4/6/26 Champs League Tues/Wed, USMNT roster set for 4/11 games vs Japan, US Men lose what now?, US Open Cup & FA Cup rounds, Indy 11 home Fight Cancer night Sat 7 pm

Champions League Final 8 Action is back Tues/Wed (must hear anthem)

Champions League returns with a surprise team in Sporting CP hosting Arsenal at 3 pm Tuesday on Para+. Arsenal are odds on favorites along with Bayern Munich and the holders PSG. Two English teams Arsenal & Liverpool remain while La Liga has 3 with Real Madrid, Atletico & Barcelona while France, Germany & Portugal have just 1 each in Bayern Munich, PSG and Sporting respectively. Lots of stories below!!

USWNT Faces Top 5 Ranked Japan in 3 Game Series Sat, Tues & Thurs on TNT

The US national Team brings an experienced roster into this top 5 match-up with Japan coming up this weekend & Next week as the roster marks the return of two players who add a tremendous amount of experience to the U.S. roster as both have played in World Cups and the Olympics. Forward Sophia Wilson, a member of the “Triple Espresso” front line who helped lead the USA to the 2024 Olympic gold medal, makes her first USWNT roster in 17 months following her pregnancy and the birth of her daughter in early September of 2025. The 25-year-old Wilson has 58 caps for the USWNT along with 24 goals, three of which were scored at the 2024 Olympics, to go with her two assists in that tournament. Defender Tierna Davidson, 27, has made a complete recovery from an ACL injury suffered in NWSL play at the beginning of the 2025 season. She returns to the USWNT after a 13-month absence. Coincidentally, Davidson’s most recent international match was against Japan on Feb. 26, 2025, in the SheBelieves Cup finale. The USWNT will begin its three-game series against Japan in San Jose, Calif. at PayPal Park, home of Bay FC and the San Jose Earthquakes, this Saturday – April 11 (2:30 p.m. PT / 5:30 p.m. TNT, truTV and HBO Max in English and Universo and Peacock in Spanish).

U.S. Women’s National Team Roster by Position (Club; Caps/Goals) 2026 April Matches vs. Japan

GOALKEEPERS (3): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash, 10), Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC; 8), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United, ENG; 6) DEFENDERS (9): Tierna Davidson (Gotham FC; 67/3), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG; 74/1), Naomi Girma (Chelsea FC, ENG; 52/2), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash; 10/1), Lilly Reale (Gotham FC; 7/0), Emily Sams (Angel City FC: 9/1), Emily Sonnett (Gotham FC; 115/2), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC; 7/0), Kennedy Wesley (San Diego Wave FC; 4/0) MIDFIELDERS (7): Sam Coffey (Manchester City, ENG; 44/5), Lindsey Heaps (OL Lyonnes, FRA; 173/39), Claire Hutton (Bay FC; 15/1), Rose Lavelle (Gotham FC; 118/27), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC; 15/5),Jaedyn Shaw (Gotham FC; 34/10), Lily Yohannes (OL Lyonnes, FRA; 16/1) FORWARDS (7): Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current; 10/1), Jameese Joseph (Chicago Stars FC; 4/1), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit; 52/13), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC; 17/6), Ally Sentnor (Kansas City Current; 18/7), Alyssa Thompson (Chelsea FC, ENG; 29/4), Sophia Wilson (Portland Thorns FC; 58/24)

World Cup Field is Set

The World Cup field of 48 is finally set. The World Cup playoff finals took place, and four teams from UEFA along with 2 FIFA inter-confederation playoff winners booked their place into this summer’s tournament in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. From UEFA, Czechia, Türkiye, Bosnia & Herzegovina, and Sweden each won their playoffs, while DR Congo and Iraq/Bolivia won the inter-confederation playoffs in Mexico to complete the field. For USMNT fans, they now know who the team will face in their final group stage match on June 25th: Türkiye. They beat Kosovo 1-0 in a hard fought match to secure their spot and join the USMNT, Australia, and Paraguay in Group D. Mexico sees Czechia join their group alongside South Africa and South Korea, as Czechia took out Denmark on penalties. We are still looking for World Cup tickets in Seattle, June 29th if you have a lead on 2 or 3 tickets.

US Bows to Portugal 2-0 Where Are we Now?

Wow – not sure what to say after watching the US get slapped 5-1 and 2-0 at home in Atlanta in front of 70,000 fans in Atlanta. I will go back to what I said the minute they handed the keys to Pochitino – I still think its a HUGE mistake.
After looking decent — over the past window – BOTCHITINO returned to his idiotic ways vs the best 2 teams the US has faced in 4 years. I am sure many have forgotten but with AMERICAN coaches we have beaten the likes Spain, Brazil, England and the likes – we have gotten to a Quarterfinals where a handball vs Germany kept us from advancing to the Semi’s for the first time ever (20 years ago). But those days are long gone. This team, this World Cup, which the US will host was supposed to be our coming out party – to show that the US has really gotten better at the world’s game. We already have more players playing for better teams overseas than ever before. The US DA Program now replaced with MLS Next has help produce our strongest ever group of players – we had more players play more games in the Champions League this season than ever before – and that was with Christian Pulisic not being in it this year. But man Botchitino has really screwed this thing up.

Hopefully I am wrong – and these desperate moves in our next to the last 2 games before the World Cup were part of some master Plan to lull the rest of the World to Sleep thinking the US is so bad we won’t get out of our Group. At our current Ranking of below 20 – our lowest ranking in 20+ years – that just might happen. I will go into player by player details on what went wrong – and what we must do next. (Man I wish Real Madrid had offered the Gig to Bochitino a month back). Anyway lots of stories below about how we lost and what’s next. Hey at least we aren’t Italy right? I will offer up my opinions next week. Meanwhile lets get ready to watch our REAL US National Team – our Women as they match-up against top 5 Japan. Bet they won’t lay an egg – Hayes unlike Botch – can actually coach!!

Indy 11 vs Monterey Bay – Sat 7 pm at The Mike

Indianapolis – Indy Eleven midfielder Jack Blake tied the franchise record with his 27th career goal in the Boys in Blue’s 1-1 draw vs. defending USL champion Pittsburgh Riverhounds at Carroll Stadium Sat night. Indy Eleven goalkeeper Eric Dick (former CHS, Butler and Carmel Dad’s GK) made a season-high seven saves in the match against the team that he helped lead to the 2025 title, winning the USL Championship MVP and Prinx Playoff MVP after allowing no goals in 450 minutes in four playoff games. Indy continue their three-match homestand next Saturday at 7 p.m. at Carroll Stadium vs. Monterey Bay FC in the annual “Kick for a Cause” game.  Susan G. Komen®, the world’s leading breast cancer organization, is the spotlight partner.  The match is part of the 2026 Scarf Series, so fans can purchase a ticket + knit scarf here. The Family Four-Pack is available for all 2026 home games and it can be purchased online only.  Priced at just $49, the Family Four-Pack includes four tickets, FREE parking, $20 in Concession Vouchers, and a 20% Merchandise Discount, along with access to the Fun Zone/Kids Activation Area.

TV Schedule – Games on TV

Tues, Apr 7
3 pm Para+ Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich
3 pm Para+ Sporting CP vs Arsenal

8 pm FS2 Nashville SC vs America CCC
10 pm FS2 LAFC vs Cruz Azul CCC
Wed, Apr 8
3 pm Para+ Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid
3 pm PAra+ PSG vs Liverpool

9 pm FS2 Tigres vs Seattle Sounders CCC
11 pm FS2 Toluca vs LA Galaxy CCC
Thurs, Apr 9 Europa League
3 pm Para+ Bologna vs Aston Villa
3 pm PAra+ Porto vs Nottingham Forest
3 pm Para+ Crystal Palace (Richards) vs Fiorentina
Sat, Apr 11
7;30 am USA Arsenal vs Bournemouth
9:30 am ESPN2 Dortmund vs Bayer Leverkusen (Tillman)
12:30 pm NBC Liverpool vs Fulham (Jedi)
4:30 pm Fox Portland Timbers vs LAFC
7 pm Indy 11 vs Monterey Bay Home
7:30 pm Apple Inter Miami vs NY Red Bulls
Sun, Apr 12
11:30 am USA Chelsea vs Man City
pm TNT, HBO US Women vs Japan
Tues, Apr 14
7 pm TNT, HBO US Women vs Japan
Tues, Apr 17
9 pm TNT, HBO US Women vs Japan
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 Tix
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup
Fri, June 19
3 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup
Thur, June 25
10 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Australia World Cup

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

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US Women Sat vs Japan

Sophia Wilson Returns to USWNT With Fresh Perspective: “I Want to Enjoy It All”
USWNT Prepare for Series Against Japan with “Much More Developed” Roster
Hayes Names 26-Player Roster for April Matches Against Japan
Sophia Wilson Returns to USWNT With Fresh Perspective: “I Want to Enjoy It All”
Returning Wilson grateful for past USWNT moms

Champions League Tues/Wed

US Men

Mauricio Pochettino: USMNT ‘Little Details’ Away From Top-10 European Opponents
USMNT 2026 World Cup big board 6.0: Have March losses cemented Pochettino’s squad?
Pochettino’s USMNT World Cup process is about to hit the home stretch
USMNT’s Patrick Agyemang exits Derby match with apparent Achilles issue, World Cup bid in doubt
USMNT striker Patrick Agyemang stretchered off with non-contact injury
Poch, Pulisic agree, U.S. ‘not far away’ from best
USA vs. Belgium, 2026 Friendly: Man of the Match
Monday Morning Reflection: USMNT faces tough questions after 5-2 loss to Belgium
 Has USMNT finally fixed its lack of depth?
USMNT players reveal what Pochettino is really like
World Cup doomed for USMNT with Pulisic goal drought?

