9/12/25 US finally wins, Euro leagues return, Champs League is back Tues, CHS Boys Pack the House Tonite 7:30 Murray Free Admit with jersey, Full TV Game Schedule

US Finally Wins a Game 2-0 in the Fortress that is Columbus, Ohio
The USMNT has finally beaten a Top 25 team under Pochitino as he lined up in the same 3-4-2-1 formation he ended with against Korea that yielded so many good shots. The US dominated from the start with 65% possession and a wonder goal from Man of the Match Alex Zendejas. The America’s man hit this spectacular volley (Zendejas Volley) to give the US the 1-0 lead. Zendajas Golazo in Spanish. Later the US would add an insurance goal from Flo Balogen (Balogan Goal) on a beautiful slip pass from Pulisic. (US Highlights). All in all a nice performance as I was in attendance of course. Now this was Japan’s C team mind you. So Bochitino poking his chest out like they had accomplished something was hiliarious. It beats losing – but Japan played their stars vs Mexico and their CHUMPs vs the USA. Let that sink in a second as you realize the depths that Bochitino has taken this team to in his 1 Full year on the job and the lowest ranking in 2 decades. Yes he’s been here 1 year now and still had 5 experimental MLS players in camp against 2 top 20 teams with 8 games until the World Cup. Its like he has never watched us play or watched tape (because he hasn’t) It seems the US Soccer press is beginning to Call BS just like I have for over a month now. Anyway it sure was nice to see the US actually win a game in person – albeit against Japan’s C team. I can tell you there were less than 1000 Japanese in the stadium – if the US wants to play a home game in front of a US only crowd – the ONLY places that is guaranteed to happen is in the Midwest – Columbus or Cincy.

INDY 11
Indy Eleven concludes its season-long three-game USL Championship road trip at Eastern Conference opponent Rhode Island FC on Saturday at 7:00 pm on ESPN+. Midfielder Jack Blake and goalkeeper Hunter Sulte have earned USL Championship “Team of the Week” honors after helping the Boys in Blue to a key road victory at Hartford Athletic last week. For Blake, it is the fourth time in 2025 and the 12th time in the past two seasons that he has gotten this recognition. Sulte is a two-time “Team of the Week” selection this year and a four-time pick in his two-year Indy Eleven career.  

Champions League Returns Tues/Wed/Thur next week on Paramount+, CBSSN, Prime Video
Group play starts Tuesday with 12:45 and 3 pm time slots all 3 days and constant coverage starting at 12 noon everyday and lasting thru the wrap up shows after the games.

All Youth Players who wear their Jersey to the Game will get FREE ADMISSION vs #19 Columbus North

Got a chance to ref with the Vets Sat at North Central with Joe and Alex got to see HSE Girls – good team
Got to run center w/Alex and Jessica on hand on a beautiful night at Lawrence Central vs Brebeuf
A blast catching the US vs Japan in Columbus with my Soccer Buddy Bart Scoble – Dos a Cero Baby!

TV GAME SCHEDULE

Sat, Sept 13
7:30 am USA Arsenal vs Nottingham Forest
10 am USA Fulham (Robinson) vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
10 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Sunderland
12 noon Para+ Juventus vs Inter
12:30 pm NBC Westham United vs Tottenham
12:30 pm CBS NC Courage vs Angel City NWSL
12:30 pm ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs Hamburger
3 pm USA Brentford vs Chelsea
3 pm ESPN+ Atletico Madrid (Cardosa) vs Villareal
5 pm Tubi Orlando Pride vs Bay FC NWSL
7:30 pm Tubi KC City vs Washington Spirit NWSL
7:30 pm Apple DC United vs Orlando City
8:30 pm Apple Seattle Sounders vs LA Galaxy
8:30 pm Apple Dallas vs Austin
Sun, Sept 14
9 am USA Burnley (Adams) vs Liverpool
11:30 am USA Man City vs Man United
11:30 am ESPN+ M’Gladbach (Reyna, Scally) vs Werder Bremen
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Bologna
3 pm ESPN+ Barcelona vs Valencia
3 pm ESPN Chicago Red Stars vs Portland Thorns NWSL
6 pm Golazo, Para Utah Royals vs Houston Dash NWSL
8 pm Golazo, Para Seattle Reign vs Racing Louisville NWSL
Tues, Sept 16 – Champions League
12:45 pm CBSSN PSV (Dest) vs Union SG
12:45 pm PAra+ Athletic Club vs Arsenal
3 pm Para+ Juve vs Dortmund
3 pm Para+ Real Madrid vs Olympique Marseille
3 pm Para+ Tottenham vs Villareal
3 pm Para+ Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Millwall League Cup
8 pm CBSSN Nashville SC vs Philly Union US Open Cup Semi Final
Weds, Sept 17- Champions League
3 pm CBSSN Ajax vs Inter Milan
3 pm Para+ Bayern Munich vs Chelsea
3 pm PAra+ Liverpool vs Atletico Madrid (Cardoso)
3 pm Para+ PSG vs Atalanta
8 pm CBSSN Minn vs Austin US Open Cup Semi
Thurs, Sept 18 – Champions League
12:45 pm CBSSN Kabenhavn vs Bayer Leverkusen (Tilman)
12;45 pm Para, Prime Club Brugge vs Monaco
3 pm CBSSN Frankfort vs Galatasaray
3 pm Para+, Uni New Castle vs Barcelona
3 pm Para, Prime Man City vs Napoli
10:30 pm CBSSN Angel City vs Washington Spirit (Rodman)
Fri, Sept 19
8 pm Prime Houston Dash vs Chicago Red Stars NWSL
10 pm CBSSN, Prime Utah Royals vs Racing Louisville NWSL
Sat, Sept 20
7:30 am USA Liverpool vs Everton
7:30 am CBSSN Leicester City vs Coventry City (Wright)
9:30 am ESPN+ Hoffenhiem vs Bayern Munich
10 am USA Burnley (Adams) vs Nottingham Forest
10 am Peacock West Ham vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
10 am Peacock Wolverhampton vs Leeds (Aaronson)
10 am Para, Prime Norwich City (Sargent) vs Wrexham
10:15 am ESPN+ Real Madrid vs Espanyol
12 noon Para+ Hellas Verona vs Juventus
2:45 pm Para+ Udinese vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
12:30 pm NBC Man United vs Chelsea
3 pm USA Fulham (Robinson) vs Brentford
7:30 pm TUBI KC Current vs Seattle Reign NWSL
10 pm TUBI Portland Thorns vs San Diego Wave NWSL
Sun, Sept 21
9 am USA Bournmouth vs New Castle
10:15 am ESPN+ Mallorca vs Atletico Madrid (Cardosa)
11:30 am ESPN+ Bayer Leverkusen (Tillman) vs B Mgladbach (Scally, Reyna)
11:30 am USA Arsenal vs Man City
2:45 pm Para+ Inter Milan vs Sassuolo
2:45 pm beIN Sport Olympique Marseille (Weah) vs PSG
3 pm ESPN+ Barcelona vs Getafe
8:30 pm ESPN2 Bay FC vs NY/NJ Gotham FC NWSL
9 pm FS 1 LAFC (Son) vs Real Salt Lake (Luna)
Fri, Oct 10
8:30 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Ecuador
Tues, Oct 14
9 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Australia
Thurs, Oct 23
9 pm TNT, Max USA Women vs Portugal Chester PA
Sun, Oct 26
4 pm TNT, Max USA Women vs Portugal Hartford CT
Sat, Nov 15
5 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Paraguay Chester PA
Tues, Nov 18
7 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Uruguay Tampa, FL

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US MEN

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Back again
Carlisle: Zendejas’ star turn comes at perfect time for him, USMNT
Zendejas’ starring role has come at the right time for himself and the USMNT
The USMNT heads to October after a convincing 2-0 win over Japan
Pulisic rates 9/10 as Japan win gets USMNT back on track

 As the World Cup nears, does Pochettino know USMNT’s starting XI?
USMNT: Whose stock rose or dropped after September window?
Sebastian Berhalter: From nearly quitting to USMNT breakthrough
USMNT bring back good vibes vs. Japan: “We all believe”
Pochettino preaches positivity for USMNT: “We stick with the plan” 
USMNT vow to “keep going” after South Korea setback
Carlisle: USMNT loss to South Korea another misstep in World Cup prep
USMNT searching for a result against Japan after South Korea defeat
Report: USMNT considering March friendlies against Portugal, Belgium
Columbus is once again the US Fortress

Live from Columbus Ohio – the US Fortress of the Midwest !!

Goalkeeping

Indy 11 Keeper up for USL Save of Week
GK after bad Game
Low Dives – What we Worked on Last Week  at CFC
Donnarumma’s arrival signals a shift for Man City under Guardiola

World

Donnarumma’s arrival signals a shift for Man City under Guardiola
🚑 Groin discomfort, Barça confirm medical report on Lamine Yamal
Carlo Ancelotti eyes Brazil renewal, focused on 2030 World Cup
Martin Odegaard injury news — Arsenal captain forced off again
UEFA delays decision on allowing Barcelona to play in Miami, AC Milan in Australia
Bolivia stuns Brazil 

MLS

Matchday 33: What to know for this weekend’s must-watch matches
MVP Power Rankings: Anders Dreyer, Lionel Messi battle for top spot
Matchday 33: Who can clinch playoffs or be eliminated?

NWSL

Alyssa Thompson’s move to Chelsea included tearful goodbyes and pizza
Gotham FC bets big, adds Jaedyn Shaw to its star-studded squad

Reffing

Offsides?  
8 Second GK Rule

Lovely night for Soccer reffing with veteran Thomas Kelley at Noblesville. Love those grass fields.

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Back again

Some of our most watched leagues embark on a new season.

Saturday

Fulham v Leeds United – 10a on USA Network: Antonee Robinson and Fulham will face Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United on Saturday morning. Robinson came off the bench in Fulham’s two most recent matches to play 20-30 minutes, and remained with his club over the break as he continues his recovery. Aaronson has also been coming off the bench for Leeds and getting roughly the same number of minutes though it seems clear that it is in a designed role and not an effort to get his minutes up over time. Fullham fell to Chelsea 2-0 ahead of the break and are still looking for their first win on the season while Leeds have thoroughly mixed results, opening the season with a win before being thrashed 5-0 by Arsenal and then rebounding with a draw against Newcastle.


Crystal Palace v Sunderland – 10a on Peacock: Chris Richards has played every minute of the first three matches for Crystal Palace and the club picked up their first win of the season, 3-0 over Aston Villa, heading into the break. They now face a newly promoted Sunderland side that have won two of their first three matches, defeating both West Ham and Brentford in the opening weeks of the season.

Bournemouth v Brighton & Hove Albion – 10a on Peacock: Tyler Adams and Bournemouth have won their past two matches 1-0 defeating Wolverhampton and Tottenham with Adams playing nearly every minute of the match though he also received a yellow card in each match. Bournemouth bounced back well after their season opening 4-2 loss to Liverpool and currently sit in seventh place, three points back of the league leaders.

Coventry City v Norwich City – 10a on Paramount+: Haji Wright and Josh Sargent will face off in English Championship action this weekend. Wright and Coventry have won twice and drawn twice in their first four matches of the season and currently sit in fifth place with Wright scoring in each of the team’s last three matches. Meanwhile Sargent, who may be running out of chances with the USMNT, was named the Championship player of the month after scoring five goals in the teams first four matches, including both goals of Norwich’s 2-0 win over Blackburn heading into the break two weeks ago.

Juventus v Inter Milan – Noon on Paramount+: Weston McKennie has seen just a minute in each of Juventus’s first two matches of the season, wins over Parma and Genoa. It seems that he has work to do to once again work his way back into the squad, a position he is very familiar with and has been very successful at. Juve have a huge matchup this weekend with last seasons runners up, Inter Milan.

NEC v PSV – 12:45p on ESPN Select: Sergnio Dest, Ricardo Pepi, and PSV will look to bounce back from a shocking 2-0 loss to Telstar heading into the International break. Dest started the match, as he has each of PSV’s first four matches, while Pepi came on at the half for his first extended appearance of the season.

Club America v Guadalajara – 11:15p on Paramount+: Alejandro Zendejas and Club America are undefeated in their first seven matches of the Liga MX Apertura with just two draws though they are still in second place, a point back of Monterrey who have won six matches and lost once. Zendejas has appeared in every match and started all but one.

Saturday MLS Matches with USMNT flavor – the below MLS players were called into the September camp and with the exception of the backup keeper, Roman Celentano, each made at least a brief appearance in the friendlies against South Korea and Japan:

  • Atlanta United v Columbus Crew – 7:30p on MLS Season Pass (Apple TV): Max Arfsten and Sean Zawadski
  • Charlotte v Inter Miami – 7:30p on MLS Season Pass: Tim Ream
  • DC United v Orlando City SC – 7:30p on MLS Season Pass: Alex Freeman
  • Cincinnati v Nashville SC – 7:30p on MLS Season Pass: Roman Celentano
  • Seattle Sounders v LA Galaxy – 8:30p on MLS Season Pass: Cristian Roldan
  • Chicago Fire v NYCFC – 8:30p on MLS Season Pass: Matt Freese
  • Vancouver Whitecaps v Philadelphia Union – 9:30p on MLS Season Pass: Tristan Blackmon and Sebastian Berhalter v Nathan Harriel
  • Real Salt Lake v Sporting Kansas City – 9:30p on MLS Season Pass: Diego Luna
  • Colorado Rapids v Houston Dynamo – 9:30p on MLS Season Pass: Jack McGlynn
  • San Diego v Minnesota United – 9:30p on MLS Season Pass: Luca de la Torre

Sunday

Southampton v Portsmouth – 7a on CBSSN: Damion Downs did not appear against South Korea and saw just a handful of minutes off the bench in the match against Japan, a role which matches what he’s seen thus far this season with his club in the English Championship. Downs has appeared in three of four matches as a substitute for Southampton, missing one due to illness.

Atalanta v Lecce – 9a on CBSSN: Yunus Musah spent the international break joining his new club, Atalanta who finished last season in third place in Serie A though they are still looking for their first win this season. Musah’s role with his new club remains to be seen, he had started in the midfield for AC Milan just ahead of his transfer, playing the full 90’ in the teams 2-0 win.

Lille v Toulouse – 9a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Toulouse suffered a 6-3 loss to PSG heading into the international break and will look to wipe the slate clean as they face Lille on Sunday. McKenzie has played every minute thus far for Toulouse who won their first two matches, without surrendering a goal, before being crushed by PSG in their most recent match.

St. Pauli v Augsburg – 9:30a on ESPN Select: James Sands started St Pauli’s first two matches of the season, a draw with Borussia Dortmund and a win over Hamburger, playing almost every minute early for a club that is picking up points early in the season and looking to put some ground between themselves and the threat of relegation. St. Pauli face Augsburg this weekend. Augsburg is coming off a 2-3 loss to Bayern Munich, a loss in which Noahkai banks saw 1’ minute off the bench, which was one more minute than he received while on international break with the USMNT.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Werder Bremen – 11:30a on ESPN Select: Joe Scally, Gio Reyna, and Borussia Monchengladbach are looking for their first win, and first goal, of the season as they face Werder Bremen on Sunday. Gladbach opened the season with a scoreless draw against newly promoted Hamburger and fell 1-0 to Stuttgart in week two. Scally started both matches at rightback while Reyna has yet to appear for his new club. Werder Bremen also have one loss and one draw in their first two matches though they have given up seven goals in the two matches.

Rennes v Olympique Lyon – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann has started the season playing every minute for a Lyon side that have won their first three matches. Lyon are tied with PSG for the league lead with both teams also having a +5 goal differential. This weekend Lyon will face a Rennes side that are 1-1-1 to start the season and sitting in ninth place. Interestingly Rennes have played down a man in two of their three matches, the season opening win over Marseille as well as a 4-0 loss to Lorient in the second week of the season.

AC Milan v Bologna – 2:45p on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic scored his first goal of the season after coming on as a substitute late in AC Milan’s 2-0 win over Lecce just ahead of the break. Milan face a Bologna side who opened the season with a 1-0 loss to Roma before bouncing back and defeating Como 1-0. Milan will be looking to make a move up the table this season, relative to their disappointing eighth place finish last season, and a home win over a team that finished a point back of them would be the type of result they will need.

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World Cup Onside/Offside: Good win for USMNT, Messi’s last dance?

  • Luis Miguel Echegaray

Sep 10, 2025, 01:10 PM ETareside! This week, Luis Miguel Echegaray recaps some of the most notable highlights from the international break. From jubilation in west Africa and the heights of El Alto in South America to a spark of encouragement in Columbus, Ohio, here is LME’s point of view as World Cup qualifiers took center stage.


ONSIDE: Finally, a spark for the U.S.

After Saturday’s uninspiring 2-0 loss to South Korea in Harrison, New Jersey, with another disjointed performance, the United States men’s national team finally gave its fans a reason to believe in Mauricio Pochettino’s project, beating Japan 2-0 at Columbus, Ohio’s Lower.com Field on Tuesday night.

Pochettino reacted to the South Korea loss by tinkering both in strategy and lineup (five changes from Saturday) so his side could better the agile, high-possession mentality of Hajime Moriyasu’s Japan, a team I think will do very well next summer. And so he went back to the playbook from his Southampton and Tottenham days, when he often employed a 3-4-3 (or 3-4-2-1) formation in order to play the role of contrarian against teams who enjoy buildup play. That’s exactly what happened Tuesday night as the U.S. pressed, attacked and exploited the massive holes that were available due to their high-press mentality.

It was classic, old-school Pochettino, and it worked.

– Carlisle: Zendejas’ star turn comes at perfect time for him, USMNT
– Marcotti: Gattuso taught Italy to attack, but at what cost?
– Hunter: Will anyone stop Spain winning the World Cup in 2026?

Christian Pulisic — who was not part of the squad during the summer, which yielded plenty of criticism — was magnificent Tuesday night, finding so much freedom in possession as he constantly recovered the ball, made chances and notched an assist for Falorin Balogun. Club América’s Alex Zendejas was also excellent, capping a great performance with a lovely goal.

I also think that if there is meant to be any success in the future, it must unequivocally involve Chris Richards because I cannot overstate enough the importance of the center back from Crystal Palace. He is vital to everything the U.S. does.

Now, the actual result against Japan is neither here nor there — this was a friendly, after all, and the U.S. opponents rotated heavily after their draw with México, meaning key starters such as Liverpool‘s Wataru EndoTakefusa Kubo from Real Sociedad didn’t play while others (Brighton’s Kaoru Mitoma, Monaco’s Takumi Minamino) entered only as substitutes. This also wasn’t the U.S. team’s “strongest” XI either, but let’s not focus on this point; instead, let’s remember the bigger takeaway. On Tuesday night in Columbus, they players — and Pochettino — were able to see the personality of a cohesive, resilient and creative side and in my opinion, it was their best performance since the Argentinian took over.

I do think, however, that playing every single friendly on American soil is not necessarily a good thing for this team because tougher challenges will come their way. Instead, I wish they tested themselves more often in hostile environments against a legitimate World Cup contender.

Now, some have argued to me that in a nation with massive support for Mexico and other nations, playing in the U.S., from the Americans’ perspective, can already seem like playing in an away environment. But that’s not the same. I am talking about a U.S. side that, for the sake of hypothetical argument, should travel to Monumental stadium and face Argentina, or head to north Africa and test itself against Morocco in Rabat. Heck: forget major teams. Go and play a team such as Scotland or Indonesia, it doesn’t matter. The point is to face them at their house, in front of their fans, their culture and their support.

Canada, for example, did exactly that in the September window, with Jesse Marsch’s men winning 3-0 away at Romania and 1-0 against Wales in Swansea. The result is quite honestly secondary to the lessons you can learn when you play in alien territory, because this is how you learn how to get comfortable with the uncomfortable and if you want to make history at next summer’s World Cup, you have to be ready for everything. Being a host nation won’t save you.

The Americans’ remaining matches for the year are against EcuadorAustraliaParaguay and Uruguay — all good testers for 2026, but they’re all happening in the USA. After that, there are reports of games in March against European giants such as Belgium and Cristiano Ronaldo‘s Portugal, depending on their own qualification routes. These are all very strong opponents to warm up against, but I think playing in this kind of proverbial bubble, always at home, helps no one, most notably the United States men’s national team. Being a host nation means very little once the whistle is blown and the game kicks off.

But let me finish with a positive because on Tuesday night, Pochettino’s U.S. team played a tremendous game, which is hopefully a sign of continued progress and ultimate confidence that can build toward something very special by the time June comes around.

ONSIDE: The underdogs rise up in South America and Africa

South America’s automatic places for next summer’s competition were already cemented as Argentina, Ecuador, Colombia, Uruguay, Brazil and Paraguay had booked their tickets before the final matchday. So all eyes centered on Venezuela and Bolivia, who were looking to earn that seventh spot, which would put them in the intercontinental playoff spot.

Venezuela had the upper hand heading into the evening, but a heartbreaking 6-3 defeat at the hands of Colombia meant that Bolivia had an opportunity to do something they hadn’t done since 2009 — win against Brazil, and leapfrog Venezuela for seventh place. Just like 16 years ago, La Verde had the altitude to rely on as their Municipal stadium in El Alto stands at an overwhelming 13,600 feet above sea level — 1,800 feet more than their previous stadium in La Paz. Bolivia used this to their fullest advantage, not losing a single qualifier at home. In fact, in this campaign, they broke a World Cup qualifying record for most points earned with 20 points, and their singular victory away from home was against Chile last year, which ended up being incredibly important.

Against Brazil, they grabbed a 1-0 win thanks to a questionable penalty decision — what’s CONMEBOL without a little drama, eh? — but it must also be said that this has been a campaign in which Óscar Villegas’ team has played its heart out. In the end, Bolivia earned the playoff spot and are now closer to returning to the World Cup for the first time since 1994, which was funnily enough also hosted by the United States. This would also be the second time in Bolivia’s history where they have actually qualified for the tournament: their two other previous World Cup appearances (1930 and 1950) were done through invitation.Meanwhile, in Africa, Cape Verde — with a population equivalent to the city of Atlanta — won a historic game over Cameroon 1-0, meaning that the Blue Sharks have a lead at the top of their qualification group by five points. One more victory from their final two matches and they’ll be heading to their first-ever World Cup. After the final whistle, Cape Verde fans stormed the pitch, celebrating what could be an incredible conclusion to their campaign.Now, it must be said that if you’re an avid African football fan, this is not a complete surprise as this beautiful country, which consists of 10 islands and multiple islets, have done very well in recent years, including a quarterfinal appearance at the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations, but let’s not undermine this achievement. When you’re topping your group, one that includes a powerhouse like Cameroon, it is a testament to their work.

OFFSIDE: The end is nigh as the final chapters of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo are about to be written

Last Thursday night in Buenos Aires, Lionel Messi played his final World Cup qualifier with Argentina. The evening — a 3-0 win for the defending World Cup champions over Venezuela — also yielded a brace from Messi to make it 36 goals from 72 games in CONMEBOL qualifying, which convincingly leads the history books on the continent. On Tuesday night, La Albiceleste lost 1-0 against Ecuador, but regardless, it comfortably concluded their 2026 qualifying campaign at the top of the table.

Messi, who sealed this campaign as the top scorer in South American qualifiers with eight goals, didn’t play in Guayaquil as he returned to the U.S. in order to get ready for Inter Miami’s final run towards MLS playoff, so this essentially means that Messi’s career in World Cup qualifiers is done. His presence at next summer’s tournament is also, at this moment, not guaranteed.

“Given my age, the most logical thing is that it won’t happen,” the 38-year-old star said last week, also holding the record for most appearances at the World Cup. “I’m excited, eager, but I’m taking it day by day, match by match. … I’ll continue as I have been, taking it day by day, trying to feel good, and above all, being honest with myself. When I feel good, I enjoy it. And if I’m not good, I have a bad time and I’d rather not be there. I’ll see. … I haven’t made a decision about the World Cup.”Why is Lionel Messi not committing to the 2026 World Cup with Argentina?Kasey Keller and Alejandro Moreno discuss Lionel Messi’s future with Argentina ahead of the 2026 World Cup. Meanwhile in Europe, where UEFA qualifiers don’t finish until November, Cristiano Ronaldo also had a joyous international window. His pair of goals against Armenia in Portugal’s 5-0 rout meant that his 38 goals in World Cup qualifiers surpassed Messi and put him just one behind the recordholder, the legendary Carlos Ruíz from Guatemala. On Tuesday against Hungary, Ronaldo tied Ruíz with a penalty as Portugal won 3-2 against Hungary.Ronaldo, 40, also extended his international scoring record to 141 goals in 223 games. He will be 41 in February and his aim — just like Messi — is to play in a record sixth World Cup.So will we see a “Last Dance” next summer? Will the 2026 men’s World Cup be Messi and Ronaldo’s curtain call on the international stage?Even contemplating this feels surreal because after two decades of astonishing success and jaw-dropping memories, it’s almost unbelievable to believe that in the very near future, we will not see them play ever again, whether it’s for club or country.Years and years from now, younger generations will ask us about their incredible rivalry. They will ask about the most remarkable, inspiring and breathtaking time in the history of the sport when two superstars controlled the game in the palm of their hands and in turn, as we tell them all about it, we will als

Pulisic rates 9/10 as Japan win gets USMNT back on track

  • Cesar HernandezSep 9, 2025, 10:13 PM ET

Goals from Alejandro Zendejas and Folarin Balogun led the United States men’s national team to a 2-0 victory over Japan in a friendly at Columbus, Ohio’s Lower.com Field on Tuesday.

Following Saturday’s 2-0 loss to South Korea, the USMNT quickly bounced back with a more proactive attack through an experimental 3-4-3 formation. In a first half that included 63% possession, the home side created danger through high-pressing fullbacks Max Arfsten and Alex Freeman. After a clever dribble from Arfsten in the 30th minute, the 24-year-old launched a cross that found Zendejas, who impressively volleyed the ball into the back of the net.The U.S. continued its attacking influence in the second half.In 64th minute, the Americans doubled their lead after a pacey run from Christian Pulisic led to an assist for Balogun’s goal. Despite Japan shaking things up with second-half subs that wrestled back some of the momentum, the 2-0 result was cemented by the final whistle for the home team that had a late second wind in the dying minutes of the match.Looking ahead in their ongoing World Cup preparation, coach Mauricio Pochettino and his U.S. roster will take part in friendlies next month against Ecuador on Oct. 10 and Australia on Oct. 14.

Manager rating (scale of 1-10)

Mauricio Pochettino, 8 — Credit where credit is due. Pochettino took a tactical gamble after not only ringing in five different changes from his previous XI but also testing out a 3-4-3 formation. Sure, it wasn’t perfect, there were some questionable defensive moments in the new setup and goalkeeper Matt Freese was kept fairly busy by Japan’s opportunities. Nonetheless, the overall performance is a step forward after the loss to South Korea.


– As the World Cup nears, does Pochettino know USMNT’s starting XI?
– USMNT Player Performance Index: Top 50 Americans ranked by club form
– Carlisle: USMNT loss to South Korea another misstep in World Cup prep


USMNT Player ratings (0-10; 10 = best; 5 = average)

GK Matt Freese, 9 — USA’s starting spot in net appears to be his to lose after earning a clean sheet thanks to his six saves. He fumbled the ball during one of those interventions, but it didn’t end up hurting the scoreline.

DF Tim Ream, 6 — An inconsistent but decent evening for the captain. While he was a vital distributor that was able to get forward, Ream also found himself losing aerial deals and occasionally chasing attacking players.

DF Chris Richards, 7 — Not bad from the Premier League player who added more confidence to the backline. Provided crucial interventions but also had some imprecise passes going forward.

DF Tristan Blackmon, 6 — An improvement after his shaky debut last week. Although his decision-making may not be at an elite national team level, Blackmon still dished out some important clearances.

MF Max Arfsten, 8 — Looked much more comfortable in an advanced role. Wasn’t the strongest during defensive moments, but that may not matter much when you consider his attacking presence that created the assist for the first goal.

MF Cristian Roldan, 6 — A mixed bag from the central midfielder that was able to win back possession, but also didn’t regularly win his duels in the heart of the XI.

MF Tyler Adams, 7 — It wasn’t a vintage Adams performance, but it was still a big improvement from last week. Some crucial interventions in the midfield and plenty of accurate passing.

MF Alex Freeman, 7 — Granted, Freeman wasn’t superb defensively and could have done a better job with his distribution, but he should hold his head high with the ground he covered on the right flank and his overall involvement in the attack. A promising 90+ minutes.

FW Christian Pulisic, 9 — Roamed around, created his own opportunities with recoveries, dropped deep and then clinched the well-earned assist for Balogun’s goal.

FW Folarin Balogun, 8 — A clear upgrade over Josh Sargent. Balogun linked well with the frontline and created plenty of danger with his attacking presence. Briefly went quiet before scoring the second goal of the match.

FW Alex Zendejas, 9 — Zendejas dove into a tackle that earned a yellow card early on but quickly bounced back with his goal and clever movement in the final third. A statement performance from the highly involved Club America winger.

Substitutes (players introduced after 70 minutes get no rating)

FW Diego Luna, 8 — An energetic cameo from the young player that was a focal point in the buildup and almost earned an assist in the final minutes.

MF Jack McGlynn, 8 — Nearly scored twice, with the second shot rocketing off the crossbar.

MF Sergiño Dest, 7 — Provided the pass that led to McGlynn’s shot that hit the crossbar. Another player that could benefit from Pochettino’s change in formation.

MF Luca de la Torre, 7 — Accurate with his distribution and almost secured an assist from McGlynn’s first short-range opportunity.

FW Damion Downs, N/A — Subbed on in the 79th minute.

DF Nathan Harriel, N/A — Subbed on in the 84th minute.

So Bochitino want’s us to fill the stadiums but he doesn’t want us to question the players effort or his horrific tactics and player decisions. Ok Poch. Sure!!

Pochettino’s back three worked for the USMNT. What might that mean for the World Cup?

USMNT beats Japan in a friendly

By Jeff Rueter The Athletic Sept. 10, 2025

Mauricio Pochettino wasn’t hired to help the U.S. men’s national team win games against regional opponents or friendlies. Those were two areas in which predecessor Gregg Berhalter was still excelling up until the end of his tenure as coach. The perceived value of investing $6 million annually in the Argentine manager was his history of success in the club game. With his pedigree, the theory went, his fresh eyes could find diamonds in the rough of his new player pool and configure a system that would give the USMNT a better chance of making a deep run at the 2026 World Cup.A year isn’t a long time in a job, but it’s over halfway from when Pochettino assumed the role and when his ultimate performance review will commence after the World Cup comes to North America. At a certain point along the way, it’s expected there would be signs of progress.On Tuesday night, we finally saw some evidence of evolution. Pochettino seemed to adapt based on persistent issues with his base 4-2-3-1 — which he had used in all 11 games to date in 2025 — to a 3-4-2-1. By dropping a player from the attacking line beneath his striker and introducing a third center back, his team was able to play with more decisiveness in transition and more downhill intentionality.“I think we have players that play in this new formation,” Pochettino said after his team’s 2-0 win over Japan on Tuesday, listing a few defenders whose clubs play a similar system. “I think it’s good to have different plans, approach to the games, use different formations.”

It was successful, albeit in a win over a fully rotated side that qualified for the World Cup this spring. But it also led to a more entertaining performance from the USMNT than we’ve seen in some time. That latter point seems more dependably replicable in this shape, too.Throughout his first year, the U.S. player pool has been thoroughly examined as Pochettino familiarizes himself with dozens of previously unknown options. Some recurring issues were understandable consequences of his continued chopping and changing. Others suggested he just didn’t have the players available to make his ideal system sing.Often, a team that’s struggling to generate chances or results will flock to the wing for refuge. The wide areas are less congested than the central third, offering more open room for carries and give-and-go sequences that can quickly move upfield. It rewards players’ athleticism and instinct while helping advance in spite of a system that isn’t quite a well-oiled machine.One finding from the Gold Cup was that Max Arfsten was not a natural answer at left back in a 4-2-3-1. Arfsten plays as an attacking wingback with the Columbus Crew, and he didn’t have the awareness or defensive composure as the ball neared the box. The same zone was repeatedly targeted at the 2025 Concacaf Nations League, when Joe Scally started in defeats against Panama and Canada. Thus far, there’s no proven alternative to Antonee Robinson on the left in a back four.In this 3-4-2-1, Arfsten was playing a far more similar role to the one he occupies at the club level. His opposite number, Alex Freeman, plays his club soccer on the right edge of a back four. However, the 21-year-old has the mobility and positional awareness to play a more advanced role, as he often factors into the Orlando City attack.

For the first 15 minutes Tuesday, it was Freeman who was pinning Japan back with dribbles upfield. The opponent began to catch on, shifting its center a bit to its left to slow him down. Perhaps fueled by playing at the Crew’s home stadium, Arfsten had confidence and space to operate on the left, providing the game’s breakthrough with a well-looped cross.

Alex Zendejas scores for the USMNT vs Japan

Even at his defensive shakiest, Arfsten remained in Pochettino’s first team thanks to his attacking dynamism. He’s good value to win his attempted take-ons when dribbling, an invaluable trait to progress upfield while creating space for himself to cross. Asking him to lean into his bag of tricks is a less risky idea when there’s an extra center back to cover the defensive duties he was already struggling to handle. It also gets him into spots to make more actions like these, dribbling until he finds his crossing angle.

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The use of a wingback helps solve for one of the player pool’s biggest deficiencies. While Christian Pulisic is the current generation’s greatest success and Tim Weah has forged a steady career in Europe, the U.S. pool is concerningly thin on the wings. Rather than forcing the issue, this tweak to a base 3-4-3 operates with two attackers beneath the striker in the channel — more like attacking midfielders than touchline-hugging wingers.

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That’s great news for Pulisic, Weah and Alex Zendejas, who are each  more natural goalscorer than chance-creating crosser. It’s also good news for Malik TillmanDiego Luna and, potentially, Gio Reyna, who would still have an obvious home in the half-spaces. Pochettino could find his favored combination based on the matchup, offering simple tweaks to the format for each match.

The formation shift might also be a welcome change for his star pupil. As a left winger playing out wide, Pulisic can struggle with his decision-making in possession sequences and transition alike, needing to cut in-field and survey passing options while acknowledging his instinct to set up his own shot. In the seam, he has a bit less to mull over as he’s already at a shooting angle…

Folarin Balogun scores for the USMNT

…or able to slip a ball between the marking defender and a center back being pulled out of position away from his striker, as he did here to set up Folarin Balogun for the clincher vs. Japan. Don’t underestimate the value of Arfsten’s comfort in this role, offering a needed off-ball run to put the right half of the backline in two minds and thus giving Pulisic a little more space with which to operate. That has a trickle-down effect on the striker, who could get a little extra room with two more scoring threats or creators in close proximity.

As Pulisic exited following the assist, he gave Pochettino an affirmative nod while his coach gave a wink and a nod. Seemingly, they won’t see a need to swap barbs about this change on podcasts.


USMNT manager Mauricio PochettinoMauricio Pochettino’s changes paid off vs. Japan (Koji Watanabe / Getty Images)

After halftime, Pochettino told the TNT broadcast that he was happy to see his team getting used to “another system.” Given how it performed, we haven’t seen the last of it. So what does that change about the squad permutations heading into the 2026 World Cup?

The biggest question about how viable this 3-4-2-1 will be has to do with the position group most directly impacted: the midfield. No area of the field has been rotated more heavily and consistently under Pochettino, with the previous cycle’s set-in-stone baseline of Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Yunus Musah fully deconstructed to examine new options.

It goes without saying that two midfielders will have to cover more ground without a third teammate in the engine room. Sometimes, that’ll slow upfield progression until the ball sprays wide. Other times, it’ll allow opponents to take shots if they get behind the midfield and the backline is holding its ground, as Kōki Ogawa attempted in the 70th minute before seeing his chipped shot clang off the crossbar.

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While line-breaking with dribbles and passes alike is still a major benefit, tirelessness and agility to follow a play as the ball leaves your proximity are even more mandatory in a double-pivot. It may mean more coordinated in-game rotation to keep legs fresh, or more trust in players who are used to playing in a two-man midfield (like Cristian Roldan, this camp’s late inclusion).

Playing with two midfielders is also a risk sheerly in terms of Pochettino’s personnel. The pool is pretty deep in central midfield; beyond the incumbent ‘MMA’ trio, Tanner Tessman and Aidan Morris continue to thrive since moving to Europe, while Johnny Cardoso, Sebastian Berhalter and Luca De La Torre have continued to warrant looks with the national team.

Almost certainly, two of the players named above will miss the World Cup squad; it might be three if Pochettino needs more center back depth. Considering the lack of surefire center backs who can be starters at an international level, he might want the safety of choice.

USMNT's Chris Richards, Alex Zendejas and Tim ReamUSMNT center backs Chris Richards (3) and Tim Ream (13) with goal-scoring winger Alex Zendejas (Joseph Maiorana / Imagn Images)

If the midfield represents the pool’s deep end, then center back may be its wading area. Chris Richards and Tim Ream are the only options who have continued to make the majority of Pochettino’s camps, with Ream a month shy of his 38th birthday. Mark McKenzie starts for Toulouse in Ligue 1, but was bypassed in both September friendlies for the previously uncapped Tristan Blackmon. Miles Robinson and Walker Zimmerman are holdovers from Berhalter’s core. Celtic duo Cameron Carter-Vickers and Auston Trusty both missed this camp, and with the Scottish side missing out on the Champions League, they may not get the big-game tests needed to work back into Pochettino’s plans.

Of the program’s fullbacks, most — from Arfsten and Freeman to Sergiño Dest, Scally and John Tolkin — are more comfortable going forward than doing defensive work. The only exceptions are Robinson and Freeman; both could serve as makeshift wide center backs to offer further wide options and variety in possession, or play more naturally out wide.

The story of the September window, narratively, was one of impatience: discouragement that the team didn’t look more ready for next summer’s close-up, and confusion about the continued vetting of fresh faces so close to a World Cup. To Pochettino, a career club manager, friendlies may as well be his preseason. A string of bad results will harsh the vibe, but the losses can be spun into positive if lessons were learned.

“It’s hard to be more consistent,” Pochettino said. “(This) formation is more simple to understand, for the players, than the formation that we started in (against) South Korea.” From there, he emphasized the change as a chance to “simplify things” and lean into his players’ strengths. “We have a squad that can fit very well in that formation.”

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In that sense, the change in shape against Japan may have provided valuable validation of his trust in players like Arfsten and evidence that this new formation could fit his player pool best. There’s still a lot of work to be done, especially in midfield. But for now, the U.S. fanbase can see a sign of evolution under Pochettino — and, after such a tense aftermath to Saturday’s defeat against South Korea, that sure looks like some measure of progress.

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Jeff Rueter

Jeff Rueter is a senior soccer writer for The Athletic who covers the game in North America, Europe, and beyond. No matter how often he hears the Number 10 role is “dying,” he’ll always leave a light on for the next great playmaker. Follow Jeff on Twitter @jeffrueter

No doubt in my mind that Balogun is the leader for the #9 with Pepi at this point. I wish Sargent had more luck for the US but he just doesn’t score with the stars & stripes on. .

Pochettino shows signs of pointing USMNT in a positive direction

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino

By Charlie Davies Sept. 11, 2025 The Athletic

It has taken exactly one year, but at long last we have witnessed some signs of progress from Mauricio Pochettino’s U.S. men’s national team.

It’s nothing dramatic or radical, but after slumping to what has felt like the lowest levels possible, Pochettino and his players have given us a glimmer of hope. Tuesday’s 2-0 win over Japan was much-needed, but it wasn’t so much the result that pleased me, welcome as a win was after Saturday’s miserable performance against South Korea.It was the performance that cheered me the most; the ‘look and feel’ of a team that many, including me, had begun to fear was drifting aimlessly toward an inevitable disappointment in June’s World Cup. They suggested that maybe the die is not cast. That perhaps, we can still dream a little. Maybe.Collectively, Pochettino’s group, at last, looked something like a team rather than just a gathering of hopefuls thrown together for a tryout. And individually, there were some performances that reminded us that, as much as we may have despaired at recent displays, there is some talent with which the Argentine coach can work.Of course, we can’t get carried away. This was a Japan side missing many of its first-choice players, a ‘B team’ at best. But this wasn’t a full-strength USMNT either, and ultimately you can only beat what is in front of you.Crucially, for the first time in Pochettino’s tenure, there was a system change that made sense, a formation that fit the players and a collective comfort that has been sorely lacking. The manager may not overly concern himself with tactics, but he made a change and rolled out a back three with wingbacks — a shape that clearly played to the strengths of this squad. It made a real difference and allowed the U.S. to rely on the athleticism of its wide players, with Max Arfsten and Alex Freeman given license to attack.Arfsten, in particular, looked liberated, surging forward with the confidence he shows weekly for the Columbus Crew. Freeman, raw but with real potential, was less tidy on the ball but showed flashes of what he could become. Questions remain about the defensive side of his game, however. Early on he looked vulnerable, as Japan’s 23-year-old right wingback Henry Mochizuki targeted him. But he grew into the game as the U.S. took more control of possession, which allowed him to focus on his strengths going forward. That progression is encouraging.

USMNT beats Japan 2-0USMNT had plenty to celebrate during its performance vs. Japan (Adam Cairns / Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY Network / Imagn Images)

Antonee Robinson is the first choice at left back, but it is reassuring to see that Arfsten, who provided a pinpoint cross for Alex Zendejas’ opener, might have the potential to be a credible backup in a position where there is little depth, which would allow Pochettino to avoid shoehorning Tim Weah or Sergiño Dest into a left wingback role.Freeman is at an earlier stage of his development and the World Cup might come too soon for him, but he also looked more confident in a system where he didn’t have the sole responsibility of defending.The back line itself, felt settled for the first time in ages. Chris Richards is now the undisputed leader at center back, and apart from one badly misplaced pass, he exuded calm and intelligence. He plays in a back three at Crystal Palace and looked very much at home in that system.Tim Ream also looked better in a back three and at the moment he, too, looks to have a spot in the first-choice starting XI. Ream is more at ease when the defensive line is a little lower and with his experience and reading of the game, there doesn’t appear to yet be a real challenger to him on the left of the back three.Tristan Blackmon was better vs. Japan than he was against South Korea, but he is still untested at the top level, and there remains a place up for grabs. Pochettino did not get a true look at Noahkai Banks, the 18-year-old who has broken into the first team at Augsburg in the German Bundesliga. Perhaps his chance comes in the October friendlies against Ecuador and Australia.Matt Freese in goal has been solid, and at the moment the No. 1 jersey is his to lose. He may not yet look like the heir to the long list of top goalkeepers that this country has produced, but he is currently ahead of his rivals for that role.If left back has been a perennial headache, midfield is suddenly a source of abundance. The inclusion of 30-year-old MLS stalwart Cristian Roldan raised eyebrows — he’s had his chances and never quite convinced at international level — but his attitude and professionalism are beyond reproach. Roldan is the kind of player every squad needs: a glue guy, a leader in the locker room, someone who raises the standard without ever becoming a distraction. In a tournament setting, when you’re picking your final 26 and know some players might not see the field, you want a Roldan, not a malcontent, in the team camp.His performance against Japan was quietly effective, and with the likes of Weston McKennie, Johnny Cardoso, Malik Tillman, and Yunus Musah all absent, he took his chance to justify his late call-up.There is a debate over whether a solid performance against a weakened Japan justifies another call, but as Pochettino continues to learn about his squad, Roldan’s reliability and attitude may keep him in the mix, especially if injuries or club form keep others out.The formation used puts a lot of responsibility on the two central midfielders, and alongside Roldan, Tyler Adams looked to relish the responsibility and the knowledge that he had so much ground to cover, so much to take control of. It was good to see Adams looking hungry and determined to make that swath of the field his own. There is no doubt about Adams’s quality and leadership; he sets the tone for the midfield and looks ready to reclaim that role fully.

Mauricio Pochettino and Folarin BalogunMauricio Pochettino and Folarin Balogun share a hug after a successful showing vs. Japan (Joseph Maiorana / Imagn Images)

Up front, the most encouraging development was the chemistry between Christian Pulisic and Folarin Balogun. Pulisic, so often burdened by expectation, looked loose and liberated in this new system. Freed from the rigid demands of being “the guy,” he roamed, found space and played with a joy that’s been missing. His second half was his best in a U.S. shirt for some time, capped by an assist for Balogun.Balogun, for his part, showed why he’s now the undisputed starter at striker. His movement, hold-up play and ability to link with Pulisic were a cut above. He’s not just a poacher; he’s comfortable dropping deep, drifting wide and creating as well as finishing.His main rival for that spot is probably still Ricardo Pepi, but the two are very different kinds of strikers. Pepi is more direct, more of a pure No. 9 who plays off the shoulder and looks to get in behind. Balogun, with his Arsenal academy upbringing, is more unpredictable, more versatile and, crucially, a better passer. Having both in the squad gives Pochettino options.Zendejas not only showed his outstanding technique with the volley for his goal, but he looked much more at home in this formation as well, operating behind Balogun and in the inside channels rather than working a narrow strip out wide.Even during the slower passages of play, there was a sense of purpose and understanding. The wingbacks knew their roles. The midfield duo covered ground and protected the back three. Pulisic and Zendejas, no longer forced to play as traditional wingers, thrived in more central, creative roles. Across the team, the formation brought out better things from the players.

However Pochettino came to the conclusion that this change was worth a try, the fact is that he has uncovered something that worked. Yes, it worked against a second-choice Japan in a friendly setting, but it worked, period. Very little up until then had gone Pochettino’s way as pressure continued to build.It’s easy to forget that Pochettino had almost no time to drill this formation. There were no tactical sessions, no practice games — just a leap of faith.Sometimes, international football is about keeping it simple: give the best players a system they know, and let them play. Sometimes, progress comes not from grand plans or ideological purity, but from circumstance and necessity. Coaches stumble upon solutions, forced by injuries or form to try something new. The key is to recognize when something works and to have the humility to stick with it.This was not the finished article. Far from it. But for the first time in a long time, there’s a feeling that the USMNT has taken a step in the right direction.October presents fresh challenges: Ecuador is fresh off a World Cup qualifying win over Argentina, and Australia interestingly also plays the back-three system. Ecuador should present a bigger challenge than either South Korea or Japan, and with roster experimentation ideally behind the USMNT, improvement and consistency now become the priority.But we can now look forward to those games with anticipation. Finally – finally – there are signs of progress. And for now, that’s enough.(Top photo: Adam Cairns / Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY Network / Imagn Images)

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Charlie Davies

Former US men’s national team forward Charlie Davies is a contributor at The Athletic delivering hard-hitting opinion columns, straight-talking podcast appearances, and insightful explainer videos. Charlie made 17 appearances for the USMNT between 2007-09 and was pivotal in helping the team qualify for the 2010 World Cup, before his career was impacted by a serious car accident. He has remained firmly in the soccer spotlight with his TV contributions for CBS Sports and is one of the most prominent former USMNT voices in the country. Follow Charlie on Twitter @CharlieDavies9

USMNT after one year of Pochettino: Shake-ups, process and an unclear World Cup outlook

Paul Tenorio ept. 10, 2025

COLUMBUS, Ohio — One year ago, Mauricio Pochettino sat on a stage in lower Manhattan with a smile on his face, filled with optimism about the job he was taking on.“Everyone thinks that there is no time to prepare and to arrive in our best condition to the World Cup,” Pochettino said that day. “What I wanted to tell you is I am on the opposite side. I believe there is time enough. … Fútbol is like this: to touch the right buttons and we start to perform. For sure I think we have time. We have time. And we need to really believe in big things.”That time has slipped through Pochettino’s fingers faster than he might have expected.Exactly one year since Pochettino was named as head coach, the Argentine is still trying to find out exactly which buttons to press — and with whom. Tuesday night’s 2-0 win over Japan marked his only marquee win since taking the job, and it came against a heavily-rotated side in a friendly. Even so, it felt like a massive relief for a coach in need of some sort of positivity to reinforce what he insists is a carefully considered process centered around one finish line: next summer’s World Cup.Amid what has been a sometimes stormy tenure, including ugly losses at March’s Concacaf Nations League final four, poor results against World Cup-caliber opponents in pre-Gold Cup friendlies (making for the program’s first four-game losing streak in 18 years) and two defeats to rival Mexico, Pochettino has insisted that fans need only to be patient. The results would come, he said.His hope has to be that the win over Japan was the turning point in a rebuild he was paid handsomely to undertake.“Always when we talk about that sport, soccer, it is about (winning),” Pochettino said on Tuesday. “I am so pleased because I think the players deserved that result. … When you are strong in your ideas and your belief, it’s about to keep going and never give up. So (I’m) happy for that, yes.”But, he reiterated, the most important thing right now isn’t the results.“It’s the process,” he said.

It’s one that started at his introductory press conference last September 10, when the former Tottenham, Chelsea and PSG manager called his staff “winners” and talked about how they would “create the platform for (the U.S.) to perform.” A defiant Pochettino earlier this week reiterated the same idea: that his staff has a plan.“We know what we are doing,” he said. “We have experience.”Without the results, however, Pochettino was asking fans to blindly trust that his process would wind up in the right place when it counted most. U.S. Soccer sought a coach with Pochettino’s profile in part so that fans might have exactly that kind of confidence in how he built a team after taking over a side that was eliminated in the group stage of the 2024 Copa América – on home soil, no less.Pochettino was a hard pivot from Gregg Berhalter, a coach who spent almost his entire playing career in Europe but was still seen by some fans as an “MLS coach” supposedly holding back a mostly-European-based player pool. Pochettino came with a pedigree of success in European clubs — and a price tag to match. He is making a reported $6 million per year, the highest salary in the federation’s history.U.S. Soccer was willing to bet that Pochettino’s success at the club level would translate to the international stage. That hasn’t happened immediately.Still, despite some poor results, including Saturday’s 2-0 loss to South Korea, the players have been doing their best to buy in. The win over Japan was at least some validation of that faith.“(The coaches) have a plan in place, and they’re very well-versed in what they want to do,” U.S. veteran Tim Ream said on Saturday night after the Korea loss. “So for us as players, it’s all about coming in and adapting to what they want, what their instruction is, what their game plan is. … And that’s what we have to have to focus on as players. You can’t worry about, ‘Oh, we’re getting down to the wire. Oh, it’s going to be this.’ You just have to come in and adapt and adjust and do exactly what they’re asking you to do and go out and play the game.”

USMNT's Christian Pulisic and Tyler AdamsUSMNT core figures Christian Pulisic and Tyler Adams during Tuesday’s win over Japan (Adam Cairns / Columbus Dispatch / USA Today Network / Imagn Images)

Flipping the power dynamic

Pochettino’s tenure with the national team has, so far, been defined by his willingness to mix things up, especially after the March Nations League failures, when the U.S. lost to both Panama and Canada.“You remember March?” the coach asked, sarcastically and pointedly, during his press conference on Monday. “It was a wake-up call. Because we need to start a different process and (a) different approach.”

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Pochettino challenged regulars in the team to prove they belong. He leaned heavily into the MLS player pool and insisted the domestic league is every bit as strong as some of its European counterparts. (An ironic turn for a fan base who insisted it was Berhalter who would favor MLS players even as he heavily leaned on the European core.) Pochettino also didn’t back down from a public back-and-forth with star Christian Pulisic this summer.The winger asked to skip the Gold Cup so that he could get much-needed rest. But in an interview with CBS Sports defending the decision amid criticism from alumni like Landon Donovan, Pulisic mentioned that Pochettino wouldn’t allow him to play just in pre-tournament friendlies.The manager responded forcefully on the eve of the Gold Cup.“I think when I signed my contract [with] the federation [it said] I am the head coach,” Pochettino said. “I’m not a mannequin.”The interaction was a microcosm of how Pochettino has tried to alter the power dynamics within the program. His goal has been to create more competition, mine the pool for depth and solve for any complacency that crept in. But without the results to reinforce those efforts, it left the strategy wide open for criticism.Pochettino insists the payoff is coming. And he’s been fairly open that the next step in the process will start in October. Upon revealing his September camp roster, he called this month’s gathering a “last opportunity to bring some new faces that we didn’t have the possibility to bring in the past.” In theory, that should mean we should have a better idea of Pochettino’s full-strength squad next month.For now, the players who make up that group remain somewhat of a question mark.

USMNT's Malik Tillman and Diego LunaMalik Tillman and Diego Luna helped guide the USMNT to the Gold Cup final (Jed Jacobsohn / Getty Images)

Building out depth

ochettino’s roster decisions over the last six months haven’t always been up to him. He couldn’t bring Weston McKennie, Tim Weah or Gio Reyna to the Gold Cup due to Club World Cup commitments. Sergiño Dest, Antonee Robinson, Ricardo Pepi, Folarin Balogun and Zack Steffen were out injured and couldn’t go either. Pulisic and Yunus Musah asked for time off.For these September friendlies, Pochettino said he took club form and fitness into consideration when leaving players like McKennie, Musah, Johnny Cardoso, Malik Tillman, Robinson and Matt Turner at home. Others, like Tanner Tessmann, Joe Scally and Aidan Morris seem on the outside looking in.Pochettino this week used Tillman as an example for how the roster churn shouldn’t be seen as an assessment of the best players in the pool. Tillman was a player he clearly would have called in if the U.S. was playing World Cup qualifiers. The Leverkusen midfielder was the breakout player of the Gold Cup. But with the U.S. playing two friendlies, Pochettino saw more value in letting the attacking midfielder stay at his club and work back into full fitness after missing all of preseason with an injury following the summer tournament.“You can call (him),” Pochettino said. “But if you call and you take a risk and it’s a setback and issue, and maybe it’s one, two, three months that (he doesn’t) play, it is a big risk for the World Cup.”Instead, Pochettino saw more value in bringing in other players to test them. That way, if the U.S. has to reach further into the pool for the World Cup, they know which players they can trust. So while fans (and media) groaned at some of the players called into camp, questioning whether there is an opportunity cost when minutes are spent on Tristan Blackmon or Nathan Harriel, Pochettino saw it as a necessary step in his process.“Of course I want to win,” he said. “But also we need to think in the process.”For Pochettino, the win over Japan was a level of validation. He pointed to Alejandro Zendejas’ performance as one that pushed a player into a better position for “the race for the roster for the World Cup.” Max Arfsten and others improved their standing, too.October should be an even more important gauge for this program.

It won’t be clear if Pochettino’s message and motivation have taken with this group until we see some of the players who have been at home since March’s Nations League disaster.

How can we judge whether he’s motivated the likes of Tessmann and Scally — and whether they are better options than Sean Zawadski or Harriel — unless he brings them back in October and gives them a chance? How will we know what this U.S. midfield looks like with Tyler Adams, McKennie and Tillman starting, rather than Adams, Sebastian Berhalter and Diego Luna, if we don’t see them together?

USMNT manager Mauricio PochettinoMauricio Pochettino enjoyed a win over Japan, but successes haven’t been frequent in his time as U.S. manager (Koji Watanabe / Getty Images)

When winning matters

One year ago, Pochettino said “we are here because we want to win.” This week, he said the team didn’t have to start winning until the World Cup.

A national team coach operates on a different timeline than most any other type of coach. He’s not wrong that national teams are ultimately judged on their World Cup performances — not anything else. Gregg Berhalter used to say all the time that friendlies were times to experiment and try things, that sacrificing results in exhibitions in the name of success when the games counted made all the sense in the world. But that approach is fundamentally at odds with human nature.

Fans want to see wins. They want to see progress. Ahead of a home World Cup, that takes on even more importance. It’s part of the reason so many stadiums have been filled with fans of the opposition. It’s why a home World Cup feels so monumental. This is about building support around the national team, and in doing so to build up the sport in the country itself.

And it goes beyond just the fans. If the U.S. is going to find success at the World Cup, the players need to start to feel some level of confidence, too. So while wins won’t really matter until the World Cup, Pochettino’s process does need to account for wins before that.

“I love the feeling of winning, so I would like to win games before the World Cup,” Adams said this weekend. “I understand his thought process, and we talked about it in (the locker room). You could still have good performances and not necessarily get the result. But, yeah, I think at a certain time it’s important to have some results.”A result came Tuesday. Pochettino smiled at the end of his post-match press conference and said, “I’m looking forward to October.” It was a hugely different vibe than just a few days ago.The question will continue to come down to what Pochettino asked for: belief. Belief that there’s a plan behind some of what has felt, at times, like chaos. And belief that the plan will lead this U.S. team to something better than it was before he arrived. That, after all, is what U.S. Soccer is paying for.“It’s our responsibility to create the platform for them to perform,” Pochettino said that first day in New York last year.He will argue that the past year has been spent building that platform. Now the fruits of that work must start to yield results.he Japan win was, at least, a start.

(Illustration: Kelsea Petersen/The Athletic; Michael Owens/Getty, Catherine Ivill/Getty)

Folarin Balogun just reminded USMNT why he’s the answer to its striker problem

COLUMBUS, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 09: Folarin Balogun #20 of the United States strikes the ball during the second half against Japan during an International Friendly at Lower.com Field on September 09, 2025 in Columbus, Ohio.  (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Henry BushnellSept. 10, 2025

COLUMBUS, Ohio — In the 64th minute of a still-tight game Tuesday night in America’s heartland, Christian Pulisic skated past a Japanese midfielder, glanced up, and saw a somewhat novel sight.Over his nine-plus years with the U.S. men’s national team, Pulisic has turned and ran at countless defenders. He has spun into space countless times. He has skipped into dangerous positions game after game, and far too often, he has lacked options.But here at Lower.com Field, finally, Pulisic had the USMNT’s best option.

For the first time under head coach Mauricio Pochettino, he had Folarin Balogun.Spotting Balogun darting behind the Japanese back line, Pulisic stabbed a pass into space. Balogun surged onto it, nudged away a defender, finished with his left foot to the far post and gave the U.S. a 2-0 lead.

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1965581687175233703&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2Fathletic%2F6616031%2F2025%2F09%2F10%2Ffolarin-balogun-usmnt-striker-pochettino%2F&sessionId=71a2786b5d6cade94d862e1e59f2e852b34c82a6&siteScreenName=TheAthletic&theme=light&widgetsVersion=2615f7e52b7e0%3A1702314776716&width=550px

It was a “perfect example” of his movement, U.S. defender Tim Ream said, movement that made several teammates rave. “Even before that,” Ream continued, “he made a lot of good runs, a lot of [well]-timed runs, being able to get in behind when the pressure’s coming onto the midfielders, and onto the defenders, when we have the ball.”Balogun seemed to unlock the U.S. attack in a way that no other American striker has in years. Since Gregg Berhalter, the previous coach, took charge in 2019, 16 men have started up top for the USMNT; none has seized the position with two hands, two feet and consistent goals.Balogun, if healthy, is capable of doing that.

USMNT fans hope Christian Pulisic and Folarin Balogun can form a powerful combination. (Stephen Nadler / ISI Photos / ISI Photos via Getty Images)

“Balo is so good,” midfielder Cristian Roldan said.The Monaco forward is the most dynamic and well-rounded No. 9 that the USMNT has had this decade. And he could be a game-changer for Pochettino.He has been that, at times, since committing his international career to the U.S. over England and Nigeria in 2023. He went straight into the starting lineup, scored and won a trophy in his second match, looking like the striker the U.S. had been missing.But under Berhalter, who had built his system around a hole at striker, Balogun sometimes struggled. He scored just twice in nine appearances in 2024. Then, he battled injuries. Until last week, he still hadn’t linked up with Pochettino. As he recovered from an ankle knock last month, he was initially left off this September roster. He got an admittedly “late” call only after Vancouver Whitecaps veteran Brian White withdrew from the squad due to injury.That call, it turns out, might have changed the trajectory of the USMNT under Pochettino. The Americans created almost nothing from open play in a Gold Cup final loss to Mexico, and throughout most of Saturday’s 2-0 loss to South Korea. On Tuesday, in came Balogun, and plenty improved.“He brings that know-how, and the timing of his runs,” Ream said. “To be able to put defenders on the back foot, running back towards their goal, helps us massively.”Added Pulisic: “He gives sort of an out a lot of the times. Whether it’s coming into pockets and laying the ball off, or it’s little runs in behind, he just kind of relieves the team when we’re under pressure.”

As a winger for much of his youth, Balogun is most comfortable running towards goal, stretching an opponent. But he has worked to round out his game, and on Tuesday, that work was evident.He checked to the ball with the U.S. under pressure in its defensive half. In the 21st minute, with a defender on his butt near midfield, he seemed to cushion a careening ball to wingback Alex Freeman, then spun in behind, and ultimately created a chance for Alex Zendejas.

“It’s definitely something that I’m practicing,” Balogun said of playing with his back to goal, as a target.

“I’m more comfortable facing the goal — I think anyone is, to be honest. It’s difficult when you’re not facing the goal. You have to kind of use your perception, and use spatial awareness to try and protect the ball. But it’s part of the job of a striker.” And it’s a facet he’s improving.It’s on the run, though, where he excels. Against Japan, he was on the run as much as he’s ever been in a U.S. jersey.“When I turn, I feel like I look, and he’s making short runs across the back line,” Pulisic said.“I felt I had good connections with the other players,” Balogun said. “And yeah, I felt comfortable.”It was only his second game, and first start, under Pochettino. But already, he said, “I felt like I knew my job, and that’s a credit to what the coaches are telling us.” He was significantly more effective than the teammate he replaced, Josh Sargent. He combined with Pulisic for an early chance. His diagonal run from center to left helped spring the USMNT toward its first goal. And his second-half finish capped the victory.He could still face competition from Ricardo Pepi or others for a starting spot at the World Cup next summer. But for now, after a dreary weekend, he has injected promise and reminded U.S. fans of potential.His return and instant impact are among the biggest developments of the Pochettino era to date.The win felt “really good,” Balogun said. “After the game against South Korea, we wanted a reaction, we wanted to give the fans some good news before we split up with this camp. So, I was really happy.”(Top photo: John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

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9/5/25 US Men vs Korea Sat 5 pm vs Japan Tues 7 pm in Columbus, World Cup Qualifying, Leagues Cup Champ Seattle, Full TV Schedule

Around the World of Soccer

Interesting week of soccer I’ll start with Sad to see Wrexham’s Ollie Palmer’s farewell for those who watch We are Wrexham on FX or Disney+ Ollie was a big part of their multiple promotions – but his time with the club has come to and end. Also in the Championship American forward Josh Sargent Can’t Keep from Scoring as he notched a brace last weekend on his way to league leading 5 goals so far. Cool to see Pochitino Take in Ohio State College Football last weekend on Fox’s Texas vs OSU pregame show. Messi’s last home WC Qualifier at Argentina was last night. Another record signing on the ladies side as American & Angel City star Alyssa Thompson goes to Chelsea for $1.3 million-sad for my daughter who has season tix for Angel City FC. World Cup Tix Go on Sale starting next week unfortunately our closest locations are Atlanta & Kansas City. If you haven’t seen the Pulisic special series on Paramount plus its 8 episodes and worth the watch.

USA faces Korea Sat 5 pm then Japan Tues at 7:30 pm in Columbus on TNT, HBO, Peacock

So lets put it out there – I said it last week that Men’s Coach Bochitino has no clue what he is doing after again seeing what a pathetic roster he called in for this one of the last 10 games we will play before the World Cup. Now the media is finally starting to agree with me –ESPNFC Agrees Poch is Clueless. How he could leave home our starting GKs, starting 8, backup 6s, and outside backs is just beyond me. He should be getting this squad ready for battle against top 20 competition and instead he brought questionable MLS players in for their first camps. At least Pulisic is back and Dest and Weah. But there is still a lot of the core of this squad missing. I may be the one holding up the Go Back Home BOCHITINO POSTER in Columbus on Tuesday night. Clueless is all I can say at this point. I honestly think this guy is mailing this $6 million a year job in and laughing in our US faces. So what do I see this weekend? 1 loss and 1 tie. We’ll lose the first one to Korea and Son as he’ll torch our backline and its lack of speed. While Japan will match us in possession but will not beat us in the fortress that is Columbus with the American Outlaws in Full Voice. I hope we have a good crowd – though US soccer and Boch have given us NOTHING to get excited about. I truly thought Poch was gonna bring our A team and we would win both of these games this weekend. I guarantee if Nashville Headman BJ Callaghan who won a nations league and Gold cup with this team was in charge that is what would happen. But with Boch calling the shots its a lost and tie and him saying we need to play em better with more hart. Since I would have NEVER picked this US Roster– I have no clue who might start this weekend but lets try this.


Leagues Cup – Seattle Dominates Miami – Miami Fights Post-Game Disgusting

Seattle was truly spectacular last Sunday Full house in Seattle – as they destroyed Messi and Inter Miami 3-0 Hi-Lights  on the night. After such a fantastic Leagues Cup that the MLS dominated – it was sad to see Miami players Suarez and Busquets just absolutely lose it after the game as the post game broke out into an all-out brawl. I am not sure MLS has punished Miami’s punks enough as Suarez (6 games) and (Busquets 2 games) were only kicked out of Leagues Cup games. Suarez spit on coach or security guard from Seattle he has to be suspended from MLS games too.

