply: “F****** brilliant!”

(U.S. Soccer/Getty Images/Brad Smith)


Hayes may be coaching in America but she has not changed, firmly shaped by her upbringing in north London.She credits her friends and family for keeping her humble. Those in the audience had shared her journey with her since she was a child, people who continue to run projects across the London borough at Camden Sports Development or youth leagues at Regent’s Park.“My community is what I am and what I care about,” she said. “I’m so stoked to be here with people that have been massive in my life. My friends have never changed and I’m grateful for that. If you say otherwise, there’ll be about 50 of them lining up at the door for you… I’m kidding.“Are you?” one heckled.“I probably shouldn’t say this in a press conference,” said Hayes, “but one of my friends used to live up in Delancey Street and she lived in a big posh house, a nice five-storey, it was lovely, gorgeous.

“I used to go up there and pretend, maybe one day, this would be a life for me. I used to come home with a little posh accent and my mum would say, ‘Your s*** still stinks’”.That was one way to keep your daughter grounded.When it comes to her tenure as the USWNT boss, Hayes is, in her words, “fresh out of the packet”, but she is already thinking about her legacy, explaining that unifying the US talent pool under a women’s football development strategy is “going to be the biggest piece” of what she leaves behind.She described herself as a “builder” who wants to lay foundations for the long term, and importantly she wants to devise a strategy for players and staff across all departments which is centred around a “female lens”.“Everything we create, the systems, frameworks, methodology, everything is done through a male lens. I seek to challenge that. If we value women and want to keep women in the workplace, we have to be creative because raising children is the hardest job in the world and your children need you too. But you’re entitled to be able to do that and have a job in football. We have to think through a female lens. That’s at the heart of everything.”Hayes said of her own accord: “I’m not going to answer any questions on men’s football. I know exactly where I am and what I want to do with my life. That’s in the women’s game, developing everything in and around that.”On Saturday Hayes will be a visitor at what she called her “second home”, Wembley. The 48-year-old will have to go through a “weird moment” of humming the English and American anthems because she “loves them” both before coming up against former Chelsea players like her ex-captain Millie Bright.Hayes momentarily feared making the jump from club to national-team management as she was unsure how the change in rhythm would affect her. For around 25 years, she had driven to the training ground six or seven days a week.“I worried about that for about four seconds,” she said. “Then I said, ‘OK, what are the benefits?“I get to get up and breathe, take Harry to school, go to the gym, create my schedule around those things, and not sacrifice the things that make me feel healthy.”She added: “I definitely didn’t feel healthy at the end of my time at Chelsea. I don’t want to say it’s pressure. I just think it’s the stress, the toll it took on me. Doing that during menopause, I realised, was even harder.“To get on top of all of these things, I feel like I’ve got my mojo back, my smile back and joy back. I didn’t realise how much I’d lost in that. I’m loving football more than ever.”(Top photo: U.S. Soccer/Getty Images/Brad Smith)

England vs USWNT: The Lionesses who were made in America

England vs USWNT: The Lionesses who were made in America

By Megan Ferin Nov 27, 2024


When England face the USWNT at Wembley Stadium on Saturday, all eyes will be on Emma Hayes.

The former Chelsea manager is making her first return to English soil in a managerial capacity since leaving the seven-time Women’s Super League (WSL) champions in May to lead the U.S. women’s team.

Footballing trips across the Pond are familiar territory for Hayes, though. Her coaching career began at summer camps in Long Island, New York when she was 25, when she headed to the States with just $1,000 (£1,250 at today’s exchange rates) and a one-way ticket. After eight years coaching club and college teams (with a three-year stint as Arsenal’s assistant coach in the middle), she returned to England in 2012, building Chelsea into a domestic behemoth, before heading back to America this summer and promptly leading her new team to gold medals at the Olympics in France.

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Hayes is not an anomaly. Where MLS was historically branded a “retirement league” for august but ageing male players, English women footballers (and coaches) have found early-career moves to the States foundational.

Of England’s current 24-strong squad, forward Alessia Russo and right-back Lucy Bronze, plus head coach Sarina Wiegman, credit time spent in the U.S. as being critical in their career development, while goalkeeper Anna Moorhouse and defenders Esme Morgan and Jess Carter currently ply their trades in the top-flight National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL).

Other England internationals with U.S. roots include Arsenal defender Lotte Wubben-Moy, who attended the University of North Carolina (UNC) and Aston Villa defender Lucy Parker, who went to Louisiana State University (LSU) and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Now-retired internationals Rachel Daly, Demi Stokes, Karen Bardsley and Jodie Taylor also found value playing college and club football on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean.

The American appeal is multi-faceted. There is the opportunity to develop within a more direct, physical style of football, and the boon of getting a university education alongside playing competitive football, as well as the chance of regular game time.

The Athletic takes a look at the England squad members “made” in America…


Alessia Russo, 2017-20, University of North Carolina

Russo was, at first, a gamble.

In 2017, North Carolina were being pipped to top American talents by rival universities, so their head coach Anson Dorrance needed to recruit from further afield. At England youth camps, a teenage Russo repeatedly caught the eye, to the point a full scholarship was offered. Russo accepted. There was anticipation —  but then angst.

“I sent my assistant coach to watch her play and he calls me back in a panic and says, ‘Oh my gosh, Anson, I am so sorry. This kid can’t play, she’ll never play for us’,” Dorrance told the Press Association news agency in 2023.“I’m thinking, ‘Oh god, we’ve dumped all of our money into a player that can’t play’, and all of a sudden I’m having sleepless nights. Then I get a call a couple of days later, ‘Oh no, Anson, I’m wrong, they had the wrong (shirt) number on Alessia. She’s an a**-kicker’.”Upon Russo’s arrival, the No 19 shirt worn by USWNT legends Mia Hamm and Crystal Dunn during their time at UNC, was brought out of retirement for her — a sign of the potential they saw.

Russo in action for North Carolina in 2019 (Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

To honour the history, Russo wore a Hamm patch on one sleeve of her jersey and a Dunn patch on the other. But Russo’s greatest tribute came in the form of her performances.

In three seasons, she established herself as one of the best forwards in the college game, being named a first-team All-American (awarded annually to the most outstanding athletes in their sport) in 2018 — the first UNC player to earn that honour since Dunn — and 2019, and helping UNC twice finish as runners-up for the national championship. Russo was also a semi-finalist for the Hermann Trophy, an honour awarded to the top collegiate player in the country, in those two years.

Russo’s triumphs were born out of challenge. A broken leg forced her to miss the end-of-season play-offs in 2019 (she was still named Offensive Player of the Year for UNC’s regional league and a first-team All-American). She later told Manchester United’s UTD Podcast that the mental strength the recovery process built was key to handling future setbacks.

The step up in physicality and athleticism was also steep. The game in America focused on slick, direct transitional play, where athleticism and physical fitness were lionised above technical skill. While Russo’s technical skill today is laudable, one of the Arsenal forward’s most impressive assets is her strength and power in the final third.

“Moving to America helped me develop loads, on and off the pitch,” Russo told Arsenal’s media team in a 2024 documentary. “I needed to grow up physically. I’d not really set foot into the gym or pushed my body. In America, you have to step up.”


Lucy Bronze, 2009, University of North Carolina

Bronze knows how to lift silverware. The Chelsea full-back has five Champions Leagues, three WSL titles, two Division 1 Feminine winner’s medals and one from Liga F, among others. She is the first English footballer to win the Champions League with two different foreign clubs and the first England footballer and first female defender to claim the FIFA Best Women’s Player of the Year award and a spot on the FIFPRO World XI (2020).

“That comes from my time in the U.S. and how competitive it was,” Bronze told Chelsea’s website after joining them from Barcelona in the summer.

Bronze in action for North Carolina in 2009 (Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Bronze’s spell in the States was brief but impactful. Her mum, Diana Tough, persuaded Bronze to attend summer training camps in North Carolina. There she impressed head coach Dorrance, who offered her a scholarship to UNC in 2009. Across 24 appearances, Bronze helped UNC claim the 2009 national title as she won All-American honours.Key to her development on the pitch were Dorrance’s training methods. The now-retired coach (he won 21 national titles over a 45-year career but also faced a lawsuit from two former players claiming sexual harassment, which resulted in a settlement in 2008 despite him denying the allegations) was known for pitting players against each other during sessions. Bronze often found herself up against Tobin Heath, a 2008 Olympic gold medallist with the USWNT. “I realised that I need to work a lot harder and push myself if I want to compete against those kind of players,” Bronze told Forbes.

After just a year in North Carolina, Bronze returned to England to continue her sports science degree at Leeds Metropolitan University, while playing for Sunderland, then Everton and Liverpool.

“It was tough being away from home, from where I’d learned to play football, but I think that made me the player I am,” Bronze has said. “That really shaped me, more than anything else in my career at such a young age. I then knew how to be a winner and that has driven me every year since.”


Sarina Wiegman, 1989, University of North Carolina

A glance at Wiegman on the touchline is a window into the soul. On the outside, the two-time European Championship-winning head coach is calmness personified. But behind that, her mind is whirring, analysing, competing.This has always been Wiegman’s way around the football pitch.“I think the difference between her and most of the kids I was coaching back then is the Europeans come in with a greater maturity,” Dorrance told the PA news agency. “We had a wonderful culture of great kids, very talented kids, but she always seemed to be a tad more serious than anyone else. You can even see her in press conferences — you’re interviewing a serious individual.”Where Russo credits UNC for instilling in her a physical and psychological strength and ronze also says it gave her a winning mentality, for Wiegman, her time on its campus was the start of her understanding the differing standards in women’s football — and importantly, how to raise them.In 1988, while competing in the FIFA Women’s Invitation Tournament with the Netherlands, Wiegman was invited by Dorrance to study at UNC and join the school’s football team. The following year, she was playing alongside Hamm, Kristine Lilly and Carla Overbeck, lifting the national championship trophy at season’s end.

Wiegman considered her time in the U.S. “an absolute trigger for me”, describing the quality of players and working conditions as operating at the “highest level”.

Upon returning to her home country a year later, the disparity in infrastructure and quality was stark. “When I went back, I thought, ‘If I can contribute in the Netherlands, to create what is in the U.S. in the Netherlands, I would be a happy person’,” she told UK newspaper The Guardian in 2023. “It took 20 years.”


