3/26/26 US Men face Belgium Sat, Portugal Tues on TNT, World Cup Final 6 spots Qualifying this week, Miami out of Champs Cup Quarterfinals Set, Man City beats Arsenal Carabu Cup, Indy 11 win 2, Last Chance WC Tix

Around the World of Soccer

Sixteen Year’s Ago last week Clint Dempsey scored this wonder Goal for Fulham to beat Juve in Europa League – the biggest European Competition an American had played in to that point.  This is why I watch Inter Miami games when I can on FS1 or Apple – you just never know what Messi might do (oh Nashville came back and won to advance).  LAFC Advanced to the Champions Cup Quarterfinals with this Martinez screamer.  Check out these moves from Week 1 in NWSL. Love this story from US Soccer star Sophia Huerta about a Coach who had an impact on her life. I think this is why we old coaches- including THE OLD BALLCOACH -still coach.  How about this new Intro for the World Cup and this Huge Announcement. Speaking of the World Cup it is just 76 days away now — if anyone has access to tickets to the USA vs Australia in Seattle on June 19th – we are desperately looking for tickets to that game. We have games 1 & 3 in LA, Knockouts in San Fran or Dallas but we have nothing in Seattle. (Willing to pay/trade tix/we have Semi-Finals if the US gets there). Last Minute World Cup Tix Sales phase is Apr 1 thru FIFA.

US Men Face Portugal & Belgium In World Cup Warm Up on TNT, HBO
Sat vs Belgium 3:30 pm, Tues 7 pm Portugal

So the as we get down to the last 4 games before the World Cup — its time to show how far we the US has come under Poch as we finally play Top 10 ranked squads in Belgium and Portugal over the next week in Atlanta on TNT. I guess its time to see what we have less than 100 days out from the World Cup. Our front line looks good as forwards Balogun and Agyemang are on fire overseas and Pepi seems back in from at the 9. McKennie and Tillman continue to thrive in Italy and Germany respectively and Pulisic seems to have finally found his grove a little again. The real questions surround what Poch will do in the back – who are the back 3 or 4? Chris Richards for sure – but is it an aging Tim Ream and Miles Robinson or does Mark McKenzie or Trusty get the call? Jedi Robinson is back at left back – does he play the outside wingback in a 5 man back or in a 4 flat back? Who holds down the Dmid slots with Adams hurt yet again – Tanner Tessman and Roldan again ? or does Cardosa staring at Atletico get back in the mix? Where does Gio Reyna fit in this picture while not playing for club? So many questions – might be answered this week – or not? My pick the US playing vs Belgium with no Lukaku will tie them 1-1 I am thinking. I think Portugal – again without Renaldo could be a similar result – but let me set the Belgium game first.

US MEN DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (Club/Country; Caps/Goals)
GOALKEEPERS (4): Chris Brady (Chicago Fire FC; 0/0), Roman Celentano (FC Cincinnati; 0/0), Matt Freese (New York City FC; 13/0), Matt Turner (New England Revolution; 52/0)
DEFENDERS (9)Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 16/1), Alex Freeman (Villareal/ESP; 13/2), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse/FRA; 25/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 79/1), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace/ENG; 35/3), Antonee Robinson (Fulham/ENG;50/4), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 38/3), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 22/0), Auston Trusty (Celtic/SCO; 5/0)
MIDFIELDERS (8): Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 9/1), Johnny Cardoso (Atlético Madrid/ESP; 22/0), Weston McKennie (Juventus/ITA; 62/11), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough/ENG; 13/0), Gio Reyna (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 34/9), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders FC; 43/0), Tanner Tessmann (Olympique Lyon/FRA; 12/1); Malik Tillman (Bayer Leverkusen/GER; 26/3)
FORWARDS (6): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 56/9); Patrick Agyemang (Derby County/ENG; 12/5), Folarin Balogun ( AS Monaco/FRA; 23/8), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 34/13), Christian Pulisic (AC Milan/ITA; 82/32), Timothy Weah (Olympique Marseille/FRA; 47/7)

More About the New US Jersey Cool Commercial

USMNT and Bournemouth midfielder Tyler Adams revealed that the USMNT players told both U.S. Soccer and Nike that they wouldn’t partake in a photoshoot of the World Cup kit, unless they had some say in the design, following their disappointment in the 2022 World Cup kit 😯“The team wasn’t too fond of the [uniforms] we were going to be wearing [in Qatar], just because we didn’t feel it represented us necessarily and the country as we’d like. When you have an opportunity to represent your country at a World Cup … you just want to love the kit.” “For me, it was simple: I want something that’s timeless. I want to have that kit you look back at in 30 years and you’re like, ‘That’s still the best one.’ … It’s pretty straightforward: You have to have stars and stripes of some sort. They represent us perfectly.” “There was definitely a sense [Nike was] very, very uncomfortable with the [2022] situation, especially when you have 20-25 guys on a team saying they all hate the jerseys they’re about to play in. But there was a quick turnaround. They honestly welcomed the criticism and they brought us right into the loop to start the design process for the next ones.”“Weston, at one point, was coming up with some crazy designs that no one agreed with, just things that [defeated] the whole purpose of why we’re having these conversations. Guys, let’s just come up with a design that makes sense. At one point they’re showing us colors, and someone’s like, ‘Oh, I love that green.’ And I was like, ‘Get out of the room! Like, what are we doing here?’ But it’s good. It all came to the right spot.”I feel like we had more say than Nike had in it, to be honest with you.” 

Indy 11 Win First 2 Games

Indy Eleven completed a successful week with its second victory in five days, earning a 2-1 win over USL Eastern Conference rival Detroit City FC in the home opener in front of 9,357 fans at Carroll Stadium. Goalkeeper Eric Dick a former Carmel Dad’s Club, Carmel High & Butler Grad made three saves to earn the victory. The Boys in Blue travel to Hartford Athletic Saturday for a 5 p.m. match on ESPN+, before returning home for a pair Tues, March 31 vs Union Omaha in US Open Cup play and again Sat 4/4 vs defending USL Champs Pittsburgh Riverhounds. Flex Mini Plans include vouchers to be redeemed for any 2026 regular season home match. Call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com.

Caught a few U12 Games over at TPC with Carter N, and Korben D for the first time
Always Fun reffing with these 2 – Michael A and and Dan D at Grand Park Indoors.

World Cup Qualifying for Last 6 Spots Are Up for Grabs this Week

Six nations will join the 48-team World Cup field via this month’s playoffs

UEFA Path A bracket

  • March 26, 2026: Italy vs. Northern Ireland – 3:45 p.m. ET
  • March 26, 2026: Wales vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina – 3:45 p.m. ET (FS1)
  • March 31, 2026: Wales/Bosnia and Herzegovina winner vs. Italy/Northern Ireland winner – 3:45 p.m. ET

The winner of UEFA Path A will be a part of Group B with Canada, Qatar and Switzerland.

UEFA Path B bracket

  • March 26, 2026: Ukraine vs. Sweden – 3:45 p.m. ET
  • March 26, 2026: Poland vs. Albania – 3:45 p.m. ET (FS2)
  • March 31, 2026: Ukraine/Sweden winner vs. Poland/Albania winner – 3:45 p.m. ET

The winner of UEFA Path B will be a part of Group F with the Netherlands, Japan and Tunisia.

UEFA Path C bracket

  • March 26, 2026: Türkiye vs. Romania – 1 p.m. ET (FS2)
  • March 26, 2026: Slovakia vs. Kosovo – 3:45 p.m. ET
  • March 31, 2026: Slovakia/Kosovo winner vs. Türkiye/Romania winner – 3:45 p.m. ET

The winner of UEFA Path C will be a part of Group D with the United States, Paraguay and Australia.

UEFA Path D bracket

  • March 26, 2026: Denmark vs. North Macedonia – 3:45 p.m. ET
  • March 26, 2026: Czechia vs. Ireland – 3:45 p.m. ET
  • Tues, March 31, 2026: Czechia/Ireland winner vs. Denmark/North Macedonia winner – 3:45 p.m. ET

The winner of UEFA Path D will be a part of Group A with Mexico, South Africa and South Korea.

Pathway 1

  • Thurs, March 26, 2026: New Caledonia vs. Jamaica – 10 p.m. ET (FS1)
  • Tues March 31, 2026: DR Congo vs. New Caledonia/Jamaica winner – 5 p.m. ET (FS1)

The winner of Pathway 1 will be a part of Group K with Portugal, Uzbekistan and Colombia.

Pathway 2

  • March 26, 2026: Bolivia vs. Suriname – 7 p.m. ET (FS1)
  • Tues, March 31, 2026: Iraq vs. Bolivia/Suriname winner – 11 p.m. ET (FS1)

The winner of Pathway 2 will be a part of Group I with France, Senegal and Norway. (full stories below)

Man City Downs Arsenal in Carabu Cup

City flew by Arsenal with a little help from the Gunners Kepa’s howler to take a 2-0 win at Wembley in the Carabu Cup last Sunday. Does this mean trouble for Arsenal with just 6 games left in the Premier League Season?

Big weekend for Carmel FC 💙⚽️

🏆 2013B Blue – Indy Turf Invitational Champs (4–0)

🥇 2015G Blue – Union FC Invitational Champs

🥈 2012B Gold – Indy Turf Finalists

3 teams. 2 trophies. 1 runner-up.

Strong start to the season. Congrats teams and coaches.

TV Schedule – Games on TV

Thurs, March 26
1 pm FS2 Turkey vs Romania WCQ
3:45 pm FS2 Poland vs Albania WCQ
3:45 pm Fubo, Ukraine vs Sweden WCQ
3:45 pm Fubo Italy vs Northern Ireland WCQ
3:45 pm Fubo Czech Republic vs Ireland WCQ
3:45 pm FS1 Wales vs Bosnia WCQ
6 pm FS1 Bolivia vs Suriname WCQ
7 pm Peacock DC Power vs Tampa Bay Rowdies USL
11 pm FS1 New Caledonia vs Jamaica WCQ
Fri, March 27
3:45 pm FS1 England vs Uruguay Friendly
3:45 pm Foxsoccer.com Germany vs Switzerland Friendly
10 pm Amazon Prime Angel City vs Houston Dash NWSL
Sat, Mar 28
9:30 am ESPN+ Man United vs Man City WSL
12 noon ESPN2 Boston Legacy vs Utah Royals NWSL
2 pm CBS Denver Summit vs Washington Spirit NWSL
2 pm ESPN+ NY Cosmos vs Fort Wayne USL 1
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
4 pm CBS Portland Thorns vs KC Current NWSL
5 pm ESPN+ Hartford Athletic vs Indy 11 USL
6:30 pm ION Seattle Reign vs Racing Louisville NWSL
8:45 pm ION TV San Diego Wave vs Chicago Stars NWSL
9 pm Univision Mexico vs Portugal (friendly)
Mon, Mar 30
12 noon FS2 Cyprus vs Moldova
2:45 pm FS1 Germany vs Ghana Friendly
Tues, Mar 31
2:30 pm FS1 UEFA WC Qualifier Playoff 1
2:30 pm FS2 UEFA WC Qualifier Playoff 2
5 pm FS1. Peacock Congo DR vs TBD WCQ 1
11 pm FS1, Peacock Iraq vs TBD WCQ2
7 pm Para+ Indy 11 vs Union Omaha US Open Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Weds, Apr 1
7:30 pm CBS Galazo Michigan Bucks vs Detroit City US open Cup
8 pm CBS Sports Net Colorado Springs vs Spokane Wash US Open Cup
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Fri. Apr. 17, 7:30 pm | IU vs. Notre Dame GRAND PARK
Sat. Apr. 18, 6:00 pm | Saint Louis vs. Xavier GRAND PARK

Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Complete 2026 World Cup schedule featuring match dates and start times
NWSL Schedule

World Cup Playoffs Were Immensely Moving 🎢  Men In Blazers Update
 
A nerve-filled Italy edged themselves past Northern Ireland. A lethal finish from Sandro Tonali (miraculously resurrected from the injury which kept him out of the Tyne-Wear derby) broke Northern Irish resistance and hearts. Italy will now travel to Wales-killers Bosnia and Herzegovina who won on penalties. Incredibly, the Italians are fighting their way into their first World Cup since 2014. As James Horncastle told us, their greatest opponent is fear of failure
Watch this: International football is the best. The quality of it may be lesser, but the emotional heft cannot be beat. Listen to the agony in the voice of eloquent Wales manager Craig Bellamy in defeat. 
ii. I found it so hard to watch the Republic of Ireland implode and cough up a 2-0 lead that I had to leave the Brewhouse Bar, so I did not have to watch their fans ricochet from light to darkness. Up 2-0 and soaring against the Czech Republic after 23 minutes, they fell apart to go out on penalties—a savage way to experience the nation’s fifth loss in six World Cup playoff fixtures. The true agony for my friend, Icelandic Ireland manager Heimir Hallgrimsson, was that this loss was self-inflicted. The penalty they conceded to let the Czechs back in was a moment of rash-self destruction.
I was watching the game with my friend Kevin Egan. He is flying back to Dublin for what he hoped would be Ireland’s World Cup qualification game. Instead, it will be one of the most depressing games in football history as the World Cup playoff losers now meet in friendlies next week. Ireland versus North Macedonia is going to be sadder than Tracy Chapman’s debut album. 
iii. It was incredible to witness Bosnia’s 40-year-old Edin Dzeko and Poland’s 37-year-old Robert Lewandowski deliver in their nations’ hours of need. Just as impressive, Viktor Gyökeres blasted an effortless hat-trick to propel Sweden past Ukraine. 
The United States will face either Kosovo or TürkiyeRun, don’t walk to look at this Güler assist that incapacitated an entire defense. That kind of quality is what we aspire to match.
AlsoThis French goal to destroy Brazil last night is the kind of level we will need to raise our game to. Stunning Ekitike finish, but the team play… wow. 🤩
iv. Here are the fixtures that will decide four of the six World Cup places. All seem too close to call:
Bosnia and Herzegovina 🇧🇦 vs. Italy 🇮🇹 (Tuesday, 2:45 p.m. ET, FS1)
Sweden 🇸🇪 vs. Poland 🇵🇱 (Tuesday, 2:45 p.m. ET, Vix+)
Kosovo 🇽🇰 vs. Turkey 🇹🇷 (Tuesday, 2:45 p.m. ET, Fox Soccer Plus)
Czech Republic 🇨🇿 vs. Denmark 🇩🇰 (Tuesday, 2:45 p.m. ET, Vix+)
v. The inter-continental bracket went to form. Jamaica beat audacious minnow New Caledonia, who won over the Mexican crowd with their tenacity from the moment they sang their national anthem, more than 7,400 miles from their island nation. The Reggae Boyz now face DR CongoBolivia overcame Suriname late and will face Iraq in the other final. 
Both the European and intercontinental playoff finals take place on Tuesday, March 3. I will recap all the glorious action in detail with the one and only Rory Smith on Wednesday. 

Games on Fox Networks FS1, FS2, Foxsoccer.com Thursday & Tues

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USMNT


USMNT players reveal what ‘strict’ but ‘loving’ Pochettino is like behind the scenes
ESPN Jeff Carlisle and Lizzy Becherano
Roldan: ‘Huge gap’ in U.S. midfield without Adams
Full breakdown: Pochettino names final roster before World Cup
USMNT roster: Pochettino sets stage for final World Cup auditions
USMNT’s European edge: The stunning rise of Freeman and Agyemang
|The latest USMNT Big Board: Who’s in and who’s out?
Ream: Derby move helped Agyemang to ‘grow up’
Is USMNT striker group the best it’s ever had for a World Cup?
Poch made exception for ‘special talent’ Reyna
Why Mauricio Pochettino wants the USMNT’s ‘right 26 — not the best’ for the World Cup
USMNT roster: Pochettino sets stage for final World Cup auditions

Ronaldo to miss Portugal games vs. U.S., Mexico
Lukaku to miss Belgium games with U.S., Mexico

U.S. striker Pepi’s Fulham move now off, PSV say
Transfer rumors, news: USMNT’s Robinson on Man United’s radar
Marsch: USMNT U-turn left me ‘devastated, angry’

World Cup

2026 World Cup playoffs explained: 6 spots up for grabs, teams involved and how to watch
Ultimate World Cup betting guide: Odds for every group, Golden Boot and winner
List: 2026 World Cup countries facing travel bans in the United States
List of countries set to play in their first-ever World Cup next summer
78 days to the World Cup: When Cameroon’s Roger Milla proved that age is nothing but a number
World Cup, Welcome to Zlatan: Ibrahimović Allows FOX Sports to Join Him

World

Carabao Cup final Result: Arsenal 0-2 Manchester City as it happened
France and Croatia up next! Share your predictions for Brazil 
Vinícius Júnior steps up and says he’s ready to lead Brazil without Neymar
Spain manager lavishes praise on Lamine Yamal, recalls ‘pain’ after Gavi injury

Cristiano Ronaldo’s son takes big step, trains with Real Madrid
Saudi giants? PSG? MLS? The race to sign Mo Salah is on
Life after Salah: How Liverpool could line up next season without the Egyptian King

MLS & NWSL

MLS Champions Cup Advancers
Every MLS call-up: March 2026 international window
Antoine Griezmann makes the move to the MLS by agreeing to terms with Orlando City
Nashville SC channel “relentless spirit” in Champions Cup upset of Inter Miami
Nashville level up, Charlotte break out & more from Matchday 5

NWSL TV Contract — MLS is on Apple TV and occasional FS1 or Fox TV Game on Weekends

GK

MLS: Best Saves of the Week
81 days to the World Cup: Tim Howard’s 16 saves vs. Belgium
Arsenal starting Kepa ‘backfired big time’ after Carabao Cup final howler helps Man City to trophy, says Jamie Redknap

Reffing

High School Rule Changes for 2026 Season
How to Become a Travel Ref 

Man it was cold last weekend at Grand Park for Sebastion’s (left) first ever game reffing.

The USMNT return to action this Saturday (3 p.m. ET, TNT/Peacock) against Belgium, before facing a Ronaldo-less Portugal on Tuesday night. This March moment has been hailed as “the most important camp” by players fighting to prove they are World Cup worthy. We bring an unbeaten-in-five record to play, while Belgium have not lost in four games on the run. Though without the injured Thibaut CourtoisLeandro Trossard, and Big Rom Lukaku, the Belgians have sufficient quality to test and probe with Kevin De Bruyne churning his magic alongside Jérémy Doku and Youri Tielemans.

From a U.S. perspective, there are so many questions about this team as we careen towards a World Cup in which we are desperate to prove ourselves to ourselves. Who will start at striker (Flo!)? Who will be in goal (Is Matt Turner making a late charge)? Is Gio Reyna, who has played just 26 minutes in 2026, our James Rodríguez—a player who soars in an international jersey in a way he does not in a club shirt? Can Christian Pulisic make the U.S. team his happy place, away from the frustration and tension he has been experiencing recently in Milan?  Above all, as Mauricio Pochettino openly muses about a return to England—it was fascinating that he chose not to say “Right now, I am thinking only of the U.S. and the World Cup challenge” here—how does that impact the culture and focus of the team? I will talk in depth with Clint Dempsey about all of this live on stage tonight and then we’ll break down the game in its entirety right after the whistle blows on Saturday. Come be with us. I am so excited to watch. I do believe this team has the talent to make a Morocco-like run, but we have to create a culture that is unshakeable and impermeable to outside reaction. We will learn a lot about ourselves this week and I can’t wait to unpack it all alongside you. MoreWatch this footage of Americans being interviewed at the 1994 World Cup. It is absolute gold.