More USA Friendlies this Weekend and Tues in Columbus

USA v. South Korea (Saturday, 5 p.m. ET, TNT/Peacock) 🇺🇸🇰🇷
USA v. Japan (Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. ET, TNT/Peacock) 🇺🇸🇯🇵

If the U.S. men’s national team World Cup squad was one of those reality cooking challenge shows, we are at the stage where the clock is running down but the raw ingredients are still spread out all over the prep table, and it remains to be seen if we can combine them into any kind of competitive recipe. South Korea and Japan will be testing mid-tier opponents. Win one game, get Pulisic firing, and we can all feel so much better. Lose both and it is going to feel very, very dark. Two very different paths lie ahead. Here are the headlines to prepare you for all that is to come:
Christian Pulisic, Our Lord and Savior, Is Back 🦅
When the roster for the upcoming friendlies was announced last week, Pochettino said he hadn’t spoken with Pulisic since the Gold Cup, adding, “I think everything is behind us, all that happened in summer, and I think now we need to look forward.” We will find out the truth of that the moment Christian takes the field for his first appearance since that Nations League disaster back in March. He has looked spritely for Milan with a goal in his first two games, but must now play for the U.S. with the same dominance as he did in the commercials which were omnipresent this summer. Knowing Christian, he will be highly motivated to score. He knows one electric moment of football can change everything in the blink of an eye. I would settle for another goal testicled over the line. When I spoke to Tyler Adams, he told me the difference between the U.S. with and without Pulisic is that Christian is the one American player who can make something out of nothing. I both pray and expect that to happen tomorrow. 


The Focus is Going to Shift Immediately from the Big Names Who Are Not There, to the Glut of New Ones Who Are ️
So much focus over the past weeks has been spent on the vast number of big-name players who were not called up. Make no mistake: this is an MLS-heavy, raw squad with some mighty omissions—not just reputationally in terms of the more familiar names like Weston McKennie and Gio Reyna, but also from a footballing perspective. Aidan Morris, who has been balling out for top-of-the-Championship Middlesborough, is outside looking in. 

There are honestly so many questions all over the field. Who is the No. 1 striker? Who is our goalkeeper, out of a very raw group? Who are our leaders? The midfield group looks very green aside from Tyler Adams. There is always a sense with our squad, that the big names—McKennie, Reyna, Brendan AaronsonYunus Musah—will come back and save us. We often tell ourselves this team is just a placeholder and that the cavalry is coming. What if it is not coming? And this is it?
The U.S. are playing South Korea and Japan. Two teams who are well-drilled, intelligent collectives, primed to punish any mistake we make at high pace. They will be stern tests. The kind of quality we could expect to face if we make the knockout phase of the World Cup. This is a moment for the USMNT to prove themselves to themselves against teams at the level of Türkiye and Switzerland, the two sides who outclassed them in friendlies ahead of the Gold Cup. 

One Thing Not to Worry About 
Finally, don’t stress the noise from outside pundits. Their voices and opinions and insights are actually what you want. I laughed with Tyler Adams that the volume of noise we currently have in the United States is a tiny squeak compared to the booming torrent of punditry in England or Italy. Think about how many former NFL or NBA stars have platforms to make their opinions known. 
A vast layer of pundits is ultimately a sign of a healthy football-sphere. Indeed, it will hopefully grow and grow as the profile of the game grows, and the U.S. men, please god, begin to capture the interest of the nation. That is the real story of the moment. This team needs to start winning. The empty seats at Gold Cup stadia spoke volumes about where this team is right now. Charlie Davies wrote this week: “There is already a worrying lack of enthusiasm bordering on apathy in the USMNT’s fan base at a time when positivity and optimism should be growing in anticipation of this huge moment in American soccer. I don’t even want to think about what the impact would be of another heavy loss at home.” It is hard to live out this team playing in the shadows like this. The truth is, we are in danger of becoming a club football country now. Liverpool-Arsenal felt like a massive rumble that captured the interest of American sports fans. The lack of casual chatter going into this U.S. game is deafening. This is the moment to change everything.

Got to Ref with Drew Emenhiser for the first time at Lawrence North Wed a little 2 man style.
Nice night for soccer with Jonathan and Andrew at Heritage Christian with the Girls Thursday night.
All Youth Players who wear their Jersey to the Game will get FREE ADMISSION vs #19 Columbus North

TV GAME SCHEDULE


Sat, Sept 6
9 am Fox Sport 2 Latvia vs Serbia WCQ
10 am CBSSN,Para+ Bolton vs AFC Wimbledon
12 noon FS2 England vs Andorra WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Ireland vs Hungary WCQ
5 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Korea
7:30 pm ESPN+ Charleston vs Indy 11
7:40 pm Tubi NC Courage vs Utah Royals NWSL
10 pm Tubi Bay FC vs KC Current NWSL
Sun, Sept 7
9 am FS1 Georgia vs Bulgaria WCQ
12 noon FS1 Lithuania vs Netherlands WCQ
2:45 pm FS1 Germany vs Northern Ireland WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Poland vs Finland WCQ
2:45 pm ?? Turkey vs Spain WCQ
3 pm Para+, Prime Chicago Red Stars vs Orlando Pride NWSL
4 pm CBSSN, Para, Prime, Washington Spirit (Rodman) vs Seattle Reign NWSL
5 pm ESPN NY/NJ Gotham vs Angel City NWSL
7 pm Apple free Sporting KC vs Austin MLS
8:30 pm ESPN San Diego Wave vs Houston Dash NWSL
Mon, Sept 8
2:45 pm FS2 Israel vs Italy WCQ
8:30 pm Para+, Peacock El Salvador vs Suriname WCQ
9:30 pm CBSSN, Para Panama vs Guatamala WCQ
Tues, Sept 9
12 noon ESPNDes South Africa vs Nigeria WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 France vs Iceland WCQ
2:45 pm ?? Serbia vs England WCQ
3 pm ?? Wales vs Canada
7:30 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Japan in Columbus, Ohio
9 pm Uni, TUDN Mexico vs Korea
Fri, Sept 12
2:30 pm ESPN2 Bayer Leverkusen (Tillman) vs Frankfurt
Sat, Sept 13
7:30 am USA Arsenal vs Nottingham Forest
10 am USA? Fulham (Robinson) vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
12 noon Para+ Juventus vs Inter
12:30 pm CBS NC Courage vs Angel City NWSL
5 pm Tubi Orlando Pride vs Bay FC NWSL
7:30 pm Tubi KC City vs Washington Spirit NWSL
7:30 pm Apple Cincy vs Nashville
8:30 pm Apple Seattle Sounders vs LA Galaxy
Sun, Sept 14
9 am USA Burnley vs Liverpool
11:30 am USA Man City vs Man United
11:30 am ESPN+ M’Gladbach (Reyna, Scally) vs Werder Bremen
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Bologna
3 pm ESPN+ Barcelona vs Valencia
3 pm ESPN Chicago Red Stars vs Portland Thorns NWSL
6 pm Golazo, Para Utah Royals vs Houston Dash NWSL
8 pm Golazo, Para Seattle Reign vs Racing Louisville NWSL
Fri, Oct 10
8:30 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Ecuador
Tues, Oct 14
9 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Australia

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US MEN

USMNT September 2025 friendlies USA vs. South Korea: what to watch for
Pochettino, Pulisic must reconcile for USMNT to be at its best going into World Cup

USMNT roster omissions might hamper World Cup preparations
2025 USMNT Friendly: Scouting South Korea
USMNT players on risks, rewards of World Cup year transfers
How Columbus became a Fortress for the USMNT 
Yanks abroad: Pulisic, Adams, Morris, Balogun stand out, Cremsaschi to Parma, and more
Mitrovic discusses U.S. U-20 team’s progress as World Cup nears
USMNT transfer grades: Analyzing every American move in the summer window

USMNT Embracing Competition to Impress Pochettino
The Group is Looking Lovely’: USMNT Looks to Build on Standard Set in Gold Cup
How the Legacy of Michael Bradley Remains with the USMNT
Cristian Roldan Added to USMNT Roster for September Matches against Korea Republic and Japan
USMNT Needs Momentum

Goalkeeping

Top Premier League saves from Matchweek 2 (2024-25) | NBC Sports
Top Premier League saves from Matchweek 3 (2024-25) | NBC Sports
Top Saves Leagues Cup
USL Championship Save of the Week – Week 26

NWSL

Chelsea breaks transfer record to sign USWNT’s Alyssa Thompson
Women’s transfer record broken again: Here’s what happened on WSL deadline day
Chelsea sign USWNT’s Alyssa Thompson from Angel City
Alyssa Thompson joins Chelsea: What to know about forward’s NWSL departure
Roundabouts, sheepherding, hot sauce: How USWNT stars adapt to life in England

MLS

Seattle Sounders humiliate Inter Miami: Leagues Cup title, trophy grand slam, and a night for the history books

Seattle Sounders humiliate Inter Miami: Leagues Cup title, trophy grand slam, and a night for the history books
Miami fight with Seattle after loss embarrassing
Shameful Miami after Leagues Cup loss to Seattle

Full house in Seattle


WORLD


Lionel Messi on future with Argentina and 2026 World Cup: ‘I haven’t made a decision’
Lionel Messi gives frank assessment of 2026 World Cup hopes after Venezuela win
Lionel Messi says presence at 2026 World Cup is unlikely – ‘The logical conclusion is…’

Daniel Levy steps down as Spurs chairman after more than 2 decades with the club
Real Madrid superstar Kylian Mbappe: ‘I don’t know if we’re ready for a 60-game

Unlike his Miami Teammates – Messi shows nothing but pure CLASS. The GOAT!

Reffing

Offsides?  
8 Second GK Rule
Interesting Var Review Audio Fulham game Shame
Head EPL Ref Howard Webb Says Var Missed it Fulham Game

Rough night of reffing at University High -with and Kyle. Beautiful night though.

Pochettino, Pulisic must fix rift as USMNT prep for World Cup

  • Jeff CarlisleSep 4, 2025, 09:56 AM ET

Mauricio Pochettino and Christian Pulisic are back together, with head coach and player taking part in the U.S. men’s national team training camp ahead of this month’s friendlies against South Korea and Japan.

Just how “together” they are will be revealed over the next week and beyond, but make no mistake: they need to be on the same page if the U.S. is to reach its stated aim of making a deep run at next summer’s World Cup.This isn’t to say that the two have had a falling out, nor do they need to be best friends and have regular dinners together. But there has been a disconnect.

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Pulisic waved off an attempt by Pochettino to sub him out of the third-place game at the Concacaf Nations League last March. He missed out on the recent Gold Cup two months later, and while USSF sporting director Matt Crocker said at the time, “We made the collective decision that this is the right moment for [Pulisic] to get the rest he needs,” the public backlash was intense, with former USMNT players, among them Landon Donovan, questioning the player’s commitment.

Pulisic’s response, in part, was to state in an interview with CBS Sports that he had offered to play in two pre-Gold Cup friendlies, but that Pochettino had turned him down. Pulisic later said in the interview that he didn’t understand the decision even as the manager explained he wanted just one roster for the entire Gold Cup program. While Pulisic’s impulse to defend himself is understandable, divulging some of the deliberations about his Gold Cup participation was a mistake and only served to annoy Pochettino. The U.S. manager responded, stating that he is “not a mannequin” and that he alone would decide who plays for the USMNT and when. When the roster for the upcoming friendlies was announced last week, Pochettino said he hadn’t spoken with Pulisic since the Gold Cup, adding, “I think everything is behind us, all that happened in summer, and I think now we need to look forward.”Left unsaid is how effective that approach will be if there hasn’t been any communication. To be clear, success at the World Cup doesn’t rest solely on Pulisic, as numerous moving parts need to align for a deep run to occur. The U.S. needs to sort out its goalkeeping situation. Right back Sergiño Dest has to be healthy, the better to augment the attack with his ability to deliver the unexpected. The same is true for Antonee Robinson on the opposite flank. Holding midfielder Tyler Adams needs to be at his ball-hawking best. One of the available strikers — be it Folarin BalogunRicardo PepiJosh SargentHaji Wright, etc. — needs to hit top form ahead of the tournament.But Pulisic’s combination of talent, creativity and experience remains a critical piece of the attack. When Pulisic plays well and is in full flow, the team usually follows suit. Scoring goals is the most difficult part of the game, and Pulisic remains a vital contributor to that aspect of the cause. Pochettino and Pulisic need each other for the team to succeed. Part of what’s at issue between Pulisic and Pochettino is that the U.S. manager is in the middle of attempting a cultural reset. That goes for everyone, from the biggest stars down to uncapped players who get called in. Pochettino is demanding total commitment, at least as he defines it. As fatigued as Pulisic was after playing over 50 games a season at AC Milan the last two years, his decision to sit out the Gold Cup, while offering to play in the two friendlies before the tournament, sent Pochettino a different kind of message.

“If you arrive to the camp and you want to spend a nice time, play golf, go for a dinner, visit my family, visit my friend, that is the culture that we want to create?” Pochettino said last May. “No, no, no, no, no. What we want to do is to go to the national team, arrive and be focused and spend all my focus and energy in the national team. If we want to be good in one year’s time, we need to think that today is the most important day.”The adjustment from the players — including Pulisic — to Pochettino’s approach has taken some time. Defender Tim Ream admitted after the Gold Cup that it had taken too long. At Tuesday’s media availability, Ream said that with players just arriving, there hadn’t been a team-wide meeting yet to discuss expectations, though coaches had been pulling players in for individual meetings.”We’ll sit down I’m sure [Tuesday] and have a discussion,” he said.”But for us, it is just the guys who were here during the Gold Cup … We kind of know what the standard needs to be and what it is going forward and just making sure that everybody’s being held accountable, pushing each other, helping each other, and making sure that we all know that we’re on the same page, we’re on the same team.”Pochettino was a top-flight manager for 15 years — with stops at Tottenham, Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea — before taking up with the USMNT. If there is to be movement in any direction, that will fall on Pulisic, because Pochettino won’t be changing his ways. The U.S. manager has made it clear that no one’s spot is secure. Weston McKennie was left off the current roster, and while Pochettino blamed his absence on a lack of rest due to participation in the Club World CupTim Weah had a similar workload, yet was included in this camp. Relationships between players and coaches can be fluid, going through difficulties. Pulisic’s rapport with former U.S. manager Gregg Berhalter experienced some rough patches before the two found alignment ahead of the 2022 World Cup, in which Pulisic played a critical role in the U.S. reaching the round of 16. That could very well be the case with Pochettino and Pulisic. However, Pulisic and the rest of the team will need to adapt to Pochettino’s ways.

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USMNT’s home crowd dilemma is US Soccer’s age-old problem

Guatemalan fans at the Gold Cup semifinals

By Paul Tenorio Sept. 5, 2025 10:00 am EDT


Since taking over as coach of the U.S. men’s national team last fall, Mauricio Pochettino has had a jarring introduction to some aspects of American soccer culture. He has felt it most acutely standing on the sideline and looking into the stands around him.Pochettino’s first competitive games in charge of the U.S. were opening acts in doubleheaders staged by Concacaf, meaning swathes of ticket holders for the late games, which featured Mexico, didn’t show up for the U.S. contests. Then, during the Gold Cup, Pochettino experienced the power of the immigrant communities in the U.S. as Guatemala fans far outnumbered Americans in St. Louis for the semifinal and Mexico supporters created a home-field advantage for El Tri in Houston in the final.Other games highlighted a lack of interest. Six games between September 2024 and July 2025 had 18,008 or fewer fans in attendance.For an Argentine used to diehard fans packing home stadiums, the huge numbers supporting visiting teams and the lack of U.S. fan support seemed to catch Pochettino off guard. After the final, he implored U.S. soccer fans to come out and support the team. “I would love to see my players playing with 70,000 people cheering,” Pochettino said in the postgame press conference in Houston. “We need the people. We need the fans. The fans have one year to realize how important are the fans in soccer.

“I think that today (against Mexico), like with Guatemala, it’s a scene in our country to see how important are the fans – to be in the stadium, to stay with the team, to support, not only through Instagram, social media or behind the TV. It’s (important) to be here and translate the energy.

“Football without fans? It’s impossible.

Mauricio Pochettino ha expressed his wish for packed home crowds – full of USMNT fans. (Robbie Jay Barratt / AMA/ Getty Images)

“Here, I think that it’s time to realize that we need the fans. … I think, I hope, and I wish, next time to play with full stadium, with our fans there cheering for the team and helping to achieve a good performance and good result.”The U.S. coach was wading into an attendance issue that has ensnared the program for more than a decade now. It traces back to a ticketing strategy built around revenue rather than accessibility, a team that has struggled on the field and the realities of playing a global sport in a country defined by its diversity.On Saturday, the U.S. will play South Korea in front of a 25,000 sold-out crowd at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, New Jersey. Tuesday’s friendly against Japan at Columbus’  20,000-capacity Lower.com Field is trending toward a sellout as well. Fewer than 600 tickets were available, including suites and premium options, as of Thursday night.The crowds are indicative of U.S. Soccer’s efforts to alter the equation and find the right mix of market, price point and opponent to balance sporting goals, fan engagement and revenue-driven realities. With what has long been expected to be a transformative home World Cup approaching, the efforts to reach new fans and bring them into the gates are as critical as ever to the short- and long-term growth of the sport. As the men’s team struggles to get results, making the games more accessible will be a vital part of any attempt to build excitement in the run-up to the tournament.


The slide is infamous in American soccer circles. As part of a presentation at a board meeting in 2017, U.S. Soccer executives presented how the federation’s ticketing strategy shifted from the 1998 World Cup cycle through to the 2018 cycle to emphasize smaller venues and higher ticket prices for U.S. games. Ticket prices in the 2002 cycle averaged $28.05. By the 2018 cycle, when the U.S. men missed the World Cup, the average price jumped to $97.06. Revenue more than doubled, from $7 million over eight games in the 2002 cycle to $17.6 million in the 2018 cycle. But it came at a cost of attendance and accessibility. In that same period, attendance dropped from 249,266 fans across eight games to 181,090.What You Should Read NextDoes USMNT have an attendance issue? The answer isn’t simpleThe USMNT’s friendlies against Canada and New Zealand were played with swathes of empty seats in the stadia – but is that cause for concern?

Undoubtedly, the socioeconomic makeup of those in the stadium shifted along with those fast-rising prices.U.S. Soccer chief commercial officer David Wright insists that the federation is “an organization that has evolved dramatically in the last three to five years.” But ticket prices for games can vary dramatically, based both on dynamic pricing and also on the business realities for U.S. Soccer.

“We’re a 501(c)(3), nonprofit, but as many people know, our ability to drive revenue is really important because it funds and candidly accelerates our ability in the sport,” Wright tells The Athletic. “Obviously, we’ve got our women’s and men’s senior national teams, but we have 25 other national teams that are really important to U.S. Soccer and our overall efforts throughout the game. We’re also thinking about coaching, we’re thinking about refereeing, thinking about participation, and have programming against all three to grow. So it takes resources. It’s always a balance between the business side, but then also providing access and accessibility.”

The USMNT takes on Japan, and Yuto Nagatomo, next week. (Koji Watanabe / Getty Images)

Tickets were available for the Japan friendly in Columbus for less than $50. The get-in price for friendlies in Austin and Colorado in October are currently $54 and $75, respectively. Tickets prices in New Jersey were not as friendly. The original get-in price for non-supporters in New Jersey was $50, but a month later that had jumped to $180.There have been at least some steps toward increasing that accessibility.U.S. Soccer recently reached a deal with the American Outlaws, its largest supporters group, in which all tickets for supporters in federation-hosted matches through October 2026 will be capped at $45 (plus fees), and will be sold directly by the Outlaws to members.The aim is not just to drive accessibility, but to bring new fans into the supporters’ culture.“Our supporter groups are the lifeline,” Wright said. “They provide incredible energy and atmosphere. I think it also speaks to our fan-first approach. We’re an evolving organization. We have great relationships with our supporter groups. And I think it’s just an acknowledgement that (they) are really important, and to be able to provide access in a really meaningful way is a win-win.”In a statement, Justin Brunken, co-founder of the American Outlaws said the partnership, “helps eliminate one of the biggest barriers — cost — and makes it possible for more passionate fans to stand, sing, and support together.”“This isn’t just about saving a few bucks,” the statement read. “It’s about keeping soccer grounded in community.”U.S. Soccer has also done more outreach toward college students to bring younger games into the stadium at discounted prices.The business side of U.S. Soccer has changed dramatically since 2017, which has also impacted the reliance on ticket revenue for the federation’s aims. U.S. Soccer brought all commercial work in-house in 2022, ending its longstanding relationship with Soccer United Marketing. Since the federation’s sponsorships have been moved in-house, commercial and event revenue has increased substantially, with projections above $200 million in total revenue.The federation also grew out its “advancement” team, which focuses on donations. Those efforts have brought in enormous donations from Arthur Blank for the new training facility and Michele Kang with a directive to grow women’s and girls’ soccer, as well as many other donations pointed toward everything from hiring Pochettino to growing youth programs or coaching and referee education. In prior years, U.S. Soccer raised between $4 to $6 million annually in contributions. That number jumped to around $70 million under the expanded advancement team.“As a percentage of revenue, (ticker revenue will) come down, but it doesn’t diminish the importance,” Wright said. “Not only is the revenue obviously important to fuel the business and to provide opportunities, but it’s obviously one of the most high-profile opportunities to engage with fans,” Wright said. “So the ability to have 20 to 25 marquee matches a year that provide access and leave an impact in a community, while also engaging millions of fans via social (media) and broadcast is really important. It’s something that we recognize, and obviously we’re leaning in on.”The strong expected crowds in New Jersey and Columbus show that the U.S. men can draw a crowd, but finding the right venue and the right opponent is an increasingly difficult dance.


It’s easy to point to some of the repeat visits to cities — Austin, Columbus, Cincinnati, St. Louis — and wonder how exactly U.S. Soccer makes decisions on where they play games. It’s not an easy process.

It starts with finding an opponent, which has been especially difficult in this cycle because the U.S. men are not playing qualifiers, but confederations are still going through their qualification process. That, combined with the Nations League, has decreased available opponents in every window.Once an opponent is found, John Terry, U.S. Soccer’s senior director of events, tries to narrow down markets based on a number of factors.Opponents often have preferences on how far they will travel based on their second opponent in the window and where that game is being staged. Brazil, for example, was willing to play the U.S. ahead of the Copa América, but only if the game was staged in Orlando. U.S. Soccer was willing to make that accommodation, and to play on a temporary surface at Camping World Stadium, in order to get a game against such a high-quality opponent.U.S. Soccer also has to find training facilities for both teams in markets — one reason why it hasn’t frequented the New York market as often, for example, and why Austin and St. Louis have been favorites for the team.The availability of venues in markets isn’t always simple either. In the fall, U.S. Soccer is contending with the NFL, college football, MLS and concerts. It has to think about the cost of playing on grass laid on top of turf — both in terms of dollars and in quality of play. It considers the size of the venue and the ticket demand in the market. And it isn’t picking a city based solely on what is happening in that window. It also has to consider future windows and look at where it can play games in future months. And, of course, it’s weighing those options simultaneously for both the men’s and women’s national teams.

Austin’s Q2 Stadium has become a popular site for the USMNT. (David Buono / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Even then, repeats can happen. U.S. Soccer had its October USMNT friendly scheduled in Austin against Ecuador for months when Concacaf put them in Austin for a Gold Cup group stage game this summer, for example. Meanwhile, travel for a team increasingly based in Europe has made it more difficult to schedule games on the West Coast. (Though the makeup of the roster under Pochettino has been swinging back toward a prominent mix of MLS players.) U.S. Soccer also tries to avoid traveling far distances between games in a window. There has been an effort in recent years to go to new markets, or to get back to cities for the first time in several years. That includes a friendly played in San Antonio, Saturday’s game in New Jersey — the first there since the U.S. lost to Costa Rica in World Cup qualifying in 2017 — and a reported friendly set for Tampa in November. “It’s not just because we’ve got a World Cup (coming), that’s a strategy that I think we’ve employed for a number of years now,” Wright said. “For us, it’s: How do you expose the sport to a variety of different markets, but also partner with local markets that really want you to be there?” In addition to all of those considerations, U.S. Soccer does think about trying to maximize home field advantage. But as the pro-Guatemala crowd in St. Louis showed, sometimes it doesn’t matter where the U.S. plays. The makeup of the country is such that it can lead to crowds that favor the visitors.That may not always be what the coach or team wants, of course. But for U.S. Soccer, there are still gains to be made in those crowds. “The amount of diversity in this country is a really, really powerful thing, and something that, as an organization, I think we’ve really leaned in and embraced,” Wright said. “If you’re a fan of the sport in this country, we believe we’ve got a real opportunity to engage with you. There’s about 130 million fans of the game. We expect that number to drastically increase coming out of the next summer. Not all those 130 million are passionate U.S. soccer fans, but they’re passionate about the game … And I think it is really powerful as we think about the future. It’s a huge area of opportunity.” Those points of connection will be the true measure of success of the World Cup, and that’s a process that has already started. The magnitude of the World Cup’s impact will depend on many things, including the results of the host team. But beyond what happens on the field, U.S. Soccer must find wins off of it, too. Getting the cities, venues and prices right to open the game up to fans can make just as lasting an impact. (Top photo: Joe Puetz / Imagn Images)

USMNT’s Balogun finally has his chance for a late first impression on Pochettino

USMNT striker Folarin Balogun

By Henry Bushnell Sept. 3, 2025


U.S. striker Folarin Balogun, back with the national team for the first time in nearly a year, said Wednesday that the injuries that kept him away from the USMNT are “behind me.” “I’m in a good shape, and in a good way,” Balogun said via Zoom from U.S. camp in Morristown, N.J., ahead of Saturday’s game against South Korea. Those injuries cost him four consecutive U.S. camps, the team’s first four under head coach Mauricio Pochettino. Balogun, after starting or appearing in all nine A-team games for the USMNT in 2024 under former head coach Gregg Berhalter and interim Mikey Varas, missed camps in October, November and this past March due to injury. He was initially named in Pochettino’s pre-Gold Cup squad, but also withdrew from that camp due to an ankle ailment. “It was a tough period, but I think every athlete goes through that at some stage,” Balogun said. Another ankle issue in August cost him a preseason game and Monaco’s Ligue 1 opener. It was presumably part of the reason why the 24-year-old was not on the first version of the USMNT’s September roster, which was revealed last week. But when Brian White withdrew due to injury, U.S. Soccer contacted Balogun, who’d made his 2025-26 debut that past weekend, playing 90 minutes in a 1-0 loss to Lille. “I got the call — I can’t remember the date, exactly, but it was a bit late,” Balogun acknowledged Wednesday. “I was really happy,” he added. “It was important for me to be back with the team.” Several days later, he scored his first goal of the season in a 3-2 win over Strasbourg. Then he jetted across the Atlantic, to New Jersey, where he was one of the last to arrive at U.S. camp. Now, he will get his chance to make a delayed first impression. He is one of a few players who, at roughly the midway point of Pochettino’s tenure, are meeting and training under the new boss for the first time. “Everyone wants to make an impression,” Balogun said. “And I think that’s just natural, with such a big competition coming in 10 months, it’s important to leave your mark.” That “big competition,” of course, is the World Cup. The 2026 edition, slated for June and July in the U.S., Canada and Mexico, would be Balogun’s first. For roughly 11 months, the countdown to that milestone coincided with Balogun’s absence from the USMNT. Now, a first opportunity to impress the coach who’ll select the U.S. World Cup roster might lead some players to press, to over-exert, to try to be something other than themselves. “That’s part of the psychology, to not overdo it, because things will just become more complicated,” Balogun said. “The harder you try sometimes, the more difficult it is.” But Balogun is comfortable searching for and finding a middle ground, and pushing for a potential place in the U.S. starting lineup come next June. He’ll compete with EFL Championship leading scorer Josh Sargent and new Southampton signing Damion Downs for the prime minutes at striker in this camp, which also includes a friendly against Japan. “It’s something I’ve been doing all my career, fighting for my position and fighting to get in teams,” the former Arsenal academy product said. “I believe that’s a balance that comes naturally to me.” (Top photo: Sam Hodde/Getty Images)

Pochettino, ‘jealous’ of CFB atmospheres, wants Americans to share same passion with soccer

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 29: Head coach Mauricio Pochettino of United States gestures before the Gold Cup 2025 Quarterfinals against Costa Rica at U.S. Bank Stadium on June 29, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.  (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

By Henry Bushnell Sept. 5, 2025Updated 2:39 pm EDT


MORRISTOWN, N.J. — For Mauricio Pochettino, the 2025 Gold Cup doubled as a crash course in American soccer culture. First in half-empty stadiums, then in front of hostile crowds on home soil, the Argentine coach of the U.S. men’s national team seemed shocked by the lack of public passion for his team.After a Gold Cup semifinal against Guatemala and a final against Mexico, he spoke about the missing emotional connection between U.S. players and fans. “The fans,” he said, “have one year to realize how important fans are in soccer.”Ahead of his next USMNT camp, though, he learned that such passion exists in the United States — for the other type of football.Last Saturday, Pochettino visited Columbus, Ohio, for the Week 1 college football showdown between the universities of Ohio State and Texas. He stood among a crowd of 107,524 people, nearly all wearing red and silver for the Buckeyes. “It was amazing,” Pochettino said Friday ahead of the USMNT’s first of two September games (Saturday against South Korea).“For me, it was a massive surprise,” Pochettino continued. “I’m 53. It’s difficult to have this type of surprise. But to live the atmosphere that we lived there, three hours before, seeing the passion of the people, the atmosphere … the fans in the stadium, 100,000. I was so jealous.”

He was jealous, of course, because that type of passion often doesn’t follow the USMNT or any U.S. soccer team.“I was so jealous, I said, ‘I want to coach these teams. I want to be next,’” Pochettino said with a wide smile and a laugh.Throughout his three decades in soccer, he has played for and coached teams boosted by similar passion. He has seen it at Newell’s Old Boys and Espanyol, at Tottenham and Paris Saint-Germain.When he didn’t see it this summer — or when he saw it for Guatemala in St. Louis, and when he saw it for Mexico in Houston — he called it out.“The fans gave to you, to Guatemala, an unbelievable energy,” he said after the U.S. squeaked past Los Chapines in the semis. “That is football. That is football. When we say the connection between the fans and the team, that is the connection that we like to see in the World Cup. That connection that makes you fly. The energy that translates.”He said he saw Guatemala players crying after the loss and noted, “That is the way that we need to feel. And our fans need to feel the same. It’s not to come here to enjoy all the spectacle, and if you lose, nothing happens. … You play for your pride. … When we talk about culture, that is culture. … That is an important thing that we need to learn here in this country.”Pochettino saw an example of that kind of sports culture at 9 a.m. last Saturday, when he appeared on Fox’s Big Noon Kickoff pregame show in Columbus. He led an “O-H-I-O” chant. “We really feel the passion of the people here in this country,” he said Friday.And he knows that part of his job, as USMNT coach, is to try to create that passion for soccer. He talked Friday about being a “representative or ambassador” for the sport. “I think I feel a little bit of responsibility,” Pochettino said. “It’s our responsibility to translate to all these people that maybe are more focused on another sport like football, American football. It’s to try to convince them (to) share with soccer that passion. “If only a little bit we can translate to our sport, I think our players will appreciate a lot, and for sure (the fans) will help us to achieve or earn what we want.” (Photo: Stephen Maturen / Getty Images)

USMNT star Tim Weah doubles down on ‘evil’ comment about former players turned pundits

USMNT's Tim Weah and Yunus Musah

By Henry Bushnell Sept. 4, 2025


U.S. men’s national team forward Tim Weah said Thursday that he doesn’t regret calling former USMNT players turned pundits “evil” for their criticism of the current team.Weah made the comments earlier this summer in an interview for Christian Pulisic’s Paramount+ docuseries. The remarks aired in an episode released last month and reignited the public spat between active USMNT players and alumni.“I think those guys are chasing checks,” Weah said in the docuseries. “And for me, I just feel like they’re really evil. Honestly. Because they’ve been players, and they know what it’s like when you’re getting bashed. Those are the same guys that’ll turn around and shake your hand and try to be friendly with you at the end of the day.”“Don’t get me wrong,” he added, “I respect all of them. They were the players that I looked up to. But quite frankly, the guys before us didn’t win anything, either. Christian himself has had a better career than every single one of the guys who speak negative on us.”On a video call with reporters Thursday from U.S. camp in New Jersey, Weah was asked whether, in retrospect, he felt the term “evil” was accurate and appropriate.“One hundred percent — don’t regret anything I said,” he began. “But I’m fully focused on the positives now. I’m leaving all that negative energy out the window.”

Tim Weah, left, trains with USMNT teammate Folarin Balogun. (John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

Weah continued: “I think right now it’s important to kind of shift the focus to what we’re doing as a group, and what this team is doing, and how we can execute performances and kinda take our game to the next level in order to be prepared for the World Cup. I’m 100 percent focused on that. And if that means blocking out all the noise, that’s what we’re gonna have to do. We’re just focused on what our main goal is. We’re, each camp, trying to build. I’m so happy to be back with the boys.”

Weah missed this summer’s Gold Cup while with Juventus at the Club World Cup. Then, last month, he completed a roughly $17 million transfer from Juve to Marseille — a club with whom his father, George, played for six months at the end of his career. The move begins as a loan deal but includes an obligation to buy after the current season. “The move to Marseille was a fun one, obviously, with my family history,” Weah said Thursday. “Joining the club, for me, was a no-brainer. I know the history of Marseille, how passionate that city is and how fans are and the team is. I knew it was the right place for me to be before the World Cup and building up to one of the biggest tournaments of our lives.” U.S. head coach Mauricio Pochettino left other regulars who’d recently moved to new clubs off his September roster. Pochettino said last week that the reason for omitting Johnny Cardoso, for example, was to allow Cardoso to settle at Atlético Madrid.Weah completed his transfer more recently and has played fewer games for Marseille than Cardoso has for Atleti. But when asked if missing this U.S. camp was ever a consideration, Weah said, “No, I never thought about not coming into camp.”“As Marseille’s a priority, the national team is also a priority to me as well,” he continued. “Coming here, and being with the group, and building on what we already have, and fine-tuning a lot of things, for me, is important. Because at the end of the day, the goal is nine months away. We have to perform and be on top of our game. So, any chance I get to come in and kinda build with these guys, I’m 100 percent for it. I’m always here.”He also spoke about Marseille — the city and club — as the ideal place for him as he and the USMNT build toward next summer.

“The club is everything to the city, everything to the fans. I mean, they eat, sleep, breathe football; eat, sleep, breathe Marseille,” Weah said. “You know what it means to them, it’s their heart and soul, so you have to give 100%. If we lose a game, they’re on us. It’s super intense. Just the group alone, we get into so [many] fights together, in trainings, in the locker rooms, that people think we’re crazy at times. But it’s just because everyone is so passionate, everyone has the same goal, everyone wants to win. “And I think being at a club like that before the World Cup, and before going into something so big, I think it’s super important for me. Because I get to build that mindset of being a warrior, I get to build on that. I think that’ll be super positive for me going into the World Cup — and also for the [national] team, because I get to bring that kind of vibe into camps when I come back.”(Top photo: Jeff Roberson / Associated Press)

8/29/25 USMNT Roster Drop, Leagues Cup Final Miami vs Seattle Sun 5 pm, Indy 11 home Sat,

US Men Roster Drop for Sept 6 & 9 Games – No McKennie, Musah, Wright, Turner, Scally

There are 12 players on the roster who competed in the Gold Cup this summer. However, there are some notable absences from players who were excluded due to recovering from injury, as Pochettino opted to have them remain with their teams to continue building up full fitness, even as some recently returned to the field. Those players include Antonee Robinson, Ricardo Pepi, Malik Tillman, and Patrick Agyemang.

Several regulars were not selected for the September roster, including Weston McKennie, Matt Turner, Yunus Musah, Haji Wright, Brenden Aaronson, Gio Reyna, Joe Scally, and Johnny Cardoso. Meanwhile, Alex Zendejas gets his first USMNT camp of 2025 after playing well for Club América. Making the roster is dual national Tristan Blackmon, whose call-up was accidentally leaked by new Vancouver Whitecaps teammate Thomas Müller during a press conference over the weekend. Blackmon was reportedly contacted by Canada head coach Jesse Marsch in the spring to gauge his interest in playing for Canada at the international level. He instead accepts the call-up to join the USMNT for this camp. Four other players are looking to earn their first cap for the USMNT. Dual national Noahkai Banks makes his USMNT camp debut, while Blackmon, Roman Celenatano, and Jonathan Klinsmann are in search of their first cap after returning to the national team. The USMNT take on South Korea on September 6th at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, New Jersey. They then complete the international window with a friendly against Japan on September 9th at Lower.com Field in Columbus.
USMNT ROSTER
GOALKEEPERS (3): Roman Celentano (FC Cincinnati), Matt Freese (New York City FC), Jonathan Klinsmann (Cesena) DEFENDERS (8): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew), Noahkai Banks (FC Augsburg), Tristan Blackmon (Vancouver Whitecaps), Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Alex Freeman (Orlando City), Nathan Harriel (Philadelphia Union), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace)
MIDFIELDERS (6): Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 50/2), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps), Luca de la Torre (San Diego FC), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), Jack McGlynn (Houston Dynamo), Sean Zawadzki (Columbus Crew)
FORWARDS (5): Damion Downs (Southampton), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan) Josh Sargent (Norwich City), Tim Weah (Marseille), Alex Zendejas (Club América), Folarin Balogun

So I have NO IDEA what Bochitino is Doing here? Now is not the time to be testing new Goalkeepers – these are real teams we are playing! And why so many MLS players? Are you kidding me Boch! HE HAS NO IDEA WHAT HE IS DOING. At this rate we may not make it out of the Group stage. How the heck are McKennie, Haji Wright and Joe Scally not here at least. Aaronson is also a bit of a headscratcher. I am ok with Berhalter he showed well last time – lets see if he can play now that we have REAL competition. I am hope so because I do like his grit. We’ll see on all these others.

Leagues Cup Final Dream Match-Up Messi’s Miami vs Seattle Sounders this Sun 8 pm on Apple, Univision

Miami came from behind in dramatic fashion to beat Orlando in Miami as Messi and the Suarez spurred Miami on to victory. In the late game Seattle Dominated the first half then held on for the 2-0 win over the LA Galaxy setting up the Wednesday night Leagues Cup Final on their home field Sunday at 8 pm on TUDN, Univision & Apple TV free.

Indy 11 Host Louisville City Sat 7 pm @ The Mike

 Indy Eleven midfielder Jack Blake recorded his sixth career brace to lead the Boys in Blue to a 3-2 victory over Miami FC at Carroll Stadium.The victory moved the Boys in Blue into a playoff position at the 2/3 point of the 30-game regular season schedule. The Boys in Blue host Eastern Conference leader Louisville City FC next Saturday at 7 pm at Carroll Stadium for “Mystery at the Mike”. Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster. Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here.  For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

Carmel FC Goalkeeper Coach Erin Baker

So excited to welcome former Carmel FC & All State Carmel High School Goalkeeper Erin Baker as Carmel FC Goalkeeper Coach this fall. The former Wright State College Goalkeeper, daughter of Carmel FC Coach Tom Baker and former CFC Coach and legendary Canadian Team Goalkeeper Carla Baker (now Carmel High Asst Coach). Erin will handle coaching duties on Mon nights at Shelbourne Fields and Wednesdays at Badger Fields. Your’s truly will be on hand when I can to help (around high school reffing duties).

Carmel FC GK Coach Erin Baker was a 2 time All-State Selection at Carmel High School and State Champion before playing college ball at Wright State in Ohio. Coaching now on Mon & Wed nights.
Congrats to our Carmel FC squads on a jam-packed weekend across the Midwest and a special mention to our 3 teams that picked up silverware in their respective events. Huge thanks to our players, coaches, and the parents who make the miles and memories possible.
• 2012 Girls Gold — Premier Cup (Bronze) Champions
• 2013 Boys Blue — Puma Cup Finalists
• 2014 Girls Gold — Chicago Development Showcase
T Ray, Mike A and Shane reffing tourney at Grand Park Sunday with Coms — aren’t we cool looking!
Apple TV & Univision & TUDN Sunday 8 pm

GAMES ON TV

Fri, Aug 29
2:45 pm Para+ Lecce vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
3 pm CBSSN Leicester City vs Birmingham City Championship
8 pm Prime Orlando Pride (Marta) vs NY/NJ Gothem NWSL
10:30 pm Para+, Prime Seattle Reign vs San Diego Wave NWSL
10:30 pm Para+, Prime, Golazo Portland Thorns vs Utah
Sat, Aug 30
7:30 am USA Chelsea vs Fulham (Jedi)
9:30 am ESPN+ Werder Bremen vs Leverkusen (Tillman)
9:30 am ESPN+ Stuttgart vs B M’Gladbach (Scally, Reyna)
10 am USA Sunderland vs Brentford
10 am Peacock Tottenham vs Bournemouth (Adams)
12:30 pm NBC Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Newcastle United
12:30 pm ESPN+ Ausberg vs Bayern Munich
7 pm TV 6, ESPN+ Indy 11 vs Louisville
7:30 pm Tubi KC Current vs NC Courage NWSL
Sun Aug 31
7:30 am USA Nottingham Forest vs West Ham
11:30 am USA Liverpool vs Arsenal
12:30 pm CBSSN Genoa vs Juventus (McKennie)
2 pm USA Aston Villa vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
3:30 pm ESPNd+, Rayo Vallencano vs Barcelona
4 pm CBS NWSL Washington Spirit vs Chicago Red Stars
8 pm Apple, Univision Seattle Sounders vs Inter Miami Leagues Cup Final
10:30 pm FS1?, Apple Free – LAFC vs San Diego
Mon, Sept 1
9 pm CBSSN Angel City (Thompson) vs Bay FC NWSL
Wed, Sept 3
7 pm CBSSN Washington Spirit vs Vancouver Rise W Concacaf Cup
7:30 pm ESPN+ Hartford vs Indy 11
Thurs, Aug 4 WCQ
2:45 pm Fox Sport 2 Bulgaria vs Spain
7:30 pm Peacock Argentina vs Venezuela
8:30 pm Peacock Brazil vs Chile
Fri, Aug 5 WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Ukraine vs France
8 pm Amazon Prime Racing Louisville vs Portland NWSL

Sat, Sept 6
5 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Korea
Tues, Sept 9
7:30 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Japan in Columbus, Ohio
Fri, Oct 10
8:30 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Ecuador
Tues, Oct 14
9 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Australia

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Summer Olympiques

Some of our most watched leagues embark on a new season.
The Transfer window is nearly closed as teams and players settle in to what their club’s will look like for at least the next several months. A US player or two could still be on the move this Fall (we’re keeping our eye on you Yunus Musah) but we’re pretty close to locked in. We’re also locked in on some great matches this weekend that could see more debut’s as well as some head to head action in France. It start’s on Friday with a couple of matches:

Friday

Lecce v Milan – 2:45p on Paramount+: AC Milan opened their season with a home loss to newly promoted Cremonese with Christian Pulisic starting the match and playing the full 90’ but Yunus Musah not making it off the bench amid ongoing rumors that he is being pursued by Napoli and Atalanta. Milan dominated possession and allowed just four shot attempts by Cremonese but were unable to convert more than one of their own twenty-four shot attempts. Milan will look to bounce back against Lecce who settled for a scoreless draw with Genoa last weekend.

Saturday

Chelsea v Fulham – 7:30a on USA Network: Antonne Robinson returned from injury and played 28’ minutes off the bench last weekend as Fulham drew with Manchester United 1-1. That makes a pair of 1-1 draws to open the season for Fulham who will now face a Chelsea side who are coming off a 5-1 thumping of West Ham last weekend after opening their season with a scoreless draw against Crystal Palace.

Werder Bremen v Bayer Leverkusen – 9:30a on ESPN+: Malik Tillman missed Bayer Leverkusen’s season opening loss to Hoffenheim last weekend but is reportedly available this weekend heading into their match with Werder Bremen who fell 4-1 to Eintracht Frankfurt. Tillman will be making his debut for his new club as they look to bounce back and get on track to challenge Bayern Munich for the league title.

Stuttgart v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN+: Gio Reyna has joined good friend Joe Scally at Borussia Monchengladbach and will look to get his career back on track. Reyna, Scally and Gladbach will face Stuttgart this weekend looking for Gladbach’s first win of the season, following a 0-0 draw last weekend with Hamburg.

Tottenham v AFC Bournemouth – 10a on Peacock: Tyler Adams and Bournemouth defeated Wolverhampton last weekend, bouncing back from a season opening loss to Liverpool, but then fell to Brentford 2-0 in Carabao Cup second round action midweek with Tyler getting the match off. This weekend Bournemouth will take on a Tottenham side that have won their first two matches to start the season, including a 2-0 win over Manchester City last weekend.

Blackburn Rovers v Norwich City – 10a on Paramount+: Josh Sargent has opened the season by scoring a goal in each of Norwich’s four matches that he has appeared in (he missed Norwich’s EFL Cup match against Southampton midweek) but Norwich have won just one of their three league matches, with all ending with an identical 2-1 score line. This weekend Norwich will face a Blackburn Rovers side that just missed out on the promotion playoffs last season but have also won just one of their opening three matches this year as well.

Deportivo Alaves v Atletico Madrid – 11a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+: Johnny Cardoso might not be in the US squad but he’s made the starting 11 for Atletico Madrid the first two matches of their season. Atletico will be looking for their first win of the season this weekend as they take on Deportivo Alaves, who fell to Real Betis 1-0 last weekend.

Leeds United v Newcastle United – 12:30p on NBC and Peacock: Brenden Aaronson has come off the bench to play roughly 25’ in each of Leeds United’s first two matches of the season. Leeds won their opener but were thumped by Arsenal last weekend 5-0 with the team already down 4-0 when Aaronson came into the match.

Augsburg v Bayern Munich – 12:30p on ESPN+: Noakhai Banks has pulled the reverse Johnny Cardoso, the 18-year-old center back has made Mauricio Pochettino’s September callup list though he has not made it off the bench for Augsburg yet this season. Unfortunately, that might say as much about the differences in depth at the midfield and center back positions for the USMNT as it does about Pochettino’s puzzling decisions. Augsburg defeated Freiburg 3-1 in their opener last weekend and will now face Bayern Munich who opened their Bundesliga campaign with 6-0 drubbing of RB Leipzig.

PSV v Telstar – 2p on ESPN+: Ricardo Pepi saw his first minutes of the Eredivisie season last Saturday, coming off the bench for the final minutes of PSV’s 4-2 win over Groningen. Sergino Dest started the match at left back, played the full 90’, and picked up his second assist of the season. Dest has had a goal contribution in each of PSV’s first three matches. PSV will face a Telstar side that are looking for their first win of the season, they snapped a two match losing streak last weekend in drawing 2-2 with FC Volendam.

Toulouse v PSG – 3:05p on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Toulouse will take on perennial league favorites PSG on Sunday. Both teams have won their first two matches of the season and are tied, along with Lyon and Strasbourg, at the top of the table early in the season. McKenzie has started and gone the full 90’ in each of Toulouse’s two matches.

Sunday

Rangers v Celtic – 7a on CBSSN and Paramount+: Rangers and Celtic were both dumped from Champions League qualifying midweek in embarrassing fashion and will now look to bounce back in the latest edition of the Old Firm derby. Cameron Carter-Vickers started and played the full match plus extra time midweek as Celtic eventually fell to Kazakhstan’s Kairat Almaty in penalties after playing a home and away series, including a full 120’ in the second match, without either team scoring a goal. Celtic have won each of their first three matches though CCV was rested last weekend. Auston Trusty had come off the bench in Celtic’s first three matches of the season but was not included in the squad last weekend or midweek. Celtic’s opponent this weekend is their arch-rival Rangers who have drawn each of their first three league matches and also fell midweek in Champions League qualifying 6-0 (and 9-1 on aggregate) to Club Brugge.

Monaco v Strasbourg – 11:15a on beIN Sports: Folarin Balogun returned from injury last weekend to get the start and go the full 90’ in Monaco’s 1-0 loss to Lille. Balogun and Monaco will now face Strasbourg who have won their first to Ligue 1 matches of the season.

Genoa v Juventus – 12:30p on CBSSN and Paramount+: Weston McKennie was used as a time wasting substitute last weekend as Juventus saw out a 2-0 win over Parma to open their Serie A season. McKennie appears to once again be at an interesting point in his career as the midfielder was left out of the September window and is looking to work his way back into the squad with his club as well. It’s a bit startling but it is not the first, or second, time that McKennie has found himself in a similar position and he has bounced back well each time prior.

Aston Villa v Crystal Palace – 2p on USA Network: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace have opened their Premier League season with a pair of draws against Chelsea and Nottingham Forest with Richards playing the full 90’ in both matches. Richards also went 90 on Thursday as Palace played Norwegian side Fredrikstad FK to a scoreless draw in see out their 1-0 aggregate win in UEFA Conference League qualifiers. Palace have allowed just four goals across five matches in all competitions to start the season, including two in their win over Liverpool in the Community Shield match, and Richards is a key figure in what appears to be a solid defense. Palace will face an Aston Villa side this weekend that are looking for their first win, and first goal of the season.

Olympique Lyon v Olympique Marseille – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann and Tim Weah will face off in Ligue 1 action on Sunday afternoon before Weah heads to the States for the September window while Tessmann remains in France as he missed out on a callup. Tessmann has started and gone the full 90’ in Lyon’s first two matches while Weah came off the bench in Marseille’s first match, a 1-0 loss to Stade Rennais, but started on the left-wing in the teams 5-2 drubbing of Paris FC last weekend.

US Men’s National Team

Christian Pulisic back as USMNT September roster released with several changes
Pochettino names September USMNT roster, as Pulisic & Dest return
USMNT midweek roundup: Horvath’s penalty heroics
Tessmann, Adams, Tolkin, & Morris among weekend’s top performers, while others struggle

Analysis: Mitrovic names strong U-20 roster for final pre-World Cup camp
Thursday night update: Seattle and Miami reach final; EPB, Flach, & Richards advance in Europe

MLS

Seattle Sounders vs. Inter Miami: Who has the edge in Leagues Cup final?
Seattle Sounders vs. Inter Miami: Leagues Cup 2025 final is set
Seattle Sounders: How they reached the Leagues Cup 2025 final
Inter Miami: How they reached the Leagues Cup 2025 final
Power Rankings: Philadelphia Union regain Supporters’ Shield lead
Matchday 31: What to know for this weekend’s must-watch matches
USA roster: 12 MLS players called for Japan, South Korea friendlies

Europe

Messi’s farewell: Argentina star to play last home World Cup qualifier
Trent Alexander-Arnold left out of Thomas Tuchel’s England squad

Fenerbahçe sack José Mourinho after Champions League exit
UEFA announces major change to Champions League final

5 spicy fixtures you must watch this weekend
Amorim living ‘day by day’ at Man United as pressure grows after embarrassing cup loss
Premier League weekend preview: Are we seeing the end of Ruben Amorim
Manchester United’s Ruben Amorim: ‘Sometimes I want to quit, sometimes I want to be here for 20 years’

Goalkeeping

What A Save! MLS Who had the best stop in Matchday 30?
What A Save! MLS Who had the best stop in Matchday 29?
USL Championship Save of the Week – Week 25
USL Championship Save of the Week – Week 24
Top 10 Premier League Goalkeepers 2025! 🏆

Reffing

8 Second GK Rule

Always fun to ref games @ Carmel High – Carmel Freshman boys then girls with Omar Mon night.
Good crew Sat @ Park Tudor

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It’s time for Mauricio Pochettino to stop tinkering and build a World Cup team

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 6: Mauricio Pochettino manager / head coach of USA during the Gold Cup 2025 Final match between United States and Mexico at NRG Stadium on July 6, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Robbie Jay Barratt - AMA/Getty Images)

By Charlie Davies

Aug. 28, 2025 3:04 pm EDT

124


I spent the earlier part of this week living under the stars, in a tent deep inside Yellowstone National Park, with only a patchy cellphone signal, no internet or television. It wasn’t quite an Aaron Rodgers retreat but it was an amazing experience.

Anyone who has ever ‘disconnected’ in that manner, understands the value that it brings. You have time to break free from the constant demands of everyday life, to refocus and renew before re-emerging with fresh energy.

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But when I came out of the retreat and saw Mauricio Pochettino’s roster for the upcoming games against South Korea and Japan, I wondered for half a second if I wasn’t now living in an alternative reality.

Almost half of Pochettino’s 23-man squad is made up of players from Major League Soccer ,as he continues to experiment with new players while the likes of Weston McKennie at Juventus, Johnny Cardoso of Atlético Madrid, Yunus Musah at AC Milan and Tanner Tessmann at Lyon have been left out.

Weston McKennie was among those left out of Mauricio Pochettino’s latest USMNT squad. (Marco Canoniero / LightRocket via Getty Images)

We are nine months away from the start of the World Cup on home soil and the coach is still experimenting, still familiarizing himself with the player pool and still ‘sending messages’ to players? Really?

At this stage, I would expect the national team coach to be focused on his core starting team and supporting cast, getting players familiar with their roles, the partnerships that are so vital across the field and the group dynamics that need to be fine tuned before competing with the world’s elite.

Of course, there is always room for bringing in a form player or two or trying out alternative options and testing the depth of his roster. And there is some validity in Pochettino’s likely goals here – broadening the pool, lighting a fire under those excluded and perhaps giving European-based players the chance to focus on their club situations for now.

But the benefits of a player being allowed to stay with a European club are limited when you remember that during the international break, large numbers of the first-team squad at clubs like Milan, Juve and Atlético, are away with their national teams anyway, weakening the significance of those training sessions, which are mainly for reserves and other non-internationals. Two things really concern me about this roster. Firstly, the U.S. is playing against Japan and South Korea, two teams with quality players and top-tier experience, who are exactly the kind of opponents that might be waiting in the World Cup itself, especially in the knockout phase.With no qualifying games, these friendlies should be treated as seriously as possible, to get the squad truly competitive encounters – to test them and help them grow. As we saw with the debacle of June’s 4-0 crushing by Switzerland in Nashville, if the opposition is high-level and comes in motivated, the outcome for an experimental team can be ugly.

There is already a worrying lack of enthusiasm bordering on apathy in the USMNT’s fan base at a time when positivity and optimism should be growing in anticipation of this huge moment in American soccer. I don’t even want to think about what the impact would be of another heavy loss at home.

Secondly, while the time for ‘sending messages’ should be over by now, I also worry about exactly what kind of message Pochettino is sending by his selection of MLS players who few people, if any, were clamoring for.

Under former USMNT coach Bob Bradley, players like Charlie Davies were incentivized to prove themselves overseas. (Chris Williams /Icon SMI / Corbis / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

When I played for the national team under Bob Bradley, there was an unwritten rule for emerging American MLS talent. If you want to be a national team player, you earn yourself a move abroad, you fight for your place at your club, you perform week-in, week-out and then you get your chance.

It was highly motivating. It led people like me to turn down, after college, a Generation Adidas contract with MLS and head to Europe. It was why I battled for a starting place at Hammarby in Sweden, moved to Sochaux in France and played for Randers in Denmark.Jurgen Klinsmann was another national team coach who was keen to see Americans move to Europe, pushing players to get as close to the highest level as possible. It’s why so many of our players over the last 25 years improved, became more professional and more steeled. It’s not easy as an American walking into a European locker-room, proving yourself, earning a starting place and keeping it. It’s a grind every single day. It meant the national team coach got players who had been forged by that experience, hardened and sharpened.

It also gave players in MLS something to aim for. You might be performing well enough for your club, but were you playing well enough to attract the attention of European scouts?

So what is the message the players receive when they see Pochettino’s roster?

With all due respect, have the likes of Roman Celentano, Tristan Blackmon, Nathan Harriel and Sean Zawadzki really been performing at such a consistently high-level in MLS that they simply could not be ignored? Have they really thrust themselves into contention for World Cup places?Even if you were looking to MLS-based players, it is surprising that some of these new faces are being picked ahead of the likes of Djordje Mihailovic (11 caps), DeJuan Jones (10 caps) and Chicago’s exciting talent Brian Gutierrez (two caps).But the message sent is even worse. When I see a player like Paxton Aaronson, who after trying to make it at Eintracht Frankfurt took on the challenge of a loan spell at Utrecht and earned a starting place at a top-four club in the Dutch league, take a move back to MLS, it leaves me thinking the players have understood that under Pochettino you’d actually be better off in MLS.

Paxten Aaronson made a recent return to Major League Soccer from Europe. (Seth Herald / AFP via Getty Images)That is a crazy situation. But what other conclusion could we draw from the fact that a promising player like Aidan Morris, who was rightly called up due to his excellent form with the Columbus Crew, is now ignored despite being a regular in the highly competitive Championship with Middlesbrough?

Morris won two MLS Cups with the Crew before, at the age of 22, going to play for then-Middlesbrough boss Michael Carrick, a great coach to learn from, given he played in Morris’s midfield role. That’s the kind of initiative that I would lean towards rewarding.Morris could now be forgiven for thinking that he would have been better off, from a national team perspective, staying with the Crew, never having to worry about losing his place, never having to push himself, under pressure, every week in the grind of that league. He’d probably be in this roster if he was playing in MLS – which is absurd.

There are contradictions in Pochettino’s approach, too. If the aim is to give players in new club environments space to settle, then why call up Tim Weah? He is in his first season with Marseille, adapting to a new system under Roberto De Zerbi and new teammates, and yet he is (deservedly) included in the roster.And he should be, because Weah is a vital piece of the U.S. puzzle. His speed, quickness, timing, 1-v-1 ability, two-way commitment and World Cup experience (including scoring against Wales in Qatar) make him unique in this group.The reality is that outside of him, the USMNT simply doesn’t have another wide player with that blend of qualities. His inclusion underscores just how inconsistent the logic is when other Europe-based players in similar or even stronger club situations are left behind.

At least Pochettino says this is the last window before the experimenting stops in October. That is a relief, but I think not going with a full-strength squad for these games is another missed opportunity for the coach and the team.

Hopefully the approach to the games will be less experimental than the roster call-ups suggests. If the U.S. wants to inspire belief heading into the home World Cup, now is the time to sharpen, not experiment.

The September friendlies will mark Christian Pulisic’s return to the squad. (Logan Riely / USSF / Getty Images for USSF)

Thankfully, Christian Pulisic is on the roster, and I really hope that he and everyone else can now put this summer’s unpleasant conflict behind them. The whole saga was the result of poor communication. No one blinked an eye when it was announced that Musah was missing the Gold Cup for ‘personal reasons,’ and few would have objected if Christian’s absence was put down to muscle fatigue or a minor injury.

I’ll never understand why it was instead described by U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker as the player asking to “step back” this summer due to the volume of games. The whole thing could have been avoided with different language.Christian had a new coach coming in at AC Milan and it was important for him to be at the Milanello training ground fresh and ready to go on day one of preseason and not coming in late or tired from the Gold Cup and playing catch-up ahead of the new season.The U.S. needs Pulisic to have a great season with Milan and to return in style to the national team. He’s central to World Cup hopes, and whatever people think of his decision this summer, it is time to put it behind us and get behind our best player. Just as it’s time for Pochettino to get behind his best players, period.(Top photo: Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

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Mauricio Pochettino wants trust in his process but his USMNT is short on time

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 6: Mauricio Pochettino manager / head coach of USA during the Gold Cup 2025 Final match between United States and Mexico at NRG Stadium on July 6, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Robbie Jay Barratt - AMA/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio

Aug. 26, 2025

38


The U.S. men’s national team has 10 games until the World Cup.

The journey to that point is going to be one hell of a ride. The question for U.S. fans is whether they believe in the process.

Mauricio Pochettino’s 22-man squad for the September window included Christian Pulisic — another player will be added at a later date — but was most certainly impacted by the start of the European season. The roster is missing players still working back from injury and others who aren’t in form at their clubs or were given time to integrate into new teams or fight for a place. Based on Pochettino’s answers at his press conference on Tuesday, we will likely see names like Ricardo Pepi, Weston McKennie, Yunus Musah, Antonee Robinson and Malik Tillman, if healthy, in October and November.

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Even then, Pochettino’s search for his best U.S. team still feels very much like a work in progress.

Pochettino said he is using this September window as a judging ground for players he hasn’t seen, like Sean Zawadzki, Noahkai Banks, Jonathan Klinsmann and Tristan Blackmon.

“For us, this is the last camp that we are going to add some new faces,” he said.

Fulham’s Antonee Robinson was among the high-profile absentees from the USMNT squad. (Tim Nwachukwu / Getty Images)

It’s also one more chance for players he saw at the Gold Cup, but would like to test in a more competitive setting, like Sebastian Berhalter, Jack McGlynn, Nathan Harriel, Damion Downs and Max Arfsten.

“We really believe that is the right decision,” he said. “To bring the right balance to the squad.”

Whether those auditions should still be happening at this point is a fair question.

The former Tottenham, PSG and Chelsea manager was only hired last September. The last year was spent familiarizing himself with the entirety of the pool. That evaluation process has now run right up against the final months of World Cup prep. There isn’t much time to start to put a group together that can compete next summer on the sport’s biggest stage.

Pochettino clearly still wants to see a few more options before he moves into the next phase. I don’t agree with a good chunk of the decisions on this roster. Quality-wise, there are players left out of this squad that shouldn’t have been.

But it’s clear that Pochettino is doing so with intent.

He wants to send a message — for longtime starters like McKennie, Musah and Matt Turner, but also those who are trying to fight into the picture in Europe, like Aidan Morris and Tanner Tessmann. No one’s job is guaranteed.

“I think all (players) need to feel the possibility of fighting for a place,” Pochettino said. “If we want to be a really competitive team, we cannot nominate 13, 14, 15 players (and say): ‘These guys for sure are going to arrive to the World Cup. And the rest, they need a few places to fight.’ Come on, that is not the real sport…

“When you see different national teams, national teams that won World Cups, I think you really understand what (real competition) means. Players need to feel that threat from (their) teammate, and they need to defend the place in every single (camp) that you join the national team, but also when you perform in your (club) team.”

USMNT falls to Mexico in the Gold Cup finalPochettino (left) and captain Tim Ream (center) suffered summer disappointment with a Concacaf Gold Cup final defeat. (Chandan Khanna / AFP via Getty Images)

It’s a valid message from Pochettino. There was too much of a sense of comfort in this U.S. group when he took over after the 2024 Copa América failure. There was a subset of players who believed they were, essentially, untouchable. There was a need to fight back against that mentality within the group, not just to motivate those players to work harder, but to build belief throughout the pool that every player had a chance to make the team and to compete.

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But that task — building that competitiveness within the group, creating more of an edge — also has to be balanced against quality.

Building a team is not always about picking the best 23 or 26 players for a roster. It’s important to have the right chemistry and the right mentality top to bottom. You need glue guys. But you also need to remember that, at some point in the tournament, you might have to turn down the bench and summon the 21st or 23rd or 25th guy and put them in the game. And you better be sure that they can deliver better than the player you left at home.

Past U.S. coaches have learned that lesson the hard way before. (See: Landon Donovan in Brazil.)

It’s fine to disagree completely with the call-ups in this roster and also to give Pochettino some grace in this window. To let him try to foster a more competitive spirit within the team now in the name of a better team next summer. And to believe that the team that is summoned next June will have more than enough time to bond and build the right spirit ahead of the home tournament.

It’s fine as long as you trust that the process will land you with the best possible team in 10 months — and that Pochettino and his staff won’t get the mix of motivation, mentality and quality wrong. There has to be belief that, as Pochettino said, he’ll find the players that give the U.S. the best chance to win when the first game kicks off at SoFi Stadium.“It’s up to us to select the best players to play in the World Cup,” he said. “We have experience. We have the quality and the capacity to see and to detect and to analyze … and to create the best plan to arrive in the best condition. Now it’s up to the players. We want to have the best players to compete in the best way in the World Cup. And for sure we are going to arrive with the best roster to compete.” (Top photo: Robbie Jay Barratt / AMA / Getty Images)



Pochettino confirms no contact with Pulisic, addresses McKennie’s omission

AUSTIN, TEXAS - OCTOBER 12: United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino talks with Christian Pulisic #10 during the first half against Panama at Q2 Stadium on October 12, 2024 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Henry Bushnell Aug. 26, 2025 81


Mauricio Pochettino said Tuesday that he “didn’t talk with” Christian Pulisic this summer, but said that the public back-and-forth between the two in June is “behind us.”Pochettino, speaking to reporters via Zoom after naming Pulisic to the U.S. men’s national team roster for September friendlies against South Korea and Japan, added: “We need to look forward. We have a plan for every single player, and the plan for Christian now is to call and to see him in this camp.”Pochettino said he hoped that Pulisic would “arrive in a good condition, fresh, [coming off a] good preseason with Milan, with his team, and ready to compete — that is the most important thing.”Pulisic will rejoin the team for the first time since March, when the U.S. lost to Panama and Canada. In that Concacaf Nations League third-place match against Canada, Pulisic appeared to wave away a substitution, delaying Pochettino’s attempt to replace him midway through the second half.Then, in May, Pulisic chose to skip the summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup. When U.S. Soccer announced the roster, it released a statement from sporting director Matt Crocker making clear that Pulisic had initiated what was ultimately a “collective decision” after “thoughtful discussions and careful consideration.”