Anna Moorhouse, 2022-present, Orlando Pride

For Moorhouse, America was a slow burn.

The 29-year-old goalkeeper earned her first call-up to Wiegman’s England squad in July this year. A second call-up arrived in October, and she’s now had a third. The attention arrived as Moorehouse was having one of her best seasons between the sticks, helping Orlando Pride first to the NWSL Shield (given to the club with the best regular season record each year, and the first trophy in club history) and then, this past weekend, to the NWSL championship, thanks to a 1-0 win over the Washington Spirit in the final.

Moorhouse has been integral, keeping clean sheets in half of her 26 appearances this season.

Moorhouse has become an influential player for Orlando (Elsa/Getty Images)

Her recent success in the States is more notable when considered in the light of her itinerant past. In the decade prior, Moorhouse spent time at Everton, Durham, Doncaster Rover Belles, Arsenal and West Ham United in England, before two mixed seasons with Bordeaux in France’s top division.

A move to Orlando came along in 2022, but her fortunes looked destined to follow the established theme. In that debut season, Moorhouse made five appearances, conceding 13 goals without keeping a single clean sheet nor being part of a win as the Pride finished 10th in the 12-team NWSL. Not until three games into the next season did Moorhouse play in her first victory (also the Pride’s first of the 2023 campaign), a 3-1 win against the San Diego Wave. In her ninth appearance last season, she kept her first clean sheet in a 1-0 defeat of Racing Louisville.Moorhouse was not helped by the quality of defence in front of her, but the league’s relentless transitional style also posed an initial challenge.“The biggest difference between the two leagues is the (NWSL) is a lot faster pace. You have athletes in every single position,” she told women’s football website INDIVISA this year. “You have so many transitions. The players are just pure athletic. When I first got here, I was trying to play and getting caught on the ball. I was trying to get up to speed. I think I’ve grown into that and I’ve changed that side of my game.“


Esme Morgan, 2024-present, Washington Spirit

After seven years with Manchester City, England defender Morgan made the bold call to move to the NWSL’s Washington Spirit in the summer, craving a new experience. “If I’d have got to the end of my career and just stayed in England the whole time, having heard how much other people have enjoyed going abroad, maybe I would have regretted it,” she told The Washington Post.

Her struggles to break into Gareth Taylor’s starting XI and the potential impact on her place in Wiegman’s squad had been evident. The 24-year-old featured in just nine WSL matches for City last season, starting five, and she spent most of her time with England on the bench.

The move to Washington represented an opportunity to shift this and so far, has. Following a thigh injury which delayed her debut until mid-September, Morgan has become a mainstay in the Spirit’s back line, helping them to finish runners-up to Orlando in both the regular-season table and again in Saturday’s play-offs final.

Morgan has been utilised mostly in central defence but has slotted in at right-back when required, a versatility that Wiegman will welcome, given Niamh Charles’s shoulder surgery. Her adaptation to the shift in style will also be crucial in setting her apart from other defenders at Wiegman’s disposal.

After the Spirit’s semi-final win against NJ/NY Gotham — in a penalty shootout — Morgan even lamented the number of fouls called by the officials: “This league certainly, comparing it to the English league, everyone’s so physical, so fit, so fast, so much less time on the ball, and so I really enjoy the challenge of it. No one ever plays to sit out and defend for a draw for 90 minutes or just low-block the whole time.

“I feel like it’s an element of my game that is developing a lot from being over here.”


Jess Carter, 2024-present, NJ/NY Gotham FC

From one league champion to another — Carter swapped Chelsea for NJ/NY Gotham in July after six seasons in west London.

Carter’s transfer was eagerly anticipated by the New York club’s fans: a six-time WSL and reigning European champion, the England defender’s pedigree spoke for itself. For Carter, the opportunity to challenge herself in a different environment appealed, particularly as the arrival of England team-mate Bronze posed a threat to her in terms of getting regular club minutes.

Jess Carter, right, scored against former club Chelsea in a pre-season friendly (Ira L. Black – Corbis/Getty Images)

Carter, who has U.S. citizenship through her father, had always kept an eye on football across the Pond. But her move was also tinged with controversy after the defender said her decision was about wanting to be “surrounded by people who treat other people well”.Her off-field relationship with former Chelsea goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger, who had moved to Gotham in April, was thrust into the spotlight after manager Hayes said in March that romances between team-mates were “inappropriate”. Carter liked a post on X condemning Hayes’ remark. Hayes later said she “let herself down” with the comment, but added, “I don’t take those things back”.lthough she did not mention Chelsea, Carter told women’s soccer website The Equaliser in an interview announcing her transfer: “Gotham shares my same values. How you treat people and how the team is treated are my biggest values. I think I can really become a better football player when I’m surrounded by people who treat other people well, and really care for one another as people before footballers.”

Carter has shown the power of confidence, instantly becoming a mainstay in the reigning champions’ defence as they progressed to the NWSL semi-finals, though they were denied a chance to play for successive titles by the Spirit.

While Carter, like her compatriots, has credited the league’s athleticism and physicality for aiding her development, she has also praised the positivity that comes with the American sporting culture.

“When I first came, I was like, well, this is a little bit much — everyone is so energetic!” Carter told football website 90 Minutes in October. “But it’s more the fact that I could probably count on one hand in WSL club football how many times my managers or coaches turn around and say, ‘You did really well. Good job. Well done’. That positive reinforcement I don’t think really happens much in the WSL, or not in my experience, anyway.”


Lotte Wubben-Moy, 2017-19, University of North Carolina

At 17 years old, Wubben-Moy was presented with a decision: say yes to a dream or choose the more difficult path to achieve it.

It is telling of the Arsenal defender’s mindset that she chose the latter, opting to leave her girlhood club Arsenal after 13 professional appearances and the offer of a professional contract to pursue higher education at UNC and further development under Dorrance.

Looking back, Wubben-Moy calls the decision “the hardest” of her life so far, but the upsides have been plentiful. After three years of starting regularly at centre-back and helping UNC to successive runner-up finishes in the NCAA College Cup, Wubben-Moy returned to England in 2020 and has established herself as one of England and Arsenal’s most aggressive and consistent defenders after two standout campaigns.

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“They definitely contributed to the player I am today, not just on the field but off the field as well,” Wubben-Moy told Arsenal’s website in 2020 of her time at UNC.

Dorrance specifically is praised by Wubben-Moy for his impact. The architect of the first U.S. World Cup win in 1991, Dorrance lionised the “winning mentality” that defines American sporting success. His tactics to develop the mental and physical side of a player’s game hinged on creating what he called a “competitive cauldron”, where players’ performances were analysed in front of peers and rankings posted on a weekly bulletin board for all to see.

As Wubben-Moy learned to adapt her game to the U.S.’s more athletic style of play in real-time, the visibility of her progression served as a catalyst.

“It doesn’t suit everyone and it is brutal, as in the numbers don’t lie,” Wubben-Moy told The Guardian in 2021. “But while so much of the game today is dictated by stats, the bottom line is still whoever scores more goals, whoever’s better on the day, whoever’s feeling more confident, that’s who wins.”

Wubben-Moy called the “competitive cauldron” a “masterpiece” due to the myriad mental components it demanded.“There are only going to be so many winners,” Wubben-Moy said. “But if as a team you can lift each other up while being competitive and go from saying, ‘Ah, I could be better there’ to looking at your mate and saying, ‘She’s gonna help me get there’, I think that’s next level.”

(Top photos: Getty Images)

USMNT Player Tracker: Pepi the hat-trick hero, Adams’ impact and Reyna returns

USMNT Player Tracker: Pepi the hat-trick hero, Adams’ impact and Reyna returns

By Greg O’KeeffeNov 25, 2024


Ricardo Pepi’s growing dilemma at PSV Eindhoven, Paxten Aaronson’s key role in Utrecht’s remarkable progress and Gio Reyna’s much-anticipated return all play a part in this week’s USMNT 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

His defending champions are top of the league, remain competitive in Europe and have an attack as formidable as their defence is mean — Peter Bosz cannot have much to grumble about.But the PSV manager does have one thorny issue to resolve and, even if he is probably tired of talking about it already, it is not going away anytime soon.Bosz is wedded to playing a lone centre-forward, so how do you make two go into one? Specifically, how do you give enough game time to a striker considered a club legend while also accommodating the Eredivisie’s best young forward in the team?Captain Luuk de Jong’s muscle strain at the weekend meant Pepi made successive starts this season for the first time. The 21-year-old duly followed his goal and assist from the 3-0 win over NAC Breda before the international break with a hat-trick in their 5-0 thrashing of Groningen.

Pepi celebrates after scoring his team’s fifth against Groningen (Broer van den Boom/BSR Agency/Getty Images)

It puts Pepi on nine goals to date this term — he is joint-top scorer in the division alongside FC Twente’s Sem Steijn. But, while the latter has clocked nine goals from 11 starts for his fifth-placed team, Pepi has that many from just four starts. Other clubs across Europe are by now well aware of his prowess, and have taken note of his relative lack of opportunities.De Jong has five more starts than Pepi, and three fewer goals which would suggest that, at 34, his prolific powers are beginning to ebb. So how could Bosz perform a better balancing act between a club icon and what could be one in the making (if he stays in Eindhoven for long enough)?Could PSV go two up front, giving both men a chance to shine together? It appears not.Asked in his post-match press conference if it is an option, Bosz appeared to shut it down. “For years we have had a system that everyone thrives on and that is with one striker,” he said.When pressed further on whether Pepi’s remarkable form is making his selection task harder he was giving nothing away. ”No, I’m happy to have two good strikers,“ insisted Bosz.

The familiar sight of Pepi replacing De Jong (Photo Prestige/Soccrates/Getty Images)

Almost as taciturn after the game was Pepi himself, who was grilled by ESPN on how it feels to be in and out of the team when playing so well — not least with three goals in his last four appearances for the USMNT under new manager Pochettino.“No matter when my name is called, I am going to be ready and I have been showing that,” he said. “I’m going to keep preparing and working hard. (Whether Pepi is picked) is not my decision. That’s the coach’s decision and it’s completely out of my control so I just focus on what I can control.Advertisement“I’ve said it before, mentally it can be difficult, but sometimes you get rewarded and get a couple of starts and all of a sudden everything changes a little bit.”Whether anything changes after his latest heroics remains to be seen. The team sheets for their next two games, Wednesday’s Champions League tie with Shakhtar Donetsk and Sunday’s top-vs-second clash with FC Utrecht, will be intriguing. But if there is a succession plan in the pipeline, Bosz needs to ensure Pepi enjoys more opportunities to thrive as he has in the last two league games.