What to know about the World Cup’s intercontinental play-off: How it works, favourites and moreThe teams and paths were laid out at a ceremony in November, which featured Wayne Gretzky Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

By Jack Lang March 25, 2026Updated 5:49 am EDT

What comes to mind when you hear the term ‘intercontinental play-off’? For most, the answer will involve some combination of the following: New Zealand, Australia, Uruguay, ludicrous away trips, fireworks set off outside hotel rooms, jet lag, penalty kicks, joy and desperation. These games were usually variations on a similar theme and followed a relatively settled pattern. Teams from different federations played two games — one home, one away — in order to determine who would make it to the World Cup. It was, in many ways, one of the purest expressions of the power of international football, overflowing with a kind of history-in-your-back-yard charm. For the 2026 World Cup, FIFA has decided to go in a different direction. We have, for the first time, a play-off tournament, taking place on neutral soil in Mexico, with two qualification spots up for grabs.


How does the intercontinental play-off work?

The tournament will take place between March 26 and March 31, 2026, less than three months before the World Cup itself. All the games will be played in Mexico, with matches held in Guadalajara and Monterrey. There are six teams from five confederations. Two of them — DR Congo and Iraq — were seeded for the draw because they sit higher in the FIFA men’s world rankings than the others. Those teams go directly to the finals of two mini-brackets. The remaining four sides must face off in two single-legged semi-finals to reach that stage.

How the draw played outMarcio Machado – FIFA via Getty Images


Pathway 1

Semi-final: New Caledonia vs Jamaica, March 26, Guadalajara

Most of the sides at this tournament were delighted to qualify, but not Jamaica. A home win against minnows Curacao would have been enough to send them to the World Cup proper, but they fluffed their lines in astonishing style, drawing 0-0. English head coach Steve McClaren resigned in the wake of that result.His replacement, interim Rudolph Speid, will have a solid defence to work with: Jamaica only conceded five times in 10 qualifiers (across two rounds). There are issues, however, including a perceived lack of professionalism at federation level and the feeling that the team would be better served by younger, hungrier players than by household names. It is worth noting, though, that Jamaica did hit the woodwork three times against Curacao.

The draw has been kind to them because New Caledonia are the rank outsiders in this qualifying tournament. That is not to diminish them; reaching this stage is an extraordinary achievement by any metric.New Caledonia is an island in the Pacific Ocean. It is a French overseas territory. Its population is below 300,000. Imagine Hawaii getting to the brink of a World Cup. This is more unlikely than that.It would be disingenuous to claim much knowledge about the football team. The players are part-timers. Some play in the local league, while others are dotted around clubs you’ve never heard of. Case in point: their key attacker, 37-year-old Georges Gope-Fenepej, plays in the French fourth division.On paper, it looks like an uphill challenge against Jamaica. What New Caledonia don’t lack, though, is heart. “The step is big,” coach Johann Sidaner told ESPN recently. “Maybe we have a one per cent chance of qualifying for the World Cup. But we will play 100 per cent to do it.”

Lying in wait: DR Congo, March 31, Guadalajara

The highest-ranked of the play-off teams, DR Congo narrowly missed out on direct qualification from the African system, then negotiated a tricky four-team play-off to book a place in Mexico.Their gritty, acrimonious victory over Nigeria outlined some of their assets. There was the togetherness to recover from going behind early, plus a level of control in possession that slowly tilted the match in their favour. The midfield, set up around the brilliant Sunderland youngster Noah Sadiki, is one area of strength. Another is the defence, anchored by the experienced Chancel Mbemba.French coach Sebastien Desabre is already a national hero, having completely changed the team’s fortunes since arriving in 2022. A spot at the World Cup would only enhance his reputation further.

Pathway 2

Semi-final: Bolivia vs Suriname, March 26, Monterrey

Bolivia are perhaps football’s most Jekyll-and-Hyde team, tough to beat at home but generally timid on the road. That is mainly down to the altitude factor: they host matches at over 4,000 metres above sea level, which makes life incredibly difficult for even the best teams. It was their strong home record that helped them see off Venezuela to finish seventh in South American qualifying.This is not a team set up to grind out results. Their defence is fragile and the midfield does not provide great cover. Marcelo Moreno, their attacking focal point for the best part of two decades, retired during this World Cup cycle. What Bolivia do have is a talisman: wriggly winger Miguel Terceros, who plays his club football in Brazil and finished qualifying with seven goals.Suriname, Bolivia’s opponents (and fellow South Americans, geographically speaking), came within a whisker of qualifying directly from the Concacaf region. Still, even a play-off place is the stuff of dreams for a nation who were languishing in 191st place in the rankings as recently as December 2015.Their ascent since then owes much to strategy at the federation level. A country that has lost many of its most talented sons — Edgar Davids, Clarence Seedorf, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink — to the Netherlands national team sought to reverse the pattern, trawling the Dutch leagues for players of Surinamese descent. The result? A few rumbles of discontent, but a more talented squad — and an ever-growing sense of momentum.Managed by former Ajax goalkeeper Stanley Menzo, Suriname like to dominate possession. Bolivia, who play in bursts, will probably let them do so. The latter will likely start this one as slight favourites, but do not rule out another chapter of the Suriname fairytale.

Lying in wait: Iraq, March 31, Monterrey

Iraq have not reached a World Cup since 1986 — their only appearance to date — and would have been forgiven for thinking the universe was against them during qualifying. They narrowly lost out to Jordan in the third round of the Asian process; the mini-tournament for the fourth round was then relocated to Saudi Arabia, whose national team happened to be competing.In the end, it took a dramatic, redemptive victory over the United Arab Emirates for them to reach this point.This is, in some ways, a side in transition. Australian coach Graham Arnold only took over in May, and the general feeling is he has yet to establish much in the way of an overarching identity, at least in tactical terms. What Iraq do have is a sense of unity and, in Mohanad Ali and Aymen Hussein, two proven international goalscorers.

By Jack LangFootball Writer

USMNT players speak up about what Pochettino the coach is like

  • Jeff Carlisle and Lizzy Becherano ESPN Mar 25, 2026, 06:44 AM ET

at first glance, descriptions of what it’s like to play for U.S. men’s national team manager Mauricio Pochettino are littered with contradictions. Among the words players use are “intense,” “passionate” and “demanding” — but those are almost immediately followed by words seemingly at the other end of the emotional spectrum. “Family” comes up, as does “likable,” even “loving.”

In many respects, that is the nature of coaching. When trying to extract the best out of a group of players, the emotions and approaches cover a broad spectrum, and can vary widely across individuals, or even from minute to minute. There are times to drop the hammer, and other moments to put an arm around the shoulder. And despite a coach’s best efforts, they can’t reach every player. That doesn’t mean they stop trying. Based on recent evidence, Pochettino’s approach appears to be working. The USMNT is unbeaten in its past five games heading into friendly matches against Belgium on March 28 and Portugal three days later.

Granted, this string of positive results consisted of all friendlies, but with the U.S. co-hosting this summer’s World Cup, and no World Cup qualifying slog to go through, the USMNT can play only the teams that are in front of them. To that end, the team’s trajectory is decidedly upward, and that is down in large part to Pochettino’s approach — and the players’ receptiveness to his methods.

“Above all, he just expects intensity, and he expects mentality — he expects energy,” midfielder Cristian Roldan told ESPN when asked about Pochettino. “I think those things are really contagious. So he’s very likable. He’ll hug you. He’ll have a conversation with you. He’ll yell at you. But in the end, it comes from a good place. And as long as you bring what he wants, you’re going to be in a good spot.”


– The latest USMNT Big Board: Who’s in and who’s out?
– Ranked: Every USMNT World Cup kit from 1990 to 2026
– USWNT transfer grades: Every American move assessed


A USMNT culture that’s ‘more strict’

It was clear when Pochettino was hired in September 2024 that things needed to change within the USMNT. Like the dark side of the Force, negative habits and emotions had slowly crept into the U.S. team. Some of this was down to having two back-to-back interim managers over six months — Anthony Hudson and B.J. Callaghan — to start 2023, and then opting to rehire Gregg Berhalter to the post later that year. The progress the USMNT achieved during the 2022 cycle wasn’t replicated in Berhalter’s second go-round. Complacency set in and the project stagnated. So, when Pochettino came on board as an objective outsider, he made it clear that there would be no guaranteed starters. Players would have to earn their spots, regardless of their perceived status within the team or from the broader public. Everyone would be held accountable. “No one’s special — when you come into camp, you’re a U.S. men’s national team player, you deserve to be here,” midfielder Tyler Adams told ESPN. “[He’ll] make sure that you get better each time you come into camp and feel worthy. But at the same time, it’s required from you to put what you’re going to get in and get out of it. So, every single camp guys have learned and adjusted to that.

“But I don’t want to say that he’s changed the culture — I’d say he’s brought the culture out of us. I think we’ve had that in us and it just took someone to bring it out of us, and I think he’s done a great job of that.” And how did Pochettino do that exactly? To hear Adams tell it, the approach — at least a high level — was simple. “I think he’s a little bit more strict in certain things,” Adams said. “I think that the standards that were set were clear from day one. You don’t break my trust. You don’t break the rules. You don’t disrespect one another or you won’t be around.” The adjustment did take some time. The performances at the 2025 Concacaf Nations League finals, when the USMNT fell in consecutive matches to Panama and Canada, were horrid. It led to multiple former USMNT players questioning the heart and desire of the current generation. Pochettino responded by not calling up certain players — most notably Weston McKennie — for subsequent camps. Due in part to injuries to the likes of Antonee Robinson and Folarin Balogun, but also what Pochettino called “football decisions,” the coach took a decidedly youthful squad to the 2025 Gold Cup. Twelve players on the roster had five or fewer international appearances. While the U.S. ultimately lost to Mexico in the Gold Cup final, the message was clear: Pochettino would call up the best team that worked together, not the best 26 players.

But the Argentine also showed patience. Every player encounters a coaching change at some point in their career. With Pochettino, there was an understanding that a different coach from a very different background would take some getting used to. “You understand that there’s going to be nuances and there’s going to be growing pains that come along with [a coaching change], but you also understand you have to have grace with one another,” U.S. defender Mark McKenzie told ESPN. “So I think that was the biggest thing, is recognizing that it’s not going to be perfect in the first moments. They started to learn us the same way we need to learn them.”

Is Mauricio Pochettino is under pressure to deliver success for USMNT at the World Cup?

The ‘Futbol Americas’ crew to debate if Mauricio Pochettino is under serious pressure to deliver success for the USMNT as they prepare to host the 2026 FIFA World Cup.Those growing pains now appear to have been overcome. But with less than 100 days until the World Cup, and just one more international window taking place, tensions are bound to rise as the May date for the World Cup roster announcement approaches. With Pochettino’s no-favorites approach, will fear be the predominant emotion during the run-up to the tournament?”I’ll be very honest: I think some guys will probably feel scared,” veteran U.S. defender Tim Ream told ESPN. “I think that’s a realistic and a real feeling that some guys will have.”The approach that you have to take is, well, your spot is never guaranteed no matter where you are. Someone’s always younger, faster, better, trying to take your spot. So how do you hold that off as long as possible? Well, you just keep working. That’s the way the sport is.”


The USMNT’s intense ‘die for the shirt’ approach

Pochettino’s culture of accountability bleeds into the training sessions, sometimes literally. For the players, the moment the boots go on, there is nothing else in the world that matters. Perfection isn’t expected but maximum effort, intensity and laser-like focus are. Training sessions become a test of mental endurance as much they are about physical fortitude.”What’s the most important thing? That pass is the most important thing. That touch is the most important thing,” said Ream. “That piece of communication — whether you’re telling somebody left, right, go this way, go that way — is the most important thing. And so when I [refer to] how demanding he is, he wants all of that.”In every single training session, as soon as you cross the line, your focus is nowhere but there. And that can be draining. Yeah — it can be very draining.” Pochettino expects that intensity to permeate every aspect of the training session. That includes reaching a level of physicality that replicates game-like situations. Yes, the tackles do fly in at times. “Whether it’s 11-v-11, a small-sided game, yeah, I’m going to get stuck in,” said McKenzie. “I’m not doing it to the point where it’s going to harm or hurt my teammate. But at the same time, I’m not just going to jump over his foot just because — I’m going to make sure I’m getting stuck in. “I want to win this tackle. I want to win this duel. So there’s ways to go about it without harming each other, but you want to have that competitive nature, competitive edge in trainings because that’s the way we want to play the game.” The thinking behind this approach is that it raises the level of the entire group.

“You have guys that don’t normally want to get into tackles, getting into tackles,” said Roldan. “Those are the things that are contagious.”

Is Pulisic right to hit back at USMNT criticism?

The Futbol Americans crew discuss if Christian Pulisic was correct to hit back criticism aimed at him from some USMNT legends including Landon Donovan.

In terms of the cadence of the sessions, they are intended to condition the players to what they will see in the game. Every drill, tactical session, gym workout or activation has a purpose behind it. The philosophy is that there is no wasted energy.

“[The drills] all form this tunnel to make sure that the final product on the field is the way we want it to look or the way that we are training for it to look,” said McKenzie.

It results in training sessions that end with the right level of utter exhaustion and the desire to want to do it again the next day. Pochettino’s cultural reset has had the desired effect.

“I think the overarching culture is that guys would die for the shirt right now,” goalkeeper Matt Turner told ESPN.


No longer ‘inmates running the asylum’

In the previous cycle, Berhalter appointed a so-called leadership council of select players, which the coaching staff used to take the temperature on certain issues. Under Pochettino there’s no such structure in place. Multiple players said the current setup makes for better dialogue where anyone can speak up.

“It becomes almost like the inmates running the asylum,” said Ream about the past leadership council. “So, it almost becomes where there’s a group of players who have a lot of the say, and then there’s a group who are a little bit hesitant. So they’re like, ‘Well, he chose those guys. I can’t say anything.’

“Now it’s like, ‘Guys, we’re all in this together.’ OK, yes, I’m the oldest. I’m not the loudest. So, Tyler [Adams], Chris [Richards], you want to be the loudest? Be the loudest, bro. It’s no problem. And it’s a give-and-take, but everybody feels empowered to speak and say whatever they feel — equal and in a positive way.”

While Pochettino prefers to leave players alone when they are with their clubs, Ream feels the level of communication now among players, even away from camp, is greater than it has ever been. The number of group chats has increased to the point that he says he “can’t keep up with them all.”

Make no mistake. Pochettino is still the boss, and hasn’t hesitated to publicly come down on players when he feels they’ve strayed out of their lane.

The USMNT’s biggest star and face of the team, Christian Pulisic, said he “didn’t understand” Pochettino’s decision to not include him in a pair of pre-Gold Cup friendlies, even as Pulisic said he was skipping the Gold Cup. Pochettino declared that as manager, he was “not a mannequin” and would make the decisions he felt were best for the team, regardless of what Pulisic thought.

Pochettino also later criticized midfielder Timothy Weah for a seemingly innocuous comment about how high World Cup ticket prices were, stating that it’s not a player’s “duty” to discuss such topics, insisting he focus purely on his game.

Whether that’s just Pochettino keeping his players in line and focused on the task ahead, or the hints of possible discontent, remain to be seen. The ultimate judge of Pochettino’s approach will be the results of this summer’s World Cup. But for now, there appears to be total buy-in from the players — at least from what they are saying publicly.


Pochettino getting ‘personal’ with players

Communication is arguably the most important aspect of coaching. It enables a manager to impart knowledge, build trust, increase motivation and improve performance. Entire locker rooms can be lost by saying the wrong thing at the wrong time.

Pochettino’s communication style can be divided into two parts: the way he speaks on the field, and away from it.

On the field during training, timing is everything. Knowing when to keep quiet is just as important as knowing what to say. In moments of struggle, there is benefit to seeing if players can solve problems on their own. Stop things too often, and the rhythm of the training session gets mangled.

“I think [Pochettino] does a really good job of knowing when to step in in a training session and say, ‘Guys, we have to have more. You need more. I need more from you’ or ‘We need to do this as a group better,'” said Ream. “And I think when you interject immediately when you see something wrong, I think if you do it too much, it loses its value.

“Mauricio, he has this innate ability to know when is the right time to step in and when is the right time to just watch and see.”

That dovetails well with what happens in matches. It’s a players’ game, and once the whistle blows, the manager only has so much influence. Oftentimes, it’s up to the players to figure out things on the fly. McKenzie likens it to an assembly line.”You’re going through the training sessions and you’re building that framework of the car, but the driver is going to be the one who ultimately is able to get the most out of that vehicle,” he said. “And that’s pretty much the picture I’d say of what Mauricio wants to do.”Away from the training ground is when Pochettino does some of his most important work. It’s where he can sidle up to a player, get details about their background and what’s happening with their home life. It’s a moment to communicate with a gentler touch rather than the heightened, competitive emotions of a game or practice. It gives Pochettino more data on what buttons to push with which players and when.”He’s wanting to have personal conversations. He’s wanting to know about your family,” Ream said. “He’s wanting to understand and know everybody on a much deeper connected level. Guys were a little bit uneasy about that kind of thing early on and now they understand how he operates and how he works.”Turner added: “When you have a coach that is intense, demanding, and loving, you take the time to get to know him, and you see what works communicationwise and what doesn’t work. Then, you try to learn a lot about each other and just open up.”The result is greater sense of connectedness throughout the team. During the previous cycle, there was lots of talk about the brotherhood that existed among the players. Now the word that gets used is “family” — one that includes not just players, but the entire staff as well.”That family side of it is huge,” McKenzie said, “and it creates an environment where the door is open for guys to have conversations and feel like you’re part of the team, whether it’s your first camp or whether it’s your 51st camp.”That closeness is preparing both the players and staff for the gauntlet of the World Cup, which starts for the USMNT on June 12 against Paraguay. If the USMNT performs as it hopes, the players could end up spending two months together in the intense pressure cooker of the sport’s biggest tournament, from the time their camp begins in May to the World Cup final on July 19.”It has to be that way because you’re all trying to do something incredible,” said Ream. “You’re all going to a tournament that’s going to be the biggest one in the history of this sport. You have to have those feelings. You have to be that close. You have to be that tight-knit. You have to feel all of that, because without that it doesn’t matter.”

National Writer: Charles Boehm

USMNT roster: Pochettino sets stage for final World Cup auditions

USMNT-MarchWindow-Roldan

Charles Boehm Tuesday, Mar 17, 2026, 05:06 PM

The US men’s national team are mere days away from their final gathering before a FIFA World Cup summer, this month’s high-profile friendlies against Belgium and Portugal at Atlanta United‘s Mercedes-Benz Stadium. There’s now just a matter of weeks to go before that massive, long-awaited tournament on home soil kicks off against Paraguay in Southern California on June 12. And still head coach Mauricio Pochettino doesn’t have full availability of all his players due to a wide spectrum of injuries and fitness concerns, with regulars like Tyler Adams, Diego Luna, Haji Wright and Sergiño Dest left off the March roster released on Tuesday morning.  It’s a recurring reality of the international game, by now familiar to ‘Poch’ and his staff. So, regardless of who’s in uniform, they expect the same high level displayed in last autumn’s wins over Australia, Paraguay and Uruguay, probably the team’s best outings under Pochettino. “Most important is to try to detect the right selection, to be very, very close to performing the way that we perform in the last two camps,” the Argentine manager told reporters after his squad was unveiled, noting there are 10 personnel changes from then to now. “October and November were a very good example that, maybe with a different roster, different names, but the team performed. And what we need to do is to have the possibility to see [that] again in this camp.” Representing the @USMNT in friendlies against Belgium and Portugal. 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/VghaPkPY9V— Major League Soccer (@MLS) March 17, 2026

Questions remain

When they congregate at U.S. Soccer’s brand-new National Training Center, the gleaming facility in exurban Atlanta named after chief benefactor and ATLUTD owner Arthur Blank, Pochettino & Co. must swiftly gather their firsthand evaluations of players they haven’t worked with up close in some four months, then fashion lineups that can stand toe-to-toe with two of Europe’s most talented contenders. Is the Tim Ream-Chris Richards center-back pairing still the best choice at the heart of defense? Can anyone challenge Matt Freese’s hold on the starting goalkeeper job? Will Weston McKennie translate his superb form at Juventus to the national team? Does Christian Pulisic remain the attacking nexus despite a recent paucity of goal contributions at AC Milan? And which strikers will make the cut? “It’s an art, because every single player is different and can add different things to the team,” said Pochettino. “We cannot follow some rule, because I think it’s not fair to judge all in the same way. But I think it’s two different things that we appreciate, and we expect for the players to add to the national team. “Because all are completely different – different character, different profiles, different quality, different talent.”

