Projecting the USA's 2026 World Cup Roster Following Losses To Portugal, Belgium

For better or worse, this part of the World Cup roster race has been run.

With the United States men’s national team’s final two tuneups before coach Mauricio Pochettino names his final, 26-player squad for the 2026 U.S. co-hosted tournament now in the books, there are no more opportunities left for those hoping to get a congratulatory phone call from the former Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain manager to impress while wearing the Stars and Stripes.

Poch and his staff will watch every club game for every candidate every week, no question. They’ll consider everything, from form to fitness to roles to chemistry on the field and off. Some decisions have probably been made. Others will go down the wire. The choices “are going to be painful, because in that process you always create emotional links,” Pochettino said on Tuesday, after the Americans lost their first two games of the year to European powers Belgium and then Portugal. “They know it’s going to be a competition,” he said. “It’s going to be difficult only to pick 26.”

Coming out of the March window, who is most likely to make it? And which 11 players will line up for the USA when they kick off the competition June 12 against Paraguay in Los Angeles?

This is my latest prediction:

(Photo by Robin Alam/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

Starter: Folarin Balogun
Backups: Patrick Agyemang, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright 
Just missed out: Josh Sargent

Balogun went into the two games as the incumbent. And although the Monaco striker didn’t score in either, nothing that happened against Belgium or Portugal has changed the pecking order up top. Need proof? Look no further than Pocherttino’s decision to start Pulisic as a No. 9 in the latter. If he saw Agyemang or Pepi as potential World Cup starters, surely the Argentine would have given one of them the assignment.

Instead, Agyemang and Pepi came in as substitutes in both games, and combined on the former’s well-taken consolation goal versus the Belgians. Ageymang also had a couple of bright moments against Portuguese; he might just have pulled ahead of Pepi as the first striker off the bench. It’s also possible that Wright, who missed this camp because of a minor injury, remains ahead of both.

(Photo by Andrew J. Clark/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

Tillman started both March games and probably helped himself. He’s not as strong defensively as Aaronson, Luna or the deeper-lying Johnny Cardoso (more on him in a minute), but he had some of the Americans’ better moments going forward. He could start some games at the main event depending on the opponent.

Reyna seemed World Cup-bound when Poch named him to the March roster despite his lack of playing time with Borussia Dortmund. I’m not so sure after 31 ineffective minutes off the bench.

Luna wasn’t involved in March, having just returned from injury. Previously seen as a lock, his inclusion now feels closer to a coin-flip. Whether he survives the cut will depend largely on how he performs for MLS team Real Salt Lake over the next seven weeks.

Then there’s Zendejas, who’s participated in only two camps since Pochettino was in late 2024. But the Club América No. 10 scored a gorgeous game-winner over Japan last October and continues to be among the most consistently productive Americans playing anywhere in the world.

(Photo by Andrew J. Clark/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images)

Starters: Tim Weah, Antonee “Jedi” Robinson
Backups: Max Arfsten, Alex Freeman
Just missed out: Joe Scally

Previously considered a strength, right back has become a problem for Pochettino. He sees Dest — a defensive starter in 2022 — as a winger. Freeman isn’t sharp; he played more in the national team’s first two games of 2026 than he has since joining Spanish club Villarreal three-plus months ago. Versatile Bundesliga veteran Scally doesn’t really seem to be Poch’s cup of tea, though his comfort as a right center back could keep him in the mix.  

That leaves Weah. The natural winger isn’t a perfect solution but might be the best one. The 26-year-old is massively experienced at right back, having manned the role at least 11 times for Marseille in Ligue 1 and the UEFA Champions League this season and 10 for Juve the year before.

Pochettino praised the job Weah did to contain Belgium’s ace Manchester City winger Jeremy Doku, ruing the lack of defensive support he received from his fellow defenders.

“It was a great opportunity for Tim,” Poch said. “For me, he was good.”

Jedi is the clear lock on the left. He was one of the sharper U.S. players in March in his first international action since late 2024. But Arfsten, his deputy, looked over matched after subbing in for Robinson in both games.

(Photo by Omar Vega/USSF/Getty Images)

Starter: Matt Freese
Backups: Matt Turner, Chris Brady 
Just missed out: Roman Celentano, Jonathan Klinsmann, Diego Kochen, Patrick Schulte

Freese all but certainly won the starting World Cup job with a stellar showing on Tuesday. Neither Portugal goal was his fault, and he made several incredible saves — including this beauty to deny Seleção captain Bruno Fernandes.

The New York City FC backstop’s presence and command of his 18-yard-box also stood out. It was easily the 27-year-old Harvard graduate’s best game for his country since making his international debut last June. He’s been in the net for 14 of the USA’s 16 games since.

“I think he has an amazing energy,” Pochettino said of Freese even before the Portugal match.

For a guy who allowed five goals, Turner played well against Belgium. The score line would’ve been even uglier had he not. Yet his distribution is still suspect; only an inadvertent Belgian handball prevented what would’ve been a goal originating directly from a wayward Tuner pass.

Finally, multiple sources told me that the uncapped Brady, 22 has impressed U.S. keeper coaches Toni Jimenez and Jack Robinson and separated himself from the rest of the candidates for the third-string keeper role.

Doug McIntyre is a soccer reporter for FOX Sports who has covered United States men’s and women’s national teams at FIFA World Cups on five continents. Follow him @ByDougMcIntyre.