There has never been a more important summer for football in the United States. As one of the three co-hosts of World Cup 2026, the United States Soccer Federation does not just have a team in the tournament — it has a nation watching, a generation of new fans being created in real time, and the weight of a country's sporting ambition riding on every result. Football has been growing in America for decades. This is the tournament that could make it explode.
Mauricio Pochettino's side enter the competition ranked 16th in the world with arguably the most technically gifted squad in the history of the US men's national team. 13 of the 26 players were part of the squad that reached the Round of 16 in Qatar 2022, providing experienced foundations alongside 13 tournament debutants. The group stage draw has been kind — Group D features Paraguay, Australia and Türkiye rather than any of the tournament's elite sides. The path to the quarter-finals is as clear as the USMNT has ever had it. The question is whether Pochettino's squad has the depth, the consistency and the big-game nerve to walk through it.
Manager: Mauricio Pochettino and the Weight of Expectation
Mauricio Pochettino arrived as USMNT head coach in September 2023 with a reputation built across the Premier League's most demanding stages. His Tottenham side reached a Champions League final. His Chelsea tenure brought mixed results but confirmed his ability to work with elite attacking talent. His PSG spell produced Ligue 1 titles but European disappointment. For the United States, he represents the most decorated managerial appointment in the program's history — a manager who understands modern pressing football and possesses the tactical sophistication to compete against international opposition of the highest quality.
Pochettino mainly prefers a 4-3-3 or a flexible 3-4-2-1 formation with a reliance on high pressing — a style that suits the athleticism and energy of the American squad. A recent friendly win over Senegal gave the camp a confidence boost ahead of the tournament, with both Pulisic and Balogun starring. However, his record in competitive CONCACAF competition has been mixed: the USA went out to Panama in the CONCACAF Nations League semi-finals and lost to Mexico in the Gold Cup final under his management. Tournament knockout failures against regional rivals are not the preparation story Pochettino would have chosen heading into a home World Cup. He needs his best players to deliver from the first whistle.
USA's Full World Cup 2026 Squad
Goalkeepers: Matt Turner (New England Revolution), Chris Brady (Chicago Fire), Matt Freese (New York City FC)
Defenders: Sergiño Dest (PSV Eindhoven), Joe Scally (Borussia Mönchengladbach), Tim Ream (Charlotte FC), Walker Zimmerman (Nashville SC), Cameron Carter-Vickers (Celtic), Miles Robinson (FC Cincinnati), Chris Richards (Crystal Palace), Aaron Long (New York Red Bulls), DeJuan Jones (New England Revolution), Kobi Henry (Leverkusen)
Midfielders: Tyler Adams (Bournemouth), Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (AC Milan), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo), Johnny Cardoso (Real Betis), Gio Reyna (Nottingham Forest)
Forwards: Christian Pulisic (AC Milan), Folarin Balogun (Monaco), Timothy Weah (Juventus), Brenden Aaronson (Leeds United), Ricardo Pepi (PSV Eindhoven), Josh Sargent (Norwich City), Caden Clark (RB Leipzig)
Notable absentees: Diego Luna, Tanner Tessmann
Key Players to Watch
Christian Pulisic — The Star Carrying a Nation
Christian Pulisic is the most experienced player in the current squad and its leading goalscorer, having already surpassed the 30-goal mark for his country. The AC Milan forward is the face of American soccer — the player who has carried the weight of the USMNT's ambitions through the past five years at the highest level of the club game. A Champions League winner with Chelsea in 2021, he has grown into one of the most technically complete wide forwards in European football. However, Pulisic heads into the tournament with little club form, having failed to score for Milan in 2026 and coming under scrutiny for skipping the Gold Cup. For the USA to go deep at this World Cup, Pulisic needs to find his best form at exactly the right moment. Playing in front of his own country's fans across Los Angeles and Seattle, the conditions could be exactly what he needs.
Folarin Balogun — The Striker With Everything to Prove
Folarin Balogun chose to represent the United States over England — the country of his birth — and arrives at World Cup 2026 with the momentum of a strong 2024-25 season at Monaco behind him. Balogun is expected to play a prominent role alongside Pulisic as one of the USA's primary attacking threats. Quick, technically gifted and a natural finisher, he is the player most likely to provide the goals that carry the USA through the group stage and into the knockout rounds. The combination of Pulisic's creativity and Balogun's movement gives Pochettino a front pairing that can hurt any defence in Group D.
Tyler Adams — The Engine Room
Tyler Adams is the defensive heartbeat of this US squad. Playing for Bournemouth in the Premier League, the central midfielder has developed into one of the most complete defensive midfielders the American game has ever produced — precise in the tackle, intelligent in his positioning and a calm distributor under pressure. The defensive midfield area has been identified as a potential concern for the USA, and Adams's fitness and form will be critical to how well Pochettino's side can protect their defence in the difficult knockout matches that follow the group stage. When Adams is on the pitch and operating at his best, the USA look like a team built to compete at the highest level.