Last chance saloon

Peruse this roster, then consider the notable absences – which also extends to FC Dallas product Alejandro Zendejas, left out despite his ongoing productivity for LIGA MX giants Club América – and the difficulty of the numbers game facing the coach and his players becomes evident. The USMNT called in 27 for this month’s camp. Though it’s not yet official, FIFA is expected to limit World Cup rosters to 26 players. Poch previously said he’d prefer not to call anyone in for pre-World Cup friendlies vs. Senegal and Germany who hasn’t already made the cut for the tournament itself. The writing on the wall: A handful of those who’ll gather in ATL are staring at a final audition, in addition to the ongoing search for chemistry among those who’ll work together on the pitch. “Decisions in this roster, what I can tell you [is] that everyone is saying that maybe is the last opportunity, but it’s not closed,” said Pochettino. “It’s open. This is still open. It’s not the final roster. “You can see injuries. You can see combinations,” he added. “The combinations and the dynamic of the group can change, depending on the selection. That is so important for me.”

Key names return

Motioning with an invisible ruler in his hand, Pochettino admitted there can be no hard-and-fast, objective standard for inclusion, because each player carries their own context, their own skill set and relationship to the collective, above and beyond their current status at club level. That’s why New York City FC academy product Gio Reyna and Orlando City alum Alex Freeman are back with the group despite precious little playing time with their European clubs, Borussia Mönchengladbach and Villarreal CF, respectively. Luna didn’t get the call despite making his 2026 MLS debut for Real Salt Lake last weekend as he works his way back from a nagging knee issue. “The most important is what the player can add to the team,” noted Poch, “and if he can be the right player to help the team to perform.” Charles Boehm – @cboehm

USMNT Aims to Carry Over Energy From 2025’s Statement Finish

USMNT Aims to Carry Over Energy From 2025’s Statement Finish
USMNT Aims to Carry Over Energy From 2025’s Statement Finish

USMNT

Wed, March 25, 2026 at 6:40 PM EDT·

4 min read

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MARIETTA, Ga. – The U.S. Men’s National Team hasn’t seen action in more than four months, since November 18, 2025, and as the team prepares to play its first match of the calendar year against ninth-ranked Belgium on Saturday, March 28 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, USMNT players have reportedly been itching to pick up right where they left off.

The USMNT concluded 2025 on a soaring note, defeating then-14th ranked Uruguay at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. The U.S. mounted an energetic and fearless performance, scoring four first-half goals against the two-time World Cup winners en route to a statement 5-1 win.

The victory over Uruguay wrapped a highly successful back half of the year for head coach Mauricio Pochettino and his team. Under Pochettino’s leadership, the U.S. compiled an 8W-2L-2D record in its final 12 matches of the year and enters a two-match set against a pair of top-10 European sides riding a six-match unbeaten streak against World Cup-qualified opponents.

“Leaving that game, in the style how we won it, all of us wanted to come back and play the next week and continue on with it,” defender Auston Trusty said Wednesday. “It’s been three, four months since we’ve all seen each other. There’s been some time, but hopefully we bring that energy back and bring that momentum from leaving that game.”

The Celtic FC defender started the November win over Uruguay and made major contributions on both ends of the pitch. Trusty assisted defender Alex Freeman’s second goal of his brace and later helped set up midfielder Diego Luna’s finish in the 42nd minute.

Trusty was one of five center backs called up for March training camp, joining Tim Ream, Chris Richards, Mark McKenzie and Miles Robinson. Each player in that group is looking to vie for a spot on Pochettino’s 26-player roster for the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup later this year. Last week, the head coach used this position group to demonstrate the level of competition in this camp and emphasize that no player is guaranteed a spot on the World Cup roster at this point.

Players have reported knowing that roster spots are still up for grabs has created high intensity and competition in training. It’s also helped them stay focused and not look too far ahead.

“Individually, you have to do your thing, play your game, and put yourself in the best position to get stuff for the team,” Trusty said. “Also while you’re on the team, while you’re in the squad, in camp, it’s [about] being the teammate that’s working hard during training, supporting staff, supporting the players around you, and really giving it your all.”

Another center back in the mix is Robinson, who has earned 38 caps for the U.S. Men’s National Team in his career. The two matches this week in Atlanta marks Robinson’s return to the same training site and stadium where he began his professional soccer career. In 2017, Robinson was the first MLS SuperDraft pick in Atlanta United history, going No. 2 overall out of Syracuse. The center back played seven years at the club, making 123 regular season appearances and winning the 2018 MLS Cup with the 5-Stripes, before moving on to FC Cincinnati.

“First and foremost, I’m very grateful to be back and representing the stars and stripes here,” Robinson said. “Atlanta definitely did a lot for me, in terms of my career.”

The most-capped center back in March camp, Ream, described earlier this week the importance of playing loose and confident, to not feel like your knuckles are turning white from such a tight grip. His two teammates on the backline both agreed that this moment heading into the two Atlanta matches is about staying focused on the present moment and making the most of the opportunities in front of you.

“Every day, every game, every training session is to put itself in position to make that spot, make that position for the team to be one of the key players,” Trusty said.

“It’s about understanding that every day is a mission,” Robinson said. “You have to compete at your best, recognizing that you have to be coachable. You have to understand what Poch wants from you but also have that mentality to be focused in every aspect of the game. Keep as many clean sheets as possible and do the most you can in any opportunity that you get.”

Why Mauricio Pochettino wants the USMNT’s ‘right 26 — not the best’ for the World Cup

Steven GoffContributing writer

Wed, March 25, 2026 at 7:08 PM EDT·

MARIETTA, Ga. — In the two months before he finalizes his U.S. World Cup roster, Mauricio Pochettino will weigh factors that go beyond soccer ability.Without pure talent, of course, the Americans will not go very far in the 48-team tournament unfolding this summer across North America. Accordingly, Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and many other regulars are sure bets for a 26-man squad revealed May 26.But Pochettino has also said he will select “the right 26 — not the best; the right 26.”In other words, he is looking to curate a team that functions well both on and off the field — one that will fortify bonds over at least five consecutive weeks at hotels, on buses and jets, and handles the searing pressure of playing in the sport’s greatest spectacle on home soil.The last thing Pochettino wants is a breach like the one involving Gio Reyna and, by extension, Gregg Berhalter’s entire unit at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. Over the tournament’s history, multiple teams, notably France in 2010, have been knocked off track by bad chemistry or preventable incidents.“Yes, you want great players who are going to make great plays within the game,” Brad Guzan, a reserve goalkeeper for the 2010 and 2014 U.S. World Cup teams, told Yahoo Sports. “But the reality is probably not everyone is going to see minutes, and if that’s the case, you need to make sure they’re going to be able to fit within a team environment and be able to help and contribute in other meaningful ways.”

MARIETTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 23: Head Coach Mauricio Pochettino of the United States Speaking to players during the USMNT training at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Training Ground on March 23, 2026 in Marietta, Georgia. (Photo by John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)
The USMNT’s World Cup roster won’t be about talent alone under Mauricio Pochettino. (John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF via Getty Images)

Building the right locker room

Upon his hiring in the fall of 2024, Pochettino set out to change the team culture and set a fresh vibe. It did not come easy. It took until last summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup for Pochettino’s message to get through and for the players to fully buy into his plans.

With everyone aboard, positive results began to follow. The Americans will carry a five-game unbeaten streak against World Cup-bound opponents into daunting tests at Mercedes-Benz Stadium versus Belgium on Saturday and Portugal on Tuesday. The nine-day camp marks the final assembly before Pochettino selects the “right 26.”Pochettino’s bonding efforts seemed to have taken hold. Veteran defender Tim Ream said arriving to Atlanta this week after four months since the previous camp was “like “seeing family all over again.”Because camaraderie and results went hand in hand through the fall, “Guys have a hunger,” Ream said. “They want to be a part of a team that’s moving in the right direction and playing well and fighting for each other.”

The team’s fighting spirit revealed itself in an actual fight late in the 2-1 victory over Paraguay last November. Alex Freeman was at the center of it, and within seconds, Sebastian Berhalter and others had rushed to his aid.“We backed our guy,” midfielder Tanner Tessmann said. “That is what it’s all about, man.”In the transactional period between Berhalter’s firing after the 2024 Copa América and Pochettino’s hiring months later, however, such reactions were not a given. A native of Argentina, where representing La Albiceleste is the greatest honor, the new boss needed to rekindle the U.S. fire.Now that the blaze is almost self-sustainable, Pochettino must go about picking his World Cup unit with compatible pieces.The idea of selecting the “right” players rather than the “best” players is not original.“You pick the best 26 members that make the best team, which is a concept difficult to understand,” Portugal coach Roberto Martinez told Yahoo Sports. “If you’ve got a player that plays every minute and is the star of their [club] team and he comes to a national team and he can only play five or six minutes [as] a supportive player, it’s a completely different role. It’s very, very difficult to have a committed player in that role.”

Martinez, of course, has a trickier task than Pochettino, juggling many more world-class players — and egos. But the concept remains the same: constructing a team that functions on and off the field for an extended period, even if that means passing over a quality player.So how will the process play out for Pochettino? Soccer is not like basketball or baseball, sports where statistics tell most of the story.He and his staff will weigh players’ form with their respective clubs and the national team. They will consider experience, versatility, on-field partnerships and data analytics. They will rely on intuition. And they will weigh how a player fits in the group.They don’t expect any distractions from Reyna, who, from all indications, is more mature and focused than four years ago. Despite scant playing time at German club Mönchengladbach in 2026, he was invited to camp this week.Every player seems to recognize the importance of putting the team first.“You have to do your thing and play your game and be in the best position to [stay] with the team,” center back Auston Trusty said. “But while you’re on the team, while you’re in camp, it’s being the teammate that’s working hard during training, supporting the players around you and really giving them your all. That’s really just about the mindset.”Center back Miles Robinson said “you have to understand every day is kind of a mission, that you have to compete at your best, recognizing you have to be coachable. You have to understand what Poch wants from you.”

Guzan — Atlanta United’s newly appointed club ambassador and sporting adviser after a 20-year playing career — said the days between World Cup matches are when teams can come together or slip apart.“Whatever the result of the game, there’s going to be training the next day and there’s going to be guys that maybe are upset they didn’t play or play more,” said Guzan, who, as Tim Howard’s two-time back-up, didn’t play in the World Cup. “You need guys that understand what’s needed in certain moments. So from the outside, you may have the opinion that this player should be there or that player shouldn’t be there, but inside of camp, they’re offering things that aren’t seen.”A U.S. player who seems to personify that role is Seattle’s Cristian Roldan, a seasoned midfielder from the 2022 squad who, since last fall, has become a Pochettino favorite for his leadership, experience and acceptance he might never step onto the field. That doesn’t mean Roldan isn’t good enough to contribute on the field, but with a large roster and no more than five substitutions per match, Pochettino values his intangibles.“I expect competition every camp, but this one, especially leading up to the World Cup, with the things Coach said that no one spot is guaranteed, proving yourself each and every day is extremely important,” Roldan said.


As the World Cup nears, USMNT’s center back corps remains uncertain, unsettled

USMNT's Matt Freese, Tim Ream and Chris Richards

Kyle Rivas / Getty Images

By Henry BushnellMarch 25, 2026 3:10 pm EDT

ATLANTA — At nearly every position, the U.S. men’s national team enters 2026 with depth. It has multiple strikers who would have started in 2022. In midfield, regulars at Champions League clubs might need to settle for places on the USMNT bench. Even at wingback, there are three players starting (when healthy) for top-50 clubs, a fourth who just moved to one, and a fifth who’s a fixture in the German Bundesliga.And then, on the other hand, there is center back.The position, USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino said back in September, is “really open.”He and his predecessors have seemingly spent much of the 2026 World Cup cycle waiting for central defenders to emerge. With the tournament less than three months away, only one, Chris Richards, really has.Tim Ream, of course, is still around. For a while, he felt like a placeholder whose value was as a bridge and a veteran presence. Now, at age 38, he’s the USMNT’s most-frequent captain and apparently a starter, even as he sometimes struggles to cope with the speed of MLS.

Ream is a starter because no others have emerged to seize his place. Pochettino, who was a center back himself in his playing days and should have an intimate knowledge of the craft, called up 11 players in that position throughout 2025. He tried two other natural fullbacks on the right side of a back three. Many are decent players, but beyond Richards and arguably Ream, none would inspire confidence if thrown into a World Cup game.Noahkai Banks, left, remains undecided about his international future.Adam Pretty / Getty ImagesNoahkai Banks is the most talented. And when Pochettino welcomed him to a maiden camp in September, he said that the now-19-year-old Banks “can be a really important player, in a position that, for every single national team, is difficult to find.” He speculated that Banks, by season’s end, could “be maybe the best center back in Europe or in Germany.” As of March, he isn’t quite that, but he’s broken through and is now considered one of the top young defenders in the Bundesliga.

The problem: He’s never actually played for the USMNT, and he hasn’t yet decided whether to represent the U.S., the country of his birth; or Germany, the country where he’s spent the vast majority of his life.Banks made it “very clear” that he was “not available to be selected” for the USMNT’s March roster, Pochettino said last week. He has also said he won’t rush the decision or make it “dependent on a World Cup.” So, it feels highly unlikely that he’d commit and debut on the biggest stage of all this summer.“So,” Ream said Monday, “we work with the group that’s in [camp] right now.”That group is Richards, Ream, Mark McKenzie, Miles Robinson and Auston Trusty, plus Alex Freeman and Joe Scally, the two fullbacks whom Pochettino has played on the right side of a three.Of the group, only Ream was at the 2022 World Cup. Richards and Robinson would have been if not for injuries. Over the three years since, Richards has grown into a consistent starter at Crystal Palace in the English Premier League. But Robinson never quite resumed his pre-Achilles tendon tear ascent. He has settled in at his level, as one of the better center backs in MLS.McKenzie has found his, too, at Toulouse, a middling club in France’s Ligue 1.Trusty, who has bounced from Birmingham City (on loan) to Sheffield United to Celtic, started the USMNT’s very first game of the 2026 cycle… and then didn’t start another one until the very last game of 2025.Trusty’s Celtic teammate, Cameron Carter-Vickers, was at one point a promising prospect, but plateaued and is now injured.Walker Zimmerman, another 2022 World Cup veteran, is now 32 and has seemingly fallen down the depth chart. At best, he would be brought to the World Cup as something of a closer, because of his ability to win aerial duels.Pochettino, in search of long shots, called up Tristan Blackmon in September, but that experiment didn’t pan out. The coach’s piloting of a hybrid back three made Scally and Freeman options on the right, but it didn’t really change the broader calculus.

And even Freeman, who earned Pochettino’s trust throughout the summer and fall, has hardly played competitive soccer since November. He moved from Orlando City to Villarreal in January, and has played just 38 minutes in four substitute appearances thus far.What You Should Read NextUSA or Germany? Noahkai Banks’ personal decision more nuanced than casual discourse around itThe 19-year-old is eligible to play for both the U.S. and Germany and faces a tough decision amid a sea of outside noise“Obviously I haven’t got the minutes I’ve wanted,” Freeman said Tuesday. He noted that the competitiveness of training sessions at Villarreal, plus “extra work” in lieu of playing time, helps him “stay sharp.” But without actual match sharpness, it’s tough to see Freeman being a reliable starter for the national team this summer.So, there is currently a question mark to the right of Richards. And to his left, there is Ream, a model of longevity but a player who has seemingly lost a step since 2022.Ream spoke this week about the secrets to his longevity. “If I had to pick one, I would say just being adaptable; understanding that different coaches do and want different things,” he said. He has adapted to Pochettino’s ways and wants. He gives the U.S. precisely what it needs as a ball-playing defender and distributor. But his lack of pace could be a liability.So the position, it seems, remains open and uncertain as friendly tests here against Belgium and Portugal beckon.“I think every day, every game, every training session we get, it’s to put ourselves in a position to make that spot, make that position for the team and be one of the key players for the team,” Trusty said Wednesday.



USMNT’s European edge: The stunning rise of Alex Freeman and Patrick Agyemang from MLS to final World Cup camp

Steven GoffContributing writer Tue, March 24, 2026 at 5:52 PM EDT·

MARIETTA, Ga. — Alex Freeman and Patrick Agyemang were among the two dozen or so U.S. players on the team bus rumbling into this Atlanta suburb Tuesday morning for the second day of the final training camp before Mauricio Pochettino selects his World Cup roster in two months.Distance from the team hotel: 12 miles. Lengths swiftly traversed in their career arc: incalculable. A year ago, Freeman was in his first full Major League Soccer season with Orlando City, best known to some as the son of a Super Bowl-winning wide receiver, Antonio Freeman. Alex had played for youth national teams but never for the senior squad.A year ago, Agyemang was still harnessing his 6-foot-4 frame after a breakout season with Charlotte FC in 2024. He had auditioned for Pochettino early in 2025, but, as with Freeman, the World Cup seemed a million miles away.A year later, both have matriculated overseas, with Freeman at Villarreal in Spain and Agyemang at Derby County in England. Both have received regular U.S. call-ups. And with the sport’s quadrennial carnival kicking off across North America in less than three months, both are in serious contention for Pochettino’s 26-man squad.“It’s been very quick,” said Freeman, who had started just 16 MLS matches before making his U.S. debut last summer. “It’s been just a moment for me to realize how serious things are but to adjust. I feel like it’s been a blessing. [I’ve] been grateful to be able to have eight or 10 months [that] kind of changed my life.”Freeman and Agyemang are among six regulars who have taken full advantage of opportunities since last summer when Pochettino broadened and accelerated the roster-building process. The others are goalkeeper Matt Freese, wing back Max Arfsten, and midfielders Sebastian Berhalter and Diego Luna — players who, for the most part, were not seriously in the mix as of early 2025.Except for Luna, who recently recovered from a knee injury, all are in the nine-day U.S. camp, which will feature heavyweight friendlies at Mercedes-Benz Stadium against Belgium on Saturday and Portugal next Tuesday. Pochettino is scheduled to announce his World Cup squad on May 26.While those four have expanded their MLS profiles, Freeman and Agyemang parlayed performance for club and country into missions abroad.

VILLARREAL, SPAIN - MARCH 08: Alexander Freeman of Villarreal CF looks on during the warm up prior to the LaLiga EA Sports match between Villarreal CF and Elche CF at Estadio de la Ceramica on March 08, 2026 in Villarreal, Spain. (Photo by Alex Caparros/Getty Images)
Alex Freeman moved to Villarreal following his rapid rise with Orlando City. (Alex Caparros via Getty Images)

Alex Freeman’s Villarreal challenge

Freeman, a 21-year-old right back and wing, joined Villarreal in La Liga in late January, though an initial dearth of playing time could cloud his World Cup outlook.“Obviously, I haven’t gotten the minutes I’ve wanted,” said the South Floridian, who has logged 42 minutes in four Villarreal appearances. “But I feel like I also got the experience at a high level in Spain to be able to stay sharp against [some] of the best players on the team and maybe even the league.”Joining a prominent club was challenging enough, but he was joining one in the middle of the season and now sitting third behind superpowers Barcelona and Real Madrid while pursuing a 2026-27 Champions League berth. As Freeman has learned, the lineup does not typically change much when things are going well.Because of his MLS offseason and Villarreal bench time, Freeman has not started for any team since a two-goal performance in the 5-1 U.S. romp over Uruguay more than four months ago.U.S. teammate Cristian Roldan cautioned that “it’s going to take a whole lot for him to see the field [in Spain]. The level of competition is very high over there, but I fully expect him to tap into even more of his potential, grow as a player, be uncomfortable in certain situations, so that he continues to grow.”Before joining Villarreal, Freeman consulted with Pochettino and U.S. star Weston McKennie, a Juventus star. Freeman said they told him the move was “high risk, high reward.”Roldan, a 30-year-old midfielder in his 12th season with Seattle, praised Freeman’s ball skills and his ability to “wiggle out of pressure.”With Sergiño Dest, Pochettino’s first-choice right back, sidelined with a hamstring injury, Freeman should get the chance to continue proving his value – even if he’s not in prime form.He said he wants to show he is “the same Freeman you guys all see on the field.”