Player ratings: Pulisic 3/10 in USMNT’s loss to Portugal
Ogden: Türkiye will be USMNT’s stiffest test in World Cup group stage
O’Hanlon: Will USMNT’s depth be World Cup game-changer?

World

Erling Haaland makes history with hat trick in City’s thrashing of Liverpool
Barcelona close in on LaLiga with win vs. Atlético, Man City thrash Liverpool, more

Southampton stun Arsenal to reach FA Cup semis
 It’s make-or-break time for Arsenal, Mikel Arteta
Arsenal in ‘difficult period’ with shock FA Cup loss

O’Hanlon: What would Premier League table look like without set pieces?

MLS & NWSL

Beckham: Inter Miami stadium ‘dream come true’
With Messi goal, Inter Miami open new stadium with dream moment
Miami’s Nu Stadium opens Sat
MLS Power Rankings: LAFC are practically perfect atop the table

World Cup

Goalkeeping

Scandal as teen ball boy confesses to stealing Donnarumma cheat sheet
MLS: Best Saves of the Week
Donnarumma ‘cried with sadness’ after Italy loss
Hugo Loris Still making saves

Reffing

Just Thank the Refs
Hand Ball yes or no?

USMNT midweek viewing guide: Quarterfinals begin

follow along with all the USMNT action this week. by Justin Moran Apr 6, 2026, 8:38 AM EDT 77Comments (All New)

AEK Larnaca FC v Crystal Palace FC - UEFA Conference League 2025/26 Round of 16 Second Leg

LARNACA, CYPRUS – MARCH 19: Djordje Ivanovic of AEK Larnaca controls the ball whilst under pressure from Chris Richards of Crystal Palace during the UEFA Conference League 2025/26 round of 16 second leg match between AEK Larnaca FC and Crystal Palace FC at AEK Arena on March 19, 2026 in Larnaca, Cyprus. (Photo by George Wood – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)UEFA via Getty Images

Midweek action is here. All kickoff times are in EST. All MLS games are available on MLS Season Pass on Apple TV, as well as any other networks listed. Let’s get into it!

Monday

  • Juventus vs Genoa, 12p on Paramount+, DAZN: Weston McKennie and Juve host Genoa in Serie A.
  • Napoli vs AC Milan, 2:45p on Paramount+, DAZN: Christian Pulisic and Milan visit Napoli in Serie A.

Also in action:

  • Cesena vs Südtirol, 6:30a on Onefootball: Jonathan Klinsmann and Cesena host Südtirol in Serie B.
  • Lecce vs Atalanta, 9a on Paramount+, DAZN: Yunus Musah and Atalanta visit Lecce in Serie A.
  • Venezia vs Juve Stabia, 9a on Onefootball: Gianluca Busio and Venezia host Juve Stabia in Serie B.
  • Blackburn vs West Brom, 10a: George Campbell, Daryl Dike, and West Brom visit Blackburn Rovers in the EFL Championship.
  • Derby vs Stoke, 10a: Can Patrick Agyemang and Derby County do it on a rainy night in Stoke? Just kidding, this is a home game for Derby in the EFL Championship. Stoke is coming to them.
  • Watford vs Charlton, 10a on Paramount+: Charlie Kelman and Charlton Athletic visit Watford in the EFL Championship.
  • Swansea vs Middlesbrough, 12:30p on Paramount+: Aidan Morris and Boro visit Swansea in the EFL Championship.
  • Girona vs Villarreal, 3p on ESPN Select, ESPN Deportes, Fubo: Alex Freeman and Villarreal visit Girona in La Liga.
  • Hull vs Coventry, 3p on Paramount+, Prime Video: Haji Wright and Coventry City visit Hull City in the EFL Championship.

Tuesday

  • Nashville SC vs Club América, 8p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Alex Zendejas and América visit Matthew Corcoran and Nashville SC in the first leg of this Concacaf Champions Cup quarterfinal.

Also in action:

  • NK Istra vs Hajduk Split, 12p: Rokas Pukštas and Hajduk Split visit NK Istra 1961 in the HNL (Croatia’s top division).
  • Independiente Petrolero vs Racing Club, 6p on beIN Sports, Fubo: Matko Miljevic and Racing are on the road to begin their Copa Sudamericana journey (they’re in Group E).
  • LAFC vs Cruz Azul, 10p on FS2, TUDN, Fubo, ViX: Timothy Tillman and LAFC host Cruz Azul to kick off their 2-game CCC quarterfinal.

Wednesday

  • Tigres UANL vs Seattle Sounders, 9p on FS2, TUDN, UniMás, Fubo, ViX, Univision NOW: Jordan Morris, Cristian Roldan, Jesús Ferreira, and the Sounders go to Monterrey to visit Tigres in this CCC quarterfinal first leg.
  • Toluca vs LA Galaxy, 11p on FS1, TUDN, UniMás, Fubo, ViX, Univision NOW: Harbor Miller and the Galaxy kick off their 2-game CCC quarterfinal on the road in Toluca.

Thursday

  • Crystal Palace vs Fiorentina, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Chris Richards and Palace host Fiorentina in the first leg of this Conference League quarterfinal.

Also in action:

  • Mainz vs Strasbourg, 3p on Paramount+, ViX: Lennard Maloney and Mainz host Strasbourg in the first leg of this Conference League quarterfinal.

Friday

  • Paris FC vs Monaco, 1p on beIN Sports, Fubo (free trial): Folarin Balogun and AS Monaco visit Italian-American winger Luca Koleosho and Paris in Ligue 1.
  • Augsburg vs Hoffenheim, 2:30p on ESPN Select, Fubo: Noahkai Banks and Augsburg host Hoffenheim in the Bundesliga.
  • Marseille vs Metz, 3:05p on beIN Sports, Fubo: Tim Weah and OM host Metz in Ligue 1.

Also in action:

  • Düsseldorf vs Holstein Kiel, 12:30p on ESPN Select, Fubo: John Tolkin and Holstein Kiel visit Fortuna Düsseldorf in the 2. Bundesliga.
  • RB Salzburg vs LASK Linz, 1:30p: George Bello and LASK visit Salzburg in the Austrian Bundesliga. Japanese-American defender Anrie Chase has made 3 appearances for Salzburg since joining from VfB Stuttgart last August.
  • West Brom vs Millwall, 3p on Paramount+: George Campbell, Daryl Dike, and West Brom host Millwall in the EFL Championship.

That’s it! Did I miss anything that matters? Let me know in the comments below. Let’s see who stands out this week!

USWNT faces Japan, thrice

Emma Hayes thinks Japan is “without question” one of the favorites to win the 2027 World World Cup. So what better way to prepare for such an opponent 444 days out than to play the team … three times in a row? A little over a year ago, Japan defeated the U.S. 2-1 and handed Hayes her first loss as USWNT’s head coach. The Nadeshiko went on to win the 2025 SheBelieves Cup, breaking the Americans’ five-tournament streak.  Like the Michael Jordan meme, Hayes took that personally. The U.S. hosts Japan on Saturday at 5:30 p.m. ET in San Jose, Calif.; on April 14 at 10 p.m. ET in Seattle; and on April 17 at 9 p.m. ET near Denver. The games will air on TNT and truTV and stream on HBO Max and Universo (in Spanish). 
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US Open Cup Rd of 32 Apr 14 & 15

Every match from the Round of 32 will stream live on Paramount+ with select matches also co-airing on either CBS Sports Network or CBS Sports Golazo Network. CBS Sports will host The Golazo Show whip-around program highlighting every goal from eight April 15 matchups, beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET on Paramount+ and CBS Sports Golazo Network.

Round of 32 Schedule Set for 2026 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup as 16 Major League Soccer Clubs Enter Competition
2026 U.S. Open Cup’s Second Round Concludes with Tight Contests from Coast to Coast

Round of 32 Schedule – 2026 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup

Home teams listed first; host priority order for Round of 16 matches in each group also listed; visit the schedule section of ussoccer.com/us-open-cup for the most up to date details.

 Tuesday, April 14 (all times ET)

New England Revolution vs. Rhode Island FC – 7 p.m. (Paramount+)

Louisville City FC vs. Austin FC – 7 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Network)

Detroit City FC vs. Chicago Fire FC – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network)

Westchester SC vs. New York City FC – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC vs. Sporting Kansas City – 8 p.m. (Paramount+)

Colorado Rapids vs. Union Omaha – 9:30 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Network)

Sacramento Republic FC vs. Minnesota United FC – 10 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network)

Wednesday, April 15 (all times ET)

FC Naples vs. Orlando City SC – 7 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Network)

The Golazo Show – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network)

Chattanooga FC vs. Atlanta United FC – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

Richmond Kickers vs. Columbus Crew – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

Red Bull New York vs. Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

Charlotte FC vs. Charlotte Independence – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

D.C. United vs. One Knoxville SC – 7:30 p.m. (Paramount+)

St. Louis CITY SC vs. FC Tulsa – 8 p.m. (Paramount+)

Houston Dynamo FC vs. El Paso Locomotive FC – 8 p.m. (Paramount+)

San Jose Earthquakes vs. Phoenix Rising FC – 10 p.m. (Paramount+ & CBS Sports Golazo Network)

Champions League quarter-finals predictions, star players and youngsters to watch

Real Madrid's Kylian Mbappe and Arsenal's Viktor Gyokeres

Will Kylian Mbappe and Viktor Gyokeres be celebrating after the quarter-finals? Getty Images

By The Athletic UK Staff April 6, 2026Updated 5:05 am EDT

This is an updated version of an article that was first published after the quarter-final line-up was confirmed in March.