Pochettino, speaking to reporters that same day, called it “the best decision” for Pulisic and for the USMNT. But, in subsequent media appearances, he didn’t sound thrilled about it. Pulisic, meanwhile, drew fierce criticism from some fans and pundits, including former players. Landon Donovan said on a Fox Sports broadcast that USMNT players being “on vacation, not wanting to play in the Gold Cup,” was “pissing me off.”

That drew a response from Pulisic’s father, Mark, who implicitly told Donovan in an Instagram post to “look in the mirror + grow a pair.” A week later, Christian Pulisic went on a CBS Sports podcast to defend himself, and argued that questions about “my commitment, especially towards the national team,” were “way out of line.”

Pulisic also made the point that he “did want to be a part of at least the two friendlies” prior to the Gold Cup, against Turkey and Switzerland. “I did speak with the coaches, and I asked, and I wanted to be a part of the team in whatever capacity I could,” Pulisic said. “And they said no, they only wanted one roster [for the friendlies and the Gold Cup]. And that’s coach’s decision, I fully respect that. I didn’t understand it, but it is what it is.”

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Pochettino, speaking two days later at a press conference on the eve of the Gold Cup, responded. Players could not pick and choose when they play for the national team, he said. “I think when I signed my contract [with] the federation,” he added, “[it said] I am the head coach. I am not a mannequin.”Pulisic also revealed that he’d only had one conversation with Pochettino about the decision. On Tuesday, Pochettino seemed to confirm, as Fox Sports reported, that the two haven’t spoken since May. There was “nothing to talk [about],” Pochettino said.Later, when asked whether he considered not calling Pulisic into the September camp, Pochettino said: “Christian had the possibility to have a good rest in the summer, and then start the season. … He’s in a condition to come. … He can add his freshness, and, of course, his quality.”

USMNT midfielder Weston McKennieUSMNT midfielder Weston McKennie won’t take part in friendlies vs. South Korea and Japan (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

Where’s Weston?

The rest of Pochettino’s September roster, though, was headlined by omissions. When asked why he left off midfielder Weston McKennie, Pochettino indicated that McKennie’s delayed offseason, and his precarious place in Juventus’ squad, were two factors.“We already know Weston,” Pochettino said. “It’s not necessary to call him to know.”McKennie’s involvement in the Club World Cup left him with a truncated preseason at the Italian club. And as the Serie A season started last weekend, he found himself on the outside looking in at the Juve starting lineup. He entered the team’s opener, a 2-0 win over Parma, in the 89th minute.“We wanted to give him the possibility to be more settled in his club,” Pochettino said of McKennie, “and the possibility to be in his best form.”Pochettino indicated that the reasoning for Johnny Cardoso’s omission was similar. Cardoso moved to Atlético Madrid last month from Real Betis. The thinking, Pochettino said, was to “give time to them to adapt in the new environment.”Pochettino also said, though, that “no one has their place sure.” That, he said, was his broader message: “everyone needs to fight.”But when asked if already had in mind the players who would return in October, he nodded his head and said, “Yes.” Later, when asked specifically about McKennie, he said that September will be “the last camp that we are going to bring some new faces.” And he hinted that McKennie will be back in October.“Weston [needs] time to prepare himself with [Juventus], and it’s important to be with his team fighting for a place,” Pochettino said. He added that he wants to give McKennie “all the tools to fight for a place to be every week, on the pitch, competing. Because that is going to put him in his best form. … We know his talent.” (Top photo: John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

The Champions League draw’s impact on USMNT stars’ all-important season

USMNT and PSV's Ricardo Pepi and Sergino Dest

By Jeff Rueter

Aug. 28, 2025 3:22 pm EDT

3


With the domestic leagues underway, the main event of Europe’s footballing calendar has finally been scheduled. On Thursday, all 36 participants in the UEFA Champions League learned who their eight opponents will be in the opening phase of the 2025-26 installment.

Over the past decade, U.S. players have become increasingly relevant to the competition. Last year featured a new record for involvement, with USMNT-eligible players eclipsing 5,000 combined minutes in the 2024-25 Champions League. What looked to be a promising business end for a few of the teams with Americans involved quickly went south in the playoff round, though, with little presence in the final three rounds of the competition.

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Will it be another year with many missing out on the tournament’s biggest games? Or is anyone, during this all-important season leading into a home World Cup, poised to become the second U.S. player to take the field in a Champions League final?

Let’s make sense of the draw, through an American lens:

Who are the headliners involved?

While the transfer window remains open in most of Europe’s top leagues for a few more days, there are currently seven members of the USMNT who project to prominently feature in this year’s tournament. It’s a healthy portion, enough to comprise over half of a starting XI, but down from 13 players who saw the field last season.

Four are entering the Champions League as returning members of qualifying teams. Folarin Balogun will hope the third year’s the charm, having struggled in his first two seasons since AS Monaco signed him from Arsenal for a lavish $43.4 million fee. Balogun now finds himself battling for starts with a player whom he rose through the Arsenal youth ranks, Mika Biereth, with each ex-Gunner starting one of Monaco’s first two Ligue 1 fixtures. It’s a pivotal season for the 24-year-old, who has struggled for consistency but whose commitment with the USMNT was supposed to solve the program’s striker headaches.

Ricardo Pepi and Sergiño Dest should play major roles for PSV, who fell in last year’s round of 16 in a 9-3 aggregate smashing by Arsenal. Dest is now fully recovered from his 2024 knee injury, while Pepi is recovering from his own season-ending operation. PSV has put a lot of trust in the 22-year-old striker, signing him to a fresh pact last winter amid transfer interest and handing him the No. 9 shirt following Luuk de Jong’s departure.

For now, at least, Weston McKennie remains with Juventus despite yet another window of speculation that the Serie A side is ready to let him leave if there’s credible interest. The club lists the midfielder as its vice-captain, and he donned the armband on a few occasions in last year’s Champions League. He’s the sole American on the squad, as Tim Weah joined fellow qualifier Marseille on a year-long loan this summer. Weah’s first league start came as an inverting left winger, and he could pop up with far more goals than he did as a wingback with Juventus.

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Two players who moved for some of the largest transfer fees spent on an American player will hope to back that investment with strong Champions League showings. Malik Tillman was vital as PSV shocked Holland by snatching the Eredivisie title on the final day, and he also putting in leading shifts for Mauricio Pochettino at this summer’s Gold Cup. He’s part of a radically transformed Bayer Leverkusen, helping make up for the recent exodus of talent from the since-dismantled 2023-24 Bundesliga champion.

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Johnny Cardoso will also feature in Atlético Madrid’s midfield, having started for Real Betis in last year’s UEFA Europa Conference League final. While he’s been dependable in La Liga, his USMNT performances have left much to be desired. Perhaps Diego Simeone can help provide the right tutelage to help round out his game.

A few other Americans will hope to see the field as their teams’ schedules get congested or after their advancement fates have been determined. Three U.S. eligible players serve as backup goalkeepers or youthful netminding prospects: Brandon Austin (Tottenham), Gabriel Slonina (Chelsea) and Diego Kochen (FC Barcelona).

Eintracht Frankfurt has two players who may be far from Pochettino’s pool: veteran fullback Timothy Chandler and 18-year-old attacking midfielder Marvin Dills, a promising playmaker worth tracking for the future. Borussia Dortmund may have sold Giovanni Reyna, but Cole Campbell and Mathis Albert will hope to inherit some of his (and others’) late-game cameos to impress Niko Kovač.

USMNT and AC Milan star Christian PulisicChristian Pulisic and AC Milan will be sitting out European competition this season (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Wait … where’s Christian Pulisic?

While several crucial options for Pochettino will play in the pinnacle of the club game, the program’s most important player is entirely absent.

Last season was difficult for AC Milan, which aspired to contend on all fronts despite Stefano Pioli’s departure in the summer. Poor form necessitated another midseason coaching change, and the team struggled for consistency as well as to reach its previous heights from recent memory. Milan slumped to an eighth-place finish in Serie A, below the positions necessary to reach any of the Champions League, Europa League or Conference League.

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Their other campaigns suffered dramatic faceplants after Sérgio Conceição took the helm in midwinter. Milan entered the final day of the UCL league phase in prime position to avoid the knockout playoff round, but a defeat against Dinamo Zagreb forced them into the extra set of games, where they were binned by Feyenoord and failed to reach the round of 16. The Rossoneri’s final hope was to reach the Europa League by winning the Coppa Italia, and they did well to overcome rival Inter in a two-leg semifinal. However, Bologna pipped them in the final 1-0, slamming the door to Europe shut.

It’s the first time since 2016 where Milan has failed to qualify for European competition. Max Allegri will hope to get the club back in short order. Barring an unexpected departure in this or the winter window, Pulisic (and fellow U.S. international Yunus Musah) will play all of his club matches this season against Italian opposition.

UCL draws for teams with USMNT players

PSVRicardo Pepi, Sergiño DestFC BayernLiverpoolAtlético MadridBayer LeverkusennapoliOlympiacosUnion Saint-GilloiseNewcastle78.3
Bayer LeverkusenMalik TillmanPSGMan CityVillarrealBenficaPSVOlympiacosNewcastleCopenhagen77.5
MarseilleTim WeahLiverpoolReal MadridAtlalantaClub BruggeAjaxSporting CPNewcastleUnion Saint-Gilloise76
Atlético MadridJohnny CardosoInter MilanLiverpoolEintracht FrankfurtArsenalBodø/GlimtPSVUnion Saint-GilloiseGalatasaray75.8
AS MonacoFolarin BalogunMan CityReal MadridJuventusClub BruggeTottenhamBodø/GlimtGalatasarayPafos74.5
JuventusWeston McKennieBorussia DortmundReal MadridBenficaVillarrealSporting CPBodø/GlimtPafosAS Monaco72.5

So what did the draw yield?

Of the headlining U.S. lot, it’s McKennie’s Juventus that may have received the most favorable draw. The Italians managed to avoid all of the record-setting six qualifiers from the Premier League, although away days against Villarreal and Monaco could prove tricky.

According to the UEFA coefficient, which awards points based on club performances in the last five years of continental play, Pepi, Dest and PSV received the most difficult draw of any qualifier. The two-time reigning Dutch champion will have to run a difficult gauntlet, facing Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Napoli, Atlético Madrid, Leverkusen and Newcastle. That will provide the striker and fullback with some considerable challenges.

Leverkusen finds itself with a tough octet of fixtures, including perennial European powers PSG, Manchester City and Benfica, while Atlético Madrid will take on Inter, Liverpool and Arsenal as part of its league phase. Balogun will hope to spark wins for Monaco against City, Real Madrid, Juventus and Tottenham among others. Marseille has the projected toughest draw of the Ligue 1 entrants, with its list of opponents topped by Liverpool, Real Madrid and Atalanta.

While dates and times for each match won’t be sorted until Saturday, Aug. 30, we’re guaranteed a few matchups pitting two of the more marquee Americans against one another. Those matchups are (with the drawn hosts listed first):

  • PSV (Pepi, Dest) vs. Atlético Madrid (Cardoso)
  • AS Monaco (Balogun) vs. Juventus (McKennie)
  • Bayer Leverkusen (Tillman) vs. PSV (Pepi, Dest)

(Top photo: Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)

Premier League Predictions: Liverpool vs Arsenal, Leeds vs Newcastle and the rest of Matchday 3

Premier League Predictions: Liverpool vs Arsenal, Leeds vs Newcastle and the rest of Matchday 3

By Oliver Kay

Aug. 29, 2025 12:09 am EDT

32


Welcome to week three of The Athletic’s Premier League predictions challenge, where the subscribers are setting a rather troubling pace.

It wasn’t just Liverpool fans celebrating wildly when 16-year-old Rio Ngumoha scored that dramatic winner at St James’ Park on Monday night.

More than 3,000 miles away in the U.S. state of Rhode Island, Sunderland fan Derek was punching the air. As well as condemning Newcastle, Sunderland’s arch-rivals, to an agonising 3-2 home defeat, Ngumoha’s goal extended the subscribers’ lead at the top of our Premier League predictions table.

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“When Liverpool were up 2-0 against 10 men, I thought it was a done deal,” Derek says. “How wrong I was — as was the case with my Sunderland pick.”

Wrong in the moment… and yet right when it mattered.

Each week, a different Athletic subscriber is chosen to join an algorithm, six-year-old Wilfred and me, Oli Kay, in predicting the Premier League results. We’re awarding three points for a correct scoreline and one point for getting the result right.

There’s also a bonus point for any correct “unique” prediction, so Derek got two points for being the only one to call Liverpool’s victory in Newcastle.

He got one scoreline right (Crystal Palace 1-1 Nottingham Forest) and called another five results correctly. That bonus point, thanks to Ngumoha’s stoppage-time winner, meant he equalled Vaageesh’s nine-point haul in week one, taking the subscribers three points clear at the top after two rounds.

There were two other bonus points awarded last weekend: one for me for calling Burnley’s victory over Sunderland (sorry, Derek) and one for the algorithm for being spot-on with Fulham 1-1 Manchester United.

Spare a thought for Wilf, who was on course for a massive four-pointer after 99 minutes with Newcastle and Liverpool locked at 2-2 — only to be denied by Ngumoha’s goal. A bit mean to pick on the younger kids like that, Rio.

“So close to glory,” Wilf’s dad tells us. “Gutted.”

This week’s subscriber is Katherine, a 43-year-old Chelsea fan from London, who, after Vaageesh’s and Derek’s efforts, has a lot to live up to.


Our subscriber’s match of the week

Chelsea vs Fulham, Saturday, 12.30pm UK/7.30am ET

Katherine says: “The feeling of optimism going into this season has been through the roof and scoring five goals without Cole Palmer last weekend only adds fuel to that fire. Fulham are a solid team and are difficult to beat (which we found out last season), but I’m confident we’ll have too much for them.”

Chelsea 3-1 Fulham 

Oli says: Remarkably, Chelsea are starting their season with four consecutive London derbies. In fact, only one of their first eight Premier League games is outside the capital’s M25 orbital motorway. It must all feel rather parochial for the new world champions, but they seemed to enjoy themselves out east at West Ham last weekend. This might be more of a battle — like their opening game, a goalless draw at home to Crystal Palace — but although I never feel totally confident in backing this Chelsea team, I fancy a home win, even if they are again without the injured Palmer.

Chelsea 2-1 Fulham

Chelsea beat West Ham 5-1 away last week (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)


Oli’s other predictions

Manchester United vs Burnley

Oli says: For all the excitement surrounding their new additions, it’s only one point from two games for Manchester United this season, plus that shock Carabao Cup loss to fourth-tier Grimsby Town in midweek. More glaringly, it’s just 28 points from 29 games under Ruben Amorim since his appointment last November. That early-season optimism is going to give way to gloom if they can’t get some wins on the board very quickly. With Manchester City away and Chelsea at home straight after the international break that begins on Monday, victory in this game seems essential.

United 2-0 Burnley

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Sunderland vs Brentford

Oli says: As nice as it is to see Sunderland enjoying their return to the top flight after eight years away, wouldn’t it have been nicer still if Jordan Henderson was back at his hometown club rather than potentially lining up against them this weekend? His best years are behind him, but he would have been ideal for the Granit Xhaka role — as indeed is Granit Xhaka. Henderson made a real difference to Brentford’s midfield last weekend on his first start for them, so Keith Andrews’ team shouldn’t be the soft touch they looked like in week one away to Nottingham Forest.

Sunderland 1-1 Brentford

Tottenham Hotspur vs Bournemouth

Oli says: This is all feeling quite August 2023 for Tottenham, isn’t it? New manager, new optimism, strong start and a sudden sense of: “Hey, these players are actually pretty good, you know?” Those feelings quickly faded under predecessor Ange Postecoglou — unbeaten in his first 10 Premier League games, then 34 defeats in the next 66 — but I do feel an upturn could prove more sustainable this time under Thomas Frank.

Tottenham 2-1 BournemouthWhat You Should Read NextThe Thomas Frank tactic that was crucial to Tottenham beating Manchester CityTottenham’s goals against Manchester City represented two key features of their new manager’s attacking principles

Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Everton

Oli says: I’m struggling to find cause for optimism for Wolves at the moment. Vitor Pereira did such a good job when he came in midway through last season, but a difficult summer has left the squad looking well short, whereas Everton will be energised by last week’s lift-off at their new home and by the additions of Jack Grealish and Tyler Dibling.

Wolves 0-1 Everton

Leeds United vs Newcastle United

Oli says: My historic references last week led subscriber Sam K to accuse me of living in the 1950s. Come on, Sam. Let’s get this right: 1980s, 1990s, even early 2000s, but not 1950s. Anyway, for me, this fixture evokes the turn-of-the-century feeling that anything was possible. (Spoiler: it wasn’t, particularly for these two clubs.) It’s Lee Bowyer, it’s Jonathan Woodgate, it’s Mark Viduka, it’s James Milner, it’s Alan Smith. It’s a Kevin Keegan meltdown in front of the TV cameras at Elland Road and it’s chairman Peter Ridsdale living the dream while feeding his tropical fish in the executive suite. It’s two clubs who, after a miserable period, are now in a happier place again. And it’s… very hard to call actually, but I’m going to go for a depleted Newcastle battling to their first win of the season.

Leeds 1-2 Newcastle

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Brighton & Hove Albion vs Manchester City

Oli says: We all overestimated City last week. If this transition to a new-look team is going to work, it needs more of a balance between freshness and familiarity. I expect a more recognisable line-up from Pep Guardiola at Brighton — and possibly a more recognisable performance.

Brighton 1-2 City

Nottingham Forest vs West Ham United

Oli says: I really like this Forest team. I don’t like this West Ham team. I’m not talking about the club, the fans, the manager or individual players, some of whom I like; I mean the team. It lacks speed, it lacks heart and it lacks identity. I’m not sure what it’s meant to be. Their first two performances of the season have been really poor. It might get worse before it gets better.

Forest 3-0 West Ham

Liverpool vs Arsenal

Oli says: Isn’t it a bit early to have the two title favourites facing each other? I don’t like it. The transfer window is still open and teams are still finding their rhythm. Having this match now also means the return fixture is in the first week of January, right at the end of the hectic festive programme when players are running on fumes. I don’t like that either. Anyway, if I’m filibustering, it’s because I have no idea which way this is going to go — and I’m determined not to say a draw, even though I want to.

(Deep breath)… I’m going for an Arsenal win. I just don’t think Liverpool have settled yet — two wins, but two shaky performances. And if they prove me wrong, as they did by winning at Newcastle, I will absolutely reinstate them as my title favourites.

Liverpool 1-2 Arsenal

Aston Villa vs Crystal Palace

Oli says: Villa have been surprisingly slow out of the blocks — no goals scored yet, and just one point from their first two games. Palace haven’t exactly hit the ground running either, but their two draws seem more justifiable given their European commitments and an ongoing sense of disruption in the transfer market. This is a chance for Villa to kick-start their season. If they don’t, manager Unai Emery will be concerned, with PSR calculations still a concern as Monday’s transfer deadline looms.

Villa 2-1 Palace

(Top photo: Getty Images; design: Demetrius Robinson)

8/22/25 All MLS Leagues Cup Final 4, Germany, Italy kick off seasons, Indy 11 home Sat 7 pm, Carmel High Girls Pack the house night tonight 7 pm

MLS Teams Advance in Leagues Cup

All 4 MLS teams won vs their Mexican counterparts on Wednesday night as MLS dominated this competition and will send all 4 teams to the Semi-Finals Wednesday night for the first time ever. Two of the games did go to shootouts however. I have to admit – I stayed up to 2 am to watch these games as I have been intrigued by this competition. Huge news that American Paxton Aaronson is returning to MLS with Colorado.

Italy & Germany Start European Seasons this Weekend

Exciting for Americans as Italy and Germany get underway with tons of American internationals on rosters with stars like Pulisic @ AC Milan, McKennie @ Juventus and Joe Scally at M’Gladbach & now Gio Reyna who has joined him from Dortmund on hand. Of course Inter Milan and Bayern Munich will be tough to knock of their perches as each league. Full previews for both leagues below.

Indy 11 loses in Jagermeister Cup – Hosts Miami FC Sat for All Things Indiana Night

Indianapolis – For the second time in the past three USL Jägermeister Cup matches, penalty kicks decided the outcome, but this time Indy Eleven fell to Greenville Triumph SC, 6-5, in the Quarterfinals at Carroll Stadium.The Boys in Blue scored first in the 55th minute when midfielder Bruno Rendon played a cross into that area that forward Romario Williams finished into the top right corner to give his team a 1-0 lead. Indy Eleven maintained that lead until the 90th minute when Greenville tied the match at 1-1 on an own goal. In penalty kicks, Greenville shot first, with both teams converting the first 11 tries.  Greenville goalkeeper Gunther Rankeburg then made the deciding save on Oliver Brynéus’ attempt to send his team to the Jäger Cup semi-finals.The Boys in Blue resume USL Championship play vs. Miami FC on Saturday at 7 pm at Carroll Stadium on All Things Indiana Night. Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster.

Dan, Brent and Shane Reffing at Park Tudor Thursday night
Josh, Mohamed & I at the Hamilton Heights Complex Tuesday night

TV GAME SCHEDULE

Fri, Aug 22
2:30 pm ESPN2 Bayern Munich vs RB Leipzig Germany
8 pm Amazon Prime Chicago Red Stars vs NC Courage NWSL
Sat, Aug 23
7:20 am Para+ Wrexham vs West Brom
7:30 am USA Man City vs Tottenham
9:30 am ESPN+ Leverkusen (Tilman) vs Hoffenheim
9:30 am Para+ Wrexham vs Sheffield Wed
9:30 am Para+ Norwich City (Stewart) vs Middlesborough (Aidan Morris)
9:30 am Para+ Coventry City (Haji Wright) vs Queens Park Rangers (Juergan Sumners old team)
10 am USA Brentford vs Aston villa
10 am Peackcock Bournemouth (Adams) vs Wolverhampton
11 am
12:30 pm NBC Arsenal vs Leeds (Aaronson)
12:30 pm St Pauli (Sands) vs Dortmund (Reyna)
1:30 pm ESPND+ Atletico Madrid (Cardoso) vs Elche
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Cremosnese
3:30 pm ESPND+ Levante vs Barcelona
4 pm CBS Bay FC vs Washington Spirit NWSL
7 pm TV6, ESPN+ Indy 11 vs Miami FC
7:30 pm Apple TV free Chicago vs Philly
7:30 pm Prime Cincy vs NYCFC
7:30 pm ION NY/NJ Gotham FC vs Utah Royals NWSL
10 pm ION Portland vs Kansas City Current NWSL
Sun, Aug 24
9 am USA Everton vs Brighton (new stadium unviel)
9 am Peacock Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Nottingham Forest
11:30 am NBC Fulham (Jedi-hurt) vs Man United

11:30 pm ESPN+ M’Gladbach (Scally) vs Hamburger
2:45 pm CBSSN Juventus (McKennie) vs Parma
3:30 pm ESPNd+ Oviedo vs Real Madrid
7 pm Apple TV Charlotte vs NY Red Bulls
7 pm Para+ Houston Dash vs Seattle Reign NWSL
8 pm Para+, Prime, Golazo San Diego Wave vs Racing Louisville
9 pm FS1 Apple TV Seattle vs KC
Mon, Aug, 25
1:30 pm ESPN+ Athletic Club vs Rayo Vallecano
2:45 pm CBSSN Inter Milan vs Torino
3 pm USA Newcastle vs Liverpool
Tues, Aug 26
12:45 pm Para+ Kairat vs Celtic (CVB)
2:45 pm Para+ Preston North End vs Wrexham
2:45 pm Para+ Bournmouth (Adams) vs Brentford C Cup
2:45 pm Para+ Norwich (Sargent) vs Southampton C Cup
Wed, Aug 30
2:$5 PM Para+ Fulham (Robinson) vs Bristol City C Cup
2:45 pm Para+ Grimbsy Town vs Man United C Cup
2:45 pm Para+ Millwall vs Coventry City (Wright) C Cup
2:50 pm Para+ Club Brugge vs Rangers Champs League
Fri, Aug 29
2:45 pm Para+ Lecce vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
3 pm CBSSN Leicester City vs Birmingham City Championship
8 pm Prime Orlando Pride (Marta) vs NY/NJ Gothem NWSL
10:30 pm Para+, Prime Seattle Reign vs San Diego Wave NWSL
10:30 pm Para+, Prime, Golazo Portland Thorns vs Utah
Sat, Aug 30
7:30 am USA Chelsea vs Fulham (Jedi)
12:30 pm NBC Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Newcastle United
Sun Aug 31
7:30 am USA Nottingham Forest vs West Ham
11:30 am USA Liverpool vs Arsenal
12:30 pm CBSSN Genoa vs Juventus (McKennie)
Sat, Sept 6
5 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Korea
Tues, Sept 9
7:30 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Japan in Columbus, Ohio
Fri, Oct 10
8:30 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Ecuador
Tues, Oct 14
9 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Australia

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Goalkeeping

Saves of the Week EPL Week 1
Saves of the Week France

USL Saves of the Week  
Man United have a goalkeeper problem, but solving it might have to wait

DRAMA! Andrew Thomas sends Seattle Sounders to Leagues Cup semis
El Pulpo! Pedro Gallese rescues Orlando City vs. Toluca

USA

USMNT countdown to the World Cup: Does McKennie have Juve future?
Rapids break record to sign USMNT’s P. Aaronson
USMNT countdown to the World Cup: Sargent making early claim to be Pochettino’s No. 9
Giovanni Reyna opts to join Borussia Mönchengladbach


USWNT to take on New Zealand in October friendly

World

2025-26 Bundesliga opening weekend schedule: How to watch
Bundesliga predictions: Bayern to repeat, surprising
Italy Season Preview Serie A Season Preview
Serie A Season Preview- Inter Favorites Again

Italy Season Preview
Bundesliga 2025/26 Tactical Previews
| The full 18 club index 5 reasons to look forward to the 2025/26 Bundesliga season Bayern Munich the favorite again as Bundesliga season …
Another Camp Nou delay? Barcelona requests La Liga changes in upcoming home game

10 European storylines to follow: Liverpool and City rebuild, Barca’s defense, more

– Connelly, O’Hanlon’s Premier League mega-preview, 2025-26
– How clubs got their colors: Stories behind iconic kits


Kennedy Center to host 2026 World Cup draw

Reffing

8 Second GK Rule
Chelsea Wall Rule – No Goal
What’s Your Call?  
Dogso Liverpool Game

MLS

Colorado Rapids & Paxten Aaronson: Why the USMNT midfielder returned to MLS
Leagues Cup 2025: Semifinal matchups, schedule info & who advanced
Inter Miami oust Tigres in WILD Leagues Cup quarterfinal
DRAMA! Andrew Thomas sends Seattle Sounders to Leagues Cup semis
Leagues Cup dreaming! LA Galaxy deny LIGA MX leaders Pachuca
El Pulpo! Pedro Gallese rescues Orlando City vs. Toluca
MLS takes Leagues Cup bragging rights over LIGA MX
Power Rankings: San Diego FC on verge of record-setting season

Leagues Cup Action resume Wed night, Aug 27th on FS1 & Apple TV Free

USMNT weekend viewing guide: full go

Some of our most watched leagues embark on a new season.

by jcksnftsn Aug 22, 2025, 12:26 PM EDT

Chelsea v Crystal Palace - Premier League

Getty Images

Italy and Germany join the regular season roundup this weekend for a full schedule of league action as we fully get the European calendar underway. Despite that, there is a slow start to the weekend with a lack of action on Friday. However, the combo of all leagues in play, and matches not starting up until Friday is out, gives us a load of action to follow starting Saturday morning. Let’s get to it:

Saturday

Eintracht Frankfurt v Werder Bremen – 9:30a on ESPN+: Paxten Aaronson is heading to Colorado and Timothy Chandler doesn’t actually play so Eintracht Frankfurt will be dropping off our watchlist for now, unless Nathaniel Brown decides to make a switch to the USMNT.

Bayer Leverkusen v TSG Hoffenheim – 9:30a on ESPN+: Malik Tillman missed Bayer Leverkusen’s 4-0 win over SG Sonnenhof in dfb Pokal action last weekend and will be unavailable this weekend as well as Leverkusen open their season against Hoffenheim though he has returned to training.

AFC Bournemouth v Wolverhampton Wanderers – 10a on Peacock: Tyler Adams and Bournemouth look to bounce back after their 4-2 loss to Liverpool in last weekends opener. Their opponent this weekend, the Wolverhampton Wanderers, also gave up four goals last weekend in a 4-0 loss to Manchester City.

Norwich City v Middlesbrough – 10a on Paramount+: Josh Sargent and Aidan Morris will face off in the Championship as Sargent looks to continue his hot start. The forward, who was left out of the Gold Cup squad, has scored in each of his first three matches to start the 2025 season. Meanwhile, Morris and Middlesborough haven’t conceded a goal in league play through their first two matches as they are off to a 2-0-0 start.

Coventry City v Queens Park Rangers – 10a on Paramount+: Haji Wright picked up his first goal of the season last weekend as he converted a penalty and Coventry City went on to defeat Derby 5-3 and pick up their first win of the season.


Olympique Marseille v Paris FC – 11a on beIN Sports: Tim Weah’s playing options look to be opening up as a post match dustup following last weekends opening loss between Adrien Rabiot and Jonathan Rowe that was described by the club as being “extremely violent” led to both players being transfer listed. Weah came on as a substitute at the start of the second half last weekend for centerback Geoffrey Kondogbia as the team looked to take advantage of a first half red card to Rennais. Marseille need to rebound quickly as they take on newly promoted Paris FC on Saturday.

Arsenal v Leeds United – 12:30p on NBC and Universo: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United defeated Everton in their return to the Premier League with Aaronson seeing 23’ minutes off the bench. The difficulty level ratchets up a notch or twelve on Saturday as they face an Arsenal side coming off a 1-0 win over Manchester United and looking to make a title run this season.

St. Pauli v Borussia Dortmund – 12:30p on ESPN+: James Sands made his return from injury as St. Pauli needed penalties to defeat Eintracht Norderstedt in dfp Pokal first round action on Saturday. Sands went the full 90’ in his return playing as a center-mid. St. Pauli will now face Borussia Dortmund which also looks like they will be dropping off as a regular on the viewing guide with the likely exit of Giovanni Reyna and neither Cole Campbell nor Mathis Albert looking likely to break through in the short term.

PSV v Groningen – 12:45p on ESPN+: Sergino Dest created PSV’s opening goal with a fizzed cross that was redirected for an own goal last Sunday in PSV’s 2-0 win over Twente. Ricardo Pepi was again not included in the squad as his recovery is ongoing but Alassane Plea has picked up a long term injury so there are certainly minutes for the taking when Pepi is available. This weekend PSV face FC Groningen who are coming off a 2-1 win over Heerenveen.

Atletico Madrid v Elche – 1:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN+: Johnny Cardoso started Atletico Madrid’s La Liga opener and came off at the half with his club up 1-0 but the team would give up two second half goals to Espanyol to fall 2-1. Cardoso did not look out of place in the first half though he did pick up a yellow just minutes prior to the half ending. This weekends opponent, Elche, played to a 1-1 draw with Johnny’s former team, Real Betis, last weekend.

AC Milan v Cremonese – 2:45p on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic got his season started on the right foot, scoring a goal in AC Milan’s 2-0 Copa Italia win over Bari last weekend. Pulisic played the first 66’ minutes of the match before being subbed out for Club and Country teammate Yunus Musah. This weekend’s opponent Cremonese lost in penalties to Palermo after neither side was able to score a goal in regulation.

Olympique Lyon v Metz – 3p on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann went the full 90’ as Lyon defeated Lens 1-0 in their opener and will now face a Metz side that fell 0-1 to Strasbourg.

Sunday

Crystal Palace v Nottingham Forest – 9a on Peacock: Chris Richards and Crystal Palace played Chelsea to a scoreless draw last Sunday and will now face Nottingham Forest who finished last season just outside of the Champions League positions and started their 2025-26 campaign with a 3-1 win over Brentford.

Toulouse v Brest – 10:15a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie went the full 90’ last weekend as Toulouse defeated Nice 1-0 to open their season.

Fulham v Manchester United – 11:30a on USA Network: Antonee Robinson missed Fulham’s 1-1 draw with Brighton & Hove Albion last weekend but is nearing a return and may be available this weekend as Fulham face Manchester United. Manager Marco Silva said he would make a decision on Robinson’s availability for this weekend following Saturday’s training session.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Hamburg SV – 11:30a on ESPN+: Joe Scally started and went the full 90’ for Borussia Monchengladbach last weekend at RB in the team’s 3-2 win over Delmenhorst. Gladbach will face Hamburg this weekend in their Bundesliga opener. Gladbach may also be moving up the priority viewing list in the near future with rumors that Gio Reyna could be joining his BFF Joe Scally in Gladbach.

Lille v Monaco – 2:45p on beIN Sports: Folarin Balogun missed last weekend’s match as Monaco opened their season but is reportedly available this weekend as they face Lille this weekend. Monaco opened their season with a 3-1 win over Le Havre.

Juventus v Parma – 2:45p on CBSSN and Paramount+: Weston McKennie and Juventus will open their season against Parma on Sunday looking to bounce back from a dissapointing 2024-25 season that saw them finish well out of the title race though they did just sneak into fourth place and the final Champions League spot. They will face a Parma side that were just out of the relegation positions last year.

USMNT countdown to the World Cup: Does McKennie have Juve future?

  • Jeff CarlisleAug 21, 2025, 07:54 AM ET

The opening weeks of the European club season have seen some auspicious starts. Norwich City‘s Josh Sargent continues to bang in the goals, with his tally against Portsmouth already giving him three on the young season. Chris Richards and Crystal Palace secured an impressive road shutout at Chelsea, and Sergiño Dest continued his fine form for PSV Eindhoven.The most notable performances of the weekend came from players in Christian Pulisic and Johnny Cardoso who have had some attention around them — not all of it positive.Throughout the season, ESPN will be monitoring the progress of the U.S. men’s national team player pool, delivering insights into those whose form or fitness has made them particularly intriguing. We call it the USMNT’s Countdown to the men’s World Cup.ESPN will count down to June 11 every week so that way, when the U.S. team is announced for this highly anticipated World Cup on home soil, no names on that 26-man roster will come as a surprise.Welcome to the USMNT’s Countdown to the World Cup. Only 295 days to go.


Editor’s Picks

Christian Pulisic | Attacker | AC Milan

2025-26 minutes: 66
2025-26 FotMob rating: 8.6

Finally letting his football do the talking

Pulisic’s summer of discontent — complete with deciding to skip the Gold Cup, some subtle sniping with U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino, and then a not-so-subtle war-of-words with former USMNT players over his decision — finally got back to focusing on his actual performances. And after shaking off an ankle injury, Pulisic delivered for his club, scoring Milan’s second goal from a sharp reception and finish on the turn in what was a 2-0 win over Bari in the Coppa Italia.

The 66-minute performance reinforced a truism about Pulisic and his USMNT teammates: If he plays well, he’ll be praised. If he doesn’t, he’ll be criticized. Might some of that criticism be over the top? Possibly. But like it or not, this is what he signed up for, and using his docuseries as a platform to complain about said criticism won’t change that. With next summer’s World Cup now only 10 months away, the scrutiny on Pulisic and his play is only bound to increase. His start to the season is nonetheless encouraging.

Johnny Cardoso | Midfielder | Atlético Madrid

2025-26 minutes: 45
2025-26 FotMob rating: 6.7

Already invaluable at Atléti

There has been plenty of head-scratching when it comes to Cardoso and the USMNT. Namely, why doesn’t he replicate his club form at international level? Cardoso’s debut for Atléti on Sunday against Espanyol elicited a very different type of question. Why was he subbed out at halftime by manager Diego Simeone?

It’s a decision made all the more puzzling given how Cardoso performed. He completed 87.5% of his passes and won 71.4% of his duels. Atlético were up 1-0 when he departed, only to lose the match 3-2 when Espanyol rallied for two goals. Simeone even praised Cardoso for his play and acknowledged he needed to reexamine his decisions.

“I think I learned a lesson,” he told reporters afterward. “I’ll take something away from that. There’s a lesson for me.”

Given that Cardoso earned compliments, it’s a start that bodes well for continued playing time on a very competitive squad. Now the challenge for Pochettino is to find a way to get the best out of Cardoso when he dons a different red, white and blue jersey.

Weston McKennie | Midfielder | Juventus

2025-26 minutes: 0
2025-26 FotMob rating: 0.0

An annual tradition: Asking whether McKennie has a future at Juve

There’s always a danger in reading too much into preseason. There are youngsters to try out, fitness levels to manage, and in the case of Juventus, there’s recovery from a packed summer that included the FIFA Club World Cup. All of that said, when it comes to McKennie, how big of a role will he end up playing for Juve this season? It seems to be an annual query.

Last season, McKennie was ever-present, making a total of 48 league and cup appearances. But if the past three friendlies are anything to go by, the U.S. midfielder will be hard-pressed to repeat that level of activity. As the Serie A opener against Genoa nears this weekend, and with manager Igor Tudor opting for a 3-4-3 formation, McKennie has seen his playing time steadily decrease, with him entering last weekend’s friendly against Atalanta in second-half stoppage time. There have also been reports he might be headed to AS Roma.

If McKennie remains with Juve as a squad player, the team’s presence in the UEFA Champions League figures to result in plenty of player rotation, but it’s a less-than-ideal scenario for McKennie and the USMNT; it also might open the door for a fringe player or two. Middlesbrough‘s Aidan Morris has impressed in the opening weeks of the season.

The in-form XI

If the World Cup started tomorrow, who would make up Pochettino’s starting XI? Each week we take our best attempt to name a starting lineup based on form and fitness, which means there’s no room for injured players.

Even as Dest returns to health, a competition is brewing for the remaining outside back slots. Antonee Robinson, when healthy, is the presumed starter at left back, but he has yet to even make the gameday roster in recent weeks for Fulham as he continues to recover from offseason knee surgery. One possible option on the left side, Watford‘s Caleb Wiley, is in a similar situation with a back injury.

The hope is that both players return to the field soon, but in the meantime, Pochettino has plenty of options in an attempt to fill the void. Joe Scally has played on either flank for both club and country, and has been a steady presence on the backline for Borussia Mönchengladbach, making more than 30 appearances in each of the past four seasons. However, Pochettino has shown a clear preference for outside backs who can contribute to the attack, whereas Scally’s strengths lie more on the defensive end of the field. Last season, in 32 league appearances, he had no goals or assists, and created only 11 chances.

That has led Pochettino to look at other options. Both Max Arfsten of the Columbus Crew and Orlando City SC‘s Alex Freeman logged the majority of minutes available at outside back during the Gold Cup. Arfsten showed some vulnerabilities in his defending, but improved as the tournament progressed and chipped in with a goal in the quarterfinal win against Costa RicaHolstein Kiel‘s John Tolkin got time in the Gold Cup as well, and started the club season in dream fashion, scoring Kiel’s opener in the 2-0 victory over Homburg in the DFB-Pokal. The sequence showed off Tolkin’s passing, mobility and finishing ability. His edge in defending means he cracks this week’s in-form XI.

That is by no means the extent of Pochettino’s options when it comes to outside backs. Tim Weah‘s debut for Marseille last weekend came as a wing back, and Yunus Musah‘s early days under new Milan manager Massimiliano Allegri have seen him play in a similar role. Weah has shown flexibility in the past at club level in terms of playing on either flank, although for the USMNT, his value lies farther upfield given his ability to stretch and get behind defenses. The September window should reveal plenty.

Big Board 1.0 update

ESPN’s USMNT Big Board 1.0 went live earlier this month, and each Big Board will provide the foundation for weekly player updates. Below are the minutes and player ratings for each of those 35 players.

Matt Turner, goalkeeper, New England Revolution: 180 minutes in 2025; 7.4 FotMob rating in 2025.

Matt Freese, goalkeeper, New York City FC: 2,250 minutes in 2025; 7.2 FotMob rating in 2025.

Zack Steffen, goalkeeper, Colorado Rapids: 1,800 minutes in 2025; 7.1 FotMob rating in 2025.

Turner might get the nod in the in-form XI, but Steffen is doing all he can to push for more consideration from Pochettino. Steffen’s goals prevented mark of 6.33 is the third highest in MLS, showing a level of consistency that was absent last season. The big challenge for Steffen is simply staying healthy. If he does, he should get a chance to battle for the starting goalkeeping spot.

Patrick Schulte, goalkeeper, Columbus Crew: 1,980 minutes in 2025; 6.7 FotMob rating in 2025.

Chris Richards, center back, Crystal Palace: 180 minutes in 2025-26; 7.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Tim Ream, center back, Charlotte FC: 1,802 minutes in 2025; 6.6 FotMob rating in 2025.

Mark McKenzie, center back, Toulouse: 90 minutes in 2025-26; 7.5 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

McKenzie remains the leading contender to push for Ream’s spot in the center of the USMNT defense, and he delivered a composed performance in Toulouse’s season-opening 1-0 win over Nice, completing 93% of his passes and winning 67% of his duels. Consistency with the USMNT has been an issue, but he’s off to the right kind of start with his club.

USMNT’s Chris Richards reacts to Community Shield win with Palace

Chris Richards speaks after Crystal Palace’s penalty shootout win over Liverpool in the Community Shield.

Cameron Carter-Vickers, center back, Celtic: 180 minutes in 2025-26; 7.7 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Miles Robinson, center back, FC Cincinnati: 2,258 minutes in 2025; 6.9 FotMob rating in 2025.

Auston Trusty, center back, Celtic: 138 minutes in 2025-26; 6.4 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Sergiño Dest, fullback, PSV Eindhoven: 262 minutes in 2025-26; 8.1 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Antonee Robinson, fullback, Fulham: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Joe Scally, fullback, Borussia Mönchengladbach: 90 minutes in 2025-26; 7.4 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Caleb Wiley, fullback, Watford: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Max Arfsten, fullback, Columbus Crew: 2,240 minutes in 2025; 7.5 FotMob rating in 2025.

Alex Freeman, fullback, Orlando City SC: 2,320 minutes in 2025; 7.5 FotMob rating in 2025.

Tyler Adams, midfielder, AFC Bournemouth: 90 minutes in 2025-26; 6.2 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Weston McKennie, midfielder, Juventus: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Johnny Cardoso, midfielder, Atlético Madrid: 45 minutes in 2025-26; 6.7 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Luca de la Torre, midfielder, San Diego FC: 1,995 minutes in 2025; 6.8 FotMob rating in 2025.

Tanner Tessmann, midfielder, Lyon: 90 minutes in 2025-26; 7.6 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Yunus Musah, midfielder, AC Milan: 24 minutes in 2025-26; 6.8 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Sebastian Berhalter, midfielder, Vancouver Whitecaps: 2,470 minutes in 2025; 7.4 FotMob rating in 2025.

Christian Pulisic, attacker, AC Milan: 66 minutes in 2025-26; 8.6 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Tim Weah, attacker, Marseille: 45 minutes in 2025-26; 6.9 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Malik Tillman, attacker, Bayer Leverkusen: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Diego Luna, attacker, Real Salt Lake: 2,005 minutes in 2025; 7.2 FotMob rating in 2025.

Luna sat out last weekend’s 1-0 defeat to Charlotte as he was suspended because of a red card he picked up against the New York Red Bulls. Luna now has seven yellow cards and two ejections on the season. He’s obviously getting more attention from opponents, but he’ll need to find a way to keep his composure as well as the edge with which he plays. Not at all easy, but a trait he’ll need to refine.

Alejandro Zendejas, attacker, América: 380 minutes in 2025-26; 7.1 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Zendejas looks to be cooling off a bit … or is he? During the two tournaments that comprised the 2024-25 Liga MX season, Zendejas had 11 goals from 7.07 xG across 40 matches. So far this season, Zendejas has one goal from 1.36 xG in five matches. So his goals/game are down, but his xG/game is up. Still early days yet, but if Zendejas continues to get chances, his goal scoring should round into form.

Giovanni Reyna, attacker, Borussia Dortmund: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Folarin Balogun, forward, AS Monaco: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Ricardo Pepi, forward, PSV Eindhoven: 28 minutes in 2025-26; 6.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Josh Sargent, forward, Norwich City: 227 minutes in 2025-26; 7.4 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Patrick Agyemang, forward, Derby County: 0 minutes in 2025-26; 0.0 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Haji Wright, forward, Coventry City: 176 minutes in 2025-26; 7.1 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

Damion Downs, forward, Southampton: 93 minutes in 2025-26; 7.1 FotMob rating in 2025-26.

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Serie A season preview: Inter Milan favourites again, challenges for Juve, Conte being Conte

Serie A season preview: Inter Milan favourites again, challenges for Juve, Conte being Conte

By James Horncastle Aug. 15, 2024


One normal season of Serie A. That’s all I ask for…

If normal means more unpredictability, more infrastructure-defying competitiveness, more “only in Italy, eh?”

As we’ll discover in this preview of the upcoming season, a coach has already rescued his sporting director from a burning building, Drake has bailed a club out of bankruptcy on the condition he can design their shirts, and Antonio Conte wants more signings, more, more, more.

Just when you thought you were out, this league pulls you back in…


Who do you think will win the title and why?

No one has retained the title since Juventus at the end of their nine-year streak in 2020, but Inter Milan have been stealthily dynastic.

Think about it. They ended Juventus’ dominance in 2021, took the title to the final day in 2022, and won the league in 2024. They’ve also been to Europa League and Champions League finals and pulled off the Coppa-Super Coppa double, twice.

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Unlike Napoli a year ago, Inter have continuity of coaching and the eviction of Suning brings stability at the ownership level.

For the first time in four summers, Inter have not sold a big name. They’ve added (Piotr Zielinski and Mehdi Taremi) without subtracting and, for that reason, appear primed to add a 21st Scudetto to their collection.

Inter celebrate their 2024 title — will they do the same in 2025? (Mattia Pistoia/Getty Images)

And who will make up the rest of the top four?

Top four is so passee. Isn’t this the league that earned five Champions League places through coefficient-leading performances in Europe? OK, I’m stalling and trying to buy myself an extra place here because, credit to Serie A, it is so tough to call.

One of the reasons for that is six of last year’s top 10 have changed their coach; seven if we include Daniele De Rossi, who is beginning his first full season at Roma. My instinct is to reward continuity and to back holders and favourites Inter, as well as Atalanta. Gian Piero Gasperini has made the top four on five occasions. If anyone slips up, Atalanta are there to take advantage.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Steve Pagliuca on Boston Celtics, Atalanta and feeling ‘like the Ted Lasso of Italy’

Elsewhere, Antonio Conte is a guarantee and whether it’s Victor Osimhen or Romelu Lukaku up front, I expect Napoli to push hard. Conte’s teams in Italy always challenge for the title (unless they’re called Arezzo or Atalanta).

It’s the Bergamaschi who are the variables here.

By winning the Europa League, they showed the depth and resilience necessary to cope with eight Champions League games. But the injuries to Giorgio Scalvini and Gianluca Scamacca, and a stand-off between the club and Teun Koopmeiners, who wants to force a move to Juventus, throw a spanner in the works.

The test for Atalanta will be similar to what Napoli experienced last year: can they keep a group of players hungry, motivated and willing to stay at the club after finally winning a coveted trophy?

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AC Milan should be fine. More than fine. They’ve beaten Manchester CityReal Madrid and Barcelona in pre-season. They’ve won the Trofeo Berlusconi. Surely an eighth Champions League will follow? Am I right?

This summer’s strategy seems to have as its working title “Sceptics Busters”. New coach Paulo Fonseca and Milan’s incoming striker Alvaro Morata will always have their doubters. But the Portuguese raises the ceiling of this current group of players while the Spaniard has the European pedigree that goes straight to the very core of Milan’s DNA. Both know the league.

Juventus, meanwhile, showed in each of the last two seasons they can underperform and still contend for the title for four- or five-month stretches. They’ve appointed the hottest coaching mind in Serie A in Thiago Motta, whose style is, in many ways, countercultural to Juventus’ traditions. If it meshes — and that’s a big if — then my top four, in no particular order, are: Inter, Napoli, Milan and Juve.

Milan’s pre-season form has been promising (Kamil Krzaczynski/Getty Images)

Which team will surprise us most?

Try not to pay too much attention to their sweaty tussle with Modena in the Coppa Italia — which was ultimately decided by a penalty shootout — Napoli will experience the biggest upswing in points. That’s a consequence and a combination of the anticipated Conte effect and the worst title defence since Torino in 1950 without the mitigating circumstances of the Superga air disaster.

Como are a top-half team disguised as a newly promoted club a la Monza two years ago. Now Cesc Fabregas has his coaching badges, it’ll be interesting to see how he performs in the dugout, where he replaces Osian Roberts. This is no longer Osian’s XI.

The arrivals of Pepe Reina, Alberto Moreno, Raphael Varane and Andrea Belotti make Como glitter like the waters of the lake.

Question is: do Napoli and Como constitute surprises in the way Bologna did last season? Probably not. I think the surprise will be Bologna again on the basis they won’t fade as badly as people expect after losing Motta, Joshua Zirkzee and Riccardo Calafiori.

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Who will be the biggest underperformers?

The risk is that it’s Juventus.

This is Motta’s first big job. It’s his first time coaching in four competitions. They’re making a lot of (overdue) changes, particularly in midfield, but the squad, for now, looks incomplete. The more seasoned Juventus fans can hear echoes of 1990 when the club spent lavishly on an up-and-coming new-wave coach from Bologna, Luigi Maifredi. Juventus then finished seventh.

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I don’t foresee a repeat of that. Motta theoretically has a soft start against Como and Verona and has always got his teams punching above their weight. But they have a lot of work to do this month to optimise the team and move out players such as Federico Chiesa.

League-wise, Roma have been the biggest underperformers of the past six years. It’s a big ask for De Rossi, as a young coach, to get this team out of the rut of sixth place, which is where they’ve finished three seasons in a row.

Staying in Rome, Lazio’s new boss Marco Baroni staked a claim to be considered coach of the season at Verona, but he takes over a team that has now fully transitioned away from the Ciro Immobile/Sergej Milinkovic-Savic/Luis Alberto era.

Fiorentina should give us the measure of Raffaele Palladino, too. He kept Monza up comfortably but benefited from the biggest net spend in the league in his first year. His replacement at Monza, Alessandro Nesta, needs to show he can cut it at this level and that he didn’t get the job because of his past with Adriano Galliani, his chief executive from his playing days at Milan.

Keep an eye on 777-owned Genoa. It remains to be seen if their owners’ troubles destabilise the club. Alberto Gilardino lost Radu Dragusin in January and has since bid farewell to Mateo Retegui. If Albert Gudmundsson follows, they could be in a spot of bother.

Thiago Motta, Riccardo CalafioriMotta, while head coach of Bologna (Giuseppe Maffia/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

How do you expect the promoted clubs to do?

All the teams graduating from Serie B are foreign-owned and should, if run correctly, be able to capitalise on the dysfunctional (Verona) or stale (Udinese) teams that have been circling the drain of relegation for some time.

Parma have settled down since owner Kyle Krause did a mini-Chelsea upon taking the keys to the Tardini three years ago. Their manager, Fabio Pecchia, is a promotion specialist, but it remains to be seen if he can keep them there.

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Venezia reportedly risked going out of business until Drake got involved and joined the ownership group. No doubt, this was all part of God’s Plan. The Lagooners will be hoping their return to Serie A lasts longer than One Dance.

Last year’s top scorer in Serie B, Finnish striker Joel Pohjanpalo (22 goals), should be the player whose jersey you buy this season. Why? Venezia are Italy’s most fashion-first football team and Pohjanpalo has been known to go straight to the sideline bar for a pint after sinking four goals.

Who will be the best young player this season?

Milan copped a lot of flak for not sending any Italian players to the Euros, but the core of the Under-17 team that won the same competition over the summer is founded in their academy. Let’s see if Fonseca finds time to blood youngsters Mattia Liberali and Francesco Camarda.

In Turin, there’s already a lot of hype surrounding Vasilije Adzic at Juventus but, as with the Milan boys, it’s probably too soon for him to make a sustained impact.

The pick that immediately comes to mind is Matias Soule, now of Roma. He was a contender to win this award last year (the league gave it to Zirkzee) while on loan at Frosinone from Juventus and the prospect of him duetting with Paulo Dybala at Roma this season is too much to handle. Motta wished to keep the Argentine playmaker at Juventus. Soule’s sale was a freak in the balance sheets — heaps of pure profit — but will Juventus come to regret it on the pitch?

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GO DEEPER

Matias Soule is Juventus’ silky loanee who just turned down the Saudi Pro League

Which under-the-radar player have big clubs been sleeping on?

For two years, it was Monza goalkeeper Michele Di Gregorio. Then, this summer, Juventus ruthlessly demoted and released Wojciech Szczesny in order to sign him. Di Gregorio should be in the Italy setup at least as one of Gigio Donnarumma’s understudies after shining in analytics such as goals saved above average for the past two seasons.

If we rule out players who are expected to move, such as Fiorentina’s Nico Gonzalez, Udinese’s Lazar Samardzic or Genoa’s Gudmundsson, let’s settle on Morten Frendrup, a Pac-Man midfielder who gobbles up everything. Every team needs a player like the Dane.

Morten Frendrup of Genoa (Simone Arveda/Getty Images)

Which team has had the best transfer window?

At times, Italian coaches sound like accountants. You do the books at the end of the year. A fortnight of the transfer window remains, so judgements are premature. Let’s put it this way: Juventus and Bologna have been the best sellers, although Zirkzee’s buyout clause and the sell-on percentage Basel were due for Calafiori needs to be taken into consideration.

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In terms of retention, for all the people who say Milan have diverged from Moneyball this summer, this disciplined approach has got the team in such a strong financial position that they can keep Mike MaignanTheo Hernandez and Rafael Leao. In a vulnerable league where top talents tend to hang around for two years, it’s pretty cool that Hernandez and Leao are beginning their sixth seasons at San Siro.

Roma have been the most aggressive, investing almost €100million (£86m, $11om). Look out for their new centre-forward Artem Dovbyk. He was the Pichichi in Spain with Girona last season (24 goals). It’s the first time an Italian club has bought the holder of that award since Christian Vieri returned to Italy (Lazio) after one season at Atletico Madrid in 1997-98.

For all you romantics out there, Alexis Sanchez has returned to Udinese, swayed no doubt by the most random coaching appointment of the summer: Kosta Runjaic.

Which team has had the worst transfer window?

One swallow doesn’t make a summer. One bad signing doesn’t ruin a transfer window.

But Milan are paying Tottenham more for Emerson Royal than they paid Lille for Mike Maignan; €18million is a big price to keep captain Davide Calabria as first choice right-back. Milan fans must hope Royal suddenly transfigures into Cafu. He, on the other hand, has taken the No 22 jersey — a number that once belonged to Ballon d’Or winner Kaka. Whatever you make of Royal, you have to respect his confidence.

Lazio have let Ciro Immobile, Felipe Anderson and Luis Alberto go. Dainty playmaker Daichi Kamada, the replacement for Milinkovic-Savic last summer, left for Crystal Palace after a single season.

A strategy of signing players from Verona and Salernitana (who their president Claudio Lotito used to own) risks catching up with them. It’s a year since their sporting director Igli Tare departed. Angelo Fabiani has stepped into the breach, but it still doesn’t feel like Tare has been replaced.

Ciro Immobile, Felipe Anderson and Luis Alberto have all left Lazio (Elianton/Getty Images)

What did you miss most about Serie A?

Aside from Conte telling his new club they need to make more signings, it’s got to be Gottismo.

Lecce’s coach Luca Gotti already had a cult following. He looks like a matinee idol from the 1960s. He rides Ducatis, reads biographies of Ernest Shackleton and attended his daughter’s graduation in a Lecce polo. But then he saved his sporting director from a burning building. (I know, right?) Pantaleo Corvino had booked a hotel to talk about Gotti’s contract extension.

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“It was owned by a friend of mine and at the time only used for weddings.”

Gotti bought Corvino dinner, but what sealed the deal was a knock on the door at 4:30 in the morning.

“It was Gotti. He’d come to warn me that a fire had broken out in the hotel.” Corvino had been fast asleep and would have slept through it. “I went outside but was hit by the fumes and smoke. In the meantime, I could no longer see Gotti, I tried to go down the stairs but was blocked by the flames.

“At that point, I returned to my room. I tore the curtain, went out onto the balcony and that’s when I found Gotti. I saw that the fire was heading in our direction and we started thinking about jumping from the first floor. Luckily, the fire brigade arrived and helped us down.

“After we got down, (and) when it was safe, I turned to Gotti and said: ‘Luca, how much did you want in your contract extension? That’s fine…’”

What’s the one match we should really look out for in the opening few weeks of the season?

Juventus-Roma on September 1. It’s an early chance for Soule (and Dybala) to show their old club what they’re missing.

Then the Milan derby on September 22. Inter have won a record six in a row. One of the criteria for judging Fonseca will be whether he can invert this trend.

Tell us one great storyline involving Serie A we might have missed over the summer…

Zlatan Ibrahimovic as Zoolander. Milan’s recruitment has been less Moneyball and more hair-brained, so to speak.

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When announcing Fonseca, he said: “There’ll be a different energy on the sideline, a different face: one was bald (Stefano Pioli), the other has more hair. But still elegant.” At Morata’s unveiling, Zlatan commented on his striker’s looks. “We’re a good-looking team. Alvaro’s a handsome guy. We could do to make (Strahinja) Pavlovic (Milan’s new buzzcut centre-back) grow his hair.”

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Give us your boldest prediction for the season…

Napoli are a year removed from winning the league. Who have they lost in the meantime? Zielinski, Kim Min-jae and Hirving Lozano. They have hired Conte. Apart from Paris Saint-Germain, I don’t see anyone signing Osimhen — and if someone does cut Aurelio De Laurentiis a cheque, Napoli will buy Romelu Lukaku.

In a season in which Napoli only have Serie A and the Coppa Italia to focus on, it is not inconceivable that Conte does what Conte does and wins the league. Last of all, don’t be surprised if Vincenzo Italiano takes Bologna to the Coppa Italia final.

(Top photos: Getty Images)

Bundesliga 2022-23 season preview: Everything you need to know ahead of the new German football season

  • Constantin EcknerAug 3, 2022, 09:18 AM ET

On Friday, football fans around the world will hear the familiar hymn of the Bundesliga once again, when champions Bayern Munich meet Europa League winners Eintracht Frankfurt to start the 2022-23 season. Coaches have swapped dugouts, players have departed, others have arrived with much fanfare, and the question of whether Bayern can be challenged for the title this year remains controversial.

Before the action gets underway, though, let’s look back at what you might’ve missed since the 2021-22 campaign came to a close in May, and dissect some of the biggest storylines worth following as the 2022-23 season begins to unfold.

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Jump to: Better Bayern? | Talents remain | Coaching carousel | Who can stop Bayern? | Cinderella stories | Managing the schedule | What are the Americans up to?


Bayern have changed, and for the better

A disgruntled striker dominated the first few weeks of this summer, as Robert Lewandowski did not hide his intention to leave Bayern Munich. While Bayern and Barcelona negotiated a deal behind closed doors, fans were worried about the record champions’ prospects for the upcoming season. No glances at the history books are required to deduce how important Lewandowski had been to Bayern in recent years. He scored 98 goals in the past two seasons alone and was especially crucial as the team’s rescuing anchor if things didn’t go their way.

While Lewandowski eventually exited in July, Bayern’s hierarchy used that time to secure deals for the immediate future. With the signing of Sadio Mane, the German champions once again scored a real steal in the transfer market. Mane has been one of the Premier League‘s most exciting players for almost a decade. Without the Senegal international, Liverpool wouldn’t have been as successful as they were domestically and internationally.

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While Mane is not a like-for-like replacement for Lewandowski, the 30-year-old offers Bayern boss Julian Nagelsmann the chance to execute some of the tactical ideas he has had in mind since his arrival in Munich in 2021. First glimpses of the new Bayern team were visible in the German Supercup match against RB Leipzig, which Bayern won 5-3. Mane and Serge Gnabry played together up front and were almost impossible for Leipzig’s defence to manage, considering neither acted as an obvious target player and were free to drift around the attacking third, pressing relentlessly whenever Bayern lost possession.

The Supercup game also saw Nagelsmann bring on €67 million signing Matthijs de Ligt as well as the two Ajax academy graduates in Ryan Gravenberch and Noussair Mazraoui. Oh, and 17-year-old striker Mathys Tel from Stade Rennais has also just arrived in Bavaria, with Nagelsmann predicting that the young Frenchman could one day score 40 goals in a season.

Whoever thought that Bayern might go into decline after Lewandowski’s departure will be in for a surprise, because Bayern look better than they did last season.


There’s no talent exodus this year

While Bayern are always expected to leave their mark on the transfer market due to their financial might, the other 17 Bundesliga clubs usually suffer a dip in quality during the summer transfer window. Coaches and sporting directors have become creative in finding replacements and discovering new talent to fill the voids, but the fact remains that they’re often largely powerless to keep hold of their best players.

This summer was different, though. Erling Haaland has been the only major player who left one of the 17 non-Bayern clubs, with others opting against moves to England or Spain. Surprisingly, Christopher Nkunku, the highly touted Paris Saint-Germain academy graduate who was elected the Bundesliga’s Player of the Season for 2021-22, decided to extend his contract with Leipzig until 2026. Reports suggest that no buyout clause was included in his new contract.

Florian Wirtz, the 19-year-old attacking wizard at Bayer Leverkusen, also extended his contract — his running until 2027. The Germany international is recovering from a cruciate ligament tear, which might have influenced his decision to commit to Bayer for longer than initially planned. Many expected Wirtz to follow in the footsteps of former Leverkusen wunderkind Kai Havertz and go abroad rather quickly.

The extensions of Nkunku and Wirtz are a signal to the rest of the league and the continent: It’s no longer a foregone conclusion that every highly skilled player in Germany under the age of 25 has to go to Bayern, Borussia Dortmund or the biggest clubs elsewhere in Europe.

Still, some sides had to contend with the departures of key players. Union Berlin lost goal scorer Taiwo Awoniyi, and Mainz moved on from captain Moussa Niakhate. Both have joined Nottingham Forest, who seemingly have an appetite for Bundesliga players, considering the newly promoted Premier League side also signed Orel Mangala from VfB Stuttgart.

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These three have been the exception rather than the rule in this summer’s transfer window, which is a welcome change for fans of German football.


The coaching carousel continues to spin

Coaches might start calling the day following the end of each Bundesliga season “Black Sunday,” because on that day (or the days immediately following), a few of them are usually shown the door. It was no different in 2022, with Markus Weinzierl (FC Augsburg), Adi Hutter (Borussia Monchengladbach) and Florian Kohfeldt (VfL Wolfsburg) being relieved of their duties soon after the campaign’s conclusion. A week later, Dortmund made it official that Marco Rose was no longer the head coach of the Black and Yellow.

Naturally, those clubs began their searches for new managers. Dortmund ended up reinstating Edin Terzic, the former assistant who acted as an interim coach before Rose was appointed in 2021. Gladbach appointed Daniel Farke, the former Norwich boss who had gone to Russian Premier League outfit Krasnodar in January and left shortly after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began. Hertha Berlin also looked to the east and brought back Sandro Schwarz, who had stayed in Russia until the summer, reaching the national cup final with Dynamo Moscow. Wolfsburg replaced Kohfeldt with former Bayern and Frankfurt boss Niko Kovac. Augsburg chose Enrico Maassen, the former coach of Dortmund’s reserve team, to step in for Weinzierl. Schalke 04 appointed Frank Kramer following their promotion, which had been achieved under Mike Buskens, who was not too fond of the idea of remaining head coach.

This marks the second consecutive summer in which the clubs swapped coaches en masse. The year prior, practically everyone looked worse after installing their new hires. Dortmund fetched Rose away from Monchengladbach, who signed Hutter from Frankfurt, who signed Oliver Glasner from Wolfsburg, who signed Mark van Bommel. Only Frankfurt had any noticeable success with their new manager, winning the Europa League in May.

Despite it all, though, the coaching carousel keeps spinning.


Can anyone challenge Bayern?

When one club wins 10 consecutive championships, it raises the question of whether anyone will ever put an end to their dominance.

