The Summer of Soccer is over for the United States men’s national team, the Qatar World Cup is but only a fading memory and coach Gregg Berhalter will soon return after a months-long hiatus. When he’s back around the team in September for friendlies against Uzbekistan and Oman, it will unofficially mark the beginning of the team’s preparation for the 2026 World Cup in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.
As pivotal as 1994 was, when the tournament was first held in the United States, the version three years from now will be even more significant for the sport in America. That will be true regardless of how the U.S. performs, but as this team’s unprecedented collection of talent enters their prime years, expectations will never have been higher.
There isn’t a black-and-white way to define what success would look like yet, however improving upon past performances is a logical barometer. So, after bowing out in the round of 16 in 2022, a trip to the quarterfinals — which would equal the team’s best-ever finish in the modern era — feels like a good place to start.
There’s lots of work to do, and before the World Cup becomes the primary focus, the U.S.-hosted Copa America next summer promises to be an incredible dress rehearsal. Unlike this summer’s Gold Cup and the invented-from-thin-air Nations League, the Copa America carries real prestige. It will feature all 10 CONMEBOL teams — hello, World Cup champions Argentina — and six Concacaf teams to create a rare high-stakes tournament for the U.S. to compete in.
In this version of the USMNT Big Board, we look at the current state of the depth chart and choose a 26-player roster for the Copa America (it’s unclear what roster size the tournament will use). For the purpose of this exercise, we’ll assume all players are healthy.
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How we’re doing this
As we have in the past, we’re going position by position, from goalkeeper to attacker, and sorting the player pool in four tiers based on recent form and the coaching staff’s perceived preferences. Those tiers:
Tier 1: Projected starter. Roster locks and players who are clear starters at their positions.
Tier 2: Contributor. Expected to be on the roster and contribute on the field, either as a sub or as a possible starter.
Tier 3: On the bubble. In contention to be on the 26-man squad and provide roster depth.
Tier 4: Out of the picture. Whether they are locks who are injured and thus unavailable, or they are players who have been around the team but likely won’t receive much of a look for inclusion, this group is not in consideration right now.
Goalkeepers
Turner’s rise over the past couple of years has been remarkable and there is no question he’s entrenched as the U.S. No. 1. It’s hard to envision a realistic scenario where he loses that job, but the same might have been said about Steffen when he made his move to Man City from MLS. As things stand, Turner is the No. 2 at Arsenal and his standing with the Premier League runners-up also doesn’t figure to change this season. It’s not ideal to go another full campaign without a steady run of games, but Turner improved at Arsenal — particularly with his feet — so perhaps another year there can continue that trend.
After Turner, it’s all up for grabs. Horvath helped Luton Town get promoted to the Premier League while on loan, Johnson is a welcome veteran presence, Steffen was the No. 1 through much of qualifying and Slonina is the high-potential prospect. Any of those options for the second and third spots are justifiable, so we won’t waste any time pretending otherwise.
Selections right now: Turner, Horvath, Slonina
Full-backs
Tier 1: Sergiño Dest (Barcelona), Antonee Robinson (Fulham)
Tier 2: Joe Scally (Borussia Monchengladbach)
Tier 3: Reggie Cannon (free agent), DeJuan Jones (New England Revolution), Bryan Reynolds (Roma), Shaq Moore (Nashville SC), Sam Vines (Antwerp) , DeAndre Yedlin (Inter Miami CF)
Tier 4: George Bello (Arminia Bielefeld), Jonathan Gomez (Real Sociedad), Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United), Marlon Fossey (Standard Liege), Julian Gressel (Vancouver Whitecaps), John Tolkin (New York Red Bulls)
Dest and Robinson are the obvious choices to start on both sides, and neither face any real threat to be unseated any time soon. They’ve both been subject to transfer rumors, but there’s real value, from a U.S. perspective, for Robinson to remain at Fulham, where he gets to play next to U.S. teammate Tim Ream. Dest said he wants to remain at Barca, but he can’t afford a consecutive season with a bit role.
Scally’s ability to play on both sides makes him a key asset and should probably be considered the primary back-up to both Dest and Robinson. He ranked No. 7 among all American players in minutes in Europe’s top five leagues last year (2,212) and is still just 20 years old.
All the players listed in Tier 3 are viable roster options. Jones and Reynolds both had solid Gold Cups and are on the ascent; Vines is naturally left-sided and the trio of Cannon, Moore and Yedlin have all been somewhat interchangable at right-back.
Neal is also worth a shout here not because he’s Copa America-ready, but he more than held his own in the Gold Cup at 19 years old, which bodes well for his future.
Selections right now: Carter-Vickers, Ream, Richards, Trusty, Zimmerman
Midfielders
Tier 1: Giovanni Reyna (Borussia Dortmund)
Tier 2: Weston McKennie (Juventus), Yunus Musah (Valencia), Tyler Adams (Leeds United), Luca de la Torre (Celta Vigo)
Tier 3: Malik Tillman (Bayern Munich), Kellyn Acosta (LAFC), Johnny Cardoso (Internacional), Djordje Mihailovic (AZ Alkmaar), James Sands (New York City FC), Tanner Tessmann (Venezia)
Tier 4: Gianluca Busio (Venezia), Cristian Roldan (Seattle Sounders), Alan Soñora (free agent), Aidan Morris (Columbus Crew), Richie Ledezma (New York City FC, on loan from PSV Eindhoven), Paxton Pomykal (FC Dallas), Timothy Tillman (LAFC), Jackson Yueill (San Jose Earthquakes)
The tiers might be a bit deceiving here because McKennie, Musah, Reyna and Adams are all roster locks. It’s just a question of what combination of those three should play in midfield. After seeing Reyna play centrally in the Nations League, it should be clear that’s where he makes the biggest difference for this team. It’s possible Berhalter still views him as a winger, but the team is significantly less dynamic when he’s out wide.
So, if Reyna is playing advanced centrally, that leaves only two spots for Adams, Musah and McKennie. A tough decision! But that’s the sign of a good team. Musah is the most complete player of the three, so I’d go with him in one spot. The other is probably a decision based on matchup, but Adams — the team’s World Cup captain — deserves the benefit of the doubt (again, assuming full health).
The depth pieces all have important seasons ahead of them. De la Torre is the default “next man up” — he was a major contributor at Celta Vigo after the World Cup — and is better suited to help chase a goal rather than lock up a game. Malik Tillman had a breakout season on loan at Rangers playing mostly in an attacking midfielder role. Sands’ loan spell at Rangers didn’t go as well and is now back at NYCFC, but was reliable in the Gold Cup.