Quote of the weekend

“Right now, everything he touches turns to gold. I think it’s very nice for him.”

PSV and Netherlands midfielder Guus Til, who also scored against Groningen, was another mightily impressed by the USMNT star’s hat-trick.


Player of the weekend

One young American who is getting the game time his performances deserve in the Eredivisie is Aaronson. And no wonder, with the 21-year-old involved in yet another goal for Utrecht as the team hot on PSV’s heels won again on Sunday.

Aaronson’s assist for Yoann Cathline in the 2-1 victory at NEC Nijmegen made it three goal contributions in three games. The loanee now boasts four goals and two assists in 10 starts so far this season.

The New Jersey native has knuckled down in another loan spell away from parent club Eintracht Frankfurt (who intend on making him a first-team regular next term), and is thriving in Holland after a harder spell in a doomed relegation scrap with Vitesse Arnhem last term.

Aaronson holds off NEC’s Rober Gonzalez (Broer van den Boom/BSR Agency/Getty Images)

Graphic of the weekend

Over 18 months since his previous consistent involvement at club level, Tyler Adams has logged consecutive starts for AFC Bournemouth — you’d be forgiven if you didn’t remember he plays there given how infrequently he has been fit to feature — on either side of the November window.

After a 67-minute shift against Brentford on November 9, the midfielder remained in Andoni Iraola’s lineup for Saturday’s visit from fellow south coasters Brighton, exiting after 65 minutes with a tidy performance to show for his efforts.

Iraola likely won’t conflate correlation with causation as the Cherries suffered defeat in both of Adams’ recent starts. Each was decided by a single goal, after all. Adams showed some signs of rust on Brighton’s first goal on Saturday, as Danny Welbeck and former Leeds team-mate Georginio Rutter deftly passed around him in the build-up. On both goals, Adams made recovery runs to get back into defensive position, showing he should still have the pace to be impactful at this high of a level.ow all that’s left is getting back that previously uncanny reading of sequences and more decisive defending when able.But sometimes, the most mundane of updates can provide the greatest comfort. Sometimes, just seeing a player make it through a pair of starts is its own kind of solace.Jeff Rueter


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Tanner Tessmann
Club: Lyon
Position: Midfielder
Games: 10

Pochettino was very complimentary about Tessmann after his performance in the second CONCACAF Nations League quarter-final win over Jamaica last week. The USMNT boss said he hoped to see him get more starts for Lyon too, but Tessmann was back on the bench for the financially troubled French club and had to be content with a nine-minute cameo in the 1-1 draw with Reims.

Name: Taylor Booth
Club: FC Utrecht
Position: Midfielder
Games: 8

Another young American trying to make a bright impression at Utrecht is Booth, who has not had as many starts as Aaronson but features regularly for Ron Jans’ side from the bench. Booth got onto the field again on Sunday and did well, creating a chance and looking bright on the ball.

Booth replaces Miguel Rodriguez against NEC (ANP via Getty Images)

Name: Griffin Yow
Club: Westerlo
Position: Right wing
Games: 10
Goals: 1

The 22-year-old scored in his Belgian side’s 4-0 win against Kortrijk, and looks fully recovered from the knee complaint that ruled him out for four games earlier in the season. Westerlo are seventh in the league.

Name: Gio Reyna
Club: Borussia Dortmund
Position: Attacking midfielder
Games: 2

The USMNT playmaker made his long-awaited return from injury for the Bundesliga side in their 4-0 win over Freiburg on Saturday at Signal Iduna Park. His 12 minutes off the bench were his first action for his club since August and manager Nuri Sahin was pleased.

“Gio trained brilliantly this week,” he said in the post-game press conference. “It’s important to get training minutes and, if possible, as many minutes as possible into the legs.”

The challenge for Reyna, once fully fit, is to convince Sahin he should be a regular starter — an objective that proved so difficult under previous manager Edin Terzic.

Reyna urges his team on against Freiburg (Hesham Elsherif/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

When Mauricio Pochettino was a rugged enforcer, and why he wants his USMNT to follow suit

When Mauricio Pochettino was a rugged enforcer, and why he wants his USMNT to follow suit

Felipe Cardenas Nov 27, 2024 The Athletic

auricio Pochettino’s goals as United States men’s coach are big and bold and complicated by both historical realities and current perceptions. Turn the national team into a competitive international power. Capitalize on the opportunity of a lifetime presented by the next World Cup. Tap into the sport’s massive, unfulfilled American potential.His first impression to the U.S. audience is one of a smart-suited tactician of global repute with a $6 million annual contract, but in 1989, Pochettino was a rough-edged, 17-year-old defender trying to earn himself a pro soccer career. Back then, the tasks were less ambitious but more direct. ‘Go soften up the opposing No. 9,’ he was told by his veteran teammates and coaches at Argentine club Newell’s Old Boys. The instruction was clear, the execution bruising.A message-sending challenge. A knee to the back of the thigh. A cleat to the ankle. No quarter given. No apology offered.Could it be that kind of mindset the USMNT needs as much as implied promises of formational focus and technical improvement? Pochettino is perceived as a savant, but his methods and motivations are founded on willpower and ferocity.

Even after the 2022 World Cup cycle and winning several regional trophies, questions continue to be asked about this team’s mentality and whether they can tap into the spicier aspects of the world’s game.


It was billed as the newly minted Pochettino’s first major test. On Oct. 15, the Americans traveled to Guadalajara, Mexico, to face their eternal rivals in a prime-time friendly with nothing but pride on the line.

As he’d played 67 minutes two days earlier against Panama, Pochettino allowed star Christian Pulisic to travel back early to his club, Milan, instead of being involved, to limit the winger’s minutes. Pulisic is enjoying the best moment of his career in Serie A, and his absence that night in Guadalajara left a leadership void. Mexico won their individual battles and bullied their visitors en route to a 2-0 win.

Pochettino’s side were listless, uninspired.Soft, perhaps?U.S. central defender Tim Ream seemed to think so.“It comes down to fighting for each other and being even more aggressive. We didn’t match (Mexico’s) intensity and that’s on us,” Ream told Sirius XM last week. “Bare minimum, you have to match the opponent’s intensity throughout the 90 minutes.”

Tim Ream during the loss to Mexico last month. (Ulises Ruiz / AFP / Getty Images)

The performances improved this month during a two-leg CONCACAF Nations League quarterfinal versus Jamaica. A 1-0 away win in Kingston was followed by a convincing 4-2 victory in St. Louis. But that loss to Mexico has not been completely erased.The overwhelming takeaway from it was that this U.S. team still lacks fight and grit. That it’s more naive than it is talented, and that without Pulisic, it lacks a decisive player. It’s a concern, with the next World Cup in 2026, an event largely hosted by the United States, looming ever closer.Coupled with an embarrassing Copa America on home soil over the summer, the events from Guadalajara raised doubts about this side’s ability to manage high-stakes situations. The two wins over Jamaica will have built confidence internally, but the Reggae Boyz are no world power. Pochettino likes to talk about “the other football,” the intangibles, the steeled edge, the dark arts of soccer.Gamesmanship and deception are attributes rarely associated with the game in America. Around the world, however, those characteristics come together and are ingrained in players from a young age. Soccer is played differently stateside, and that cultural disconnect has become Pochettino’s principal concern as he takes over a team that, at times, has come off as uninterested and privileged.Pochettino has sent a message early in his tenure that a squad place under him should not be taken for granted. “We have to challenge the players, because they have to feel desperate to want to be called up; that’s what other federations like Argentina do, where the players don’t choose which games they go to,” he said before the first leg against Jamaica.

“In terms of how to translate the competitive spirit to the players, we have to do it little by little and step by step. That’s something that we can’t do too quickly because in the end, the most important thing is creating a structure around the players that has that ideology and mentality, and that our priorities are all aligned.”It raises the question: Why is this an issue for this U.S. men’s national team?

As an Argentine, it’s perhaps impossible for Pochettino to grasp that an opportunity to play for the national team is anything less than a dream. It doesn’t matter whether it’s your first cap or your 78th. Argentina, a star-studded side led by Lionel Messi and the reigning world champions, have come to epitomize what that commitment looks like.“The Argentinian player is desperate to be called up, doesn’t matter if it’s a friendly or a CONCACAF game, or Copa America, or a World Cup,” Pochettino said earlier this month during a video call with reporters. “The Argentinian player approaches a call-up like it’s a world final and like it’s their last chance.“I think our players have time to get into that mindset, and if we do, we’ll increase our level by 200 percent and we’ll have a chance, because we certainly have the talent to do something important.”

Mauricio Pochettino wants his players to be more cunning. (Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

The CONCACAF Nations League doesn’t carry much prestige, but it’s the only competitive tournament the U.S. will participate in before the 2026 World Cup. Speaking to reporters from Jamaica, Pochettino talked about putting his players in “uncomfortable zones” and raising the team’s emotional capacity to play do-or-die matches.“We need to build that expectation. We need to build that pressure,” Pochettino said. “We are USA. We need to perform and we need to win games.“If one of my players is kicked, we’re going to defend him. We have to be cunning enough to know when to kick the ball long or to stand in front of the ball. These are things that may seem like small details, but they have everything to do with playing this game. What we showed against Mexico was the opposite of what we showed against Jamaica. That’s the stamp that we want.”

Pochettino is being open about his first impressions of the players he’s inherited. It will be fascinating to watch the plan he and his staff implement as they try to turn the U.S. into a mentally hardened team — one that’s difficult to play against, as Pochettino put it. That certainly wasn’t what defined this same group under predecessor Gregg Berhalter, despite his best attempts to change their mindset.

When Pochettino was hired, his man-management skills were highlighted as a positive for this U.S. team. He had presided over the egos and personalities of Messi, Kylian Mbappé and Neymar at Paris Saint-Germain. He coached in the Premier League and a UEFA Champions League final. His tactics, focused on aggressive pressing and quick attacking sequences born out of possession, were also noted as a match for these U.S. players.But it’s Pochettino’s background as a rugged Argentine central defender that could be the secret to success for the men’s side.