The Champions League quarter-finals kick off this week, with the path to the final in Budapest on May 30 now clear.

Real Madrid host Bayern Munich at the Bernabeu this Tuesday in the competition’s most-played fixture, while Premier League leaders Arsenal travel to Lisbon to face Sporting CP.Barcelona will play Atletico Madrid in an all-La Liga affair at the Camp Nou on Wednesday, while holders Paris Saint-Germain take on Liverpool at home in a replay of last season’s round of 16 tie, which Arne Slot’s side lost on penalties.


What is the most exciting tie?

Oliver Kay: Obvious answer: Real Madrid vs Bayern. I was surprised by how well Madrid performed against Manchester City and I’m fascinated to see whether they can repeat that against a Bayern team who appear to be coming to the boil nicely.

James Pearce: PSG vs Liverpool is going to be intriguing — the holders against the six-time winners. Their meeting at Anfield in the last 16 a year ago was an outstanding game. For Arne Slot’s Liverpool, it’s a revenge mission.

Mario Cortegana: Madrid vs Bayern. Bayern are the most in-form team in Europe, while Madrid seemed dead once again — until they returned to their fearsome best in their convincing win against City.

Joselu was Real Madrid’s unlikely hero when they faced Bayern Munich in the semi-finals two years agoDavid Ramos/Getty Images

Thom Harris: There have been plenty of goals in recent meetings between Barcelona and Atletico Madrid, including a 4-4 draw and the recent Copa Del Rey semi-final, in which Simeone’s side took a 4-0 lead into the second leg and nearly threw it away. It should be action-packed.

Pol Ballus: There’s no debate: Bayern vs Madrid. The best team in Europe this season against the competition’s most successful club. Whoever wins, they will send a statement to the rest of the field.

Jack Lang: PSG vs Liverpool — their two games last year were absolutely absorbing and we have the added factor of Liverpool trying to salvage their season.

Amy Lawrence: Come on, everyone wants to watch boring Arsenal! Well, if not, it is hard to look beyond Real vs Bayern, which has all the classic feels.


How will each team feel about their chances in the quarter-finals and the rest of the tournament?

Kay: Premier League sides hold no fear for PSG, who beat City, Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal en route to winning last season’s final in style, and who have already beaten Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea this time. Last season, they were a surprise package, having scraped through the league phase, whereas nobody will dare to underestimate them now. That brings its own pressure.

Pearce: Liverpool will be underdogs, but if they play with the tempo and intensity they showed in the second leg against Galatasaray, they’ll have a chance. It came down to fine margins when the clubs met last year, with PSG advancing on penalties. The return to fitness of Alexander Isak after three months out will also be a timely boost. But the absence of Alisson, who performed heroics in Paris a year ago, could hurt them. The Brazil ‘keeper is out with another hamstring injury, so the Georgian Giorgi Mamardashvili will deputise.

Cortegana: There was a lot of pessimism around Real Madrid after the round-of-16 draw — the bracket seemed particularly difficult — but morale soared after eliminating City, even if it has been slightly dampened by Saturday’s 2-1 defeat at Mallorca in La Liga.

Harris: Atletico will have taken confidence from that Copa del Rey semi-final first leg drubbing of Barcelona, but will know they are unlikely to be so ruthless in front of goal once again — they also lost at home to them on Saturday in the league. They have serious firepower at their disposal, and while they might not be expecting to win the whole thing with — potentially — Arsenal to play next, they’ll be thinking: why not?

Barcelona failed to overturn a 4-0 loss in the Copa del Rey semi-finals against Atletico MadridJoan Gosa/Xinhua via Getty Images

Ballus: Barca have reasons to be optimistic. Simeone’s Atletico can be painful opponents, but Hansi Flick’s side have already learned their lesson this season in that Copa semi-final, when they realised they sometimes had to be more pragmatic. They then got the 2-1 La Liga away win over Atletico this weekend. Flick’s team can’t have any complaints about the draw, although they could face Arsenal in the semi-finals. That would be a whole different story.

Seb Stafford-Bloor: Bayern will be respectful, but confident. Nobody has Real Madrid’s mythology in the Champions League, but Bayern have every right to see themselves as the better side. Jamal Musiala and Alphonso Davies remain injury doubts, at least for the first leg, but Kompany’s side will still pack quite a punch.

Lang: Just reaching the quarter-finals counts as a significant achievement for Sporting, especially given they lost the first leg of their round-of-16 tie 3-0 against Bodo/Glimt. They will know they are underdogs against Arsenal. The question is whether the Portuguese side can leverage the psychological advantage of having nothing to lose.

Lawrence: Arsenal have fresh memories of a 5-1 win at Sporting last season, so they won’t be intimidated. Unhelpfully, they have their most pivotal league game (Manchester City away) just after, but that’s the deal when chasing multiple trophies. Their draw is generous, but anything goes from semis onwards.


Which star player will define these quarter-finals?

Kay: I can’t take my eyes off PSG’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia when I watch him. Vitinha does a wonderful job in the way he sets the tone for Luis Enrique’s team, but Kvaratskhelia is the beguiling forward who creates and scores goals from nothing.

Pearce: Dominik Szoboszlai. The Hungary captain is having an outstanding season for Liverpool and he has the added motivation of the final being in Budapest. He has become Liverpool’s talisman.

Dominik Szoboszlai will be targeting a Champions League final in his native HungaryCarl Recine/Getty Images

Cortegana: Vinicius Junior. Real Madrid’s Brazil forward was the most decisive player against Benfica and City, and his impact in the knockout rounds of this competition is extraordinary at 25 years old.

Harris: If Atletico are to cause a ripple, Julian Alvarez will be front and centre. The Argentina striker is a relentless presser from the front, carries the ball forward with power and authority, and looks increasingly sharp in front of goal.

Ballus: Pedri. The Barcelona and Spain midfielder has a history of outstanding performances against Atletico in the past couple of seasons and is still returning to his best after recovering from a hamstring injury. Against Simeone’s entrenched defence, his wisdom in midfield could make the difference.

Stafford-Bloor: Harry Kane. The last time Bayern faced Real Madrid in the semi-finals in 2024, Kane was not really fit and was rushed on to the pitch because of the tie’s importance. Two years on, the England captain is fitter, arguably in the form of his career and is comfortably Bayern’s most influential player. If he runs the game, they will win.

Lang: Kane for me, too. He looked incredibly hungry in the second leg against Atalanta. Real Madrid’s defence is more vulnerable than City made it look — I expect Bayern to cause all sorts of problems, with Kane leading the charge.

Lawrence: If Arsenal are to keep going, Declan Rice and Gabriel have to continue being their powerhouses. But Bayern and PSG have that extra Champions League nous, so it’s between Kane and the Ballon d’Or-winning Ousmane Dembele as the attacking leaders of their packs.

Play: Video

Which up-and-coming player should I be looking out for?

Kay: What Pau Cubarsi is doing is pretty extraordinary. The Spain centre-back has only just turned 19 and is totally at home at the heart of Barcelona’s defence. He didn’t enjoy the first half against Newcastle United in the round of 16 second leg, but he is a serious talent with a great career ahead of him.

Ballus: Keep an eye on Marc Bernal, too — another 18-year-old from La Masia, Barca’s famed academy, with sky-high potential. Some suggested he was the heir to Sergio Busquets, but he also has an incredible sense for goal despite being a holding midfielder.

Pearce: Rio Ngumoha. Liverpool’s 17-year-old winger is unlikely to start either leg against PSG but could well make an impact off the bench. He’s quick and direct.

Cortegana: Bayern’s attacking midfielder Lennart Karl. At just 18, he has registered four goals and two assists in the tournament, and this is a great opportunity to see him on the biggest stage.

Lennart Karl is an exciting prospect for Bayern MunichAlexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

Lang: I really like watching Fermin Lopez. The 22-year-old doesn’t quite have the technical grace of Pedri or the great schemers of Barca’s past, but he just consistently makes things happen. He scores goals, creates space for others, appears in big moments… the very definition of an all-action midfielder.

Stafford-Bloor: Aleksandar Pavlovic. The 21-year-old Bayern midfielder is still underestimated, but he relishes the big games and his metronomic passing always seems at its sharpest when the pressure is ratcheted up. Remember the performance he gave against Real Madrid at the Bernabeu last time? He was nerveless for a then 19-year-old.

Harris: How about Sporting’s Goncalo Inacio? The 24-year-old is a strong, left-footed centre-back who can whip the ball through the lines and dominate aerial duels. He’ll be busy against Arsenal, but he is quickly emerging as a defensive leader who will be on the radar of Europe’s elite.


How do you feel about the next round’s fixtures already being set?

Kay: Even as someone who is very ‘old man yelling at clouds’ about so many of the changes made to European football over the last couple of decades, I cannot find anything to dislike about this one. For one thing, it helps fans — and media outlets — plan travel.

Stafford-Bloor: Fine, because having a clear bracket actually helps build anticipation. It also saves us from having to suffer through a draw after each round and everything that entails.

Lawrence: I suspect the brackets are more interesting to those who don’t have a vested interest. If your team are involved, the excitement about who comes next or is avoided is a wonderful part of fandom. That is missed.

