The U.S. trio hoping to follow Yamal from La Masia to Barcelona stardom

The U.S. trio hoping to follow Yamal from La Masia to Barcelona stardom

Diego Kochen and Pedro Soma used to play on rival teams in Miami when they were kids. Now they both play for Barcelona. They’re not the only players on the brink of the first team at the Spanish giants who were born in the United States in 2006, either; there is also the Colorado-born Adrian Gill.

Just six months in age separate the trio, who hope their education at Barça will serve the United States men’s national team in the coming years as more young Americans break through in Europe. To have three the same age all make Barça’s senior side, though, would be special.

Goalkeeper Kochen and midfielder Soma are already regulars with Barça Atlétic, the Catalan side’s reserve team that competes in the third tier of Spanish football. Gill may have been playing alongside them, too, but for picking up a serious injury in 2023 just days after training with the first team for the first time. He recently returned after over 14 months of rehabilitation work, and is now re-finding his rhythm in the U19 team.

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The three of them sat down together with ESPN analyst Luis García — who also came through at Barça before going on to play for Liverpool and Atlético Madrid, among others — to discuss their different journeys so far, their playing styles, their hopes with and for the USMNT, their bond off the pitch as Americans abroad.


Gill, from Denver, is the oldest of the three. He was also the first to sign for Barça, joining from local youth side Cornellà in 2018 after his family had relocated to Spain. “The room just started spinning around me,” he says of the moment a coach at Cornellà told him about Barça’s interest.

A year later, Kochen (Miramar, Miami) joined him at the club. He was playing for the Marcet Football Academy and thought his dad was winding him up when revealing the club, whose famed La Masia academy produced the likes of Lionel Messi, Andrés Iniesta and Xavi Hernández, wanted to sign him.

“At first, you can’t believe it,” he tells ESPN. “I was, like, ‘Damn, what a harsh joke my dad’s playing on me.’ It’s incredible. It’s a great feeling. There’s no other like it. It is pure excitement, pure joy. Those are the only words to describe that moment.”

The perception on the outside is often that kids in academies at big clubs have it easy. The reality: that pressure is enormous, especially at Barça. Every year, you’re not just competing against the opposition, but with your teammates to be retained for the next season. For Gill and Kochen, it was a different environment than they’d been used to.

“One of the most difficult parts was realising I need to be in my position and the ball’s going to get to me that way,” midfielder Gill says. “At Cornellà, you play No. 6 or you go to No. 8 or No. 10 or play wherever you want and get the ball. At Barça, it was, and still is, just learning the tactics behind it and being able to be calm, wait for the ball. Not rush. That was the hardest part. There’s also the expectation that you need to win everything, but I think that that’s the right expectation. It brings up the level of every player.”

Kochen adds: “On the field it was pretty hard, especially for me, because it’s a whole other intensity — it’s a whole other world. It’s a whole other philosophy. It’s pretty tough. The intensity’s way more. It’s way higher and the expectation, too, which is what I initially struggled with, but in the end, you get used to it. It’s something you grow with.”

Both have adapted to the requirements at the club, progressing through the age groups to land professional contracts when they turned 16. Along the way, they have played alongside some of the best young players in the world. At U15 level, a kid from the year below was promoted to their team. Lamine Yamal, still only 17, is now a regular in Barça’s first team and a European champion with Spain.

“Later in the recovery process was actually harder for me just consistently coming in and knowing I’m not going to play,” he says. “Putting in the effort knowing playing is seven months away [was tough], but then finally coming back and being able to be with my team and train is one of the best things in the world. It revitalised everything I feel about football.

“It’s tough. It’s a long journey, but it’s all worth it to finally come back. It was 415 days without playing a game. I still have a way to go to get to the intensity that I was at before injury, but physically I feel basically up to where I was.”

It helps to have a good family network around him, but also the familiar faces of Kochen and Soma. The three joke about American sports. Gill is an NFL obsessive who supports the Denver Broncos. Kochen follows the Miami Dolphins in NFL and the Miami Heat in NBA and takes huge offence that Soma, also Miami-born, prefers the San Francisco 49ers and the Los Angeles Lakers. “One side of my family is spread around California,” Soma protests.

“All of us being American, it brings us closer together for sure,” Kochen says. “Culturally we’re similar. We hang out outside of football. We’re pretty close friends. I’ve known Pedro for a while now, since my Miami days. And I’ve been with Adrian for six years at the club. We’re definitely known as the gringos of the team.”

Gill offers a more local colloquial term for gringos: “The guiris. My nickname is guiri.”

Despite being American, all three could yet travel various paths in international football. Gill also has a Polish passport, Soma a Brazilian one, and Kochen has Peruvian and Venezuelan roots, the latter also sounded out by the Spanish Federation [RFEF]. Yet all three are focused on the USMNT.

“Right now in my life, I do see myself with the USA,” says Soma, who will likely take part at the Under-20 World Cup later this year. “I’ve been with the national team for over three years now. I feel very, very American. I love it when I put the shirt on. I’m looking forward to making the USMNT.”

Gill, previously an international at U17 level, adds: “Our goal is to bring a next great generation for the USMNT. We’ve got so many young kids playing in Europe at the top level, around Borussia [Dortmund]’s first team or Barça’s first team, which is kind of unheard of. It’s going to be a great generation.”

Kochen is the furthest along in his international career, and he sees being called up by Pochettino, the 2026 World Cup in Canada, Mexico and the United States as a realistic goal.

“It would be surreal, but I’m there for whatever the country needs,” he says. “Whatever position it needs me in, I’ll be there 100%. If it’s the first goalkeeper in the 2026 World Cup, if it’s the second, if it’s the third, whatever they need me to be, I’ll be there at 100%.”

Luckily for U.S. fans, Pochettino’s past as a player and manager at Barça’s local rivals, Espanyol, has not affected Kochen’s involvement with the senior side.

“The first thing he said was, ‘We have a [Barça player] here,'” Kochen laughs. “It’s the first thing he told me [that he played for Espanyol]. But he, as well as his staff, they’re a great team. I think they bring a lot to America. I think they will do a lot. I’m really happy to have a coach like him who’s admired by lots of people in the world of football.”

Espanyol allegiances beside, Pochettino’s appointment has certainly gone down well with Barça’s trio of Americans who are hoping his success will also be their success.

“I think it’s great,” Soma says. “Some Latino blood for the United States is never going to be bad. I’m excited. The U.S. is building, building, building and more and more you can see more youths becoming professional, especially in Europe. I think for the 2026 World Cup, the U.S. is going to have a great, great team with a great coach.”