A few weeks ago, some would have comfortably picked Borussia Dortmund as a viable challenger to Bayern Munich, but their chances have dropped dramatically, though, since Haaland’s exit. Their replacement, Sebastien Haller, was signed from Ajax to fill that physical center-forward role, but he will be out for several months receiving ongoing treatment for a malignant testicular tumour. Without their Haaland successor, the Black and Yellow might struggle to generate the necessary offensive output in the early going, which could mean the gap between them and Bayern is too great to make up.

The sad truth is that the remaining teams are unlikely in a position to challenge Bayern throughout the course of 34 matchdays. RB Leipzig might have significant name value in their squad, but there are justifiably question marks behind manager Domenico Tedesco’s tactical approach, as he focuses greatly on Nkunku as his target player in the final third. Leipzig also lack stability at the back, particularly when the team are forced to track back.

Leverkusen, the other team among Germany’s top four, have caused some excitement during the summer in light of the signing of 20-year-old Czech prospect Adam Hlozek, as well as Wirtz’s contract extension. However, what Bayer 04 did not manage to do is sign a much-needed anchor player for their midfield. They have been lacking that one stabilising element between defence and attack: Robert AndrichCharles Aranguiz and Kerem Demirbay are undoubtedly gifted, yet they are better suited as sidekicks to a dominant midfielder.

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WEDNESDAY, June 4 (all times ET)
• Valencia vs. Villarreal (1:30 p.m.)
• Stuttgart vs. Frankfurt (2:30 p.m.)
• Atletico Madrid vs. Cadiz (4 p.m.)
• Getafe vs. Celta Vigo (4 p.m.)

THURSDAY, MAY 4 (all times ET)
• Sevilla vs. Espanyol (1:30 p.m.)
• Girona vs. Mallorca (1:30 p.m.)
• Athletic Club vs. Real Betis (3:30 p.m.)
• Rayo vs. Valladolid (3:30 p.m.)

FRIDAY, MAY 5 (all times ET)
• Mainz vs. Schalke (2:30 p.m.)

It wouldn’t be surprising if one of these three teams could keep up with Bayern during stretches of the season, but in the end, Bayern will likely prevail given their quality and depth. The record champions simply do not face the same issues as Dortmund, Leipzig or Leverkusen.


Will we see another Cinderella story?

It has become a tradition of the Bundesliga that each season at least one underdog climbs into the top third of the table, usually qualifying for continental competition and then disappearing again the next year due to the stress of the extra games in their calendar. Mainz, Augsburg and FC Cologne all have had outstanding years in recent memory, and last season saw Union Berlin and SC Freiburg both play well beyond their market value, earning places in this season’s Europa League as a result.

This season marks Union’s second straight season in Europe, but the Cinderella story of the team from the eastern part of the capital city could come to an end soon, given the departures of Awoniyi and Grischa Promel and the fact that manager Urs Fischer might not be able to reinvent his team once again. How the Swiss coach was able to tweak things enough to prevent his side from becoming predictable for the first three years following Union’s promotion was commendable enough; to do so a fourth time is unlikely.

Moreover, Union and Freiburg’s performances might suffer from playing in three competitions simultaneously in a year with a particularly condensed schedule thanks to this winter’s World Cup in Qatar. The two sides likely won’t be in danger of relegation, but slipping back into mid-table is a realistic scenario.

This raises the question of whether any other team might be able to fit into Cinderella’s glass slippers this year. It could end up being one of the fallen giants that makes a surprising impact and returns to the sharp end of the table.

Schalke have just been promoted back to the Bundesliga. The 1997 UEFA Cup winners were part of the league’s elite for many years, but mounting debt and financial constraints caused the club’s hierarchy to offload most of the team’s best players until 2020. Coupled with a series of ill-advised managerial appointments, Schalke were doomed to experience the ultimate embarrassment: relegation to the 2. Bundesliga, where the Royal Blues spent one year.

This team is nowhere near as strong as past Schalke sides, which would make a run towards European places somewhat of a miracle, but perhaps now that there is so much less pressure on the club, they can suddenly become overachievers.

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How will everyone contend with the winter break?

Three decades ago, fans of Bundesliga clubs knew exactly what to do between the holiday season and the end of January. As the league had implemented a lengthy winter break to give everyone some rest — and to pay tribute to the fact that under-soil heating has not yet been installed in every stadium — supporters streamed into indoor arenas and watched indoor football. Later, the Bundesliga adjusted its schedule and shortened the winter break to two weeks.

As the World Cup in November will affect the schedule of practically every league in Europe, we will see another temporary alteration and Bundesliga teams in particular will have to deal with an incredibly condensed timetable. Those who are also competing in international competitions will not get any break until November. Once the World Cup is concluded on Dec. 18, the league won’t restart immediately, instead waiting until Jan. 20. This means a return to the old lengthy winter break, and traditionalists have called for the temporary reinstatement of the “Hallenmasters,” a tournament crowning Germany’s indoor champions. The German FA hosted the tournament in various iterations between 1987 and 2001, with Borussia Dortmund being the record winner with four titles. The final “Hallenmasters” was decided in a penalty shootout between SpVgg Unterhaching and Dortmund, as the small club from the Munich suburbs beat Dortmund 5-4.

If you’ve witnessed those tournaments, you probably remember them fondly. If you haven’t, let’s hope you’ll get an opportunity to watch something similar in 2023.


What are the Americans up to?

Finally, a look at the Bundesliga through the lens of the United States. This summer has seen Tyler Adams leave Leipzig and Chris Richards depart Bayern for Crystal Palace, but Germany remains home to plenty of intrigue for followers of the USMNT.

Giovanni Reyna has become something of a phantom in Dortmund. Everyone is aware of the gifted midfielder, but we have not seen him on the pitch in some time. After a promising start to the 2021-22 season, Reyna was sidelined by a muscle injury until February. He made his return, even played for the national team, but then was injured again in April. Even though Dortmund afforded him extra time to recover and return to full fitness, he still missed 34 games through injury last season, which has raised questions about Reyna’s resilience.

The 19-year-old is still not ready to be selected for the matchday squad for Dortmund’s season opener and will need more time before he can be a reliable option for Terzic. Regardless of Reyna’s injury woes, Dortmund remain convinced of his qualities. Once he returns to the pitch, he might collide with Marco Reus, as both are best suited for the No. 10 role. Reus possesses the bonus of being the team captain, but Reyna is a pillar of the future. In any case, we should see more of him at some point this season, but patience is needed.

The same can be said for Ricardo Pepi. The Texas native signed with Augsburg for a transfer fee of $20m in January, shortly before his 19th birthday. Most fans in Germany had not heard of the striker beforehand but were curious what this hyped American could bring to the table. Sadly for him, he was a non-factor during his first few months in-country. Pepi made four appearances in Augsburg’s starting XI and was brought on as a substitute seven times, scoring no goals in 475 minutes of total playing time.

Maassen, Augsburg’s new manager, also seems to view Pepi as an alternative from the bench. He brought him on after 74 minutes in the DFB-Pokal game against fourth-division side Lohne, replacing Andre Hahn. While Augsburg’s two-striker system offers Pepi the chance to earn more playing time, he has to prove he’s able to compete in Germany’s top flight.

Patience might be the key quality most American players in the Bundesliga have to show this year. Joe Scally, right-back for Borussia Monchengladbach, has found himself on the bench more often than on the pitch in preseason.

What could give him hope is that he was featured in Borussia’s starting XI against Oberachern in the Pokal. Gladbach have two right-backs in their squad: 19-year-old Scally and the much more experienced 29-year-old Stefan Lainer. Normally, Lainer should remain first choice, but if the Austrian slips, Scally should be there to take over the spot. Scally’s advantage is that there is no considerable pressure on the young American. Gladbach want to help him progress so that he becomes a long-term option.

Jordan Pefok‘s situation is quite different. When Awoniyi, who had scored 20 goals across competitions in the previous season, decided to leave Union Berlin, he left some rather large boots to fill. Union chose Washington, D.C.-born Pefoke (who’s going by Jordan Siebatcheu in Germany) as Awoniyi’s replacement.

The American, who grew up in France and possesses Cameroonian roots, had scored 22 goals for Young Boys in the Swiss league last season and put himself on the radar. Pefok and Awoniyi have similarities in stature and physicality, and it seems Union would like him to play an identical role. Pefok started the season by scoring his maiden goal for Union in their hard-fought win over Chemnitz in the first round of the DFB-Pokal. There is certainly more to come from the newcomer — who will be on the pitch Saturday, as the Bundesliga goes into its 60th season.

7/25/25 Euro Finals England vs Spain Sun 12 Fox, USMNT tix vs Japan Sept 9 Columbus discount tix, Indy 11 Xmas in July Sat night 7 pm, Messi suspended

Women’s Euro Finals England vs Spain Sun 11 am Fox

Just amazing that all the Semifinals went to extra time with England again pulling a rabbit out of the hat to beat a game Italy in Extra time England- Italy highlights . The same for Spain as they found a way past Germany Highlights in extra time. It gives us the dream final — the rematch England vs Spain. At the beginning of the tournament, both teams were ranked first and second favorites to win the competition. England, who have become the third European team to reach the final of three consecutive major tournaments, lost 1-0 to Spain when they met in the Fifa World Cup final in 2023. I like Spain again – 2-1 in Extra time of course.

Still sad for Germany goalkeeper Ann Berger who was inspiring and added the save of year with this Amazing Save. Germany vs France Shootout Even more remarkable is her fight and win against Cancer and her story gets even more inspiring Berger’s Journey from Cancer to Shootout Hero. (in honor of my Bruz Cable who’s birthday would have been in just 5 days and lost his battle with cancer in 2023).

Indy 11 Xmas in July promo Sat night 7 pm @ The Mike

The Boys in Blue host the final round of USL Jägermeister Cup group play with “Christmas in July on Saturday, July 26 at 7 p.m. at Carroll Stadium vs. FC Tulsa.  Indy 11 Christmas in July Indy Eleven leads Group 3 with a 2-0-1 record and can clinch a berth in the quarterfinals of the 38-team event with a victory. Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster. Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here.  For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

US Men vs #17 Japan in Columbus on Tues. Sept 9th – Discount Tix Available

The US men are coming to Columbus, Ohio Lower.com Field on Tuesday night Sept 9th for a 7:30 pm match up with #17 ranked Japan. The Ole Ballcoach is going along with some buddies to the game. Visit http://ussoccer.spinzo.com/CarmelFC this special link to get discounted tickets. We plan to sit in section 128 or 129 ($50/each) beside the American Outlaws who will be in the Nordic Section 127. Let me know if you plan to join – feel free to send on to friends. I for one was sick of seeing US fans outnumbered all summer long in our own stadiums. Let’s prove Columbus and Cincy are the HOME STADIUMS of US Soccer – this is where US Fans will not be outnumbered! Join me in the trek to Columbus to fight for our Red, White and Blue! Reach out to the Ole Ballcoach at shanebestsoccer@gmail.com if you want to coordinate travel plans.

MLS All Stars beat Mexico Liga MX – Leagues Cup between the two starts this weekend

So I tuned in to both the Skills Challenge and the MLS vs Liga MX Allstar Game this week — and you what — it wasn’t bad. Austin Texas filled the stadium for both events and it was a pretty good watch on Apple TV. Dissapointing to have no Messi or Jordi Alba on the field for MLS – but honestly the MLS were the better squad in both halves even without them. The Skills Challenge had my favorite MLS Allstar Goalie Wars Were Great & MLS Allstar Game highlights. This week the Leagues cup between Liga MX and MLS will start with games all week and weekend featuring MLS vs Mexican teams on Apple TV and FS1. (see schedule below). Lionel Messi, Jordi Alba suspended by MLS for skipping All-Star Game

Had a great time reffing some high school games with the legendary Tom Baker today. My favorite Canadian!

RIP Mike Sommer

CDC Celebration of Life for Long Time Carmel Dad’s Club Ref Mike Sommer
Date: Saturday, July 26, 2025 Time: 9:00AM
Location: Conference Room above Badger Field Concession Stand

My Bruz Cable Best – here in JC – best soccer player in the Family.
Had a chance to make Clemson while they were top 5 in the US
before getting hurt. RIP Bruz!!

TV GAMES SCHEDULE

Coverage starts at 11 game at 12 noon Sunday on Fox

Fri, July 25
8 pm FS2 Brazil vs Colombia Women Copa
Sat, July 26
5 pm NBC, Peacock Everton vs Bournemouth (Adams)
7 pm FS1 Inter Miami vs Cincy
7 pm TV 6, ESPN+ Indy 11 vs FC Tulsa Christmas in July
7 pm Peacock Man United vs West Ham
9:30 pm Apple TV Salt Lake vs San Jose
10:30 pm Apple TV Vancouver vs Kansas City
11 pm Univision Necaxa vs America (Zendejas)
Sun, July 27
11 am Fox Coverage Women’s Euros
12 noon Fox England vs Spain Euro Finals
2:30 pm Golazo Ajax vs Celtic (CVB, Trusty)
Mon, July 28
5 pm FS2 Womens Copa America Knockout
8 pm FS1 Women’s Copa America knockout
Tues, July 29
7 pm Apple Toluca vs Columbus Crew Leagues Cup Mex vs MLS
8 pm FS1 Women’s Copa America knockout
10 pm?? FS1 Pachuca vs San Diego Leagues Cup Mex vs MLS
Weds, July 30
7 pm Apple Miami (Messi) vs Atlas Leagues Cup
8 pm? FS1 Orlando City vs Pumas UNAM
10 pm FS1 Portland Timbers vs Atletico San Luis
Thurs, July 31
7 am Golazo Arsenal vs Tottenham (friendly)
7 pm Apple Monterey vs Cincy
10 pm FS1 Cruz Azul vs Seattle Sounders
Fri, Aug 1
8 pm FS2 Women’s Copa America QF
8 pm Prime Racing Louisville vs KC Current NWSL
8 pm Apple? Columbus Crew vs Puebla
10 pm Apple? LAFC vs Pachuca
10 pm FS1? Tigres vs San Diego
10:30 pm Para+ Seattle Reign vs Angel City NWSL
Sat, Aug 2
5 pm FS2 Women’s Copa America QF
7:30 pm Ion NC Courage vs San Diego Wave NWSL
8 pm Apple? Columbus Crew vs Puebla
8 pm FS1? America (Zendejas) vs Minn United
10 pm FS1? Portland Timbers vs Queretaro
10 pm ION Bay FC vs Houston Dash NWSL
Sun, Aug 3
12:30 pm ABC Washington Spirit vs Portland Thorns NWSL
6 pm Para+ Orlando Pride vs Utah Royals
Sat, Sept 6
5 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Korea
Tues, Sept 9
7:30 pm TNT, Tele, Max USA Men vs Japan in Columbus, Ohio
Fri, Oct 10
8:30 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Ecuador
Tues, Oct 14
9 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Australia

Its EPLs Aston Villa vs Germany’s Frankfurt in Tix In Louisville

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Women’s Euros

Agyemang: From ball girl to baller
Euro 2025 semifinals: Aitana Bonmatí’s game-winner in extra time lifts Spain over Germany
Bonmati shows why Spain was so eager to have her back
Fox evolved approach with Euros broadcast
Wiegman tips Arsenal’s Agyemang for ‘bright future’


USA

If Zendejas can’t crack the USMNT, is Liga MX a viable league for aspiring Americans?

USMNT after 2025 Concacaf Gold Cup: Whose stock is up or down?

MLS

No Messi, no Alba: Can the MLS All-Star Game be fixed, and where does it go from here?
MLS ASG: Surridge leads MLS to dominant win over Liga MX Ryan Young
MLS All-Stars dispatch Liga MX All-Stars in 2025 showcase
Back on top! MLS All-Stars top LIGA MX All-Stars in Austin
Austin brings the party for MLS All-Star Game: “This is a soccer city”
All-Star Game: Another chapter in MLS vs. LIGA MX rivalry
The MLS All-Star game entertained plenty, but that may no longer be
Power Rankings: Inter Miami & San Diego FC vie for top spot
MLS Brings Lionel Messi Cam Back to TikTokLionel Messi will star in an exclusive TikTok livestream during Inter Miami’s Aug. 2 Leagues Cup matchup with Necaxa
Buyer beware: The gamble MLS clubs make with designated players

Source: LAFC eyeing move for Spurs star Son
🎥 Messi involved in four goals to make absolute mockery of NYRB 😮

🎥 Portland Timbers unveil largest tifo in MLS history for 50th anniversary

Galaxy scores in final minute to force draw with LAFC in tense El Tráfico

Commentary: LAFC fans put aside their rivalry with Galaxy to stand in solidarity against ICE

Goalkeeping

Stefan Frei injury: Seattle Sounders goalkeeper back home resting
War brewing? Barcelona expect Ter Stegen to be out for 4-5 months, not three

Barcelona goalie Marc-André ter Stegen set for back surgery, faces spell on sidelines
> Keylor Navas, former Real Madrid goalkeeper, is set to join UNAM Pumas in Liga MX after a six-month stint in Argentina with Newell’s Old Boys (More)

Reffing

Foul or not ?   
Is Hairpulling always a Red Card?  
Neymar Yellow?

GK Yellow or Red Rush in?  

TOP TALKING POINTS
 
UEFA Opposes VAR Changes
UEFA reportedly opposes any measures to widen VAR’s powers to intervene in corner kicks and second yellow cards. The International FA Board (Ifab), football’s lawmaking body, is considering extending VAR’s powers (see previous write-up), but Uefa believes this would increase delays, negating any benefit from the extra interventions. It is also opposed to plans that would scrap rebounds on penalties, whereby the ball would be declared “dead” if the goalkeeper saves the penalty or it strikes the post or crossbar.
The European governing body was unhappy that Ifab approved changes to the laws of the game in March without consulting them. The most notable enforced change is that a goalkeeper now concedes a corner instead of an indirect free-kick for holding on to the ball for longer than eight seconds. The rule was applied for the first time at the Club World Cup–watch here.
Uefa is required to take on Ifab’s law changes. Changes approved at Ifab’s Annual General Meeting (AGM), which will next take place in March 2026, are binding and come into effect globally. While some rules can be subject to interpretation by different bodies, such as the interpretation of handball, the proposed VAR and penalty changes would not allow for that.
Aitana Bonmati of Spain celebrates scoring her team's first goal during the UEFA Women's EURO 2025 Semi-Final match
Aitana Bonmati’s extra-time strike sent the reigning World Cup champions to the Euros final. (Maja Hitij – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)
2023 World Cup champions Spain have clinched their first-ever UEFA Women’s Euro Final berth, taking Wednesday’s semifinal with a narrow 1-0 extra-time victory over eight-time title-winners Germany .
“I’m proud because we deserve it,” winning goal-scorer Aitana Bonmatí told reporters. “We had a tremendous championship. It was the first time we beat Germany, and on top of that, we reached the final.”
How it happened: Germany entered the match shorthanded, with both injuries and suspensions forcing them to start every available defender.
The squad’s famed football mentality prevailed for more than 110 minutes of a 0-0 deadlock, as Spain struggled to break down a committed German defense led by savvy goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger.But as the clock ticked down in extra time, Bonmatí’s audacious 113th-minute strike caught Berger off-guard, handing Las Rojas a shot at their second major tournament trophy in three years.
What’s next: The once-improbable 2023 World Cup Final rematch has become a reality, as familiar foes Spain and England gear up for another championship battle.
“I know what they can do,” said Spain and Arsenal midfielder Mariona Caldentey of the defending Euros champs. “It will be a hard game.”
Don’t miss it: The UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 Final kicks off on Sunday at 12 PM ET, live on Fox Sports.
Women’s Euro Final Confirmed
England will face Spain in the 2025 Uefa Women’s Euro final on Sunday, July 27, at 17:00 BST (12:00 ET). This comes after Spain’s first win against Germany in the semi-finals, secured by an extra-time goal from Ballon d’Or winner Aitana Bonmati—read the full match report here.
Spain are given the edge over England in the final, with Opta’s model projecting a 51.5% chance of victory. At the beginning of the tournament, both teams were ranked first and second favourites to win the competition. England, who have become the third European team to reach the final of three consecutive major tournaments, lost 1-0 to Spain when they met in the Fifa World Cup final in 2023. However, both nations secured a 1-0 win at home, respectively, when they met earlier this year in the Uefa Nations League.
Viewership numbers have been high throughout the tournament. An average of eight million people in the UK watched England’s win against Italy in the semi-final, delivering ITV’s highest viewership of the year. The peak audience reached 10.2 million, compared to 9.3 million in England’s 2022 semi-final victory over Sweden.
> Arsenal made a winning start to their preseason tour of Asia after Bukayo Saka’s 53rd-minute goal earned a 1-0 victory over AC Milan in Singapore (More) | Liverpool have officially signed Hugo Ekitike for £79m, subject to international clearance (More)
> The great-grandson of dictator Benito Mussolini, Romano Floriani Mussolini, has joined Serie A side Cremonese on loan (More)
> Kylian Mbappe will wear Real Madrid’s No. 10 shirt next season; the French forward didn’t ask to wear it, but the club is expecting record sales (More)
> Raheem Sterling is receiving interest from Juventus and Bayer Leverkusen as Chelsea look to offload the 30-year-old (More)

> Crystal Palace have submitted an appeal against their demotion from Europa League with the Court of Arbitration for Sport; decision expected on or before August 11 (More) |


MLS Match Day 24 Recap
Charlotte FC captured 6 points from the week, including a 3-2 road win over Atlanta United. Pep Biel was the orchestrator in this one, scoring once and assisting twice, including one to Wilfried Zaha. That’s Charlotte’s third straight win, and now they get Toronto at home. Save for a collapse, they should absolutely be in the playoffs. As for Atlanta, they’re winless in their last 7 and don’t seem to have any answers. Here’s an example of how clueless the attack has been.
El Trafico went as El Trafico goes; a full 97-minute affair filled with fights and plenty of goals. The Galaxy came back twice, down 2-0 and 3-1, to tie the game with a stoppage-time header from Maya Yoshida. Gabriel Pec and Denis Bouanga both had a brace, and Eddie Segura got a straight red in the 91st minute after a big scrum broke out. Here’s a wild photo of Segura choking Diego Fagundez. We got everything we asked for out of this rivalry.
FC Dallas ended their 5-game winless skid with a 3-0 victory over St. Louis City. Petar Musa had an assist and a brace and now has the most goals (27) in FC Dallas history for a player in his first two seasons. Lucho Acosta missed the game for personal reasons. We don’t know what’s going on there 🤔.
The Seattle Sounders beat San Jose 3-2 behind Pedro de la Vega’s best performance in a Seattle jersey. For the first time, Brian Schmetzer lined him up on the left wing, his natural position, and it resulted in a goal and an assist. But Seattle lost Jordan Morris in the first half, and he’ll need surgery on his AC joint. He finally got healthy and now this. So brutal.

MVP Race
The MVP race is starting to heat up. We have a couple of usual suspects and a couple of new names leading the ballot. Here’s a breakdown of the four frontrunners.
Lionel Messi 🐐
I was lucky enough to witness Messi’s 6th brace in his last 7 games on Saturday in Harrison, New Jersey. Checking that off the bucket list ✅. With 28 goal contributions in 18 games played, he’s blowing everyone out of the water in contributions per 90’. Every other MVP candidate has played 22 games or more. If this continues, no one will be surprised if he becomes the first player ever to repeat as MVP.
Sam Surridge
With Saturday’s goal, he became the 10th player in league history to score at least 18 goals in his team’s first 24 games of the season. Against the other top 5 teams in the Eastern Conference, Nashville is 3W-2L-1D, the second best behind Inter Miami’s 4W-1L-1D. Surridge has been a revelation, becoming the first player ever to score in 6 games in a row for Nashville.
Evander
The best player on the current Supporters Shield leaders. That’s usually enough to win it. But how about out-dueling Messi in last week’s matchup. He controlled the tempo, dictated play, and added a brace for good measure. With 23 goal contributions and counting, Evander has been the engine behind FC Cincinnati’s surge to the top of the Eastern Conference. He scored in 5 straight games, setting the record for most games in a row with a goal in Cincinnati’s history. He’s the second-best player in the league.
Anders Dreyer
Anders Dreyer’s first MLS season is pushing record-breaking numbers, and he just won June Player of the Month. He leads the league in assists with 15, and is just behind Messi in overall goal contributions with 25 total. He’s easily one of the best DP signings in the last 5 years.
Funny enough, in the 2020–21 season at FC Midtjylland in Denmark, Anders Dreyer and Evander combined for 31 goal contributions across all competitions, forming a dynamic duo that powered both domestic success and a Champions League run.


Congrats to the 6 Indiana Soccer Teams Playing this weekend in the USYS National Championships in Orlando July 22-27.
B15U – Indy Premier Elite 64 10B B15U – ZYSA 10B Green NL B19U – Alliance Eleven 06/07B
G17U – FW United Elite 64 08G G19U – FW United Elite 64 06/07G NWI Lions United 2011G Yellow.

https://www.soccerindiana.org/odp-try-outs/

Messi, Jordi Alba suspended by MLS for skipping All-Star Game

Inter Miami's Jordi Alba and Lionel Messi

By Paul Tenorio July 25, 2025 1:00 pm EDT


Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi and Jordi Alba have been suspended for Saturday’s match against FC Cincinnati after skipping Wednesday’s MLS All-Star Game.The league announced the sanctions on Friday afternoon.“Inter Miami CF’s Jordi Alba and Lionel Messi will be unavailable for the club’s match against FC Cincinnati on Saturday, July 26, due to their absence at this week’s Major League Soccer All-Star Game,” a statement from the league read. “Per league rules, any player who does not participate in the All-Star Game without prior approval from the league is ineligible to compete in their club’s next match.”While Alba took a knock in Miami’s last game, Messi was rested for fatigue issues.In a phone interview with The Athletic, MLS commissioner Don Garber said it was a “very, very difficult decision” to suspend Messi.“The most important thing is I know Leo Messi loves this league, and MLS is an entirely different league because of the years he’s been here helping to show the world what MLS is and what it’s capable of being,” Garber said. “One of the learnings that we have here is clearly MLS is different than other leagues around the world, and we have an approach to building events and building other activities we feel are important to help us grow interest in the league. I think it’s important — and particularly important to me — nobody has done more for Major League Soccer than Lionel Messi. Not just what he’s done off the field, but what he’s done on the field. Every game is a must-see match. I fully understand and respect and admire his commitment to Inter Miami.

“His decision [not to attend the All-Star Game] is not one that I really can argue with whatsoever and I understand it. But unfortunately we have a longstanding policy relating to player participation in the All-Star Game and we had to enforce that policy. It was a very, very difficult decision, but one I hope both [Messi] and everyone else can understand and respect. He has shown up for his club, for his teammates, for our league time and time again and I respect his decision.”Garber said the league would look to adapt the policy for future years.“We are going to take a very hard look at the rule moving forward. It is important to all of our players and all of our fans that we have a policy that reflects and involves the realities of our league and its players going forward. I am committed to working with all of our players and to start working with Leo Messi to adapt this rule so it makes sense going forward.”Prior to the ruling coming down Friday, Miami coach Javier Mascherano offered a suggestion to avoid this dilemma in the future, saying the All-Star Game should be held on a weekend and not played mid-week as a means to build in the requisite rest.He had been under the impression earlier on Friday that both players would be available for Saturday’s game, which pits two of the top teams in the league against one another.

“Well, Messi showed normal fatigue from the number of games and minutes he’s been playing,” Mascherano said. “Look, players always have discomfort, especially when they play every three days. But luckily, he is returning today. Let’s hope he can train alongside the group so we can count on both of them for tomorrow’s game.”Messi has played 90 minutes in every Inter Miami game dating back to April 30. That includes nine games since June 14, four of which came at the FIFA Club World Cup. He last missed a match on April 27, in between legs of the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinals.MLS has weighed the decision the last few days after learning on Wednesday morning that the two players would not be traveling for the game. Notably, FC Cincinnati’s star players Evander and Miles Robinson both took part in the All-Star festivities, which meant they did not get rest nor were they able to train with their teams.“I don’t know that we necessarily need clarity,” FC Cincinnati coach Pat Noonan said in his Friday press conference regarding the lingering uncertainty about Miami’s star duo. “There’s rules. I’m aware of those. We’re under the impression that we’ll prepare for the game without those two available. We just played them a week ago, we know what it looks like with them on the field. But that’s kind of how we approached it.”Noonan added that FCC never considered having Evander or Robinson sit out the exhibition. Evander took part in the Skills Challenge on Tuesday night – Alba had initially been scheduled to as well – before captaining MLS opposite Liga MX’s Sergio Ramos on Wednesday.“There was no thought of holding our guys back,” Noonan said. “That’s never been the case. Our guys have always gone to represent our club and then that won’t change. They did a great job. Miles and Evander represented the club in a really good way and it was nice to see Evander be the captain to go and do well in the skills competition, and for the stretch of the first half that I saw, he did a good job. I’m happy for those two and their performances.”This is not the first time a major star has faced this sanctioning. Former LA Galaxy star forward Zlatan Ibrahimović was also suspended one game for missing the All-Star Game in 2018. Still, suspending one of the most famous players in the world and the reigning league MVP ahead of a showdown against a first-place FC Cincinnati team is a major decision considering the implications for the audience, playoff positioning and commercial benefits. The suspension also comes in the midst of Miami and Messi negotiating a contract extension. Messi’s current deal expires at the end of the 2025 season.Messi is obviously the league’s biggest draw. On Thursday, the league announced the return of a “Player Spotlight” TikTok broadcast of Messi for four of Inter Miami’s matches, beginning on Aug. 2 in the opening round of the Leagues Cup against Liga MX side Necaxa. Last season, the spotlight event on TikTok drew “more than 6.4 million live views” across MLS and Inter Miami’s accounts, per a release from the league, setting the record for the largest live audience for a U.S. sports event on TikTok.Garber reiterated that he hopes Messi understands why the league made its decision.

“I hope he does,” Garber said. “I think it’s important to state that I respect the fact that he made this decision because he’s played more games than almost any other player — 22 of the last 23 matches, including nine in the last 35 days. We don’t have a policy that says those players who have played more games at a particular time therefore they don’t have to show up, play or attend the All-Star Game. That’s the kind of thing we need to look at going forward.

“MLS doesn’t get everything right all the time. We always need to adapt, and really look at this rule going forward. The struggle is that I know 100 percent from everything I’ve heard and everyone involved, he made this decision because he’s playing so much and he wants to focus on his team.”

(Top photo: Jeff Dean/Getty Images)

No Messi, no Alba: What’s next for the MLS All-Star Game?

  • Cesar HernandezJul 24, 2025, 09:38 AM ET
  • With a 3-1 win over the Liga MX All-Stars on Wednesday night, MLS stole back regional bragging rights through a victory in the 29th edition of the league’s All-Star Game.
  • Carried by goals from Sam SurridgeBrian White and match MVP Tai Baribo in front of a packed crowd at Q2 Stadium in Austin, Texas, the evening and encompassing All-Star festivities throughout the week will go down as a well-deserved success for MLS.
  • All of that said, in a marquee showcase that was filled with many of the best and the brightest from both leagues, there was one noteworthy omission: global superstar Lionel Messi. Earlier on Wednesday, MLS confirmed the absence of the Inter Miami CF player, as well as that of teammate Jordi Alba, despite both being selected for the match. Heading into the All-Star Game, Miami coach Javier Mascherano publicly stated that having his starters in the exhibition wasn’t ideal.

“The players are called up, I would like them to be able to rest but that is not my decision,” Mascherano said. “I know how important the All-Star [Game] is, and as far as I know, there is no decision from the club, everything is as normal.”This isn’t the first time that a high-profile player or club has said no to the event. In 2018, the LA Galaxy‘s Zlatan Ibrahimovic turned down the opportunity, and on the Liga MX side of the competition this year, 2025 didn’t feature selected players such as Leon‘s James Rodríguez or Cruz Azul‘s Erik Lira and Carlos Rotondi. The participation of Monterrey star Sergio Ramos also wasn’t officially confirmed until the night before.

Editor’s Picks

Why is this an issue for the All-Star Game? And with next year’s edition taking place in a World Cup year, when plenty of eyes will be on North America, where does the high-profile exhibition go from here?

Schedule congestion

The packed schedule is the most significant factor in the subdued vibes of the 2025 event. Both MLS and Liga MX will not only have a rapid turnarounds with regular-season matches this weekend, but will then also kickoff their joint Leagues Cup tournament next week. Including Leagues Cup and MLS, Messi & Co. are currently on a nine-game stretch between July 5 and Aug. 6. If they advance in Leagues Cup, up to three additional knockout-round games would then be played next month.

With that in mind, it’s understandable that Mascherano does not want to overtax his players.

“The intensity of the games we’ve played, especially in the last month and a half, has been very, very high,” the Miami coach, who has also had to manage injuries in his roster, added recently.

Not everyone agrees with Mascherano, though. Despite having to travel to the events during his playing days, six-time MLS All-Star Brian Ching viewed his involvement as a moment to relax and connect with other important names across the country.

“I always enjoyed the All-Star Game because it allowed you to meet and play with some of the best players in the league,” he said to ESPN. “These games are a mental break from the season for everyone because the games are fun to play in. None of the players play more than a half so it is like a practice for them.

“Most players enjoyed the opportunity to do something different from their normal week with their teams.”But that still hasn’t been enough to convince all involved. When Ibrahimovic missed out in 2018, the superstar cited fatigue, and was then surprised when he was handed a one-game suspension in accordance to league rules.

“[I] think it is ridiculous, but yeah, no comments,” Ibrahimovic said at the time. “They do whatever they want. I come from a different world; I come from the real world.”

Regarding when a one-game suspension could arrive for Messi and Alba, MLS commissioner Don Garber said that the league is “managing through that process as we speak” ahead of Wednesday’s game, while also admitting that there has been a heavy workload that had been put on the players.

“Miami had a schedule that is unlike any other team,” he said. “Most of our teams had a 10-day break. Miami hasn’t. We had Leo playing 90 minutes in almost all the games. That’s nine games in 35 days.”

It isn’t as if facing off against Liga MX is a unique opportunity either. In the modern era of MLS, there’s been a growing number of matchups between the two leagues that have sought to collaborate as often as possible. Along with Leagues Cup, Campeones Cup and clashes in the Concacaf Champions Cup, the All-Star Game can feel lost in the list of Liga MX-vs.-MLS battles.

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“You already have Campeones Cup and you already have Leagues Cup,” said ESPN’s Herculez Gomez, who played in both MLS and Liga MX. “How much is too much and then what are we trying to do here? Does a fan really enjoy [the All-Star Game]?”

Supporters of the league, especially those who sported a Messi jersey at Q2 Stadium, might also think twice about the All-Star Game going forward.

“It’s unfortunate because if you wanted to highlight this product or your products to the rest of the league, well, your biggest assets have to be there,” Gomez said.

Changing the competition format

Getting all players on board is something that the league will have to continue to manage in future editions, but what about the format of the competition itself that could perhaps garner more appeal for players and fans?

While the “all-star” concept itself is novel to the traditional hotbeds of the sport in Europe and Latin America, MLS could do more to stand out in an American sports landscape that has no shortage of high-profile exhibitions — let alone stand out in their own series of Liga MX-vs.-MLS events.

Making changes wouldn’t be a stretch when considering how often the league has tinkered with formats that have ranged from games against European club giants, the United States, Liga MX, and intraleague battles such as East vs. West and MLS USA vs. MLS World. And more generally, the league has demonstrated an appetite for experimenting with new rules and innovations for the global game.

The addition of the skills challenge is a step in the right direction during the All-Star week, but if MLS wants to capitalize on a younger demographic, the league could tap into the burgeoning scene of alternative tournaments such as The Soccer Tournament, Kings League and Baller League. Invited teams and celebrities from abroad, viral online moments through new rules, all on a small-sided pitch, the ingredients are there to experiment in a sport that has traditionally pushed back on new ideas that can allow players to show off a different side of their character.

Nicol backs Messi’s MLS All-Star snub

Stevie Nicol backs Lionel Messi and Jordi Alba’s decision to skip the MLS All-star game as the pair face a one-match ban for their absence.

“I [definitely] believe what lacks in normal football now is personality, in terms of players being able to be themselves,” Baller League player Josh Harrop, a former Manchester United midfielder, said to ESPN earlier this year. “I am a big football fan, but I kind of lost interest in watching it as much, because games are just so, so boring and dry.”

The argument, at least from the league’s perspective, could be made that those ideas are already being tested out within the skills challenge that has events such as goalie wars and the crossbar challenge. On Tuesday, guests such as U.S. men’s national team icon Clint Dempsey, U.S. women’s national team captain Lindsey Heaps, Liga MX Femenil star Nicki Hernandez and Liga MX icon Oribe Peralta also took part in the competition.

Ching, who has had a lengthy experience in the All-Star Game, doesn’t want to see too many changes.

“I feel this format keeps it competitive and entertaining for the fans while keeping it interesting and fun for the players,” the three-time MLS Cup champion said. “These games get competitive because of the rivalry between the two countries but both teams get to enjoy the experience of playing with the best of the best.”Either way, MLS still has plenty to ponder before a World Cup year in which lots of attention will be focused on the North American soccer landscape.

“I love the All-Star Game. You know, most leagues probably do, [but] how do you get your players to love the All-Star Game? Your partners to love the All-Star Game, and fans too,” Garber said. “Ninety-plus percent of our Leagues Cup matches are going to be MLS-vs.-Liga MX games, so maybe it is time for us to evolve the format … we’ll see how it plays out.”

For now, the opponent and date for the 2026 All-Star Game at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, is to be determined — as is whether all of the league’s biggest names will be in attendance.

Should any of England’s Euro 2025 finishers be starters in the final?

Should any of England’s Euro 2025 finishers be starters in the final?

By Cerys JonesJuly 24, 2025


England are in a major final again, and once more, their substitutes proved the difference.

Against Sweden, it was Michelle Agyemang who equalised and fellow replacement Chloe Kelly who played a key role in both of England’s goals. Against Italy, Agyemang was the hero who forced extra time again before Kelly scored the 119th-minute winner — which, incidentally, was from a penalty won by Beth Mead, another substitute.England’s strength in depth has been their superpower in Switzerland, allowing them to break down low blocks, stretch tired defences and, ultimately, pull off two great escapes. The question now is whether any of Sarina Wiegman’s so-called ‘finishers’ have earned a start for Sunday’s final in Basel against Spain.Here, The Athletic looks at each of their cases for a place.


Michelle Agyemang

In four senior caps, 19-year-old Agyemang has scored three goals — two of which were late equalisers to make England’s progress through the knockout stages possible. That is all without coming on before the 70th minute. Naturally, that begs the question of what she could do in 90 minutes instead of 20.

The map below shows how Agyemang has made the most of her minutes, taking up dangerous positions while, against Sweden, helping break down opposition attacks early.

Against Spain, those attributes — and particularly her strength in hold-up play, allowing team-mates time to get up the pitch and join a counter-attack — could be a great fit. After seeing her latch on to a long ball and lob Italy goalkeeper Laura Giuliani, only to hit the bar and let out a yell of frustration, the idea of her running in behind to exploit Spain’s high line is tantalising.

Is the time right for her to take the starting spot up top? That would feel harsh on Arsenal team-mate Alessia Russo, who has only scored once but has led the press brilliantly, run tirelessly and been a creative force too, with three assists. Russo is also adept at hold-up play and exploiting a high line (as shown for England’s first goal in the 4-0 win against the Netherlands).

Will she start the final? Excellent as Agyemang has been, starting her over Russo would be uncharacteristic for Wiegman. There is no guarantee the teenager can replicate over a full game what she has achieved against low blocks and tired defences. Wiegman will opt for experience, and that is the sensible call — but if England need a hero, it would make sense to give Agyemang more than 20 minutes.What You Should Read NextMichelle Agyemang: The teenager who saved England at Euro 2025The Arsenal forward rescued England against Sweden, showing her clinical finishing and ability to disrupt defences


Chloe Kelly

Kelly is the only one of England’s super-subs from Euro 2022 who has kept that role, with Russo and Ella Toone having become starters. Had that apparent standstill been put to her two years ago, she might have been disappointed. Now, though, after the gamble of leaving Manchester City in January in search of more playing time at Arsenal, she will be delighted she has even made it to Switzerland, let alone proven to be so crucial.

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She has been as important as Agyemang in England’s progress. Kelly was instrumental in England’s goals against Sweden before hammering home her penalty in the shootout. Against Italy, her dribbling and pace on the right wing were crucial in opening up space in the middle and creating opportunities for herself. She almost scored an iconic winner when she skipped away from four Italian defenders and bent her shot just wide of the top-left corner in extra time. In the furore, it went largely unnoticed that she almost scored directly from a corner. Instead, she would seal victory by turning in her saved penalty.She tracked back tirelessly against Italy, and made a key defensive contribution after substitute Giada Greggi had got the better of Grace Clinton. Again, she finds herself vying for a starting spot in a European final.

Will she start the final? Kelly has the best chance of any of the substitutes. Her contributions have been slightly less obvious than Agyemang’s, but equally as important, and she has more experience than her Arsenal colleague. A lot will depend on Lauren James’ fitness. If the Chelsea forward can bounce back from the ankle injury she suffered on Tuesday, she will be hard to displace. If not, Kelly will be first in line.What You Should Read NextMichelle Agyemang: The teenager who saved England at Euro 2025The Arsenal forward rescued England against Sweden, showing her clinical finishing and ability to disrupt defences


Aggie Beever-Jones

The Chelsea forward had a strong build-up to the Euros, planting herself firmly in Wiegman’s thinking with a hat-trick at Wembley against Portugal, but has had limited opportunities in Switzerland. Her standout moment was her first tournament goal, England’s sixth of the match against Wales — a well-taken but admittedly poorly defended header. The 21-year-old came on in the 85th minute against Italy and helped stretch their tired defence throughout extra time, coming close to turning home a couple of crosses but she could not find a way past Giuliani.Spain, her speed and dribbling on the counter-attack could be a weapon, and her adaptability to play across the front three helps provide cover. However, she is less physically imposing than Lauren Hemp (left wing) and Russo (striker), and has far less major tournament experience.Will she start the final? Beever-Jones’ competitors have the edge over her for a starting spot. She is still best used as a ‘finisher’, testing tired defenders.


Grace Clinton

Clinton faces stiff competition for a midfield role from Manchester United team-mate Toone, as well as Georgia Stanway and James. When she has got on to the pitch — which has been for no more than 16 minutes at a time — the 22-year-old has shown relentless energy but has not been at her best. Mostly employed to refresh England’s midfield and rush opponents with box-to-box running, Clinton has helped stop teams from building attacks.At her peak, Clinton balances reading of the game, movement and link-up play with defensive nous; that has not quite happened this tournament. Against Italy, when she came on in the 106th minute for Keira Walsh, she had to help prevent counter-attacks while simultaneously trying to provide a spark from deep. She looked comparatively sluggish when Greggi intercepted Kelly’s loose ball and pulled away into England’s half. Clinton has massive potential, but we have not quite seen it at this tournament.

Will she start the final? England desperately need to exercise some control over the midfield in the final and it does not feel like Clinton has shown more ability to do that than Stanway, Toone or Walsh. She will stay as a substitute.


Beth Mead

Mead’s Euros has not gone how she, or Wiegman, had planned. She started in her favoured right-wing position for England’s opening defeat against France, a performance that prompted a rethink about how England could extract the best from James. The Chelsea attacker was moved to the right, with Toone stepping in behind the forward line and Mead dropping to the bench.

Wiegman still seems to trust the Arsenal forward — she has featured in every game, and was the first port of call when James was forced off with an ankle injury against Italy. She showed versatility in that semi-final, moving into the No 10 role when Kelly was introduced, and looked dangerous in the box, not least when she won England’s penalty.

Mead was fouled for the penalty that led to England’s dramatic extra-time winner against Italy (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

However, that role change arose out of exceptional circumstances as Wiegman was trying to piece together an unusual number of attackers on the pitch, rather than providing any hints at where she could play in the final.

Will she start the final? Right now, the options ahead of her appear stronger. James did not have her best half against Italy but, if fit, would still be first in line to start on the right. Even without James, Kelly’s excellent substitute performances would put her ahead of Mead in the pecking order. Given Mead’s drop-off in minutes, no matter her experience, she is not best placed to start.

Germany 0 Spain 1: Aitana Bonmati’s strike lifts Spain to first Euros final appearance

Spain's midfielder #06 Aitana Bonmati (L) celebrates after scoring Spain's first goal during the UEFA Women's Euro 2025 semi-final football match between Germany and Spain at the Letzigrund Stadium in Zurich, on July 23, 2025. (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP) (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images)

By Cerys Jones and Tamerra Griffin

July 23, 2025

36


Aitana Bonmati nearly missed the 2025 European Championship due to a bout with viral meningitis the week before the tournament began. But on Wednesday, the two-time Ballon d’Or winner found a late goal to lift Spain to their first appearance in a Euros final. They will face a familiar opponent in England — the team Spain beat in the 2023 World Cup final.

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In a record fourth match that went to extra time this tournament, Spain needed a bit of magic from their star player to get past eight-time tournament winners Germany. The German side nearly ended the game in regular time with a pair of back-to-back shots in the 94th minute, but Spain goalkeeper Cata Coll made two acrobatic saves to keep the score level going into extra time.

Spain also finally broke their drought against Germany, a team they hadn’t beaten in the last eight meetings.

Despite Germany holding Spain scoreless through 90 minutes, something no other team at Euro 2025 could do, they failed to capitalise on multiple chances at the other end. Germany’s first of three shots on target came after the hour mark, despite multiple chances throughout the game.

Cerys Jones and Tamerra Griffin analyse the main talking points, setting up yet another final between Spain and England.

quarter-final

SwedenSweden2

EnglandEngland2*

NorwayNorway1

ItalyItaly2

FranceFrance1

GermanyGermany1*

SpainSpain2

SwitzerlandSwitzerland0

semi-final

EnglandEngland2

ItalyItaly1

GermanyGermany0

SpainSpain1

final

EnglandEngland

SpainSpain


Bonmati to the rescue 

Bonmati should not have scored that goal. Given how airtight Germany’s defense has been the whole game; how sharp Ann Katrin-Berger’s coverage of the goal; how underwhelming Spain have been on the attack with lofty crosses and half-hearted shots; how likely this game was to end with yet another set of penalties; and how Bonmati might still be recovering from viral meningitis; it simply did not seem possible by any stretch of the imagination.

But this is why Bonmati is a two-time Ballon d’Or winner. When the pressure is high and the chances slim, she transcends imagination and executes.

Bonmati’s extra time goal lift Spain to the Euros final (Sebastien Bozon/AFP via Getty Images)

She had fist-slamming frustrations throughout a game that saw Spain uncharacteristically frustrated over a much longer period than they’re used to against a steely Germany, but still Bonmati decided to do a dummy run that allowed her to slip past Rebecca Knaak before firing a low, driven, near-post shot at such an acute angle, you could hardly blame Berger for assuming she wouldn’t bother exploiting it. The shot was simply avant-garde in its brilliance. We will never know whether it was purposeful or a misdirected cross, but the way Bonmati pointed to her head during her celebrations suggests it just might have been.

Tamerra Griffin


Germany were their own worst enemy, again

Germany reached the final four despite doing their level best to put obstacles in their own path. Against Spain, they again have themselves to blame for their defeat.

Nobody has managed to keep a clean sheet against this Spanish side with their vast reserves of goalscorers and creators. No matter how dogged your defence, they will eventually score by hook or by crook — so opponents’ only real hope is to outscore them by exploiting their high line and being clinical in front of goal.

Germany became the latest side to fail to pull that off. Despite holding Spain scoreless for more than 100 minutes, it was through their own wayward finishing and lack of an incisive final action that they found defeat.

Germany held Spain for more than 100 minutes (Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)

Most teams have not even got as far as creating the opportunities that Germany carved out against Spain, so they deserve credit for that, but will be bitterly disappointed in their lack of end product.

Giovanna Hoffman had a particularly infuriating few moments in the first half, snatching at Sara Dabritz’s promising cross in the 28th minute and rolling a shot wide from Carlotta Wamser’s sumptuous curled pass in the 30th. She was offside for the latter, which she might well have been relieved by after failing to convert when one-on-one with Cata Coll. Before that, in the eighth minute, Klara Buhl had missed a golden opportunity to put Germany ahead when she fired wide after a perfectly timed run onto Berger’s long free kick. The ending of stoppage time summed it up: they had four shots, two of which were superbly saved by Coll and two of which were comfortably off target.

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They followed the blueprint for beating Spain up until the final step. They attacked well on the counter, exploited their high line, created good chances from the wings, and did so with only 33 per cent of possession – but let themselves down in front of goal. They had ample chances to take the lead before Bonmati eventually scored deep into extra time.

Having suffered avoidable and obvious red cards for Carlotta Wamser and Kathrin Hendrich against Sweden and France, they caused their own downfall with attacking rather than defensive errors in the semi-final.

Cerys Jones


Germany goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger and Spain forward Esther Gonzalez are teammates at Gotham FC in NWSL (Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Familiar foes among two Gotham FC players

Some of the striker-keeper duels between Spanish striker and Euros golden boot leader Esther Gonzalez and German goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger could have ended differently had Berger not been so deeply familiar with her goal-hungry opponent.

The two have been holding down both ends of the fort for Gotham FC in the National Women’s Soccer League (NSWL). Esther, in this tournament and her club’s league, leads the scoring (four goals at the Euros, 10 in the NWSL), while Berger was voted goalkeeper of the year last season and regularly dazzles with highlight-reel-calibre saves, even before the one that nobody can stop talking about in the quarter-final against France.What You Should Read NextBreaking down Ann-Katrin Berger save of the Euros, sending Germany to semi-finalsBerger is unflappable in goal for Germany

That’s the kind of edge a keeper needs against a prolific, confident, and in-form striker like Esther, whose threat is at least twofold: she can score with both feet and her head; and her movement off the ball is as cerebral as it is dizzying for a defender to track.

Tamerra Griffin


A rematch waiting in the final

The final against England is Spain’s chance to lay an unequivocal claim to the title of best team in Europe.

They are already familiar with England as opponents on the biggest stage, having beaten them in the final of the 2023 World Cup. Much about England remains the same: familiar faces like Ella Toone, Alessia Russo, Lucy Bronze, and Georgia Stanway were stalwarts of that final, and their attacking identity has stayed similar. However, there are new variables: Spain were not facing England’s likely front three, crucially including an in-form Lauren James, and England did not enter that final as, arguably, underdogs.

From World Cups to Nations Leagues, Spain and England know each other well (Judit Cartiel / Getty Images)

Sarina Wiegman’s team have made life incredibly difficult for themselves at Euro 2025, falling to a concerning opening defeat against France in the group stage and twice needing Michelle Agyemang’s late equalisers to drag them through the knockouts. Several times they have looked beaten, and several times they have bounced back. That puts a different complexion on this final to Spain’s win in Australia in 2023, when it was Spain whose build-up had not gone smoothly and England who were entering on the back of a major tournament win. Those roles are now reversed.

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England are beatable. France have done it once this tournament, and Sweden and Italy came remarkably close. But in spite of the noisy buildup, the early defeat, the scrappy knockout performances, here are England in a third consecutive major final. Spain face a side with proven winning credentials, but an underdog mentality – a combination which, if they cannot break England’s spirit early, could be lethal.

Cerys Jones

(Top photo: Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images)

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7/22/25 Euros Today England vs Italy, Wed Spain vs Germany on Fox, MLS Allstar Game Wed 8 pm, Skills comp Tonight 9 pm Apple TV, USMNT tix vs Japan Sept 9 Columbus discount tix, Indy 11 Xmas in July Sat night 7 pm.

Women’s Euro’s Continue on Fox 3 pm Tues England vs Italy, Wed Spain vs Germany

Wow the Germany vs Sweden game going to extra time and winning in penalties after Germany played the entire game a player down was truly amazing. Germany goalkeeper Ann Berger was inspiring and added the save of year with this Amazing Save. Even more remarkable is her fight and win against Cancer and her story gets even more inspiring Berger’s Journey from Cancer to Shootout Hero. I know who I am rooting for now to win the whole thing (in honor of my Bruz Cable who’s birthday would have been in just 8 days and lost his battle with cancer in 2023).
Of course Spain will be co-favorite along with defending Euro Champs England. Games start at 3 pm on Fox! I like England in the first one but I think Italy will take them to ET – while Spain will probably beat Germany setting up a dream final on Sunday 12 noon on Fox. Women’s EURO Great Saves | Quarter-Finals


US Men vs #17 Japan in Columbus on Tues. Sept 9th – Discount Tix Available

The US men are coming to Columbus, Ohio Lower.com Field on Tuesday night Sept 9th for a 7:30 pm match up with #17 ranked Japan. The Ole Ballcoach is going along with some buddies to the game. Visit http://ussoccer.spinzo.com/CarmelFC this special link to get discounted tickets. We plan to sit in section 128 or 129 ($50/each) beside the American Outlaws who will be in the Nordic Section 127. Let me know if you plan to join – feel free to send on to friends. I for one was sick of seeing US fans outnumbered all summer long in our own stadiums. Let’s prove Columbus and Cincy are the HOME STADIUMS of US Soccer – this is where US Fans will not be outnumbered! Join me in the trek to Columbus to fight for our Red, White and Blue! Reach out to the Ole Ballcoach at shanebestsoccer@gmail.com if you want to coordinate travel plans.

Indy 11 Xmas in July promo Sat night 7 pm @ The Mike

 Midfielder James Murphy scored his first Indy Eleven goal, but the Boys in Blue fell at USL Championship Eastern Conference opponent North Carolina FC, 4-2 Friday night. The Boys in Blue host the final round of USL Jägermeister Cup group play with “Christmas in July on Saturday, July 26 at 7 p.m. at Carroll Stadium vs. FC Tulsa.  Indy 11 Christmas in July Indy Eleven leads Group 3 with a 2-0-1 record and can clinch a berth in the quarterfinals of the 38-team event with a victory. Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster. Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here.  For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

MLS vs La Liga All-Star Game Wed 9 pm / Skills Challenge Tues on Apple TV/Prime

The MLS will roll out their best to face Mexico’s La Liga starts in the Skills Challenge on Tues 8 pm followed by the All-Star Game on Wed at 9 pm from Austin all on Apple TV or Amazon Prime Network. If you have Apple you don’t need the MLS Season pass to watch these.

Awesome to Hit the High School fields at Mt Vernon with (L-R) T Ray Phillips, Mike Arrington & the boss Dave Howard. Looking forward to the DeWayne Classic at Carmel High this weekend.

RIP Mike Sommer

CDC Celebration of Life for Mike Sommer
Date: Saturday, July 26, 2025
Time: 9:00AM
Location: Conference Room above Badger Field Concession Stand

Mike was not only a dedicated Carmel Dad’s Club, High School and Middle School referee but also a kind and steady presence within our CDC community. He will be greatly missed by all of us who had the honor of refereeing alongside him. Man Mike is the one who got me started Reffing at CYO, Middle School and High School lower level teams on the outskirts of town before I became fully licensed for HS. I learned a lot from Mike – how important it was to treat the kids with respect and always do that extra bit of explaining the rules with a calm voice  He was loved by many across the soccer World! 

June 6, 1967 — June 19, 2025 Indianapolis
https://www.arnmortuary.com/obituaries/michael-sommer

Fond are the Memories of driving out to Anderson to do games – always driving the back woods roads and ALWAYS stopping on the way home for dinner at some diner or small restaurant out there. Good Times indeed. I am out of town for the ceremonies – but will look forward to gathering July 26th to honor our friend Mike Sommer.

TV GAMES SCHEDULE

Tues, July 22
3 pm Fox England vs Italy Semi’s
5 pm FS1 Colombia vs Boliva Women Copa
8 pm FS1 Paraguay vs Brazil Women Copa
Weds, July 23
3 pm Fox Spain vs Germany Semi’s
9 pm Apple Free/Amazon Prime MLS vs Mexico All Star Game
Thur, July 24
8 pm FS2 Chile vs Uraguay Women Copa
8 pm FS1 Ecuador vs Argentina Women Copa
Fri, July 25
8 pm FS2 Brazil vs Colombia Women Copa
Sat, July 26
7 pm FS1 Inter Miami vs Cincy
7 pm TV 6, ESPN+ Indy 11 vs FC Tulsa Christmas in July
9:30 pm Apple TV Salt Lake vs San Jose
10:30 pm Apple TV Vancouver vs Kansas City
Sun, July 27
12 noon Fox TBD vs TBD? Euro Finals

Women’s Euros

Women’s Euro semifinals: What to know for Italy vs. England
Why have there been so many missed penalties at Euro 2025?
Italy’s players couldn’t get pro deals at home 3 years ago; now they’re crushing at Euro
Why England vs. Italy offers that rarest of prospects – a ‘big six’
The longevity of Lucy Bronze: Challenging Wiegman and playing
How Italy’s perfect blend is allowing their dreams to run wild at Euro 2025
– Bonmatí proud of journey from meningitis to MVP
– Berger typifies Germany’s fight as tough semifinal looms
– Euro 2025 semifinals: How do you tactically beat each team?

MLS All Star Game vs Liga MX Wed 8 pm & Skills Challenge Tues 9 pm on Apple TV

MLS vs La Liga – Which All Star Roster  Is more Valuable  

🎥 The top 5️⃣ goals from the MLS weekend
🎥 Portland Timbers unveil largest tifo in MLS history for 50th
🎥 Messi involved in four goals to make absolute mockery of NYRB 😮

> Lionel Messi bags another brace and two assistsin Inter Miami’s 5-1 over NY Red Bulls; watch his assist (More); Messi’s second goal took his career non-penalty goals to 764, surpassing Cristiano Ronaldo’s record of 763 (More) | San Diego remain top of the Western Conference, while Cincinnati remain top of the Eastern Conference; See all MLS results (More)

Club World Cup

‘You can’t put Trump in there, it was just embarrassing’
One former Chelsea one was not impressed by what he saw in the USA this summer
Chelsea captain Reece James issues clear World Cup warning after lifting trophy in the shadow of Trump

Its EPLs Aston Villa vs Germany’s Frankfurt in Tix In Louisville

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UEFA Women’s Euro 2025, Semi-Final: England vs. Italy, 20:00 BST / 15:00 ET. England can take confidence from the fact that they have won four of their previous five games against Italy, with their most recent meeting resulting in a 5-1 victory in a friendly in February 2024. But Italy have proven to be a different team this tournament, having opened the scoring in all four of their Euro 2025 games so far, only doing so in three of their 18 matches in the competition prior. Read the full match preview here.

The UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 semis are set, with Italy, England, Spain, and Germany advancing past a fierce quarterfinal round to secure a spot in the final four.
Spain’s 2-0 victory over Switzerland proved to be the only quarterfinal decided by more than one goal, while Italy’s 90-minute 2-1 thriller against Norway narrowly avoided extra time.Both England vs. Sweden and Germany vs. France needed penalty shootouts to determine a winner, with the prevailing nations mounting steep comebacks to punch their semifinal tickets.“I really had a sense throughout the game, even when we were down, that it wasn’t our time to go,” England defender Esme Moran said of her team’s poise after falling behind 2-0 early in the match.
PK madness: Penalty kicks have remained a hot topic throughout this year’s tournament, with players converting just 24 of 41 attempts — a well below-average 58.5%.
England and Sweden combined for nine missed penalties on Thursday, marking the worst conversion rate in Women’s Euro history.Germany also made dubious history over the weekend, becoming the first Women’s Euro team on record to register a comeback win after seeing a player sent off, following defender Kathrin Hendrich’s 13th-minute straight red card offense.
New Euro Favorites
The semi-finals of the Uefa Women’s Euro 2025 have been confirmed. England will face Italy on Tuesday (July 22), and Germany will play Spain on Wednesday (July 23).
England, following a penalty shootout victory over Sweden in the quarter-finals, are now the 36.5% favourites to win the tournament, according to Opta’s prediction model. They’ve overtaken previous favourites Spain, who are now projected to have a 31% chance of winning the competition. Both sides are expected to reach the final, which takes place on Sunday, July 27.
While Spain have won all four of their matches, scoring 16 and conceding just four, the model favours England due to the difficulty of their semi-final opponents. Germany, who are given a 23.4% chance of winning, are unbeaten in eight meetings with Spain, having won five and drawn three, with a combined goal tally of 18–3. Meanwhile, Italy (8%) are ranked eight places below England.
Dive deeper into the final four’s key stats here.
Save of the Year by German GK Ann Berger

P27, W0, D1, L26: Why England v Italy offers that rarest of prospects – a ‘big six’ Euros upset

BERN, SWITZERLAND - JULY 11: Cristiana Girelli of Italy celebrates with fans after Italy qualify for the quarter finals following the UEFA Women's EURO 2025 Group B match between Italy and Spain at Stadion Wankdorf on July 11, 2025 in Bern, Switzerland. (Photo by Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images)

By Michael Cox The Athletic – July 22, 2025Updated 10:34 am EDT


The Athletic has live coverage of England vs. Italy semifinal at the 2025 UEFA Women’s Euros.

There are a couple of paradoxes in international women’s football in Europe at the moment.The first is that, while the overall quality of the game is steadily improving year on year, it is difficult to make a case that any individual side has dramatically improved in relation to the others. The accepted hierarchy is still in place.In other words, the six favourites going into Euro 2022 were the same six favourites going into Euro 2025: England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden. No one has yet evolved from being one of the ‘other’ nations to being one of the favourites.The second is related. While the outsiders have become better at competing with the favourites — there are no longer any huge thrashings at the European Championship, and the biggest margin of victory at this tournament has been by a fairly respectable five goals — they are not actually managing to defeat them. Or, in actual fact, even get a draw against them.The statistics demonstrate this nicely. At Euro 2022, there were 16 matches between one of the ‘big six’ and the ‘other 10’. Those matches produced 15 victories for the favourites, and a single draw.That draw was recorded with the final kick of the group stage, when Iceland scored a 112th-minute penalty against a France side who were already assured of top spot in Group D, and therefore had made six changes for a game played in 36-degree heat. The equaliser, admitted France manager Corinne Diacre after the game, “wasn’t that important given the situation”. It’s fair to suspect that, had France needed to beat Iceland, they would have.

Dagny Brynjarsdottir’s penalty earned Iceland a draw against France at Euro 2022 (Marcio Machado/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images)

It’s been a similar story this time around. The 11 matches between one of the favourites and the ‘other 10’ at Euro 2025 have produced 10 victories for the favourites. And only Denmark have (twice) held the opposition to merely a one-goal victory, losing 1-0 to neighbours Sweden, and 2-1 to Germany, ensuring their elimination after two matches.

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Denmark, of course, will not be celebrating this as much of an achievement. Indeed, Denmark are the side who inflicted the last genuine shock at the European Championship, in 2017. Going into the quarter-final, they were given little hope against a Germany side who had won eight of the previous nine European Championships. But after the match was postponed by a day due to torrential rain in Rotterdam, Denmark produced a huge upset by coming back from a goal down to win 2-1. It was only the second time since 1989 that Germany had not won the European Championship.

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The Danes subsequently reached the final in 2017, beating relative minnows Austria on penalties in the semi-final, before losing to hosts the Netherlands 4-2 in the final.But that seems a long time ago. And now, the underdogs’ record against the ‘big six’ at the past two tournaments is played 27, won none, drawn one, and lost 26. Which does not make for a particularly appealing competition for viewers hoping for the unexpected.On Tuesday in Geneva, Italy have the final opportunity in this European Championship to provide the Euros’ first genuine shock, when they take on holders England. In some ways, it is a shame to be speaking about Italy in such a fashion, considering their period of relative success in the 1990s. As other European nations have put more resources into women’s football, Italy stood still and therefore slipped behind.The Italian game remains something of a mystery to many, with almost all the national team players remaining at home, and relatively little Italian involvement in the final stages of the Champions League. It is clear, from speaking to four-time Serie A-winning manager Rita Guarino before the tournament, that English football and the Women’s Super League is considered a template for Italy to follow. That includes bidding to host this tournament in four years’ time, having witnessed the success of Euro 2022.It might seem patronising to consider Italy underdogs, but then the general pattern from this tournament is players and managers declaring the opposition are favourites.

And, after all, Italy are suited to the role. For all the brilliance of playmaker Manuela Giugliano, they probably do not have the guile to dominate the game against England. But they have centre-backs who will relish a physical duel against Alessia Russo (of Italian descent, as it happens), full-backs who have provided a stream of good crosses throughout this tournament, attacking midfielders who make direct runs on the break, and a major penalty-box threat in Cristiana Girelli.Andrea Soncin’s side showed enough against Spain in their final group game to suggest they will cause England problems, primarily on the counter-attack. An Italian win would be popular across Europe — it would not merely be a victory for themselves, but for everyone outside the established ‘big six’.(Top photo: Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images)

How Italy’s perfect blend is allowing their dreams to run wild at Euro 2025

Italy's forward #10 Cristiana Girelli celebrates at the end of the UEFA Women's Euro 2025 quarter-final football match between Norway and Italy at the Stade de Geneve in Geneva, on July 16, 2025. Italy won 2-1 over Norway. (Photo by SEBASTIEN BOZON / AFP) (Photo by SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP via Getty Images)

By Megan Feringa July 22, 2025Updated 10:34 am EDT


The Athletic has live coverage of England vs. Italy semifinal at the 2025 UEFA Women’s Euros.

