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Pulisic Ends Goal Drought as USMNT Beats Senegal 3-2 — World Cup Confidence Is Building

Christian Pulisic ended a five-month goal drought as the USMNT beat Senegal 3-2 in Charlotte. World Cup confidence is building with nine days to go.

By World Soccer Wire Editorial

Christian Pulisic had a message for his critics Sunday night: stop talking about it.

The USMNT captain ended a five-month goal drought in style, scoring and assisting in the first half as the United States beat Senegal 3-2 in Charlotte in a chaotic but ultimately encouraging World Cup warm-up. Sergino Dest and Folarin Balogun also found the net, and while Sadio Mané gave the Americans a scare with a brace either side of halftime, Pochettino's side held on for a result that matters more than the scoreline suggests.

"I felt this confidence," Pulisic said after the game. "I've played really well in recent months too, but all people seem to care about is goals. So hopefully now people can stop talking about it."

Consider it done.

How It Unfolded

The US were cool and clinical in the opening minutes, moving the ball with patience before Pulisic unlocked things entirely. In the seventh minute, a clever touch from Ricardo Pepi between two defenders freed Pulisic for a run down the left. His low cross was perfectly weighted, and Dest arrived in stride for a simple finish at the near post.

Pulisic added his own name to the scoresheet in the 20th minute — his first international goal since 2024 — rounding goalkeeper Mory Diaw before tucking a composed angled shot into the net. His 33rd international goal, and the timing couldn't have been better.

Pochettino made 10 substitutions at halftime, and Senegal pounced. Sadio Mané — still dangerous at 34 — pulled one back almost immediately, then leveled again to make it 2-2 and give the second-half side a genuine test. Balogun answered in the 63rd minute with the winner, restoring order and giving the United States the result that heads into the record books.

What It Means for the World Cup

The Senegal result matters for two reasons. First, the obvious one: Pulisic's form. He has been the USMNT's most important attacking player for years, and his goal drought had become an irritating storyline heading into the tournament. That noise is now gone. A goal, an assist, a commanding first-half display — Pochettino will sleep easier knowing his captain arrived in Charlotte with something to prove and delivered.

Second, the system looks right. The US outshot Senegal 15-7 and created multiple chances that weren't taken. That's the kind of dominance you want to see heading into a tournament opener. Ricardo Pepi had one of his strongest performances in an American shirt. Alex Freeman, on his first start, looked sharp. The depth is real.

One concern: the second-half collapse. Mané exposed a reshuffled backline twice in quick succession, and goalkeeper Chris Brady had a difficult debut. Pochettino won't be making 10 changes against Paraguay on June 12.

Next Up: Germany on Saturday

The USMNT has one more warm-up before the World Cup begins — a sold-out clash against Germany in Chicago on Saturday. Four-time world champions, ranked in the top 10 globally. If Pulisic and the first-choice lineup can perform against that opposition the way they performed against Senegal on Sunday, the mood heading into the Paraguay opener will be very good indeed.

Nine days to go. The captain is back scoring. The World Cup is almost here.

The USMNT faces Germany on Saturday in Chicago before opening World Cup 2026 against Paraguay on June 12 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. Watch on FOX and Fubo.

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Messi Confirmed for a Record Sixth World Cup — But Argentina Is Holding Its Breath

"Messi is in — but Argentina is watching his hamstring. At 38, with a record sixth World Cup on the line, here's what his selection means and who missed the cut."

By World Soccer Wire Editorial

He's in. At 38 years old, with a hamstring scare hanging over him and history on the line, Lionel Messi has been officially named to Argentina's 26-man squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Coach Lionel Scaloni announced the selection Thursday, confirming what the soccer world had hoped — the greatest player of his generation will get one final shot at defending his world title on North American soil.

It will be Messi's sixth appearance at the tournament, joining Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo as the only players in history to appear in six men's World Cup tournaments. The record alone would be remarkable. But Messi isn't here for records — he's here to win.

The injury cloud

His participation was put in jeopardy last week after he exited the field during Inter Miami's MLS game against the Philadelphia Union with an injury. Inter Miami later confirmed that Messi suffered from muscle fatigue in his left hamstring, with his return timeline depending on day-to-day progress.