Who’s your prediction to win the whole thing and has it changed from the last round?

Kay: Arsenal. For one thing, without wishing to disrespect Sporting, Mikel Arteta’s team have by far the most straightforward route to the semi-final. For another thing, they have a defensive solidity that means they won’t be torn apart the way City, Chelsea, Tottenham and Newcastle United were in the last round. But, at some point, they will have to show more as an attacking force.

Arsenal will be pleased with their semi-final draw against SportingVince Mignott/DeFodi Images/DeFodi via Getty Images

Pearce: I make Bayern favourites, but if Liverpool get past PSG, they’ll have a real chance. As erratic as they have been domestically this season, Slot’s side have beaten Real Madrid, Atletico and last season’s finalists Inter.

Cortegana: It will be Bayern or Arsenal, but I give Real Madrid a much better chance now than in recent months.

Harris: I echo the others. Bayern look pretty irresistible going forward and their constant rotations make them a nightmare to defend against, even for Arsenal. That would probably be my final, where the quality of Kane and Michael Olise will tell.

Ballus: Bayern, and that has not changed from the last round. They’ve been the best team in the competition so far and have the perfect combination of a top-end squad and an exciting coaching staff led by Kompany who are hungry for success.

Stafford-Bloor: It’s still Bayern. PSG have improved a lot in recent months and have found a menacing rhythm, and it’s hard not to be impressed by what Barcelona did to Newcastle. But with the Bundesliga basically won already and Bayern best-placed to survive these knockout rounds, I predict they’ll beat a jaded Arsenal in the final.

Lang: After watching PSG huff and puff their way past Monaco in the punishment play-off round, I wasn’t too hot on them defending their Champions League crown. Now, though, they look to be relocating a bit of the swagger that made them so good last season. Granted, Chelsea were in an incredibly generous mood over two legs, but even the best teams need a jumpstart now and then. I expect Luis Enrique’s team to make a statement against Liverpool and they’ll be hard to stop from there.

Lawrence: Assuming Bayern or PSG emerge from their brutal side of the draw, they have to be heavy favourites. If there is potential for an underdog, wouldn’t it be something to have a new winner (mentioning no names, ahem)?

Ranking the eight 2025-26 Champions League quarter-finalists

Arsenal's David Raya and Bayern's Harry Kane

Arsenal’s David Raya and Bayern’s Harry Kane will both have designs on the Champions League this season Getty Images

By Anantaajith RaghuramanApril 5, 2026 The Athleitc

We are down to the final eight in the Champions League after a riveting round of 16 that saw an astonishing 68 goals scored across 16 matches.Seven of the eight ties saw one team score at least four goals. Two teams scored eight while Bayern Munich hit double figures against Atalanta on aggregate. We don’t know if the quarter-finals will be as explosive, but we do know that they will provide us with some classic matchups.Throughout this Champions league campaign, The Athletic’s projections — powered by Opta — have assessed each team’s chances of making it out of the league phase and each knockout round.

So here, with just eight storied clubs remaining, we rank their chances of lifting the famous trophy in Budapest on May 30.


8) Sporting CP

Cards on the table, there is an argument to be made for our projections underestimating Sporting.

We backed Bodo/Glimt to beat them in the round of 16 despite being given a 37 per cent chance of making it past the reigning Portuguese champions after the draw. A 3-0 home win in Bodo increased that to an 87 per cent chance of making it through.

Sporting defied the odds (literally) to take the match to extra time and score two more to end the fairytale with a 5-0 win on the night. Unfortunately, their prize for doing so was a quarter-final against Arsenal.

Our projections give them just a 21 per cent chance of making it past a team they have beaten just once in seven meetings, scoring nine goals and conceding 15. It would take a Herculean effort from a team that does have stars in Goncalo Inacio, Morten Hjulmand, Maximiliano Araujo and Luis Suarez to defeat the best team in Europe.

Sporting produced a monumental comeback against Bodo/Glimt in the second legGualter Fatia/Getty Images


7) Atletico Madrid

The attacking firepower Atletico possess is scary, but they can also look very vulnerable defensively, a marked change from Diego Simeone’s previous years in charge.

A desperate Tottenham Hotspur ran them ragged to win the second leg 3-2 after self-imploding to hand Atletico a 5-2 advantage after the first leg and Bodo beat them 2-1 in Madrid. Barcelona, who possess more quality across the board than either of those teams, will pose a challenge to a team trying to get into the last four for the first time since making two finals and a semi-final in four seasons between 2014 and 2017.

Our projections duly give them just a 34 per cent of making it past Hansi Flick’s side.

There are reasons to be positive, though. Across that four-season run, Atletico twice eliminated Barcelona, even seeing off the ‘MSN’ triumvirate of Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar Jr in 2016.Most importantly, beating Spurs meant they inherited their league-phase home advantage, which ensures a second leg in Madrid. Having beaten Barcelona 4-0 in Madrid in the Copa del Rey semi-finals, they will be confident of overturning any deficit or holding on to any lead they bring back from the Camp Nou for the second leg.


6) Liverpool

The 4-0 thrashing of Galatasaray should instil some confidence in Arne Slot’s team, who have enjoyed very few comprehensive victories in 2025-26. But even the most optimistic fans on the red half of Merseyside will be concerned about facing Paris Saint-Germain at this stage of the season.

There is scar tissue from just over a year ago when Ousmane Dembele scored at Anfield and set PSG on their way to the quarter-finals via a penalty shootout, and eventual Champions League glory. Watching PSG thrash Chelsea 8-2 on aggregate while dragging them all over the place will not have soothed those wounds, either.

Liverpool’s Galatasaray win was promptly followed by a 2-1 league defeat to Brighton, continuing a trend that has plagued their campaign. Their 5-1 win at Eintracht Frankfurt in September was followed by successive defeats. Their 3-0 win at Marseille in January was instantly succeeded by a 3-2 defeat at Bournemouth. They beat West Ham 5-2 in February but then lost 2-1 to Wolves.

Our projections give Liverpool a reasonable-looking 44 per cent chance of making it past PSG, who they beat 1-0 at the Parc des Princes last season a week before the Anfield reverse, courtesy of an inspired Alisson performance in goal.

Liverpool found some form against Galatasaray, but can they do the same against the European champions?Michael Regan/Getty Images


5) Real Madrid

Alvaro Arbeloa became the first Madrid manager to win each of his first four knockout games in the competition, seeing off Jose Mourinho and Pep Guardiola in those matches. He has got the 15-time European champions playing to their strengths with a simple system that prioritises individual expression within a set structure.While Manchester City threatened them even after going down to 10 men at the Etihad, it was the kind of open game Madrid have often thrived in in the Champions League. The boundless athleticism of Federico Valverde, Aurelien Tchouameni, Vinicius Junior and Kylian Mbappe, among others, along with the technical skill of Arda Guler, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Brahim Diaz, make that possible.But Bayern will pose the biggest test yet — a well-drilled unit capable of shutting teams down and destroying them too. Madrid could also be without Thibaut Courtois — along with confirmed absentee Rodrygo — for at least the first leg.But this is a rivalry in which they have had the upper hand in recent meetings. Madrid ditched Bayern out of the competition at the semi-final stage in 2023-24, 2017-18, and 2013-14, and in the quarter-finals in 2016-17.Our projections give them only a 40 per cent chance of making it through but ‘Champions League’ Madrid are a unique team — Bayern, of all opponents, will be well aware of that.

Few teams enjoy getting up close and personal with Real Madrid in the Champions LeagueCarl Recine/Getty Images


4) Barcelona

An eventual 7-2 scoreline in the second leg may have flattered Barcelona given Newcastle United were on an even footing with them for nearly 75 per cent of the tie. But this has not been uncommon under Flick. When things click and the team shifts into gear, they overwhelm opponents, and the goals tend to flow at a frightening pace, knocking opponents to the floor and keeping them there.

That has not been the case much this season, though, with fatigue from a hectic 2024-25 and injuries to the playing squad preventing them from gathering momentum. But the Newcastle win — alongside a 5-2 thrashing of Sevilla days before that and a hard-fought 1-0 win over Rayo Vallecano before the break — could finally kickstart their campaign.Pedri is back to full fitness, Robert Lewandowski is back among the goals and Lamine Yamal is… well, Lamine Yamal. Add in the eventual returns from injury of Frenkie de Jong, Jules Kounde and Alejandro Balde, and it is understandable why our projections give them the second-best chances of making the last four at 66 per cent.While the 4-0 loss to Atletico in the Copa del Rey will sting, Barcelona have beaten them by a combined 6-1 at the Camp Nou. They will also play Simeone’s side three times in 10 days: April 4 in La Liga and April 6 and 14 in the Champions League.


3) Paris Saint-Germain

It’s March and PSG are a force to be reckoned with again — the sense of deja vu from 2025 will not be lost on the remaining seven teams.

The win over Chelsea saw Luis Enrique’s side at their ruthless best, punishing miscues and scoring eight times from an expected goals tally of just 2.1. The finishes were excellent but the fluidity in their attacking moves, facilitated by basically everybody except the centre-backs moving into whatever spaces they wanted, was a joy to watch.

Ousmane Dembele, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Bradley Barcola all look back to their sharpest. Fabian Ruiz is still out but Vitinha, Joao Neves and Warren Zaire-Emery are driving a capable midfield, while Nuno Mendes can terrorise full-backs on one end and lock up wingers on the other.

Acoording to our projections, PSG trail Barcelona in the odds to reach the semi-finals (56 vs 66 per cent) and win it all (12 vs 16 per cent). But their modern-day pedigree keeps them marginally ahead.