Derby County's Patrick Agyemang during the Sky Bet Championship match at Fratton Park, Portsmouth. Picture date: Monday March 16, 2026. (Photo by Steven Paston/PA Images via Getty Images)
Derby County’s Patrick Agyemang is working to establish himself in England’s second-tier ahead of the World Cup. (Steven Paston – PA Images via Getty Images)

Agyemang thriving in the Championship

Agyemang, a 25-year-old striker, has been a hit at Derby County in the second-flight English Championship, recording 10 goals and three assists while starting 29 consecutive league matches for an East Midlands club locked in a heated race for a promotion playoff berth.Since arriving in England, Agyemang said, “I’ve grown into the person and player I am now. It’s been amazing. I feel myself building in all types of areas, on and off the field, and I think it could obviously translate here as well and help the [U.S.] team.”This camp is critical for Agyemang, who appears to be No. 4 on the depth chart behind Monaco’s Folarin Balogun, Coventry City’s Haji Wright and PSV Eindhoven’s Ricardo Pepi. Wright, however, is sidelined with a groin injury. For the World Cup, Pochettino is expected to select three or four from the pool, which also includes Toronto FC’s Josh Sargent and Vancouver’s Brian White. (Neither was invited to this camp.)Agyemang acknowledged having to adapt to the unmerciful rigors of the English Championship.“At times you think you get a foul or something, and it’s just not a call,” the Connecticut native said. “It’s play on and play on. So obviously it’s very aggressive in that nature. But I’m always a guy that always likes to go [to] new places and just work hard and put my head down and keep focused on that. It’s been a great experience for me, but [there] definitely have been differences [with MLS], for sure.”Tim Ream, a veteran center back who played in the English Championship for part of his Fulham career, was Agyemang’s Charlotte teammate last year until Derby County came calling.“You just never know with the Championship, what kind of reaction you’re going to get from guys,” Ream said. “I don’t think he could last 90 minutes when we were in Charlotte and now I’m seeing he’s playing full 90-minute matches. That tells me he’s in a place mentally and physically that he feels good. And when you feel good, you just feel like you can do anything.”With Agyemang in U.S. camp, Ream joked, “I’m going to have to knock him down a peg or two just to make sure that he doesn’t get too far ahead of himself just because that’s the way I am with him.”

Sitting next to Ream, Agyemang smiled.“It’s impressive to see what he’s done in a short amount of time,” Ream added. “Hopefully, that continues. But he’s got a good head on his shoulders and he knows that if he continues to do the small things and focus on himself within the group, he’s going to be playing a long time.”Like all players, Agyemang is trying to balance the demands of club and country and maintain focus on whichever crest he is wearing at that moment.He said he is “taking care of the business here and then when I go back [to England], it’s the same thing. … I just want to continue doing that until the end of the season and potentially the World Cup, so just trying to not stress too much about anything and just enjoy as much as possible.”

World Cup 2026: U.S. host cities awarded $625m in security funding after delay

A picture of the FIFA World Cup trophy in front of the United States Capitol in December 2025.

The funding is being administered via FEMA under the FIFA World Cup Grant Program Michael Regan – FIFA via Getty Images

By Adam CraftonMarch 18, 2026

The 11 U.S. cities set to host World Cup games this summer have been awarded $625million in security funding, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has informed members of Congress.The funding is being administered via FEMA under the FIFA World Cup Grant Program, which it says will be used to “hold operational exercises, conduct staff background checks, and strengthen cybersecurity defenses”.In a release first shared with members of Congress and seen by The Athletic, a statement from FEMA said the cities can also use awarded funds “to pay for increased police and emergency response at FIFA venues, hotels, and transportation hubs”.Representatives of the cities, who asked to remain anonymous to protect relationships, told The Athletic that the funds had began to land.What You Should Read NextWorld Cup 2026 stadium guides: Kansas City Stadium – home of the loudest sports crowd in historyWhat can fans expect from the Kansas City Chiefs’ stadium, usually known as Arrowhead, at the 2026 World Cup?

The funding was first pledged in President Donald Trump’s domestic policy bill last summer – which he called the “One, Big, Beautiful Bill – but the processing had been delayed during the partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in early 2026.Democrats were requesting more guardrails against ICE activity after federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis. As FEMA falls under DHS, the World Cup was dragged into the fight.The now former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem accused Democrats of “shut[ting] down the government,” and wrote on X: “The longer DHS goes without funding, the less prepared our nation will be for threats at the FIFA World Cup and America 250.”Noem claimed that “FEMA was in the final stages of reviewing applications to ensure proper oversight” of the World Cup funding when the partial shutdown started on February 14.Yet Nellie Pou, a Democratic congresswoman representing New Jersey, subsequently claimed that the anticipated award date of the funds was “no later than January 30, 2026” — in fact prior to the shutdown.The original award of the funding represented a considerable success for U.S. Soccer, which supported the host cities in their lobbying, as well as for FIFA, whose president, Gianni Infantino, has developed a close relationship with President Trump. Yet it has taken longer than expected for the funds to be awarded.

In a memo to members of Congress, FEMA claimed that staff were impacted by three separate funding lapses, but claimed that the administering of the funds “is a testament to the Trump Administration’s commitment to getting resources into the hands of law enforcement.FEMA also awarded $250m to states hosting FIFA World Cup 2026 matches through the Counter Unmanned Aircraft Systems (C-UAS) Grant Program. They say this is to defend against the threat of drones.In a statement on Wednesday afternoon, Rep. Pou said: “Finally. Matches begin in less than 90 days. Congress passed this funding long in advance and officials needed this money months ago. So I’m glad to see DHS finally do the right thing and release these overdue funds.“I am hopeful that with this money released, host cities and law enforcement have what they need to make the 2026 World Cup a massive success. We cannot waste a once-in-a-generation chance to show the best of America.”In a subsequent news release, Andrew Giuliani, executive director of the White House Task Force on the FIFA World Cup 2026, said: “We are proud of the collaborative efforts between federal agencies, local partners and the White House Task Force in preparing for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. This grant program provides valuable funding to host cities, helping them strengthen security operations and protect their communities.”

World Cup fans from several nations facing $15k bonds to enter U.S. – and players may not be exempt

Senegal fans cheer on their country at AFCON

Senegal supporters are among those impacted by the bond payments Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images

By Adam CraftonMarch 25, 2026Updated 8:30 am EDTv

Fans from several countries participating in this summer’s World Cup must deposit up to $15,000 in bond payments to be granted a tourist visa to enter the United States, while organizer FIFA is privately pressing the Trump administration to make exemptions for players.The difficulties have emerged as nationals from certain countries travelling to the U.S. on a business or tourist visa — known as B-1 and B-2 visas — have been subject to bond payments after policy changes by President Donald Trump’s administration.The “Visa Bond Pilot Program” relates to 50 countries, five of which have qualified for the World Cup. The policy has impacted nationals from Algeria, Cape Verde, Senegal and the Ivory Coast since January 21 this year. Last week, World Cup participants Tunisia were among the countries added to the list, which comes into effect from April 2. Cape Verde — an archipelago of only 525,000 people — has qualified for the men’s World Cup for the first time in its history.A U.S. State Department spokesperson told The Athletic that all applicants, regardless of age, are subject to the same legal standards and must demonstrate they qualify for and intend to comply with the terms of a visa. They added that those who depart the U.S. in a timely fashion before their visa expires will recover their money, while they also said the visa bond requirement is not retroactive and does not apply to holders of existing valid visas.However, there is no wording outlined in the Visa Bond Pilot Program that grants immunity to athletes competing in major sporting events such as the World Cup. Athletes who do not already have U.S. visas will largely apply for the B-1 or B-2 visas during the tournament, meaning they, too, could be asked to deposit bonds. The State Department said that all visa applications will be adjudicated on a case-by-case basis by officers.The policy states that there is “no procedure” for applicants to apply for a waiver of the bond, but consular officers can determine whether a waiver “would advance a significant national interest or humanitarian interest based on the applicant’s purpose of travel and employment.”When contacted by The Athletic this week, neither the State Department nor FIFA took the opportunity to rule out that players from the designated countries would be required to pay the bonds. FIFA declined to comment on all aspects of this report.

The situation is causing concern among the soccer federations of designated nations. Sources, who asked to remain anonymous to protect relationships, told The Athletic the matter was raised with FIFA at pre-World Cup preparation workshops that competing federations attended this month in Atlanta. Fewer than 80 days out from the World Cup, FIFA is attempting to convince the Trump administration to waive the bonds for official members of a competing federation’s delegation, which would likely include players, coaches and support staff, as well as federation executives and possibly key personnel from sponsors.ABehind the scenes, FIFA is working on contingencies, with the organization seeking to help the soccer teams of designated nations circumvent the bonds by supplying invitation letters for the official delegations of national federations competing at the World Cup. FIFA wants these letters to act as a waiver for the bonds. According to sources close to the matter, the current expectation is that, if successful, this will extend only to players, staff and federation executives, but possibly not to the immediate relatives of players, who may be subject to the bonds.When The Athletic asked the State Department about FIFA seeking to influence the U.S. government’s policies, a State Department spokesperson stressed that “rules, policies, and procedures for visa processing are set in Washington, D.C.,” before adding that the U.S. government “continues to engage robustly with FIFA in support of the largest and greatest FIFA World Cup in history.”While negotiations are ongoing over possible player exemptions for the visa bonds at the World Cup, it does not appear that any such privileges will be extended to fans.For supporters from the impacted countries, the bonds add a huge financial burden on any trip to watch their team in the U.S. this summer, compounding the highly expensive World Cup tickets and hotels this summer.FIFA president Gianni Infantino has repeatedly claimed this summer’s men’s World Cup in the U.S., Canada and Mexico will be the “most inclusive” in the competition’s history. Yet a national traveling from the impacted countries, who is deemed otherwise eligible for entry into the U.S., must now also have the means to post a bond of either $5,000, $10,000 or $15,000, which may preclude or deter many from traveling at all.Gianni Infantino (right) has repeatedly stressed the World Cup will be an “inclusive” eventAndrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty ImagesThe bond payments are per person, rather than per travelling party, meaning that a parent travelling with a child would have to make two separate bond payments. Sources familiar with the process indicate that the $5,000 payments will be broadly reserved for children entering the country, with payments of $10,000 or $15,000 for adults.A State Department spokesperson told The Athletic that America’s safety and border security “will always come first” and reiterated that nationals of designated countries would be required to post a visa bond of up to $15,000 before a visa can be issued. This would appear to be an issue for Algeria, Tunisia, and Cape Verde, with Senegal and the Ivory Coast designated for broader travel bans, which would limit travel in any case.The State Department further claimed that the program “has proven effective in deterring illegal immigration and the Trump Administration is expanding it to additional countries based on a range of immigration risk factors, including high overstay rates, screening and vetting deficiencies, concerns regarding acquisition of citizenship by investment without a residency requirement, and foreign policy considerations.”FIFA has also been asked by impacted nations to ensure that the State Department provides B-1 or B-2 visas that offer multiple entries into the U.S.This has become a challenge as the State Department has increasingly been providing single-entry business or tourist visas to nationals of designated countries, when equivalent visas previously offered multiple entries.Federations, players and fans need multiple-access visas to the U.S. because some teams in the tournament will play in more than one country during the World Cup. Ivory Coast, for example, have a group game in Toronto sandwiched between two games in Philadelphia, while Senegal’s final group-stage game is in Toronto, and they may need to return to the U.S. for knockout games. Tunisia’s first two games will be in Mexico before their final group game in Kansas City. Algeria and Cape Verde’s group games are all within the U.S.A State Department spokesperson said an applicant’s “individual circumstances” will be taken into account when a consular officer makes the final decision on whether to issue a single- or multiple-entry visa.

Football Writer

11/15/25 USMT vs Paraguay 5 pm TNT, Uraguay Tues 7 pm, US U17s lose in WC, NWSL Semi’s Sat/Sun, MLS changes, WC Qualifying continues

US Men Face #23 Paraguay Sat 5 pm on TNT, Uruguay Tues 7 pm

So here we go again – the US is actually playing 2 top ranked South American teams- perfect opportunity to put our best team out there to see how we match up just 7 months before we host the World Cup right? Ah no. Not with Botchitino in charge. Best player -Pulisic ?? at home in Milan. Best Centerback – Richards – at home at Crystal Palace, Best Centermid/utility player McKennie home at Juventus. (against his will). Tilman injured & Adams hurt last weekend of course – no issue. Honestly we had 3 players injured playing in Colorado in our last international window – stupidity by US Soccer – OF COURSE. Now Botch was ridiculed for playing Pulisic & Richards last time out in meaningless matches (sorry Milan & Palace) every match the US plays with just 7 months to a World Cup matters. But sending Pulisic, Tilman, Richards back to their clubs injured was simply stupid by the US. Now when we really need them in camp to see how we match up. They are not here. So in comes Gio Reyna – I guess how well you are playing for your club (he doesn’t) really doesn’t matter after all. Along with Right back Joe Scalley – thank goodness. So how do we line up and look this weekend against Paraguay? This is the game we actually have a chance – Uruguay is going to crush us Tuesday. I am hoping to see a bit of an experimental team tonight – backline of Arfsten & Dest on the edges and McKensie, Trusty & Joe Scally holding down the 3 Centerback slots. Lets give Pepi the start up front with Gio Underneath in the 10 slot. Berhalter or Morris in the 6 role with Tessman on the wing again. Best case scenerio today – 1-1 tie. My pick 1-2 loss before the beatdown Tuesday vs Uruguay.

DETAILED ROSTER BY POSITION (Club/Country; Caps/Goals)

GOALKEEPERS (4): Roman Celentano (FC Cincinnati; 0/0), Matt Freese (New York City FC; 11/0), Jonathan Klinsmann (Cesena/ITA; 0/0), Patrick Schulte (Columbus Crew; 3/0)

DEFENDERS (9): Max Arfsten (Columbus Crew; 14/1), Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 35/2), Alex Freeman (Orlando City; 11/0), Mark McKenzie (Toulouse FC/FRA; 24/0), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC; 78/1), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati; 37/3), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 21/0), John Tolkin (Holstein Kiel/GER; 4/0), Auston Trusty (Celtic/SCO; 4/0)

MIDFIELDERS (7)Tyler Adams (Bournemouth/ENG; 52/2), Sebastian Berhalter (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; 7/0), Aidan Morris (Middlesbrough/ENG; 11/0), Gio Reyna (Borussia Mönchengladbach/GER; 32/8), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders; 41/0), Tanner Tessmann (Olympique Lyon/FRA; 10/0), Timmy Tillman (1/0; LAFC)

FORWARDS (5): Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United/ENG; 54/9), Folarin Balogun (AS Monaco/FRA; 27/7), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; 16/3), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven/NED; 33/13), Haji Wright (Coventry City/ENG; 19/7

NWSL Playoffs on ABC & CBS

The Semi-Finals are here for the NWSL after the shocking upset of Kansas City last weekend. I love what the NWSL is doing with their TV contracts- unlike MLS – which is clueless when it comes to TV – NWSL leverages CBS and ABC/ESPN to present its playoffs after a full season of coverage. I just wish the NWSL could compete on salaries as they continue to lose US National players to Europe. Sat we get Washington vs Portland at 12 noon on CBS, while Sunday has Orlando and Gothem Battle Sunday at 3pm on ABC. See full game previews below.

Headlines Around the World of Soccer

Great to see Croatia and Luka Modric have qualified for the World Cup – England & France also qualified with their wins – while plenty can secure births over the next week. Who Can Qualify this week. Huge seeing Ronaldo got a Red Card in Portugal’s game this week and might miss games in the World Cup. Did you know American forward Ricardo Pepi has scored as many Champions League stoppage time winners as Ronaldo and Sergio Aguero? Huge news that MLS says Apple TV will show all MLS games without season pass starting next season – so if you have Apple – you get all MLS Games. MLS has also announced starting in 2026-27 they will move to a Fall Season to match the European Soccer Schedule – I think this is death call for MLS – hope I am wrong. Lots of stories on it below. US Soccer, World Cup Qualifying & NWSL Playoffs all weekend on TV. (See full schedule below)

Great to have Carmel High Coaches Shane Schmidt (rt) & John Simmonds (mid) join DOC Juergan Summer at our Carmel FC coaches social last week. Shane’s Boys won State, while John’s ladies finished 2nd in the state.
Yes T Ray Phillips and I reffed in the Snow in early November at the Zionsville College Showcase Last weekend.
Mike Arrington, Shane & T Ray Phillips at Zville Showcase last weekend

GAMES ON TV

Sat, Nov 15
9 am FS1 Kazakhastan vs Belgium WCQ
12 noon CBS Washington Spirit (Rodman) vs Portland Thorns NWSL Playoffs
12 noon? Georgia vs Spain WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Greece vs Scotland WCQ
2:45 pm ? Switzerland vs Sweden WCQ
5 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Paraguay Chester PA
8 pm TUDN, Univision Mexico vs Uruguay
Sun, Nov 16
7 am ESPN2 Liverpool vs Chelsea FC Womens Superleague
9 am FS1 Hungary vs Ireland WCQ
9 am FS2 Portugal vs Armenia WCQ
12 noon FS2 Azerbaijan vs France WCQ
12 noon ?? Albania vs England WCQ
2:45 pm FS1 Italy vs Norway WCQ
3 pm ABC Orlando Pride vs NY Gothem FC NWSL Playoffs
Mon, Nov 17
12 noon FS2 Finland vs Andorra WCQ
2:45 pm FS2 Germany vs Slovakia WCQ
Tues, Nov 18
2:45 pm FS2 Belgium vs Liechhtenstein WCQ
4 pm ?? Canada vs Venezuela
7 pm TNT, Max USA Men vs Uruguay Tampa, FL
8:30 pm Univision Mexico vs Paraguay
Weds, Nov 19
12:45 pm ESPN+ Juventus vs OL Lyonnes (Heaps) Women’s UCL
12:45 pm CBSSN Wolfsburg vs Man United Women’s (GK Joyce) UCL
3 pm CBSSN Arsenal vs Real Madrid Women’s UCL
Thurs, Nov 20
12:45 pm CBSSN Twente vs Atletico Madrid Women’s UCL
3 pm CBSSN PSG vs Bayern Munich Women’s UCL
3 pm ESPN+ Chelsea vs Barcelona Women’s UCL
Sat, Nov 22
7:30 am USA Burnley vs Chelsea
9:30 am ESPN+ Heidenheim vs Mgladbach (Reyna & Scally)
9:30 am ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs Freiburg
9:30 am ESPN+ Wolfsburg vs Bayer Leverkusen (Tilman)
10 am USA Bournmouth (Adams) vs West Ham United
10 am Peacock Wolverhampton vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
10 am Pk Liverpool vs Nottingham Forest
10:15 AM ESPN+ Barcelona vs Athletic Club
12 noon Para+ Juventus (McKinny) vs Fiorentina
12:30 pm NBC New Castle vs Man United
8 pm CBS NWSL CHAMPIONSHIP
9:30 pm Apple TV Vancouver vs LAFC MLS Playoffs

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USA

Poch: No USMNT player ‘safe’ in making WC roster
Mauricio Pochettino’s message to USMNT: ‘No one can feel safe’
Five Things to Know: USMNT vs. Paraguay

Players Showing ‘More Bite’ in November Camp as World Cup Draws Closer
USA vs. Paraguay, 2025 USMNT Friendly Preview
2025 USMNT Friendly: Scouting Paraguay
Mckennie Shocked to be left off Roster
Adams off U.S. squad for friendlies after injury
– How Roldan went from USMNT afterthought to Pochettino favorite
– Pulisic trades pitch for pen in writing new children’s book
– How the USMNT combats jet lag: Fly kits, supplements, sleep masks

USMNT’s Balogun scores, sees red for Monaco
As the World Cup approaches, can the USMNT impress in final tests of the year?