When Gerardo “Tata” Martino met Pochettino in 1989, he saw a nervous teenager who was about to face the pressures of football in Argentina. At the time, Martino was a title-winning captain at Newell’s Old Boys. Pochettino, still raw, had been discovered by Jorge Giffa, a renowned identifier of talent for the club, and fast-tracked towards the first team.“I didn’t meet the man who would become a head coach,” Martino told The Athletic in August. “I met a player who had the typical anxiety and expectation of someone who was just starting his career. There was no way for me to even fathom that (Pochettino) would go into coaching. I met him when he was 17 years old and he had a massive responsibility ahead of him because Newell’s was in a difficult situation, facing relegation.”

Mauricio Pochettino was an old-school defender. (Laurence Griffiths / Getty Images)

Martino, who resigned as Inter Miami coach last week, knows Pochettino well. He has also coached and suffered through the idiosyncrasies of CONCACAF football as Mexico’s national team manager from 2019 to 2022.A Newell’s legend of three league titles as a player and another as the coach, Martino quickly spotted the young Pochettino’s fearless edge.“He was the prototypical central defender from that era, at a time when there was little talk about defenders making the first pass to break a line,” Martino said. “Rather, it was about how they defended, how they marked the opposition, their ability to anticipate and win balls in the air. That was Mauricio.”

In Guillem Balague’s 2017 book “Brave New World: Inside Pochettino’s Spurs,” Pochettino described a run-in he had with Martino during one of his first Newell’s training sessions. “I was 17, young and hungry. Not scared of anybody, cocky even,” Pochettino said.According to Pochettino, Martino quipped, “I’m going to kill you” after receiving a tough tackle from the academy defender.“No, there’s no chance,” Martino said emphatically with a laugh when asked whether he had threatened his rookie teammate. “Surely something must’ve happened. I was a player who had been in the top flight for almost 10 years. Mauricio was a kid who was just starting. That happened often back then. Today, those types of things don’t happen as often. It was normal for an experienced player to have a word with a young player who was just starting out.”Pochettino the enforcer further thrived when Marcelo Bielsa took over as Newell’s coach in 1990. Led by Bielsa and playing alongside Martino, Pochettino would win two league titles and reach a Copa Libertadores final in 1992. That squad’s relentless, high-pressing intensity is a characteristic Pochettino later adopted as a manager. His hire as U.S. men’s national team coach comes at a time when Argentine managers are in high demand.U.S. Soccer officials didn’t pinpoint that when they announced his appointment in September, but Martino believes Pochettino’s heritage is part of a growing trend.

“I think that’s an important piece to all of this,” Martino said. “Right now, coaches from Argentina, because of everything that has happened with the national team, are well respected, and that opens doors to be considered for certain jobs. I wouldn’t simply compare Mauricio to other Argentine coaches, though.”

USMNT looked better against Jamaica. (Tim Vizer / AFP / Getty Images)

Pochettino has been largely molded by European footballing methodologies. He is a sophisticated student of the game who has lived and coached in Barcelona, London and Paris. His DNA, though, is from rural Argentina. His core memories as a player at Newell’s are replete with blood, sweat and massive pressure.“Argentine coaches have become accustomed to difficult situations that aren’t as common today,” Martino said. “There was a time when coaches wouldn’t get paid, or they had to deal with the club’s ultras and the hostility of difficult moments. But those negative experiences strengthen you, they give you thicker skin.”Martino, though, stressed Pochettino will have to “learn how to become a national team manager.” Regardless of Pochettino’s qualifications and his implementation of progressive tactics early on, he’s in his first-ever stint as an international coach. Although so was Lionel Scaloni when he led Argentina to World Cup glory in 2022.There were calls for the U.S. Soccer Federation to hire another American after Berhalter was fired.

Fans and pundits passionately discussed the importance of understanding the psyche of an American player. Tapping into the courage that defined previous U.S. teams was seen as a priority.Pochettino is an outsider who has read the room accurately. He knows a player’s resume and potential are secondary to their willingness to swallow their pride for the good of their country. Case in point, his response to that comfortable home win over Jamaica last week.“In the second half, we didn’t approach the game in the way we wanted,” he said. “The goal was to win the second half, and we didn’t approach it with the same intensity and mentality. It shows we still have things we need to improve.”

Internationally, the reputation of the U.S. men’s team eroded over the summer. They were humbled by opponents who were unafraid to test the limits of the sport’s rules. Their Copa America preparation, which included losing 5-1 against Colombia, and the group-stage elimination that followed, sent the wrong message to the world.he improvement Pochettino demands must come on the sport’s biggest stage in 2026. There is no other option.If the squad cannot align culturally with its new manager at a World Cup held mostly on home soil, the repercussions will lead to a renewed evaluation of the American player.

10/8/24 US plays Sat/Tues, Indy 11 play Tues/Sat , HS Sectionals this week, International play this wk, Pulisic on fire still

US Men Set to Play Panama Sat 9 pm TNT + Mexico Tues 10 pm TNT

The US men prepare to play their first games under new manager Mauricio Pochettino with his complete new staff on hand for this first group of games vs Panama (who beat us last time) and @ Mexico.  Of course the US will be missing a bunch of players as Tim Weah, Chris Richards, Fologan, Gio Reyna and more are all missing to injury.  I will have more as we get closer to game time – including my starting line-up.  (stories below)  If you missed this Christian Pulisic has stayed hot in Italy with his 6th goal of the season.

Indy 11 in 4th place @ Detroit City 4 pm on ESPN+

Leesburg, Va. – Indy Eleven moved up two positions to fourth place in the USL Championship Eastern Conference standings with a crucial 1-0 road victory at Loudoun United in a rare mid-week contest. Defender Aedan Stanley took a corner kick from the left side and drove it in front of the goal.  Loudoun keeper Hugo Fauroux punched the ball high into the air, where defender Ben Ofeimu headed it down from the corner of the six to Musa, who, with his back to the goal, volleyed it with his left foot high over Fauroux for the game winner.  It was Ofeimu’s first assist for the Boys in Blue.With three games left in the regular season, the Boys in Blue (13-10-8) are in fourth place in the Eastern Conference with 47 points.  The top four teams in the East will host the first round of the playoffs the first weekend in November. Indy finishes its road week at third-place Detroit City FC on Saturday at 4 p.m. on ESPN+.

High School Sectionals this week has Carmel Boys Hosting and Carmel Girls in Zionsville

in Class 3A, the second-ranked and three-time defending champion Noblesville Millers will meet Carmel Saturday evening at Carmel’s Murray Stadium. Noblesville has won 19 consecutive state tournament matches and is five away from tying North Central of Indianapolis (1994-97) for the state record.   Tix are just $7 for the games at Murray.  Get on out there and watch some high school soccer. 

LADIES

The 3rd ranked Carmel Girls cruised thru Sectionals in Zionsville and will face #12 Indianapolis Cathedral in the finals Sat at 2 pm at Zionsville’s beautiful new stadium.

Girls Soccer Rankings

Last Updated: Monday, Oct 7, 2024

#TeamOvr.Str.
1Hamilton SoutheasternHamilton Southeastern13-0-318.3
2NoblesvilleNoblesville12-0-217.7
3CarmelCarmel11-3-220.1
4HomesteadHomestead13-2-114.3
5Evansville MemorialEvansville Memorial13-1-113.1
6WestfieldWestfield10-4-219.6
Nate Sinders (middle) bringing food for his dad Mark (right) and myself and all the folks at Zionsville High a Great Assignor, Ref and Chef – NATE the GREAT !!

US Men 

MLS

Miami Celebrates Winning the Supporters Shield at Columbus last week
MLS Power Rankings: Messi’s Miami eyes points record, Portland seals playoff spot
MLS sets league-wide record for attendance in a regular season

US LADIES & NWSL 

USWNT to face Netherlands after England friendly  Jeff Kassouf

NWSL Power Rankings: Shield-clinching Orlando looks unstoppable Ryan Rosenblatt
Unbeaten Orlando Pride clinch 1st NWSL Shield

Is Chawinga Africa’s finest striker, after equalling Kerr’s NWSL record?

Why Hatch’s story is one of NWSL success, not just USWNT heartbreak

NWSL’s Red Stars sign USWNT’s Naeher to 2025

Angel City edges Seattle Reign 1-0 in tight contest

WORLD

Top 10 games to watch in October 2024 international break AC Milan boss fumes after Pulisic penalty drama ESPN  Adriana Garcia

Man United continue to drift, playing boring football, as Ten Hag’s bosses watch on ESPN ark Ogden Paul Pogba sees doping ban reduced, Juventus reportedly wants to terminate contract   Iniesta confirms his retirement from football
Andres Iniesta reveals dream of becoming Barcelona manager

Manchester City’s APT Ruling: How It Could Change Everything

Inside the ‘insane’ nature of Man City’s latest court case and what it means for football’s future

Lamine Yamal on course to replace Lionel Messi as leading adidas star

Goalkeeping

Great Save US Keeper Gag GK Training on your Own  

Reffing

Dogso Card Mistake Yellow or Red ?  