There’s a saying in Italian: I sogni non sono nei cassetti perche ci stanno stretti. It translates as: Dreams are not kept in drawers because they are too tight.That much was certain last Tuesday as Italy defeated Norway 2-1 in a Women’s European Championship quarter-final to reach their first tournament semi-final since 1997, allowing their deepest wishes to run wild and free.“We all dreamt together,” said midfielder Annamaria Serturini ahead of the quarter-final match. “We all dreamt because, in the end, everyone dreamt for a long time. We have reached our great goal, and we do not want to stop. We want to continue dreaming, and making Italians dream.”With reigning European champions England next today (Tuesday), Italy are dreaming hard. But, as Serturini says, many of these players have also been dreaming for a long time.Of the 16 teams at this tournament, Italy’s average squad age was the fourth-oldest (28.34 years), behind those of Sweden, Portugal and Wales. Comparatively, the other three sides still standing in Switzerland rank between eighth- (England, 26.93) and 10th-oldest (Spain and Germany are level at 26.33).Excluding the last two quarter-finals, of the 52 line-ups put forth by various teams at Euro 2025, Italy have fielded four of the 15 oldest sides (Sweden, Portugal, Wales and the Netherlands sent out the other 11 between them).Striker Cristiana Girelli, who got both goals in that win against Norway, is this tournament’s fourth-oldest scorer at 35 years old, behind Wales’ Jess Fishlock (38), Janice Cayman of Belgium (36) and Sweden’s Kosovare Asllani (who is also 35 but around nine months older than Girelli).Also, of Italy’s six most-used players in these finals so far, four are in their thirties: Girelli (298 minutes), goalkeeper Laura Giuliani (32 years old; 360), forward Elena Linari (31; also 360) and defender Cecilia Salvai (31; 347).

Italy’s players and coaching staff celebrate their 2-1 quarter-final win over Norway (Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)

Before we go any further: no, this is not a piece focusing solely on the age of Italy’s squad. But one of their main problem areas for the Itailans after getting to previous tournaments was a perceived lack of pace and energy; they were a talented team bogged down by immobility.

In the past two years, though, they have looked sharper, more energetic, despite still being bookended in goal and up front by two of the three oldest players in the squad in Giuliani and Girelli. The key has been the gradual introduction of a new generation around the experienced core to supplement their talents with pace and vivacity.Specifically in midfield and along the flanks, Italy have looked much more lively in their displays. Full-backs Lucia Di Guglielmo and Elisabetta Oliviero are both 28 and have had good tournaments, while a midfield of Manuela Giugliano (27), Arianna Caruso (25) and Emma Severini (22) outworked and outplayed Norway last week.What You Should Read NextHow England saved themselves at Euro 2025: Blood, sweat, notes and… holding in a wee during the shootoutRaw emotion and a never-say-die attitude came to the fore as the European champions somehow made it into the semi-finals

Even more beneficial have been the performances from Sofia Cantore up front.The 25-year-old forward, who joined NWSL side Washington Spirit from Juventus last month, assisted both goals against Norway. In Girelli, Italy have a very good penalty-box player — her one-touch close-range finish for the opener in that quarter-final and 90th-minute headed clincher are cases in point — but Cantore provides the zeal and creativity that allows her team-mate to focus on occupying those areas in the opposition box.Girelli’s two goals that night were emblematic of Italy since the September 2023 appointment of head coach Andrea Soncin, who has shifted the team’s look with this modest generational change.In fact, of the starting XI against Norway, six — Barbara Bonansea, Giuliani, Girelli, Salvai, Giugliano and Linari — all made their national-team debuts between 2012 and 2014. The rest — Di Guglielmo, Oliviero, Caruso, Severini and Cantore — made theirs between 2019 and 2024.

Goalkeeper Giuliani is the fourth most-capped player in Italy’s Euro 2025 squad (Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images)

Many of Italy’s big moments have stemmed from the older players in their thirties, the ones who have endured big games, big dreams and big heartbreak in the past as a collective, while more recently introduced “additions” enter the pool as players come of age.Calling these players “young” would be disingenuous. Only Severini is under 24 years old. Yet, there is something abnormal about this blend.International teams are generally spaced by four years, with youth teams graduating together, contending for some time, then being replaced via gradual onboarding of their successors. In this way, sides take on the look of a quilt: kiddos, prime players and veterans stitched together and all scoring and playing. England at this tournament are a good example of this, with their quarter-final goalscorers Lucy Bronze (33) and Michelle Agyemang (19) having 14 years and three months between their respective birth dates.Italy’s chemistry is more two-dimensional than three.Soncin has found success in this method. His tenure began with a 2023-24 Nations League campaign in which Italy finished second in their group behind Spain but recorded a historic 3-2 away win against the world champions, leading to some of the optimism currently surrounding the squad. That sense of positivity was further built during Euro qualifying earlier this year, as Italy finished top of their group ahead of the Netherlands, who won the competition in 2017.Tonight against England, Italy will doubtless be underdogs, as they were in the previous round.Norway were disorganised last week and allowed Soncin’s midfielders to move without much pressure. The English should be stronger in this aspect of the game — but Italy have surprised many in the past two years to reach this historic point, and that is arguably because of the slow but purposeful blend the 46-year-old coach has managed to nurture.Calling it a revolution (or even an evolution) is arguably a step too far. Rather, it’s a slow reawakening, a reformation, nailing Italy’s dreams to the front door of this tournament.(Top photo: Sebastien Bozon/AFP via Getty Images)

‘There are no words’ – Lionel Messi and his record-breaking scoring for Inter Miami

FOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS - JULY 9: Lionel Messi #10 of Inter Miami CF celebrates his goal during a game between Inter Miami CF and New England Revolution at Gillette Stadium on July 9, 2025, in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Andrew Katsampes/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio and Conor O’Neill b July 16, 2025


Two years into his time with Inter Miami, Lionel Messi remains the game-changing superstar he has been throughout his career.Messi, who won the MLS Most Valuable Player award in 2024 with 20 goals and 16 assists in just 19 games played in the regular season, seems intent on increasing his output this year. Miami set the record for most points in a season last year en route to the Supporters’ Shield, and the club is again on pace to finish first atop the regular season standings thanks to Messi’s recent form.Entering Wednesday night’s match vs. FC Cincinnati, Messi has scored multiple goals in five consecutive regular-season games, the first player in MLS history to do so. No other player had ever done it in four. You’d be forgiven for having it slip out of your focus, as the streak straddles the Club World Cup.Messi scored two goals in a pair of wins over CF Montréal and the Columbus Crew on May 28 and May 31, respectively. Miami then played four games in the FIFA Club World Cup, with Messi’s free kick goal against Porto earning MLS their only win in the tournament and ensuring that Miami would be the only MLS team to advance to the knockout stage.Since returning to MLS play, Messi has seemed intent on making a statement as rumors swirl about his future — even as sources close to Miami and the player have insisted that he is nearing an extension to remain in South Florida.Messi has scored two goals in each of his last three games — all wins — over Montréal, the New England Revolution and Nashville SC.

That lifts Messi’s season tally to 16 goals — tied with Nashville’s Sam Surridge for the league lead — and seven assists in 16 games played.

While Miami is five points back of the Philadelphia Union, who sit in first place in the Supporters’ Shield table, it has three games in hand. Miami is setting the pace with two points per game — ahead of the Union’s 1.95 pace – and is 6-2-2 in its last 10 games, having not lost in MLS play since May 17. It’s riding a five-game winning streak, which coincides with Messi’s latest goal binge.

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“There are no words. What he continues to do is incredible — breaking records every three days,” Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano said after the Nashville win. “It’s what I have said a thousand times in this room: He’s the flagbearer of this team, he sets the standard for how we compete, he is the leader, the one who obviously encourages his teammates, shows them how we have to keep going, and, above all, maintain at this moment the tone we are setting.

“It’s a blessing to be part of this stage of his career.”


While the goal tally is remarkable in itself, how it has been achieved is even more so.

The shot map below showcases the wide range of strikes by Messi, including five from outside the box — more than 22 of the 30 MLS teams have managed in their entire campaigns.

And it was a long-range effort that kickstarted the multi-goal streak in Miami’s 4-2 victory over Montréal in May. Scored in typical Messi fashion, he quickly shifted the ball to create an opening, aided by teammate Sergio Busquets, who cleverly blocked the onrushing Montréal midfielder Victor Loturi, before Messi curled a precise shot into the bottom corner.

The second also came from his repertoire of trademark finishes. No player has perfected the dinked finish quite like Messi and his uncanny ability to generate the perfect loft, regardless of the goalkeeper’s proximity or height, was on show again as he put the ball over Jonathan Sirois from close range.

For all his ability, a streak like this can’t persist without a healthy dollop of good fortune. In the following match against Columbus Crew, Messi was gifted his first goal thanks to some disastrous goalkeeping from Nicholas Hagen.

The Guatemalan ‘keeper made a costly error, miscuing a goal kick straight into Messi’s path on the edge of the area. Messi gave Hagen the chance to atone for his blunder with an uncharacteristically underhit lob, but the goalkeeper only managed to palm it goalward. He was less charitable with his second 10 minutes later, this time his lob from just inside the area was perfectly calibrated.

He kept the streak alive with a brace in his next match, again against Montréal. No player has completed more take-ons than Messi’s 3.9 per 90 minutes in MLS this season, and both goals against Montréal demonstrated the jinking movements that continue to make him so feared throughout the league.

The first saw the Argentine dart into the area and swiftly shift his body weight to carve out space for another arrowed finish into the far bottom corner, but it was the second that was truly breathtaking.Picking up the ball from Luis Suárez near halfway, Messi embarked on a long, mazy dribble, leaving a trail of confusion as bamboozled Montréal defenders collided while trying to stop him. He evaded them at every turn before rifling a shot into the top corner from close range.After two relatively routine efforts, in his next match, a 2-1 victory against New England, there was one glaring omission in his scoring streak: a free kick. Against Nashville, he duly obliged, opting for measured placement over whipped power, as he guided an effort from the edge of the area into the bottom-left corner. After this and his staggering effort against Porto in the Club World Cup, he’s now up to a staggering 69 career free kicks.This phenomenal streak has been a self-contained showreel of the myriad ways Messi can put a ball into the back of the net.And based on this evidence, he’s far from done.What You Should Read NextHow Lionel Messi’s favorite goal became immortalized in artOne of the Argentine superstar’s greatest goals has been reimagined as an “immersive gateway that collapses time”(Top photo: Andrew Katsampes/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

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7/11/25 US loses to Mexico, PSG vs Chelsea WCC Final Sun 3 pm, Indy 11 Star Wars Night, Euros continue


PSG and Chelsea Advance to the World Club Cup Final Sun 3 pm on TNT, Univision

So I have to admit I have enjoyed the WCC much more than I thought I would. The games have been surprisingly competitive with the South American and African teams surprising everyone -but in the end its Champions League Winner PSG who has dominated and will face another European team in Chelsea. I was fortunate to get a chance to attend the Bayern Munich vs PSG game in Atlanta last weekend – man what a fun game and great experience with nearly 70K in Mercedez Benz Stadium. Sad the injury happened however – PSG’s GK injured Bayern’s Jamal Musiala was hurt on this play- Did PSG’s Gigi Foul here? Check out some of these Great Saves of the Club World Cup    (more below in the GK section). 

Women’s Euro’s Continue on Fox
The Women’s Euros have been enjoyable to watch during this summer of soccer – and honestly Fox has done a good job with some serious coverage. Who doesn’t love a good women’s soccer game at 12 and 3 pm everyday.

Indy 11 host Star Wars Night – Sat 7 pm

 In a commanding performance at home, Indy Eleven powered past Monterey Bay FC with a 3-0 victory, backed by a strong attacking display and a clean sheet from goalkeeper Hunter Sulte. Goals from Aodhan Quinn, Jack Blake, and Romario Williams sealed the win, as the Boys in Blue continue their climb up the USL Championship Eastern Conference standings. The win lifts Indy Eleven to seventh in the East with 17 points through 14 matches. The Indy Eleven “Summer of Soccer presented by Indy Roof & Restoration” concludes with “Star Wars Night” on Saturday, July 12 at 7:00 pm vs. Rhode Island FC at Carroll Stadium in a rematch of the 2024 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals.  Single-game tickets for all matches are available via Ticketmaster. Flex Plan, Group, and Hospitality tickets are available here.  For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com

US Loses to Mexico 2-1
So I picked 3-1 Mexico – but little did I know El Tri would absolutely dominate the game – the likes of which we haven’t seen in years. The US got off to a great start behind this spectacular header from CB Chris Richard in the 4th minute. From that point though it was all Mexico. In possession, shots, tackles, hell everything. The US looked like they had no idea what was going on as the Mexican’s sent shot after shot into the box. US vs Mexico Hi-lights Tim Ream (showing his age) was slaughtered on Mexico’s first goal as Jimenez beat him to the spot and shot corner as US GK Matt Freeze had no chance. The US weathered the storm but rarely had possession or attack as the players who looked so good against the SHIT of Concacaf wilted while playing the only other decent team in our region. A second half goal finally came in 77th minute as Mexico used a questionable offside not called to take the lead when Tim Ream was once again beat. The 2-1 loss could have been much worse of course as a 90% Mexican Crowd and the largest ever Gold Cup audience watch on Fox. What they saw unfortunately was Botchettino continuing to show he has NO CLUE how to manage a National Team. Yes it was our B- squad but they looked outclasses and clueless from the kickoff. Sure the fought hard – but lets be real – until Botchettino is now tied for the worse ever start to US national team stint ever. His wins only against the patsies of Concacaf. When facing teams ranked 50 or lower he is 0-5 now.

The question now is what’s next? I think some players stood out as Chris Richards showed he is the man on the back line now. I have said this repeatedly but Tim Ream needs to be on the team – his leadership and knowledge is unquestioned – but if he starts in the World we are screwed. Someone must be found to team with him. Both outside backs sucked in my mind but we’ll see. Adams was a NO SHOW this entire tourney – thankfully De La Tore and even Sebastian Berhalter had standout tourneys. Neither should surpass Musah however. Sad to see Johnny Cardosa have such a bad tourney – absolute stupidity by Botch not to rebuild his confidence by playing him against the minows of CONCACAF.

The frontline had its moments as Adebayand shows promise and did ok – he just can’t hold up or score – sounds like all the 9s for the US. Still a move to the English Championship could help keep him in the mix as a 3rd forward. Of course Luna and Mark Tillman booked their tickets with this tourney as they were our best players along with Richards. Doubt Luna will get much time vs real compeition – but I like his spunkyness and heart. Same for Berhalter. Of course Matt Freeze had the shootout heroics – but otherwise he looked mighty shaky – and should replace an in form Matt Turner or Ethan Horvath. Of course Poch is clueless so who knows how this works out.

I can say honestly I am done with Poch – first he didn’t invite the right players – no CCV, No Trusty or German dude no the back line. The guys he did bring he didn’t play? Downs, McKensie, 10, — hell why bring them if you aren;t going to give them a chance in the game? Seriously WTH? I honestly the best thing that could happen for the US is to have Poch grow tired of this little part time gig he’s getting paid 4.5 Million too much to do and go back to Europe. Then BJ Callahan can come in and save the day and perhaps get us to the Quarterfinals of the World Cup on home soil. If not – I don’t see Poch getting us past the first round past the knockout stage and the Gold Cup was just further evidence. Hopefully I am wrong and a full squad will show up to pound Japan in 2 months in Columbus – yes you should make plans now to go!

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

CARMEL FC & PALMEIRAS CAMP
Palmeiras Soccer Camps for players aims to let all participants develop their full technical, tactical and physical potential no matter their skill level. Day by day they will learn to enhance their strengths and will be stimulated to understand their own weaknesses. Players participating will be coached by Palmeiras Professional Coaches and may be invited to join Palmeiras Academy in Brazil for tryout. Register now!
Camp dates: July 21-25 Ages: 7-16 Location: Carmel Clay Community Soccer Complex, Home of Carmel FC: Price: $295 REGISTER

World Club Cup

Is the United States too hot to handle the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup?
Club World Cup’s standout players and trends, from Jobe Bellingham to Thiago Silva

‘To New York’: Chelsea troll Flamengo after reaching Club World Cup final

Wenger doesn’t ‘share Klopp’s view’ of CWC
Return of ‘best player’ Dembélé ‘critical’ for PSG
PSG embarrasses Real Madrid in one-sided Club World Cup semifinal, confirms its supremacy
PSG are out of this world, as Real Madrid are brought back down to it

My Bayern Buddy Nate Dawg and I got over the Bayern vs PSG game in Atlanta


US Men

What the Gold Cup revealed about the USMNT’s World Cup hopes
USMNT World Cup roster Big Board: Which Gold Cup players made case?Henry Bushnell
USMNT’s real test from here will be learning from Gold Cup final loss to Mexico
USMNT still hasn’t had a convincing win since Pochettino took over. Time is running out
USMNT built foundation of pride, aggression at Gold Cup
What the Gold Cup revealed about the USMNT’s World Cup hopes
USMNT Vibe Check – the sounds of the world approach
USA vs. Mexico, 2025 Gold Cup Final: Man of the Match
USMNT falls to Mexico in Gold Cup Final

US Women

USWNT’s Korbin Albert joins Lyon from PSG
USWNT midfielder Albert and Colts kicker Shrader announce engagement
USWNT great Tobin Heath announces retirement

Women Euros

Women’s Euro 2025: How every team can qualify for quarterfinals
Switzerland scores in stoppage time to draw with Finland, reach Euro quarters
Crisis, what crisis? England thrash Netherlands to keep Euro 2025 dream alive
What are the Euro 2025 yellow card suspension rules? Which players are at risk?
Norway beat Iceland in seven-goal thriller to extend perfect record

Goalkeeping

Best saves | FIFA Club World Cup 2025
INSANE Quarter-final Saves | FIFA Club World Cup Highlights
Incredible Round of 16 Saves ft. Manuel Neuer & MORE …

Reffing

Man City WCC Game Hand Ball or Not? 
Gigi Dunnaroma Save – Dangerous or Brave?   
Was PSG’s GK Donoroma’s Save a Foul? |
Real Madrid Game – why was this a Red Card?     

Pierluigi Collina: Referees’ body cams went “beyond our expectations”

Pierluigi Collina, the Chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee, says that he is very happy with the refereeing innovations introduced at the FIFA Club World Cup 2025™, including body cameras for referees, advanced semi-automated offside technology and the new eight-second rule aimed at cutting down time-wasting by goalkeepers.

The inaugural edition of the new 32-team tournament was the first FIFA competition to feature body cams and Mr Collina said they have received a positive reception. The trial aimed to explore whether the new camera angle can improve the experience for those watching on television and online by showcasing the referee’s perspective.

“The outcome of using the ref cam here at the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 went beyond our expectations. We thought it would have been an interesting experience for TV viewers and we’ve received great comments,” said Mr Collina. “We were asked: ‘Why not in all the matches?’ and even more: ‘Why not in all sports?’“

He added that, while it provided enjoyment for the public, it was also “very, very positive” for FIFA’s own purposes. “We had the possibility to see what the referee sees on the field of play. And this was not only for entertainment purposes, but also for coaching the referees (and) to explain why something was not seen on the field of play,” he said.

One example was the group stage match between Atlético de Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain, where the referee did not see a handball incident by an Atlético defender because a player blocked his line of vision. “From this ref cam, (it) was absolutely clear that the referee could not have seen that incident live on the pitch,” Mr Collina said. The video assistant referee (VAR) alerted the referee who awarded a penalty to Paris Saint-Germain after reviewing the incident on the pitchside monitor.

The tournament also saw the introduction of an amendment to Law 12.2a, passed by the International Football Association Board (IFAB) at its 139th Annual General Meeting on 1 March 2025. Under the new rule, a corner kick is awarded to the attacking team if a goalkeeper holds the ball for longer than eight seconds, with the referee using a visual five-second countdown. Previously, the referee would award an indirect free kick if the goalkeeper kept the ball for more than six seconds.

“It was very successful; the tempo of the match was improved. We had no time lost by goalkeepers keeping the ball between their hands for a very long time – as happened quite often in matches before,” said Mr Collina, adding that violations were kept to a minimum with the new law.

“The fact that only two goalkeepers were punished means that they really respected the rule. And by doing that, we achieved the purpose that we wanted, which was not to give corner kicks, but prevent the eight seconds rule from being not respected. The purpose was 100% achieved.”

An advanced version of the semi-automated offside technology helped speed up the decisions for offside situations and Mr Collina said this helped avoid situations where forwards run 30 to 40 metres only for the flag to be raised at the end. “The alert went to the assistant referees well before, when there was a clear offside position. So, it worked very well, we have the goals disallowed, correctly disallowed; we also had correct decisions supported by the semi-automatic offside technology – [we are] very happy, very pleased,” Mr Collina said.

A total of 117 match officials – 35 referees, 58 assistant referees and 24 video match officials – from 41 member associations were appointed to take charge of the 63 matches during the tournament. “It was a great competition. The people attending the matches confirm this, it was well played by players and well refereed by match officials. And all the referees who are here are 100% proud of being part, of having been part of this first time ever,” Mr Collina concluded.

TV GAME SCHEDULE

 WE -Women’s Euros

Sat, July 12th

3 pm Fox Sweden vs Germany WE
3 pm FS1 Poland vs Denmark WE
7 pm TV8 Indy 11 vs Rhode Island Star Wars Night
7:45 pm FS1 Inter Miami vs Nashville SC
7:30 pm Apple Cincy vs Columbus Crew MLS
9:30 pm Apple free RSL vs Houston MLS

Sun, July 13th
3 pm Fox Netherland vs France W Euros
3 pm FS1 England vs Wales WE
3 pm TNT?/Univision Chelsea vs PSG WCC Final
7 pm Apple free St Louis vs Portland Timbers MLS
Wed =, July 16
3 pm Fox Norway vs Italy QF
7:30 pm Apple Cincy vs Miami MLS
7:30 pm apple Orl vs NYC
10 pm FS1 Seattle Sounders vs Colorado
Thurs, July 17
3 pm Fox Sweden vs England QF WE
Fri, July 18
3 pm Fox Spain vs Switzerland QF WE
Sat, July 19
3 pm Fox France vs Germany QF
7:30 pm Apple/Sirius RBNY vs Miami MLS
7:30 pm Apple NE vs Orlando MLS
9:30 pm Apple RSL vs Cincy
10:30 pm Apple LAFC vs LA
Tues, July 22
3 pm Fox TBD vs TBD? Semi’s
Weds, July 23
3 pm Fox TBD vs TBD? Semi’s
9 pm MLS All Star Game
Sat, July 26
7 pm FS1 Inter Miami vs Cincy
Sun, July 27
3 pm Fox TBD vs TBD? Euro Finals

USMNT Friendlies in preparation for the 2026 World Cup.

Schedule   (Subject to change)

Sept. Japan / S. Korea
Oct.   Argentina / Ecuador
Nov.  Egypt / Morocco
March Sweden / Ukraine
June.    Australia / Paraguay

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I am surprised that the US didn’t fall further – we are not a Top 20 team under Pochetino
Club World Cup Final, Baby: Chelsea vs. PSG 🏆The Mauricio Pochettino Memorial Derby (Sunday, 3 p.m. ET, DAZN/TBS)History awaits. PSG are just 90 minutes away from completing one of the most dominant club seasons of all time in which they will have won every single trophy that was available to them. Following on from the Champions League, Ligue 1, and the Coupe de France, the Club World Cup would be a fourth trophy lifted in three months, a 6.6-liter twin-turbo-charged quadruple. Yet it could also be Chelsea who walk away with a startling $136 million in prize money.  PSG are a creative machine, undoubtedly the world’s top club side, by some gulf. Just over a month ago, they smashed five goals past Inter to storm to Champions League glory. On Wednesday afternoon, they obliterated Real Madrid, making the European game’s long-reigning monarchs look worse than Grok, and even more deliciously, rendering Kylian Mbappé’s revenge fantasies impotent. The football they play is so mesmerizing, in certain moments, it can dizzy and disorient you to the point that, fleetingly, you can be tricked into believing nation state ownership is a good thing. The talk that surrounds them is not just of victory, but of dynasty.And for Chelsea? Their success in this tournament is a testament to tenacity and the fortune that befell them after losing their second game 3-1 to Flamengo. A defeat which ultimately life-hacked them into the generously weak half of the knockout bracket. It was admittedly magical watching João Pedro, in his first start for Chelsea, blast two stunning strikes against his former side Fluminense, then admit, “I have to stay professional, I play for Chelsea. Chelsea pay me to score goals.”  Do they stand a chance? After watching PSG go two up inside 10 minutes against Real Madrid, Enzo Maresca will approach this game in full-on “(chuckles) I’m in danger” mode. His team will be boosted by the return of Moisés Caicedo, but as a typically possession-hungry squad, how will they adapt in the face of PSG’s ferocious press? A Chelsea fan at the Michelob Club asked me to tell him something optimistic ahead of the final. I advised him to watch “Star Wars,” and think of João Pedro living out the role of Luke Skywalker firing his proton torpedo down the thermal exhaust port to blow up the Death Star.  Rogstradamus 🔮: Le Romp. PSG 4-1. Second half will be a dead rubber in the sweltering heat of New Jersey. 🥵Also: The Club World Cup final will be shown live at more than 20 movie theaters across the United States this Sunday. You have not lived until you’ve seen Cole Palmer’s celly at an iPic. Football on the silver screen in America. What a time to be alive.  
  Farwell Luka Modrić 🇭🇷👑A sad coda to PSG’s semi-final was witnessing Luka Modrić substitute in with the game long over, unable to bend it to his will, in his final ever Real Madrid performance. He departs as the club’s most decorated player, the winner of 28 major trophies and a Ballon d’Or. A midfielder who looks like a medieval witch but who played the game transcendentally. Watching him set traps and arrange the pieces in front of him to suit his will, is as if the secrets of the sport can be found by studying his decision making closely. His move to Milan will be fascinating to witness, as is the prospect of Christian Pulisic learning at his knee. More: Savor Luka. Pure silk in human form.

Americas
> Lionel Messi has made history, becoming the first MLS player to score multiple times in four consecutive matches in Inter Miami’s 2-1 win over New England Revolution (More); watch the record-breaking goal here | See upcoming MLS fixtures (More)
Euros frontrunners advance
 Alexia Putellas of Spain celebrates with teammate Salma Paralluelo after scoring her team's sixth goal
Spain is through to the quarterfinals atop Group B. (Aitor Alcalde – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)
There are still a few berths left to be decided, but a number of Euro frontrunners have already punched their ticket to the knockout rounds with a group stage game in hand.
After Norway became the first team to qualify for the quarterfinals on Sunday, Spain followed suit in Group B with a dominant win, while Germany and Sweden wrapped up Group C on the second matchday of group play.
Still alive: Runner-up spots in Group A and B will be decided this week, and there’s still all to play for in the hyper-competitive Group D after England possibly saved their 2025 Euro campaign with a 4-0 thumping of The Netherlands on Wednesday.
France, England, and The Netherlands go into Group D’s third matchday on Sunday tied on three points apiece, though the Dutch have possibly the hardest path forward, needing a significant result against Les Bleues to keep their Euro dream alive.
“We bounced back from the previous game and showed we were more than capable [of] showing the world what we can do,” England goalscorer Lauren James told the BBC.
England will face close rival Wales to close out the group stage, after Seattle Reign midfielder Jess Fishlock scored the first major tournament goal in Wales women’s football history on Wednesday against France.
Bottom line: The Euro group stage has presented mostly straightforward results in the early stages, but there is still room for a few more twists before the knockouts.

Lalas ‘wouldn’t be surprised’ if Pochettino drops Pulisic in September

Seth Vertelney Pro Soccer Wire
I will show up in Columbus and Burn Botchitino’s Face in EFFIGY if this HAPPENS !!

Alexi Lalas said he wouldn’t be surprised if U.S. men’s national team coach Mauricio Pochettino sends a message in September by dropping Christian Pulisic. Pulisic opted out of Gold Cup duty this summer, citing a desire to rest after a grueling season with AC Milan. The 26-year-old claimed in an interview that he requested to play in pre-tournament friendlies against Turkey and Switzerland, only to be denied by Pochettino. The Argentine didn’t take kindly to the forward’s claims, attempting to reassert control over his selection process by saying: “I am the head coach. I am not a mannequin.” Without Pulisic and a number of other absent stars, the USMNT reached the Gold Cup final, losing 2-1 to Mexico on Sunday to fall just short of the title.Need a break? The USMNT now has only friendlies on the agenda before kicking off the 2026 World Cup on home soil next summer. The first two post-Gold Cup matches will be friendlies against South Korea on Sept. 6 and Japan on Sept. 9.All eyes will be on Pochettino’s roster selection for the September window, with the coach potentially set to reintegrate some of his missing players from the summer. But Pochettino could also choose to delay that reintegration in order to send a message.”It would not surprise me in the least if he makes an example of multiple players, whether it’s Christian Pulisic or anybody else,” Lalas said on his “State of the Union” podcast.”It would not surprise me in the least if he again lays down the law by the decisions that he makes. And I think he can afford to do that.”

Mar 23, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; United States of America forward Christian Pulisic (10) arrives before the Concacaf Nations League third place match at SoFi Stadium.

Even if Pochettino drops Pulisic or others in September, the coach would almost certainly look to bring them in if they are available for friendlies in October or November.With the World Cup only months away at that point, it will be imperative for Pochettino to figure out his best combinations on the pitch.”[If players are dropped] you’re just kicking the can down the road in that at some point, you want to have those players together,” Lalas said. “Even if it’s just for a friendly, you want them in camp together. You want to see what they’re going to look like.”You also want whatever time you’re going to get to kind of deal with whatever crap there is, because these are the players — whether you like them or not, it doesn’t really matter. These are the players that you’re going to have.” For that reason, Lalas still felt that Pulisic would get the nod for the USMNT’s two September matches.”I think Pulisic is going to get called in,” the former USMNT defender said. “But it wouldn’t surprise me if Pochettino didn’t do it. If I was the coach at this point, after what happened here, I’d still probably call him.”

What the Gold Cup revealed about the USMNT’s World Cup hopes

  • Jeff Carlisle
  • Cesar Hernandez

Jul 10, 2025, 10:00 AM ET

It’s been an eventful summer for the U.S. men’s national team. Things got off to a rocky start, with a squad short of several starters and disappointing friendly defeats to Turkey and Switzerland.

When the matches counted, though, Mauricio Pochettino & Co. rebounded nicely. The USMNT was perfect in the Gold Cup group stage, gutted out knockout-round wins over Costa Rica and Guatemala, before delivering an admirable, gritty performance — considering the youth and inexperience of its squad — in the narrow 2-1 final defeat to Mexico.

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So, as the players embark on some much needed rest and relaxation before the new European club campaign kicks off in barely a month’s time, where does that leave the U.S.? ESPN’s Jeff Carlisle and Cesar Hernandez reflect on the Americans’ Gold Cup run and draw conclusions with one eye on next summer’s FIFA World Cup on home soil.

Is a runner-up finish a successful Gold Cup?

Carlisle: Yes. It certainly helped that expectations were as low as they could be heading into the tournament thanks to the 4-0 friendly loss to Switzerland, when the U.S. didn’t look remotely competitive. But this team, comprised mostly of MLS players, recovered, and went about as far as its talent level could take it.

Were there some close calls? Definitely. Closer than they needed to be, in fact. But they largely mirrored the results we saw in 2021 when a side that was also at less than full strength won the Gold Cup. I also think when you consider how injuries to Haji Wright and Johnny Cardoso cut into Pochettino’s depth, the U.S. did well to go as far as it did. And there’s no shame in losing the final to a Mexico squad that was much closer to full strength.

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More than anything, players built up their stock and gained experience. Now the trick is to build on what was accomplished.

Hernandez: Keeping in mind that the national team was heading into the tournament with a four-game losing streak and plenty of off-the-field noise, we can definitely consider a second-place finish a success.

Granted, there were some very narrow victories — including a dramatic penalty shootout in the quarterfinals that almost led to an entirely different conversation about the U.S. team this summer — but credit is due to Pochettino and his alternate roster for maintaining their perseverance up to the final.

Despite the bittersweet end against a stronger Mexico side that outplayed the U.S. in Sunday’s championship match, Pochettino should feel content about the insight gained ahead of next summer’s World Cup. As for his players, the experiences earned for many MLS-based options in the knockout-round matches are invaluable.

Which player best bolstered his claim for a World Cup place?

Hernandez: Either as a starter or a first option off the bench, Diego Luna looks ready to be an important, game-changing player for the USMNT in 2026.

All gas and no brakes, the 21-year-old attacking midfielder played with an intensity that was unmatched by any other member of the roster, and along the way, he earned three goals and two assists in six appearances. Dynamic, hungry for the ball and willing to take necessary risks, the Californian was a genuine joy to watch — especially against Guatemala with his two goals in the first 15 minutes.

But there’s room for improvement. As seen against Mexico, and possibly because of how Pochettino organized the XI, Luna went quiet in the biggest game of his short national team career. Still, if he continues to develop at the pace we’ve seen since last year, he could soon reach another level or two before next summer.

Carlisle: Chris Richards. Entering the tournament, the center-back pairing was up for grabs. Richards — and to a lesser extent Tim Ream — seized it with both hands and showed no sign of letting go. Not only did Richards defend with composure and solidity, but he chipped in with a couple of goals as well. Oh, and by the way, he’s become more of a leader on this team. That will be critical when more of the full team convenes in September.

I’d say at this stage, health permitting, Richards has locked up one of the starting spots for the World Cup, which counts as fantastic news for Pochettino. Too much of the team and its construction has been in flux. To have a player make a position his own will help the U.S. manager sleep better at night.

How did Pochettino fare in his first major tournament?

Carlisle: I’d say Pochettino is doing … OK, but OK isn’t what the U.S. Soccer Federation is paying for. They are paying for excellence, and that hasn’t come just yet.

To be clear: Pochettino hasn’t had it easy, what with an abbreviated runway to next year’s World Cup, as well as the fact that he’s been without his top players for long stretches. I think that Pochettino did well with the group he had available at the Gold Cup, but it’s also clear he’s going to need to bring back the more talented players at some point. Talent matters.

Where did it go wrong for the USMNT in the Gold Cup final?

The “Futbol Americas” crew debate what went wrong for the United States in its 2-1 loss to Mexico in the Gold Cup final.

The problem: I get the sense he’s chafing at some of the cultural issues around the team, namely the lack of competition within the squad and the complacency that’s set in. I think for him, that process has been harder than he expected. However it happens, he’s going to need to get those players on board. That will ultimately determine if his time as U.S. manager is a success or failure.

Hernandez: If we’re giving it a letter grade, let’s say it’s close to a C+.

It’s a passing grade either way, and the summer has been a success, but there is a sense that this is also the bare minimum when you consider Pochettino’s résumé and history. Sure, it was mostly an alternate group at the Gold Cup and he’s been in the job for less than a year, but with the latest squad and previous call-ups, has he elevated the national team to the level that was expected of him when he first arrived?

On the field, there are still questions. The same could also be said off the field with how he’s had to manage the culture of his team. Pochettino seems surprised at the overarching mindset of American soccer — “when we talk about culture, that is culture,” said the Argentine about Guatemala’s players and fans in St. Louis — and it’s fair to say his dealing with an absent Christian Pulisic could have been better.

Could the team move on from some of its high-profile absentees?

Hernandez: Many marquee players are still very much needed. Pochettino and his roster should feel proud of their perseverance and doggedness in the Gold Cup, but the reality is that they were truly missing Pulisic, Antonee RobinsonWeston McKennieFolarin BalogunTimothy WeahSergiño Dest and other absent stars who would have helped get the job done against Mexico.

For most of those names, we also shouldn’t overlook their previous World Cup experience that will be a boost ahead of 2026. This is also a case-by-case situation, though.

Looking further down the list, do they need Giovanni Reyna? Or Yunus Musah? They’ll probably be in the mix next summer, but as of now, we can’t confidently say they’re a vital piece of the puzzle.

Carlisle: Managing isn’t just about putting the best 11 players out on the field. It’s part alchemy as well in that they have to make a cohesive team. By the end of the Gold Cup, it was clear that the group was unified and fighting for each other.

But if the Gold Cup final proved everything, it’s that the U.S. still needs all the talent it can muster, and how Pochettino adds in the presumed first-teamers will determine if he ends up with chemistry or chaos.

A few of those are no-brainers, like Robinson and Dest. Those two alone will do plenty to kick-start the U.S. attack. Balogun is another, assuming he can stay healthy. As for Pulisic, McKennie and the rest, that will bear watching given the sniping that has occurred.

Playing time at club level will be the ultimate decider, which doesn’t bode well for the Reynas of the world. Ultimately, I think most everyone comes back, but when and how remains to be seen.

Did players seem to understand what Pochettino wants from them?

Carlisle: For the most part, they did understand. It makes sense in that this was the closest thing to a club environment that Pochettino and the players will experience together. Pochettino was in his element and the players responded by buying into his methods. This was proved by the way the players pulled for and supported one another, with the way they backed Malik Tillman after his missed penalty against Costa Rica a case in point.

Execution is a different issue. Obviously as the games got more difficult, the execution began to fray a bit. Part of that will come as these players continue to gain more experience.

Pochettino did make some head-scratching decisions, including the deployment of Max Arfsten at fullback when his defensive abilities were lacking. But by tournament’s end, Arfsten’s defense had improved considerably, an example of the team’s willingness to adapt.

Hernandez: That remains up for debate.

The grit and determination was there as they powered their way to the final, but there were a handful of moments during the tournament in which the ideas didn’t seem fully fleshed out or understood. In-game management was occasionally questionable, leading to tactical alterations that seemed to create confusion for some of his players.

To be fair to Pochettino, he was also simply dealing with the hand he was given with the alternate roster. No matter the caliber of the manager in charge, any coach would have had a challenging time trying to find cohesion and build an identity. That unity was eventually built by the final, but it just wasn’t enough against a powerhouse like El Tri.

What lessons can the U.S. take from the Gold Cup?

Hernandez: One key lesson was identifying the individual players who could rise to the occasion in high-pressure moments.

Pochettino talks ’embarrassing’ no-call on apparent Mexico handball

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino talks about a penalty not being issued after Mexico’s Jorge Sánchez’s apparent handball in the box.

Tillman, Luna, Richards, Matt Freese and others took charge when needed on the pitch, all while showcasing another lesson: The value of mental toughness from the summer’s squad.

“It’s the grit, it’s the determination that we’ve been lacking. To be honest, it’s fighting to the end. Every ball, every moment,” said Luna after their semifinal win over Guatemala. “The game’s about moments, and I think this is where we showcase it.”

Looking ahead, one major task for Pochettino will be maintaining that energy once their stars return.

Carlisle: Vibes matter. If the group buys in, and the players fight for each other, then good things can happen. It sounds simple, but if that was true, the U.S. wouldn’t have laid the egg that it did at the Concacaf Nations League in March, when the team looked like it was going through the motions.

The team’s fight used to be foundational. Lately it has waxed and waned — mostly waned. That it was present on a more consistent basis counts as a positive.

Learning how to perform in hostile environments counted as another step forward for this group. Yes, the Mexico result wasn’t what the U.S. wanted, but getting exposed to such situations will stand these players in good stead moving forward.

Tyler Adams asks USMNT fans to paint World Cup stadiums ‘red, white and blue’

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 6: Tyler Adams #4 of the United States gives a thumbs up on the field during the finals of the CONCACAF Gold Cup 2025 between the United States and Mexico at NRG Stadium on July 6, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Robin Alam/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

By Adam Craftonuly 10, 2025


Tyler Adams has urged American fans to paint stadiums “red, white and blue” during next year’s FIFA World Cup, in the wake of head coach Mauricio Pochettino voicing frustration at the lack of support the United States men’s national team received at the recent Concacaf Gold Cup.

In a telephone interview with The Athletic on Tuesday, Adams revealed he told teammates to prepare for Sunday’s Gold Cup final against Mexico in Texas as though it would be “the hardest away game they have played in a long time.”Mexico won the tournament by beating Pochettino’s USMNT 2-1 in front of 70,295 fans at Houston’s NRG Stadium. Following the game, Pochettino reiterated his wish for the squad to enjoy stronger support at American venues, urging fans to show their backing “not only through Instagram, social media or behind the TV.”

The Argentinean coach previously said that USMNT followers could learn from the intensity of the Guatemalan supporters who dominated the stadium in St. Louis during the semifinal against the U.S. The Mexican turnout at the final also greatly outnumbered the support for the host nation. It has been a familiar story for games involving the men’s national team, as diasporas of their opponents from within the U.S. often appear to turn out stronger, rendering the challenge more difficult even during home games.

Mexico had passionate support in Houston for its Gold Cup triumph. (Robbie Jay Barratt / AMA / Getty Images)“Without a doubt,” said Adams of whether he would like to see more U.S. supporters in stadiums during next year’s World Cup.The Bournemouth midfielder, who captained USMNT during its run to the round of 16 at the World Cup in 2022, has seen this play out before.“It’s so funny because for a lot of the fairly inexperienced players in our national team, it’s the first thing I said to everyone going into this game against Mexico,” Adams said. “I was saying, ‘Don’t go into this team with a naive mentality of expecting it to be all people cheering for us and excited about the game.’ If anything, we’re going into an atmosphere where we are playing the hardest away game you’ve probably played in a long time.“I wouldn’t say it hurts because it’s what I (have come to) expect when we play in certain areas geographically. At the same time, it’s what makes our country amazing: the diversity our country has to offer. It was a learning experience for a lot of guys, but of course come the World Cup, you’re hoping that you see so much red, white and blue instead of whoever opponent you’re facing.”Adams also revealed that Pochettino was “very emotional” in the locker room after the loss against Mexico. The Americans reached the final following a tournament they entered without several key players, either due to injury, Club World Cup involvement, manager’s decision or choice. Significant absentees included Christian Pulisic, Antonee Robinson, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Yunus Musah.The situation created openings for more players from teams within MLS, with Matt Freese, Sebastian Berhalter, Diego Luna and Patrick Agyemang among those who received fresh opportunities.

Head coach Mauricio Pochettino was emotional in the USMNT locker room after the Gold Cup final, according to Tyler Adams. (Omar Vega / Getty Images)

“Mauricio thought we had battled the entire tournament. It’s crazy because he mentioned it was the first time we had been together for 40 days and it was obviously the longest stint that we’ve had together under him. There was growth from every single player, person and backroom staff who represented U.S. Soccer during that tournament. We grew so much closer, and this is the culture we’re trying to build,” Adams said. “He was thankful to everyone for the commitment we’ve given with a fairly new group on a new stage, where everyone is still trying to gain experience and prove their worth. He was extremely proud. Obviously it hurt to come up short. You’re hoping that you walk away with a trophy at the end of it, but it didn’t happen.”

Adams made 25 starts for Bournemouth last season, amid a few injury issues, and conceded that the heat and workload of an end-of-season tournament was the biggest individual challenge of the Gold Cup for him. He came into the Gold Cup with a minor foot injury and subbed out in the 77th minute against Guatemala and the 82nd minute against Mexico.

“From my perspective, it was getting used to playing a tournament after playing a really demanding season,” he added. “It was the most I’ve played in a really, really long time. My body, to be quite frank with you, was just pushing and grinding through the entire thing. It wasn’t like playing the World Cup in Qatar where you’re playing mid-season and you’re feeling fresh and at your best. It’s about how can you really manage yourself and get the best performance out of yourself. After I play another full season, I’m gonna feel a lot better come the World Cup. It was a grind every single day, trying to do your best.

“When you’re playing in Texas multiple times, when you’re playing in some of the hottest places, it’s very demanding. I’m used to playing in good old sunny Bournemouth, where it’s 50 (degrees) every day. So going from that to playing in 100 (degrees) is obviously a huge difference.”

Adams said the summer heat was grueling for Gold Cup teams. (Aric Becker / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

Adams spoke to The Athletic after his childhood soccer field in Wappinger, N.Y. took on his name as a tribute to the trail he has blazed in the sport. The Martz Field Recreation Facility is now the Tyler Adams Soccer Pitch as part of Adams’ partnership with Scotts lawn care products to push for youth access to natural turf pitches. Adams, who started as a center forward pretending to be former Arsenal, Barcelona and New York Red Bulls forward Thierry Henry, recalled taking his earliest steps in soccer in Wappinger.

“Soccer was introduced to me from my mom. She played in high school. At 3 years old, I always had a ball at my feet,” he said. “I remember walking down to the park where the field is named after me now, playing soccer with friends in my community, or playing basketball and any sport I could get my hands on. My first memory really was in my grandma’s front yard and at the field.”That little boy has gone on to become a mainstay of the national team when fit and available, even captaining the team in Qatar in 2022. However, since Pochettino became coach, the Argentine has tended to favor defender Tim Ream, who turns 38 in October and now plays for Charlotte FC, for the armband. Pochettino has yet to fully clarify who will captain the USMNT at the World Cup in 2026.“When I’ve been in camp, it has been Tim. Obviously that’s a role that I’ve previously played and am ready to play whenever needed,” Adams said. “I am again assuming he hasn’t made it necessarily clear who it’s going to be, but if I had to guess, then it would probably be Tim.”

Tyler Adams asks USMNT fans to paint World Cup stadiums ‘red, white and blue’

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 6: Tyler Adams #4 of the United States gives a thumbs up on the field during the finals of the CONCACAF Gold Cup 2025 between the United States and Mexico at NRG Stadium on July 6, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Robin Alam/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

By Adam Craftonuly 10, 20253


Tyler Adams has urged American fans to paint stadiums “red, white and blue” during next year’s FIFA World Cup, in the wake of head coach Mauricio Pochettino voicing frustration at the lack of support the United States men’s national team received at the recent Concacaf Gold Cup.

In a telephone interview with The Athletic on Tuesday, Adams revealed he told teammates to prepare for Sunday’s Gold Cup final against Mexico in Texas as though it would be “the hardest away game they have played in a long time.”

Mexico won the tournament by beating Pochettino’s USMNT 2-1 in front of 70,295 fans at Houston’s NRG Stadium. Following the game, Pochettino reiterated his wish for the squad to enjoy stronger support at American venues, urging fans to show their backing “not only through Instagram, social media or behind the TV.”

The Argentinean coach previously said that USMNT followers could learn from the intensity of the Guatemalan supporters who dominated the stadium in St. Louis during the semifinal against the U.S. The Mexican turnout at the final also greatly outnumbered the support for the host nation. It has been a familiar story for games involving the men’s national team, as diasporas of their opponents from within the U.S. often appear to turn out stronger, rendering the challenge more difficult even during home games.

Mexico had passionate support in Houston for its Gold Cup triumph. (Robbie Jay Barratt / AMA / Getty Images)

“Without a doubt,” said Adams of whether he would like to see more U.S. supporters in stadiums during next year’s World Cup.

The Bournemouth midfielder, who captained USMNT during its run to the round of 16 at the World Cup in 2022, has seen this play out before.

“It’s so funny because for a lot of the fairly inexperienced players in our national team, it’s the first thing I said to everyone going into this game against Mexico,” Adams said. “I was saying, ‘Don’t go into this team with a naive mentality of expecting it to be all people cheering for us and excited about the game.’ If anything, we’re going into an atmosphere where we are playing the hardest away game you’ve probably played in a long time.

“I wouldn’t say it hurts because it’s what I (have come to) expect when we play in certain areas geographically. At the same time, it’s what makes our country amazing: the diversity our country has to offer. It was a learning experience for a lot of guys, but of course come the World Cup, you’re hoping that you see so much red, white and blue instead of whoever opponent you’re facing.”

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Adams also revealed that Pochettino was “very emotional” in the locker room after the loss against Mexico. The Americans reached the final following a tournament they entered without several key players, either due to injury, Club World Cup involvement, manager’s decision or choice. Significant absentees included Christian Pulisic, Antonee Robinson, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Yunus Musah.

The situation created openings for more players from teams within MLS, with Matt Freese, Sebastian Berhalter, Diego Luna and Patrick Agyemang among those who received fresh opportunities.

Head coach Mauricio Pochettino was emotional in the USMNT locker room after the Gold Cup final, according to Tyler Adams. (Omar Vega / Getty Images)

“Mauricio thought we had battled the entire tournament. It’s crazy because he mentioned it was the first time we had been together for 40 days and it was obviously the longest stint that we’ve had together under him. There was growth from every single player, person and backroom staff who represented U.S. Soccer during that tournament. We grew so much closer, and this is the culture we’re trying to build,” Adams said. “He was thankful to everyone for the commitment we’ve given with a fairly new group on a new stage, where everyone is still trying to gain experience and prove their worth. He was extremely proud. Obviously it hurt to come up short. You’re hoping that you walk away with a trophy at the end of it, but it didn’t happen.”

Adams made 25 starts for Bournemouth last season, amid a few injury issues, and conceded that the heat and workload of an end-of-season tournament was the biggest individual challenge of the Gold Cup for him. He came into the Gold Cup with a minor foot injury and subbed out in the 77th minute against Guatemala and the 82nd minute against Mexico.

“From my perspective, it was getting used to playing a tournament after playing a really demanding season,” he added. “It was the most I’ve played in a really, really long time. My body, to be quite frank with you, was just pushing and grinding through the entire thing. It wasn’t like playing the World Cup in Qatar where you’re playing mid-season and you’re feeling fresh and at your best. It’s about how can you really manage yourself and get the best performance out of yourself. After I play another full season, I’m gonna feel a lot better come the World Cup. It was a grind every single day, trying to do your best.

“When you’re playing in Texas multiple times, when you’re playing in some of the hottest places, it’s very demanding. I’m used to playing in good old sunny Bournemouth, where it’s 50 (degrees) every day. So going from that to playing in 100 (degrees) is obviously a huge difference.”

Adams said the summer heat was grueling for Gold Cup teams. (Aric Becker / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

Adams spoke to The Athletic after his childhood soccer field in Wappinger, N.Y. took on his name as a tribute to the trail he has blazed in the sport. The Martz Field Recreation Facility is now the Tyler Adams Soccer Pitch as part of Adams’ partnership with Scotts lawn care products to push for youth access to natural turf pitches. Adams, who started as a center forward pretending to be former Arsenal, Barcelona and New York Red Bulls forward Thierry Henry, recalled taking his earliest steps in soccer in Wappinger.

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“Soccer was introduced to me from my mom. She played in high school. At 3 years old, I always had a ball at my feet,” he said. “I remember walking down to the park where the field is named after me now, playing soccer with friends in my community, or playing basketball and any sport I could get my hands on. My first memory really was in my grandma’s front yard and at the field.”

That little boy has gone on to become a mainstay of the national team when fit and available, even captaining the team in Qatar in 2022. However, since Pochettino became coach, the Argentine has tended to favor defender Tim Ream, who turns 38 in October and now plays for Charlotte FC, for the armband. Pochettino has yet to fully clarify who will captain the USMNT at the World Cup in 2026.

“When I’ve been in camp, it has been Tim. Obviously that’s a role that I’ve previously played and am ready to play whenever needed,” Adams said. “I am again assuming he hasn’t made it necessarily clear who it’s going to be, but if I had to guess, then it would probably be Tim.”

How bold tactics and an old-fashioned kick-off routine made Paris Saint-Germain fast starters

How bold tactics and an old-fashioned kick-off routine made Paris Saint-Germain fast starters

By Liam Tharme

July 11, 2025 12:00 pm EDT

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Paris Saint-Germain’s kick-offs explain a lot about their approach to starting matches.

They are the only moments of games where Luis Enrique’s side look old-fashioned — the ball is immediately launched by the taker, who kicks for touch, deep into the final third.

Typically, Vitinha is that player, and ironically it’s one of the few ‘passes’ he does not complete all match. Come the resulting throw-in, PSG then squeeze up and press.

Here they are executing the ploy at the beginning of last weekend’s Club World Cup quarter-final win against Bayern Munich.

Teams kicking off like this in prior decades often had an inferiority complex. They did not want the ball in their own half, or to invite opponents onto them early on.

Luis Enrique’s new European champions excel against pressure though, so this is about creating the type of match they like to play. PSG want to press you, they want to dominate territory, they want to wear teams down from minute one, they want a fast start.

Their head coach said earlier in this tournament that they copied the kick-off tactic from fellow French side Lyon. “Teams will figure you out. In football, there’s no magic wand,” Luis Enrique explained. “You’ve got to keep switching things up and evolving.”

And evolve they have done.

A team with a deserved reputation these days for fast starts, PSG were a relatively poor first-half team for the opening 18 months of the Spaniard’s tenure. They did not score in the opening 45 minutes of 13 of his first 19 Champions League games in charge. That spans from matchday one of the 2023-24 group stage — a tournament where PSG went on to reach the semi-finals — up to and including the 4-2 comeback defeat of Manchester City in the league phase in January.

Since that win against City, across a combined 17 Champions League and Club World Cup fixtures, PSG have scored the opening goal inside 20 minutes on nine occasions.

They start fast more often than they don’t.

Ousmane Dembele celebrates putting PSG two up against Real Madrid after just nine minutes (Luke Hales/Getty Images)

PSG turned two cup finals into processions in the space of seven days in May. They hit Reims twice in three minutes to be two goals up in the Coupe de France final before the clock even hit 20 minutes — it was 3-0 by half-time.

Then, in the Champions League showpiece against Italy’s Inter, right-back Achraf Hakimi opened the scoring on 12 minutes and Desire Doue doubled the lead eight minutes later.

“These sorts of games can change drastically after the first goal. I have experienced that,” Luis Enrique had told reporters pre-match on the latter occasion. He was perhaps not expecting a start that good and knew how rarely Inter went behind.

PSG winning that Champions League final — by a record scoreline — after taking control early was fitting, because it continued a trend from the competition’s knockout rounds. They scored with their opening shot of the semi-final’s first leg away to Arsenal, with their first two in the quarter-final decider at Aston Villa and with their third chance of the round of 16 return against Liverpool at Anfield.

FIFA CLUB WORLD CUPTop FIFA CLUB WORLD CUP Stories

The Athletic’s Friday football quiz question #63

Real Madrid gambled on Xabi Alonso at the Club World Cup. Was it a success?

Rotation: The key word of Chelsea’s long summer at the Club World Cup

They were the 2024-25 Champions League’s best team in the opening half-hour of matches, scoring 13 times and only conceding twice, with six of their goals coming inside 15 minutes.

Luis Enrique’s side have been even more relentless in the Club World Cup.

They cracked Inter Miami open within six minutes of their round of 16 tie kicking off and were 4-0 up by half-time. Against Real Madrid in the semi-finals, PSG ran out 4-0 winners and were three up by 24 minutes, the earliest they have been winning by such a margin since April 2018.

Their start on Wednesday was so electric that Luis Enrique felt compelled to say “we didn’t put the brakes on” in his post-match press conference. It was another crowning win, this time against the biggest of European football’s heavyweights.

They treat late-phase knockout games just like they would treat any other fixture.

PSG’s first goal kick against Madrid goes short, as they try to get out with a combination down the sides. A one-two between Achraf Hakimi and Joao Neves nearly sticks, only for the right-back to miscontrol the return pass.

Successive, stylish backheel passes by Jude Bellingham and Kylian Mbappe then find Gonzalo Garcia behind the PSG midfield, with only the two centre-backs between him and Donnarumma.

The speed with which PSG recover their shape is exceptional.

Inside four seconds, they have seven outfielders behind the ball, prompting Vinicus Junior to pass wide after striker Garcia lays the ball off to him. Left-winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia is doing his defensive duties, tracking Federico Valverde’s overlapping run.

Two smart PSG blocks shut down any promise of a proper Madrid opening.

First, Kvaratskhelia blocks Arda Guler’s cross. Then, when the ball ricochets across to Aurelien Tchouameni, Ousmane Dembele arrives quickly to get in the way of his shot.

At Madrid’s first goal kick, they press man-to-man.

Doue, the right-winger, slides round to help No 9 Dembele harry the centre-backs and goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois. This means Hakimi has to commit to a full-back-to-full-back press on Fran Garcia.

The risk with that is not having an extra player advantage against Mbappe and Vinicius Jr on halfway, who obviously have plenty of speed and space to exploit.

A reverse angle of Dembele primed to press in the first half of the Champions League final has become popular on social media in recent weeks for how intensely he is staring at Inter ’keeper Yann Sommer.

There was also a scenario only minutes into the quarter-final’s first leg at home against Villa, where Dembele pressed Emiliano Martinez too early and the goal kick got re-taken for encroachment.

Through such an ultra-aggressive out-of-possession approach, PSG regain the ball quicker and can spend more time grinding opponents down.

“If you want to spend more time attacking, you have to recover the ball if you lose it,” Neves told The Athletic in April. “In those five to 10 seconds when you lose the ball, you have to give 100, 120 per cent, because it’s the best way to attack again.”

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PSG attack from the off with brave rotations, too.

Here, four minutes in against Madrid, is the perfect example.

Dembele has dropped deeper as PSG work a wide triangle. Note the start position of their left-back Nuno Mendes, with this move becoming one full-back setting up another. Doue is the link to unlock Madrid’s defence. He receives Dembele’s forward pass and backheels it between centre-half Antonio Rudiger and left-back Garcia, releasing Hakimi.

Hakimi’s low cutback picks out Mendes on the edge of the six-yard box, but Courtois saves the big chance with his feet.

Going ahead so early in games means PSG can attack in a variety of ways. In December 2023, when he was five months into the role, Luis Enrique spoke about the “really high individual level” despite seeing “room for improvement”.

This is a team stacked with quality ball carriers and transition players who thrive when given time, space and overloads to attack you with. PSG had the most fast break shots (29) and goals (six) in this season’s Champions League, not least because they were in a position to choose when to sit off opponents or press them.

Beware, then, Chelsea and their coach Enzo Marseca. If the cliched expectation is for a cagey final on Sunday, they could be in for an almighty shock.

At the very least, don’t let PSG win the coin toss.

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It is now blindingly obvious that PSG are the world’s best football team

7/4/25 US Men in GC Finals vs Mexico Sun 7 pm, USMNT wins again, Indy 11 home Sat 7:30 pm, Club Cup SFs this weekend, Women’s Euros

US Men vs Mexico Gold Cup Final Sun 7 pm on Fox

The Us held on for dear life and found a way to squeeze past the 106th ranked team in the World Guatemala to advance to their 13th Gold Cup Final where they will face Mexico a 2-0 winner over Honduras. The American’s dominated early behind 2 spectacular goals What a Goal by Diego Luna before slipping into a into the worse 50 minutes I have seen a US men’s team play in 20 years Hilights. Our “Coach” Poch continues to show what a horrific national team manager he is as – as his team was ridiculously dominated by team many US college teams could beat. NO IDEA what this guy is doing – but he’s not doing it right. We don’t look balanced in attack or defense or transition. We have no plan – the players are just running around the field – with no idea what they are doing. He subs late – and when he does his subs do NOTHING. I keep hearing the guys are close and feeling like a team – well they sure as heck don’t play like it.

Now the games have been exciting the US beating NO ONE on the way to the finals – struggling to beat CONCACAF teams – none of which is ranked in the top 60 in the World. Lets be Real – Mexico is going to kill us – 3-1 at best for the US. Our back line continues to show its weakness as our 3rd string left and right backs from MLS continue to show they can’t play defense. Thankfully Centerback Chris Richards (Crystal Palace) & the diminutive former Fulham Capt Tim Ream (37 years old – slow as molases) have played well in the middle. I am still waiting for Capt Tyler Adams to actually make a difference in a game as his partner Sebastian Berhalter has shown he deserves a look for our World Cup next year. The stars have been Diego Luna who at 21 has been our best/most competitive striker. Malik Tilman has also proven he deserves a chance to play with the A team come fall. Honestly those 2 might be competing for the #10 slot at some point. Again not sure why — but Poch decided not to bring in the B squad from Europe and instead is going with the young MLS players who honestly simply can’t play at the World Cup level. I do think he may have found a new Goalkeeper in Matt Freeze, especially if Matt Turner can’t get starter minutes in Europe. Otherwise we came in with 3 starters in Chris Richards/Tyler Adams & Matt Turner. We leave with Tilman, Luna and perhaps Luca de la Torre, Patrick Agyemang, &  Jack McGlynn in the mix. If they can find a way to actually beat the only top 50 team we have played in this Gold Cup – Mexico on Sunday – I may change my tune. But the 3-1 loss we are about to get will continue to keep me in the FIRE POCH camp.

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

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

US Women Dominate Canada 3-0 with our B Team

Unlike our men – our only real US Coach – Emma Hayes continues to show what a master she is. She continues to roll in new young players while our European Contingent has the summer off. Still the US dominated Canada 3-0 (Highlights) with the new young players like Alyssa Thompson and Michelle Cooper showing their mettle. Again we are the #1 team in the World – NO QUESTIONS asked. Probably why the US ladies continue to sell out every stadium they play in. Go USA! (Stories below)

The World Club Cup is Coming Down to Crunch Time this Weekend Semis Sat/Sun

So again I have to admit I have watched more of these than I thought I would – even watching in Spanish sometimes when the games are not in english (Chelsea 2 vs Palmeiras 1 Fri) yes the same Palmeiras that is hosting Carmel FC’s Summer Camp – (see below). Exciting games coming Sat – heck I am headed down to Atlanta for Bayern vs PSG on Saturday at noon on TNT and my buddy Oscar is headed to NJ for Real Madrid vs Dortmund at 4 pm on Uni/TNT.

Women’s European Championships Continue on Fox

The Women’s Euro’s have been enjoyable so far. Some really good games this weekend as France plays England Sat after Netherlands vs Wales. Read all about below and see the full game schedule.

Camps to Check out This Summer

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

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

CARMEL FC & PALMEIRAS CAMP
Palmeiras Soccer Camps for players aims to let all participants develop their full technical, tactical and physical potential no matter their skill level. Day by day they will learn to enhance their strengths and will be stimulated to understand their own weaknesses. Players participating will be coached by Palmeiras Professional Coaches and may be invited to join Palmeiras Academy in Brazil for tryout. Register now!
Camp dates: July 21-25 Ages: 7-16 Location: Carmel Clay Community Soccer Complex, Home of Carmel FC: Price: $295 REGISTER

Such sad the news that Liverpool foward Diogo Jotta died in a car accident. Jota Video  

TV GAME SCHEDULE

GC=Gold Cup, WCC = World Club Cup in US WE -Women’s Euros

Fri, July 4th
12 noon FS1 Denmark vs Sweden WE
3 pm Fox Germany vs Poland WE
3 pm TNT, Unimas Fluminense vs Al Hilal WCC
7:30 pm FS1 Dallas vs Minn MLS
9 pm TNT Chelseas vs Palmeiras WCC
10:30 pm Apple LA Galaxy vs Vancouver MLS
Sat, July 5th
12 noon FS1 Wales vs Netherlands W Euros
12 noon TNT PSG vs Bayern Munich WCC
3 pm Fox France vs England WE
4 pm TNT Real Madrid vs Borrusia Dortmund WCC
7 pm FS1 Charlotte vs Orlando MLS
7:30 pm TV 8 Indy 11 vs Hometown Heros
8:30 pm Apple Free Austin City vs LAFC MLS
Sun, July 6th
12 noon FS1 Norway vs Finland W Euros
3 pm FS1 Switzerland vs Iceland WE
5 pm Apple free Seattle Sounders vs Columbus Crew MLS
7 pm FOX USA Men vs Mexico GOLD CUP FINAL

Mon, July 7 th
12 noon FS1 Spain vs Belgium W Euros
3 pm Fox Portugal vs Italy WE
Tues, July 8th
12 noon FS1 Germany vs Denmark W Euros
Wed, July 9
12 noon FS1 England vs Netherland W Euros
3 pm Fox France vs Wales WE
3 pm TBS Fifa WCC Semis
7 pm CBSSN Philly Union vs NYRB MLS

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US Men


USMNT still hasn’t had a convincing win since Pochettino took over. Time is running out
Diego Luna, USMNT’s Gold Cup hero, is ready to take on Mexico in final
Luna eclipse: No stars, no problem as USMNT finds new focal point
Poch: ‘Desperate’ Luna sets example for USMNT
Concacaf Gold Cup as it happened: Luna sends USMNT to final
USMNT Hang On for 2-1 Win in Gold Cup Semis
The USMNT survived Guatemala. Mexico wins too
How confident should U.S. feel ahead of Gold Cup Final vs. Mexico?
US Men Seek Statement Win vs Mexico in Final – Charles Bohm
Diego Luna books USA vs. Mexico showdown in Gold Cup final

US Ladies Dominate Canada 2-0

USA 3-0 Canada – The Continental Classico comes home
Lavelle and Co. are responding well to Hayes’ USWNT challenges

Claire Hutton scores first USWNT goal in win over Canada
Stoney slams ‘inexcusable’ Canada loss to USWNT
24 in 24: Rodriguez nets in another USWNT debut

World Club Cup

How confident should U.S. feel ahead of Gold Cup Final vs. Mexico?
Who are the Al Hilal players knocked out City and have eyes on the Club World Cup?