World

Who would win the 2026 World Cup if it kicked off today?
2026 World Cup: Who’s in, how the rest can qualify
Croatia clinch WC spot, end Faroe Islands’ dream
2026 World Cup: Croatia qualify, Germany still have work to do
Depay goal puts Netherlands on cusp of World Cup
Ronaldo risks ban at World Cup after red card
Gattuso wants rule change as Italy WC bid falters
Messi gets goal, assist as Argentina win in Angola
Mbappé too focused on another French World Cup triumph to dwell on 400 goals
Seeing red: Ronaldo’s antics fit with his late-career legacy missteps
Who can qualify for the World Cup this week?

Qualified teams (27/45)

– Europe (3 of 16 qualifiers): England, France, Croatia
– North America, Central America and Caribbean (0/3):
– Africa (9/9): Algeria, Cape Verde, Egypt, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia
– Asia (8/8): Australia, Iran, Japan, Jordan, Uzbekistan, Qatar, South Korea
– South America (6/6): Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay
– Oceania (1/1): New Zealand

U17 World Cup

PAYING THE PENALTY: U.S. men fall in U-17 World Cup Round of 32 in shootout
United States suffer penalty shootout loss to Morocco in FIFA U17 World Cup
US vs Morocco U17s   Highlights
Mexico shock Argentina and qualify to the Round of 16 of 2025 U17 World Cup

MLS

Opinion: MLS takes on risk in July-May calendar, but Apple deal change is positive
MLS 3.0? League’s new calendar is its smartest move in years
MLS Calendar Change – Pro Soccer Wire
MLS Calendar Change will Freeze Accent on the Field – Sporting News
All MLS Games to Be on FREE Apple TV – No Season Pass in 2026
San Diego vs. Portland Timbers: MLS betting odds, prediction, pick


NWSL

Marta isn’t a fan of ‘average athlete’ McCall Zerboni’s punditry
Why did Bia Zaneratto play 114 minutes on a sprained MCL?

USWNT stars shine for Chelsea as Girma makes season debut

Goalkeeping

Emi Martinez Making Saves as U17WC
Top 16 Saves of MLS Season
NWSL Great Save Naeher
Top Saves NWSL Lorena KC
What a Save 

Reffing

Canada Game Red Card?
Var Sound Arsenal Offside Call vs Man City 
Goalkeeper Obstruction 
Ref Sounds – Fulham Game 
Become a Referee Must be 13

T Ray Phillips, Me & Ahn reffing in the cold of Zionsville last weekend.
Rob, Todd & I reffing at Grand Park for the Boys College Showcase last night
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The U.S. men’s national team are back for the second-to-last international window before the World Cup. Are we running out of time? We will play Paraguay and Uruguay, all the ‘guays. But the squad still feels, let’s say, incredibly experimental. Lots of massive players not called in, including Christian PulisicWeston McKennie and Chris Richards. But one huge, almost marquee name is back: Gio Reyna, returning like a prodigal son for the first time since the doomed tragedies of the CONCACAF Nations League in March. Lots of intrigue to unpack. The process that we’re meant to trust remains — I’ve got to be candid — somewhat of a mystery. 🤨
More: Our team at The Give N Go broke down the biggest omissions from the most recent USMNT roster earlier this week. Watch that here📺
ii. Let’s start with Gio. Football writer Henry Bushnell tweeted that Gio has played fewer club minutes this year (just 146 total for German duffers Borussia Mönchengladbach) than any other USMNT player and hasn’t scored or created a goal since January. “Players need to perform” was the rule for months. The reality is Gio is suddenly good enough for Pochettino — not because of anything he has done on the field, but based on our memory of what he could do four years ago in the last cycle, the Gio of our imaginations. This is some gamble by Poch, it completely changes the dynamic of the message he has been giving the other players and that is a risk.
I want to say, I am happy for Gio as a human being. He came on our show last week and I found the interview very moving. To listen to this 22-year-old kid, who’s had everything in his world buckle with his family, his club career, and his international career, all conflating together in this mess. A player who was once on the same starboy trajectory as his friend Erling Haaland, now on the bench in a German relegation battle barely getting minutes. This is his chance for redemption and I hope he seizes it. 🦅
iii. What does his return mean from a “trust the process” perspective? Again, this is the second-to-last camp before the World Cup squad is announced, but I am old enough to remember back in August when Poch announced, “This is going to be the last camp to have the possibility for us to see players, new faces,” and here we are. Gio, back. Reliable Joe Scally, back. I am happy they are. I think they could and should have been called up earlier, but this issue of “trust the process,” you either have to articulate the process intelligently, clearly, or it just looks like you’re muddying the waters. 🤔
iv. In many ways, this is an outcome — not process — driven World Cup for the USMNT. Poch inherited the job mid-cycle and is trying to play catch up while learning international football management, the peculiarities of American football culture and U.S. Soccer on the fly. He will be judged on whether or not he wins a knockout game in the World Cup, that is all that matters. So the rules of how we get there, we can make them up along the way. Right now, we are like the plant-based meat of world football: it sounds good, it sounds like we should be the next big thing, but it is impossible to tell if we are really going to catch on. 🏆
v. All of that said, I’m ready for this quite intriguing pair of games: Paraguay (on Saturday) and Uruguay (on Tuesday), 39th in the world and 15th in the world. Both qualifiers for our World Cup and two really stern tests for this team. Just to recap, in case you missed the last couple of friendlies on Friendly Avenue: Over the past six months, we got taught a lesson by TürkiyeSwitzerland and South Korea. We’ve drawn with Ecuador and we’ve beaten, let’s call them, a Japan 11 and a midnight oil version of Australia. We are three games unbeaten against top 25 teams, but let’s see how we fair against the two mighty ‘guays. Make us proud, boys. Go, go USA! 🇺🇸
vi. The best place to enjoy the upcoming friendlies with your fellow USMNT fans? That would be our Discord channel. Join us here this weekend and next Tuesday, and come prepared with your best Gio questions, Poch theories, and Balogun vs. Pepi takes. 🍻
Herc on How This Window Can Help Change the USMNT Narrative 
“If they play well and beat what I think are two very quality opponents in terms of player personnel and… two of the best coaches in South America, then Mauricio Pochettino and his squad will get into what this team actually means. [If they] can pull off good results and play well, then that’s going to change the narrative for sure.”
How Herc Ranks Poch’s Current No. 9 Options 
“I think right now, if we were asking ourselves who’s in pole position, it’s got to be Folarin Balogun. He’s done so well the last couple USMNT camps and he’s shown an incredible ability to work off players like Christian Pulisic, who are so important and vital to this team. He’s one of the few forwards that can create for himself if he plays by himself… Then, it’s going to be Haji Wright two, and Ricardo Pepi three.”
On Diego Luna Getting Listed as a Potential Second Striker 
“I’m very intrigued. Does that mean they’ll go two strikers? Because I look at this team and it doesn’t really scream three at the back. It screams like a four-man backline. Are you going for two? And is that with a true No. 9 and a playmaker underneath? If that’s the case, I can see why Diego Luna is listed as a striker.”
On the Return of Gio Reyna 
“In every team I’ve been on, there have been special cases, special players who get treated differently. [Poch] needs to see what Gio Reyna is about now because come March, that’s your last window. That’s got to be, ‘I’m going to the World Cup with these 26 players.’ That’s got to be the moment. So you’ve gotta see what he has and what better opportunity for a player like Gio then against a very stingy defensive specialist in Paraguay.”
On Matt Turner’s Absence 
“What happened to Zack Steffen is now happening to Matt Turner. Steffen went from being the No. 1 with the USMNT to Gregg Berhalter to “Here comes the World Cup” and not even being one of the three. Turner went from being No. 1 — record setter, two shutouts in a World Cup — to now not even being one of the four [in consideration]. I’d be very worried if I was Turner right now.”
Herc’s Score Predictions for the Two Friendlies 
🇵🇾 “Against Paraguay, you’re in store for a very difficult game to break down in terms of attacking and they’re going to make things difficult for the USMNT. I think we’re heading toward a gritty 0-0 draw.”
🇺🇾 “As far as Uruguay, it’s 1v1 defending all over the place. If Pochettino and the USMNT get a back-and-forth going, it’s going to be a very long afternoon. I think I’m gonna lean all the way in this one, 3-1.”
 Watch the full preview to get all of Herc and Rog’s thoughts on the USMNT’s upcoming friendlies against Paraguay and Uruguay (or listen here), and make sure to follow VAMOS on TikTokInstagram, and YouTube for so much more.
Temwa Chawinga headlines NWSL end-of-year award shortlist
Temwa Chawinga #6 of Kansas City Current celebrates after a goal
Kansas City star Temwa Chawinga is up for her second straight NWSL MVP award. (Jamie Squire/NWSL via Getty Images)
The NWSL dropped the end-of-year awards shortlist on Monday, as the league gives standout players and coaches props for a quality 2025 regular season.
Back-to-back Golden Boot winner Temwa Chawinga is up for her second straight MVP award, with the Current star joined by Delphine Cascarino (San Diego), Esthér González (Gotham), Manaka Matsukubo (North Carolina), and Bia Zaneratto (Kansas City).Matsukubo is also up for Midfielder of the Year, alongside Kenza Dali (San Diego), Debinha (Kansas City), Claire Hutton (Kansas City), and Olivia Moultrie (Portland). (See full lists)
Cleaning up: After winning the NWSL Shield in record fashion, the Current received a league-leading eight nominations, including two Defender of the Year candidates (Kayla Sharples, Izzy Rodriguez), Goalkeeper of the Year (Lorena), and Coach of the Year (Vlatko Andonovski).
Orlando is the only 2025 playoff club fielding zero end-of-season nods, while only Matsukubo and Rookie of the Year nominee Riley Tiernan (LA) represent current eliminated teams.
Vote now: A weighted scale of players (40%), coaches and leadership (25%), media (25%) and fans (10%) now vote to determine this year’s winners, with fan submissions closing tonight at 8 PM ET.
Gotham shoots to end Orlando’s repeat NWSL title runPlayers of NJ/NY Gotham FC huddle after the NWSL match between NJ/NY Gotham FC and Portland Thorns at Sports Illustrated Stadium on September 26, 2025 in Harrison, New Jersey. The last two NWSL champions will face off in Florida on Sunday. (Elsa/NWSL via Getty Images)The last two NWSL champions will square off on Sunday, as No. 8 Gotham visits No. 4 Orlando on a mission to end the Pride’s repeat title bid in the weekend’s second semifinal.“We’re an incredible team, and we’re just going to capitalize on all the opportunities we can get,” said Gotham forward Jaedyn Shaw after last Sunday’s upset win over No. 1 Kansas City.“It seems like most people outside don’t believe in the Pride, but the Pride are still the champions,” Orlando captain Marta said after the Pride’s quarterfinal victory. “There needs to be a little bit more respect for that.”Head-to-head: The teams split their 2025 regular-season series 1-1, with the away side taking all three points each time — though neither team is without an edge.“I’m really happy to be part of this team, and it’s only the beginning. This is the first game of three, so we’re going to keep pushing,” said Shaw, as the recent record-breaking signing continues to fuel Gotham’s firepower.“I love when people count us out,” said Pride midfielder Haley McCutcheon. “I feel like the only people who matter are the people in that locker room and the people who are with us every single day, working to achieve the goals we set out to achieve.”Tune in: The Pride host Gotham FC on Sunday at 3 PM ET, live on ABC.  
  Spirit hopes for a healthy lineup to offset Thorns’ upset bidTrinity Rodman #2 of Washington Spirit warms up prior to the quarter-final round match between Washington Spirit and Racing Louisville
Washington star Trinity Rodman went as an unused sub last weekend as she continues to rehab an MCL strain. (Scott Taetsch/NWSL via Getty Images)No. 2 Washington is gearing up to face No. 3 Portland on Saturday, hoping for a healthy roster as the NWSL semifinal squads take the pitch in front of another sold-out “Rowdy Audi” crowd.The Spirit are still waiting for star forward Trinity Rodman’s return, as the 23-year-old continues to rehab a recent MCL injury after going as an unused sub in Saturday’s quarterfinal.Washington also saw defenders Gabby Carle and Tara McKeown exit last weekend’s win with apparent injuries, though Rodman and McKeown were spotted training with the team this morning.Ready for battle: Despite their issues, the Spirit aren’t ready to tap out — as they take on Portland side firing on all cylinders after overcoming their own losses earlier this the season.“We are not just 11 players,” Spirit manager Adrian Gonzalez assured reporters. “We have a deep roster and that’s something that’s giving us a lot.”“The bounce-back ability of this team has been absolutely outstanding all season long,” said Portland manager Rob Gale. “We ain’t done yet.”Tune in: Washington hosts Portland at 12 PM ET on Saturday, live on CBS.

USA vs. Paraguay, 2025 USMNT Friendly Preview

by Parker Cleveland Nov 14, 2025, 10:00 AM EST

United States v South Korea - International Friendly

Getty Images

The USMNT is back to face Paraguay as the World Cup approaches following a decent October friendly window where the team continued showing consistency and growth. It was not a window without controversy as players returned to their clubs injured or having played heavy minutes much to the chagrin of their managers. This is truly a tale as old as time, but Mauricio Pochettino took heed and left several key players off the roster to allow them to rest and recover. Their absence will give him a chance to flesh out the roster with players who can provide depth but might not get a chance to start with the stars in camp. For their part, Paraguay come into the match having emerged from the gauntlet of CONMEBOL qualifying to reach the World Cup. They reached the tournament playing an organized and disciplined style marked by trying to break lines and play fast to push the ball forward and create chances. In a recent jaunt to Asia, however, the team jumped ahead 2-1 against Japan in the 64th minute and fell back but failed to secure the win thanks to a 94th minute goal from Ayase Ueda. That was followed by being thoroughly outplayed by South Korea in a 2-0 loss which saw the South Americans manage only 43% of the possession despite being behind 1-0 in the 15th minute. That said, Paraguay is tactically flexible and can create chances in possession. How the team lines up, using either a 4-4-2 or 4-2-3-1, should indicate how they will approach the game. In the last three matches, Poch has shown that his team can effectively play a cohesive style. The three center back formation has worked well against the varied tactics of Japan, Ecuador, and Australia. What’s more is that the team has shown grit and determination after the tough loss to South Korea and falling behind the Aussies. Who he lines up with is a different issue. The list of players who are reliable starters for the USA has dwindled as Matt Freese, Alex Freeman, Tim Ream, Cristian Roldan, and Folarin Balogun are the players who have seen consistent minutes of those brought into the team. The window will be particularly important for Joe Scally and Gio Reyna. The left back can show that he is able to step in if Antonee Robinson continues to struggle with his injury and Gio Reyna has a chance to show he can lead the attack with Christian Pulisic missing. Perhaps more important than their play on the field, Scally and Reyna need to show the level of professionalism that Poch expects. Indeed, the story of these matches may very well be how players who are being given a chance, or a second chance, perform.

USMNT’s Christian Pulisic supports Gio Reyna in reviving his troubled career

Gio Reyna has the support of friend Christian Pulisic.

Gio Reyna has the support of friend Christian Pulisic. Stephen Nadler / ISI Photos / USSF

By Tom BogertNov. 14, 2025Updated 2:16 pm EST The Athletic

U.S. national team star Christian Pulisic may not be in the November camp as Gio Reyna makes his return to the group, but the AC Milan star certainly has Reyna’s back.Pulisic said Reyna has been mistreated and sympathizes with the 23-year-old’s battle with injuries over the last four years.“He’s had a really tough time, unfairly in a lot of ways,” Pulisic told CBS Sports Golazo Network. “I feel for him. It’s difficult what we go through. Some of the injuries he’s gone through, it’s really hard.”Reyna exploded as one of Europe’s biggest teenage talents with Borussia Dortmund and the USMNT in the lead up to the 2022 World Cup, but controversy and injury have dimmed his light since.Reyna was in the middle of a dispute between former U.S. head coach Gregg Berhalter and his parents, Claudio and Danielle Reyna. The Reynas, frustrated by Gio’s lack of playing time at the World Cup, revealed to U.S. Soccer a decades-old domestic violence incident involving Berhalter and his wife. The revelation led to an investigation, a public saga and the breakdown of the relationship between the two families.There was a time during the 2022 World Cup when Reyna was nearly sent home from camp for his attitude.On the field, things haven’t been much smoother for Reyna. He has failed to feature more than 610 minutes in a single league season since 2020-21. After falling out of favor in Dortmund, Reyna went on loan to Nottingham Forest, where his playing outlook didn’t much improve. He was even left off the match-day roster entirely a handful of times.This summer, Reyna moved from Dortmund to Borussia Mönchengladbach. He has started just one game, but has appeared in six. He ramped up his fitness before his debut and then was sidelined briefly with a thigh injury.However, Pulisic is still supporting his teammate.

Gio Reyna is now on Borussia Monchengladbach

Gio Reyna hopes his move to Borussia Mönchengladbach can lift his fortunes.Lars Baron / Getty Images

“When I have him on the field with me on the national team, I feel a lot more relaxed,” Pulisic said. “He’s a really, really good player — that’s not a crazy take, a lot of people see that. I just tell him to stay patient. He’s a guy that’s gone through a bit of a tough time, he’ll admit that, but that doesn’t mean he can’t have really good things ahead.”The November camp is the first time Reyna has been involved with the national team since Berhalter selected him for the 2024 Copa America. A“I do think it’s been unfair, but I think he’s going to come around and people are going to see that soon,” Pulisic said.As for Pulisic, he is missing camp after just recovering from a hamstring injury sustained on international duty in October. He missed four games for AC Milan and returned from the bench last weekend.“I just want to make sure I have the time now to fully care for myself, to make sure my hamstring is doing well and allow other guys to take my place,” Pulisic said. “It’s just the best decision for everyone right now.”Pulisic was absent from the USMNT over the summer after asking head coach Mauricio Pochettino not to be selected for the Gold Cup. He got some time off before returning to Milan for preseason.The USMNT faces Paraguay on Sunday in Chester, Pa., and Uruguay on Tuesday in Tampa and won’t be together again until the March international break. By Tom BogertSenior Writer, US Soccer

How Max Arfsten, uncapped and ‘overlooked,’ became an unlikely USMNT fixture

USMNT left back Max Arfsten

Stephen Maturen / Getty ImagesBy Henry BushnellNov. 13, 2025

PHILADELPHIA — At 16 years old, Christian Pulisic was moving to Borussia Dortmund, and Tyler Adams was turning pro in New York. Folarin Balogun was with Arsenal’s vaunted under-17s. Weston McKennie and Ricardo Pepi were on similar paths to soccer stardom in Dallas. Most of the U.S. men’s national team these days develops in elite youth academies, often far from home, with big dreams. As for Max Arfsten?Arfsten, who has started more games for the USMNT in 2025 than anybody else, was playing at San Joaquin Memorial High School in Fresno, Calif., yearning for a Division I college scholarship.“Which is crazy,” Arfsten tells The Athletic, his mind blown by the contrast. “That’s insane to think about.”“But,” he notes, “everyone’s journey is different.”His went from the parks of Fresno to the University of California, Davis; from the San Jose Earthquakes reserves, where he failed to earn a first-team contract, to the Columbus Crew via the waning MLS SuperDraft. Having spent the first 21 years of his life in California, he didn’t even know where Columbus was. He arrived, essentially, as a trialist. He spent 2023 on the Crew’s bench — and quietly struggling, venting to confidants on the phone, sometimes returning to the Crew facility late at night to train on his own, less to improve, more to free his mind and “blow off steam.”Throughout that year, and even for parts of 2024, he was nobody. He was “overlooked,” as he’s said, and as he’s been for much of his soccer life.But at almost every stage, at every level, he was convinced: “I belong.”That’s what Arfsten, now 24, told himself in January at his very first USMNT training camp. That’s what he told himself two months later at his first A-team camp alongside studs like Pulisic and McKennie.He was nervous, he admits. “All these guys play for the top clubs,” he thought. He’d text his childhood coach, Milton Blanco, “all excited,” Blanco says. But Arfsten’s mindset quickly fell in line with what Blanco would tell him about any new teammate or opponent that might seem intimidating: “It’s just another f***ing dude.”By the summer, his understated cockiness began to flow. Off the field, in baggy cargo pants and oversized Ts, he oozes Cali chill; but on it, he plays with “that little arrogance,” Blanco says, and an edge. Even in an unfamiliar position, left back, he’d go at opponents. He rebounded from mistakes in a Concacaf Gold Cup quarterfinal against Costa Rica to score his first national team goal.No one ever anointed him a starter, but from March 23 through Oct. 10, he started all but one USMNT game. He entered 2025 with zero national team call-ups; he’ll likely end it with over 1,000 minutes, potentially more than any other U.S. outfield player this year. (He’s currently second to Tim Ream.)Advertisement

In 2026, he has big ambitions. “I want to play in Europe, I want to play in the World Cup,” he says. “I feel like those are the two next steps for me.”But he doesn’t want to get ahead of himself. Nor does he feel fully comfortable with the national team, even in his red sweatshirt, sipping a vanilla latte in the team hotel lobby on a Monday afternoon, ahead of, potentially, his 15th and 16th U.S. games.“Every time I come here, I still feel a massive point to prove,” Arfsten says.In fact, “that’s how I approach everything at this point,” he adds.Because that’s what he’s been doing at every stop on the journey.