Reffing the Best Job for High School Kids Ever Become a Licensed High School Ref Become a Licensed Ref with Indiana Soccer – must be over 13 Bad Decision Does Not Mean you’re a Bad Ref

The Ole Ballcoach catching High School games down at Riverside with Marko & Terek.
Finally got a CHS Girls Freshman game vs HSE with Robert Hart on Saturday before Sectionals start

GAME TV SCHEDULE

Thur,  Oct 10

2:45 pm FS 2               England vs Greece

2:45 pm TUDN            Israel vs France

2:45 pm fubu               Italy vs Belgium         

2:45 pm FS 2               England vs Greece

2:45 pm TUDN            Israel vs France

2:45 pm fubu               Italy vs Belgium  

Fri,  Oct 11

2:45 pm TUDN            Iceland vs Wales  

2:45 pm FS2                Germany vs Bosnia  

2:45 pm fubu               Italy vs Belgium         

Sat,  Oct 12

12 pm FS1                   Croatia vs Scotland  

2:45 pm FS2                Portugal vs Poland

2:45 pm fubu               Italy vs Belgium  

7:30 pm Telemundo    Mexico vs Valencia

9 pm  TNT/Univ         USMNT vs Panama

Sun Oct 13

12 pm FS1                  Finland vs England  

2:45 pm FS2                Austria vs Norway  

2:45 pm TUDN            Greece vs Ireland

4 pm ESPN+ Indy 11 @ Detroit City

7:30 pm Apple             Vancouver vs LAFC

Mon, Oct 14

12 pm FS1                   Georgia v Albania  

2:45 pm FS2                Belgium vs France  

2:45 pm Fubo             Germany vs Netherlands  

Tues Oct 15

12 pm FS1                  Finland vs England  

2:45 pm FS2                Spain vs Serbia  

2:45 pm TUDN            Greece vs Ireland

7:30 pm FS1                Canada vs Panama  

10:30 pm TNT/Univ    Mexico vs USMNT

Top games to watch in October 2024 international break

The October international break commences this midweek as club soccer takes a backseat to games with the national teams. For example, fans can watch qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup. Yet, while those World Cup qualifiers are not consistent among all teams, each of the FIFA confederations has games available. Here, we picked the 10 most interesting fixtures to keep you company until Oct. 15.

Top games during October international break

USMNT v Panama (Saturday, Oct. 12, 9 p.m. ET)

Mauricio Pochettino’s tenure will start as the USMNT hosts Panama. This is a rematch of the two’s group-stage meeting from the 2024 Copa America. Panama won after Tim Weah picked up a red card. Both Weah and Folarin Balogun, who scored in that fixture, are off the Argentinian coach’s first roster due to injury. This is Panama’s first fixture since its exit from the Copa America at the quarterfinal stage.

You can watch USA vs. Panama on TNT, Telemundo, Universo, Peacock, and Fubo. For new users to Fubo, Fubo is offering a free 7-day trial.

Mexico v USMNT (Tuesday, Oct. 15, 10:30 p.m. ET)

Pochettino will also experience the heated derby against Mexico for the first time as the head coach of the Americans. Both sides crashed out of the group stage in CONMEBOL’s tournament this past summer. The game will be at Estadio Akron, one of the venues for the 2026 World Cup.It’s the first away fixture for USMNT in 2024. The United States is undefeated in this rivalry since 2019. The streak of results includes two Nations League and the 2019 Gold Cup final. It will be the first time Pochettino faces Javier Aguirre’s team since their three La Liga encounters 13 years ago. Watch the game on TNT, Univision, Sling TV, and Fubo.

England v Greece (Thursday, Oct. 10, 2:45 p.m. ET)

Lee Carsley started his spell as England’s interim head coach with a 2-0 win over the Republic of Ireland, the national team he represented in his playing days. Despite the national anthem controversy, he’s still in the job for the October International Break with the Three Lions set to play games against Greece and Finland.

It was against Greece that David Beckham scored one of the most famous free-kicks in soccer history. In a tense atmosphere at Old Trafford, his 93rd-minute strike sent England to the 2002 World Cup.

England vs Greece will be live on FS2, ViX, and Fubo.

Austria v Norway (Sunday, Oct. 13, 2:45 p.m. ET)

These two teams aren’t among the best soccer nations by any stretch of the imagination. But their contrasting fortunes showed the importance of team planning more than individual brilliance. Under Ralf Rangnick, Austria played a fantastic Euro 2024 before losing to Türkiye in one of the best games of last summer. Norway, who missed out on the tournament, revived with a 2-1 win over Austria in the reverse fixture last month thanks to Erling Haaland’s winner. Watch Austria vs Norway live on FS2, ViX, and Fubo.Germany vs Netherlands will be shown live on the Fubo Sports Network as well as ViX.

Scotland v Portugal (Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2:45 p.m. ET)

In the wake of their promotion to Nations League A and an impressive Euro 2024 qualifying campaign, Scotland endured a difficult 2024 so far. Including the humbling 5-1 defeat by Germany in the Euro 2024 opener, Scotland lost six of their nine games since the turn of the year.Portugal also had an uninspiring time in Germany, but Cristiano Ronaldo scoring his 900th career goal raised their spirit last month. The 39-year-old striker is competing with Aleksandar Mitrović and Karim Benzema to finish top of the Saudi Pro League’s scoring chart. Scotland against Portugal will stream live on ViX.

Bolivia v Colombia (Thursday, Oct. 10, 4:30 p.m. ET)

September was a historic month for Bolivia’s soccer. For only the second time in the 21st century, they won away from home courtesy of a 3-2 success in Chile. They’re now a single point behind World Cup kings Brazil nearly midpoint to the qualifiers. 

Colombia also recorded a memorable victory last month in the repeat fixture of the Copa America final. Beating the world champions was a big achievement, but they’ll now have to cope with the difficulty of playing at an altitude of 4,100 meters above sea level. 

Bolivia vs Colombia will be exclusively shown on Fanatiz.

Venezuela v Argentina (Thursday, Oct. 10, 5 p.m. ET)

Meanwhile, Argentina will search for a quick reaction after the defeat at Barranquilla. La Albiceleste also bid farewell to Ángel Di María in September’s eventful international window.

Three NWSL playoff spots up for grabs as season end nears
Chicago Red Stars huddle prior to the first half against the Houston Dash
Chicago can clinch a 2024 postseason berth with a win on Saturday (Troy Taormina-Imagn Images)
With the Shield in Orlando’s hands, attention turns to the final three available playoff spots up for grabs in the NWSL.The Chicago Red Stars, currently in sixth, could become the next team to clinch a postseason berth with a win against the surging Gotham on Saturday at 4pm ET (Paramount+).Big Picture: Only Houston has been eliminated from postseason contention, but Portland and Bay FC will try to hold off those below the playoff line to better their odds at a quarterfinal appearance.Both clubs will have their work cut out for them, as Portland takes on first-place Orlando on Friday at 10pm ET (Prime), and Bay FC battles fourth-place Kansas City on Saturday at 10pm ET (ION).With only three regular season matches left, Seattle, Angel City, San Diego, and Utah will all face elimination scenarios this weekend.
Could NWSL MVP come down to Banda and Chawinga?
Orlando Pride forward Barbra Banda (22) celebrates scoring during the second half against Bay FC
Banda has headlined a historic unbeaten streak by the Orlando Pride (Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images)
With KC Current forward Temwa Chawinga running away with the 2024 NWSL golden boot, is there still intrigue to be found in this year’s MVP race?Chawinga won NWSL Player of the Month for September, while forward Barbra Banda continued to excel with the unbeaten, Shield-winning Orlando Pride.Big Picture: Banda’s goal contributions are slightly off Chawinga’s pace, with 13 goals and six assists to Chawinga’s 18 goals and six assists.Chawinga leads the league in goals per 90 minutes, but Banda holds the title in goals and assists per 90 minutes, while both players comfortably lead the league in xG and npxG per 90.Bottom line: It’s been a year for blazing offense in the NWSL, personified by Chawinga and Banda’s excellence. But who will take the MVP crown?
Portland Thorns general manager Karina LeBlanc will be transitioning out of her role at the end of the 2024 season, the club announced on Wednesday.LeBlanc will join RAJ Sports, led by Thorns ownership the Bhathal family, in a role across the Portland Thorns and the newly-announced Portland WNBA team.Big picture: Joining the club in late 2021, LeBlanc oversaw the Thorns’ most recent NWSL championship in 2022, but this year the team has struggled with performances on the pitch.The Thorns’ winless streak early in the season led to head coach Mike Norris being reassigned to a new role, with assistant Rob Gale elevated to permanent manager.After appearing to right the ship, Portland has lost six of their last seven NWSL regular season games and are battling to stay above the playoff line in seventh place.
Delta Official Airline NWSL
Andi Sullivan suffers torn ACL, will miss rest of the season
Andi Sullivan #12 of Washington Spirit reacts against Kansas City Current at Audi Field
Sullivan suffered the injury in last weekend’s 2-0 loss to the Orlando Pride (Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)
The Washington Spirit announced on Wednesday that captain Andi Sullivan suffered an ACL tear in the team’s loss to the Orlando Pride on Sunday, and will miss the rest of the 2024 season.A Spirit stalwart, Sullivan started all 21 regular season matches she appeared in for the club in 2024, tallying two goals.Sulivan joins a growing number of injured Spirit contributors, including Croix Bethune (out for the season), Trinity Rodman, Casey Krueger, and Ouley Sarr.
Alyssa Thompson’s late goal contribution surge 
Alyssa Thompson #21 of Angel City FC laughs after her goal during a 2-1 win over the Chicago Red Stars
Thompson has registered five goals and two assists in her last seven NWSL games (Harry How/Getty Images)
Angel City’s playoff hopes hang by a thread after a three-point deduction due to a salary cap violation, but forward Alyssa Thompson is keeping the dream of the postseason alive.Thompson has scored five goals and registered two assists in her last seven NWSL games, including a crucial assist in a win against the Seattle Reign last weekend.Six points off the playoff pace with three games to go in the regular season, Angel City will need Thompson at the height of her powers in their matchup against North Carolina on Saturday at 7:30pm ET (ION).
12 NWSL golden boot leader Temwa Chawinga has scored against 12 different teams during Kansas City’s 2024 campaign. Chawinga can complete the first-ever season sweep against the San Diego Wave on Oct. 19.

USMNT Player Tracker: Unlucky Balogun, Tillman has no equals – and Pulisic to step up?

USMNT Player Tracker: Unlucky Balogun, Tillman has no equals – and Pulisic to step up?

By Greg O’Keeffe THE Athletic


Folarin Balogun’s bad luck, Christian Pulisic’s penalty puzzler and Malik Tillman’s eye-catching form all play a part of 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 considering the options at his disposal, we’re keeping tabs on how they perform every weekend.


Issue of the weekend

After a patchy start to the season with Monaco, things were just beginning to look up for Folarin Balogun.

His goal against Rennes on Saturday ensured the visitors won 2-1 and it was his third in as many games. Having failed to find the net in Monaco’s opening four Ligue 1 fixtures (one of which saw him left on the bench), his had been a timely return to form and confidence — even more so ahead of the autumn USMNT friendlies under Pochettino, when everyone is so keen to make a good first impression.But Balogun won’t be there when the Pochettino era kicks off against Panama in Austin, Texas, on Saturday after dislocating his shoulder 64 minutes into the win at Rennes.He had to be helped off the field in obvious pain and will undergo tests to evaluate the timeframe for his recovery.