Can PSG become the first team other than Real Madrid to retain the European Cup since Milan in 1990?Ryan Pierse/Getty Images


2) Bayern Munich

Bayern are the best attacking side left in the Champions League and duly pummelled Atalanta 10-1 in the round of 16.

Harry Kane has been arguably the world’s best player in 2025-26, racking up 48 goals in just 40 club games. Michael Olise leads Europe’s top five leagues in assists with 17, adding 11 goals to that mix too. Luis Diaz has been a brilliant foil too, while Serge Gnabry is enjoying yet another renaissance.

Jamal Musiala, Lennart Karl and Nicolas Jackson round out an attacking unit that can hurt defences in every way possible.

Bayern have a solid back line too and have been creative with their out-of-possession work, with their players covering for each other admirably. Dayot Upamecano, Konrad Laimer and Jonathan Tah have been the team’s unsung stars.

Michael Olise has been arguably the most creative force in European football this seasonMarco BERTORELLO / AFP via Getty Images

Exorcising the ghosts of past losses to Real Madrid is a top priority. Our projections give Bayern a 60 per cent chance of making the last four, but it is hardly ever that straightforward against Madrid, who will aim to make this game as transitional as possible. Bayern have the pace in attack to make them pay but will their defence be able to hang on against Mbappe, Vinicius and company?

We are coming up to six years since their last treble in 2019-20 under Flick, which came seven years after their first in 2012-13 under Jupp Heynckes. With the league title wrapped up and the team into the German cup semi-finals for the first time since winning it in 2020, could a third treble in 14 years be on the cards?


1) Arsenal

Their reliance on defensive solidity and corners may ruffle a few feathers, but Arsenal remain top of our projections with a 30 per cent chance of winning the Champions League.

The draw fell in their favour after topping the league phase in the way Liverpool must have been hoping for in 2024-25 when they did the same. Bayer Leverkusen posed a stiff challenge in Germany but fell 2-0 at the Emirates despite recording more possession (58 vs 42 per cent). Arsenal have a 79 per cent chance of defeating quarter-final opponents Sporting, which would pit them against Barcelona or Atletico.

Mikel Arteta’s side will need to adapt a little in Europe, especially regarding corners, with Champions League officiating more stringent than in England. They also need to move past their only knockout loss of the season in the Carabao Cup final against Manchester City in which they looked bereft of ideas in possession and were outfoxed without it.

Arsenal can surely be counted on to solve their out-of-possession issues, given it is the area Arteta has improved them the most in during his time in north London. Eberechi Eze suffering a calf injury that will rule him out for at least a month is a concern, but Martin Odegaard’s return from an injury of his own should add some much-needed verve and creativity.

Sophia Wilson, Tierna Davidson return to USWNT roster for Japan friendlies this weekend and next week

Portland Thorns forward Sophia Wilson (9) pictured with the ball

Sophia Wilson is back on the USWNT roster for the first time since October 2024. Denis Poroy / Imagn Images

By Tamerra GriffinApril 1, 2026

The Portland Thorns’ Sophia Wilson will make her return to the  roster for the first time since giving birth to her daughter. Wilson, who last featured in October 2024 before going on maternity leave, joins Trinity Rodman to form two-thirds of ‘Triple Espresso’ as the USWNT prepares for three critical matches against Japan,  and are ranked fifth in the world, according to FIFA. The last time the two sides met was at the 2025 SheBelieves Cup, which Japan won after beating the U.S. 2-1. Center back Tierna Davidson has also earned her first national team call up since sustaining an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury last March. Davidson, who plays for reigning National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) champions Gotham FC, . Winger Michelle Cooper of the Kansas City Current is also back in the lineup for the first time this year after missing previous camps due to injury. The USWNT will play Japan three times in as many venues: PayPal Park in San Jose on April 11, Lumen Field in Seattle on April 14, and Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, Colo. on April 17.


USWNT April roster in full

Goalkeepers (3): Jane Campbell (Houston Dash, 10), Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC; 8), Phallon Tullis-Joyce (Manchester United, ENG; 6)

Defenders (9): Tierna Davidson (Gotham FC; 67/3), Emily Fox (Arsenal FC, ENG; 74/1), Naomi Girma (Chelsea FC, ENG; 52/2), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash; 10/1), Lilly Reale (Gotham FC; 7/0), Emily Sams (Angel City FC: 9/1), Emily Sonnett (Gotham FC; 115/2), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC; 7/0), Kennedy Wesley (San Diego Wave FC; 4/0)

Midfielders (7): Sam Coffey (Manchester City, ENG; 44/5), Lindsey Heaps (OL Lyonnes, FRA; 173/39), Claire Hutton (Bay FC; 15/1), Rose Lavelle (Gotham FC; 118/27), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC; 15/5), Jaedyn Shaw (Gotham FC; 34/10), Lily Yohannes (OL Lyonnes, FRA; 16/1)

Forwards (7): Michelle Cooper (Kansas City Current; 10/1), Jameese Joseph (Chicago Stars FC; 4/1), Trinity Rodman (Washington Spirit; 52/13), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC; 17/6), Ally Sentnor (Kansas City Current; 18/7), Alyssa Thompson (Chelsea FC, ENG; 29/4), Sophia Wilson (Portland Thorns FC; 58/24)


Wilson’s club form, Davidson’s recovery afford them USWNT invitations

Though she’s yet to score a goal or play a full 90 minutes with the Thorns this season, Wilson has provided plenty of evidence in the space of four games of what she is capable of. With roughly 15 minutes in her first regular-season match since her maternity leave (which happened to be against another “espresso shot” in Rodman and the Washington Spirit), followed by 30, 45, and 68, Wilson’s hold-up play, incisive defending, and nose for goal haven’t waned during her time away from the pitch. It’s possible she sees her first 90 minutes since her return with the USWNT in one of the Japan games, but no matter how much she plays, it’s an important time to get back in the national team fold as the team prepares for World Cup qualifiers later this year. Wilson needs time to adjust to head coach Emma Hayes’ tactics and system (which her teammates have spent the better part of last year doing), as well as building or rebuilding partnerships with players like Alyssa Thompson, Michelle Cooper, and Emma Sears, who have been called up more regularly in her absence. Davidson hasn’t played quite as many minutes on her own return to the pitch. Nonetheless, her inclusion in this squad reveals where Hayes’ head could be regarding her proximity to the core group of players bound for Brazil — especially considering it likely meant leaving Tara Rudd of the Washington Spirit off the roster.


Consistency solidifying in the midfield

With the exception of 20-year-old Riley Jackson of the North Carolina Courage, the seven midfielders called up to this camp are the same who featured at the SheBelieves Cup last month. That includes Gotham FC’s Jaedyn Shaw, who has missed her last two club games due to a hamstring injury.

Emma Hayes appears to be building her team around a core midfield group that includes Jaedyn Shaw.Adam Hunger / Getty Images

As the USWNT backline and attacking front remain in flux, the consistency in call ups between the last international window and this one hints at Hayes’ core forming literally at the center of the pitch. She’s experimented with different line-ups among these seven players as well, demonstrating their malleability according to the needs of the game. It also helps that many of these players — Coffey, Hutton, and Moultrie in particular — have put on strong performances with their club teams lately.

Japan has exceptionally talented midfielders who are sure to pose the toughest test the USWNT has faced all year. Now that this emerging midfield core has played a tournament together, they will be asked to put what they’ve learned to use, not just once but three times.

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Campbell, Sams inclusions prove club form matters

Fittingly, Campbell’s last appearance on the USWNT was on Feb. 26, 2025 against Japan in the SheBelieves Cup finale. Should the 31-year-old earn another cap during this window, she could have an opportunity to display the form she’s had recently with the Dash, who are 2-1 and occupy the fifth spot in the NWSL table with a game in hand.

Campbell has made 12 saves so far this season, kept two clean sheets, and has saved 85.7 percent of shots on goal, according to Fbref. Since Campbell’s last call-up, Hayes had opted for younger goalkeepers like Bay FC’s Jordan Silkowitz as a replacement to an injured core player. That Hayes has opted for Campbell this time around feels a reflection of her club performances.

Sams has been called up more consistently than Campbell but does not always play significant minutes. Unlike Rudd, Sams missed out on the SheBelieves Cup but has since settled in nicely at Angel City. She’s started all three of their games and played next to veteran Sarah Gorden or Savy King in center-back pairings that have helped the Los Angeles side to their best start in club history at 3-0 and a clean sheet.

With the national team, Sams has been positioned as a full-back, though with Davidson presumably on limited minutes and the defensive flanks secured by Fox, Thompson, Reale, and Patterson, Sams could find her way back to the center of the pitch against Japan.

Pochettino admits U.S. World Cup roster selection will be ‘painful’ following Portugal loss

United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino

U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino reacts during the international friendly between his team and Portugal. Rich von Biberstein / Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

By Paul TenorioMarch 31, 2026

ATLANTA — Mauricio Pochettino admitted he faces a series of “painful” decisions in selecting his final United States World Cup squad after Tuesday’s 2-0 defeat to Portugal left a number of questions unanswered.ochettino’s side now has no more friendlies remaining before the planned May 26th squad announcement in New York, and the coach insisted several places are still up for grabs.“They know that it’s going to be a competition,” Pochettino said, after goals from Francisco Trincão and João Félix sealed a second straight defeat. “They know we are going to see every single week, every single game and we are going to assess one year and a half or more and make the decision who (is) going to make the roster.”