Mauricio Pochettino and Max Arfsten share a high five

Mauricio Pochettino and Max Arfsten share a high five during the U.S.’s friendly vs. Japan in ColumbusAdam Cairns / Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY Network / Imagn Images

All I wanted was a D-I scholarship

Arfsten was born and raised in Fresno, an unglamorous city in California’s Central Valley, and a thriving soccer town largely fueled by Latinos. “That’s who I grew up around,” Arfsten says. There was no big-time academy; no powerhouse college program; no flourishing pro club. But there was “a very big pickup, streetball type of scene,” he explains.Arfsten, the eldest of three brothers, took some traditional routes into soccer — a local club, Cal Odyssey; high school soccer, where “the level was really bad,” he says with a smile; and private training sessions with Blanco. But he’d also play in unstructured environments, with and against grown men when he was a teen. “That’s where I developed a lot of my technical ability,” Arsten says — in games that were “5-v-5, small space, just play.”In those environments, he says, “I got a lot better.” But he didn’t necessarily get on scouting radars. “All I wanted was a D-I scholarship,” he says. When he got his first offer as a high school junior, from UC Davis, he leapt at it.A week or two later, he recalls, he went to a tournament in Las Vegas and prestigious schools came calling. He considered Notre Dame. But he’d committed to Davis. “I felt a loyalty,” he remembers. He also wanted to play right away. So he enrolled at a school that, he admits, was “not even that good [in] the landscape of college soccer.”

AdvertisementAt the time, and for most of his childhood, he was an attacker — a winger or a roaming striker. He was good, and started most games as a college freshman, but … a pro prospect? While some of his present-day peers were already breaking into the USMNT, he was chugging along without a goal until the Big West Conference’s postseason tournament.

Arfsten ultimately spent two-and-a-half years at Davis — and later graduated, he notes, with a degree in economics, after continuing classes online. He left to sign an MLS Next Pro contract with the Earthquakes, and there, in San Jose, he began to truly believe he belonged. He’d occasionally train with the first team and think to himself: “I can play with these guys.”

The club, though, disagreed. So off he went, to the MLS draft, to Columbus and to the toughest year of his life.

Max Arfsten playing on the left wing for the Columbus Crew

Max Arfsten mans the left wing for the Columbus CrewJason Mowry / Getty Images

The breakthrough

He went alone, from California to Central Ohio, and did earn a contract with the Crew. But for the first time in his soccer life, he rode the bench. He’d push through training sessions; he’d drive home pleased with his performance. But come Saturdays, he’d hardly play. He’d call his mom and lament that Crew coach Wilfried Nancy seemingly didn’t like him. “I was ging through it,” Arfsten says now. “I was frustrated.” get out of his own head, he’d occasionally go back to the Crew’s training ground late at night. He’d scan his thumbprint and enter a mostly-deserted complex. He’d grab a ball and do technical work.

The following morning, coaches would sometimes confront him: “What are you doing? Why are you training extra?”

But they came to understand the nighttime sessions were, as Arfsten says, “a mental thing” — an escape from “just sitting at home and being sad or mad that I’m not playing.”

He logged just 272 minutes for the Crew in 2023. They won MLS Cup, but he hardly contributed. “It was a hard year for me,” he says now. “But I feel like I needed it to grow mentally.” He “reprogrammed” himself to treat weekday training sessions like gamedays. And in 2024, hardened, he began to establish himself.He earned Nancy’s trust, first as a sub, then as a starter, always in his new position: left wingback. “It was definitely an adjustment at first, especially the defending part,” Arfsten says. But he knew that countless left-footed stars, from Marcelo to Jordi Alba, had transitioned from attacking positions to two-way roles early in their pro careers. “I always had a feeling I could play wingback,” Arfsten says. Once he gained an understanding of pressing triggers and proper body positioning, it began to feel natural.

When he broke into the USMNT earlier this year, he was initially pushed even farther toward his own goal, as a fullback in a back four, and out of his comfort zone. Some fans would ridicule his defending.“I don’t want to agree with that,” Arfsten says of the criticism, “but I understand. I have grown up being an attacking player my whole life. Tracking back and defending is something that’s been asked of me as of lately, and I’m trying to embrace it and be as good as I can at it.”Now, though, as the U.S. has shifted toward formations with a back three and wingbacks, Arfsten has returned to his natural habitat. In his first game at wingback for the national team, he served up an assist to Alejandro Zendejas. With Antonee Robinson, the national team’s once-secure starter at left back, struggling to recover from knee surgery, Arfsten has solidified himself in the lineup.And yes, he does now feel more comfortable around U.S. teammates in camp. “I don’t feel comfortable in the sense that something is given to me,” he clarifies. He still feels the proverbial “chip on my shoulder, and I think part of that comes from playing in the MLS, as opposed to so many guys that play in top leagues.”But he is confident, perhaps more so than ever before, that he belongs.

‘OK, I can play with these guys’

When the maiden U.S. call-up appeared in his email inbox last winter, Arfsten was at his childhood home back in Fresno, and “I was hyped,” he recalls. He told his brothers, who responded: “Bro, that’s craaazy.” Blanco says that Arfsten would occasionally text him during those early USMNT days: “Hey, I trained with this guy, I trained with that guy.” Part of him, perhaps, was in awe.

But Blanco, who has worked with Arfsten off and on since the player was 8, would respond: “Dude, I’m happy for you, but that’s normal for you now.”

And although there were “some growing pains,” Arfsten says, “at a certain point, I was like, ‘OK, I can play with these guys.’”

His nerves tingled in January and March, but by July, when he walked out onto the shoddy grass pitch at NRG Stadium in Houston, for a Gold Cup final against Mexico, he felt something even more odd.

“I wasn’t nervous at all,” Arfsten says. “It was so weird.”

“The national anthem is usually when I feel it,” he explains. But there, in a cavernous stadium, with the stands 80% covered in Mexican green, on the biggest stage he’d ever played, he felt … confident.

Confidence is something he’s always had, to a degree; but also something he’s worked on intentionally. He reads books by or about successful people, such as Nike founder Phil Knight or tennis star Andre Agassi. He scrutinizes their words and studies their mentalities. He cites Kobe Bryant, and says: “I’m confident because I believe you have to be to be a successful athlete.”

He’s also learned to set goals that are both reachable and ambitious. Nowadays, they’re loftier than ever before. They’re also fairly explicit. Speaking two days after the Crew’s MLS season ended, Arfsten — who was the subject of a summer bid from English club Middlesborough, which the Crew turned down — says multiple times: “I want to go to Europe.”

“And,” he says, “I want to do anything I can to make this World Cup squad.”

He doesn’t let himself daydream, because “I gotta take care of playing well every day, wherever I’m at,” he says.But he knows, of course, that the biggest World Cup ever is seven months and two camps away. The USMNT’s opener is a four-hour drive from where he grew up.

“All I know,” he says, “is I want to be a part of it.” By Henry Bushnell

Senior Writer, U.S. Soccer

Who would win the 2026 World Cup if it kicked off today?

  • Multiple contributors

Nov 14, 2025, 04:11 AM ET

It’s mid-November, and qualification for the 2026 World Cup — to be hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada next summer — is in its final dramatic stages, with many automatic spots to be filled over the next week and several other nations vying for a spot in March’s intercontinental playoffs.

Before we get there, though — and before we get to the World Cup draw, which will be held in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 5 — let’s ask ourselves a simple question: If the World Cup started today, who would win it?


Spain logoSPAIN (8 votes)

Last World Cup win: 2010
FIFA rank: 1

Mark Ogden: The 2026 World Cup is going to be won by the team that can best deal with the conditions of a stifling-hot summer in the U.S., Mexico and Canada. Spain tick more boxes than any other contender. They are the reigning European champions — their pedigree is unquestioned — but Luis de la Fuente’s side will win the World Cup because they can dominate possession and wear down their opponents.

– 2026 World Cup: Who’s in, how the rest can qualify
– Marsden: Why Yamal fitness is causing Spain, Barcelona tension
– Carlisle: How the USMNT battles jet lag

They have two world-class goalkeepers in Unai Simón and David Raya, a proven defense and a midfield including Martín ZubimendiPedri and Rodri. Further forward, on top of the consistency and reliability of Mikel Oyarzabal and Dani Olmo, the unpredictability and goal threat of Ferran Torres and Samu Aghehowa, there is winger Lamine Yamal, who is capable of leading Spain to glory in his first World Cup. The final is scheduled just six days after his 19th birthday; what a gift that would be.

Tom Hamilton: Spain have plenty of big tournament pedigree despite falling on penalties in the UEFA Nations League final to Portugal in June. Their last competitive defeat in 90 minutes was way back in 2023, when they lost to Scotland. Pedri missed much of the Euro 2024 knockout stages through injury, but he’s back and firing, which adds to the world-class depth — and beautiful blend of youth and experience — that De la Fuente can call upon.

Other teams such as FranceEngland and Argentina will push them close, plus we expect Brazil to click at some stage, especially with Carlo Ancelotti at the helm. As we saw in 2022, there’s likely to be a Morocco-esque surprise package, but right now, Spain are at the front of the pack. Key to their chances, though, is getting Rodri back up to full working order. Manchester City have been slow to reintroduce him, but if he gets back to his world-class best …

Sam Marsden: Time for me to make a wholly original pick! A lot of countries have a lot of talent, but right now, none, for me, are better than La Roja, for two reasons.

Firstly, they have a clear playing style, which is not always easy to find in international football. Secondly, it feels like the roles within the team are so well defined and understood within the squad that they’re best-equipped to deal with losing players to injuries or suspensions. However, that resilience and flexibility could be tested if Ballon d’Or runner-up Yamal ends up missing games. He is perhaps the one player in the squad whose quality, unpredictability and match-winning ability is difficult to replace.

Yamal situation playground stuff’ from Barcelona and Spanish FA

Julien Lauren believes the Lamine Yamal situation could be “easily figured out” if both Barcelona and the Spanish FA “speak to each other” to sort it out.

Alex Kirkland: Am I biased, living as I do in Madrid? Perhaps. But here are the facts: Spain won Euro 2024, beating Germany, France and England along the way. Before that, they won the 2023 UEFA Nations League. Since then, they’ve reached the 2025 Nations League final — only to be beaten in a penalty shootout by Portugal. They’ve just matched the longest unbeaten run in their history, going 29 competitive games without defeat (counting that Portugal final as a draw). They’ve also got Pedri, Yamal, Nico Williams, and so many midfield options that Zubimendi, Fabián Ruiz and Rodri are competing for just one spot.

Are there weaknesses? A few: Oyarzabal isn’t your dream center forward, but he has seven goals for Spain in 12 months. And if he’s not scoring, then Arsenal’s Mikel Merino — six goals in World Cup qualifying — will. De la Fuente isn’t entirely convincing, but you can’t argue with results, and his team play a really clear, cohesive, well-established style of play. If Pedri and Yamal stay fit: no other team comes close.

Cesar Hernandez: I think there’s no looking past the Euro 2024 champions. If we’re not counting the results of penalty shootouts (though it was a dramatic one with Portugal earlier this year), they’ve gone 24 consecutive games without a defeat in regulation or extra time. They’re also breezing through World Cup qualifying without a loss or goal allowed.Granted, if the World Cup were starting this week, there’s also an assumption that the fitness management of Yamal would be in a much more ideal state as he’s shifted between Barcelona and national team duties, but who knows. Perhaps this back-and-forth continues through next year, which could lead to a different prediction for 2026.

Lizzy Becherano: At this point in time, Spain have to be considered the front-runners. Winning Euro 2024 was a master class, one that also offered valuable experience to the younger players on the squad. The likes of Yamal and Fermín López are better for enduring the pressure and high stakes on the international stage, which is crucial to being successful at a World Cup. Certain countries boast individual stars who can drive victories, but Spain stand strong enough in each position to power through the most difficult challenges the upcoming World Cup will pose.

James Olley: Spain! They lifted the Euro 2024 trophy by becoming the first team to win all seven matches without requiring penalties. And the caliber of the teams they beat — Italy, Germany, France and England among them — suggested it was no fluke.Williams and Yamal are two years older with more experience; Rodri should be relatively fresh assuming he recovers from his persistent injury problems, but if not, Zubimendi — who deputized for Rodri in the Euros final against England — has arguably taken his game to another level at Arsenal this season. Spain do need other players to kick on — Dean Huijsen switching his allegiance from Netherlands last year could be a major boost if he thrives at Real Madrid — but they still look the team to beat.

Jeff Carlisle: It has to be Spain. They’ve been wiping out their opponents in qualifying by a combined score of 15-0. Obviously there will be sterner tests once the real thing starts, but for now they’re unstoppable. Mikel Merino is banging in the goals — so is Mikel Oyarzabal — and Pedri has been imperious in midfield. Lamine Yamal was injured for the last two games and Spain didn’t look bothered at all.Even with Robin Le Normand injured out injured for the rest of the year, the defense still looks solid with Aymeric Laporte and Huijsen anchoring the back line. Besides, when you’re possessing the ball over 75% of the time, like Spain did in its last two matches, they are absolutely cutting off the oxygen to teams, giving them little to no chance of threatening La Roja‘s goal. This is also a team with loads of experience, having claimed the Euro 2024 title. They know how to come through in big matches.


England logoENGLAND (3 votes)

Last World Cup win: 1966
FIFA rank: 4

Julien Laurens: The biggest factor here besides England’s talent is that they finally have a manager who is not afraid of making big calls and being honest about it. Thomas Tuchel can deal with big egos better than anyone else, having worked for high-profile teams from Chelsea to Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich. He has extensive experience managing unhappy players and leaving behind anyone who isn’t on board with his philosophy and team spirit. One of the best tacticians in world football, Tuchel is the right guy to finally lead England to victory.

The Three Lions have one of the most talented squads of players, and bags of experience at the club level, for him to choose from — many of whom were part of England’s run to the finals at the last two European Championships. Striker Harry Kane is in the form of his life, there is depth in a lot of positions and a fresh generation of young stars pushing hard for a starting spot or a place on the plane next summer. (Seriously, take your pick from Elliot AndersonAlex ScottAdam WhartonMorgan Rogers … need I say more?)

Marcotti questions Tuchel’s comments about Bellingham, Kane and Foden

Gab Marcotti believes Thomas Tuchel should “never say” Jude Bellingham, Harry Kane and Phil Foden can’t play together. Cole Palmer will come back from injury fresh and rested, ready to have a big impact whether as a starter or as a sub. And leaders like Kane, Bukayo SakaDeclan Rice or Marc Guéhi will shine. Tuchel also explained the obvious this week: Kane, Jude Bellingham and Phil Foden can’t start together. It didn’t work in the past, and it won’t work at the World Cup this summer. The team would not be balanced enough, and in this structure, it is not possible to have them three together from the start. This England team will be built differently, on and off the pitch and that will be the reason for their success.

Bill Connelly: They currently have the best combination of talent, depth, coaching, center forward play and good health. (Spain would be my answer, if not for those last two parts.) Tuchel’s combination of caution and individualized tactics should work as well as anything in a long combination with so many knockout rounds, and while he probably doesn’t have the fullback situation figured out as well as he would prefer, no one does. This is a battle-tested squad with a bench loaded with players would start for all but the most elite countries in the world. They’re in great shape, and if the overall health of the squad hasn’t fallen apart seven months from now, they’ll have everything they need.

Gab Marcotti: I’m applying the process of elimination here. Right now, Yamal and Pedri are injured (sorry, Spain); Brazil have a lot to prove under Carlo Ancelotti; Argentina look good, but we haven’t had repeat champions in my lifetime. Right now, logic says England or France, except after 12 years of Deschamps, I can’t help but feel things might be getting a little stale for Les Bleus. So whatever, I’ll bite. Why not England? Why not Tuchel to make history as the first foreign manager to lift a World Cup? Why not an end to 60 years of hurt and humiliation? Darn, can’t believe I said that. But you did ask for “right now,” so …


France logoFRANCE (2 votes)

Last World Cup win: 2018
FIFA rank: 3

Beth Lindop: While I think Spain are possibly the most balanced team in world football, I’m opting for Les Bleus. They are no strangers to World Cup success, having followed up their 2018 triumph by reaching the final in 2022.

In terms of attacking firepower, I think they’re pretty unrivaled at the international level. Kylian Mbappé has been in fine scoring form for Real Madrid this season, while Ousmane Dembélé is now officially the best player in the world thanks to his Ballon d’Or win, though his campaign so far has been disrupted by injury. With the likes of Hugo EkitikeBradley Barcola and Désiré Doué in the squad, Didier Deschamps has an embarrassment of attacking riches at his disposal. And, at the other end of the pitch, Dayot UpamecanoTheo Hernández and William Saliba are also in great form. The squad is really strong in all departments.

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Ryan O’Hanlon: They’ve made the past two World Cup finals, and the last time they lost a knockout game at a World Cup, Barack Obama was the U.S. president and England was still part of the European Union. Their potential front three of Mbappé, Dembele, and Michael Olise is better than anything any club team can offer. Their starting center backs are currently starting for club teams that have allowed 11 combined goals through their first 21 matches of domestic play. This will be the most talented team at the tournament next summer — and it won’t be close.


Argentina logoARGENTINA (1 vote)

Last World Cup win: 2022
FIFA rank: 2

Fans surround Argentina bus to watch Messi train

Hundreds of fans gather as Lionel Messi and the Argentina team train in Spain ahead of the Angola friendly. Rob Dawson: Managing the climate in the U.S., Mexico and Canada will be key for whoever lifts the trophy, and the European nations are going to struggle. Argentina got over the line in Qatar, and the core of that squad is still here. Lionel Messi — if he plays — is unlikely to have the same impact as last time, but they’ve got Emiliano MartínezCristian RomeroAlexis Mac AllisterEnzo Fernández and Julián Álvarez around him. It’s a formidable spine to the team. World Cups are won by sides that can grow into a tournament, and Argentina have got invaluable inexperience from four years ago. They’re the ones to beat.