Monaco’s head coach Adi Hutter (left) comforts Balogun as he leaves the pitch in Rennes (Jean-Francois Monier/AFP via Getty Images)

Balogun is not the only notable injury withdrawal from Pochettino’s maiden roster, with Johnny Cardoso and Tim Weah replaced by Lyon midfielder Tanner Tessmann and Liga MX-based pair Brandon Vazquez and Alex Zendejas.

Balogun, who pledged his international allegiance to the U.S. last year and has scored five goals in 17 appearances for his country, must now hope shoulder surgery is not required. If he needs an operation, that could entail an even longer lay-off, just as he was playing his way back into the type of form that earned him the move to Monaco after his season on loan from Arsenal with Reims the previous year.


Player of the weekend

Christian Pulisic’s supreme form for AC Milan continues, with yet another goal against Fiorentina. But it might be time for the USMNT main man, who is one of the leaders of the national team, to take a more assertive approach with his club team-mates. Pulisic’s fourth goal in consecutive appearances for the Rossoneri made it 1-1 on Sunday, but the visitors wasted the opportunity to win the game. In a match of three missed spot kicks, Milan saw the two they were awarded saved — and for reasons unknown, their designated taker, Pulisic, was overlooked to step up. Instead, defender Theo Hernandez failed to convert before half-time, then striker Tammy Abraham also saw an effort saved.

Fiorentina’s Luca Ranieri attempts to stop Pulisic (Giuseppe Maffia/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Milan manager Paolo Fonseca was understandably unimpressed. “Our penalty taker is Pulisic,” he said to DAZN afterwards. “I don’t know why the players changed their minds. I spoke to him and said that it must not happen again.” Pulisic was replaced on 82 minutes and did not seem too thrilled, either, but the manager insisted he was trying to look after his star man. “It was out of caution for Pulisic — he had a problem with his flexor during the week,” he explained. “(Samuel) Chukwueze came in well and created opportunities.”


Graphic of the weekend


Quote of the weekend

“Who is better than Malik Tillman in the Eredivisie? I couldn’t name anyone.” Former Denmark international Dennis Perez, an analyst for ESPN, was very impressed by Tillman’s display in PSV Eindhoven’s 2-1 win over Sparta Rotterdam on Saturday. The American midfielder was influential as the reigning Dutch champions made it eight games and eight wins in Eredivisie this time around.

Tillman impressed against Sparta (Photo Prestige/Soccrates/Getty Images)


How did other U.S. players get on?

Name: Jonathan Gomez
Club: PAOK
Position: Left-back
Games (in all competitions): 1

The 21-year-old was on the winning side during his full debut for Greek top-flight club PAOK Thessaloniki on Sunday. Gomez, who signed from Spanish club Real Sociedad in August, is eligible for both the U.S. and Mexico and graduated through the FC Dallas academy.

Name: Jonathan Amon
Club: Lyngby
Position: Forward
Games: 11
Goals: 3

Amon has three goals so far this season in 11 appearances for his Danish Super Liga side. On Sunday he started in a front three as Lyngby, who are 10th in the table and struggling for wins, drew 1-1 at Randers FC. Amon, 25, has started all of his team’s league games so far.

Name: Cole Campbell
Club: Borussia Dortmund
Position: Winger
Games: 5

A special milestone for the 18-year-old Texan who was named in the matchday senior squad for Dortmund for the first time during their defeat by Union Berlin on Saturday. Campbell signed a contract with the Germans until 2028 in the summer. After a spell in Iceland, he joined Dortmund in 2022 and became part of the U.S. program earlier this year.

His five competitive appearances to date this season have been for Dortmund’s second team in the German third tier.

Westerlo’s Bryan Reynolds (Isosport/MB Media/Getty Images)

Name: Bryan Reynolds
Club: Westerlo
Position: Defender
Games: 10
Goals: 1

Reynolds had a steady game for his Belgian club on Friday during their 2-2 draw with Beerschot. Playing at right wing-back, he helped his team stay in sixth place.

Name: Paxten Aaronson
Club: FC Utrecht
Position: Midfield
Games: 8
Goals: 2

The younger Aaronsen brother is on a high at the moment after scoring his second goal in as many games for Utrecht, who have started the season strongly and are in second spot. He grabbed the second goal of a 3-2 win over RKC Waalwijk on Saturday.


What’s coming up?

(All times ET)

After the forthcoming international break, see if Campbell can get onto the pitch for Dortmund against St Pauli on Friday, October 18 in the Bundesliga (2:30pm, ESPN+).

Lennard Maloney will also try and help Heidenheim recover from their 1-0 loss to RB Leipzig last time out as they face his compatriot Joe Scally’s Borussia Monchengladbach on Saturday, October 19 (9:30am, ESPN+).

Folarin Balogun, Tim Weah and Johnny Cardoso to miss USMNT’s October fixtures due to injuries

Folarin Balogun, Tim Weah and Johnny Cardoso to miss USMNT’s October fixtures due to injuries

By Paul Tenorio Oct 6, 2024


Folarin BalogunJohnny Cardoso, and Tim Weah have withdrawn from the USMNT squad due to injury.

Balogun, 23, dislocated his left shoulder during Monaco’s victory over Rennes on Saturday and will undergo further assessments in the coming days.Weah, 24, has missed Juventus’ last three games due to injury while Real Betis midfielder Cardoso has also battled injury issues in recent weeks.Lyon’s Tanner Tessman, Monterrey’s Brandon Vazquez, and Alex Zendejas, who plays for Liga MX side America, have been called up as replacements for three games this month.It is the first USMNT squad selected by Mauricio Pochettino after his appointment as head coach last month to replace Gregg Berhalter, who was dismissed after a group-stage exit at the Copa America.The 52-year-old’s first game in charge is a friendly against Panama at the Q2 Stadium in Austin, Texas, on October 13. They then face Mexico in another friendly three days later at the Akron Stadium.

Full 25-man squad:

Goalkeepers: Ethan Horvath (Cardiff City), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew), Zack Steffen (Colorado Rapids), Matt Turner (Crystal Palace).

Defenders: Marlon Fossey (Standard Liege), Kristoffer Lund (Palermo), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Antonee Robinson (Fulham), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Joe Scally (Borussia Monchengladbach, Auston Trusty (Celtic).

Midfielders: Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Tanner Tessmann (Olympic Lyonnais), Malik Tillman (PSV Eindhoven).

Forwards: Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan),  Josh Sargent (Norwich City), Brandon Vazquez (Monterrey), Haji Wright (Coventry City), Alex Zendejas (Club América).

Mauricio Pochettino has big plans for USMNT – but will take his time to implement them

Sep 13, 2024; New York, New York, USA; United States men's national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino talks to the media during a press conference introducing him as the new head coach for the United States men's national team at Warner Bros. Discovery Hudson Center. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Boland-Imagn Images

By Paul Tenorio The Athletic Oct 3, 2024


Mauricio Pochettino’s first U.S. men’s national team roster looks similar to the team summoned in September, a few days before he was officially unveiled as the new coach. With limited time and several injuries to regular players, Pochettino and his staff leaned heavily on the expertise of U.S. Soccer personnel to put together this first roster.

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The October camp is the perfect baptism for Pochettino into international management. The U.S., like most other national teams, is dealing with multiple injuries, both long- and short-term, to regular call-ups. World Cup starters Tyler Adams (back) and Sergino Dest (ACL) remain out for some time after undergoing surgeries. Two featured players over the last two years, Chris Richards and Gio Reyna, will also miss this camp with knocks which have kept them out of club action. Some depth pieces, like Luca de la Torre and Cameron Carter-Vickers, were also unavailable due to injury.Pochettino had to reach a bit deeper into the pool. In a way, it’s a blessing for a new staff to see more of the players at their disposal. For now, many of the faces have been around the program somewhat regularly: Christian Pulisic, Weston Mckennie and Yunus Musah to name a few. But, the Argentine coach noted, they have already started work on identifying players who have not been as big a part of the program.“We start to follow some very good players we think have the potential,” Pochettino said. “And maybe they are not now in the roster, but for sure, they’re going to be in the roster in the future.”

Change, in other words, is coming to the U.S. team. But Pochettino is not going to force it just yet.

Pulisic has been a mainstay and captain of the USMNT (Katie Stratman / Imagn Images)

This camp will give another chance for someone like Johnny Cardoso, who struggled in his start against Canada last month, to make an impression. It’s also a big opportunity for Aidan Morris, who has had a strong start to his tenure at Middlesbrough. Players like Marlon Fossey might also get a chance to show he should have a shout at the right back spot, while Joe Scally will have to hold off competition ahead of Dest’s return.

With key USMNT left out, here’s who might rise to the occasion ahead of pending coaching hire

The list of players Pochettino wants to look at will undoubtedly start to change in the next few camps. The work to get to know the full pool has already started. Pochettino noted a staff member was in attendance at Toulouse against Lyon on Sunday to see Mark McKenzie. Another USMNT pool player started that game for Lyon: midfielder Tanner Tessmann, who wasn’t called to this camp. Pochettino was also asked specifically about Diego Luna, a player not called up to this camp, and said the midfielder is someone the staff wants to watch more of in the coming months.

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There was one notable change in this roster: the return of Zack Steffen. The goalkeeper hasn’t played for the U.S. since 2022 and hasn’t had a great season for Colorado, but Pochettino is familiar with the former Manchester City back-up’s skillset and the goalkeeper position is problematic considering the lack of playing time for both Matt Turner and Ethan Horvath.

Steffen has not played for the U.S. since 2022 (Isaiah J. Downing / Imagn Images)

Pochettino said in a press conference this week that players who aren’t getting time on the field at their respective clubs have become a real issue with this national team. Pochettino, answering in his native Spanish, said he agreed that players not playing regularly is a big concern for a coach but part of his job will be to work to find players the best places to get minutes to be ready for the World Cup in 2026. Not calling in players who aren’t getting regular minutes is a luxury the U.S. men may not be able to afford, depending on the situation, but Pochettino was clear when he said players not playing for their club was “a handicap that I believe cannot be allowed.”