Euros Women

Euro 2025 team-by-team preview, predictions, key players, more
Kosola’s goal secures Finland’s 1-0 win over Iceland in Euro 2025 opener
Switzerland stuns Norway with wonder goal at home Euros opener
Shock at the start: Germany captain forced off
Euro 2025: Caruso ruthless as Italy edge debut with narrow win
3 things you may have missed from Spain’s win over Portugal

To the Football… 🇺🇸🏆
USA 2-1 Guatemala 🇺🇸🇬🇹
The good news: Our young, raw, shorthanded squad made it to Sunday’s final in Houston. The bad news: Barely. In surreally hostile conditions on home turf in St. Louis, the United States were dominated for long spells by 106th in the world Guatemala. The experience of witnessing the game was akin to watching a rom-com movie suddenly pivot into a slasher flick. We held on, and Mexico now await. Poch’s young charges are on a CONCACAFFY hero’s journey, taking their lumps, learning their lessons, and holding on. They will become all the stronger for this experience. The question of how good we are still lingers, and, considering the “deep down in the depth chart” quality of most of these players, whether much of it matters.  
WATCHClint Dempsey and I break down that mood swing of a game on our USA-Guatemala episode of THE DEUCE 🇺🇸♠️
A Star is Born: Diego Luna 👦
Two goals inside 15 minutes, the first a delicious finish after demonstrating sharper spidey ball awareness than all those around him, the second a must-watch moment of pure, uncorked, delirious skill. Clint Dempsey has said to us, all tournament long, that our young players have a World Cup squad place in their hands, with nothing to lose. All he wanted was for one to step up and grab the chance without fear – to take on opponents and refuse to be ignored. Alongside Malik Tillman, Diego Luna has been that player. The 21-year-old from Sunnyvale, Calif. now has three goals and two assists across five matches. Poch said post-game, “[His] attitude, hunger, desire, everything, and then for sure, the talent will appear. But that is what we expect from our athletes, that’s what we want.”  
I loved Luna’s own quote post game: “The game is 90 minutes of hundreds of moments, and you’ve got to execute on each one.” That is his attitude. I chatted with Diego in Austin the night before the Saudi game. I asked him what he feels like when he takes possession. He told me he tries to tell himself to just have fun, like he did as a kid playing in the park in San Jose. It reminded me of something Clint says on The Deuce, “You got to be serious about having fun.” That is what Diego Luna is doing this summer. 
Let the debates begin about whether he should now be an A-Team starter, a spark plug off the bench, or as Simon Evans suggested, Poch should unleash all his toys.
How Did 106th in the World Guatemala Then Seize the Game by the Throat and Start to Overwhelm Us? 🇬🇹
First of all — THEIR FANS ARE AMAZING. The game might have been in St. Louis, but that sold-out stadium felt like it was in Guatemala City. What a fanbase. John Strong said the terraces were “90% Guatemalan fans.” I am not Guatemalan, but when their national anthem rang out pre-game, I found the noise, and joy, and pride emanating around the stadium to be immensely moving. Let’s never use the complaint that tickets are too expensive for this tournament again – because the Guatemala fans showed out. 
The Guatemalan players fed off the fan energy and simply overwhelmed us, relentlessly pressing the U.S. backline into mistakes that against a sharper team would have been punished. Before the U.S. scored their second, Poch’s boys had 70% possession. After it, we had just 40%. We were outshot 20-12. The noise once Guatemala scored was an epic moment. The last 10 minutes were an agony as the U.S. could not hold onto the ball going forward. Clint said, if the game went on for five more minutes, the outcome could have been so different. I have to salute the gutsy Los Chapines and their Mexican coach, Luis Fernando Tena. That fan base deserves all the joy. They are a glimpse of the passion and competitive fire which can make the Gold Cup grow and grow in the future. May a first-ever World Cup qualification be their solace. 
So How Good Are We? 
It is impossible to say. The quality of our line-up is between B and C string. The opponents we are facing are, despite their admirably ferocious CONCACAF mentalities, so far from true footballing challenges, the likes of which we would meet in the knockout round of the World Cup. Right now, we are to football what Jake Paul is to boxing.  
This young squad are on a journey. What matters are the lessons they are learning along the way together. They have made the final. A Gold Cup trophy would be lovely but the optics of it are what will be important for Poch. A symbol of forward momentum and the ability to deliver a simple message to the players who did not report: “We won without you. We achieved this with a fighting culture and a willingness to struggle. This is what you now have to fit into if you want to be part of this World Cup.”
That is what Poch is attempting: An act of cultural transformation, from complacency to collective audacity. This is all that matters.
Bring on Mexico 🇺🇸🇲🇽
The eighth time we dance against our arch rivals in the final (7 p.m. ET, FOX/FOX Sports). Javier Aguirre’s side outlasted a feisty Honduras 1-0 thanks to this Raúl Jiménez goal. The assist was from 16-year-old Gilberto Mora who is 459 DAYS YOUNGER than Lamine Yamal. Mexico are struggling to create in a similar way to us, but they have not allowed a goal in 383 minutes. Indeed, goalkeeper Luis Malagón has had to make only one save in the last three games. More on them here from our friends at Give N Go. One thing is sure: NRG Stadium in Houston is going to feel like the Azteca. I cannot wait. Much more on Mexico below.
Whatever happens, come and join Clint and me postgame live on YouTube and chop it up with The Deuce. 
I would love to hear from you all. Let me know how you think it is going to go. Email me at meninblazers@gmail.com 🍻
Clint Dempsey on Diego Luna’s breakout performance 🗣️“He was on fire tonight, man, and he’s shown that he’s a guy that can be counted on, the way that he took that first touch off the deflection off the goalie, moving it to his left side, calm-as-you-like finish. And the way he rolled the ball to do a scissor and then just pushed it in with his right foot for the second. He was the bright spot of the game, not only the two goals, but just the way he played throughout. He was dangerous.”USMNT Only@usmntonlyDIEGO LUNA AGAIN OMFG 11:23 PM • Jul 2, 2025  4.8K Likes   313 Retweets  79 Replies“I think the key for him (Luna) is not to get too high during these big moments that he’s having right now, in terms of the brace that he had tonight. He’s continuing to try to build on that and to try to be more consistent in bringing a certain type of level, every game, but he’s someone that’s growing in front of our eyes. He’s still raw, but I’m excited about seeing what will come of him and he’s just got to keep his head on straight and keep grinding and keep doing what he’s been doing.”Clint Dempsey on the U.S. struggles after grabbing the early lead 🗣️“It was a tough watch after 20 minutes. It looked like we were leaking oil and, if the game would have gone on a little bit longer, maybe they would have got the equalizer. But hey, we talked about it: 2-0 is the most dangerous lead in the game, especially when you feel like you’re playing away from home with a 90% Guatemalan crowd. Still though, the U.S. got it done.”Clint Dempsey on what it’s like playing on home turf, but in an environment that feels like an away game 🗣️“All you ever want to do is represent your country and play in big games, and then you wanna play in packed stadiums. And yeah, you wish it was more so the stadium was packed for you, but it’s like… you got to find it, you got to fuel your fire, right? You gotta motivate yourself to, hey, let’s quiet the crowd. We’re in America, we got to let them know this is our home. And that’s how we came out and that’s how we approached it in the first 20 minutes, before we kind of let the game slip away from us. But credit to them, man – coming out, packing the stadium, making memories.”Clint Dempsey on Pochettino potentially playing Diego Luna and Christian Pulisic together 🗣️“The thing with Luna is, can he be more consistent? He’s definitely upped his goal production in MLS and he’s building into the player that he wants to be because of that confidence that he’s got now of being able to score in these big moments and step up and create that energy. You want game changers and people that can create, and those two players are definitely creating, but Luna still has a way to go to get to the levels of Christian.”Clint Dempsey on the importance of reaching the Gold Cup final 🗣️“We needed them to get to the final and be in a position to try to turn things around as we build towards the World Cup. And gradually, it’s happening, but you can see that it’s starting to shift and you’re starting to see some players step up– like Luna, like Tillman, like Richards–that are pushing to get into our best starting XI.”Clint Dempsey on the three USMNT players who’ve set themselves apart at this tournament 🗣️“Agyemang is still raw and has some work, but he had a part to play in one of the goals tonight in terms of hold-up play with Tillman, but Luna, bro, he’s right there with Tillman and Chris Richards. Those are the three guys that are really knocking on the door to break into the starting lineup.”Clint Dempsey on the Premier League team he almost joined 🗣️“For sure, it was between Everton and Fulham – they were the ones that put in the bids. MLS accepted Fulham’s because it was the most and so it was kind of out of my hands. But at the end of the day, I’m happy I got to go to Fulham and had a great time there.”

Watch the full episode to get all of Clint’s thoughts on the USMNT’s win against Guatemala, and make sure to follow The Deuce on TikTok and YouTube for even more Texas-infused insight. 🤠  
  Hello, Viejo Amigo 🇲🇽We’ve seen this movie many times before, so it isn’t surprising that the USMNT’s pickup squad of MLS prospects, relative unknowns and the odd veteran are meeting the CONCACAF Gold Cup’s most successful-ever team, Mexico, in this year’s final. Since its 1991 inception, these two have collided seven times at this tournament’s apex, with Mexico winning five of those matches and the U.S. twice, both with just a one-goal margin. There’ve been 17 Gold Cups and the 2025 finalists hold 16 between them. Although El Tri boasts nine of those dubs, over recent years, the power balance between the two nations has started to level out. Mexico are 17th in FIFA’s rankings and with the USMNT a narrow place ahead in 16th, their talent pool now spills across European leagues more prominently than ever before. But unlike the U.S., Mexico’s box office names are pretty much all here and accounted for, and in their 1-0 win over Honduras in the semi-final, Fulham’s Raúl Jiménez was decisive with his finish; although he’s 34, his mission to become his country’s all-time top goalscorer is on course.Mexico’s current formation doesn’t really allow for his deputy, AC Milan’s Santiago Giménez, to earn a regular starting place in the side, but that’s the sort of heavy-attacking artillery that this specific USMNT squad do not have in reserve. Along with the captain, West Ham’s all-action center midfielder, Edson Álvarez, and 16-year-old Gilberto Mora, who assisted Jiménez with his goal yesterday, there is a lot that Poch knows he needs to be wary of. Oh, and lest we forget, mythical 39-year-old goalkeeper, Guillermo “Memo” Ochoa, fiery as ever, albeit now as a backup on the bench, where his main-character energy still somehow permits him to receive yellow cards, despite not playing a minute of football yesterday. Listen to Ochoa’s recent conversation with Herc Gomez on VAMOS to get ready for Sunday night’s clash.

Can Gold Cup final be USMNT’s first good win under Pochettino?

Ryan O’Hanlon ESPN Jul 4, 2025, 07:47 AM ET

Think back to a little over a month ago. Before the ChatGPT screenshots. Before the feuds. Before the say-it-to-my-face provocations. Before U.S. manager Mauricio Pochettino told us, “I am not a mannequin.” Before Christian Pulisic played golf at the wrong time. Before the embarrassing loss to Switzerland.

Now that you’ve occupied that headspace, imagine if I told you that the U.S. men’s national team would go undefeated through the first five games of the Gold Cup. The USMNT would get a pair of breakout performances from Diego Luna and Malik Tillman. And would get a date in the final against Mexico.

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You’d be pretty happy with that, wouldn’t you?

And by and large, many USMNT fans and watchers are pretty happy. The team hasn’t lost yet. It has overcome some adversity. Luna has become a cult hero. And Tillman is about to join Bayer Leverkusen for a transfer fee of around $40 million. Given that most of the team’s first-choice players are not on the roster, it has been a successful summer.

There’s one thing missing — from this summer and the Pochettino era, at large: The team hasn’t played a good game yet.

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It has been 15 matches since Pochettino took over, and we still haven’t seen the USMNT outplay decent, competitive opposition in a systematic, repeatable way. The U.S. has taken advantage of mistakes against bad teams, struggled to score against defensive sides, fallen apart against talented opponents and hung on against national teams that might not qualify for the next World Cup.

Sunday’s final — against Mexico, in front of what could be a partisan Mexico crowd at Houston’s NRG Stadium — will be the toughest game of Pochettino’s fledgling tenure. It’ll be the final time the U.S. plays a competitive match before the World Cup. It’ll also be Pochettino’s last chance to show that his team might be headed in the right direction.

How does Pochettino stack up with his USMNT predecessors?
Since 2013, the USMNT has played 60 tournament games in Concacaf across the Nations League and Gold Cup. This isn’t a perfect baseline, given the drastically different opponent quality game to game, but it’s a nice way of presenting the average expectation for a Gold Cup or Nations League match.

In these games, per Stats Perform data, the USMNT averages:

  • 2.4 non-penalty goals scored
  • 0.6 goals against
  • 14.7 shots
  • 9.6 shots against
  • 61.6% of all final-third possession
  • 28.9 touches in the penalty area
  • 14.6 touches allowed in the penalty area

None of that should be surprising. The U.S. has basically doubled up its opponent in most of the top-level attacking statistics: goals, final-third possession and penalty-area touches. This is expected from a country that has been one of the two dominant powers in the region over the past 30 years.

Here, though, are the same numbers for the USMNT in Pochettino’s nine games in charge across the two competitions:

  • 2.0 non-penalty goals scored
  • 0.9 goals against
  • 12.6 shots
  • 8.0 shots against
  • 63.7% of all final-third possession
  • 24.7 touches in the penalty area
  • 15.1 touches allowed in the penalty area

This, roughly, paints the tactical picture of the USMNT under Pochettino, thus far. The team is controlling more of the territory than the USMNT had in the past, but that’s not leading to better outcomes or outputs. The U.S. is generating fewer goals, shots and penalty-area touches from the increased final-third dominance, but it is also allowing more penalty-area touches and goals despite the final-third dominance.

Of course, some of that could be randomness. Perhaps this newfound level of territorial control is creating a more sound process — but the bounces just aren’t going the USMNT’s way. That’s possible across a nine-match sample. But that hasn’t been the case. Across the same 60-match span of games, the USMNT has created 2.0 non-penalty expected goals per game and allowed 0.7. Under Pochettino, the defense has been right at that 0.7 average, but the offensive production has dipped to 1.5 xG created per game. This happened in each of the USMNT’s past two matches. Against Costa Rica, the only chance the U.S. created worth more than 0.15 xG was Malik Tillman’s missed penalty. The totals below include the penalties for each team, but even with a lopsided shot count in the USMNT’s favor, the overall chance quality was roughly even. This game went to a penalty kick shootout, and deservedly so. Orange dots are goals, purple dots are shots, and the bigger dots mean higher xG per attempt. Then, after grabbing an early 2-0 lead in the semifinals, the U.S. hung on. Conceding 20 shots to Argentina or Spain is one thing, but this was against Guatemala. Transfermarkt estimates the transfer value of Guatemala’s Gold Cup squad to be one-fifth of what Bayer Leverkusen will pay to acquire Tillman. Put another way, the average player on the USMNT squad this summer carries an estimated transfer value of about €7 million. Added together, Guatemala’s entire squad comes out to €8.3 million. Why the Gold Cup final against Mexico means everything, and nothing
I’m not sure you need advanced stats to understand this. Across two matches against Costa Rica and Guatemala, the USMNT scored four goals and conceded three. Costa Rica ranks 46th in the World Football Elo ratings, while Guatemala ranks 75th. Even wi h a U.S. B-team, you’d expect some more comfortable results.Mexico, meanwhile, is 22nd. So, Sunday’s match presents a first and last for Pochettino: the last chance to win something before the World Cup, but the first time he has coached the team in a game it is not expected to win. Due to the USMNT’s depleted roster and what’s expected to be a pro-Mexican crowd in Texas, El Tri are very slight favorites. Per the implied odds from ESPN BET, Mexico has a 52% chance of lifting the trophy. Strangely, it feels like everything and nothing hinges on Sunday’s game. Nothing matters because this isn’t the team Pochettino will take to the World Cup. Plus, a lot can and will change between now and next summer — and most of it will have nothing to do with decisions made by anyone in a U.S. Soccer shirt, either. But there are so few games in international soccer that we have no choice but to give each game an outsized amount of weight. Every successive match is another bit of imperfect information about the quality of the team. That’s how a rating system will view it, too. Per the Elo ratings, the USMNT had a rating of 1738 and a ranking of 37th when Pochettino took over. Currently, it has a rating of 1727 and a ranking of 40. Teams win and lose points every time they play a game, based on the result, quality of the opponent and level of the competition. So, if the USMNT wins Sunday, it’ll make progress under its new coach. If the team loses, it’ll take a step backward. And if the match ends in a draw (and goes to penalties), the U.S. will stay where it is now: not significantly better or worse than where it was before.

Lifting Gold Cup against Mexico can give Pochettino’s USMNT the belief he craves

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JULY 02: Chris Richards #3, Brenden Aaronson #11, and Tim Ream #13 of United States react in front of Aaron Herrera #7 and Jonathan Franco #22 of Guatemala during the second half of the Gold Cup 2025 Semifinals at Energizer Park on July 02, 2025 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio July 3, 2025


ST. LOUIS — As the realities faded from what this summer was supposed to be into what it was going to be, the goal of the tournament for the United States men’s national team never truly shifted.The Gold Cup was meant to be the month when Mauricio Pochettino and his staff finally got some time with the group that they would lead into next year’s home World Cup. But the FIFA Club World Cup, injuries and Christian Pulisic’s decision to request the summer off meant the U.S. went into the tournament without many of its regulars. That shifted expectations, at least on the outside. Internally, the group still believed the goal was singular: to win a trophy.On Sunday night in Houston, a group of players who have used this summer to try to force their way into the World Cup picture will get that chance against rivals Mexico. After two ugly friendly losses to start the summer, the U.S. can end it with a continental title. To do so, they’ll have to beat the best team they will have seen being beaten by Turkey and Switzerland.It felt, after those two friendly losses, that Pochettino’s desire to send a message to the wider national team pool was going to be a lost cause. But the U.S. squad’s ability to grind out results — albeit against Saudi Arabia, Haiti, Costa Rica and Guatemala — has given Pochettino enough of what he was looking for from the group. He wanted grittiness. He asked for more fight. It has not always been pretty, but this team has given him that foundational baseline.Beating Mexico would only reinforce the message that heart, desire and fight can be a differentiator. After the 2-1 win against Guatemala on Wednesday night in the semifinal, Pochettino’s press conference turned into somewhat of an assessment of footballing culture in countries such as Argentina, where he’s from, and how it compares to the States. Pochettino came away impressed by a highly partisan Guatemalan crowd. It felt like an 85-15 tilt toward the Chapines in the heartland of America. For fans of the sport in this country, it’s not a new phenomenon. But Pochettino has been coaching this U.S. team for less than a year. He’s still experiencing these things for the first time.Guatemala was playing in a Gold Cup semifinal for the first time since 1996 and just the second time ever. That made it a must-attend event for their fans, who came from around the country to rally behind a team that had shown real character over the course of the tournament. The scene around the stadium all day on Wednesday was a celebratory one. Blue-and-white clad fans were out eight hours before kickoff, grilling and partying. When the national anthem started a few minutes before kickoff, the stadium vibrated with the voices of Guatemalan fans singing proudly.“I loved it,” U.S. winger Diego Luna told reporters after the game. “It was awesome, man. That’s what every game should be like. The Guatemalans should be very proud of the fans that they have and the energy they bring. It’s badass.”

Diego Luna has been one of the USMNT’s biggest recent bright spots. (Jeff Le/Getty Images)

Pochettino loved it, too.“That is football,” Pochettino told reporters after the game. “When we say the connection between the fans and the team, that is the connection that we would like to see in the World Cup. That connection that makes you fly. Because the energy translates.“Today, do you think that was a sport, two teams playing, and doing a spectacle? No, you play for something more. You play for emotion. You play to be happy, be sad.“I saw players of Guatemala crying. I said, ‘Congratulations, because you are in a good way.’ That is the way that we need to feel. And our fans need to feel the same. Things happen because you play for your pride, you play for many, many things. But this is good for our players. Because when we talk about culture, that is culture. To see Guatemala’s team, how it fights, how it comes here and how the fans behave. That is an important thing that we need to learn here in this country.“But I am not here to tell you that we need to do this or that. Only that sometimes, we talk about culture… I come from Argentina. And Argentina is not the same, win or lose. The consequences are massive.”

Mauricio Pochettino has cause for cheer after the USMNT’s recent turnaround. (Bill Barrett / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

It was less a critique of American soccer culture and more an acknowledgement of the reality when we talk about the growth of this sport. The 1994 World Cup helped to establish soccer as a legitimate sport in the U.S. It launched a professional league. Thirty-two years later, that culture is still growing. As the team has struggled recently, the support has understandably waned. Since the Copa América exit last summer (and at times before it), the U.S. has played in front of relatively empty stadiums and now in a hostile home environment. Pochettino yearned for the World Cup stage where, in all likelihood, it will be a large pro-American crowd urging the team on — just as it was during home qualifiers in the 2022 cycle.

More importantly, though, Pochettino wanted to break off the intensity of the night to inject into the group. He wanted that live-or-die feeling to exist within his team the way he felt it had for Guatemala on a night when its supporters were just as much a part of the result as any Guatemalan player on the field.Pochettino returned to the idea later in an answer, this time in Spanish. This time, he spoke to his own emotion and attachment to the game. “I have a lot of respect for this sport, it gave me everything,” Pochettino said. “That gave me the possibility to achieve the dreams of a little kid who was in the middle of the field in Murphy, Argentina. If it hadn’t been for this sport, for soccer, I wouldn’t be able to achieve everything I’ve achieved.“That’s why I have the utmost respect for Guatemala and the game. I can answer that it was incredible, how the Guatemalan fans lifted the team and gave them energy. And the truth is, it was important, too, for us to play in an environment like this, even if it’s here in St. Louis, to be in a hostile environment with constant noise every time Guatemala took the ball from any position on the field.“That added stress also means we learn to compete better and behave differently from a sporting perspective. And that’s something for this young group, with some experienced players, that will be very useful for the future.” It will be beneficial in the immediate term, for sure. The U.S. will likely face a similarly biased crowd against Mexico in Houston. Their experience against Guatemala can instantly be applied to a bigger stage. 

Mexico, led by star striker Raul Jimenez, will go into the Gold Cup final as favorite. (Shaun Clark / Getty Images)

“This game tonight would be like the little brother to the U.S.-Mexico game,” U.S. center back Chris Richards said. “If they were a bit nervous for that one, the next one is going to be a lot bigger. It was really important for some of the younger guys to experience that.”Beating Mexico in the final can be a validating moment, just as it was at the 2021 Gold Cup, when a squad that was similarly missing several top players won a trophy a few months after the full-strength squad had beaten El Tri in the Nations League. That win added to the culture and belief within the program. And several players from that group ended up making the World Cup team a year later. That should provide plenty of motivation for this group, too. If Pochettino wanted to use this summer to create a bonding moment — within the team, between the staff and the team, and the team with its fan base — a title can help accomplish all those things. The task after that will be to carry it forward into the next phase of preparation for the World Cup.But first, Mexico awaits. (Top photo: John Dorton / ISI Photos /USSF / Getty Images)

Tim Ream: ‘Shame’ on USMNT critics as Luna goals set up Mexico final

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - JULY 02: Tim Ream #13 of United States gestures during the first half of the Gold Cup 2025 Semifinals against Guatemala at Energizer Park on July 02, 2025 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Bill Barrett/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio July 3, 2025


ST. LOUIS — After what felt like the entire stadium sang Guatemala’s national anthem, and as the Chapines fans roared, U.S. men’s national team defender Tim Ream gathered his young teammates around him in a pregame huddle.“Just take a breath,” Ream told them. “Listen to what we’re doing. Look at what we’re doing. Embrace what we are doing. And enjoy it.”Not every minute of the U.S.’s 2-1 win over Guatemala at Energizer Park was enjoyable. The U.S. had to survive the final 10 minutes, when their lead got cut in half as their opponent fed off of a blue-and-white partisan crowd. But, they did hold up and pull through. And the U.S. team is now headed to the Concacaf Gold Cup final, where they will meet rivals Mexico in front of what will no doubt be another unfriendly crowd.The experience of Wednesday night will go a long way toward helping them navigate what, for many of these players, will be the biggest stage they have played on.“We’re on to a final, a final that I’d say a month ago, everyone basically counted us out of,” Ream said. “Shame on them. So, for us, it’s like: great, amazing. It’s knockout football. You find a way to win. You find a way to grind it out. You find a way to do it. And why shouldn’t we be happy to go on to a final and play for a trophy? That’s why we play this game, to play in front of crowds like that and play for trophies.”

Guatemala fans dominated the crowd for the Gold Cup semifinal. (Jeff Le / Getty Images)

The U.S. was able to take the juice out of the crowd early. Diego Luna’s fourth-minute goal sucked away some of the pregame energy. His second goal, 11 minutes later, allowed the U.S. to seize the game for the first half hour.Guatemala started to find more of the game as it went on. The U.S. sat a bit deeper in the second half, content to defend and deny good chances, protecting the two-goal lead. But that allowed the Guatemalan fans to urge their team on.Missed opportunities for a third goal extended the hope. And that turned Guatemala’s 80th-minute goal into a massively threatening moment. Guatemala had the momentum. They had what was essentially a home crowd providing them energy.“I think we need to hold the ball more, be better on the ball in those moments under pressure,” Luna said. “It’s new for a lot of guys to play in environments like this. I think just being better under pressure and in moments like that — and that’s something we can build off. This is a great example for what’s to come, probably, on Sunday (in the final).”Pochettino made some interesting substitutions in the second half, inserting John Tolkin as a left wing-back and Max Arfsten sliding more into a center-back role. Jack McGlynn, not exactly known for his defending, was summoned for Tyler Adams.Pochettino defended both changes at his postgame press conference, saying he was protecting Adams, who had some issues with his hamstring against Costa Rica, and taking off Luca de la Torre, who had a yellow card. After Guatemala’s goal, Walker Zimmerman was summoned for Arfsten to stabilize the back line.From that point, it was survive and advance, as the U.S. pushed back against wave after wave of Guatemala throwing everything forward.“As much as everyone wants to dominate games for 75 to 90 minutes, you can’t anymore,” Ream said. “There’s always going to be moments in games that the other team has a little bit of a spark and a jump. Obviously, with the number of their fans, they get more, and that’s OK. We just have to figure out how to weather that storm. It, of course, spurred them on to push and fight. They had nothing else to lose, right?”

Diego Luna got the United States off to a quick start. (Jeff Le / Getty Images)

Pochettino used questions about Guatemala as an entry point to talk about the culture of the sport and how he wants to see its culture evolve in the U.S.“Do you think that was a sport, two teams playing, and doing a spectacle? No, you play for something more,” Pochettino said. “You play for emotion. You play to be happy, be sad. I saw players of Guatemala crying. I said, ‘Congratulations, because you are in a good way.’ That is the way that we need to feel. And our fans need to feel the same.“It’s not to come here to enjoy the spectacle, and if you lose, nothing happens. Yes, (a lot) happens. Things happen because you play for your pride, you play for many, many things. … But I think this is good for our players. Because when we talk about culture, that is culture. To see (Guatemala’s) team, how (it) fights, how (it) comes here and how the fans behave. That is an important thing that we need to learn here in this country.“But I am not (here) to tell (you) that we need to do this or that. Only that sometimes, we talk about culture. … But I come from Argentina. And Argentina is not the same, win or lose. The consequences are massive.”This summer, so far, the U.S. has been winning. Next up will be a final against Mexico. Pochettino will again see a partisan crowd, with Houston’s NRG Stadium likely to be pro-Mexican for the championship match.After an early exit from the Copa América and two losses in the Nations League in March, a win over Mexico in a final would go a long way toward convincing more fans ahead of the World Cup.“None of it’s going to happen unless we continue to win,” Ream said. “And, for us, what’s the hallmark of a U.S. team? Fighting.“Togetherness. And that’s what we’re finding and doing in this tournament. It’s not always going to be perfect. It’s not always going to be pretty. But doing that kind of fosters that connection with the fans, with the diehards, with the casuals, with everybody. And as long as we continue to do that, then that culture grows, the feelings grow and the connections grow.”(Top photo: Bill Barrett / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

USWNT revives set piece dominance with 3-0 win over continental rival Canada

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 02: Claire Hutton #15 of the United States celebrates scoring with teammates  during the first half against Canada during the Allstate Continental Clásico at Audi Field on July 02, 2025 in Washington, DC.  (Photo by Jess Rapfogel/USSF/Getty Images)

By Tamerra Griffin July 2, 2025


The third and final match for the U.S. women’s national team in its busy window, and arguably its toughest test against continental opponent Canada, ended with its third consecutive victory. The USWNT sealed a 3-0 victory at Audi Field in Washington in front of a sold-out crowd Wednesday evening.Goals from midfielders Sam Coffey and Claire Hutton opened the scoring in the first half; both were results of set pieces delivered by the third midfielder in their lineup, Rose Lavelle. Second-half substitutes Yazmeen Ryan and Tara McKeown combined to bring the U.S. up to three.Coffey’s 17th-minute goal was her third in the last five games for the U.S., and Hutton’s, a head nod off a corner kick in the 36th minute, was her first for the U.S. senior team.Fifty-three minutes later, McKeown, who was very much at home in Audi Field where she plays for the Washington Spirit, carried the ball confidently forward before releasing it to Ryan. After wresting herself from pressure near the top of the penalty box, Ryan unleashed a left-footed shot past Canadian goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan, the final blow to the Canadians, who are ranked eighth in the world.

U.S. forward Yazmeen Ryan celebrates scoring during the second half against Canada. (Brad Smith / Getty Images)

The U.S. victory caps off two 4-0 wins against the Republic of Ireland in Commerce City, Colo., and Cincinnati last Thursday and Sunday, respectively. Across the three fixtures, the USWNT scored 11 goals and conceded none, all while head coach Emma Hayes has employed a heavy rotation of players throughout this international window. The team’s starting XI for its second meeting with Ireland was a completely different lineup from the first.The lineup for Tuesday’s match against Canada, however, was nearly identical to last Thursday’s, except for 32-year-old striker Lynn Biyendolo, the most capped forward with 83 appearances, replacing 21-year-old Ally Sentnor.The opening minutes of the match saw the U.S. on the front foot against a Canadian side that was organized and steely and under new head coach and former San Diego Wave manager Casey Stoney. Goalkeeper Claudia Dickey, who earned her second start and second cap, made a critical save against her Seattle Reign teammate Jordyn Huitema to maintain a first-half shutout.As the game wore on and the U.S. tightened its grip, exploiting the flanks with slicing balls through and over the top to wingers Alyssa Thompson and Michelle Cooper, Canada began to crumble. The margins were exacerbated by the sticky D.C. heat; the game kicked off at 7:30 p.m., and temperatures were still in the mid-80s. The humidity made it feel like 90 degrees for the 19,215 in attendance.

A rocking sold out crowd 👏

Thank you, DC ❤️ pic.twitter.com/RVvsmHTVBt

— U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team (@USWNT) July 3, 2025

Hayes continued to make changes in the second half, bringing on Sentnor and forward Emma Sears for Lavelle and Cooper, and Ryan and Sam Meza for Biyendolo and Hutton, respectively. Meza, along with defender Lilly Reale, who started and played the whole game, are two of the three young players called in to this camp from the under-23 group, a move reflecting part of Hayes’ larger project to develop both national teams.Speaking on the TNT broadcast after the game, defender Naomi Girma explained that there had been an “emphasis on second balls” throughout camp and “just being hungry, wanting the ball, and putting it in the back of the net.”Girma, who plays for Chelsea and was the only player based in Europe to report to this camp after Hayes granted the group a summer off following league play, said she was “very happy with” the team’s improvement on set pieces, which had been a noticeably sore spot the past few years.What You Should Read NextHow Emma Hayes is fortifying the pathway from the under-23s to the senior USWNT squadHayes is determined to shrink the gaps she’s identified between age groups within the national team setup — and it seems to be working

“For our growth as a program, we need new players coming in,” she added of Hayes’ approach to developing fresh talent. “I think it’s a great camp.”

Convincing win aside, the United States’ performance was not without its critiques. At halftime, Hutton pointed out on the TNT broadcast that the team looked “a bit messy” at times, and that it needed to play quicker, smarter and score more goals in the second. TNT sideline reporter Melissa Ortiz also relayed early in the second half that there were issues with the midfield rotation and that Reale needed to push up higher.

When asked whether she was surprised by Canada’s performance or the relative ease with which the U.S. managed to maintain their grip on the game, Lavelle said, “It felt like a really good performance that we’ve been working towards. So I think that that’s the standard that we have for ourselves, and now that’s the expectation, that’s where we have to start going forward.”The 30 year old returned to the USWNT following a six and a half month absence as she recovered from an ankle injury. Despite the goal and three assists total that she contributed across the team’s three matches in this window, Lavelle said there are still aspects of her game that she wants to “sharpen up technically.”The next set of USWNT matches for its window in October are yet to be announced, but the trio of victories provided ample studying notes for Hayes as younger and less experienced players made their cases to be included in the core group Hayes wants to identify as the U.S. builds toward the 2027 World Cup in Brazil.(Top photo: Jess Rapfogel / Getty Images)

A Tougher Job Than Anticipated 🇺🇸 
It does not take long for reality to set in. Less than a year ago, Mauricio Pochettino was giving his first press conference as manager of the United States men’s national team. His eyes twinkled as he allowed his thoughts to wander to the challenges, and maybe even the triumphs, that lay ahead. Pochettino is a great believer in universal energy. He burns incense. He places lemons, strategically, to absorb negativity.
Everything, back then, seemed aligned. Pochettino was full of zest. He talked about winning over the fanbase with “nice football, good football, exciting football, attacking football.” The aesthetic, he said, was “really important.” “We are in the USA, you know,” he told his audience. And in the United States, the inference went, you need to put on a show.
Most of all, though, he wanted to change the “culture” of the national team. That would be difficult, he acknowledged, but he clearly felt it was possible. He wanted a side that fought for each other, that was not content just to take part, to be seen as equals, but that yearned to win. “We need to believe that we can win,” he said. “That we can win all [of the] games. We can win the World Cup.”
Dream Big: An Inside Look at USMNT Head Coach Pochettino
Judging a coach by their soundbites is, in truth, a little unfair. Pochettino could not realistically sit there, in front of the gathered news media, and declare that of course the United States could not win the World Cup, that even to mention the possibility was hopelessly naive, that the best the (main) host nation of next year’s tournament could hope for was an uplifting run to the quarterfinals. To do so would be to doom him to failure. And besides, that is not how athletes – or those involved in professional sports – think. To Pochettino, the chance that he might win the World Cup may be infinitesimal, but it is still a chance.
Still, the contrast with the landscape, 10 months on, is stark. Yes, Pochettino has reached the final in his first major tournament as coach of the United States, but he has done so in arguably the least encouraging manner imaginable. A comprehensive opening victory against Trinidad and Tobago aside, the US has sweated through the Gold Cup, beating traditional CONCACAF rival Saudi Arabia, Haiti, and Guatemala, in the semifinals, by a single goal apiece, and edging past Costa Rica on penalties in the quarters.
There are mitigating factors here, admittedly. Pochettino is working with a second, and in some cases third, choice squad. Most of his major stars are not present, absent either through injury or their involvement in the Club World Cup. Christian Pulisic, his most potent weapon, was excluded after asking to be excused from the tournament
Far more distressing than the performances, though, has been the apathy. The Gold Cup has not exactly captivated the American public. It is tempting to attribute that to the unfamiliarity of the squad – as well as to the distraction of the Club World Cup – but even that feels like kind of a reach; U.S. fans have turned out to watch teams with much less impressive credentials than this one. 
By his own measures, Pochettino has failed to deliver. He has not won over his public. His team are not playing especially good soccer. The idea that the United States might win the World Cup is more ridiculous now than it was 10 months ago. If anything, next summer has started to take on a vague air of menace, the sense of fear and inevitability that accompanies an imminent car crash.
Snaring Pochettino was no small coup for U.S. Soccer. He is, without question, an elite coach. He took Tottenham Hotspur to a Champions League final. He was an N’golo Kanté injury away from winning the Premier League. He has coached Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea. His résumé is quite a lot better than that of any of his predecessors. It seemed, when he was appointed, as though U.S. Soccer was very much punching above its weight.
It is hard not to wonder, though, if Pochettino might have misunderstood the nature of the task. As another high-profile coach, Thomas Tuchel, is discovering with England at roughly the same time, being an international manager might look a lot like a sinecure: a lavish salary for a couple of months work a year, and free tickets to all the games you want. That is how it is often presented; it is a job, in the eyes of the game as a whole, for old men.
Beneath the surface, it is much more complicated. It not only involves trying to build a culture, and implement a style of play, in maybe a couple of dozen training sessions, spread over a year, but requires a coach to carry with them the hopes and dreams of an entire nation, no matter how distant, how unrealistic they might be. You have to be a talisman and a lightning rod, a salesman and a politician. How well you can organize a pressing system is some way down the list.
Pochettino will know that now, and will have to decide how he reacts. A story emerged in England last week that he had been sounded out as a potential successor to Thomas Frank at Brentford. There have been whispers that, had a slightly more glamorous club come calling, he might have been receptive. The World Cup sits visible, now, on the horizon. This is no time for itchy feet. 
It is, instead, time to live his values. The Gold Cup might not have brought the sort of glory Pochettino might have wanted, but it has been a useful learning experience. Not just because this summer has confirmed that the likes of Diego Luna and Jack McGlynn have a role to play next year, once the more established names have returned, but because – as Tim Ream has said – there have been signs of a team that is starting to prove it cannot “be pushed around.” The U.S. has started to bare its teeth.
That is the sort of thing a manager can work with, the sort of environment that returning players can buy into, the green shoots of an emergent culture. It is also a story that can be sold to the public. Pochettino knows, deep down, that is what he needs: not a particular style of play, but a journey that the fans can enjoy. He must rediscover that energy, that confidence that he exuded when he first took the job. He has to let those lemons do their job, absorb the negativity, dissolve the bad vibes. When life gives you lemons, after all, there are things you can make with them.

7/2/25 US Men vs Guatemala GC Semis Wed 7 pm, USMNT vs Canada Wed 7:30, World Club Cup upsets, Women’s Euro’s start on Fox Wed

US Men face Guatemala in Semi Finals Wed 7 pm on Fox/Univision

So the US found a way to defeat an average Costa Rica squad 2-2 (4-3) in Minneapolis Sun night at close to 2 million tuned in to the Gold Cup match in primetime Fox broadcast Highlights. The US will face surprise winner Guatemala who took out Canada and American coach Jesse Marsch in PKs. The US MOM (Man of the Match) was goal keeper Matt Freeze who may just be laying claim to the spot as he grows into this tourney. Matching up against legendary GK Keylor Navas (el Pantera) Freeze saved 3 of the 6 PKs (PK Saves) he faced out lasting Navas who only saved 2. The US showed some grit coming back from a 1-0 deficit before scoring 2 then allowing the equalizer with about 20 to go as good ole Coach Pooch again refused to send in subs when it was WAAAAAY past time to send them in. Another questionable coaching job against a horrific team Woo Hoo! Too bad we don’t get Canada in the next round – as that would have given us real competition for the 1st time in this tourney. Oh well — I see us again making it more difficult than it should be – but a 2-1 victory over frankly a worse Guatemala than the pretty bad Costa Rica we just beat. Still we make it much more exciting than it should be. Hopefully Mexico will beat Honduras so we have to beat at least one top 100 team to win this Gold Cup thing.

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

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

USWNT Face Canada Wed 7:30 pm on TNT after 4-0 win over Ireland

Forwards Lynn BiyendoloYazmeen Ryan and Alyssa Thompson each added goals in Sunday’s victory. Biyendolo scored the opening goal 11 minutes into the match when she buried a volley into the top corner on a cross from Emma Sears. Ryan scored in the 66th minute to tally her first international goal. Thompson scored the fourth USWNT goal in the 87th minute — seven minutes after entering the match — to get on the scoresheet for the second straight game. The USWNT will finish the international window of friendlies Tuesday against Canada in Washington, D.C. at 7:30 pm on TNT and Max.

World Club Cup Getting Interesting As Quarterfinals Commence

So I have to admit I was not a fan of this tourney and I still don’t think they should be playing this instead of the Confederations Cup that used to take place the year before the World Cup in the host country. But if you haven’t watched – the games have been ok. Really cool to see the South American and some African teams beating up on the European favorites. Now that we are down to the Quarterfinals – these games are really worth watching. The games seem to be on TNT & Unimas/TUDN or Univision – of course I prefer to watch in Spanish – so much more exciting. Either way its worth the watch – see full schedule below.

Women’s European Championships Start Wed on Fox

The Women’s Euro’s take center stage in this Summer of Soccer this week on the Fox stations. Spain & France come in as the favorites but teams like England, Germany and the Netherlands may have something to say about that. In general the games will be on at 12 noon and 3 pm everyday on Fox or FS1 or FS2. Read all about below and see the full game schedule.

Camps to Check out This Summer

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

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

CARMEL FC & PALMEIRAS CAMP
Palmeiras Soccer Camps for players aims to let all participants develop their full technical, tactical and physical potential no matter their skill level. Day by day they will learn to enhance their strengths and will be stimulated to understand their own weaknesses. Players participating will be coached by Palmeiras Professional Coaches and may be invited to join Palmeiras Academy in Brazil for tryout. Register now!
Camp dates: July 21-25 Ages: 7-16 Location: Carmel Clay Community Soccer Complex, Home of Carmel FC: Price: $295 REGISTER

TV GAME SCHEDULE

GC=Gold Cup, WCC = World Club Cup in US WE -Women’s Euros

Wed, July 2
12 noon Fox Iceland vs Finland Women Euros
3 pm Fox Switzerland vs Norway Women Euros
6:30 pm TBS US Women vs Canada
7 pm FS1 Gold Cup Semis USA vs Guatemala
10 PM FS1 Gold Cup Semi Mexico vs Honduras
Thurs, Jul 3
12 noon FS1 Belgium vs Italy W Euros
3 pm Fox Spain vs Portugal W Euros
Fri, July 4th
12 noon FS1 Denmark vs Sweden WE
3 pm Fox Germany vs Poland WE
3 pm TNT, Unimas Fluminense vs Al Hilal WCC
7:30 pm FS1 Dallas vs Minn MLS
9 pm TNT Chelseas vs Palmeiras WCC
10:30 pm Apple LA Galaxy vs Vancouver MLS
Sat, July 5th
12 noon FS1 Wales vs Netherlands W Euros
12 noon TNT PSG vs Bayern Munich WCC
3 pm Fox France vs England WE
4 pm TNT Real Madrid vs Borrusia Dortmund WCC
7 pm FS1 Charlotte vs Orlando MLS
8:30 pm Apple Free Austin City vs LAFC MLS
Sun, July 6th
12 noon FS1 Norway vs Finland W Euros
3 pm FS1 Switzerland vs Iceland WE
5 pm Apple free Seattle Sounders vs Columbus Crew MLS
Mon, July 7 th
12 noon FS1 Spain vs Belgium W Euros
3 pm Fox Portugal vs Italy WE
Tues, July 8th
12 noon FS1 Germany vs Denmark W Euros
Wed, July 9
12 noon FS1 England vs Netherland W Euros
3 pm Fox France vs Wales WE
3 pm TBS Fifa WCC Semis
7 pm CBSSN Philly Union vs NYRB MLS

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US Men

USA vs. Guatemala, 2025 Gold Cup Semi-finals Preview: Taking on an upstart
USMNT’s grit, character are shining at Gold Cup
2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup: Scouting Guatemala
Upstart Guatemala has strong American influence
Poch: Support for Tillman shows U.S. ‘connected’
Embrace the chaos of Concacaf: ‘It’s a different football’

USMNT edges past Costa Rica on penalties in Gold Cup quarterfinals
Freese saves 3 in USMNT win: ‘Penalties my thing’
Ice-cold Freese rescues USMNT in Gold Cup
USA-Costa Rica Gold Cup Player Ratings
Matt Freese has done it before
USMNT: Freese stakes his claim with penalty kick heroics
USMNT vs. Costa Rica player ratings: Freese the shootout hero

If Americans don’t move in this transfer window, is the USMNT’s 2026 World Cup doomed?
World Cup is in forefront of Pochettino’s thinking
Marsch’s non Excuse- sure sounded like an excuse

USMNT: Gold Cup SemifinalsJuly 2, 2025 – St. Louis, MO
Location: Energizer StadiumSection: 119Member Price: $67 (including fees)Ticket type: ElectronicDeadline: First-come, first-served GET TICKETS

US Women

USWNT vs. Canada – June 2025 Friendlies: A classic showdown in DC
Hayes: U.S. entering ‘next phase’ ahead of WWC
USWNT gets another 4-0 win in second Ireland friendly
Why USWNT prospects are running out of time to make the cut for U.S. squad
USA-Ireland Women’s Friendly Player Ratings
Biyendolo: First time captaining USWNT ‘means the world’
Hayes breaks protocol to give Lavelle hometown curtain call
Thompson and Abello leave USWNT camp with injuries

World Club Cup

Mbappe’s Club World Cup debut was badly needed for Real Madrid, FIFA and the player himself
Juve boss: 10 players asked to be replaced in loss
Alonso risks clipping Bellingham’s wings in balancing Madrid
Man City’s old vulnerabilities exposed in Al Hilal upset
Club World Cup shocker: Al Hilal stuns Man City
With the world watching, Guirassy turned in a perfect No. 9’s performance

Beating Messi’s Miami ‘harder than it may seem’: PSG’s Luis Enrique 
FIFPro warns of ‘wake-up call’ over extreme heat at Club World Cup
PSG played Inter Miami. It went how you’d expect.

Euros Women

Euro 2025 team-by-team preview, predictions, key players, more
Euro 2025: England’s Lionesses feel pressure as stars pull out
Euro 2025: Bonmati illness adds to questions around Spain’s bid
Euro 2025: Germany eyes return to women’s soccer summit

Hail GFOP! – Men In Blazers Newsletter Special
Rog writes: Holy Crap. What an emotion-soaked experience it was to witness our United States G-League Boys survive and advance after a CONCACAF knife-fight quarter final fought via prison rules against Costa Rica. The 4-3 penalty shootout performance felt like a bullet dodged, yet it was also ultimately so energizing, in a style that was reminiscent of Churchill’s life-truth quote: “Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result.” 🏆
Make no mistake, we were in a barroom brawl, and were kicked to the sawdust on the floor. In the 85th minute, when Alonso Martinez’s flash drive thumped the post with Matt Freese stranded, we were millimeters away from a humiliating exit. Our midfield remains eerily uncreative (and Johnny Cardoso oddly MIA.) Yet, Pochettino had promised a team who would fight and struggle and do whatever it takes to win. Clint Dempsey was ebullient in his post-match taping of The Deuce, and said the team will surge with optimism after last night’s performance, “We learned who’s got that mettle, to emerge when your back is against the well… and when you come out of these moments it builds the chemistry as a team. Everyone is going to be fighting more and understanding they are just two games away from Mission Accomplished. You need these types of moments.” 🇺🇸 🇨🇷
Clint also added something beautiful and true for all of us as long-suffering U.S. supporters which I really loved when he admitted, “For us as fans, we needed this after Copa America and Nations League. I was in my living room with my kids cheering and giving each other high fives. I want my kids to feel passionate about the U.S. and aspire to play for them one day. You need these types of moments to pass down from generation to generation. Tonight was a moment.” 🍻
📺 Watch Clint Dempsey break down the exhilaration of last night’s U.S. winon this adrenalin-filled episode of the The Deuce. ♠️
This Was Matt Freese’s Big Night 🧤
Three massive, calm, calculated saves by the NYCFC goalkeeper in the 4-3 penalty shoot-out made this a moment in which Matt Freese seriously began to lay claim to the U.S. starting role. Gent came up big, and actually seemed to thrive and enjoy himself in the crucible of a do-or-die roll of the dice against the iconic Keylor Navas. “Penalties are my thing,” he said post-game, like some kind of Harvard Donnarumma. Last night he was able to scream, “How do you like them apples?” at the world. Credit Matt Turner, who cannot be enjoying his ongoing lack of minutes, but is still bringing the joy in any way he can.  
Hot Tillman Summer Is Going On and On 🌞
GFOP Gil Rutledge wrote me a Raven entitled “TILLMANIA” and I love that term. That is what we are living. Last night, Malik Tillman was the heartbeat of our team. He won a penalty, missed a penalty, but was big enough to raise his game, provide roughly 87% of our forward motion, and keep his nerve when returning to the penalty spot during the shoot-out. The 23-year-old has not only earned his right to take a starting role when the full-strength squad Avenger assembles in the fall window, he will become Poch’s warning sign to the big name starters that they cannot be complacent. This morning Fabrizio Romano announced Malik’s Hot Summer continues: His $40m transfer to Bayer Leverkusen has been agreed. Here We Go.
“Oh, For a Team of 11 Diego Lunas…”
I love Diego Luna so much. I think he represents all that we yearn for from our U.S. team. Last night the 21-year-old from Sunnyvale, Calif. scored his first-ever goal for the USMNT. Again, it was another enormous deflection. Gent specializes in banging the ball home off other people’s body parts. 
GFOP @OptimisticCurmudgeon gave him the nickname “Deflecto” on our YouTube last night, but it was his celebration that fired up the fan base – the unbridled passion, the raw emotion, the joy that has become all too rare a currency for our boys.  
Alex Freeman’s Penalty Was a Massive Moment by a Cool, Cool Kid 😎
Do not let this moment be written out of the night’s telling. Sebastian Berhalter had just Baggio’d his penalty over the bar into the Minneapolis night sky. Costa Rica felt ascendant. Up stepped the 20-year-old with all the pressure on his shoulders, and he cooly, calmly did this. Extraordinary moment of chill by a young gent with a massive future. Damion Downs’ winner was also maximally clinical. The Germans don’t miss. 
GUATEMALA AWAIT IN THE SEMI FINALS! 🇬🇹
What a moment for their fans. FIFA’s 106th-ranked nation shocked 10-man Canada on penalties and turned Minneapolis into Guatemala City North on Sunday. La Furia Azul (“The Blue Fury”) held their nerve in the shootout and reached their first Gold Cup semi-final since 1969. 
The semi-final in St. Louis on Wednesday (7 p.m. ET on FS1) will be a rollicking experience. It’s been nine years since the USMNT faced Guatemala. Clint Dempsey was amongst the goals as we rolled 4-0. A 17-year-old Christian Pulisic made his debut in that game. With Honduras also clipping Panama, this Gold Cup has been filled with shocks. I long for a Gold Cup that loves itself, and has self-respect. With CONCACAF teams improving all the time, our region is becoming more and more competitive. This tournament could be, should be, so much more than it is. A true jewel lies within. 
USMNT Make It to the Gold Cup Semis 🏆🇺🇸
Rog writes: Our U.S. men’s national team G-Leaguers keep on keeping on. The Gold Cup is all about survive and advance. It’s also about prison rules, dark arts, and occasional fleeting moments of football. And the United States lived it all in a quarter-final 4-3 penalty shootout win over a weakened but still feisty Costa Rica after a 2-2 draw in which Max Arfsten had a hand in pretty much all the goals. I am not going to lie, it felt so good. 
We now plummet towards a semi-final in St. Louis tomorrow night against Guatemala (Wednesday, 7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports/FS1). What a moment for their fans. FIFA’s 106th-ranked nation shocked 10-man Canada on penalties (much more on that below) and turned Minneapolis into Guatemala City North on Sunday. La Furia Azul (“The Blue Fury”) held their nerve in the shootout and reached their first Gold Cup semi-final since 1996.
It’s been nine years since the USMNT faced Guatemala. Clint Dempsey was amongst the goals as we rolled 4-0. A 17-year-old Christian Pulisic made his debut in that game. With Honduras also clipping Panama, this Gold Cup has been filled with shocks. I long for a Gold Cup that loves itself, and has self-respect. With CONCACAF teams improving all the time, our region is becoming more and more competitive. This tournament could be, should be, so much more than it is. A true jewel lies within.
Could there be an eighth USA vs. Mexico Gold Cup final on the horizon? Or will we have Guatemala vs. Honduras? The truth is no one knows, but we’ll find out tomorrow night at Energizer Park. Regardless of the outcome, Clint Dempsey will join me on Do It Live! after the final whistle to break down all the action. Come and be with us🇺🇸🍻 
The Deuce with Clint Dempsey ♠️🇺🇸 – “This Must Be What It’s Like to Be an Everton Fan”USMNT vs Costa Rica Live Reactions with Clint Dempsey | Gold Cup Quarterfinals 6/29 9PM ETClint Dempsey on the reports that Poch recently interviewed for the Brentford manager opening “I hope it’s not a situation of where there’s smoke, there’s fire. You don’t want that a year out from a World Cup. But credit to the boys, they blocked all that out and they got the job done tonight.”Clint Dempsey likes what he saw from Malik Tillman “What I’m more impressed about is how he recovered in the game… Being able to get the assist. And then to step up and take the (shootout) penalty, going to the same side. For me that shows he’s built for these moments, and he’s growing in front of our eyes. He is someone that when I’ve watched him play, I like the style in which he plays, the skill that he shows, but also the character that he has to take on a situation of missing a penalty but bouncing back.”Clint Dempsey gives Matt Freese his flowers “The first one, I feel like he (Freese) went too early. I like that he took his time a little on the other ones. Make ’em beat you. He’s got a big frame… I just think he did a great job of being a dominant presence in there. He guessed right on a lot of occasions, got his hand to a few, but you know, some of those big saves he made, he was the man of the match for sure.”Clint Dempsey breaks down the current USMNT depth chart, based on what he’s seen so far in the Gold Cup “In terms of when we have our full team completely fit, I think Tillman gets into the lineup. I think if Freese keeps performing like he’s doing, I think he goes in there. Freeman has done a good job, but I still think it’s gonna be tough to knock out Dest, and Antonee Robinson… I don’t think anybody’s taking his spot. Chris Richards, he’s for sure the first center-back they put there. If Tim Ream can keep going, then that’s what’s up.But, I think up top. I don’t know, that depends on people’s fitness, and how healthy they are. Like I said, I’m a big Balogun fan from what I saw in Copa America, but Aygemang’s been the guy who’s been scoring goals. He’s just really raw still. I think he needs to do a little bit better job of his holdup play, bringing people in and being a little bit more clinical with his chances, but he’s definitely a handful there.”Clint Dempseyon the USA’s newfound optimism after Sunday night’s performance “We learned who’s got that mettle, to emerge when your back is against the wall… and when you come out of these moments it builds the chemistry as a team. Everyone is going to be fighting more and understanding they are just two games away from Mission Accomplished. You need these types of moments.”Clint Dempsey also added something beautiful and true for all long-suffering U.S. supporters “For us as fans, we needed this after Copa America and Nations League. I was in my living room with my kids cheering and giving each other high fives. I want my kids to feel passionate about the U.S. and aspire to play for them one day. You need these types of moments to pass down from generation to generation. Tonight was a moment.”

Watch the full episode to get all of Clint’s thoughts on the USMNT’s win against Costa Rica, and make sure to follow The Deuce on TikTok and YouTube for even more Texas-infused insight.  
  📬 Enjoying USMNT Only? Check out our other newsletters covering the USWNT and Premier League here.  
  So, How Did Guatemala Get Here Exactly? 🇬🇹When La Furia Azul last reached a CONCACAF Gold Cup semi-final, “Independence Day” was dominating the box office and Manchester United were one of the best teams in world football. If you’re of a certain vintage, 1996 doesn’t feel like it was 29 years ago, but for Guatemalan football fans, who cling to cult heroes like Juan Carlos Plata and Carlos Ruiz, it’s been an age. Their quarter-final win on penalties against Canada in Minneapolis on Sunday will be forever distilled as one of the greatest moments in their footballing history, not just because of the result, but the manner in which they reached it.Yes, Canada’s Jacob Shaffelburg was red-carded just before half time, but at that point, Guatemala were losing 1-0, and the cliché that it’s tough to break down a 10-man side defending a lead exists for a reason. Guatemala are FIFA’s 106th-ranked team, while Canada are 30th, so to have 58% possession and more than double the shots of Jesse Marsch’s squad, no matter the match situation, is a win in itself. To not only run the game in normal and extra time, but to then have the tenacity to prevail in a penalty shootout pressure cooker, even after captain José Pinto missed his attempt, shows that this nation is more than plucky, or even lucky; they are a unit. Penalties aside, Guatemala’s only goalscorer against Canada, with a bruising and battling header any center forward would dream of, was Rubio Rubín, who much to our chagrin doesn’t spend his evenings as a crime-fighting vigilante, despite his excellent name.Men in Blazers@MenInBlazersGUATEMALA EQUALIZE We might be 20 minutes away from penalties  9:40 PM • Jun 29, 2025  110 Likes   7 Retweets  8 RepliesUSMNT OGs may remember him, as he played seven matches for the U.S., debuting as an 18-year-old in 2014 under the stewardship of Jurgen Kilsman; he only switched to Guatemala in 2022, which has been a smart decision, scoring 13 goals in 34 games as the leader of the frontline. Another key player for them is a man that MLS heads will know as D.C. United right back and arguably the nation’s current MVP, Aaron Herrera. The 28-year-old was pivotal in both defense and attack for his country, and at one point kept his team in the game with a goal line-headed clearance in an otherwise open net for Canada. Encouragingly for Mauricio Pochettino’s side, Guatemala have lost against both Jamaica and Panama in their last five games, and in their 21-match history with the U.S., La Furia Azul have only won once. But with a trip to the Gold Cup final on the line, at this point, anything is possible.

Everyone’s favorite bounce-pass enthusiast (and former USMNT manager) Gregg Berhalter was in the crowd on Sunday night to watch his son Sebastian start for the U.S. against Costa Rica.  There are varying reports that Mauricio Pochettino either did or didn’t interview for the Brentford manager opening during the Gold Cup, although he recently told a FOX Soccer host, “This club never contacted me. I never talked to them.”

Transfer Rumors 
🇩🇪 Poch’s new favorite playmaker, Mailk Tillmanis heading back to the Bundesliga as Bayer Leverkusen have made him one of the first key signings of the Erik ten Hag era, potentially to fill the Florian Wirtz-sized hole in the middle of their lineup.
🇪🇸 Speaking of midfielders on the move, seems to only be a matter of time until Johnny Cardoso makes the 330-mile trip from Real Betis in Seville to join Atlético Madrid in the Spanish capital. The two clubs are finalizing a deal worth over $35 million.
🛑 Despite strong rumors involving a move to Nottingham Forest, Tim Weah appears to be staying at Juventus for the time being, regardless of his questionable food takes (more on that below).
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Lucky No. 13 at Craven Cottage? While he’s one of the many American strikers absent from the Gold Cup, Ricardo Pepi, who’s still rehabbing from a January knee injury, is reportedly being targeted by Fulham where he’d follow a dozen other Americans who’ve previously laced ‘em up for the Lilywhites.
🐏 Meanwhile, the USMNT’s current starting striker is making the move to England: Charlotte FC’s Patrick Agyemang is heading to Championship side Derby County. Get those reps in, American Beto.
⭐ Sunday night’s winning penalty taker in the shootout, 20-year-old forward Damion Downs, is very close to joining recently-relegated Southampton, also in the English Championship, from FC Köln in Germany, who were just promoted to the Bundesliga.
🪃 USMNT international, former Atlanta United player, and current Chelsea fullback Caleb Wiley is set to rejoin Watford on loan for the full 2025-26 season. The 20-year-old impressed in his half-season in the Championship last year after moving over from a loan spell at Chelsea’s French sister club, Strasbourg.

Mauricio Pochettino hails USMNT Gold Cup penalty shootout triumph as ‘priceless’

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 29: Head coach Mauricio Pochettino of United States celebrates with assistant coaches and staff members after defeating Costa Rica in the Gold Cup 2025 Quarterfinals at U.S. Bank Stadium on June 29, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.  (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

By Martin Rogers June 29, 2025


Mauricio Pochettino insisted the U.S. men’s national team’s thrilling penalty shootout victory over Costa Rica in the Concacaf Gold Cup quarterfinals on Sunday would be of “priceless” benefit as he desperately tries to instill confidence and momentum in his team after a miserable recent slump.Pochettino was delighted after the U.S. clinched a semifinal spot against Guatemala by holding its nerve in the shootout following a 2-2 draw at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.Goalkeeper Matt Freese was the hero with a trio of critical stops, but the head coach believes his entire squad will gain confidence from having survived the gauntlet of penalties with its tournament life on the line.“I think it’s important to show control and to translate (it) to the player, relax and the confidence in them,” Pochettino told reporters. “But yes, I’m so happy, so pleased for them to show today great character. I think it’s good for this group of players to have this type of experience. This is like I always I said, this is really important, it’s priceless, because that is the reality when you have a big tournament. It’s important that they start to build the experience together.”The U.S. went behind after 12 minutes through a Francisco Calvo penalty and equalized through Diego Luna before halftime, though Malik Tillman had earlier spurned the chance to pull things level from the spot. Pochettino’s side eventually went ahead through Max Arfsten on 47 minutes, but Costa Rica closed the gap again thanks to Alonso Martinez with 20 minutes left.

Goalkeeper Matt Freese played a key role in the U.S. reaching the last four. (Carlos Gonzalez / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

Freese was calm and opportunistic in the shootout, keeping out Juan Vargas, Calvo and Andy Rojas. Tyler Adams, Tillman, Alex Freeman and, to clinch it, Damion Downs, scored for the Americans against veteran Costa Rica keeper Keylor Navas. The U.S. will be a huge favorite when it takes on Guatemala in St. Louis on Wednesday, as it bids to book a spot in the July 6 final against either Mexico or Honduras.Heading into the tournament, four straight defeats had cast gloom over the U.S. squad, but after three group stage wins this quarterfinal provided another jolt of optimism. The mood has clearly improved, and while still some disappointment and dissatisfaction lingers at the absence this summer – for various reasons – of key players such as Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Antonee Robinson, there is a different feel starting to develop.“We are happy with the whole team,” Pochettino added. “I am happy with the starting 11. I am happy with the impact from the bench, but I am so happy with the players on the bench that were there and they didn’t have the possibility to play. They were the first supporter, the first fans, the first people helping the teammate to achieve and to earn what we have. And that is why that make us feel very proud.”Pochettino and his side still have work to do to make the skeptics believe the USMNT is capable of making a deep World Cup run on home soil next summer, but some of the questions are starting to be answered.(Top photo: John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images)

USMNT finds its fight in Gold Cup, readies for semis vs. Guatemala and its familiar faces

USMNT faces Costa Rica in the Gold Cup

By Paul Tenorio July 1, 2025 7:12 pm EDT


ST. LOUIS — The moment came right after Malik Tillman’s 37th-minute penalty caromed off the post in Sunday’s Gold Cup quarterfinal against Costa Rica.Multiple Ticos players got in Tillman’s face to mock him after the miss, and the U.S. players quickly jumped into the fray to defend their No. 10.“The keeper also, he ran 100 meters to be in the fight,” U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino said of Matt Freese, who would become the hero of the night later in the penalty shootout to send the Americans through to the semifinals.The way the team jumped in to defend Tillman, though, is indicative of a group that has grown closer together over the last five weeks. From two friendly losses to Turkey and Switzerland to open the summer through its undefeated run through the first four games of the Gold Cup, this U.S. group — a mix of starters and players trying to fight their way into the World Cup picture — has started to find its identity.“Watching them work for each other in moments, in heated moments … having their guys coming into [Tillman’s] face and watching everybody rush in, it may sound weird, but that’s an enjoyable thing to see,” said veteran U.S. center back Tim Ream. “Because I think it shows that, OK, finally, we’re a group of guys that we’re going to push back. You’re not going to push us around. We’re not going to take that kind of sh** anymore. And we have the personalities in here, and to see them all jelling together has been nice to see.”

Ream chalked it up to a team that is understanding the different personalities within the group, and the chemistry that is forming over a summer together. “When you get a group of personalities together, guys who have maybe more of a chip on their shoulder than others, that’s something that they take with them,” Ream said. “I don’t think it’s necessarily a knock on anybody else. I just think it’s one of those things where you look at who’s on the field in that instance, and Malik is probably one of the quietest guys in our group. And to see that happen to him, it’s like, ‘No, you’re not going to pick on the quietest guy.’ And listen, I’m not one to rush in and I was like, ‘Nah, this isn’t happening.’ And I think it’s just understanding everybody’s personalities and understanding what they will take and what they will give. It’s been nice to see that guys can take some but they’re going to give it back, too.”