Opinion: MLS takes on risk in July-May calendar, but Apple deal change is positive

ASN’s Brian Sciaretta offers up his thoughts on the big announcement from MLS with the change of its schedule and the altering of the its broadcasting deal with Apple TV.

BY Brian SciarettaPosted November 14, 2025 11:00 AM

MLS MADE THE historic announcement on Thursday that the league was going to switch scheduling and adopt a season that aligns with the global game. The league will now begin in the late summer, take a winter break, and resume in the spring. The goal is to take advantage of transfer markets, be able to respect FIFA international windows, and have the playoffs go uninterrupted.

Per the release: “The 2027-28 MLS regular season will begin in mid-to-late July 2027 and conclude with the Audi MLS Cup Playoffs and MLS Cup presented by Audi in late May 2028.”

Overall, the league is painting a nice picture on what is a big risk. Sure, the current schedule has problems. But some of those problems are real, and some of those problems are overblown in this announcement. But moving to a Summer-Spring season also creates news problems and doesn’t necessarily fix the existing problems.

 
Weather

For some of the league’s teams, this switch will not change much in terms of the environment of their home games. But for other teams, there are going to be a lot more cold weather games.

After this current November international break, only eight MLS teams and seven MLS games remain. Under the new switch, all 30 teams will have to play another month into mid-December. In the later stages of the playoffs, fans are willing to put up with more because of the importance of the games. But midseason games in cold weather?

That is not something that should be easily brushed aside. MLS is not the first league to have tried this. In 2010, the Russian Premier League switched from a calendar year to Summer-Spring like MLS now. The results were disastrous. Reuters had a feature six years after the switch highlighting the falling attendances, frequently cancelled or moved games, and a decline in fan interest.

MLS has enough teams either in manageable winter climates or indoor stadiums where the results won’t be as drastic. But they could have a similar impact on many of the league’s bigger teams.

MLS has different climate constraints than most of Europe. Had most of Europe’s leagues had weather similar to Chicago, Toronto, Montreal, Colorado, Salt Lake, Minnesota, Columbus, or Cincinnati, would they have had their schedules the same as they do now?

With this switch, MLS made it more difficult to get fans to go to home games for a big part of the season.

 
Footprint remains similar

In terms of the number of months in a year MLS games will be played, the footprint on the calendar year will be smaller. The new proposed winter break is essentially the same length of the current offseason. Now, on top of that, there is a new offseason in June through mid-July.

To be fair, MLS in June is historically a mess with major international tournaments and this eliminates that mess altogether. That is good.

The flow

MLS will now adopt a winter break in the middle of the season. While the Bundesliga has a winter break, the MLS winter break will be longer than any other top league. It will be like what we see in the Danish Superliga. It will now become the only major North American sports league that pauses for two months and them resumes.

The question is how do the league’s existing fans adjust to such a big interruption to the flow of the season? Maybe it will not be an issue or maybe the season’s momentum will be lost? Right now, it’s all just a guessing game, or a risk.

Transfer market

In the media release from MLS, the top two reasons for this change were related to player signings: “optimize global transfer market activity” and “maximize player signings.”

There are some merits to this. There are deals that do not happen over the summer because teams do not want to lose a key player in midseason. Those deals would likely happen if the season is yet to begin. 

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With regards to selling players then in January, team are dealing with limited needs and the players getting sold do not have a preseason to try to adjust.

That said, there are a lot of important leagues that operate on a calendar year and still manage to sell players sufficiently. Brazil’s Serie A and most South American leagues are on a variation of a calendar year. These leagues also continue to be major sellers in the world market.

It is a little overstated. Top young players have been sold from the league at a sufficient pace.

As for the buying side, MLS teams have been aggressive regardless of time of season or year. Many of the top imports within the league have arrived midseason, and there hasn’t been much complaining. Sure, if Messi arrived in Miami before the season started in his first year, it would have resulted in them making the playoffs.

But for most of the recent substantial imports – such as Heung-Min Son – joined midseason. With the league’s playoff format, having these players there for the playoffs is really the most important thing.

Playoffs

MLS said that the league is exploring new playoff formats to go along with this schedule change. Regardless of how the playoff changes, it is a big win that the playoffs, nor the stretch run leading to the playoffs, will be affected by the three FIFA international windows in the fall. The September, October, and November windows break up the flow of every league but it is even worse to be deciding titles and elimination during this run.

The talk about which American sports leagues MLS has to compete for viewership is off base. No matter what time of year, the NFL, MLB, NBA, or NHL is ongoing. These decisions need to be made independent of other leagues. If anything, it’s harder now for the MLS playoffs to compete against the NBA and NHL playoffs along with the start of the MLB season.

But the fact that the MLS playoffs are now uninterrupted is good.

Bottom Line

There is no crystal ball to tell how this is going to go. It seems like there is a lot of risk to fix problems that were exaggerated.

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But it does help with not having the league playing in June during international tournaments and it does help with the playoffs going uninterrupted and into nicer weather.

There will be a lot of challenges, and it won’t always be easy for fans. All we can do is hope it works.

Apple TV altered

MLS also announced on Thursday that its broadcasting deal with Apple TV will be altered. Instead of having a separate MLS package on Apple TV, MLS games would now become part of the general Apple TV package. Like with the previous deal, MLS season ticket holders will get an Apple TV package included with their season tickets.

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Whatever the numbers were behind this deal, it’s a good move for all parties. MLS is a league that is trying to grow and expand. It’s very hard to do that behind a paywall. Apple TV is still a paywall, but it has a massive market behind it. In total there are 45 million Apple TV subscribers and now MLS will get to push into those numbers as opposed to only those that bought the MLS package. This is the way to expand.

MLS commissioner Don Garber addresses lingering questions after league flips calendar

MLS commissioner Don Garber

Pamela Smith / AP PhotoBy Paul TenorioNov. 15, 2025 7:00 am EST

PALM BEACH, Fla. — MLS commissioner Don Garber couldn’t help but smile as he walked quickly through the lobby of the Four Seasons less than an hour after the league’s board of governors meeting adjourned. It was a hint of what he would announce an hour later.For the past two years, owners had studied, analyzed and debated the future of the league. On Thursday, they voted to move forward. The board approved a plan to flip the calendar to run from mid-July through the end of May, syncing MLS with many of the top leagues in the world, setting it up to take steps forward in its sporting product and shifting its biggest games to a more attractive spring window for media partners.League owners also approved a plan to overhaul the regular season and are mulling changes to the postseason format. MLS also announced changes to its partnership with Apple, which takes the league out from behind the paywall of MLS Season Pass and puts it on to the Aple TV streaming platform, where it will be available for tens of millions of subscribers.Garber declared the calendar change, “one of the most important decisions in our league’s history.” And as he sat to speak with reporters, his optimism about what the day meant for the future of MLS was clear. Garber discussed many of the finer details — and some of the questions that linger after such a seismic decision.The concern voiced by most fans centered on how colder weather markets would handle games played in November and December, and potentially an extra week or two in February. Garber said the work the league did to study the issue convinced those markets it would not make a massive dent on their business. Some teams will have to make updates to their facilities, but others won’t, he said. And the overlap of seasons means major changes can mostly be avoided.

“We’re (already) playing games in November now, and it could be really cold in those same markets,” Garber said. “It could be really cold in December. It could be really cold in other months. We’re talking about a couple of games (being added), so I don’t know that it makes sense for a team, for a handful of games, to dramatically change their infrastructure.“It’s not like this is as traumatic as I think most people think. When we were going through this process, 92% [of the footprint] is exactly the same window. MLS Cup was in Toronto in December, and it was really, really cold. It could have been in Toronto this year if they had a good season, right?”

Seattle Sounders win 2016 MLS Cup in Toronto

The Seattle Sounders won 2016 MLS Cup in Toronto, which was played in DecemberClaus Andersen / Getty ImagesGarber credited owners for being willing to take on such major changes in order to push the league forward. With 30 ownership groups, the idea of unanimity is long gone. But the league was able to get an overwhelming amount of support for this vote.“They want to push the envelope,” Garber said. “They’re impatient to continue to ensure we’re capturing the opportunity. They’re willing to make decisions … that might not be in their individual interest.“This is the right move,” he continued. “Moving to the international calendar would have been unthinkable years ago. We didn’t have the ability to manage it with our facilities, and we didn’t have strength and commitment within our fan base. So while this will have, in the short term, a disparate impact on certain teams, you know, I watched a (Canadian Premier League) championship where fans were packed into a small stadium and players played in a foot of snow. Now we probably would have rescheduled that game, but I think it speaks to the soccer fan here in this part of the country (who are) committed and they believe in their team.“I can remember back in the day, people said, why won’t you do the calendar? People go to NFL games when it’s cold. I’d say, ‘Well, actually it’s not the players, it’s the fans and it’s our facilities.’ Do we have heated fields? Do we have the way to manage what could be cold weather in markets from a hospitality perspective, and all of that are building blocks that needed to happen over time.”What You Should Read NextMLS calendar flip is a big step, but not the only step, toward greater global relevanceBig change is coming to MLS in the summer of 2027, but what else needs to happen for the league to increase its profile?

Somewhat swallowed by what may be the biggest change in the league in 20 years was the news about changes to the Apple deal. With Season Pass eliminated, subscribers tuning in to watch Severance or Pluribus — or Ted Lasso, which returns with Season 4 in 2026 — can now watch MLS, as can any Formula 1 fans that subscribe for the start of that deal in 2026.Importantly, Garber said the terms of the deal with Apple also changed — though he declined to disclose any details. Sources, however, confirmed Sportico’s report that the deal will now end after the 2028-29 season, three and a half years earlier than expected.“This wasn’t about MLS Season Pass not working,” Garber said. “It’s about, how could we work with Apple, who had a vision for what Apple TV could be, and where sports would fit into that, and how could MLS be a bigger part of a broader distribution vehicle for our league?“Yes, we’ll have different economics. The term will change. The financials will change. And all that’s very positive for us.”

Garber remained bullish on the league’s decision to take all of its local, national and global rights to one streaming partner. The Apple deal has faced harsh criticism by taking MLS out of typical linear rotation — though MLS does maintain a deal with Fox that airs 34 regular season games, eight playoff games and MLS Cup — but the commissioner was firm in his belief it was the right decision.

MLS airs its matches on Apple TV

MLS is bringing its matches outside of a separate paywall on Apple TVIsaiah Vazquez / Getty Images

“We need to take a step back and understand that we (foresaw) the disruption of the sports media space three to five years ago and had a vision to have every single game be treated exactly the same, have those games be globally distributed, because we knew we would continue to sign well-known international players,” Garber said. “In this case, look at [Lionel] Messi, Son [Heung-min] and [Thomas] Müller, just what’s happened this year, and what our viewership has been in Korea, and what we continue to do in Argentina, and the excitement that is existing in Europe with players (who have) only been in our league for a number of months. And it was all part of a grand plan that took some risk, and I think it speaks to the way this ownership group has continued to evolve, where doing things the way it used to be done is not part of the lexicon of the MLS board.”A big part of these changes revolve around MLS’s place in the sports media economy. MLS has failed to deliver the type of audience needed to demand high-level media rights packages. It remains behind not just other North American sports, but also the Premier League here in the U.S.The move to flip the calendar is part of a plan to help the MLS business transition from a model that has thrived as a local entertainment business into one that can resonate nationally and globally.I think the underpinning of professional sports is media, and in our case, it needs to be global media,” Garber said. “But you can’t have a great product unless you have an in-stadium experience that is really compelling and is saying to the world: Look what I’m experiencing here; you could experience that through a series of devices. So the two have to work together and I think (MLS) could achieve that. The EPL has achieved it. The NFL has achieved it. I don’t see any reason why we can’t.”Garber was asked how quickly that next media deal has to happen.“I think it certainly has to happen in order for us to to be what we want to be, which was going to require us to have more revenues to be able to continue to invest in both infrastructure, player development and signing great players so we could have a product that can compete with a very competitive soccer/football market globally,” he said. “So we look forward to continuing our relationship with Apple, and hopefully that grows our audience. And if our audience grows, that will deliver value for Apple and certainly deliver value for us, because we’ll have a larger audience to be able to think about: How could we monetize that sometime in the future?”To do that, MLS has to put a more attractive product on the field. Flipping the calendar is a tool in that aim. Lining up the transfer windows will allow MLS teams to do better business in the summer, both as a buyer and a seller. They will be able to attract more players coming out of contract, too.But if MLS is truly going to draw more viewers, the level of play has to go up. And to do that, the spending rules will have to change. Garber acknowledged that the league is studying how to modify them.

Inter Miami star Lionel Messi

Star players like Lionel Messi have called on MLS to loosen its rules on club spendingLeonardo Fernandez / Getty Images“We still believe that we’re operating in a very competitive market, in a business that still is growing,” Garber said. “I still think of MLS as a 30-year startup. So just eliminating all rules I don’t think would be prudent. And by the way, almost all leagues have rules. They might be different, [but] even football, soccer leagues have rules. They might be related to spending limits and the like, but there are rules everywhere. We just have our version of them.“We’re excited about the evolution of those rules. And we’re going to continue to work on that. The window for that would be the 2027 season. So similar to the calendar change. We went [into] a very comprehensive presentation to the board about what kinds of things we’re thinking about with our [sporting and competition] committee: research-backed analysis of what these things could look like, what impact it would have on on-field performance, what impact it would have on spending, how does it deal with competitive balance? I want to reiterate to everyone: this is not a bunch of people sitting behind a curtain and just making decisions, as many people think on social media. It’s data-driven strategic analysis, backed by research, so that when we make decisions, they’re achieving the goals we want to achieve.”To make those bigger roster-rule changes, however, the league will have to modify or negotiate a new collective bargaining agreement with the MLS Players Association. The current CBA runs through January 31, 2028 — a date that was pushed back twice by extensions in negotiations forced by MLS during and after the pandemic.Garber said he did not anticipate the expiration date of the CBA changing, but it’s hard to see how the league could reach its goal of implementing meaningful change to the roster rules by 2027 without a new CBA.We’ve got a lot of work to do collectively to ensure that we’re doing the work on the league side and on the MLSPA side, to have a deal that will be part of the future evolution of the league,” Garber said. “I don’t expect that we would change the date, but … I have a lot of faith in our players. I care deeply for them. They’ve got good leadership and good representation, and I look forward to sitting down with them both in the short-term as it relates to finalizing whatever we need to finalize on the transition, and then continuing to talk as early as we can, so that we can be in a good spot when the CBA expires.” By Paul Tenorio Senior Writer, MLS

Trinity Rodman negotiations reach NWSL commissioner as English teams express interest in U.S. star

Washington Spirit forward Trinity Rodman in green warm-ups before the team's NWSL quarterfinal match.

Washington Spirit forward Trinity Rodman will be a free agent this offseason. Scott Taetsch / Getty Images

By Meg Linehan and Tom Bogert Nov. 15, 2025Updated 8:37 am EST

Trinity Rodman’s representation is in negotiation with the National Women’s Soccer League over her future in the league, as interest from teams abroad continues. While the Washington Spirit would like to retain Rodman, the talks are currently beyond the club’s control due to existing roster constraints, according to sources familiar with the negotiations. The 23-year-old will be a free agent this offseason.Rodman’s agent has spoken directly to commissioner Jessica Berman about deals to keep her stateside; however, one of the key points of contention is the player’s salary. Under the current salary cap, teams outside of the league can offer far more than the Spirit — or any NWSL team. Rodman’s team has had talks with at least three teams in the English Women’s Super League, according to sources familiar with the discussions.The Spirit declined to comment, and the NWSL did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.The NWSL operates under a salary cap, currently set at $3.3 million at each club. That maximum will rise every season until it hits $5.1 million in 2030, in accordance with the most recent collective bargaining agreement between the NWSL Players Association and the league.While the minimum player salary for this season is $48,500 and will rise to $82,500 by 2030, there is no maximum salary for an individual player. Still, the Spirit currently has 27 players’ salaries to cover (with three players on loan), whereas teams in Europe do not have to abide by such caps.After her breakout rookie season in 2021, Rodman signed a three-year contract extension with an option for a fourth year, which was exercised this year. In 2022, the deal, worth $1.1 million, made the then 19-year-old the highest-paid player in the league at the time.Rodman told ESPN’s Futbol W at the start of the season that she has “always thought about playing overseas at some point” in her career. The Spirit’s owner, Michele Kang, owns multiple teams across the U.S. and Europe, including OL Lyoness and London City Lionesses and considers herself a “globalist” when it comes to player movement, but has made it clear that keeping Rodman has been a top priority.“We’re going to do everything in our power to hopefully keep her here,” Kang told reporters in March. “She’s an integral part of our success, our success meaning the Spirit as well as NWSL.”

Trinity Rodman was a key goalscorer in the USWNT’s gold medal run at the 2024 Paris Olympics.Daniela Porcelli / Getty Images

Multiple U.S. players have made the move to Europe this season, including defender Naomi Girma and former Angel City forward Alyssa Thompson, both of whom went to Chelsea. While it isn’t the only draw, the ability for overseas teams to pay higher salaries is a factor in the growing global market.In March, Kang ruled out a loan for Rodman to one of the other teams in her multi-club investment company, Kynisca Sports International, but said that players should experience different types of soccer throughout their career.“The European players should actually go at some point to experience the American football or different football. The same thing with the American football players as well,” Kang said. “Experiencing different styles, different leagues, it’s actually a good thing.”The Spirit selected Rodman with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2021 NWSL Draft, and the teenager had an instant impact. She was named rookie of the year in 2021, recording seven goals and seven assists, including one to Kelley O’Hara against the Chicago Stars to secure the team’s first NWSL Championship title.

Before her time in NWSL, Rodman was a standout for the U.S. youth national team, scoring nine goals in the team’s successful 2020 Concacaf Women’s U-20 Championship. She has been equally as impactful for the senior national team. Rodman has 11 goals and nine assists in 47 games with the U.S. women’s national team. She was one-third of the publicly-branded “triple espresso,” alongside Sophia Wilson and Mallory Swanson, who led the U.S. to gold at the 2024 Paris Olympics.Rodman has spent much of this season dealing with injuries, first with a persistent back problem that limited her to 15 appearances and nine starts through 26 regular-season games.Upon her return in October, she sprained her MCL during a Concacaf Champions Cup match, keeping her out of the Spirit’s final two games of the season. She was on the bench for Washington’s penalty kick shootout win over Racing Louisville in the NWSL quarterfinals last week, but never changed out of her warm-ups, instead helping guide players from the sideline.Still, she has been impactful for the Spirit, playing a contributing role to Washington securing the No. 2 spot in the NWSL standings. She has been impactful for the NWSL as a whole in terms of marketing, too, and was recently the only U.S. player featured in an Adidas campaign for the 2026 men’s World Cup.Rodman participated in full training on Friday ahead of today’s semifinal match at Audi Field between the Spirit and the Portland Thorns. By Meg Linehan and Tom Bogert

Jesús Pérez: Mauricio Pochettino’s right-hand man and the USMNT’s eyes and ears

Paul Tenorio Nov. 13, 2025

If you look just over the shoulder of Mauricio Pochettino as he roams the sideline during a U.S. men’s national team game, you’ll find his top assistant, Jesús Pérez, in a place he finds most comfortable.“Two or three yards behind the coach,” Pérez said.Within that short distance, there is a massive difference, he insists. There is a gulf between thinking through decisions and actually making them — and the consequences that come with those choices.“When you are No. 2, you see things,” Pérez said. “But when you are No. 1 … wow, the map is bigger.”Those three yards, however, do not minimize the importance of Pérez’s role on the U.S. staff. Pérez has worked at Pochettino’s side since 2010, rising from analyst at Espanyol to the coach’s right-hand man at Southampton, Tottenham, PSG, Chelsea and now the U.S. He has an outsized impact on the national team as both an integral on-field coach and a chief of staff of sorts, keeping a ulse on every department and connecting the pieces to keep the organization running smoothly.Pérez is always there, whether it’s in stadium suites scouting games of national team players, leaning against the wall during postgame press conferences or running meetings across a number of departments. He is, as Pochettino describes it, the “hands-on coordinator.”“Jesús is someone who coordinates the professional areas and ensures that integration with the staff, whether from the clubs or the national team, [and] allows us to have better communication channels,” Pochettino told The Athletic. “Where everything can flow more smoothly, preventing any problems and ultimately providing the players with a better platform to perform.”