Still, this camp is less about those bigger-picture changes. Pochettino first must lay a foundation — for himself and the staff. That goes beyond just the players he’s calling in or their current form at the club level. Pochettino said he won’t overload players with tactical changes in this camp. Instead, he wants to “create a relationship inside and off the pitch” that will help the team understand what he is asking of them.“I think the most important (thing) is to be simple,” Pochettino said. “The player cannot believe that they’re going to arrive and the first thing in Austin we are going to be in the room and to start to spend two, three hours talking about tactics, about different things. I think the most important (thing is) that we need to settle a few principles, a few concepts that I start to develop with time.”Pochettino said the plan is to use two systems, the 4-2-3-1 and 4-3-3, and “from there develop our way to play.” Pochettino joked that he watches a lot of American soccer media now — “more than you believe,” he said — and he saw pundits who talked about the defensive effort the team needs.Pochettino noted that he wants to play attractive soccer that will entertain American fans. But it’s not just about playing pretty, up-tempo soccer.

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“We are going to be very, very, very demanding. When we lose the ball, we need to be desperate to recover as soon as possible,” he said. “But we need to work like a team in this moment. We need to show that we are a real team.

“All the teams that win and won titles, you can see Argentina winning the Copa America or the World Cup, of course when they have the ball, they play really well. But when they don’t have the ball, they work like a team. They are really, really, really rough. I think we need to enjoy when we don’t have the ball and try to recover, and be very strong defensively.“We need to be very competitive. It’s not only to play nice football, it is to be very competitive. That, for me, is the objective.”The path toward that objective begins next week in Austin.

Antonee Robinson: My game in my words

Antonee Robinson: My game in my words

Stuart James and Thom Harris Oct 4, 2024 dd397a641113.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

This article is the latest in our My Game In My Words 2024 series. Click here to find all articles in the series.


“F****** hell, lad. Stop running!” a Newcastle United winger told Antonee Robinson during a game against Fulham last season.

Robinson loves overlapping and underlapping and treats the left flank like the back-straight on an athletics track, tearing forward at every opportunity to add to his increasingly impressive attacking returns. He has eight assists in the Premier League since the start of last season, which is second only to Kieran Trippier when it comes to defenders.

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As for interceptions, Robinson’s numbers are off the scale. There were 13 in one game at Anfield last season, equalling a Premier League record and keeping Mohamed Salah relatively quiet in the process.

Two years earlier, on the opening day of the Premier League season, Salah was so struck by Robinson’s performance for Fulham that he stopped to ask him his age in the middle of the match. Later, after they swapped shirts, the Liverpool forward gave him some words of encouragement that Robinson has never forgotten.

(Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Robinson is discussing all of this and more at his home in Surrey, on the outskirts of London, where we are scrolling through close to 100 clips of him playing for Fulham and the U.S. men’s national team. There are backflips and diving headers, own goals and crunching tackles, shoulder barges against one of the strongest players in the Premier League, and running races where there was only going to be one winner.

This is Antonee Robinson’s game in his words.


“I love it,” Robinson says, smiling.

It’s hard to imagine many modern full-backs saying the same thing, mindful that Robinson is talking about one-on-one defending. The 27-year-old feels like a bit of a throwback in that respect.

“I always go into games thinking, ‘I’m playing against a winger now and I don’t want him to get the better of me’. I feel like I can read where a player is going fairly well. But the ability to not fly in, to stand them up and then pick my time to close in on someone, I do really enjoy that,” he says.

Robinson made 80 interceptions in the Premier League last season. To put that number into perspective, it was the most across Europe’s top five leagues, 15 more than any other Premier League player (Bournemouth’s Lewis Cook was in second place) and almost twice as many as any other Premier League full-back (West Ham’s Emerson Palmieri made 43).

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“Obviously because I’m quite fast, it helps,” Robinson says in an understated way. “I feel confident knowing that I’m gonna get to most passes when I see them.

“But it’s quite annoying to the manager at times because sometimes I’ll be convinced the pass is going somewhere and almost gamble a little bit. And then it goes the other way and he hates it when I guess. He always says, ‘You’re fast enough to get there. Just stay, let it go (to the winger), and then go’. But sometimes when you smell something, you have the urge.”

Robinson’s scent is normally reliable. His trademark interception is cutting out the short and low diagonal pass to the winger outside of him — an action that he repeated over and again last season, including on multiple occasions against Tottenham Hotspur.

“I think the way they play would suit this because they invert the full-backs, they’re really narrow, and the winger is the only wide pass (available),” Robinson explains as we watch a couple of clips against Spurs. “So when I can see that’s literally the only pass he’s going to do, even if I go here (wide to try to intercept) and he plays it here (inside), there’s nothing on, so it feels safer to go. But you can see (on the video) that I’m just eyeing him up.”

Although Robinson said he will “almost gamble a little bit”, his interceptions are calculated. Before setting off, he looks at the body orientation of the player in possession and also waits until the passer (Bruno Guimaraes in the next example) focuses on striking the ball.

“When he’s put his head down, you can kind of see the direction of the pass — he’s going to pass here (wide) and I need to go that way anyway,” Robinson says. “This line (infield) is blocked off by our midfielder, which obviously the gaffer (Marco Silva) sets us up to do. So it looks like the only pass is (wide).”

If the distance between the passer and the receiver is close, which was the case when Robinson intercepted a ball from Julian Alvarez to Phil Foden at Manchester City last season, the risk of being caught out increases.

“I can remember similar ones to this where I would get done,” Robinson says. “Obviously I’ve seen him (Alvarez) put his head down, I know he’s passing there, so I’ve gone. But I think we played Liverpool, it was the exact same situation, it’s Trent (Alexander-Arnold) on the ball and he looks like he’s gonna pass it there (to the winger) and he plays it inside me; that’s the one I said the gaffer despises. He goes mental at that. Luckily, this one I made it.”

He has a good memory. The Liverpool clip is lined up ready to show him as a rare example of when that darting run to intercept goes wrong. Alexander-Arnold disguises his intentions, reverses the pass and Luis Diaz runs in behind.

Robinson sighs. “With that, I should know a lot better who’s on the ball. But, you know, playing against good teams you get excited. So that is a prime example of the manager waiting to kick off at me. I’m already thinking, ‘He’s gonna want to speak to me about that’.”


An aggressive, front-footed defender, Robinson enjoys an old-fashioned 50/50. “Without hurting anyone, I do like being able to leave it on someone,” he says as we watch him making fully committed but fair challenges on Bournemouth’s Adam Smith and Everton’s Abdoulaye Doucoure (below).

Robinson’s biggest attribute by far when one-v-one defending, though, is his pace. A clip of him up against the Nottingham Forest attacker Anthony Elanga, who has registered the second-fastest speed in the Premier League this season, illustrates that point. Fulham have turned over possession and Robinson is running back on the outside of Elanga, which is the last place a full-back wants to be ordinarily, but he still manages to get to the ball first. Elanga is left on his hands and knees afterwards.

“I remember one of the first passages of play here — the ball broke and both me and Elanga ended up sprinting and he’s leaving me in this race, which I didn’t expect,” Robinson says. “I was like, ‘S***. If he gets the ball, he’s in’. I knew he was quick, but he’s top-level speed. After that, I was way more cautious of the threat in behind.”

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Robinson’s speed means that throughout his career, he has been deployed as the “last man” on attacking corners, essentially as an insurance policy if the opposition counter. Liverpool’s Darwin Nunez tried and failed to win a race against Robinson from a Fulham corner last season and there was a similar scenario in the home game against Everton when Arnaut Danjuma attempted to beat him on the outside.

“He’s got to know his players there!” Robinson says, laughing. “I’d say 95 per cent of wingers, if they’re going to just try to knock it down the line and run me, I’m buzzing with that. So I was very happy when he tried that because it makes my decision so much easier.”

Robinson talks about getting tight on wingers and “not letting them breathe”. Away at Brentford last season, he was all over Bryan Mbeumo from the first minute, giving him no time on the ball. Half an hour into the game, Mbeumo let a routine pass slip under his boot by the touchline, prompting the co-commentator and former Fulham and West Ham defender Tony Gale to suggest Robinson had got inside the Brentford player’s head.

“He’s miscontrolled that because he’s looking at Robinson, thinking, ‘He’s gonna be on me sharp’. He’s taken his eye off the ball and that’s the little bit of shakiness Robinson’s put on Mbeumo early on. It’s up to Mbeumo to play a little bit of cat and mouse with him.”

Is it a game of cat and mouse with the winger?

“I suppose so,” Robinson replies, smiling. “Sometimes you end up talking to players in games, which is quite funny. I remember playing Newcastle, not this last game (this season), but a couple of games ago and Jacob Murphy was playing and he was like, ‘F****** hell, lad — stop running!’ So, little things like that — straight away they know what I’m like. And it does play a little part (in putting wingers off their game). There’s going to be players who will come at me less because they know I’m going to go the other way a lot of the time.”

Equally, there are also games where Robinson is largely defending because of the calibre of opposition. Arsenal at home last season was one of those occasions and it turned into a fascinating duel between him and Bukayo Saka in a game that Fulham won 2-1.

The first clip shows Robinson following Saka infield, shoulder-charging him and winning the ball. Robinson puffs out his cheeks after watching it. “That’s an incredibly rare occurrence because Saka is crazy strong. He’s one of the strongest players, pound for pound, that I’ve played against.”

Later in the game, Saka gets his own back in another physical duel, as if to prove Robinson’s point.

In between times, there are a couple of moments in quick succession where Robinson ends up defending one-on-one with Saka near the touchline and close to the corner flag. Robinson shows Saka down the line, forcing him onto his weaker right foot. In the first instance, Saka still manages to cross — albeit his delivery is overhit.

On the second occasion, Saka goes the same way again and Robinson blocks.

It’s tempting to think Robinson’s defending was much better the second time because he stopped the cross, but he doesn’t really see it like that.

“The first one I was still happy with,” Robinson says. “I know Saka’s very good on his left foot. If I show him down the line and he manages to get a cross in… I’d obviously like to block it, but if he’s crossing on his right foot and that’s the worst-case scenario, that’s fine. Next one you kind of know how he’s going to be shaped when he goes that way (again), so I can close it down a little bit better. But if I show him on his right every time and half of them he crosses and half of them he doesn’t, it’s a lot better than him cutting in on his left to pick a ball properly or shooting.”