Argentina opens Group J play on June 16 against Algeria at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City. That gives Messi roughly 18 days to get right. Every update between now and then will be front page news.

The squad Scaloni built

Scaloni has largely stayed loyal to the core group that lifted the trophy in Qatar in 2022 — 17 members of that winning squad return, including Emiliano Martinez, Rodrigo De Paul, Enzo Fernandez, Alexis Mac Allister, Julian Alvarez, and Lautaro Martinez.

Among the notable inclusions is Como standout Nico Paz, who thrived in Serie A and helped lead Cesc Fabregas's side to Champions League qualification for the first time. Sports Illustrated

The big omission

The most high-profile exclusion is Franco Mastantuono, the teenage Real Madrid midfielder who has generated enormous excitement as one of the most sought-after young players in world football. Despite being considered by many as a future Argentine great, Scaloni opted for experience and cohesion over potential. For a squad defending a title, that's a defensible call — but it won't stop the debate.

What's at stake

Only Brazil in 1958 and 1962, and Italy in 1934 and 1938, have ever repeated as World Cup champions. Argentina has a chance to do something that hasn't happened in over 60 years — and they're doing it on North American soil with the greatest player who ever lived leading the charge, fitness permitting. FOX Sports

The 2026 World Cup just got even bigger.

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USMNT World Cup Roster Leaked: Diego Luna Out, Gio Reyna In — And Pochettino Has Some Explaining to Do

Pochettino's 26-man squad is defender-heavy, contains at least one genuinely surprising inclusion, and leaves out two players most fans assumed were locks. Here's what it means.

The 2026 World Cup roster for the US Men's National Team has been obtained by The Guardian ahead of Tuesday's official announcement at Pier 17 in Manhattan, and it's already generating serious debate.

Mauricio Pochettino's 26-man squad is defender-heavy, contains at least one genuinely surprising inclusion, and leaves out two players who most fans assumed were locks. Here's what you need to know — and what it tells us about how Pochettino plans to set up on home soil.

The headline omission: Diego Luna

This is the one that will sting the most. Luna, 22, has been one of the USMNT's most consistent contributors over the past year. He returned from a knee injury in April and went straight back to form for Real Salt Lake — four goals and two assists in seven MLS appearances. He's dynamic, he's young, and he's been a fan favorite.

He's not on the plane.

Pochettino may be taking a more long-term approach with the 22-year-old, but that's cold comfort for fans who watched Luna earn his spot. The omission leaves a real question about the attacking depth behind the front three.

Tessmann out too — but this one's easier to understand

Tanner Tessmann sustained a muscle strain at Lyon two weeks ago, and while he was still anticipated to be included, his omission appears to be injury-related. He featured heavily for Lyon this season and was widely expected to slot into the midfield. Whether this is a permanent door closed or an injury call that could change before June 1's official submission deadline remains to be seen.

The curious inclusion: Gio Reyna

Reyna is a talented but polarizing figure who has made only four USMNT appearances since the Copa América in the summer of 2024. His selection over Luna — who was producing at club level right up until selection — is the decision Pochettino will face the most questions about on Tuesday.

Reyna's ceiling is undeniable. But at a World Cup on home soil, with games that matter from day one, the gap between ceiling and consistency is a real risk.

Alejandro Zendejas gets the nod

Club América winger Alejandro Zendejas earned a spot despite receiving just 139 minutes under Pochettino. That's a significant vote of confidence from a coach who has repeatedly said no one is safe regardless of reputation.

What the roster tells us about Pochettino's plan

This roster reflects exactly what Pochettino set out to build: a squad without entitlement, where competition ran through every position group, and 71 players got a look before 26 were chosen.

The front three of Balogun, Pepi, and Wright is lean — just three pure forwards for six weeks of tournament football. Zendejas offers versatility higher up the pitch, but if Balogun picks up an injury, the depth chart gets thin fast.

What happens next

The official roster announcement is Tuesday, May 26 at Pier 17 on the East River in Manhattan — a live public event with player appearances and entertainment. Official rosters aren't due until June 1, and it's possible these leaks have inaccuracies. With two more friendlies against Senegal and Germany ahead of the Cup, the roster could still shift if FIFA approves injury-related changes.

The World Cup opener is June 11. Pochettino has 18 days to answer every question this roster just raised.

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