Jesus Perez talks to the USMNT during pregame warmups vs Japan

Jesús Pérez commands the attention of the USMNT during pregame warmups before a September friendly vs. JapanJohn Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images

Pochettino is the face, figurehead and the ultimate decision-maker — those three yards matter. But Pérez grinds behind the scenes to give the staff, and its leader, the best chance at being successful. More importantly, the 54-year-old has become a trusted advisor that Pochettino has leaned on for more than a decade and a half.“He’s a very important person, because, over the years, besides being an important person on the staff professionally, he’s also become a friend,” Pochettino said. “That’s something that doesn’t always happen, especially in the professional sphere like in this sport. That’s something beautiful to experience, because we’re a group of people who have known each other for many years and who have also found common ground, who share life values, not only professional values, but human values. And I think that’s what makes it unique. Within the friendship and within the professional side, that makes us respect each other. That constant challenge of always being better is what’s always the priority — in our entire relationship. And I think that’s something beautiful.”


‘You’re a strong boy’

The memory still sticks in the back of Ryan Mason’s mind.It was preseason at Spurs under Pochettino, who gave him his Premier League debut. The style of play under the Argentine manager was intense, and they were going through a demanding training session. Mason was hitting a wall when he heard Pérez’s voice.“Mase, you’re a strong boy!” the coach shouted.“He was so good on the mental side of it,” recalled Mason, now head coach at West Brom. “The impact that had on my body was huge. I remember feeling it give me more life, give me more belief in my body. And I still hear it to this day. I can still hear it now. It’s something that stuck with me and sticks with me. You have your physical side, but a lot of people have limitations. Some people hit their ceiling because mentally they can’t break through certain barriers and challenges. Whereas I believe Jesús and Mauricio, they’re people that can really push through your barriers and help you reach higher levels.”

Pérez spent much of the early portion of his career as a fitness coach working in Spain and then Saudi Arabia. He got sick toward the end of his time in the latter – a stress-induced illness, he said – and nearly walked away from coaching before Espanyol’s sporting director at the time, Ramón Planes, reached out. Pochettino was looking for someone with Pérez’s background to join the club. The offer was intriguing enough to pull him back to work.Pérez established his value not just on the fitness side, but in other areas, too. He first caught Pochettino’s eye with his work ethic in a shared office, where he worked quietly but diligently. Then he showed an ability as an analyst.Pérez started working from up in the stands but one day offered advice that won Pochettino’s trust. At the time, the staff was discussing dropping a forward in favor of a midfielder because they were being overrun in the middle of the park. Pérez saw things differently.“If you allow me to say you should do the opposite, you are a brave coach, you are a brave team,” he offered. “I think what you have to do is tell one of the center backs to step up and compensate the situation and push high the line, don’t drop the striker.”Within two months, Pérez found himself on the bench with Pochettino.

Jesus Perez instructs Neymar at PSG

Jesús Pérez instructs Neymar at PSG in 2021Jean-Francois Monier AFP / Getty Images

“We brought him into the club in the youth academy,” Pochettino said. “From there, for six months we got to know each other, and then, when I had the opportunity to bring him into the technical staff with me, I made him the offer. He accepted, and that’s how we started working together in Espanyol.”

Still, that fitness background never left him. Players felt the assistant had a way of understanding and unlocking what it took to push them to the next level.

“He helped me to maintain my speed, my agility, my power and he helped me to even get better in my game and in my performances,” said LAFC goalkeeper Hugo Lloris, who played under Pochettino and Pérez at Tottenham. “I still do things (today), it’s part of my routine that I learned from them at that time. … I believe that in the shadow of (a) big manager, there (are) always big assistants. And Jesús is one of them. He is a really bright person, really intelligent, and he knows really well his job.”

Over 15 years together, between Pochettino, Pérez and the rest of the staff – which includes Miki D’Agostino (who played with Pochettino at Newell’s Old Boys) and goalkeeper coach Toni Jiménez – there is a chemistry and balance that is unique at the upper end of the sport. The coaches interact well and complement each other’s strengths.

Pochettino is a charismatic former player. Pérez is far more analytical. If Pochettino pushes hard on players, Pérez understands how to take the good-cop approach. At Spurs, if a player showed up with a new car or a fancy watch, Pérez was known to drop a comment in passing so the player knew the staff noticed. If a story is written or a TV report put out about the U.S. team, chances are Pérez has read it or watched it. In a way, he is Pochettino’s eyes and ears around the program.More on the USMNTGio Reyna’s USMNT return a ‘special situation’ that mixes Pochettino’s messageFor months, Mauricio Pochettino has preached how all players need to earn their USMNT places. Gio Reyna is the exception to his rule

“Jesús is an extension of Mauricio,” U.S. defender Tim Ream said. “He’s got his finger on the pulse with everything, sees all the small details, but also all the big ones as well. He’s very much the glue that kind of keeps all the departments together, and his communication is very similar to that of Mauricio. Lots of personal one-on-one conversations, but also making sure that everybody’s doing the right thing at all times and doing the things together and pulling in the same direction.”

Top managers typically churn through assistants — many leave for other jobs or simply burn out. That the staff has been together this long stands out. There is a level of loyalty that exists within the group. Pochettino typically negotiates contracts for his entire staff.

“He always did what he promised to me,” Pérez said. “ He said (when we) were in Espanyol, ‘We cannot give you the value that you have, but I promise you one day we will try to get the contract that you deserve.’ And since we arrived to England, I never was worried about my contract. When he asked me, you know, what do you think about your contract, I said, ‘Whatever you decide. For me, it’s fine.’ That’s my answer in the last 15 years, and it will be the same forever.”

Pérez was linked to possible top jobs in England, but never took one. Even now he basically laughs off a question about it.

“The credit is his credit,” Pérez said. “It’s Mauricio’s credit. It’s not because I want to be humble, but I know how this business works. If people want to give me some credit, fine. I’m sure some qualities probably are (from) myself. But Mauricio was doing great before I joined the team and I’m sure if all of us, (if) we leave at some point, he will continue having success.”

Pérez insists he is focused on his role within Pochettino’s staff — of being the connector.

Jesus Perez and Mauricio Pochettino at USMNT training

Jesús Pérez has been by Mauricio Pochettino’s side throughout his career, for club and countryRodolfo Gonzalez / AP Photo


Building a national team

That role has been different in some ways with the U.S.

Coaches are not around players as much, which brings “completely different dynamics.” That doesn’t just mean in how hands-on coaches can be on the field, but also in some of the relationships and politics that happen behind the scenes. Players who play require less handling. You show them where and how to improve, but their morale is up. With the rest of the squad there is a constant need to stay on top of players’ mentality and belief.“The challenge in the club is to sustain the motivation, the energy, the readiness of the guys that don’t play, and to deal with everything that comes along — the results or decisions or transfers or politics,” Pérez said. “That’s consuming. But in the national team, you select a player, and if a player doesn’t want to come, (they) stay out. So in general, you shouldn’t have problems of motivation in the camp.”

What Pochettino, Pérez and the rest of the staff have learned, though, is there are many uncontrollable variables with the national team. You never really know what players will be available. Since taking over the national team in October 2024, this staff has dealt with numerous long-term injuries to key players, including Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Sergiño Dest and Antonee Robinson. That has added to the already-difficult task of team-building.

“When we were discussing the job, you look at the list of the players you know, and you imagine the best version of everyone you know,” Pérez said. “And then (you have) every single situation, injuries or personal situations, and also every group has a past, so things don’t happen without reason. So, our duty was to go through one year knowing, assessing and digesting situations that came from the past, but trying to do (things) our way, with our circumstances. It was the real challenge.

“We want to win matches. We didn’t go to the U.S. to have an experience. We went there to increase our [experience], to play the World Cup. But we are there to win matches, to compete. The way to compete is maximizing resources, but we need to maximize the best group of players that they can be together.”

Jesus Perez addresses the USMNT

Jesús Pérez, right, addresses the USMNT during training in September 2025John Dorton / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images

That process hasn’t come without pain. The staff brought in numerous new faces and left out several regulars in a bid to increase competition and eliminate complacency. But the results that build belief in the process haven’t always been there. Pérez said there is still real conviction they have taken the right approach.

The staff seems to have unlocked something in their move to a hybrid back line that shifts from a three- to four-man look and utilizes wingbacks, a position of strength in the pool. They were also able to truly manufacture competition in a pool where it has often seemed obvious who the best players are.

“There are different ways to win matches, obviously we have our preference, but as Mauricio always says, we adapt to the players’ qualities and to the player’s state, and we are not a slave of one way or another,” Pérez said. “At the end of the day, the principles of the games are there. … But none of them are going to be right if you are not fully committed. Fully committed with no doubts. And that’s the basics. So before we talk (about) other things, we [must] feel that we have a group really committed. And if it was some noise around those circumstances, I think everything (is now) clear.”

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With time winding down toward the World Cup, and with yet another camp with numerous key figures missing, Pérez said the coaches are confident they’ve gone through the right process to find the players they trust. That was part of why they spent so much time calling in new faces and looking at options beyond the previous core.

“We know exactly the big group of players that we can rely on,” Pérez said. “Depending on the circumstances, now it’s a matter of state and injuries. But we know (for example), if we call Alex Freeman, what Alex can give us. When we gave him the opportunity, we saw the potential. And now (he is) just getting better for the national team, for his club. But if we need to call Nathan Harriel, that probably has played less with us, we know him very well (too).”

Each player — and there have been 71 called into camp since Pochettino took over — has added value in working toward the end goal, Pérez insisted.

“That’s the biggest asset of the group,” he said. “That we are going to feel bad and sorry for the guys that probably at the end, they can’t make it, but we will give (them) credit and value for what they did for us and for the group, because without them, we couldn’t have the final group.”

For Pérez, that part of the process is critical to team-building. And delegating credit in the name of group success – that’s just part of Pérez’s process.

Jack Pitt-Brooke contributed reporting to this story.

2026 World Cup ticket prices jump; FIFA targets knockout rounds, USMNT games, cohosts

Gianni Infantino and Canada's prime minister Mark Carney

Chris Tanouye / FIFA / Getty Images By Henry Bushnell Nov. 12, 2025

FIFA hiked ticket prices for dozens of 2026 World Cup games ahead of the second phase of sales, which began Wednesday. The initial prices, described last month by fan groups as “super high,” “astonishing” and “unacceptable,” were already multiple times higher than those at previous World Cups. But, sensing strong demand, FIFA raised the cost of many tickets to new record-setting heights — the first large-scale implementation of its “variable pricing” strategy. The price of a Category 1 ticket to the 2026 World Cup final, the most expensive non-hospitality ticket, jumped from $6,730 last month to over $7,000 this month, according to multiple fans who gained access to pricing data. The cost of upper-deck tickets to the final also rose, with most now priced at $5,055 (up from $4,210 last month) or $3,450 (up from $2,790). Prices for many group stage games in the United States stayed stagnant. But tickets for the games in Mexico and Canada, which generally sold quicker in last month’s “Visa Presale” phase, got more expensive across the board, with some prices rising by around 25%, according to screenshots and data seen by The Athletic.

And in the knockout rounds, prices for every single match jumped in at least one category. For the first semifinal at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, a Category 1 ticket now costs $3,295 (up from $2,780 at the start of the previous phase). A Category 2 ticket is $2,350 (up from $1,920) and a Category 3 ticket is $930 (up from $720).In most stadiums, according to color-coded maps embedded in FIFA’s ticketing portal, Category 1 encompasses the entire lower bowl and most or all of the second deck. Category 2 is predominantly the upper deck along the sidelines, while Category 3 is the upper deck above either goal. Category 4 tickets appear to be extremely scarce — confined to the upper portion of a few corner sections in the upper decks of stadiums. (Fans buy tickets by category, and FIFA assigns the exact section, row and seat closer to the start of the tournament.)

FIFA has not said how many tickets are available in each category. In fact, soccer’s global governing body has not communicated pricing details to the general public at all, as it did ahead of past World Cups. It has tightly guarded prices, and hasn’t made executives available for interviews. It even refused to reveal prices to fans who bought the “right to buy” tickets and clamored for the transparency they’d been promised.

But on Wednesday, the ticket portal opened to a random selection of fans in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. They’d entered FIFA’s second lottery, the “early ticket draw,” and won the opportunity to purchase tickets to World Cup games in their country during a so-called “domestic exclusivity period.”

After hours-long waits in digital queues, they saw and helped reveal prices. Among the other matches subject to price hikes were:

  • The World Cup opener at Mexico City’s Estadio Azteca
  • Canada’s opener at BMO Field in Toronto
  • Games in Toronto, Vancouver, Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara
  • The U.S. men’s national team’s second game, at Lumen Field in Seattle
  • The U.S. men’s national team’s third game, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.
  • Every game from the round of 16 onward

Prices for the U.S. opener at SoFi Stadium did not change — perhaps because those tickets did not sell as quick as others in the first sales phase. On Wednesday, they were still listed at:

  • Category 1: $2,735
  • Category 2: $1,940
  • Category 3: $1,120
  • Category 4: $560

But for the USMNT’s game in Seattle on June 19, they rose by 13% in Category 1, 16% in Category 2 and 22% in Category 3, to:

  • Category 1: $605
  • Category 2: $470
  • Category 3: $225
  • Category 4: $90

Prices also rose for the USMNT’s third game, to:

  • Category 1: $910 (up 13%)
  • Category 2: $750 (up 24%)
  • Category 3: $340 (up 21%)
  • Category 4: $140

A full list of updated prices — and, in parentheses, the percentage increase compared to initial Oct. 1 prices — is below.

Every 2026 World Cup ticket price (as of Nov. 12)

Most of the following list has been sourced from screenshots and screen recordings of FIFA’s ticketing portal, plus other individual prices sent by fans to The Athletic.

Some of the numbers — including the $7,875 price tag for a Category 1 ticket to the final — have not been independently confirmed with 100% certainty, but everything seen by The Athletic on Wednesday aligned with a full list compiled by a fan that circulated Tuesday in online communities. (The fan told The Athletic they wished to remain anonymous.)

Some of the prices also vary slightly by currency. On Wednesday, games in Mexico were only offered to fans in Mexico, and the prices they saw were therefore in Mexican pesos. Ditto for games in Canada and Canadian dollars. The Athletic, though, has chosen to publish the prices in U.S. dollars that FIFA is offering this week to fans in the U.S. and elsewhere — which are always rounded to “0”s or “5”s.

2026 World Cup Ticket Prices Group Stage

Mexico opener (CDMX)$2,140 (+17%)$1,550 (+20%)$925 (+24%)$370
Canada opener (TOR)$1,970 (+13%)$1,430 (+15%)$845 (+18%)$355
U.S. opener (LA)$2,735$1,940$1,120$560
Group stage (LA, SF, NYNJ)*$620$465-500$215$60-105
Group stage (TOR)*$505-525$390-405$185-195$60-75
Group stage (PHI, MIA, DAL)$445$335-385$155$60-75
Group stage (VAN)*$440 (+7%)$375 (+21%)$155 (+11%)$60-70
Group stage (BOS, ATL, HOU, KC, SEA, GDL)*$405-415$300-330$140-160$60-70
Group stage (MTY)$390 (+13%)$285-325$135-145$60
Canada Game 2 and 3 (VAN)$540 (+14%)$455 (+28%)$195 (+18%)$80
U.S. Game 2 (SEA)$605 (+13%)$470 (+16%)$225 (+22%)$90
U.S. Game 3 (LA)$910 (+13%)$750 (+24%)$340 (+21%)$140
Mexico Game 2 (GDL)$525 (+18%)$405 (+21%)$195 (+26%)$75
Mexico Game 3 (CDMX)$630 (+18%)$490 (+21%)$230 (+24%)$90

*Excluding games involving host nation

2026 World Cup Ticket Prices Knockout

Round of 32 – LA – June 28$750 (+13%)$575 (+15%)$290 (+21%)$185
Round of 32 – BOS- June 29$470 (+7%)$390 (+16%)$180 (+13%)$125
Round of 32 – MTY – June 29$400 (+8%)$305 (+9%)$150 (+11%)$105
Round of 32 – HOU – June 29$440$355 (+6%)$160$125
Round of 32 – NYNJ – June 30$715 (+8%)$580 (+16%)$265 (+10%)$185
Round of 32 – DAL – June 30$480$385 (+7%)$175$135
Round of 32 – CDMX – June 30$515 (+17%)$405 (+21%)$200 (+25%)$125
Round of 32 – ATL – July 1$440$360 (+7%)$160$125
Round of 32 – SF – July 1$665$525 (+5%)$240$185
Round of 32 – SEA – July 1$470 (+7%)$390 (+16%)$180 (+13%)$125
Round of 32 – TOR – July 2$545 (+14%)$415 (+15%)210 (+20%)$135
Round of 32 – LA – July 2$665$530 (+6%)$240$185
Round of 32 – VAN – July 2$500 (+14%)$430 (+28%)190 (+19%)$125
Round of 32 – MIA – July 3$505 (+5%)$405 (+13%)$175$135
Round of 32 – KC – July 3$470 (+7%)$385 (+15%)$180 (+13%)$125
Round of 32 – DAL – July 3$515 (+7%)$420 (+17%)$195 (+11%)$135
Round of 16 – PHI – July 4$760 (+19%)$560 (+15%)$290 (+21%)$185
Round of 16 – HOU – July 4$620 (+5%)$505 (+12%)$220$170
Round of 16 – NYNJ – July 5$980 (+10%)$785 (+16%)$365 (+11%)$260
Round of 16 – CDMX – July 5$695 (+18%)$540 (+20%)$275 (+25%)$170
Round of 16 – DAL – July 6$640$515 (+6%)$240$185
Round of 16 – SEA – July 6$695 (+18%)$565 (+26%)$270 (+23%)$170
Round of 16 – ATL – July 7$665 (+13%)$525 (+17%)$245 (+11%)$170
Round of 16 – VAN – July 7$730 (+24%)$595 (+32%)$305 (+39%)$170
Quarterfinal – BOS – July 9$1,270 (+13%)$890 (+16%)$590 (+22%)$275
Quarterfinal – LA – July 10$1,775 (+5%)$1,220 (+6%)$800 (+10%)$410
Quarterfinal – MIA – July 11$1,375 (+13%)$955 (+15%)$635 (+21%)$295
Quarterfinal – KC – July 11$1,265 (+12%)$940 (+23%)$535 (+10%)$275
Semifinal – DAL – July 14$3,295 (+19%)$2,350 (+22%)$930 (+29%)$455
Semifinal – ATL – July 15$2,895 (+13%)$2,185 (+23%)$780 (+18%)$420
Third place – MIA – July 18$1,070 (+7%)$825 (+15%)$395 (+10%)$165
Final – NYNJ – July 19$7,875 (+24%)$5,055 (+20%)$3,450 (+24%)$2,030

Most other tickets, at this stage, are still for matches between unknown teams. Most matchups and game locations will be determined on Dec. 5 at the World Cup draw and shortly thereafter when FIFA sets the schedule.

Soon after that, FIFA will open a third ticket lottery phase, and its variable pricing strategy will likely kick in again.

Henry Bushnell

By Henry Bushnell

Senior Writer, U.S. Soccer