(David Price/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)


An “unlucky” own goal at Villa Park in November in a 3-1 defeat. At least that was how Robinson viewed it at the time. Marco Silva thought otherwise.

Either way, that own goal represented a turning point in Robinson’s season. He went on to register assists in three successive Premier League matches (the first in the second half against Villa), scored two terrific goals for the USMNT against Trinidad & Tobago during the international break that followed, then produced one of the best performances of his career against Liverpool a couple of weeks later at Anfield.

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“My season took off,” Robinson says.

The own goal is interesting to break down, especially as Robinson told The Athletic previously that Silva had said to him: “If you were in this position in the first place, maybe that wouldn’t have happened and you would not have been ‘unlucky’.”

What is this position?

Robinson asks to take the footage further back to explain. “Here, when we looked at this, the manager would like Calvin (Bassey) to be two yards this way (sliding to the right), being able to cover the line a bit better. If he’s there, Tim (Ream) is three yards over and then I’m inside this winger (Moussa Diaby). Obviously, it gets played (down the line to Youri Tielemans) and you’ll see when I come in.

“Realistically, you’d want me to be here (the black circle below), so just five yards inside this line. And if I’m already there, he (Diaby) is not in front of me.

“Still, after that, he (Diaby) missed the ball. So I do get unlucky. But it’s always the steps leading up to that which you can prevent in the gaffer’s mind.”

By his own admission, Robinson was lacking in confidence ahead of that Villa match. He scored an own goal against Sheffield United the previous month and talks about going into games around that period thinking, ‘Just don’t make any big mistakes. Just do your job. Simple’.”

International weeks can be viewed as disruptive by a lot of club managers, but a change of scenery was probably just what Robinson needed. He joined up with the USMNT for the CONCACAF Nations League quarter-final tie against Trinidad & Tobago and thrived. In the first leg, in Texas, Robinson assisted the opening goal and then scored the second with a superb strike that was followed by a series of backflips that were just as impressive.

Big moment!” Robinson says, smiling. “I dyed my hair white because I thought, ‘You know what, I’m just gonna do something mad’, and then I scored a good goal, so I was very excited.”

Four days later, in the away fixture, Robinson scored a diving header. “I’m more happy with this one, to be honest. Because I remember him (Sergino Dest) getting it and me being out here (very wide), I was just like, ‘I’m going to dart in between the defenders’. It was a proper striker’s goal.”

Robinson returned to England “feeling better about myself”. He got an assist against Wolves in Fulham’s next match and then put in a man-of-the-match performance against Liverpool. The 13 interceptions made headlines and one of them (below) led to an assist for Fulham’s first goal.

Watching the game back, it’s remarkable how often Robinson seemed to be in the right place at the right time to limit Salah’s impact in a match that Fulham lost 4-3 despite leading with less than five minutes remaining.

Did Salah say anything to him afterwards? “Not this time,” Robinson replies. “He has before. We played Liverpool in the first game of the season two years ago. We drew 2-2. I remember saying to my friends, who are all big Liverpool fans and came down because it was around my birthday, ‘Lads, if Salah scores or gets an assist this game, I’ll pay for dinner tonight’, so I put a bit of added pressure on myself. And he (Salah) did (score), annoyingly.

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“But I remember him saying to me midway through the game (Robinson says this next bit in a curious voice), ‘How old are you?’. So he didn’t really know who I was. I must have been 24, 25. He just nodded and carried on with the game. Then, after the game, I asked for his shirt, so we swapped shirts and we were just chatting and he was like, ‘You were the best player this game, keep up what you’re doing’. That was very nice of him.”


A routine question about whether Robinson has had the opportunity to speak to Mauricio Pochettino since the Argentinian took over as head coach of the USMNT delivers an unexpected answer.

“Funnily enough, I bumped into him out for dinner the other day,” Robinson says. “We had a team meal in London and he just happened to be in there. I was sat next to Harrison Reed, who used to play for him at Southampton, so he went over to speak to him and I just went over and said hello. I was chatting to him and it seems like he’s really excited about it (coaching the USMNT).”

Pochettino’s appointment followed the decision to sack Gregg Berhalter in the wake of a dismal Copa America showing in the summer when the U.S. were eliminated in the group stage.

“We obviously wanted to push as far as we could in the tournament and try to win it,” Robinson says. “We didn’t even get the chance to get out of the group, which is a big, big letdown for us, especially us being the host nation.”

The Copa America post-mortem started immediately after the final whistle against UruguayChristian Pulisic, the U.S. captain, spoke about the need to regroup and, more significantly, highlighted the importance of “finding an identity again”.

(Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

With 46 caps to his name and six years of international experience behind him, including a World Cup in Qatar, Robinson has been around the team for long enough to know what the U.S. should look like on the pitch. What is their identity?

“Well, thinking back to teams before us, the U.S. was always gritty, hard-working, horrible to play against, a battling team,” he says. “They had good players but, on the whole, as a team, there was a lot of fight in them. And when we first came together as a team, we definitely had that a lot. I remember going into the World Cup, playing against England and feeling that we can make it extremely difficult for teams. But towards the end, it felt kind of soft and stagnant. We didn’t have that bite.

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“I didn’t get to go to the last (international) window and obviously we had a different manager (Mikey Varas). But I was watching us play against Canada and it just felt like they were out-fighting us. I’d back us, at our best, as a better team than them comfortably. But you have to win that fight first.

“They (Canada) did the same thing in World Cup qualifying, where they were just nasty; horrible to play against. And I think that’s something we need to get a bit of because we’re not the most talented team. So that needs to be a minimum.”

Pochettino touched on some of those themes at a press conference this week, when he highlighted Argentina’s desire to win the ball back and said it’s not just about trying to play “nice football”.

On the face of it, Pochettino’s style of play feels like a good fit for Robinson’s game. “Yeah, I think so,” Robinson says. “I think it will suit a lot of the players on our team. And, regardless, just having a fresh set of eyes and a new perspective — I think every now and then, it gets to a point where a team does need that.

“You obviously see under his resume that he’s a top-level coach. It’s going to be interesting to see how that transitions from club level to international level in terms of how much control he can have on it. He’s not going to see us every day. He’s not got a lot of time to drill into us how he wants to play. But that’s where we’ve got to step up and take responsibility and say it’s not all just on him. We need to give him as much attention and commitment as possible and make it work between us.”


“I can feel the moment when I change gears,” Robinson says.

It’s quite a sight watching Robinson overlapping to receive a pass — a bit like an Olympic sprinter setting off in the relay and waiting to be handed the baton.

According to data from SkillCorner, Arsenal’s Ben White was the only Premier League full-back to make more overlapping runs than Robinson last season.

SkillCorner define a high-intensity sprint as capturing a player moving at over 20 km/h for at least 0.7 seconds. A significant number of Robinson’s overlaps start from inside his own half, last for 3-4 seconds and see him reaching much higher speeds than 20 km/h.

“I’ve done half a pitch there!” Robinson says, laughing, as we watch him overlapping against Forest (below).

The sprint for another overlap, this time against Liverpool in the Carabao Cup, starts not far outside his own penalty area. Robinson has his hand in the air as Joao Palhinha takes possession and appears to be gesturing to the midfielder where to pass next. What’s going through his mind here?

“I think, ‘Who would I rather have the ball in this situation?’ If he (Palhinha) gives it to me, Willy’s going to run and I’m going to run and we’re going to end up in the same sort of pocket. If he gives it to Willy first, Willy is already higher up and I’m going to catch up because he’s got to wait for the ball. Willy is right-footed, he can run inside, commit a defender. If the defender goes with me, Willy is going to end up shooting. So in this situation, Willy getting the ball and me coming with speed is 10 times better than me getting it.”

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‘Willy’ is Willian, the former Chelsea and Arsenal winger and a player Robinson built up an excellent understanding with at Fulham over the course of two seasons. His departure in the summer has paved the way for Robinson and Alex Iwobi to link up on the left much more frequently than before and the signs are already promising. A Robinson overlap and low cross, after a pass from Iwobi, led to Fulham’s goal at Ipswich earlier this season.

The week before, against Leicester, it was Robinson’s first-time ball that set up Iwobi for Fulham’s winner. “The understanding is getting there,” Robinson says.

Naturally, it’s much easier to develop chemistry with team-mates at club level compared with international football because of the constant repetition on the training ground, as well as the regular cycle of matches.

That said, Robinson clearly has an excellent understanding with Pulisic when it comes to his attacking runs (the clip below shows an overlap against Bolivia in the Copa America that Ricardo Pepi should have converted) and he makes it sound as though there are a lot of parallels with playing left-back for Fulham and the USMNT.

“It’s really similar,” Robinson says. “We do have a bit more licence that I can go (forward with the U.S.). If the right-back was attacking, like Sergino, or like when (Joe) Scally was playing in Copa, I can still be high because we’d have two midfielders who would sit and do that defensive box.

“But playing with Christian is very similar. We have that same understanding of, ‘You’re our most dangerous player. I’m going to give you the ball. I’ll give you the option of sprinting behind if you want to use it. If you don’t want to use it, that means you think it’s a better option, so I trust you with that’. And we have a great relationship off the pitch anyway, so it does translate to being on the same page on it.”

(Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)

Playing next to the same player for club and country helps — as was the case with Tim Ream up until August when the central defender joined Charlotte FC. Robinson and Ream were always on the same wavelength and had a lot of joy with a move that would see the left-winger, or No 8, come short and narrow, leaving space for Robinson to run in behind and Ream to pick him out with a longer pass.

It’s a simple but effective pattern that pulls opponents out of position.

“Opposite movements — that’s a big thing in our game (at Fulham),” Robinson says.

The footage ends with an assist that provides another example of how hard Robinson has worked to improve the quality of his final ball. “A lot of my assists have come from low crosses, which is something we do a lot after training,” he explains. “Just kind of feeding it into that danger area along the six-yard line, like the Ipswich one.”

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He must be happy with his numbers: eight assists since the start of last season is an excellent return for a left-back.

“I can’t complain about that, considering the two Premier League seasons before that I had one,” Robinson says, smiling. “But a couple of goals would be nice. I haven’t scored in the Premier League yet, so I’ve got my eye on that.”


The My Game In My Words series is part of a partnership with EA Sports. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

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

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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.