Asked how many players remained in contention, Pochettino made it clear there is still some ways to go before he settles on who he wants to suit up for the nation’s first home World Cup since 1994.“Today, yes, maybe a few more (than 35),” when asked how many remain in with a chance. “It is going to be painful because that process … is going to be difficult to pick only 26 from 35, 40.

“Who will be there is going to be happy, who is not on the roster is going to be sad.”

Pochettino said he took positives out of this March window despite Tuesday’s result following a 5-2 defeat to Belgium on Saturday, saying that he felt the team showed well against two top opponents.

“We were competing well, but still we need to learn a lot,” Pochettino said.

“We are competing against Belgium, Portugal,” he added, pointing out that both European teams are ranked in the top 10 by FIFA. “I think for sure Belgium and Portugal have in the top 100 players, a few or some playing in that top 100. I think we don’t have. That is why it’s good to play against these types of teams.”

Pochettino said he was happy overall with the camp. With just a few months ahead of picking his World Cup roster, Pochettino said he felt he had a better idea of the players and what they needed to do to be ready.

“There are too many things we need to assess and see in the next few weeks,” Pochettino said. “I am more positive now than before, because seeing the team compete, we are not far away. It is only details we need to improve. When we match the opponent in the areas we need to match, we are going to have the possibility to beat them.”USMNT’s World Cup Group Is SetTurkey completes USA’s World Cup group, ramps up overall difficultyTurkey outlasted Kosovo for one of the final places in the 2026 World Cup and will be the U.S.’s last group opponent

It was a continued message throughout the press conference from the U.S. coach, who was focused more on what he felt the team learned and the way it showed a better understanding of what is needed to compete against top teams than he was in the result of a “non-official” game.

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Some of the mistakes that were being made in the game — he pointed to Antonee Robinson’s high position on Portugal’s first goal as an example — are small details that he believes will be honed and tweaked in a longer World Cup camp. They are “fixable” issues. The bigger learnings came from the level of the opponents.

“We are going to have three, four weeks to prepare for the World Cup and going to be pushing these types of situations (to learn),” Pochettino said. “After four months (away from the national team), you don’t have much time (together), you tell players, but players have to feel (it) on the pitch. These types of mistakes are not crazy, but in these types of games, players like (Portugal’s stars), when you give them a centimeter, it’s possible for them to score.”

Pochettino said he was pleased with Christian Pulisic’s performance as the starting striker for the U.S. on Portugal, even though he wasn’t able to break his scoring drought.

“I think he was very active and he did a good job,” Pochettino said. “He was involved in (a lot) of actions. It was a shame he didn’t score with the opportunities he had, but it’s normal he was a little frustrated, but I think we were a little bit frustrated the whole game.”


‘Why not us?’ Mauricio Pochettino asked the USMNT. Belgium and Portugal answered.

Portugal players celebrate a goal in front of the USMNT

Omar Vega / USSF / Getty Images

By Henry Bushnell

April 1, 2026

ATLANTA — When Mauricio Pochettino gathered his U.S. men’s national team players on the first full day of a crucial March training camp, he spoke to them about belief. He exuded a calm confidence that built around the U.S. team this fall, that swept up fans who dared to dream. They talked then about doing “the impossible,” about charging deeper into a men’s World Cup than ever before. Now, standing on a training pitch outside Atlanta last week, Pochettino asked his players: “Why not us?”nd on Saturday and Tuesday, Belgium and Portugal delivered answers.The answer was Vitinha’s pass to Bruno Fernandes on Tuesday night. It was Jérémy Doku’s electrifying 1-v-1 ability three days earlier. It was, in Pochettino’s words, “small details,” the type that separated the USMNT and European powers over the past week — and over the past decade.

“Why not us?”Well, to win a World Cup, you almost certainly have to beat multiple top-10 European teams. And the U.S. hasn’t beaten one in nearly 11 years.It has now lost eight straight games to European nations, regardless of rank, the second-longest such streak in program history, per TruMedia. And it is winless in 10 World Cup matches against teams from the continent since 2002.

The U.S. believed, and players insist they still do. But they also made minor mistakes Saturday and Tuesday — mistakes that go unnoticed against lowly Concacaf teams but get punished by the likes of Portugal and Belgium. It’s a lagging recovery run. It’s a foolish pass or a poor first touch. It’s a jump into the wrong passing lane. It’s Antonee Robinson cheating too high, plus a half dozen other “details” that allowed Portugal to take a 1-0 lead.“In that situation, we need to read [the game] better,” Pochettino said of the sequence that led to the first Portuguese goal in a simple 2-0 win.“This type of mistakes, they are not crazy,” he continued. “But in this type of game, players like [Pedro] Neto, [Gonçalo] Ramos, Bruno, João Félix — when you give a centimeter, it’s possible that they can score. That was what happened.”

João Félix’s world-class ability made an impact against the United States.Rich von Biberstein / Icon Sportswire / Getty Images

That’s what happened Tuesday. That’s what happened Saturday. That’s what happened last June against Switzerland. It also happened in 2023 against Germany, and at the 2022 World Cup against the Netherlands.For extended stretches of some of those games, the USMNT was competitive. It was better than Belgium for 40 minutes. It was on the front foot for 20 against Portugal. It looked like a coherent, well-coached team. It played with confidence and even attitude, just as it had for spells against the Germans and Dutch years ago.What it lacked was top-end talent. Individual quality. Pochettino essentially said this Tuesday.

“We are USA. And we are competing against Belgium, Portugal,” he said. “For sure, Belgiumand Portugal have, in the top 100 players [in the world], a few or some players in that top 100. I think we don’t have.”That, of course, is an oversimplified view of soccer, a wonderfully complex sport. Underdogs beat favorites all the time. Intensity and organization, intangibles and tactics, randomness and luck can all close quality gaps on any given day. They have for U.S. men’s national teams in the past. Someday, they’ll do so again.

But it’s been a damn long time since the USMNT sustained them for 90 minutes. And at the final whistle Tuesday, shoulders sank. Heads hung. Bodies moped. Chris Richards tugged at his jersey in frustration.Pochettino, when asked if he worried that the players would lose belief, seemed perplexed by the concept.

“Who start to lose belief? Which players?” he asked.

When told that none of them had ever beaten a top European team, he responded: “Yeah, but always it’s — hope the first time is going to be in the World Cup. We need to learn. That is why we are playing this type of game.”

USMNT manager Mauricio Pochettino shrugging

Manager Mauricio Pochettino gives a miffed reaction as the U.S. fell to Portugal in AtlantaAndrew J. Clark / ISI Photos / USSF / Getty Images

The players, for their part, said they are indeed learning. Some have hardly seen this level before. The USMNT’s schedule is now largely filled by games within Concacaf.

When they met the likes of Portugal, Auston Trusty saw “the ruthlessness of the finishing.”

Sebastian Berhalter felt, for the first time, a different type of soccer. “When you play against these teams, it’s a lot less chaotic than you would think,” he said. “It’s a lot more controlled. Guys have great first touches, so, pressing, it makes it even harder.”

The U.S. did press effectively up until the game’s first hydration break. That, and the entire first half, fueled the players’ persistent belief.

“I mean, both first halves, we caused the teams a lot of problems, we put a lot of pressure on them,” Christian Pulisic said of Belgium and Portugal. “It didn’t seem like either game was out of control.”

Advertisementhe shortcoming, he acknowledged, was “just little moments, or being a little bit more clinical. It’s just the same story. But I feel really close. I feel like we’re in a good place.”

USMNT players huddle during a friendly vs Portugal

USMNT players have two more matches before the World Cup group stageOmar Vega / USSF / Getty Images

In that sense, their belief is totally valid and logical. In both games this month, just like against the Netherlands in 2022, they can point to moments, to specific chances that, if they’d been converted, could have led to very different conclusions. They are, or at least seem, within reach of international soccer’s upper echelons. It would be foolish to say they cannot beat Germany in June or Turkey at the World Cup or someone even better in the knockout stages.

But it was also impossible to escape the feeling that Portugal was toying with the U.S. — just like Germany and the Netherlands did a few years ago.

And it was hard to see how the U.S. would beat a team of that caliber. The Americans can, but there is increasingly little reason to believe they will.

Late last week, after repeating his “why not us” line to reporters, Pochettino was asked: Why? Can you sell to the average American why the U.S. is a contender for the World Cup?

The crux of his answer was: “Because we are American.”

And on Tuesday night, after all the momentum from the fall had fizzled, although he repeatedly reiterated a positive message, the belief felt a bit more like blind faith.

“When we match the opponent in the areas that we need to match,” Pochettino said, “for sure we are going to have the possibility to beat them.”

Pulisic concluded: “We’re gonna figure it out. We’re gonna figure it out when it really counts.”

USA 0, Portugal 2: Decisive loss, Pulisic struggles cap last pre-World Cup window

Christian Pulisic shows frustration vs. Portugal

Dale Zanine / Imagn Images

By Henry Bushnell and Paul Tenorio March 31, 2026

ATLANTA — The U.S. men’s national team get a second consecutive lesson in quality from a European power Tuesday at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, losing to Portugal 2-0 in a friendly that brought the Americans further down to earth.They’d hoped to respond to Saturday’s 5-2 shellacking by Belgium. For around 20 minutes, they did — with energy and attacking intent.But Portugal slowly, gradually, took control of the game and punished the U.S. for a lapse — just as Belgium had three days earlier.