Tim Ream captained the USMNT vs Costa RicaVeteran Tim Ream has been a leader for the USMNT throughout the Gold Cup (Photo by Brad Rempel/Imagn Images)

The U.S. went into this summer looking for exactly that: fight, desire and togetherness. It’s the base of what Pochettino believes any team needs in order to be successful. On Tuesday, ahead of the semifinal here against Guatemala, the manager insisted the football is most important to him. But he felt the intangibles must be there in order for everything else to fall into place.hat moment where the team rallied around Tillman showed the group is figuring it out.“For me, that I’m Argentino, we love to fight, that means a lot,” Pochettino said, with a slight chuckle. “Because it means that we are connected, that we care about my teammate. And that needs to be natural, in between them. And that is why they deserve the whole credit. The experienced players, but also the young players that listen to the experienced players. That is the important thing. If not, it’s impossible to grow like a team, be a team. Because we can select 26 players, but for a team to be a team is a different thing. We can have 23 players that play in an individual way, and it’s difficult to have this type of behavior. That is because they care, because they made the effort, not only on the field, but off the field to try to care.”

The U.S. will need more of it against an emotional Guatemala team that is in the Gold Cup semifinal for the first time since 1996.And looking forward, Pochettino will have to find a way to carry that spirit into the fall, when he’ll potentially reintroduce a number of players into the group, including the likes of Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah, Sergiño Dest, Folarin Balogun and Antonee Robinson.Here are a few more key elements leading into the first of two Gold Cup semifinals (Mexico-Honduras takes place in Santa Clara, Calif., later Wednesday night):

Reunion with former USMNT players

The U.S. will face off against two players who have made previous appearances not just with the U.S. youth national teams, but with the senior team, as well.Guatemala forward Rubio Rubin was named U.S. Soccer Young Male Player of the Year in 2012 after standing out for the U.S. under-17 national team. He made his senior debut under Jurgen Klinsmann in 2014, was on the bench for World Cup qualifiers in 2016 and then played in four games in 2018 under interim manager Dave Sarachan.Rubin filed for a FIFA one-time switch in May 2022 and made his Guatemala debut a month later. Rubin has 13 goals in 34 games with Los Chapines, including two goals in this tournament.Right back Aaron Herrera also featured for the U.S. youth teams, including the Olympic qualifying group in 2021, and received one senior cap under former U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter that year. Herrera debuted with Guatemala in June 2023 and has become a leader for the group.

Rubio Rubin scores vs CanadaRubio Rubin celebrates his clutch goal vs. Canada in the Gold Cup quarterfinals (Photo by Matt Krohn/Imagn Images)

In the quarterfinal against Canada, Rubin scored while Herrera had a key header off the line in Guatemala’s upset win.U.S. midfielder Tyler Adams said he was close to Herrera in the under-20 national team.“Obviously a high-level player,” Adams said. “It’s always a little bit strange, obviously, when you play with them in the youth national team and then now they’re playing for Guatemala and you’re playing against them in a Gold Cup, but it will be a really unique experience. We know how strong Guatemala is. There’s a reason that they’re in the semifinal and playing in a semifinal, so we can’t take that for granted.

“And Rubio Rubin, obviously, was a high-level player coming up through the national team, a lot of players looked up to him growing up. He’s done really well for himself. So it’ll be exciting to play against them.”Drone issues?

When the U.S. players came out to train on Tuesday, they noticed an extra drone above the team during the open portion of training. The drone did not remain for the entirety of the training session, but Pochettino was asked about it at the press conference.He didn’t seem concerned.“We were talking [that] if someone wants some clips we can send,” Pochettino said, laughing. “It’s not a problem. We’re not going to hide [anything]. It’s not NASA here. It is the men’s national team. No problem.”

Cardoso being evaluated

Midfielder Johnny Cardoso, who looks to be headed to Atlético Madrid on a $40 million transfer, may not be available for the semifinal.Cardoso participated in someof the U.S. training on Tuesday, but still felt “problems again in his ankle,” Pochettino said.“It’s not a big issue, but it’s uncomfortable,” Pochettino added. “We will see. We have 24 hours to assess and see if he can be available to be selected or not.”The U.S. started Adams, Sebastian Berhalter and Luca de la Torre in midfield in the win over Costa Rica, and with yellow cards wiped clean before the semifinals, per Concacaf regulations, neither Adams nor Berhalter needs to be wary of missing a potential final on Sunday by getting another.

USMNT survives Costa Rica in PKs, avoids Gold Cup upset bug to reach semis

USMNT goalkeeper Matt Freese

Jeff Rueter

101

June 29, 2025Updated June 30, 2025


MINNEAPOLIS – Although the U.S. men’s national team blew another second-half lead and was pushed to the brink, it’s through to the semifinals of the Concacaf Gold Cup – thanks largely to the shootout heroics of Matt Freese.

Mauricio Pochettino’s side weathered a strong challenge from Costa Rica, playing the Ticos to a 2-2 draw in 90 minutes before getting past their regional rival in a six-round shootout (4-3) Sunday night at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.Freese, who has started the entire Gold Cup over 2022 World Cup starter Matt Turner, made three saves in the shootout, while Damion Downs converted the decisive spot kick to send the U.S. to a semifinal against Guatemala Wednesday in St. Louis.Unlike Panama Saturday night and Canada earlier in the day on the very same field, the U.S. avoided falling victim to an underdog in a shootout and the ignominy of a quarterfinal defeat. That it comes on the heels of a disappointing Concacaf Nations League final four showing in March also allows the U.S. to escape – or at the very least delay – some difficult questions with the 2026 World Cup on home soil less than a year away.

Damion Downs clinches the USMNT's win over Costa RicaDamion Downs clinches the USMNT’s win over Costa Rica. (Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

With a crowd of balanced support for each team, Costa Rica frustrated the USMNT and weathered a couple early challenges before drawing a penalty in the 10th minute. After stopping an initial cross with his inner thigh, Max Arfsten stuck with the ball in proximity as it neared Kenneth Vargas. The winger rotated his body to shield the ball, baiting Arfsten into an ill-advised sliding challenge at the edge of the box. Without any hesitation, referee Walter López Castellanos pointed to the spot.Francisco Calvo, a defender who played for in-market Minnesota United from 2017 to 2019, converted the penalty to give the Ticos a 1-0 lead in the 12th minute.Fate seemed to provide the USMNT with a leveler in the 31st minute, as Juan Pablo Vargas clattered Malik Tillman to the ground by taking out his left leg. After play continued for a bit, Castellanos went to the monitor and awarded another penalty four minutes after the infraction.yler Adams went to Tillman, seemingly to check if the attacking midfielder in form felt up to take the ensuing spot kick. Tillman, who is generally more reserved than spotlight-chasing players in his role, strode up and shanked his attempt off the post to his left, perhaps hampered by the foul on his plant leg.Six minutes later, Pochettino’s other creative playmaker made amends. Arfsten played a ball toward the top of the box to Diego Luna, whose shot caromed off of an opponent’s torso to betray a diving Keylor Navas and bring things level in the 43rd minute. It was a just equalizer given the balance of play throughout the first half, as the U.S. had outshot Costa Rica 9-3 while dominating 71% of possession.

Two minutes after the second half kicked off, Arfsten continued making amends for conceding a penalty. The Columbus Crew defender ran onto a low cross from Tilman and struck it well, placing it beyond Navas’ diving reach and into the net.

From there, however, the U.S. failed to put the game out of reach. Patrick Agyemang got the start at striker and was able to provide good holdup play and off-ball movement, but struggled to threaten Costa Rica’s defense with scoring opportunities. Pochettino kept his starters as the game went beyond the 70th minute, at which point Miguel Herrera had already brought on three reinforcements from the bench.

The USMNT looked tired, playing sloppy passes in transition and struggling to keep up with Costa Rica’s movement going forward. It was hardly a surprise, then, when Alonso Martínez — whose crafty movement in the box came up at training the day before — found room just beyond the six-yard box in the 71st minute to bring his team level again at 2-2.

At long last, Pochettino went to his bench: first bringing on another forward (Downs) in the 78th minute, then ending Arfsten’s roller-coaster of a shift in the 84th minute. Luna exited in the 83rd minute and Agyemang followed around the 90th, removing a couple players who may have factored in the eventual shootout.

USMNT players celebrate their win over Costa RicaUSMNT players celebrate their Gold Cup quarterfinal win over Costa Rica. (Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images)

The decisive sequence started off with Martínez bearing down on Freese, his teammate at New York City FC, throwing him off with a wink before placing a cool kick as Freese dove the wrong way.

Adams placed his kick just beyond Navas to level things, before Freese stuffed Vargas to create an opening for the USMNT. Tillman made up for his earlier miss, converting a shot just inches away from where his first attempt hit the post to give the U.S. a 2-1 edge.

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Still, Costa Rica wouldn’t go away quietly. Santiago van der Putten, brought on in the 88th minute, converted his attempt before setting the ball down for Sebastian Berhalter. With his father and former USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter watching on, the midfielder skied his attempt over the bar, giving Costa Rica a lifeline after three rounds of kicks.

Another fresh face, Alex Freeman, stepped up after Costa Rica converted its fourth attempt. The Orlando City defender took a composed run-up before placing an attempt in the upper corner above a diving Navas, keeping the sequence level at 3-3 entering the fifth round.

Next was Calvo for his second attempt of the day. This time, the defender sent his shot directly at Freese’s head, with the goalkeeper holding his ground and confidently punching the ball to his left. Left back John Tolkin stepped up and hit his shot toward the post, but Navas had one last heroic dive in him to parry the attempt away and force a sixth round.

Andy Rojas, a winger for New York Red Bulls II, stepped up and saw Freese make his third save of the shootout with another diving stop. Finally, Downs put the game to bed with a well-taken hit, sending the U.S. through, and giving Freese a strong case to stay in contention to start in goal moving forward, pulling a page from last fall’s shootout win over favored FC Cincinnati in the MLS Cup playoffs.

The Gold Cup is now down to its final four, which will take place Wednesday with the U.S. playing Guatemala at 7 p.m. ET at Energizer Park in St. Louis and Mexico facing Honduras at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., at 10 p.m. ET. The winners will advance to next Sunday’s final at Houston’s NRG Stadium.

TOP TALKING POINTS
 
Midday Kick-Off Concerns
Football players’ union FIFPro has urged Fifa to abandon plans for midday and afternoon kick-offs at next summer’s World Cup to avoid the heat. Six of the 16 World Cup host cities next year in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico are judged by FIFPro as “extremely high risk” for heat-stress injury to players.
Experts independent from FIFPro have also argued that if conditions are similar to those of the Club World Cup, then the “best and safest” solution would be to hold kick-off exclusively in the morning. Kick-off times will be announced in December’s draw, but insiders expect matches in the Eastern Time Zone to start at 12:00, 15:00, 18:00, and 21:00 local time, taking into account European audiences as well as broadcaster, advertiser, and sponsor interests.
Additionally, FIFPro’s medical director told reporters that one proposal being trailed is the extension of half-time breaks, from 15 to 20 minutes. He also suggested shorter but more frequent in-game cooling breaks, as the two three-minute breaks used at the Club World Cup were seen as less effective.
The CWC’s Other Big Weekend Results 
PSG 4-0 Inter Miami 🇫🇷 🇺🇸
The Lionel Messi derby didn’t go how the Argentinian GOAT would have envisioned, as he was brutally humanized by experiencing something most mortals have had to go through: encountering an ex who’s thriving without you. This was the first time in his career that he’s played a former club, and although his situationship with PSG wasn’t the long marriage he had at Barcelona, Messi was still haunted by a pivotal figure (and former manager) from that part of his past, Luis Enrique. Currently, his treble-winning side are as close to perfect as is conceivable (just ask Inter Milan and Atlético Madrid), so although Miami shouldn’t feel humiliated by this result, for Messi, it was a bit like bumping into two former flings who have now become best friends. Within five minutes in a busy Mercedes-Benz Stadium, PSG were ahead via a João Neves header from a Vitinha free kick, and their now trademark quick-fire pressing and rapid interchangeable passing, led to a brace for him in the 39th minute. That second goal initiated a pile-on, with PSG’s multi-billion-dollar pack of well-drilled dogs deciding to bury the game before halftime with a Tomás Avilés own goal and another from Achraf HakimiOusmane Dembélé’s first cameo of the tournament was a welcome vision, and although Messi and Miami looked improved in the second half, PSG were already planning for their box office quarter final against Bayern Munich. Just by advancing to the second round, Inter Miami have superseded expectations for an MLS side in the Club World Cup, breaking records that could forge a path for CONCACAF teams in the future, while PSG’s futuristic football makes them a nightmare adversary for every other team in the tournament.
Flamengo 2-4 Bayern Munich 🇧🇷 🇩🇪
Defenses of the Club World Cup, you have been warned: Harry Kane is alive, alert and seemingly hungrier than ever. After being a passive participant at Bayern’s 10-0 party against Auckland City, he managed to net in their next game against Boca Juniors, but yesterday’s opponents, Brazilian side Flamengo, suffered at the feet of one of the world’s best strikers in clutch form. Prior to this game in Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium, Flamengo were undefeated in the Club World Cup, beating one of the tournament’s favorites, Chelsea, 3-1 in the group stage. That was before they met Bayern, who have their serious face back on after resting seven players in their 1-0 loss against Benfica, perhaps lulling future opponents into a false sense of security. They were up 2-0 within 10 minutes following an Erick Pulgar own goal from a Joshua Kimmich corner, and an unstoppable left-footed Kane piledriver from outside the box. Flamengo then took the game to the German champions with a net-breaker from Gerson, but that was nullified by Leon Goretzka producing his own wizardry just before half time, curling the ball from outside the box, as the game became a goal of the tournament competition in its own microclimate. In the second half, former Chelsea and Arsenal midfielder, Jorginho, put away a penalty with his trademark hop, skip and jump to open the game up again, but Kane was decisive in the 73rd minute, and any tantalizing chance the Brazilian side might have dreamt of was ruthlessly eliminated by the England captain. 
Palmeiras 1-0 Botafogo 🇧🇷 🇧🇷
This was the first match at the Club World Cup between two teams from the same country, and although it’s not Brazil’s most historic rivalry, in recent years there’s been plenty of heat between them due to being the country’s most currently successful clubs. The game was long in Philadelphia’s oppressive heat, requiring extra time to decide its winner, because with so much at stake, the fear of losing loomed larger than the desire to win. Palmeiras No. 10, Paulinho, entered the tension as a substitute, slaloming through an exhausted Botafogo defense in the 100th minute of the match, to simply pass the ball into the bottom corner out of the goalkeeper’s reach. There was a silly wresting match in the twilight of extra time that culminated in Palmeiras defender, Gustavo Gómez, seeing red, but his São Paulo side won the day on the pitch and in the stands and will return to the Linc for Saturday’s quarter final against Chelsea. 
📊See the full list of Club World Cup match results here.

Emma Hayes’ rebuild of USWNT is focused on process, not hype

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JUNE 29: Emma Hayes head coach of The United States embraces Rose Lavelle #16 of United States before she is subbed into the game during the second half of the International Friendly match against the Ireland at TQL Stadium on June 29, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Mowry/Getty Images)

By Asli Pelit July 1, 2025Updated 5:17 pm EDT


By the time Emma Hayes walked into Audi Field’s windowless press conference room on this steamy Tuesday afternoon in Washington, D.C., to talk about Wednesday’s friendly against Canada, we already understood her strategy for the U.S. women’s national team pretty clearly.

Rotation? Check. Young players getting their shot? Check. Tactical clarity? Almost there.

Hayes isn’t simply constructing a roster. It’s a system, a culture and a framework designed to restore the U.S. to the top of the women’s game, one deliberate decision at a time.

“My job is to make sure that they compete for when they’re actually ready, and maybe it won’t be all at the same time for all of them,” she told reporters. “My job is to create sustained winning. It’s not my job, it’s what I live for. 2027 World Cup, 2028 Olympics, 2029 Gold Cup, 2031 regardless of how long I’m here, and that’s what my job is.”

Hayes sure takes her job seriously. In just over a year at the helm, she has turned the USWNT into a live laboratory. There are no guarantees. It does not matter where players come from. She’s not afraid to test, tweak, and teach.

The USWNT works out at Audi Field on Tuesday ahead of Wednesday’s friendly against Canada in Washington, D.C. (Asli Pelit / The Athletic)

“The exciting thing about coaching is … you have a clear model,” she said. “There’s probably some particular things I don’t want to talk about now, because I want to win the game, but we’ve really leaned into parts of our model in the last two camps and started to see a return on all of that intentional and deliberate practice.”Deliberateness is the key to Hayes’s success. Her coaching philosophy hinges on trust in the process and long-term development over short-term success. Under her reign, the team has proven successful, scoring 15 goals in four games in this last international window. When asked about individual players she is picking and choosing for key positions in the team, Hayes responded confidently. There are no guarantees. Take Sam Coffey. Hayes surprised Coffey with the captain’s armband on Sunday, a move all her players now understand will be the norm.

“She’s an impeccable learner. She’s always wanting to improve her game. It never ends. It’s never enough … and I think her game has gone to a whole new level,” said Hayes. But when listening to Hayes, it is clear that Coffey’s inclusion, like many others she decided to bring on for this camp, isn’t just about form. Every call-up is a lesson, every minute on the pitch a test of tactical understanding in order for Hayes to place them within the big picture strategy for her team. Even against Canada, arguably the USWNT’s toughest rival in the region and for this camp, Hayes is not changing her process for the opponent.

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“I only focus on us,” she said with a grin. “And it’s not because it’s Canada or anyone. I only focus on that. Seventeen goal zone entries is exceptional, but still only four goals. Are we taking the right decision when we’re in the right areas? Sometimes. Are we executing at the top level in the right situations?”

Her approach is already reshaping the team’s dynamic.

In Sunday’s friendly against Ireland, Hayes rotated her entire starting XI, something that hadn’t happened with the U.S. in nearly 25 years. That kind of risk-taking only works if the system in place is sound and the players are prepped. Especially in a squad where the competition is brutal, where even star players and veterans like Rose Lavelle, Lindsey Horan and Lily Yohannes are fighting for a spot in the starting XI. But that’s Hayes’s plan for her team, and she is in it for the long run.

“Our motto is to make every second count in our interactions with them and also maximize the time we can build relationships. Because sometimes it means being with different groups at different times,” she said about her long-term plans. “I pinch myself every day that I’m in this job. This is like the biggest honor to me, maybe even more so than I thought it would be. And so often people say, be careful what you wish for, because dreams don’t necessarily match up with it. They’re right about that. This one’s better.”

(Top photo of USWNT coach Emma Hayes with Rose Lavelle: Jason Mowry / Getty Images)

Will Canada learn from a total Gold Cup failure, or just keep talking a big game?

Jesse Marsch and Canada fall in the Gold Cup quarterfinals

By Joshua Kloke June 30, 2025


As Jesse Marsch was questioned on whether Canada’s relentless style of play would work throughout the Gold Cup and what exactly his Plan B was if things went belly up, Canada’s head coach did as he does. He punched back.

“Plan B is a typical question from English people,” Marsch replied to the English media member. “As managers, we have Plan A, Plan B, Plan C, Plan D, all the way up to Plan double Z. So by trying to simplify us as one thing, I think it’s a little bit insulting to me and to the team.”

Marsch meant to inject his team with confidence. Seated beside him, defender Richie Laryea’s prideful smile suggested it worked.

The problem?

As the Gold Cup played out, none of Marsch’s plans worked nearly as well.

Canada crashed unceremoniously out of a second tournament in a row, this time with a humbling and embarrassing Gold Cup quarterfinal defeat to Guatemala on penalties Sunday in Minnesota. Canada has risen to 30th in the world according to FIFA’s rankings, the highest in program history. You need to open a secondary page on FIFA’s rankings site to find Guatemala, all the way down at 106.

Considering the end result – and it following a draw vs. 90th-ranked Curaçao and an unconvincing win over nine-man and 81st-ranked El Salvador – Canada’s Gold Cup was an abject failure. Outside of performances from stars such as Jonathan David and Tajon Buchanan and the development of a small handful of young players, it’s a failure that deserves to be worn by the entire organization.

Canada goes out of the Gold CupCanada’s Gold Cup run ended in the quarterfinals (Photo by Matt Blewett/Imagn Images)

Last year’s Copa América run suggested Canada under Marsch was going to be different. One year later, it feels an awful lot like more of the same old Canada.

Marsch’s men remain eager to prove they can hang with the world’s best. Instead, outward displays of confidence were followed by poor game management, questionable squad use and repeated errors that would crush any tournament team. Forget the world’s best. Canada struggled to navigate through Concacaf’s middle of the pack. As a result, they raised questions about whether they’re ready to contend at the World Cup.

For all of Marsch’s unyielding public comments, the men’s national team appears to have learned little from John Herdman’s tournament-defining “We’re going to F- Croatia” remark in 2022. It’s more of the same: too much emotion, not enough results. You can’t continue to talk a game as big as the country itself, until the players show they’re ready to follow suit on the pitch.

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Canada might be different under the current regime, but is it truly better off? Not yet. And right now, it’s in danger of losing so much of the goodwill Marsch has built up over that past year. The approach has to be adjusted.“I still felt really strongly that this was a really good group, and it was really important to develop more players with this team and see how far we can push it,” Marsch said.The justifiable expectations of this team are far too high to cite individual player development as a reason for success in a tournament. These are expectations the team has invited.“We want to win the World Cup,” Marsch said earlier in the month.You can downplay results if the performances themselves were admirable. But strip away the veneer of development and growth? Canada hasn’t put up commendable performances in games that truly matter in a year. They were lacking in cunning and experience with its game management against Mexico in the Nations League semifinals in March, going down a goal in the opening minute. Marsch made poor tactical and game-management choices against Guatemala. Individual errors from his players didn’t help matters, either.If Marsch wants to mold this team in his image, which so many coaches do, he has to understand that with relentlessness comes errors. Jacob Shaffelburg’s two yellow cards weren’t tactical in any sort. They were a byproduct of a player not knowing when to hit the gas and when to hit the brakes.

Jacob Shaffelburg sees red for Canada vs GuatemalaJacob Shaffelburg is sent off vs. Guatemala, leaving Canada with 10 men for the second half (Photo by Brad Rempel/Imagn Images)

“Moments change matches, and the double yellow right before half obviously then changes the match. So it’s frustrating. I don’t think the first (yellow card) on Shaffelburg is a yellow. I agree with the second one, but not the first one,” Marsch said.Marsch has taken aim at Concacaf and its officials plenty – he was suspended for the first two games of the Gold Cup as a result – and there may be validity to claims that Canada has not been treated historically with the same reverence as the region’s two traditional powers, the U.S. and Mexico. But Concacaf alone cannot be blamed for Canada’s failure to make a final in two tournaments over the course of three months. Accountability has to play a big part, and that comes with an honest look in the mirror.How Canada’s players and coaches wear this failure will define the most important tournament in their lives next summer. Because if Marsch and Canada can’t take a step back and re-evaluate how they approach tournament play, there’s reason to suggest they might suffer an even more disappointing fate on home soil, on the biggest possible stage.One of Marsch’s priorities with this Canada team has been coaxing more braggadocio out of this team. That space, where you can only walk with your chest puffed out to the sky, is one that Marsch occupies. A 6-0 dismantling of Honduras in the opening match made it seem like they’d be able to maintain their strut throughout the Gold Cup. Yet Canada rarely looked convincing through the following three games. Marsch’s tactical plan – no variations either – never took hold.“I told the guys, we win as a team and we lose as a team, and we learn from it and we grow and we get better. And we are fixated on exactly what it’s going to take to be successful next summer,” Marsch said.

It’s the right message to deliver to the younger players in the group. But missing was Marsch’s admission that he, too, has learning to do.

Though he might want otherwise, Marsch has made himself the face of this team. He named Alphonso Davies captain before Copa América, a questionable move considering Davies hadn’t been captain for club or country since he exploded as a player in 2018. Marsch then named David, an even more reticent character, captain for the Gold Cup.

His goal was to transfer the balance of power to his players.

But Marsch’s outward charisma and penchant for making headlines with controversial statements, well, makes headlines. From the outside, the most memorable moments of Canada’s long month of June include Marsch alleging that Concacaf allowed his players to be poisoned and his dig at the U.S. by pointing out how he didn’t have players asking out of the Gold Cup (all while the U.S. wrestled with Christian Pulisic’s summer decision).

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What was missing from the headlines were Canadian results and the admission that learning has to be done. Canada deserves credit for dismantling Ukraine in a friendly, yes. Yet all month, Marsch did nothing to extricate himself from the center of the conversation. He hoped his players would take the ball and run with it. Without results, Marsch’s efforts feel more like bluster than a damaging wind.

Jesse Marsch and Canada fall in the Gold Cup quarterfinalsIt’s back to the drawing board for Canada and Jesse Marsch after a humiliating Gold Cup ouster (Photo Troy Taormina/Imagn Images)

Come the World Cup, Marsch has to learn the balance between sticking up for his players in public and setting them up to do their own talking on the field.

As much as the greater Canadian public likely appreciate having a coach who can stand for his team, what will truly resonate next year is results. Canadians want to adore their national teams. The proof is in seeing local sports bars explode with joy when Canada’s hockey team toppled the U.S. in the 4 Nations Face-Off in February.

Canadians will remember that uber-likable head coach Jon Cooper didn’t utter his most famous line of the tournament and after Canada earned the gold medal.

“Canada needed a win,” Cooper said, “and the players bared that on their shoulders.”

Cooper knew enough to let the results do the talking until he could follow suit. The Gold Cup proved Marsch has to approach the World Cup differently from a messaging standpoint. Otherwise, he and the federation could risk losing a nation desperate for its defining soccer moment to a global audience.

On the field, the Gold Cup revealed where Canada needs to be better: the goalkeeping debate is not over and Canada’s center backs didn’t look capable of locking down a must-win game. Canada’s midfield duo didn’t break games wide open late in the tournament and no forward proved beyond a doubt they are ready to start beside David.

Marsch has hard questions with a deadline to answer: June 12, 2026, the date of Canada’s World Cup opener. But the questions Marsch will have to ask of himself will be the most pressing.

His game management, heavy rotation and use of substitutions at key moments in the Gold Cup all fell short. Marsch wants his players to be more crafty and in control during games. He needs to do the same.

Whether using three forwards down a man and up a goal against Guatemala was part of his Plan B, C or D, it missed the mark on what the game demanded. Turning to Daniel Jebbison and Cyle Larin, both of whom have not looked in control of recent performances for Canada, to finish off a game suggests either Marsch was either out of options or didn’t understand what the situation called for. It shouldn’t have been trying to press forward when added defenders or midfielders might have sealed the win. There needs to be more to Marsch’s team that just aggression.

Heavily rotating his team throughout the group stage was a means to better understand his depth. But it also meant very few players settled into their roles come the quarterfinal. In the end, Marsch and his depth were exposed. If that happens again in a year, nearly 10 years of gradual growth in the men’s program will be for nought.

There’s still time for change, even without a tournament between now and the World Cup. The pressure to land high-profile friendly opponents permeates throughout Canada Soccer, and facing Colombia in October fits the bill.

That’s when Plans E, F and G, as it were, should be revealed. What those plans look like will determine whether this Gold Cup was a harbinger for change or the precursor for Canada’s worst failure of all.

Marsch laments Canada’s Gold Cup collapse, cites his reasons and to-do list

Canada manager Jesse Marsch

By Jeff Rueter 56 June 29, 2025


MINNEAPOLIS — Throughout the past half decade, Canada’s rise to the upper echelon of teams in Concacaf has been measured more on a “feels like” index. There is, of course, undeniable evidence that it’s among the region’s best teams. Canada qualified for the 2022 World Cup — the nation’s first appearance in the tournament since 1986 — by winning Concacaf’s qualifying gauntlet via a goal difference tiebreaker, notching meaningful wins over Mexico and the United States on home soil. After appointing Jesse Marsch, it beat the U.S. in the third-place match of the 2024-25 Concacaf Nations League. However, neither achievement comes with a trophy, and the 2025 Gold Cup was eyed as the obvious (and final) chance to secure hardware before co-hosting the 2026 World Cup.Instead, Canada exits at the quarterfinal stage — not to the USMNT, Mexico or upstart Panama, but to Guatemala, which entered the tournament ranked 84th in the world according to the Elo Ratings and 106th in the FIFA rankings. Canada led at halftime thanks to a Jonathan David penalty kick, but the half ended with winger Jacob Shaffelburg being sent off for drawing a second yellow. Guatemala equalized in the second half, then outlasted Canada in a seven-round penalty shootout to reach its first Gold Cup semifinal since 1996.“This one’s really hard to swallow,” Marsch said after the defeat. “We’ve got to learn how to win the biggest moments, right? We’ve made a lot of progress since I’ve been the national team coach and I really like this group, and I really believe in them, but we have to find a way now to make sure we’re at our best in the toughest games and in the toughest moments. We’re going to figure that out, and I promise you: we will learn from this, and we will move forward.”Marsch felt that his side dictated the majority of proceedings, even after his team went down to 10 men. The underlying numbers, however, show that Guatemala really maximized its opportunity after gaining a numerical advantage. Canada had 55% of possession before halftime, then just 31% after Shaffelburg’s dismissal. Canada also had a clear 1.19-0.2 xG advantage thanks to a greater quantity and quality of chances created, but fully ceded that edge after halftime and was outshot 8-1 (0.04-0.64). After the game, Marsch said he agreed with the second yellow, but didn’t think that the first yellow shown to Shaffelburg was justified.

Canada's Jacob Shaffelburg is red cardedCanada’s Jacob Shaffelburg is red carded vs. Guatemala (Photo by Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images)

The manner of Guatemala’s equalizer also showed a lack of big-game awareness from Marsch’s charges. As the underdog worked upfield in hopes of an equalizer, defender Derek Cornelius went to ground and stayed laying down for five or 10 seconds before getting up and rushing toward his spot. With him unable to establish a footing before a cross came in, Rubio Rubín had no issue weaving in front of Cornelius to power a header past Dayne St. Clair and bring Guatemala level with 20 minutes to go.“I feel bad for the group, because I know how bad they wanted it, but it’s important for us to learn from this,” Marsch said. “I think we lose because we beat ourselves. We can’t do that in important matches, and we certainly can’t do that next summer.”The premature exit also takes two meaningful games off the board, meaning Canada will only play friendlies between now and the World Cup. Marsch said his staff will do its best to figure out how to simulate big-game stakes and situations, but it’s no replacement for a lost tournament semifinal and, performance willing, a final.Marsch doled out ample praise for several younger members of his squad, adding that “we’re missing half of our group,” with key absences including star Alphonso Davies – arguably the region’s best player – midfielder Stephen Eustáquio and center back Moïse Bombito. While the “half” modifier feels a bit exaggerated when comparing this squad to his most common combinations – and it’s dropped after Marsch lauded how much commitment he had from his top players this summer – there were chances for alternatives to make their cases for further involvement. Niko SigurNathan SalibaDaniel Jebbison and Promise David all stepped into bigger roles in this tournament.

Another rising player, defender Luc de Fougerolles, played all 90 minutes and remained on the field for the shootout. Marsch said his staff had predetermined the first seven kickers, with the young center back identified for the second “extra kick” beyond the usual five. The 19-year-old ultimately hit his attempt off the bar, reopening the door for Guatemala to advance in their place.

“I feel for Luc, who’s a young player who has a big future, and obviously he harbors a lot of responsibility for missing the penalty,” Marsch said. “But I told the guys, we win as a team and we lose as a team, and we learn from it, and we grow and we get better, and we are fixated on exactly what it’s going to take to be successful next summer.”Marsch also clarified that Jonathan David’s late exit wasn’t due to any injury, praising his captain for his performances and leadership as he nears the end of his contract with Lille. After leading the team with three goals in the group stage, Tajon Buchanan also exited after halftime, with Marsch citing that the winger “felt his hamstring” and couldn’t push onwards.nd so, the 2026 World Cup feels all the more imminent in the absence of a deeper tournament run this summer. Guatemala found the narrowest of edges in what Marsch admits was “a crazy game.” It isn’t unusual for Concacaf’s top teams to fall victim to frequent upsets — just ask the USMNT and Mexico — but for a program that’s hungry to fare better than its last-place showing at the 2022 World Cup when the tournament comes, in part, to its neck of the woods, the lessons from this heartbreak and March’s defeat to Mexico in the Nations League semifinal must be learned and implemented immediately.

“I don’t see these guys for a month, a month and a half, or about two months,” Marsch said. “We’ll do some work internally until we get there. We’ll be discussing with the leaders in the team how we move forward, how we manage this.

“But they’re strong men, you know? They’re really committed to this. They’re really motivated to make sure that next summer, that we represent the country in all positive ways. As hard as it is right now to swallow, we’re going to find a way to make sure that we are better forward and that next summer we’re more prepared.”

(Top photo: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

Euro 2025 kicks off in Switzerland
Jess Carter, Esme Morgan and Grace Clinton of England sing their national anthem prior to the UEFA Women's Nations League 2024/25 Grp A3 MD5 match between England and Portugal at Wembley Stadium on May 30, 2025 in London, England. NWSL players Jess Carter (L) and Esme Morgan (C) will represent England at this year’s European Championship. (Harriet Lander – The FA/The FA via Getty Image)
UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 touches down in Switzerland tomorrow, as 16 European nations kick off their campaign for continental dominance.
The tournament opens with four groups of four teams, before the top two finishers in each group advance to the quarterfinal knockout round — with FOX Sports bringing every match to US fans.
Teams to watch: England enters as reigning champions, though their spot in Group D’s “Group of Death” against tough French and Dutch squads plus neighboring Wales will have the Lionesses facing an uphill climb to a repeat title.
Group B’s Spain is a clear frontrunner, with their 2023 World Cup-winning roster mostly intact and a good track record against European competition. However, they’re still reeling from the federation dysfunction and can fall victim to their own style of play.Eight-time champs Germany headline Group C, but as USWNT fans know, Sweden’s stacked roster and cutthroat tournament style could see them surging out of the gate.You likely won’t find the Euros winner in Scandinavia-dominated Group A, but Norway’s talent and experience has them looking like relative underdogs.Get the full Euros breakdown on The Late Sub with Claire Watkins.
Across the pond: Stateside soccer fans will recognize some familiar faces at this year’s Euros, with 18 current NWSL players set to represent their home countries, including three members of England’s squad.
“It’s really great to see that our fans get to support us even whilst we’re not at Gotham,” Gotham FC and England defender Jess Carter told JWS ahead of the NWSL’s midseason break. “They’re invested in us as people.”
Tune in: Euro 2025 kicks off on Wednesday at 12 PM ET, live on FOX Sports.

6/28/25 USMNT Sun vs Costa Rica 7 pm, USWNT Tues, World Club Cup Sweet 16, Indy 11 home Sat 7 pm

US Men face Cost Rica in Sweet 16 Sun 7 pm on TNT

So the US has made the Knock out round after decent games in the first round. Up next a very winnable game vs a Costa Rica team that has been saved by legendary GK Keylor Navas – La Pantera. Navas made multiple spectacular saves — and if the US can’t find a way to slip one past him – it could be a long night. I think the US will find a way a slip away with a 1-0 win somehow.

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

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

US women beat Ireland 4-0 play Again Sunday in Cincy 3 pm TNT

Rose Lavelle scored a goal and added an assist in her first international minutes in nearly seven months Thursday as the United States beat Ireland 4-0 in Commerce City, Colorado. Lavelle scored in the 53rd minute, calmly redirecting a low cross from forward Ally Sentnor. It was Lavelle’s 25th goal for the United States. Three players made their USWNT debuts Thursday: goalkeeper Claudia Dickey and defenders Lilly Reale and Jordyn Bugg. Dickey and Reale played for the full 90 minutes. Twenty-two players have made their international debuts under Hayes in her 23 games in charge. Ireland and the USWNT will play again Sunday in Cincinnati (Limited Tix Still Available) — Lavelle’s hometown. The USWNT will finish the international window of friendlies Tuesday against Canada in Washington, D.C.

Indy 11 host Indy Racing night vs Bama Legion at 7 pm Sat Night at the MIKE

St. Petersburg, Fla. – Indy Eleven forward Maalique Foster scored an exquisite goal in stoppage time of the first half, but the host Tampa Bay Rowdies rallied with three second-half goals to earn a 3-1 victory on a stormy and humid night. Rev your engines for an exciting evening at Racing Indy Night with Indy Eleven on Saturday, June 28th! This special promotion celebrates the thrilling world of motorsports and honors the racing legacy of the Circle City with an action-packed soccer match against Birmingham Legion FC. 

Racing T-shirt: Add-on a $15 Racing Indy Eleven Shirt at checkout. Item must be picked up on matchday.

Discounted Tickets: For the first 500 fans, tickets start at just $12 exclusively via this link!  

A little Reffing the Women’s League games at Kuntz with Mr. Riley Cheatum

RIP Mike Sommer

Sad news of Mike Sommer’s passing. Mike was not only a dedicated Carmel Dad’s Club, High School and Middle School referee but also a kind and steady presence within our CDC community. He will be greatly missed by all of us who had the honor of refereeing alongside him. Man Mike is the one who got me started Reffing at CYO, Middle School and High School lower level teams on the outskirts of town before I became fully licensed for HS. I learned a lot from Mike – how important it was to treat the kids with respect and always do that extra bit of explaining the rules with a calm voice  He was loved by many across the soccer World! 

June 6, 1967 — June 19, 2025 Indianapolis
https://www.arnmortuary.com/obituaries/michael-sommer

Fond are the Memories of driving out to Anderson to do games – always driving the back woods roads and ALWAYS stopping on the way home for dinner at some diner or small restaurant out there. Good Times indeed. I am out of town for the ceremonies – but will look forward to gathering July 26th to honor our friend Mike Sommer.
Service Details:
June 30, 2025 from 4:00PM to 8:00PM at St. Elizabeth Seton (10655 Haverstick Road, Carmel, IN, 46033) A Funeral Mass will be held the following morning. July 1, 2025 at 10:30AM. 
In addition to the family’s service, Carmel Dads Club will be hosting a Celebration of Life in Mike’s honor. This will be an opportunity for our CDC family to gather, share stories, and reflect on the many ways Mike impacted our lives and the club. A light breakfast will be served.
CDC Celebration of Life for Mike Sommer
Date: Saturday, July 26, 2025
Time: 9:00AM
Location: Conference Room above Badger Field Concession Stand

GOLD CUP QUARTERFINALS

Panama vs. Honduras (Saturday, 7:15 p.m. ET, FS1/Univision) 🇵🇦🇭🇳
Mexico vs. Saudi Arabia (Saturday, 10:15 p.m. ET, FS1/Univision) 🇲🇽🇸🇦
Canada vs. Guatemala (Sunday, 4 p.m. ET, FS1/Univision) 🇨🇦🇬🇹
USA vs. Costa Rica (Sunday, 7 p.m. ET, FOX) 🇺🇸🇨🇷
USMNT vs. Costa Rica. Not a Must-Win. But Def, a Must-Not Lose (Sunday, 7 p.m. ET, Fox) 🇺🇸🇨🇷
Gold Cup about to get serious. Eight teams enter, four teams leave. It’s quarter-final time in the world’s most prestigious tournament named after ABBA’s greatest hits collection. For our shorthanded U.S. boys it has been the best of times, worst of times. We have won three on the bounce, but it has been against some truly shoddy opponents, and our young hopefuls are yet to demonstrate cutting edge, creativity, or striking options. The knockout rounds will be our moment of truth. A fight-filled Costa Rica await in Minneapolis Sunday night. They are undermined by suspension and injury, including three-goal striker Manfred Ugalde. Despite the presence of talismanic goalkeeper Keylor Navas, who stood on his head in the goalless draw against Mexico, the U.S. should have more than enough to overcome their challenge. Here are the issues as I see them:
Who will step up and make themselves undeniable to seize this gift of an open audition for a World Cup place?
Our play has been so deferential and flaccid. These players have all worked so hard to get here. Pochettino has gifted so many MLS players an opportunity they never dreamed they would have. Won’t somebody step into the crucible with swagger and bellow back at the abyss to show they belong? What is holding them back? This is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take fate into their own hands. Fight without fear. This is your moment boys, make us proud.  
Is Patrick Agyemang gonna grab the role of third striker on the A-Squad?
Gent is the “Pineapple on Pizza” of strikers. Many have lauded his hold-up play and physical gifts. Others see a raw, uncalibrated project player who has struggled with his coordination at times against even the weakest opponents. I love him, his story, and his attitude. American Beto.  
Where’s Johnny?
This was supposed to be Hot Cardoso Summer. The 23-year-old defensive midfielder has thrived in Europe to the extent that Atlético Madrid are reported to have paid $35 million for him. But what is he showing—or not showing—in training that LDLT and Sebastian Berhalter are getting minutes ahead of him?  
Losing is not an option here.
Make no mistake—though, this is hard to type: This U.S. team is in a dead wind right now less than a year out from the World Cup. Drop “USMNT” into Google news—coverage of the team, the players, and the storylines is negligible. Fan engagement on social media—even of the diehard core, is a fraction of what it was in 2022. Tough tests—the possibility of Canada in the semis, and Mexico in the finals, please god, lie ahead. This U.S. team has the individual talent to win and reignite the core fan group and create the energy and joy we all cry out for.
Rogstradamus 🔮: The U.S. make heavy weather, continuing to lack pace and sharpness in the final third, but find a way to win 1-0. I see a Berhalter goal, huge celebrations on the field, and a Pochettino grimace on the sideline.
Pochettino backs Matt Freese: ‘Move on’
Matt Freese has earned four caps, all in June. (Photo: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images)
Mauricio Pochettino picked Matt Freese ahead of veteran keeper Matt Turner to start in goal at the Gold Cup, and the U.S. coach does not seem to be ready to make a change.
Not even after Freese’s howler against Haiti.
Freese earned shutouts in wins over Trinidad & Tobago (5-0) and Saudi Arabia (1-0) but committed gifted Haiti its goal in the USA’s 2-1 win.
Haiti tied the match in the 19th minute when he rolled Tim Ream’s backpass straight to Atlanta product Louicous Don Deedson, who scored from short range to Freese’s far post.
Asked after the match for his message to Freese about the mistake, Pochettino responded, “You don’t need to say nothing. That is easy. The best way to trust in a player is not to tell nothing, not to tell, ‘Be careful with this’ or ‘Be careful with that.’ No, move on.” • More: Pochettino on USMNT keepers.
Big Pat repays trust of the one person who matters


Patrick Agyemang and John Tolkin hug after they combined for the winner against Haiti. (Photo: Concacaf/Jerome Miron-Imagn Images)
On social media, no member of the USA’s Gold Cup team has taken more stick than Patrick Agyemang.
But the Charlotte FC striker has the support of the one person who matters: USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino.
And Agyemang repaid him with the winning goal in the 2-1 victory over Haiti that completed a sweep of Group D and moved the USA in the quarterfinals against Costa Rica on Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.
• More: What Mauricio Pochettino likes about Patrick Agyemang

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING: TYLER ADAMS
Tyler Adams celebrates with Sebastian Berhalter during the USA's Gold Cup match with Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Robin Alam/ISI Photos)
Tyler Adams celebrates with Sebastian Berhalter during the USA’s Gold Cup match with Saudi Arabia. (Photo: Robin Alam/ISI Photos)
“He’s hilarious. He makes jokes about his dad all the time. It’s so funny. He’s a great person to have in and around the team. And his quality on the field speaks for itself. His IQ is incredibly high. I don’t know if that’s because his dad’s a coach, but you can just see he thinks through the game in different scenarios.”
— The USA’s 2022 World Cup captain, midfielder Tyler Adams, on whether newcomer midfielder Sebastian Berhalter‘s father Gregg having been the previous head coach has created a unique dynamic.
WHAT WE’RE READING
 FIFA considers options for Iran at 2026 World Cup due to conflict with co-host U.S. By Paul MacInnes (The Guardian)
• The USMNT is a mess. That’s the price of the U.S. becoming a ‘soccer country’ By Ryan O’Hanlon (ESPN)

Camps to Check out This Summer

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

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

CARMEL FC & PALMEIRAS CAMP
Palmeiras Soccer Camps for players aims to let all participants develop their full technical, tactical and physical potential no matter their skill level. Day by day they will learn to enhance their strengths and will be stimulated to understand their own weaknesses. Players participating will be coached by Palmeiras Professional Coaches and may be invited to join Palmeiras Academy in Brazil for tryout. Register now!
Camp dates: July 21-25 Ages: 7-16 Location: Carmel Clay Community Soccer Complex, Home of Carmel FC: Price: $295 REGISTER

TV GAME SCHEDULE

GC=Gold Cup, WCC = World Club Cup in US WE -Women’s Euros

Sat, June 28th

4 pm DANZ Benefica vs Chelsea WCC
7:15 pm FS1 Panama vs Honduras GC
7:30 pm Apple free Montreal vs NYCFC MLS
10 pm FS1, TUDN Mexico vs Saudi Arabia GC

Sun, June 29th

12 noon TBS? PSG vs Inter Miami (Messi) wCC
12 noon CBSSN England Women vs Jamaica
3 pm TNT, Max, US Women vs Ireland
4 pm TBS Flamengo vs Bayern Munich WCC
4 pm FS1 Canada vs Guatemala GC
6 pm Apple Free Columbus Crew vs Philly Union MSL
7 pm FOX USA vs Costa Rica GC

Mon, June 30th
3 pm TNT? Inter Milan vs Fluminense WCC
9 pm TNT? Man City vs Al Hilal WCC
Tues, July 1
3 pm Unimas, TBS Real Madrid vs Juventus (McKinney, Weah)
9 pm TBS/Danz Dortmund (Reyna) vs Monterrey WCC
Wed, July 2
12 noon Fox Iceland vs Finland Women Euros
3 pm Fox Switzerland vs Norway Women Euros
7 pm FS1 Gold Cup Semi USA vs Honduras
10 PM FS1 Gold Cup Semi Mexico vs Guatemala
Thurs, Jul 3
12 noon FS1 Belgium vs Italy W Euros
3 pm Fox Spain vs Portugal W Euros
Fri, July 4th
12 noon FS1 Denmark vs Sweden WE
3 pm Fox Germany vs Poland WE
3 pm TBS Fluminense vs Al Hilal CWC QF
7:30 pm FS1 Dallas vs Minn MLS
9 pm TBS Chelsea vs Palmeiras CWC QF
10:30 pm Apple LA Galaxy vs Vancouver MLS
Sat, July 5th
12 noon FS1 Wales vs Netherlands W Euros
12 noon TBS Fifa World Club Cup QF
3 pm Fox France vs England WE
4 pm TBS Fifa WCC QF
7 pm FS1 Charlotte vs Orlando MLS
8:30 pm Apple Free Austin City vs LAFC MLS
Sun, July 6th
12 noon FS1 Norway vs Finland W Euros
3 pm FS1 Switzerland vs Iceland WE
5 pm Apple free Seattle Sounders vs Columbus Crew MLS
Mon, July 7 th
12 noon FS1 Spain vs Belgium W Euros
3 pm Fox Portugal vs Italy WE
Tues, July 8th
12 noon FS1 Germany vs Denmark W Euros
Wed, July 9
12 noon FS1 England vs Netherland W Euros
3 pm Fox France vs Wales WE
3 pm TBS Fifa WCC Semis
7 pm CBSSN Philly Union vs NYRB MLS

US Men

Three things the USMNT need to elevate their game in Gold Cup knockout stage


Will the USMNT’s star absentees hurt their hopes for the 2026 World Cup?

5 questions the USMNT must answer in Gold Cup knockouts (and before 2026 World Cup)
2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup: Scouting Costa Rica
USMNT completes ‘perfect’ group stage that was anything but
As U.S. battle without stars at Gold Cup, which fringe players are stepping up?

Reports: Atlético Madrid secures Johnny Cardoso transfer
Report: Bayer Leverkusen open talks to acquire Malik Tillman from PSV
Sources: USMNT’s Agyemang close to Derby move

US Women

June 2025 USWNT Friendlies Preview – USA vs. Ireland Game 2: A Skyline Rematch
USWNT 2025 June Friendlies – USA 4-0 Ireland Match One: It’s all Coffey and Roses
Hayes on Lavelle’s stellar return: ‘Only one Rose’
Why USWNT prospects are running out of time to make the cut for U.S. squad

World Club Cup

Juventus vs. Manchester City, 2025 Club World Cup: Match thread and discussion
Club World Cup group stage takeaways, predicting the winner, more

From Man City to Flamengo, Why every last-16 team will, won’t win Club World Cup
What the Club World Cup can tell us about comparing MLS to the Premier League and more
‘Saturation of soccer’: Why empty seats litter Club World Cup, Gold Cup5dJeff Carlisle


Women’s European Cup

Women’s Euros A-Z: The history of the tournament in 26 facts
How to win the Euros: set-piece prowess, holding midfielders and good subs
Euro 2025 kit ranking: Which team is Europe’s style champion?

Reffing

Ref Cam a hit at World Club Cup
Why the Mexico last min Goal was offsides
New Laws of the Game – GK PK Interference?
Chelsea Jackson Red Card
Offside Restart – where

Goalkeeping

US GK Matt Freeze Story
Should Turner Start in Front of Freeze?
Great Saves World Club Cup
Costa Rica GK Keylor Navas – La Pantera
Great Saves by Navas vs Mexico

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Weah’s agent slams Juventus treatment of USMNT forward
READ MORE Tim Weah’s agent Badou Sambague has hit out at the way Juventus has treated his client in recent weeks.

Stakes rise for USMNT’s World Cup hopefuls after navigating Gold Cup group stage

USMNT's John Tolkin, Malik Tillman and Patrick Agyemang

By Paul Tenorio June 23, 2025


ARLINGTON, Texas – The real test begins now.This group of U.S. players came into the Concacaf Gold Cup this summer through the door U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino opened for them. The task was two-fold, as Pochettino himself spelled out a week ago when the Americans opened group play with a dominant win over Trinidad and Tobago.“First of all it is to win because we want to win,” Pochettino said that day in San Jose, Calif. “And at the same time, it is to help the players to perform and to knock the door and [say], ‘We also we can perform for the national team and we can be involved in the next World Cup.’ That is what I expect. We, and the players, really believe that they are having the opportunity. Take the opportunity and show me that maybe, for sure, [you] will fight for a place in the World Cup. That, for me, is the most important thing.”The Americans cruised through the Gold Cup stage. They were expected to. Beating Trinidad, Saudi Arabia and Haiti is not a gauge of success for any U.S. team, even one that is missing 10 regulars. This group still has quality in the roster. It has the presumptive starters at center back in next year’s World Cup, Tim Ream and Chris Richards, as well as the other top contenders for that job: Mark McKenzie, Miles Robinson and Walker Zimmerman. Tyler Adams captained the U.S. at the World Cup in 2022. Malik Tillman has made a claim to play in attacking midfield. Players like Diego Luna, Luca de la Torre, Alex Freeman and Patrick Agyemang have a legitimate shot to earn a ticket onto the 2026 roster.What they do in the coming days against some of the better rivals in Concacaf will go a long way towards telling us just how much they can help when the full team is together. Let’s not forget that earlier this month the U.S. lost friendlies to Turkey and Switzerland. The 4-0 defeat in the latter was especially telling about how much the quality on the field matters.Suffice it to say, playing against Costa Rica next in the quarterfinals – despite star forward Manfred Ugalde being suspended due to card accumulation – will present a bigger and more indicative challenge, and the possibility of a U.S.-Mexico final is now in play after both topped their respective groups.

USMNT manager Mauricio PochettinoThe USMNT’s results in the Gold Cup group stage gave Mauricio Pochettino some reason to smile (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images “This was preparation. Now we’ll be playing a final, it’s all or nothing,” Pochettino said. “So we have to be prepared. We will be prepared, no matter the opponent we face. It’s our challenge: we have to compete well, to keep competing well and continue improving. We have a week to prepare for this game, so I have no doubt we’ll get there in the best possible way.”Pochettino has been clear that what he wants is open competition for the team he takes to the World Cup. If the players are going to make an impression, they will need to win some knockout games. It’s not unlike the challenge a similar U.S. group had at the 2021 Gold Cup. Coming off of an emotional 2021 Nations League victory over Mexico, U.S. coach Gregg Berhalter took a ‘B’ squad to the Gold Cup later that summer. Mexico, meanwhile, did not. It sparked debate about what the better plan was. On the one hand, Mexico got an extra month working together. On the other, Berhalter got a chance to look at a wider pool. What the U.S. did in that tournament ended any debate. It beat Haiti, Canada and Martinique in the group stage, advancing with a plus-seven goal differential — the same as this year’s team. Then it beat Jamaica, 1-0, in the quarterfinals and Qatar, 1-0, in the semifinals before meeting Mexico in the championship game. A 1-0 win in extra time helped to secure a second trophy that summer — and it announced the U.S. as being “back” as a top power in Concacaf.Before this camp started, U.S. goalkeeper Matt Turner talked about how that Gold Cup win helped him break through as a real option for Berhalter’s U.S. team. A year and a half later, Turner was starting in Qatar.That’s the opportunity for some of these U.S. players as the knockout phase begins. It feels almost like a second life after the friendly losses — especially that Switzerland result.“The steps that we’ve made, I think, are huge coming from not great results with Turkey and Switzerland,” Brenden Aaronson said. “I mean, it’s tough. You get down on yourself and stuff like that. But what I see from this group is just that bounce-back mentality. You come into the tournament, you could let it bother you, you could let negativity bother you. But I think that the biggest thing with this group is we tune everything out. We just get going.”Some players have already seized the opportunity. Tillman, who scored his third goal of the tournament in the win, has certainly made his impression on Pochettino, who praised the midfielder again in the postgame press conference. Others, like Luna and Agyemang, continue to put themselves in conversation for roles with the U.S. team. Agyemang’s game-winning goal – following a series of missed chances across the last couple games – went a long way in his argument for future inclusion. He leads the U.S. in scoring in 2025 with five goals. Now he — and the rest of the group — will get a chance to make an argument for why they can be trusted to perform when the stakes are higher. (Top photo: Omar Vega/Getty Images) 

USMNT given battle, holds off Haiti to top Gold Cup group

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - JUNE 22: Malik Tillman #17 of United States celebrates after scoring his teammates first goal  during the Group Stage - Group D match between United States and Haiti as part of the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup at AT&T Stadium on June 22, 2025 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio June 22, 2025 Updated June 23, 2025


ARLINGTON, Texas – For long stretches of Sunday night’s Gold Cup group finale against Haiti, the U.S. men’s national team had the ball but too often didn’t do anything dangerous with it.As the second half played out and with the game still tied, the U.S. started to play a bit more aggressively looking for a winner. After having two goals (correctly) called back, forward Patrick Agyemang finally got on the end of a ball from left back John Tolkin, touched it around Haiti goalkeeper Johny Placide and passed it easily into the empty net.Agyemang’s goal lifted the U.S. to a 2-1 win and into the knockout stage as the top finisher in its group.It was also a much-needed goal for Agyemang, who failed to put away his chances earlier in the game. The U.S. won all three of its group games and will now face Group A’s second-place finisher, Costa Rica, which drew Mexico 0-0 later Sunday night. Mexico heads to the other side of the knockout bracket (and will face Saudi Arabia in the quarterfinals), meaning a U.S.-Mexico clash can only happen in the final. Regardless, the narrative around this Gold Cup will truly be determined in the knockout stage. Even without many regulars, this selection of U.S. players has something to prove. Getting out of the group at the Gold Cup is a prerequisite. Getting to a final is the bare minimum bar for success. U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino made four changes to the starting lineup trying to dig into what depth he has at this Gold Cup without suffering the type of wake-up call result that happened in the first half against Switzerland. In were Tyler Adams, John Tolkin, Quinn Sullivan and Brenden Aaronson. Two of those four had World Cup qualifying experience and were on the 2022 World Cup roster. The other two were being given a window to show their ability to impact a game in this tournament. It was a mixed bag for the U.S. in the first half. Aaronson provided an assist to Malik Tillman to give the U.S. a 1-0 lead in just the 10th minute. It was the third goal of the tournament for Tillman, who has been the breakout player of the Gold Cup so far for the U.S., showing a solid workrate and good attacking production. But this U.S. team shot itself in the foot too often to let Haiti stay in the game. Haiti equalized in the 19th minute when Tim Ream played a back pass to goalkeeper Matt Freese. The NYCFC netminder tried to play a side-footed pass inside his box under pressure, but mishit it, and Don Deedson Louicius easily collected the mistake and deposited it into the back of the net. Freese has been given a chance to win the No. 1 job for the U.S, preferred to Matt Turner for every group game. He had been mostly untested through the group stage, but it was a massive mistake for a player trying to win a job.

USMNT gives up a goal to HaitiUSMNT concedes a goal to Haiti in the Gold Cup (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

The U.S. had several other chances to score a goal, but Agyemang continued to struggle to generate or finish chances up top. He was sprung in behind multiple times by teammates but couldn’t find the back of the net, including a 1-on-1 in the 24th minute. It may have been ruled offside, but the Charlotte FC striker nonetheless should have found the back of the net.The U.S. entered knowing it had already qualified for the next round and had first place all but secured, needing just a draw against an opponent that hadn’t beaten the U.S. since 1973. Still, it was important to show consistency and keep getting results, and for long stretches, the U.S. was playing far too predictably — and too safe — in the build-up. It was rare that players looked to break lines with their passes. Often, the pass went safely backwards or out to the wide areas, then got recycled around again. It allowed Haiti to stay compact and make things difficult, and the U.S. failed to generate much of anything through the first 15 minutes of the second half. But players started to look more for vertical passes. In the 64th minute, Agyemang slipped after getting on the end of a ball over the top, but Quinn Sullivan recovered the rebound and shot. It was blocked, and a Haiti defender’s clearance hit Tillman and went into the net. The goal was ruled out because it caromed off Tillman’s arm.Four minutes later, Adams found Tillman on a vertical run and the PSV attacking midfielder scored. But the flag went up for offside.Tillman nearly scored in the 74th minute on a beautiful ball over the top by Adams, bringing the ball down brilliantly, but his chip over Placide went just wide. No matter. One minute later Agyemang scored to lift the U.S. to a third straight win. The big test comes now. Costa Rica is considered a tougher opponent than any the U.S. faced in the group stage. A team with plenty to prove will now have to show it can navigate through the knockout stage at home. The U.S.’s quarterfinal is expected to be played at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis next Sunday — though Concacaf has not yet confirmed the pairing of matchups and venues for the round.What You Should Read NextWinning fosters USMNT belief at a time when fans need a team they can trustApathy surrounding the U.S. men is evident, and with a home World Cup less than a year away, restoring support – and results – is paramount

Will USMNT’s star absentees hurt their 2026 World Cup hopes?

  • Jeff CarlisleCesar Hernandez
  • Jun 27, 2025, 07:42 AM ET ESPN

There were undoubtedly some close calls in the group stage, but the U.S. men’s national team have so far gotten the job done in the Gold Cup. Winning their group with a perfect three wins from three matches against Trinidad & Tobago, Saudi Arabia and Haiti, head coach Mauricio Pochettino and his title contenders have picked up momentum and avoided a disastrous early exit in the competition.Preparing for Sunday’s quarterfinal against Costa Rica in Minneapolis and still in the race for an eighth title as they’ve managed sweltering temperatures, there’s one scorching hot talking point that has yet to be doused in American soccer circles: Where are the Americans’ best players?For a variety of reasons ranging from injuries, rest and Club World Cup duty, the USMNT are currently without a long list of marquee names, which includes Sergiño DestAntonee RobinsonWeston McKennie and Christian Pulisic. Because the Gold Cup is played every other year, it’s not out of the ordinary to have alternate squads like the one the U.S. is fielding this summer, but one year out from the FIFA World Cup, it’s fair to ask if this will hurt the ongoing evolution of the national team under Pochettino. Especially considering how infrequently these big names have suited up alongside each other since last year. “You never know six months from now what players are available, who’s hurt, who’s playing at their club … I don’t think that [time] is as important as most people may think. I think that you can put the team together at the end,” Tab Ramos, who has played for the USMNT and coached within the national team structure, said to ESPN. “[But] we’re likely going to go into the World Cup, not really with Pochettino, not really understanding 100 percent what his roster can do because he hasn’t been able to utilize the roster in different situations.”

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Dest, Robinson, McKennie, Pulisic and Tyler Adams (who is on the Gold Cup roster), have not all been on the field at the same time since a Concacaf Nations League final win over Mexico in March 2024. Under Pochettino, they’ve also played sparingly, with Pulisic being the sole member of the aforementioned quintet to earn more than 350 minutes under the coach since he was hired last September. Digging deeper, it’s easy to begin to feel worried when you find more examples. Fullbacks Robinson and Dest have not shared the field in the past year, and during the same time frame, midfielders Adams and McKennie have played just 294 minutes together. Will this lack of familiarity harm the team on the world’s biggest stage in one year? Ramos is unsure. “We are obviously giving ourselves less of a chance. There’s no question,” he said. “When you don’t have the team together, you give yourself less of a chance to be successful because you don’t know the reaction as a head coach. You don’t understand the reaction of players and of different combinations at a certain game against a certain opponent. That’s where you’re going to be missing.”The reality is those lessened chances could be the difference between winning or losing a knockout game. Given the USMNT’s record in such matches — just one knockout game victory in its entire World Cup history, spanning 10 tournaments — that is a factor that has to be considered, although Ramos still feels it’s more about the form of the players.”In terms of having the team together, it’s really who’s going to be playing great by May of next year,” he said. “That really matters.” Looking at the summer roster, defender Mark McKenzie didn’t show any signs of worry when asked if there’s enough time to find cohesion before the World Cup.”Chemistry is a relative thing. I think when you come into camp, I think we’re all understanding of a goal we have in mind. Each camp we get into, there’s an opportunity to continue to build on that,” he said to media during the Gold Cup group stage. “That doesn’t matter whether it’s now, whether it’s in a couple months, and each match will have its own challenges.”Hugo Perez, a former USMNT midfielder who coached players such as Pulisic, McKennie and Adams during their youth national team days, also didn’t sound the alarm.”Pochettino knows what the nucleus of players are … it’s good for Pochettino to see if the [Gold Cup] players from the MLS … [are] at that level,” the former El Salvador manager said to ESPN. “You miss [the stars] being here and maybe being with the group, but I don’t see that as a big deal in the end.”When chatting with Perez, it became clear that he was more preoccupied with finding a way to get the best out of the U.S.’s top players through a more varied tactical approach, and not about needing an extended period to jell together.

Herculez Gomez and Cristina Alexander debate the biggest storylines and break down the best highlights that soccer in the Americas has to offer. Stream on ESPN+ (U.S. only) “I still believe that the U.S. is lacking an identity in a style of play where they’re going to have to mix it [up],” he said. “We know we run, we know we attack by the flanks, but I still think that they can improve on short spaces, maintaining more of the ball and then, boom, explode the big space. I think we need to add that kind of play in order to compete.”I know these players: I coached them when they were 14 and 15. They’re capable of playing that type of soccer, but again, the coach has to make that decision. That’s, for me, more important than having them every time come to FIFA [international] dates.”However, those opportunities have been limited.In the past 12 months, the U.S. has played only nine competitive matches. In that same time frame, South American champions Argentina and European champions Spain each has played 14.With no qualifiers on the schedule for next year’s World Cup given the U.S.’s status as co-hosts, the chance to test and analyze a larger sample size just hasn’t been the same. And in the few high-pressure situations the Americans have played in, things have been bleak: a group stage exit in the 2024 Copa América and a fourth-place finish in the Concacaf Nations League.

“Developing the chemistry on the field is really, I think, the need,” Ramos said. “In order to develop that, you need to have some games where you struggle together and see how you get out of it.”And I think if you look at some of the — I don’t want to say failures because they haven’t been failures, but if you look at the times where we haven’t been as successful with this team because the expectations have been so high, we have not passed a lot of tests in which situations got difficult. That’s a little bit of a concern for me.”Does that concern also extend to some players seeming to prioritize their club careers abroad? When considering the high level of intensity of the European game, is there something to be said about scrutinizing players’ balance of club vs. country?Perez doesn’t believe so. He also doesn’t believe that it halts any sort of on-field chemistry.”These kids are playing in very competitive leagues, and when you play in leagues like the English Premier LeagueSerie A, in France, you are surrounded in your team by some of the best players in the world,” he said. “Second, when you’re surrounded by those players who are some of the best players in the world in your club, that’s helping you to grow as a player individually.