Weston McKennie — The Veteran Presence
Weston McKennie at Juventus has become one of the most experienced American players at elite club level, and his presence in midfield provides Pochettino with a physical, energetic option capable of covering ground across 90 minutes at international pace. His big-game experience — Serie A, Champions League, multiple major tournaments with the USMNT — makes him one of the squad's most valuable assets as a tournament progresses and the stakes rise.
Gio Reyna — The Wildcard
Gio Reyna made the cut for this squad after a period of inconsistency and some well-publicised tension within the USMNT setup. At his best — as he showed in flashes at the 2022 World Cup — Reyna is one of the most technically gifted American players of his generation. At Nottingham Forest he has shown the maturity that was sometimes absent earlier in his career. If Pochettino can get the best from Reyna off the bench or in a creative role, he becomes one of the team's most dangerous weapons. If the inconsistency returns, his inclusion will be questioned. He is the squad's highest-risk, highest-reward selection.
Group D Fixtures — The Path to the Knockout Rounds
USA vs Paraguay — 13 June, Los Angeles, 2:00 AM BST / 9:00 PM ET
The USA open their World Cup campaign at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles against Paraguay — and the setting could hardly be more appropriate. SoFi is one of the most spectacular stadiums in North American sport, and a sell-out crowd in Los Angeles for the home nation's opener will create an atmosphere unlike anything the USMNT has experienced before. Paraguay qualified from CONMEBOL and are a well-organised, physically competitive side — but this is a fixture the USA must win. The USA have progressed to the knockout rounds in each of their last three World Cup appearances and a victory against Paraguay sets the tone for achieving that again. A draw here would put immediate pressure on the remaining two matches.
USA vs Australia — 19 June, Seattle, 8:00 PM BST / 3:00 PM ET
The second group stage fixture takes the USA to Lumen Field in Seattle for a match against Australia that is likely to decide Group D's top qualifier. The Socceroos are the most dangerous team in the group after the USA — their 2022 quarter-final run demonstrated they are capable of beating European sides under knockout pressure — and Lumen Field's reputation as one of the loudest stadiums in North America will give the home crowd a genuinely intimidating atmosphere to work with. This is the match Pochettino will have circled as the key group stage test. A win here and the USA will likely top the group; a defeat would leave them needing a result against Türkiye to guarantee knockout progression.
Turkey vs USA — 26 June, Los Angeles, 3:00 AM BST / 10:00 PM ET
The group stage concludes back in Los Angeles against Türkiye, who qualified through the UEFA playoffs with an organised, intense pressing style under their manager. The USA are a very top-heavy team and depth in midfield and defensive lines remains a concern — which means if this match arrives with something still to play for, Pochettino will need his squad depth to have held up across the first two fixtures. Türkiye are not to be underestimated in a knockout-or-die scenario, as they have demonstrated repeatedly in major tournaments. But Los Angeles, with the energy of the home crowd fully behind the USA, gives the Stars and Stripes every advantage they need to close out the group on a positive note.
Can the USA Reach the Quarter-Finals?
The quarter-final is the stated minimum ambition for this USMNT squad — and with Group D's draw, it is a realistic target rather than wishful thinking. The USA's best World Cup performance since 1930 remains a quarter-final exit in 2002, and there is growing optimism that Pochettino's side can match or better that this summer. Emerging from Group D should be achievable. The Round of 32 and Round of 16 fixtures will then be against opponents determined by other groups — and the bracket could produce beatable opponents if the USA top their group.
The concerns are real, though. The USA are a very top-heavy team — when Pulisic and Balogun are not firing, the creative threat diminishes significantly. The defensive unit has questions around it, and the defensive midfield area lacks depth if Adams or McKennie are unavailable. Against the tournament's elite sides — France, Spain, Brazil — in the knockout rounds, those weaknesses will be exposed if not addressed. But the group stage draw, the home advantage and the quality in the forward positions give the USA a genuine platform for their most successful World Cup campaign in a generation.
The Host Nation Factor
Playing a World Cup on home soil is unlike any other sporting experience. The crowd energy across Los Angeles, Seattle and the other host cities where the USA may play in the knockout rounds will be at a level American football fans have never felt before. Home advantage at World Cups is historically significant — host nations consistently outperform their pre-tournament rankings, fuelled by supporter intensity, familiar surroundings and the weight of national expectation creating focus rather than pressure.
For this generation of American players — many of whom grew up watching the US fail to qualify for Russia 2018 — this World Cup is the moment they have been building towards their entire careers. The combination of genuine squad quality, a favourable group draw and the extraordinary home advantage that comes with 80,000 American fans willing you forward on every touch is a platform no previous USMNT has enjoyed. Whether they make the most of it will define Pochettino's tenure and, in many ways, the trajectory of American football for a generation.
Watch the USA or Be There in Person
The USA's group stage matches span two weeks — Los Angeles on 13 June, Seattle on 19 June, back to Los Angeles on 26 June. For international fans planning to attend, both SoFi Stadium and Lumen Field are among the best venues on the entire World Cup circuit. Browse all available World Cup 2026 tickets for USA group stage and knockout fixtures. And if the USA do make the improbable run all the way to the final — in front of their home crowd at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on 19 July — World Cup Final tickets are available now.
America is ready. The question is whether football is ready for America.