In the 36th minute, a few scruffy passes led to a U.S. turnover. The ball fell to Portugal’s Vitinha, who, with a quick glance, sent U.S. midfielder Aidan Morris jumping into the wrong passing lane. Vitinha played in Bruno Fernandes, who, as U.S. players lagged behind the play, set up Francisco Trincão for the game’s opening goal.USA’s World Cup Group Is SetTurkey completes USA’s World Cup group, ramps up overall difficultyTurkey outlasted Kosovo for one of the final places in the 2026 World Cup and will be the U.S.’s last group opponentAfter the break, the match fell into a familiar rhythm. The U.S. was never overwhelmed; but, with a lineup of mostly reserves, it never really looked capable of scoring or getting back into the game.In the 59th minute, Portugal struck again. João Félix pinged in a shot from outside the box off the post. U.S. goalkeeper Matt Freese had no chance.

By the midway point of the second half, the U.S. fans among the 72,297 in attendance seemed to have lost hope. The atmosphere felt dead. And a March window that began with optimism ended with a whimper.Here’s a closer look at the match:


Joao Felix shoots past Aidan Morris

João Félix shoots past Aidan Morris and scores Portugal’s second goalJared C. Tilton / Getty Images

A similar script unfolds

It was impossible to ignore the similarities between the respective starts of the Belgium and Portugal games. In both contests, the U.S. players looked confident and dangerous as they attacked their opponent. They created chances. They combined nicely. They caused problems. Then the hydration break came. Belgium players talked on Saturday about how the first-half hydration break — which FIFA will mandate at the World Cup no matter the venue or weather — allowed a crucial opportunity for the coaching staff to reset tactics and adjust to what the Americans were doing. Belgium put more players into midfield. They looked to isolate Jérémy Doku more on the wing and create 1-on-1 opportunities. The U.S. would score first in that game, but Belgium seized control of the match and cruised to a win. On Tuesday, the U.S. again looked dangerous and competent in the attack. Defensively it was a bit more solid. Portugal seemed, like Belgium, to absorb that energy and figure out what the U.S.’s plan was. Then, after the hydration break, the visitors settled into the game and took control. They kept the ball and made the U.S. work. They pressed effectively. And after forcing a turnover at midfield, Vitinha needed just one pass to carve up the U.S. and set up Bruno Fernandes’ assist to Trincão.It’s a concerning similarity. The U.S. needs to be ready for adjustments at the World Cup. And it needs to be able to counterpunch. In both March friendlies, it was the opponents who took advantage.

Christian Pulisic dribbles vs. Portugal

Christian Pulisic couldn’t break his scoring drought vs. PortugalJared C. Tilton / Getty Images

Pulisic starts at striker but can’t break through

Pulisic entered this March camp without a goal in 2026, and without a goal for the national team since 2024. Two days after he missed a pivotal chance against Belgium and extended the drought, Pochettino spoke about tweaking his star’s position.

“We know that he can score,” Pochettino said. “Maybe we help a little bit, [and move him] a little bit closer to the goal.”

Up until Portugal’s first goal, the U.S. created better chances. The two best opportunities fell to Pulisic, whom Pochettino had moved to a center forward position in an attempt to get him out of a rut.

Instead, Pulisic dug himself deeper. In the sixth minute, when free in the box, his finish was weak and saved. In the 22nd, a Tim Weah cross fizzed right through Pulisic’s legs.

Like on Saturday, Pulisic looked dangerous running at the Portuguese defense but out of sync in the penalty box. He closed his 45 minutes kicking out at an opponent in frustration. He was then subbed out at halftime.

Tuesday was the first time since taking over as coach in 2024, Pochettino started Pulisic in place of a natural striker rather than alongside one. Pulisic has mostly played for the U.S. in a left attacking midfield role, somewhere in between a winger and a No. 10. Here he was a center forward, paired up top with fellow attacking midfielder Weston McKennie. And although his movements and role changed, his performance in front of goal did not.

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He combined well in the position with McKennie and Malik Tillman. He looked reasonably comfortable — which is unsurprising, given that Pulisic has played in a front two at AC Milan. His off-ball running was smart. His dribbling was purposeful and sharp. Anywhere outside the box, he looked confident.

But whenever he got within 20 yards of goal, he faltered. In addition to the missed chances, he botched a 3-v-3 break in the 45th minute, failing to pick the right pass. And by the end of the half, his frustration was evident.A decade of Pulisic with the USMNTChristian Pulisic’s 10 USMNT years and the 10 moments that have defined themIt’s been a full decade since Pulisic’s first U.S. senior cap. Here’s a look back at what’s been achieved – and what still awaits

The U.S. didn’t heed Poch’s call for intensity

There were moments, again, where the U.S. played well. And there were players whose efforts met the moment. But once again there were periods of play where the U.S. was too slow to react, too delayed in their recoveries and a step behind the required effort to make the play. Mauricio Pochettino highlighted the team’s lack of intensity in his prematch comments, but the challenge wasn’t met.Unsurprisingly, there were examples on both goals. Heavy touches in midfield from both Malik Tillman and Alex Freeman eventually led to McKennie’s turnover. Then, after Aidan Morris tried to jump the pass, which allowed Vitinha to skin the U.S., Morris and Tillman were far too slow to recover into the box to defend, which gave Trincão the space to trail Fernandes and score the opener.Portugal’s second goal, on a designed set piece, highlighted it again. João Félix had the time to take a touch and set up the volley he lasered into the bottom corner of the far post. Morris was the closest to it, and afterwards, the big screen in Mercedes-Benz Stadium showed the midfielder pointing to his own chest after the goal.Against teams like Belgium and Portugal, all that’s needed is that half second or half space. Over the last three days, the U.S. was taught that lesson multiple times.By the end of the game, it felt more like a training session for Portugal than anything really productive for the U.S. Portugal was given far too much time and space on the ball. It was toying with the U.S. at times. It felt so far removed from a game with stakes — just as it felt in September 2022 when the U.S. played neutral site friendlies in Germany and Spain. The U.S. recovered and had a solid group stage in Qatar. Pochettino & Co. hope this is similarly not much of an indication of what will come when the tournament starts in a few months.

Pochettino gives blunt assessment of whether USA has any world top 100 players

USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino

Andrew J. Clark / ISI Photos / USSF

By Martin Rogers

April 1, 2026

Mauricio Pochettino had numbers on his mind on Tuesday night. It wasn’t just the two unanswered goals his United States team conceded to Portugal, the nine weeks he has to name his World Cup roster, or the 35 (or 40) players still in with a chance of making the cut at that time.Pochettino also had the figure 100 running through his thoughts, namely the players he considers to be among the best 100 in the world. And, according to him, there aren’t any Americans among them.“We are USA,” Pochettino told reporters at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, after back-to-back losses following Saturday’s 5-2 setback against Belgium. “We are competing against Belgium, Portugal. I think for sure Belgium and Portugal have in the top 100 players, a few or some, players playing in that top 100. I think we don’t have. That is why it’s good to play against these types of teams.”It was a long way from being the most incendiary thing he could have said, but, coming out of the final window before the tournament squad is announced on May 26, it was striking.Soccer is global enough that few countries on the planet can lay claim to having several of the 100 best, or even more than one.It would not be unreasonable, however, to suggest that Christian Pulisic might be disappointed with such a take from his national team coach. Such lists are, by their very nature, subjective and can use widely varying criteria to make a determination. But he has been on lists of that type before.At the end of 2024, for instance, Pulisic was among the final 22 players in the world shortlisted for The Best FIFA men’s midfielder award.And in The Athletic’s “Best 100 Players” who will be at the World Cup, compiled by Nick Miller and Tim Spiers last December, Pulisic was the only American, and came in at No. 39. The rubric used included factors such as current form, historical performance, importance to their nation, transfer value, and rating on the highly-researched FC26 video game.A Proper Top-100 RankingRanking the 100 best players at World Cup 2026Our writers attempt the impossible – ordering the best players who are in with a chance of being at the tournament in North America

Otherwise, Weston McKennie, based on his Juventus form of late, might also consider himself worthy of being in the mix. Given how national team coaches generally take the approach of cheerleading for their best players, Pochettino’s remarks were notable, at the very least, though they should be kept in context.The coach may be right, of course. At various times over the history of the USMNT, it is likely that only a handful of players would ever have been at a lofty enough point at any stage of their career to hold claims on a subjective top 100 spot. As for Pulisic, he made a stirring start to the current Serie A season after missing last summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup but has tailed off of late. He has not scored for AC Milan during this calendar year, and hasn’t scored for the U.S. since 2024.The context of what Pochettino said was important, though. The intent was clearly not to downplay his players’ ability, but to reinforce that the U.S. is not, at this time, at the same level as the leading European powers, either as a collective unit or in terms of individual ability. The point he was making was that for this reason alone, scheduling matches and competing against such opponents is vital to future development and progress. “(It) is massive for us, it is about (learning),” Pochettino added. “We should play more games. Even though this is painful it is the only way to improve, it is the only way to learn, it is the only way to see how the top players and teams compete.” If the top 100 analogy came off as strangely specific, it should be noted that as a group, U.S. Soccer does have a tendency to think in such statistical terms. Last year, the federation hired the Twenty First Group, a sports intelligence consultancy. Among the firm’s research was analysis about how many players rated in the top 1,000 in the world a national team normally needs to reach the quarterfinals of a World Cup, or better.

Why Wrexham against Southampton has the potential to be another Easter classic

Wrexham manager Phil Parkinson

Wrexham manager Phil Parkinson is hoping to oversee a fourth successive promotion Harriet Massey/Getty Images

By Richard SutcliffeApril 6, 2026 7:00 am EDT

Is it really only three years ago?