“When they come here, we have to be honest also. I mean, these kids have played together before … they know each other. I mean, they’re in contact with each other in Europe. I don’t think that’s the issue.”For Ramos, there’s enough time to develop a good team, but with the caveat that there will be a “disadvantage of knowing less” due to not having enough answers from in-game tests. As for Perez, he also believes there’s ample time, especially if there’s a lengthy summer camp next year, but stated that the true test lies in Pochettino’s ability to still get the best of his stars.”[That’s] the most difficult work that a coach has,” Perez said.Even with an alternate roster, things are looking promising for the USMNT at the Gold Cup. Following some wake-up calls and a four-game losing streak ahead of the tournament, they’ve since avoided a nightmare scenario in the group stage and qualified for the knockout rounds.Whether the competition helps answer some questions regarding roster depth, or highlights a need to continue relying on familiar faces, the countdown to the World Cup will truly begin in September with just five FIFA windows between then and next June. That will be the only time Pochettino has to make final adjustments through friendly matches. Is that enough runway to reintegrate the U.S.’s biggest stars? With each passing month, we’ll get a clearer idea of whether the USMNT are in fact ready for 2026. “I think there’s plenty of time before the World Cup, there’s plenty of games,” said Brenden Aaronson, who is part of the Gold Cup squad. “I think the thing that people don’t really understand: Yeah, it’s friendlies that are coming up, but friendlies still, you treat them like they’re international games. They’re going to be really good games and it’s not like something we’re [just] going to walk in there. We want to win these games. “We’re going to treat them like World Cup games.” If Aaronson & Co. are going to be ready for the World Cup in less than 12 months, they’ll have to.

5 questions the USMNT must answer in Gold Cup knockout stage

  • Ryan O’HanlonJun 26, 2025, 07:00 AM ET

The Gold Cup group stage is over. And with a team of mostly MLS players and fringe starters from elsewhere, the U.S. men’s national team is perfect through three matches. It has scored eight goals and conceded just one. It beat the only team that beat Argentina at the last World Cup. And a bunch of new players are getting a lot of valuable competitive experience ahead of next summer’s World Cup.

So, everyone is happy, right? Right? Yeah, not quite. Thanks to an ongoing feud between the team’s best players, the team’s former players and the team’s coach, the three wins haven’t done much to shift the conversation.Outside of the opening 5-0 drubbing of Trinidad and Tobago, the other two games weren’t leave-no-doubt affairs, either. Against Saudi Arabia, the U.S. only attempted five total shots and won with a set-piece goal from a center back a few minutes after the hour mark. Then, in the final match, they were tied with Haiti all the way up until the 75th minute, when Patrick Agyemang rounded the goalkeeper and put away the game-winner. The ranking of the USMNT’s opponents, in chronological order and according to the World Football Elo ratings: 99th, 66th and 86th.

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Based on the quality of the schedule and the state of flux on the A-list roster, we really haven’t learned too much from these matches. But the USMNT’s quarterfinal opponent, Costa Rica, ranks 47th in the Elo ratings, while potential future opponents Panama (32), Canada (29), and Mexico (25) are within the top 35. With 48 teams qualifying for next summer’s tournament, these are all World Cup-quality opponents.

So, what might we learn over the next week? Here are five questions that we should get some answers to between now and the end of the Gold Cup.

Is Matt Freese the starting goalkeeper?

If you asked this question a month ago, approximately 100% of respondents would’ve answered with a “no.” But then Patrick Schulte and Zack Steffen pulled out of the Gold Cup because of injuries, and coach Mauricio Pochettino gave Freese his first cap in a pre-tournament friendly against TurkeyMatt Turner then started the final pre-tournament friendly against Switzerland, and we all expected him to keep starting from there once the Gold Cup began. After all, he’d been the starter since before the pandemic. But then Turner conceded four goals to Switzerland in the first half, and Freese has played every minute so far at the Gold Cup. Overall, he has been … fine? Across the four matches, he has faced 11 shots worth 3.16 goals (based on Stats Perform’s post-shot expected goals model), and he has conceded three goals. That’s about as close to average as you can get.

The orange dots are goals, purple are saves, and the larger the dot, the higher the post-shot xG value of the attempt:

Now, he also made an error that led to Haiti’s opening goal, but defender Tim Ream gave him a terrible, bouncing back-pass, and the goal still required a fantastic finish from a really tight angle. I don’t think these four games are enough to really judge Freese in either direction. Just look at those shots: He hasn’t even had to save anything on the left side of the goal yet. His performances haven’t been disqualifying, but they haven’t been job-winning, either. Does Pochettino give Freese a chance to stand up against stiffer competition? Does Turner become the starter now that games are toughening up? If Freese continues to start and plays well over the final however many matches, then I think we have to say that he’s the favorite to start next summer.

Is Johnny Cardoso part of this team?

This was supposed to be a big summer for the 23-year-old defensive midfielder. With Tyler Adams nursing an injury and a bunch of the other midfield options either at the Club World Cup or taking the summer off, Johnny Cardoso figured to be a mainstay in the USMNT midfield for the first time under Pochettino. Oh, and Atletico Madrid wanted to sign him. You know, the club that’s competitive in the UEFA Champions League every season and won LaLiga four short years ago? If you had to bet on these things not panning out for Cardoso, presumably what you would’ve cast doubt on is the Atletico move. Cardoso has been a solid player for Real Betis, but has he really been that good? Plus, reported transfer moves fall apart every day, for any number of reasons. Well, how does this one sound? Atletico Madrid just spent north of €30 million in transfer fees to acquire Cardoso, who at the same time seems to have fallen behind Luca de la Torre and Sebastian Berhalter on the USMNT depth chart.

Carlisle: Skepticism building over Pochettino’s USMNT leadership

On “The Football Reporters” podcast, Jeff Carlisle gauges how USMNT fans are feeling about Mauricio Pochettino’s time in charge of the team. At the Gold Cup so far, Cardoso has played a whopping 11 total minutes. He started the match against Turkey, but his error led directly to the equalizing goal and he was subbed off at halftime. He played the whole game against Switzerland and has barely played at all since the Gold Cup started. Now, he missed the opener against Trinidad and Tobago because of an illness, so maybe that put him behind the eight ball. And maybe Pochettino’s approach to the knockout matches will be different from what he has done through the group stage. We don’t really know. But as of three weeks ago, it seemed like Cardoso was a potential starter at the World Cup. As of right now, it’s unclear whether he’ll even make the roster.

Tim Ream it is, then?

Coming into this summer, it seemed like center back was the one position where the USMNT had most, and possibly all, of its potential World Cup starters on the Gold Cup roster. Crystal Palace‘s Chris Richards would be one half of the pairing, and then we’d actually get new, useful information about who was most likely to be there next to him.

Miles Robinson started the match against Turkey next to Richards, but then Mark McKenzie replaced him at halftime. McKenzie then started against Switzerland, but with Walker Zimmerman by his side, not Richards. If you were going to draw one half-conclusion from the two friendlies, it might’ve been: Tim Ream is no longer in the picture.

Instead, the 37-year-old Ream has played every minute of every match at the Gold Cup so far … and he has been pretty darn important, too.

Although he’s a center back, Ream has added more expected possession value — essentially, how much everything you do on the ball increases or decreases your team’s chances of scoring a goal — than all but three other USMNT players. Some of that is because he has played so many minutes, but a large chunk of it is that he’s still so important to how the team moves the ball up the field.

Ream has played 14 passes into the attacking third that have increased the USMNT’s chances of scoring a goal by at least half a percent; no one else has more than eight. That might seem like a nothing number, but most of what happens on a soccer field doesn’t drastically shift goal probabilities — it’s all about racking up a bunch of tiny moments that eventually add up.

Here are all of Ream’s passes worth at least 0.5% of xPV:

We’ll see how Ream holds up against the stiffer competition, though. He has been a fantastic and underappreciated player for most of his career. But I remain a little skeptical that the USMNT can afford to rely on a 38-year-old center back if it wants to make a serious run next summer.

Can any of these attacking midfielders hang against tougher competition?

Through three matches, the players replacing Christian PulisicWeston McKennie and Timothy Weah have been quite good. This is exactly what you would’ve wanted from this situation.Malik Tillman has played every minute of every game and leads the team in goals and possession value added. He has also been a fantastic final-third defender. After the Turkey match, Tillman told me he preferred the freedom he was given in Pochettino’s system, as opposed to the stricter positional guidelines the players were given by former coach Gregg Berhalter, and it has shown so far. Tillman is the MVP of the group stage, and this is the first time we’ve seen him come close to replicating his PSV form with the USMNT.Jack McGlynn already looks like one of the best passers in the entire player pool — and quite possibly the best. For a team that has really struggled to break down low blocks, his creativity could bring something new and important. He has completed 11 passes into the penalty area — no one else has more than six — and leads the team in expected assists.Diego Luna, meanwhile, provides the rare combination of “guy who might actually try to fight a tank with his bare hands” and “guy who never loses the ball.” There’s a place for massive amounts of energy and ball security on most national team rosters.

Does the USMNT deserve more credit at the Gold Cup?

The “Futbol Americas” crew discuss the USMNT’s 2-1 win over Haiti that granted it a place in the Gold Cup knockout stages.But how will this translate against Costa Rica and (potentially) Panama, Canada and Mexico?Tillman is still kind of a strange player: He’s an attacking midfielder who relies more on positioning and off-ball running rather than a high volume of touches and seeing-eye creativity. Those players can disappear from time to time. McGlynn did most of his damage against a really weak Trinidad and Tobago team. And will Luna be able to provide enough attacking production once the schedule gets harder?All three players have really interesting qualities that could help the USMNT next summer, but the next game (or two … or three, depending on how deep their Gold Cup run goes) should give us a better sense of how those traits will scale up against stiffer opponents.

Can Pochettino get the team moving with pace?

Before the tournament began, I wrote about how Pochettino’s team ranked dead last among the USMNT managers we have data for in the following stats:

• The speed moving the ball upfield: 1.03 meters per second
• The number of possessions per match: 82.1

Through the group stages, here’s how the USMNT compares to everyone else in the competition across those two metrics:

So, the U.S. is moving slightly slower and playing games with even fewer possessions than those already-program-low rates. A lot of this has to do with the approaches of its opponents, combined with the Trinidad and Tobago game being over by halftime, but another pre-tournament favorite, Canada, still manages to embrace a lot more chaos even when it’s heavily fancied against its conservative opponents.

And then, all the way to right of the graph — moving faster than anyone else at the tournament — is the USMNT’s quarterfinal opponent, Costa Rica. Under Pochettino, the Americans’ haven’t really found a way to break down reasonably talented teams that are willing to sit back and counter-attack. And if they still haven’t figured that out, then, well, their tournament is going to be over in just a couple of days.


Clint Dempsey interview: USMNT icon on Christian Pulisic’s podcast drama and pay-to-play

INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 23: Former soccer player and current TV pundit Clint Dempsey attends the CONCACAF Nations League Championship Final between Panama and Mexico at SoFi Stadium on March 23, 2025 in Inglewood, California.  (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

By Adam Crafton June 26, 2025


For the United States men’s national team, it has been a summer of podcast outbursts forming a tetchy soundtrack one year out from a heavily anticipated home World Cup. Following Christian Pulisic’s decision not to join up with Mauricio Pochettino’s team for the Gold Cup — along with a slew of other absentees — criticism came from USMNT icons Landon Donovan and Tim Howard (on their own podcast), Pulisic issued a riposte (on a CBS podcast) and Clint Dempsey said he struggled to understand Pulisic’s decision (on the Men In Blazers podcast). In between all that, Pulisic’s father appeared to launch a broadside at Donovan via Instagram (on a post liked by his son). Pochettino also used his news conferences to assert his authority, saying players “cannot dictate the plan” after Pulisic claimed he offered to play in the two warmup friendly games but with the condition of dropping out for the Gold Cup. Dempsey also pointed out how the situation might have been averted if U.S. Soccer, the nation’s governing body, and Pulisic had aligned more closely on their messaging. During an interview with The Athletic, Dempsey said: “Why wasn’t there a way that we could have been more unified in the messaging that’s going out to the public? You have one of the best players for the national team, and if it had been England, if Harry Kane was missing a tournament or the Nations League or World Cup qualifying, there would be people asking questions. “It’s important to be unified and to have that conversation. Then there’s no back and forth looking like two people are at odds with each other, especially a year out from the World Cup. It could have been handled better. Still, the best way to solve problems — whether you get a red card in the game or you do something stupid — is to get back on the pitch and let your play do the talking for you.”

Landon Donovan’s foray into the Christian Pulisic national team debate has been one of American soccer’s stories of the summer. (Shaun Clark / ISI Photos / Getty Images)

Dempsey, who earned more than 140 senior caps, has previously revealed he once had a platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection in his adductor to play for the USMNT. He was asked whether his locker room would have required the federation to step in or if the players would have held themselves to account.“You would like to think you have a good enough relationship with your teammates that you could put a call in and ask, ‘Hey, what’s going on? Is there something I can do for you? We need you in this tournament’. At the same time, for me, it was never a question if I was going to go into the national team and play,” Dempsey said. “Whether it was Gold Cup, World Cup qualifying, the Confederations Cup, Copa America, the World Cup, I wanted to be there because as a kid, I dreamed about representing my country. “I knew that there were a lot of kids where I am from that didn’t make it. You’re representing for them, your town, your city, your state, your country. So everybody’s going through different things. Everybody’s dealing with different injuries and different things mentally. I’m not privy to those conversations to know what’s going on. “What’s made this situation difficult is what happened with Copa America when we did not get out of the group stage, then losing to Panama and Canada in Nations League and then the four losses in a row, the worst streak we’d had in a long time. It put more pressure on this Gold Cup. There are not many opportunities left after this for meaningful games, and you want to try to get things right.”

Pulisic, who racked up more than 3,500 minutes for Milan in the 2024-25 season, told CBS his body and mind “started talking” to him towards the end of the campaign and he felt a rest was best for his fitness.

Clint Dempsey and an 18-year-old Christian Pulisic celebrate a USMNT goal against Honduras in 2017. (David Madison / Getty Images)

Does Dempsey, who spent 15 seasons playing in the English Premier League and in MLS, believe that USMNT players in Europe have a uniquely difficult task to balance club and country responsibilities?“No matter what league you’re in, it’s going to be difficult,” he said. “The things that are difficult about MLS are the travel and the time changes. When I played MLS, you weren’t flying privately. People were asking you, ‘Are you a college team? Do you play lacrosse?’. We were sitting in middle seats, sitting back next to the toilet. But then in Europe at the top teams, you’re playing in more competitions and it is a grind to go back and forth to the States.”He does, however, point out that the USMNT has recently avoided the most grueling travel because it does not need to qualify for the home World Cup.“That is the hardest traveling,” he said, “because normally you come in, you play two games, you’re going to Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Mexico, Jamaica, then you fly back to Europe on Thursday, you get there Friday morning, you have a game either Saturday or Sunday.”And what of the soap opera that has surrounded the team this summer, with former players offering strong opinions and current players hitting back?“It shows there’s a climate where people care,” Dempsey said. “I’m not trying to be a part of the drama. You’re asking me my opinion and I’m giving you how I look at things. In terms of the Christian situation, all I think is U.S. Soccer could have been more unified about how that gets out to the public.

“Playing for your country in a tournament, I tell you what my mentality was. I am not saying whether someone’s doing right or wrong. Everybody has a right to their opinion — it shows that people do care, but you never want to get in a situation where it’s tit for tat. Everybody wants the same thing: to have the U.S. playing well. We want to be excited. I’d like to focus more on the positives of the new faces. They’re gonna be in this Gold Cup, they’re gonna push to get into the lineup and get this fanbase and team back on track to being inspired because we are one year out from the greatest tournament.”Dempsey, who was speaking at the mid-point of the Gold Cup group stage, said that following the breakthrough of young USMNT players who carried the team to the knockout stage of the World Cup in 2022, the team’s development has appeared to be at “a little bit of a stand still.”He said: “You’ve had this new talent, you’ve developed it so far, but then where’s this next young talent that’s coming up and pushing these guys and having competition for spots? That would create an environment where you have to look over your shoulder and be on your game to make sure that someone’s not taking your spot.”Dempsey was talking to The Athletic as part of an initiative led by Abbott, a healthcare firm that has partnered with Real Madrid as part of the Abbott Dream Team program, which will see youngsters try out in cities across the U.S. for the opportunity to then travel to Spain to train under Real Madrid coaches and learn about sports nutrition from the club’s medical team. Dempsey says the tryouts are available to 18- and 19-year-old boys and girls. “If you have the right eyes watching you, the sky is the limit,” Dempsey said. “A buddy of mine, José Torres, he’s from Longview, Texas. He played Hispanic leagues on Sunday, but through his play in Hispanic leagues, this allowed him to get a trial in Mexico with a Liga MX team and he was able to make it.”More broadly, the program is part of Abbott’s and Real Madrid’s ongoing “Beat Malnutrition” campaign to provide nutrition education and malnutrition screening to children in 12 countries around the world.

Clint Dempsey says the example of ex-USMNT midfielder José Francisco Torres shows the value of increased developmental opportunities. (Misael Montaño / LatinContent via Getty Images)

Last weekend, during a conversation at Fanatics Fest in New York, FIFA president Gianni Infantino criticized the “pay-to-play” model for many young soccer players in the U.S., saying, “For children, it must be free to play football.” When speaking to The Athletic before Infantino’s intervention, Dempsey said there is room for improvement.“My son is in an MLS academy and you don’t have to pay to play,” Dempsey said. “If you’re good enough, it doesn’t matter where you come from, what your background is, that is covered. For the players in rural areas or inner cities that are not around MLS teams, it is a lot more difficult. It is a financial strain, and my family went into debt doing that. I didn’t have a college fund growing up. It was, ‘How bad do you want something in life? What are you willing to risk? How hard are you willing to work?’. Nothing’s perfect, things need to get better. We need to make it easier for people who are less fortunate to have the chance to go chase their dreams. Hopefully, that changes, but it’s just so difficult to fix everything. “It’s not fair. And I’m not saying that I want families to do the path I did. Everybody has a different story and a different path. There needs to be ways to figure out for the people that can’t afford it to get the better coaching and the platform to try to take their game to the next level. I’m on board with that 100 percent.”(Top photo: Omar Vega / Getty Images)

Emma Hayes’ ‘astronomical’ year as USWNT head coach – but this is only the first step

Colorado , United States - 26 June 2025; United States head coach Emma Hayes and Michelle Cooper of United States after the women's international friendly match between the USA and Republic of Ireland at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, Colorado, USA. (Photo By Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

By Tamerra Griffin June 27, 2025


COMMERCE CITY, Colo. — On June 1, 2024, as the U.S. women’s national team prepared to take the field against South Korea in Colorado, head coach Emma Hayes stared down a stadium tunnel swirling with sound. Staff were banging on the walls to hype up the players, and fans roared with similar anticipation. The heat and humidity, combined with the mile-high altitude, were brutal — especially for an Englishwoman who hadn’t known how to properly hydrate for those conditions. It was Hayes’ first game since accepting the position in November 2023, and she was nervous. She’d spent 12 years managing Chelsea and had no idea how an American crowd would respond to someone “from the outside,” as she described it. Still healing from the disappointment of their earliest World Cup exit in USWNT history, her new side were also less than two months out from the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. Hayes felt “desperate to do well for the team.” They beat South Korea 4-0, with two goals each from forward Mallory Swanson and defender Tierna Davidson. Seventy days later on August 10, the USWNT became Olympic gold medalists with a 1-0 victory over Brazil. And in the year since her nerve-wracking debut, Hayes has uprooted and overhauled the women’s program in ways that feel revolutionary, inviting more new players to national team camp than any coach before her and revamping the U-23s to create a sustainable and cohesive pipeline of talent. Now, with two more years to go until the 2027 World Cup in Brazil, Hayes remains a champion of development and deliberation, choosing process over perfection as she continues to build. Thursday night offered a poetic checkpoint for what has changed and what has remained the same. Hayes and the USWNT were back at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, and the final score was again 4-0, this time against a depleted Republic of Ireland. Swanson is pregnant and Davidson is out with an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury; this match instead featured goals from defender Avery Patterson, midfielders Sam Coffey and Rose Lavelle, and forward Alyssa Thompson.Coffey and Lavelle, who just returned to USWNT camp after an ankle injury kept her away since December, are two of just four players on Hayes’ first roster as head coach who also played against Ireland. It’s a testament to Hayes’ dedication to experimenting and implementing a new standard for who receives an invitation to camp.Though Coffey earned her first USWNT call up in September 2022 under former head coach Vlatko Andonovski, she did not make the 2023 World Cup roster. Since Hayes stepped in, she has been a consistent fixture for the national team at No. 6. Thursday’s match against Ireland was her 36th cap and she scored her third goal for the United States.“She’s had such a profound impact on me as a person and a player,” Coffey said of Hayes after Thursday’s match. “I think she, in many ways, has just given me such confidence and belief in myself to know what I can do and to help the team in any way possible. I think the amount that she’s done in a year is astronomical.”

Hayes and Coffey during the former’s first game in charge of the USWNT last June. (Brad Smith/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

Coffey added that she and her teammates “still have so much that we want to do in so many ways.”“We want to grow and every camp, every game we have is just another step that we get to take together,” she added, “and so we’re loving her.”Thompson’s journey with the national team has been similarly nonlinear, even under Hayes. While she made Andonovski’s World Cup roster, she seldom played, and was not chosen by Hayes to compete for an Olympic medal in Paris. Her standout club performances since with Angel City in the NWSL earned her another invitation, and she has since solidified her spot on the USWNT.“I feel like I’ve grown so much as a player,” Thompson said after the game Thursday night of Hayes’ impact. “I’m just understanding the game more. In the beginning, there was a lot of information that I wanted to take in, and now I’m really understanding it. I feel like it comes a little bit second nature. Just being able to keep implementing things and working on my game really helped and it came from Emma coming in and just helping our team in that way.”Hayes was similarly effusive in her post-match press conference.“I know you’re probably bored of me, but I just love them all,” she said. “I said to them today, I don’t want them to think that I take for granted the trust that they place in me to coach them. I’m so grateful for how vulnerable they are to let me do that and, yeah, I just love them.”One year into the job, Hayes has called up 27 players to the senior team — which, of course, required tough decisions and frank conversations with those who lost their spots. Hayes’ first major decision came when she announced her 18-player roster for the Olympics, which did not include USWNT legend Alex Morgan. Her omission marked the first time since 2008 that Morgan would not compete with the U.S. in a major tournament.It was a ripping off of a band-aid that sent shockwaves through the world of women’s soccer and made clear the extent to which Hayes was willing to endure discomfort in order to manifest her vision. Morgan announced her second pregnancy and retirement last September, having played no part in the U.S.’s gold medal run.

Morgan’s last game for the U.S. came over a year ago and is no longer part of the picture (C. Morgan Engel/Getty Images)

And Hayes kept tinkering. Sometimes it was out of necessity as a result of injuries or pregnancies, but largely to ensure players were in the best environments for their growth. The Olympic group has not all played together since leaving France, and two of those gold medalists, Korbin Albert and Jaedyn Shaw, have recently been moved to the U-23s to continue learning.“It’s a reminder that you have to develop a playing pool that’s capable, and when you’re facing top opponents across the world that have Champions League experience, they have Nations League experience, they have cap accumulation (with the) under-20s, under-17s, we have a lot of catching up to do and to close that gap,” Hayes said. “Our program has been really clear, especially with the introduction of our under-23 program.”Hayes would have been justified in coasting after last summer’s accomplishment, at least for a little while; winning medals in major international tournaments affords you that. But if anything, she’s become more dogmatic about the changes she wants to implement, the gaps she seeks to close between starters and bench players on the senior year, and also between the senior team and U-23s.“I feel like we’re back on track, but I will urge caution with it — and I say that because I’m so respectful of what England and Spain and Germany and Brazil in particular are doing in the global game. There is no gap between one, two, three, four, five in the world,” Hayes said Wednesday.“We have to make every moment count for us to put ourselves in the best place possible to compete.”

USWNT’s Rose Lavelle records a goal and assist in first game back, helping to defeat Ireland 4-0


COMMERCE CITY, COLORADO – JUNE 26: By Meg Linehan

June 26, 2025Updated June 27, 2025
Rose Lavelle scored and provided an assist in her first game for the U.S. women’s national team in 2025, after a long injury layoff following an ankle surgery at the beginning of the year. “Firstly, we’re all delighted for Rose. There’s only one Rose Lavelle — that really is both on and off the field, as a character, as a football player, as a human being,” U.S. head coach Emma Hayes said after the game. The U.S. cruised to a 4-0 victory over Ireland in Commerce City, Colo., with two first half goals from defender Avery Patterson, which Lavelle assisted, and midfielder Sam Coffey. The final dagger came from forward Alyssa Thompson in front of a crowd of 18,504 at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park. For Lavelle, it was her 25th international goal, scored in her 111th appearance for the national team. In a twist, she scored it with her right foot, not her preferred left. “Rose’s goal was sublime, in every way, shape and form,” Hayes said. “It was exactly what we’d asked for at halftime.” The midfielder only recently returned to play for Gotham FC in the NWSL, managing a total of 71 minutes across three matches so far this season. Thursday, Hayes subbed her off in the 59th minute as she continues to return to full fitness.
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Lavelle wasn’t the only one shining for the U.S. in this first game of the international window. Patterson, starting at right back for her fifth cap and third start for the national team, has made a strong case for herself in this lengthy period of evaluation under Hayes in 2025. “Avery is taking steps in the right direction. She’s a threat from deep spaces, stepping into midfield, whether she’s going inside, outside,” Hayes said. “Her combinations with Michelle (Cooper) on that side, I thought were productive. Didn’t get tested enough defensively, where I think she has to grow the most, but she’s a great learner and a great listener.” While Patterson has already scored three goals for the Houston Dash, Thursday’s opener was her first on the international stage. Coffey also continued her scoring ways for the U.S., tallying her third international goal before halftime. Lavelle was also involved in the build-up of Coffey’s goal, with her pass leading to Thompson’s assist. Finally, Thompson added the fourth in the 63rd minute, cutting back across the Ireland defense and putting the ball on her right foot for a curling shot. The game also saw a continuation of debuts from Hayes, with three more Thursday night. Goalkeeper Claudia Dickey of Seattle Reign FC and left back Lilly Reale of Gotham FC earned starts in Colorado. Reign defender Jordyn Bugg also earned her first cap, subbing on late in the second half for captain Naomi Girma. Dickey was debut No. 20 for Hayes, Reale No. 21, and Bugg No. 22. Hayes and the USWNT head to Cincinnati next for a second match against Ireland, satisfied not just with their performance Thursday, but with more exploration and proof of the depth of the U.S. pool. (Photo: Ray Bahner / Getty Images)

Why every round of 16 team will, won’t win Club World Cup

  • Bill ConnellyJun 27, 2025, 08:31 AM ET

I’m not going to lie: I’ve really enjoyed the FIFA Club World Cup. And that’s a strange thing to say considering virtually every negative thing anyone has said about the competition has been correct. The venues have indeed been too big, making decent good crowds look paltry in cavernous environments, and one of the scourges of 21st century business, dynamic pricing, has backfired in plenty of instances.The European teams can claim both fatigue and rust at the same time, having taken a few weeks off after a grueling campaign before facing teams in midseason form (and fitness) from other continents. Stars like Paris Saint-Germain‘s Ousmane Dembélé and Real Madrid‘s Kylian Mbappé haven’t been involved. The heat and weather have been ridiculous, and the decision to have the most marketable European teams playing in the afternoon — prime time in Europe — in cities like Miami and Charlotte, is questionable at best.(This says nothing of Juventus‘ White House visitAntonio Rüdiger‘s claims of racist abuse and all the other undercurrents weighing down virtually every pastime or aspect of society at the moment.)

Editor’s Picks

However, rust, weather, stadium size, world geopolitics … none of that is the fault of the South American teams that absolutely came to play over the last couple of weeks, or the fan bases that have followed them around this sweltering country. Or the marquee names (Manchester City‘s Erling Haaland, Real Madrid’s Vinicius Junior, Inter Miami’s Lionel MessiBayern Munich‘s Michael Olise and Kingsley Coman, Juventus’ Randal Kolo Muani), familiar old stars (Benfica‘s Ángel Di María and Nicolás Otamendi, River Plate’s Marcos Acuña) or exciting lesser-knowns (Mamelodi Sundowns‘ Lucas Ribeiro Costa, Inter Miami’s Oscar Ustari, Botafogo’s Alexander Barboza) who shined in the group stage.

We saw PSG and Chelsea fall to South American counterparts (Botafogo and Flamengo). We saw Inter Miami take down a team (Porto) that was in the UEFA Champions League knockout rounds last year. We saw some electric environments for matches like Bayern Munich vs. Boca Juniors, and we saw nonsense of the best kind as eight goals were scored in the second half of Group A’s final two matches (three in Inter Miami vs. Palmeiras, five in Al Ahly’s 4-4 draw with Porto) and after both teetering on the brink of elimination, both Palmeiras and Inter Miami advanced.

And, we’re only getting started. The knockout rounds begin on Saturday, and while European favorites could reign from here, let’s take a look at each remaining contender and why they might or might not lift the strange, golden Club World Cup trophy in a few more weeks.


Al Hilal logoAl Hilal

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +5000 (equivalent to 2.0%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.4%
How they got here: tied Real Madrid (1-1), tied RB Salzburg (0-0), def. Pachuca (2-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Manchester City (June 30, 3 p.m. ET, Orlando)

Why they will win it all: Defend and counter. A number of underdogs in this tournament have proven excellent at playing good, old-fashioned organized defense. Al-Hilal are no exception, and that shouldn’t be a surprise: They have 2022 World Cup hero Yassine Bounou in goal and former Premier Leaguers in front of him in center-back Kalidou Koulibaly and defensive midfielder Rúben Neves. All three have been outstanding thus far, with Bounou saving 87% of shots on goal, Koulibaly leading the team with 42 defensive interventions and Neves leading the team in both ball recoveries, progressive passes and progressive carries. (He has a goal and an assist, as well.)

Throw in veteran fullbacks Renan Lodi and João Cancelo, plus some relentless attacking work from Marcos Leonardo and the forever-intense Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, and you have a team that allowed only one goal in three games (first), kept at least two defenders between shot and goal on 88% of opponents’ shot attempts (first) and produced 1.5 xG (third) and one goal from counter-attacks. This veteran team knows what it’s doing.

Why they won’t: Poor shot quality. I called Al-Hilal’s attackers “relentless” and “intense” above, and that’s accurate. But you can’t really call them “accurate.” Leonardo and Milinkovic-Savic have combined for one goal from shots worth 3.3 xG; maybe they were just saving all their great strikes for the knockout rounds, but when you rank 20th in the competition in shots per possession (0.11) and you’re creating only 1.3 particularly high-value shots (0.2 xG or more) per match, you have to convert the ones you create.

Bayern Munich logoBayern Munich

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +500 (equivalent to 16.7%) | Title odds, per Opta: 11.2%
How they got here: def. Auckland City (10-0), def. Boca Juniors (2-1), lost to Benfica (1-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Flamengo (June 29, 4 p.m. ET, Miami)

Why they will win it all: They take all the shots. No matter the manager, no matter the season, Bayern suffocate overwhelmed opponents. In the Champions League last season, they were second in shots per possession and first in shots allowed per possession. In the Bundesliga, they were first in both categories. They tilt the pitch, they counter-press, and they keep the ball near your goal and far away from theirs.

Three matches in, they’re doing the same thing in this competition: They’re fourth in shots per possession and first in shots allowed. Granted, they’ve benefited from playing the weakest team in the competition (Auckland City, whom they outshot, 31-1). But in more cautious and physical matches against Boca Juniors and Benfica, they still attempted twice the shots and produced more than three times the xG. They completed 351 passes in the attacking third against Boca and Benfica while allowing just 48 such completions.

Manager Vincent Kompany attempted to rest key players in scorching heat against Benfica — Harry KaneMichael OliseJoshua Kimmich and Jonathan Tah all played only the second half — and it backfired when they fell behind early and Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin somehow made it hold up. But when the starters are on the pitch, Bayern is playing for keeps.

Why they won’t: We don’t know that their old defensive weaknesses are fixed yet. The high-risk ball domination that Bayern enjoy usually comes with occasional defensive breakdowns. In six draws and losses in last year’s Champions League, they still dominated in shot quantity, but looking specifically at high-quality shots (worth 0.2 xG or more), they allowed as many as they attempted.

When Boca Juniors tied Bayern in the second half in Miami last Friday, it came on a counterattack that produced a particularly high-quality shot (0.53 xG). Granted, it was a brilliant individual effort from Miguel Merentiel, but it was the exact flavor of goal Bayern tend to allow.

Inter Miami fans celebrate progression to Club World Cup knockouts

Inter Miami fans celebrate after their draw with Palmeiras to progress to the Club World Cup knockouts.

Benfica logoBenfica

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +4000 (equivalent to 2.4%) | Title odds, per Opta: 4.3%
How they got here: drew with Boca Juniors (2-2), def. Auckland City (6-0), def. Bayern (1-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Chelsea (June 28, 4 p.m. ET, Charlotte)

Why they will win it all: Angel Di Maria and Nicolas Otamendi have turned back the clock. Or I should say, they’ve continued to do so. The club’s worldly 37-year-olds played all but 16 of Benfica’s minutes in the group stage. Di Maria scored three goals (tied for most in the competition as of Tuesday afternoon) and ranks first on the team in chances created, expected assists from completed passes, shots on goal and even total touches. He’s relentless. And did I mention he’s 37?

Otamendi, meanwhile, stifled Bayern’s Harry Kane for a half and has been one of the primary reasons Benfica enter the knockout stage having not allowed a goal for 243 minutes. He’s first on the team in defensive interventions, he has won 81% of his duels, and, oh yeah — he’s also first on the team in progressive carries and progressive passes.

Goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin has been fantastic, too, and players like attacker Vangelis Pavlidis and defensive midfielder Leandro Barreiro have been strong. But two proud old veterans lead this proud old club into the knockouts.

Why they won’t: Their record against good teams … isn’t good. In the last 12 months, Benfica have played 10 matches against teams in the top 20 of the Opta power rankings. They lost six, drew two and won only two — and one of the two came on Tuesday against a Bayern team that tried to rest quite a few starters (and still generated far more opportunities) — with two draws and six losses. They scored more than one goal just twice. This is a nearly upset-proof outfit, but they aren’t going to be favored much, if at all, moving forward.

Borussia Dortmund logoBorussia Dortmund

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +3300 (equivalent to 2.9%) | Title odds, per Opta: 5.6%
How they got here: tied Fluminense (0-0), def. Mamelodi Sundowns (4-3), def. Ulsan HD (1-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Monterrey (July 1, 9 p.m. ET, Atlanta)

Why they will win it all: They’re playing their way into form. After Niko Kovac took over in February, BVB were basically the second-best team in the Bundesliga, tilting the pitch well, executing a high defensive line and proving capable of either counterattacking or generating danger from buildup play. In the U.S. though, they honestly haven’t really done any of those things. They’ve been passive defensively and have barely even attempted to counterattack (their 8.7 per game rank 27th out of 32 teams). Plus Serhou Guirassy, one of the streakiest finishers in the game, isn’t finishing well, with one goal from shots worth 2.2 xG.

Of course, they also went undefeated and won their group. And after a dreadful attacking performance in the opener against Fluminense, they scored four goals and generated 5.1 xG in their last two games. New addition Jobe Bellingham (one goal, one assist) is already a difference-maker in and around the box. The defense suffered breakdowns against Mamelodi Sundowns but held the fort well in the other two games, and their performance against Ulsan HD produced a +3.1 xG differential — they completely dominated, even if the final score was closer than it should have been. It seems as if they’re growing into the competition.

Why they won’t: They’ve got quite a bit of growing to do. Guirassy indeed isn’t finishing, the defensive breakdowns against Mamelodi were all-caps ALARMING, and Kovac wasn’t able to rest guys as much as he wanted in two games in oppressive midday heat. They’ve produced the results they needed, and Bellingham really has been exciting, but we’re still waiting for this team to look the part of a challenger.

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Botafogo logoBotafogo

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +3300 (equivalent to 2.9%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.4%
How they got here: def. Seattle Sounders (2-1), def. PSG (1-0), lost to Atletico Madrid (0-1)
Round-of-16 opponent: Palmeiras (June 28, noon ET, Philadelphia)

Why they will win it all: They sacrifice their bodies. Botafogo’s road to the round of 16 was laborious. They attempted 23 shots to opponents’ 62. They possessed the ball just 34.8% of the time — no one else under 35% has averaged even 1.0 points per game. But Fogo averaged 2.0 points per game and became the first team to beat PSG since the Parisiens became European champions. And they did it with pure effort.

Botafogo have blocked 36% of opponents’ shots (fifth most in the competition), and they’ve forced opponents to attempt 83% of their shots with at least two defenders between shot and goal (11th). They attempted 12.3 counters per game (11th), too, scoring the only goal of the match against PSG from a counter. Their attack is pretty one-dimensional, but Igor Jesus has been clinical: He scored the game winner in both wins, and from shots worth a combined 0.2 xG.

They protected that lead against PSG for 54 minutes with no breakdown, and knowing they would advance as long as they didn’t lose by three goals or more against Atletico Madrid, they made Atleti work for 87 minutes to score just one. This is some high-effort, high-degree-of-difficulty stuff.

Why they won’t: The god of xG will eventually turn on you. Their goal differential: +1. Their xG differential: minus-4.2. They’ve allowed just two goals from shots worth 6.2 xG. They are playing inspired and intense ball, and it is a delight to watch, but … you aren’t going to win four more matches while giving opponents so many more high-quality opportunities.

Chelsea logoChelsea

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Title odds, per ESPN BET: +1000 (equivalent to 9.1%) | Title odds, per Opta: 10.5%
How they got here: def. LAFC (2-0), lost to Flamengo (1-3), def. Esperance (3-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Benfica (June 28, 4 p.m. ET, Charlotte)

Why they will win it all: Depth and a strong possession game. Manager Enzo Maresca is used to dealing with a bloated squad and in this tournament, with its oppressive weather, bloat is a good thing. He has already played 25 different guys, with only right back Malo Gusto topping 195 minutes (star Cole Palmer has had to play only 166). And despite the heavy rotation, Chelsea looked strong for basically five of six halves. They wilted late against Flamengo but responded to qualify easily.

No matter who has been playing, Chelsea have checked all the proper possession boxes: They’re sixth in possession rate (63.0%), sixth in passes per possession (9.2), fourth in progressive carries (90.3 per game) and fourth in offsides drawn (3.0 per game), and all with the third-fewest possessions per game (69.0). They’ll have to beat Benfica without the suspended Nicolas Jackson, which isn’t optimal, but this is a relatively rested team playing the type of ball it wants to play.

Why they won’t: Cole Palmer is the wrong kind of cold (and the glitches remain alarming). You probably need your best player to play well to win four knockout rounds, and Palmer has been an absolute nonfactor in his two appearances thus far. In fact, going all the way back to Jan. 20, he’s played in 26 matches for club and country and has managed just one goal with five assists. Two of those assists did come in the Conference League final against Real Betis, but he’s attempted 75 shots worth 7.6 xG in this lengthy span and put just one in the net. That’s five steps beyond “finishing funk.”

Add Palmer’s struggles to a defense that glitched out for a bit against Flamengo (and had a pretty bad habit of allowing high-quality shot attempts while nursing leads in the Premier League), and you don’t have the most stable of contenders.

Flamengo logoFlamengo

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +2800 (equivalent to 3.4%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.5%
How they got here: def. Esperance (2-0), def. Chelsea (3-1), drew with LAFC (1-1)
Round-of-16 opponent: Bayern Munich (June 29, 4 p.m. ET, Miami)

Why they will win it all: They take all the good shots. Before manager Filipe Luís flipped their lineup quite a bit for their final match, having already clinched first in Group D, Flamengo allowed one goal in two matches, and it was triggered by a series of funky deflections. Meanwhile, they attempted seven shots worth at least 0.2 xG and allowed one. It’s hard to lose when you’re taking all the good shots.

Brazilian teams have been excellent in this competition, and Flamengo are Brazil‘s best team. They play the sturdy, box-filling defense we’ve seen from most of the South American teams in the Club World Cup, but they don’t spring forward into counterattacks — instead, they play sound, patient possession ball. They keep the tempo ultra-slow, and they whittle away until they create something of high quality.

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Leo Pereira leads a great defense, Giorgian de Arrascaeta (nine goals and four assists in nine Serie A matches) and Gonzalo Plata (two assists versus Chelsea) trigger a diverse attack, and now former Chelsea and Arsenal star midfielder Jorginho is linking the two together.

Why they won’t: A slow game doesn’t work as well if you’re trailing. Granted, they charged back from a 1-0 deficit to wallop Chelsea, but if they are to make a deep run in this tournament, they are only going to face better and better opponents, and they’ll probably have to come from behind again. That’s theoretically a lot harder to do when you play at such a languid pace and your entire game is based around patience. They’ve trailed for only 48 possessions in league play this season, too — we don’t really know how good their Plan B is because they’ve never had to show it.

Fluminense logoFluminense

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +5000 (equivalent to 2.0%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.4%
How they got here: tied Borussia Dortmund (0-0), def. Ulsan HD (4-2), tied Mamelodi Sundowns (0-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Inter Milan (Monday, 3 p.m. ET, Charlotte)

Why they will win it all: They defend their butts off. In league play, Flu haven’t created tons of great scoring opportunities, but they’ve combined quantity and quality in defense: They’re fourth in Brazil’s Serie A in shots allowed per possession, and they’re third in high-quality shots allowed (0.2 xG or higher).

Thus far in the Club World Cup … they haven’t created tons of great scoring opportunities, but they’ve combined quantity and quality in defense. Borussia Dortmund and Mamelodi Sundowns each scored four goals in their other two group-stage matches, but they combined for zero goals and 0.9 xG against Fluminense. Even at age 40, Thiago Silva can coordinate one hell of a defense in the back.

Fluminense are fifth in pass interceptions (10.0 per game), they’re sixth in duel winning percentage (54.5%). They’re taking the fight to opponents and winning. And they’re getting just enough from right winger Jhon Arias in attack — he has a goal and an assist and leads the team in chances created (eight), expected assists from pass completions (0.7), shots (nine), touches (228), progressive carries (26), fouls suffered (nine) and 1v1 attempts (15) — to tie it all together. Flu aren’t playing the most exciting ball in this tournament, but they’re not backing down from challenges either.

Why they won’t: Scoring is a good thing. They only did it in one of three games. Arias is doing his best and 37-year old German Cano, scorer of 40 goals just two seasons ago, had a lovely tiebreaking assist late against Ulsan as well. But it’s really difficult to see this attack doing enough to win four knockout games.

Inter Miami logoInter Miami

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +8000 (equivalent to 1.2%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.3%
How they got here: drew with Al Ahly (0-0), def. Porto (2-1), drew with Palmeiras (2-2)
Round-of-16 opponent: Paris Saint-Germain (June 29, noon ET, Atlanta)

Why they will win it all: Messi magic. As of Tuesday, there have been four goals from direct free kicks in the Club World Cup. They had an average pre-shot xG of about 0.07. But Leo Messi’s, from 23 meters out in the second half against Porto, felt like 1.00. The crowd buzzed as Messi was lining it up. Everyone expected it to go in, and then it went in.

Per the Opta power rankings, Inter Miami was the No. 4 team in Group A heading into the tournament, and it appeared that a Messi team was primed to exit a tournament in the group stage for the first time ever. But his free kick teed up an upset of Porto, and his work further from the goal against Palmeiras — he made 12 progressive carries, won five of seven one-on-ones and altered the defense’s center of gravity for 90 minutes. Inter overcame a rampant run of cramping to draw with Palmeiras and advance.

Beating PSG is probably too much to ask, but all it might take is a couple of moments of magic from a guy still capable of generating them.

Why they won’t: OK, fine, beating PSG is almost definitely too much to ask. It will take the aforementioned magic, plus further strain from a defense that has maxed itself out in terms of both skill and effort levels. Opta’s power rankings give Inter only a 16.4% chance of advancing and even in a game based so heavily in randomness, that feels incredibly optimistic.

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Inter Milan logoInter Milan

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +1800 (equivalent to 5.3%) | Title odds, per Opta: 12.4%
How they got here: tied Monterrey (1-1), def. Urawa Red Diamonds (2-1), def. River Plate (2-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Fluminense (June 30, 3 p.m. ET, Charlotte)

Why they will win it all: They have numbers on their side. At first glance, it seems like Inter really struggled to get a foothold in this competition. They gave up a goal on Monterrey’s second shot attempt and settled for a draw, then gave up a goal on Urawa Reds’ first shot and needed two late scores to prevail. They couldn’t get on top of River Plate until a red card flipped the balance of the match midway through the second half. Stars such as Lautaro Martinez, Nicolo Barella and 36-year old Henrikh Mkhitaryan all had to put in more than 210 minutes to make sure Inter advanced properly.

Only the timing of opponents’ goals made these matches interesting, however; Inter attempted shots worth 7.2 xG and allowed shots worth only 2.3, but that +4.9 xG differential (fourth-best in the competition) produced only +3 in the actual goals department. That could bode well for them moving forward. Plus, Inter avoided some of the worst heat in the tournament with two evening matches and two in Seattle. That could also bode well.

Why they won’t: This doesn’t feel like the team that reached the Champions League final. Midfielder Hakan Calhanoglu is out, as are defenders Yann Bisseck and Benjamin Pavard. Forward Marcus Thuram got hurt against Monterrey, and midfielder Davide Frattesi hasn’t seen the pitch yet. This is a banged-up and rather experimental squad, with new manager Cristian Chivu giving lots of minutes to unproven youngsters like brothers Francesco Pio Esposito and Sebastiano Esposito.

The numbers suggest they’ve been doing just fine, but this isn’t Inter Inter.

Juventus logoJuventus

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +3300 (equivalent to 2.9%) | Title odds, per Opta: 2.5%
How they got here: def. Al-Ain (5-0), def. Wydad Casablanca (4-1), lost to Manchester City (2-5)
Round-of-16 opponent: Real Madrid (July 1, 3 p.m. ET, Miami)

Why they will win it all: They’re hustling. Igor Tudor took over as manager on March 23 and safely steered Juve to a fourth-place finish with just one loss in nine league matches. They created a forcefield around their defensive box and hustled their butts off, allowing few passes per defensive action, blocking tons of shots and making the most of the ball recoveries.

Juve are hustling said butts off appropriately in the U.S., too. Even while nursing mostly comfortable leads that would theoretically allow them to ease off the throttle, they allowed just 8.5 passes per defensive action and produced 44.0 ball recoveries per match in their wins – they ranked third and sixth in those categories, respectively, heading into the match against City. They did allow a goal from a careless breakdown against Wydad Casablanca, but it was almost the only breakdown they suffered in those two matches. Meanwhile, though the City match got away from them, Teun Koopmeiners and Dusan Vlahovic both produced moments of opportunism in their goals, and Kenan Yildiz produced his third assist of the tournament.

Juve appear to be taking this competition very seriously.

Why they won’t: Hustling isn’t enough against good teams. In Tudor’s nine league matches, Juve played three solid teams (BolognaLazio and Roma) and drew 1-1 with all three. Combined xG differential in those three matches: minus-0.8. In attack, they couldn’t count on either dangerous counters or sturdy buildup play, and they got pinned in a bit more defensively. They weren’t dominated by any means, but they didn’t create many advantages.

Against Manchester City on Thursday, it was very much the same story, as City produced a 75% possession rate and attempted 24 shots to Juve’s five. High effort levels have made them just about upset-proof, but they probably aren’t going to be favored in any more matches moving forward.

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Man City logoManchester City

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +275 (equivalent to 26.7%) | Title odds, per Opta: 20.4%
How they got here: def. Wydad Casablanca (2-0), def. Al-Ain (6-0), def. Juventus (5-2)
Round-of-16 opponent: Al Hilal (June 30, 9 p.m. ET, Orlando)

Why they will win it all: They’re Manchester City. While the qualification criteria for this competition was rather murky, the general idea is that the teams in this tournament accomplished something particularly noteworthy between 2021-24. City were the best team in the world for a large percentage of that span. They finished only third in the Premier League and reached the FA Cup final this year, which by City standards was apocalyptic, but both the ceiling and floor remain ridiculously high.

And they sure looked like the City of old in the group stage: They scored 13 goals (most in the competition), allowed only two and produced the best goal differential (+11) and xG differential (+7.7) with the highest pass completion rate (92.8%) and most progressive carries (337). They’re doing all the things we expect City to do, and wow, did they trounce Juventus — a team that beat them last fall in the Champions League — on Thursday.

Why they won’t: We don’t know what we need to know about the defense yet. Out of 36 Champions League teams this past season, City ranked 32nd in shots allowed per possession (0.15), 32nd in ball recoveries per game (37.9) and 36th in duel attempts; the attack was fine and hogged the ball as well as expected, but without a healthy Rodri, the back half of the City lineup was terribly passive.

Three January defensive acquisitions (defensive midfielder Nico Gonzalez, right back Abdukodir Khusanov and center back Vitor Reis) and a June acquisition (left back Rayan Aït-Nouri) are among the many guys who have seen the pitch — as is Rodri himself — but Guardiola is still experimenting, and the level of competition is about to ramp up quickly. They only allowed 22 shot attempts in the group stage, but three were worth at least 0.2 xG (two of which were scored), and seven were worth at least 0.1. Results are inconclusive thus far.

Monterrey logoMonterrey

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +10000 (equivalent to 1.0%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.2%
How they got here: tied Inter Milan (1-1), tied River Plate (0-0), def. Urawa Red Diamonds (4-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Borussia Dortmund (Tuesday, 9 p.m. ET)

Why they will win it all: The high line is holding up. A lot of Monterrey’s relative success in Liga MX this season came from a fun combination of a high defensive line (they drew the second-most offsides) and a willingness to go mano y mano (third-most take-on attempts, most fouls drawn in the attacking third). That formula has thus far produced in the U.S. too: They drew 12 offsides calls in the first three matches (most in the Club World Cup) and suffered 42 fouls (third-most) and have generally prevented opponents from creating any rhythm whatsoever.

They scored only one goal in their first two matches — and it came from steely veteran Sergio Ramos, predictably on a corner — but allowed only one in three. Ramos (39) and Stefan Medina (33) have been note-perfect in the back, combining for 90 defensive interventions and a healthy percentage of the team’s progressive passes and carries. The attack finally contributed against Urawa Reds, too. This team knows how it wants to win games and has executed well thus far.

Why they won’t: The numbers eventually turn on you. As with Botafogo, the Rayados have done a little bit better than the underlying xG figures suggest they should have. Their draws against Inter and River Plate happened despite a combined xG differential of minus-3.1 (they allowed one goal from shots worth 4.4 xG), and while they’re about to play a Borussia Dortmund team that hasn’t been finishing particularly well either, relying on errant opposing shots to win four matches in a row is a tall ask.

Palmeiras logoPalmeiras

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +2500 (equivalent to 3.8%) | Title odds, per Opta: 0.9%
How they got here: drew with Porto (0-0), def. Al Ahly (2-0), drew with Inter Miami (2-2)
Round-of-16 opponent: Botafogo (June 28, noon ET, Philadelphia)

Why they will win it all: They wear opponents down. Winners of 11 trophies in the 2020s, Palmeiras nearly took down Chelsea in the 2021 Club World Cup final. Despite sending loads of high-level talent to Europe in that span, no Brazilian team feels more at home on a big, pressure-packed stage, and they showed it by winning Group A with a run of second-half brilliance.

This is a pretty retrograde attack: Palmeiras are third in the competition in cross attempts (29.0 per match), second in percentage of shots from headers (28.0%) and fourth in direct attacks (sequences starting in the defensive half and producing a shot within 20 seconds). But they’re still attempting more shots per possession than anyone not named Bayern (0.22), and they’re allowing just 0.09 per possession (eighth). In sticky, hot conditions, they keep the game wide open and wait for you to wilt. It’s working.

Why they won’t: Shot quality. Attempting almost 2.5 times more shots than your opponent will generally work out pretty well for you, but only eight of their 50 shot attempts have been worth 0.2 xG or more, and they’re 20th in the competition in xG per shot (0.14). After blowing a couple of golden opportunities in the opener against Porto, Chelsea-bound Estevao’s shot quality has regressed quickly, and Palmeiras have turned shots worth 5.3 xG into only three goals. (They scored a fourth on an own goal.)

If you aren’t taking great shots and aren’t maximizing the ones you take, you aren’t winning four knockout-round matches.

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Paris Saint-Germain logoParis Saint-Germain

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +300 (equivalent to 25.0%) | Title odds, per Opta: 20.6%
How they got here: def. Atletico Madrid (4-0), lost to Botafogo (1-0), def. Seattle Sounders (2-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Inter Miami (June 29, noon ET, Atlanta)

Why they will win it all: They’re the best team in the world. They were placed in a challenging group, Ballon d’Or contender Ousmane Dembele is nursing a hamstring issue, and neither Désiré Doué nor Bradley Barcola have accomplished much so far. And yet, this deep and energetic team is doing all the things a brilliant Luis Enrique squad is supposed to do — 73.4% possession rate (first in the competition), 11.3 passes per possession (first), 104.3 progressive passes per game (first) and, on the pressing side, just 6.9 passes allowed per defensive action (first).

They still have the best fullback duo in the game with Achraf Hakimi and Nuno MendesKhvicha Kvaratskhelia remains a nonstop menace on the left wing, Fabián Ruiz and Vitinha have been almost flawless in midfield, and six different players have put the ball in the net. Even with the loss to Botafogo, the best team in the world for the last six months has made it to the knockout rounds with minimal stress.

Why they won’t: They need to dial back in. The blowout win over Atletico Madrid was a statement of intent to open their tournament, but their focus has waned since then.

They indeed gave up a counterattacking goal to Botafogo and never created a particularly high-quality opportunity in the hour that followed. And in what turned out to be a must-win match against Seattle, they were slow out of the gate, allowing a high-quality opportunity to Jesús Ferreira in the 19th minute and actually losing the first-half xG battle. They dominated the second half and were never in trouble, but after that fifth-gear showing they’ve cruised along in second, and it can be difficult to reestablish your best form once you’ve lost it.

Real Madrid ogoReal Madrid

Title odds, per ESPN BET: +500 (equivalent to 16.7%) | Title odds, per Opta: 9.7%
How they got here: tied Al-Hilal (1-1), def. Pachuca (3-1), def. RB Salzburg (3-0)
Round-of-16 opponent: Juventus (July 1, 3 p.m. ET, Miami)

Why they will win it all: Talent. New manager Xabi Alonso has had about five minutes with his new squad thus far, and it shows. Real Madrid suffered a number of defensive miscues against both Al-Hilal and Pachuca and were lucky not to be punished more for them; they also had to play a man down for more than 80 minutes against Pachuca because of an early Raúl Asencio red card. Plus, Kylian Mbappé has been out with gastroenteritis. (He is supposedly going to try to be ready for the round of 16.)

They always have moments of individual brilliance to rely on, however. Jude Bellingham opened the Pachuca match up with a first-half strike, Vinícius Júnior had a goal and a beautiful assist against Salzburg, Fede Valverde scored twice, and even 21-year old Gonzalo García had two goals and an assist. Mbappe’s return should raise their ceiling even further, and it was already forever high.

Why they won’t: Defense. With center-backs Éder Militão and David Alaba and fullbacks Ferland Mendy and Dani Carvajal all still injured, Alonso has had to rely on a makeshift back line — he has thus far kept the back four the team is used to, instead of moving to the back three he prefers — and it’s been quite the chemistry experiment with newcomers Dean Huijsen and Trent Alexander-Arnold getting to know Antonio RüdigerAurélien TchouaméniFran García and others…

… and it hasn’t gone very well. Real Madrid currently rank 24th out of 32 teams in shots allowed per possession (0.15), ninth in xG allowed per shot (0.13) and, therefore, 21st in total xG allowed (4.7). Goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois remains awesome, but they’ve been lucky to allow only two goals, and that luck might run out as the competition levels increase.
How the heatwave has affected players at the Club World Cup and what the lessons are for the 2026 World Cup

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE - JUNE 24: Carlos Palacios #8 of CA Boca Juniors uses a sprinkler on the pitch to cool down during the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 group C match between Auckland City FC and CA Boca Juniors at GEODIS Park on June 24, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Richard Pelham/Getty Images)

By Sarah Shephard June 26, 2025


The heatwave that swept the United States in recent days caused concerns for players and fans at the Club World Cup. To try to manage the intense heat, players have covered themselves in ice-cold towels or placed their hands and feet in buckets of the stuff. Such was the heat in Charlotte on Tuesday that Harry Kane even dipped his head in.At Cincinnati’s TQL Stadium, Borussia Dortmund’s substitutes watched the first half of their game against Mamelodi Sundowns from the locker room rather than the bench to avoid the pitch-side heat. Dortmund coach Niko Kovac said he was “sweating like I’ve just come out of a sauna” after his side won that game in 32C (89.6F) conditions.After their game against Paris Saint-Germain in Pasadena, just outside Los Angeles, Atletico Madrid midfielder Marcos Llorente described the weather as “impossible. Terribly hot. My toenails were hurting”.In Philadelphia, Chelsea played in temperatures of around 36C (97F), which forecasters said felt more like 41C (106F). “It is almost impossible to train or to make a session because of the weather,” Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca told reporters on Monday. “This morning’s session has been very, very, very short.”But what exactly does heat do to an athlete’s body? And how much of a problem can it really be?Here The Athletic answers those questions and what it means for the rest of the Club World Cup — and the World Cup, which will be staged mostly by the U.S, again in June and July, with games also in the neighbouring countries of Canada and Mexico.What You Should Read NextExtreme heat at the Club World Cup: Players and fans voice concerns as temperatures soarA heatwave will hit the U.S. this week where players and fans at the Club World Cup are already concerned about the dangerous weather


How the heat is impacting players

Any physical exertion in hot conditions will cause the body’s temperature to rise. “We sit about 37C (98.6F) at resting,” says Dr Chris Tyler, an environmental physiologist from London’s University of Roehampton and an expert on heat stress in elite sports. “Most people get into trouble if they are two to three degrees warmer than that, so we don’t have much of a buffer.“It’s actually quite difficult to get the body that hot, but one of the ways to do it is to move quite quickly in hot conditions.” The most obvious consequence of that rise in temperature is an elevation in your heart rate. This happens, explains Tyler, because the body sends more blood to the skin to try to get rid of some of the excess heat (the reason why some people get very red-faced when they’re too warm).That leaves less blood in the core trunk of the body, and crucially, less blood in the heart, meaning it has to work harder to provide blood to the working muscles. That’s why doing the same exercise at the same intensity is going to be harder — and feel harder — in higher temperatures than cooler ones. The most obvious visual impact among professional footballers is their sweat response. They will start to perspire earlier and more rapidly as their body tries to cool itself down.

Kane dips his head into an ice bucket and laps water over his face (DAZN)

According to Geoff Scott, former head of medicine and sports science at Tottenham Hotspur, players lose a minimum of two litres (approaching four UK pints, over four in U.S. pints) of fluid per game playing in cooler temperatures in the Premier League. “When it gets really hot and humid, that can go up to about five litres of fluid over the course of one game,” he tells The Athletic. It’s not just water they are losing through sweat either, it’s electrolytes, too, and the depletion of essential ones such as sodium, chloride and potassium is a key concern. To combat that, Scott says that in the days before and especially on the day of a game, hydration is pushed at all opportunities to make sure players are drinking water and also sports drinks with adequate electrolytes. “It’s common now that teams will do sweat analysis on the players so they know which players sweat more and which ones lose more electrolytes in their sweat, and they can be targeted with specific drinks to make sure their electrolyte imbalances are addressed,” he says. A player who gets into the “dehydration zone” could suffer light-headedness, dizziness, fatigue and muscle cramps, but Scott says that, well before getting to that opint, there will be changes in their performance levels: “You tend to start seeing them reduce their high-intensity running, and very elevated temperatures tend to affect their technical skills too, so the quality can drop off. They start to fatigue faster, too.” While an increase in sweating can cause issues regarding dehydration, it’s also a good thing, because if it can evaporate from the skin, the perspiration will take some of the heat away with it. But, Tyler explains, in conditions where humidity is also high, a lot of that sweat won’t be able to evaporate because there is already lots of moisture in the surrounding air. “So players will be losing sweat,” he says, “but it will be dripping off them rather than evaporating, which will be dehydrating without taking any heat away.” If the rise in body temperature isn’t controlled, it can lead to heatstroke. “As the blood is all shunted to the skin, there’s less volume of blood in your cardiovascular system,” explains Scott. “And that’s the problem – your blood pressure drops. Someone out for a casual jog who is getting close to that would probably stop, but these guys can’t stop (during a match), so they’re at more risk.”


How players are adapting to the temperature

To cope with soaring temperatures, athletes adapt the way they perform. In football, the average distance covered is reduced during hot-weather games and the action becomes more possession-heavy, explains Tyler. “The good teams will adapt tactically. You see it in tennis as well, where good players will make the other players run a lot more. It’s the same here; if you’re Manchester City, you can play a very slow, possession-based game and let everyone else chase you for 90 minutes.”

Manchester City’s Erling Haaland at the Club World Cup (Patricia De Melo Moreira/AFP/Getty Images)

There is physiological adaptation, too, with the body making subtle changes to be more efficient in the heat. One of those is an expansion of the plasma volume of a person’s blood, meaning you end up with a greater volume of blood in the body than you had before. “Now you have more blood, so you can send some to the skin and maintain blood flow to the working muscles without needing the heart to pump faster,” says Tyler. “That means the heart rate won’t go so high.”As well as sweating earlier, what comes out of the players’ pores will also be different to normal, says Tyler, becoming more diluted, thus preserving essential electrolytes such as sodium chloride and potassium, which are lost through sweat.Those adaptations in blood volume and sweat composition can help decrease the strain the players are under. The only catch is that those processes take time.“How long they take is hard to say exactly,” says Tyler, “but it seems like players would need at least five to seven days to see meaningful adaptations. But even after two weeks, they are still making adaptations to that stress.”Given the short turnaround time between the end of the European season, late May for a lot of leagues, and the start of the Club World Cup on June 14, many of the teams involved won’t have had much time to acclimatise before travelling to the United States.Also of relevance is the fact a lot of the teams taking part in this tournament come from countries with typically cooler climates than their rivals from South and Central America, North Africa, and the Middle East, which makes the challenge even greater.Tyler, whose research focuses on human responses to extreme hot and cold environments, and specifically on how to minimise the performance impairments observed in such conditions, says that for an event such as the Club World Cup, athletes would ideally want at least two weeks of “heat adaptation training” before leaving for the host nation.This usually involves heat tents or heat chambers, which mimic the conditions players will face on arrival. Heat lamps can also be used inside these to recreate the feeling of the sun’s rays. Temperatures in the tents can range from 35-50C (95-122F) and the humidity rises from around 30 per cent to 80 per cent by the end of a session.It’s an approach England’s new head coach, Thomas Tuchel, used at their training camp in the recent June international window. With the side’s likely participation in next summer’s World Cup in mind, players were asked to go through fitness tests inside heated tents, allowing performance staff to analyse how each of them responds to those conditions, including analysing their sweat rate and sweat composition.“The idea,” says Tyler, “is to do their normal training (or as close to it as possible) while getting their body hot in a controlled, safe environment.” Over time, he explains, players doing this start to adapt physiologically to perform better in higher temperatures. Once they arrive in the hot climate itself, they can continue to adapt. Manchester City used their early training sessions in the States to try to speed up the adaptation, with manager Pep Guardiola holding long midday training sessions in the searing Florida heat at their base in Boca Raton, near Miami. Juventus have been scheduling training to match the kick-offs of their group matches, with their English defender Lloyd Kelly telling the media they had trained “the past 10 days in the hottest times of the day”.

Lloyd Kelly playing for Juventus at the Club World Cup (Francois Nel/Getty Images)

“Being aerobically fit is advantageous anyway,” says Tyler, “so if you’re an elite player, you probably have some more tolerance for the heat than if you were a non-athlete. “That could put teams like Auckland City (the part-timers from New Zealand) at an even bigger disadvantage, because they’re not professional athletes, so their players are less fit than some other teams.” World football governing body and Club World Cup organiser FIFA’s policy on managing the temperature for players during games is to implement cooling breaks when the wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT; an overall thermal-strain measure achieved by combining temperature, humidity, wind speed and solar radiation) exceeds 32C (89.6F) on the pitch. FIFA also said its medical experts “have been in regular contact with the clubs to address heat management and acclimatisation”, and that it was working with local medical authorities regarding heat management. From the players’ point of view, the Club World Cup represents a dry run for the national-team version in a year — a taste of what they might expect if they are among those taking part in football’s biggest competition. The challenge has been made clear at the Club World Cup: the toughest opponent might not be the team you’re facing, but the heat. The preparation for that has to start now.

(Top photo: Porto’s Rodrigo Mora after playing Al Ahly on Monday; by Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images)

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