Wrexham versus Notts County was a true game for the ages; so much so that, by the time the music stopped after almost 100 pulsating minutes of Easter Monday football, it felt as if the Welsh club had finally prised open the door marked ‘EFL Return’ after 15 long years in the wilderness of non-League.

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Ben Foster’s 95th minute penalty save to clinch a season-defining 3-2 victory may be the abiding memory of a top-of-the-table clash that lived up to its “biggest non-League game in history” pre-match billing.

But, really, all footballing life was present at The Racecourse Ground that spring day, as two teams who had already breached the 100-point milestone swapped places at the top of the table for the 15th and final time that season.

There was even a touch of Hollywood glamour, of sorts, as Ryan Reynolds declared Foster to be a “double-handsome b*****d” in the dressing room afterwards, just moments after co-owner Rob Mac had kissed the former England goalkeeper full on the lips.

No matter how far Wrexham go — and the 2021 pledge by the co-owners to reach the Premier League one day now looks far less wild than it once did — nothing will surely compare to the emotional rollercoaster that was Easter Monday, 2023.What You Should Read NextThe story of Wrexham’s epic 3-2 win over Notts County – told by people who were thereAn oral account of one of the biggest days in Wrexham’s history as they rallied to beat Notts County 3-2 and edge closer to promotion

And yet here we are again, looking forward to another holiday fixture in north Wales that has a similar feel to that winner takes all contest against Luke Williams’ Notts County, a team who finished the 2022-23 National League season with 107 points but still had to negotiate the play-offs to clinch promotion due to the relentless form shown by Phil Parkinson’s champions.

Wrexham’s clash with Southampton has been looming large for some time. Shifted back a day due to the south coast club’s involvement in Saturday’s FA Cup quarter-finals, where they shocked Premier League leaders Arsenal with a 2-1 home win, Southampton’s first league visit to The Racecourse since 1959 pits two sides who, for the past seven or so weeks, have been embroiled in their very own game of pass-the-parcel when it comes to sixth place.

First, Wrexham had it. Then Southampton, whose inactivity in the Championship on Good Friday allowed the Welsh club to wrestle back possession via a stirring second-half fightback in the 2-2 draw at West Bromwich Albion.

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Derby County are also in the hunt along with Hull City but, really, Tuesday’s clash has felt for weeks to have the potential of providing the fourth and final play-offs qualifier. A point not lost on Wrexham’s Lewis O’Brien.

Wrexham's Lewis O'Brien

Wrexham’s Lewis O’Brien has been acutely aware of Southampton’s revivalJess Hornby/Getty Images

“When you look from the outside,” says the midfielder, “it is one of those games. We’re one point in front of them and they have a game in hand now. Before that, it was goal difference keeping us out of the play-offs.

“From that standpoint, people can big up the game as much as they want. But I don’t think we will be doing that. We stay in our own changing room and keep doing what we’ve been doing.”

Wrexham may publicly be keeping it cool but the stakes will undoubtedly be high on Tuesday night at a venue whose reputation as the place to be for goals in the EFL is well deserved. There have been 26 league and cup matches at the SToK Cae Ras this season, games that have yielded 90 goals.

Whether a sell-out crowd will be treated to a contest as captivating as that famous Notts County game remains to be seen. But, judging by how Southampton turned a 1-0 deficit against Wrexham on 90 minutes into three points by the time the final whistle blew on the opening day of the campaign, the potential for more thrills and spills seems high.

Southampton’s resurgence — they were fourth bottom on November 1 when Will Still was sacked — means those late, late goals from Ryan Manning and Jack Stephens have taken on even greater significance.

Certainly, Wrexham fans will be ready. Early in the season, there was no mistaking how much promotion heroes such as Paul Mullin, Ollie Palmer and Elliot Lee were missed following their respective departures. The matchday atmosphere suffered as a result.

Now, though, a new band of fan favourites have emerged, complete with their own terrace songs, and the supporter-player bond that had been such a feature of the charge through the divisions has been restored.

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“Playing at home is massive,” says O’Brien, one of 13 signings made last summer when joining from Nottingham Forest. “The fans finally feel we belong here, rather than are just here for a little bit.

“At the start of the season, they were a bit iffy as to what was going on. The team took time to gel. Now we have gelled, they believe we do belong here and get right behind us now.”

Southampton manager Tonda Eckert has inspired the club’s revival after a slow start this termLeila Coker/Getty Images

Like Notts County going into that epic 2023 title showdown, Southampton will arrive at the SToK Cae Ras in great form, a 12-game unbeaten league run having yielded 30 points to cement the popularity of Tonda Eckert, Still’s successor as head coach.

Even the disruption of losing top scorer Adam Armstrong to Wolverhampton Wanderers in January — he is still the only player at St Mary’s with a double-figure tally of goals — has been overcome by the 33-year-old German, whose previous experience of English football had come as Gerhard Struber’s assistant at Barnsley.

“It is a massive game for us,” admits Parkinson, whose own side are in great form, too. Their haul of 36 points from 18 games since Christmas is bettered by only Millwall and Norwich City (37 apiece).

“At this stage of the season, though, it’s difficult to say one game is harder than the next because everyone is fighting for something. But, with Southampton’s resurgence, it has a special feel to it and we will be ready for Tuesday night.”

One huge difference between Wrexham’s first promotion under Parkinson in 2023 and today centres on stress levels, with supporters able to enjoy the push for the Premier League in a way that was unthinkable when trying to escape non-League.

Sure, every game matters in the quest to keep those dreams of a fourth consecutive promotion alive. And should Parkinson’s men triumph on Tuesday evening, the celebrations in the stands will be suitably raucous.

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But, unlike that memorable National League run-in when even drawing a game felt like the end of the world, this has been a season to savour for Wrexham supporters.

Wrexham supporters celebrate the team's victory at Sheffield United last month

Wrexham fans have enjoyed a memorable season alreadyHarriet Massey/Getty Images

Already, their team is all but assured of securing the highest league finish in the club’s history, eclipsing the previous best of 15th in the old Second Division set in 1978-79. Then there is the sense that Wrexham’s ultimate destination under Reynolds and Mac will be the Premier League, be that next season or at some stage in the next few years.

That said, one look at the Championship table shows just what is at stake for both teams in this latest Easter six-pointer.

“Pressure is a privilege,” adds Parkinson, a manager with six promotions on his CV. “Absolutely, that’s the case. Football is about making the most of every season. I always feel every season is special and we have an opportunity to finish it well.

“We will do everything we can to do that. When you get into this position, it is important — like we have done in previous years — that we produce good performances. We have got to enjoy it and we will.”

By Richard Sutcliffe

Wrexham and Sheffield United Correspondent

Wisconsin’s Bajraktarevic crushes Italy dreams, sends Bosnia-Herzegovina to World Cup

Esmir Bajraktarevic scores for Bosnia-Herzegovina to defeat Italy

Esmir Bajraktarevic scores to send Bosnia-Herzegovina to the World Cup Elvis Barukcic / AFP / Getty Images

By Felipe Cardenas

March 31, 2026Esmir Bajraktarevic, who grew up near Milwaukee, Wisc., became a national hero for Bosnia and Herzegovina on Tuesday night, as his winning penalty clinched qualification for this summer’s World Cup and denied four-time champion Italy a spot in the tournament.The 21-year-old former New England Revolution winger converted a brazen no-look penalty past Italian goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma to complete a shootout triumph in Zenica, after scores were locked at 1-1 following extra-time.

Bajraktarevic’s strike broke the Italian hearts and prolonged the country’s World Cup drought – Italy has not qualified for the event since 2014.  After beating Donnarumma, he ripped off his shirt and raised it proudly as he celebrated with a rabid home crowd at the Stadion Bilino Polje. It has been quite the journey for the American-born playmaker, who is now at PSV Eindhoven in the Dutch Eredivisie.Bajraktarevic, who hails from Appleton, Wisc., was a U.S. youth international and invited to a senior camp in January of 2024, where he made his senior debut against Slovenia under former USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter. That summer, however, he decided to represent Bosnia and Herzegovina. As a dual national with what appears to be a high ceiling, Bajraktarevic’s decision made headlines in the U.S. But for the player, it was simply what felt right.

“The decision for me was very easy,” Bajraktarevic told The Blazing Musket in October of 2024. “It was something I knew I wanted to do since I was little. It was just a process that took a while. I’m very happy I made it. There’s no feeling like representing your country.”As Bosnia and Herzegovina prepared for the final stretch of European World Cup qualifying, Bajraktarevic reiterated where his heart has always been.“I’m very proud every time I play for Bosnia,” he said in February. “It’s a different feeling. It’s where my parents come from and it’s what I’ve always thought of myself as, as a Bosnian.”The questions will now be raised within the U.S. soccer community about whether Bajraktarevic would make Mauricio Pochettino’s current squad. That will certainly be debated, but what is evident is Bajraktarevic’s youthful flair and swagger on the ball. Against Italy, and deep into extra time, the left-footed Bajraktarevic attempted a rabona near Donnarumma’s penalty area. It flew out of bounds but that didn’t deter him from taking it even further moments later.He stepped up confidently to take one of the most significant kicks in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s soccer history, after the Italians had squandered two opportunities from the spot. As Bajraktarevic looked down and cleverly placed the ball to Donnarumma’s left, pandemonium ensued.

Felipe Cardenas

By Felipe Cardenas

Senior Writer, Soccer

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