As Patrick Agyemang strolled through the lobby of the U.S. menâs national teamâs 5-star hotel in the swanky Buckhead district of Atlanta late last month, the mother of two young soccer fans approached the lanky young striker.
âAre you a player?,â she asked. Agyemang stopped, flashed his 1000-watt smile and, somewhat sheepishly, confirmed that he was and introduced himself.
Witnessing this interaction was a timely reminder both of the national teamâs place within the larger American sports landscape and of how the coming World Cup has the power to turn someone like Agyemang â a 25-year-old former Division III college player from Connecticut whoâd never represented his country at any level until last year â into a mainstream celebrity in a matter of weeks.
At least it had.
On Wednesday, English second-tier club Derby County confirmed that Agyemang, probably a World Cup roster shoo-in for USA coach Mauricio Pochettino even before he scored his sixth international goal against No. 9-ranked Belgium on March 28, will miss the tournament after rupturing his Achilles tendon.
(Photo by Mike Egerton/PA Images via Getty Images)
Itâs a dream-crushing blow for Agyemang, obviously. Weâll get to that in a minute. But itâs also a big loss for the U.S. and for Pochettino, who seemed poised to use the 6-foot-4 forward off the bench at the World Cup, or possibly even as a starter should top choice Folarin Balogun get injured or suspended.
This is the greatest World Cup fear for every player everywhere: because it comes just once every four years, even a relatively minor ailment at exactly the wrong moment can ruin whatâs often a once-in-a-career experience. Thereâs no guarantee a player who canât participate ever gets another chance.
All that said, Pochettino still has 26 available roster spots. If the assumption is that Agyemang would have taken one, an available place just opened up. That sure canât hurt the odds of fellow strikers Ricardo Pepi and Haji Wright, who just went from probable inclusions to almost certain locks. It also boosts the chances of strikers who havenât been called in lately (Josh Sargent, Brian White) but who are now possibly just one more injury away from serious consideration.Â
And there could be a knock-on effect down the roster. Since thereâs no like-for-like replacement for Agyemang, Poch could bring another defender or midfielder or winger that he otherwise wouldnât. A versatile option who can plug multiple positions, like 2022 World Cup alum Joe Scally, is another possibility.
Weâll find out when the former Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain manager names his selections on May 26. Whatâs certain is that Agyemangâs loss will be someone elseâs gain.
Talking to him that day in Georgiaâs capital, it was clear that Agyemang fully understood that the opportunity o play in a World Cup on home soil was unique. After coming so agonizingly close to achieving every soccer playerâs dream, something he said hits differently.
âThis career goes quick,â the Agyemang told me. âYou have to enjoy it.â
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Although he didnât add to his eight international goals last month, Balogun is now even more firmly entrenched up top. He also keeps scoring at club level, with 15 combined in the UEFA Champions League and Ligue 1. His divine chip on Sunday against Weahâs Marseille is the best of the bunch so far.
The best American player on the planet throughout 2026 picked up where he left off in Juveâs first game after Marchâs international break. On Monday, Worldwide Wes scored his ninth goal of the season in Juveâs 2-0 Serie A win over Genoa.
Somewhat lost amid the negatively that followed the defeats to Belgium and Portugal was the return of Jedi, whoâd missed more than a year of national team action pre- and post-knee surgery. The left back started both games and flashed the ability that made him U.S. Soccerâs Male player of the Year in 2024. Robinson and the Cottagers return to action at Liverpool on Saturday.
If there were questions about Freese status as the USAâs World Cup No. 1before the March games, he answered them with a commanding performance in the 2-0 loss to the Portuguese. The Harvard grad, who helped the Pigeons earn a point in St. Louis last weekend, will take on Sebastian Berhalterâs Vancouver Whitecaps north of the border on Saturday.
Timing is everything ahead of a World Cup and Trustyâs is good: With Miles Robinson hurt, the left-footed center back was one of the best American performers versus Portugal. He also appears to have won back his job in Glasgow, going 90 minutes in Sundayâs 2-1 win at Dundee United after sitting out four straight Scottish Premiership games.
Although Poch has never seemed totally sold on Scally, a defensively sound stay-at-home right back who doesnât attack up the flank the way Sergiño Dest or Alex Freeman or Tim Weah can, his experience at left and center back is compelling. With Dest still nursing a torn hamstring and Freeman still not starting in Spain, could that newly-open roster spot go to Joe?
He played just 11 minutes for the national team in March but continues to have a fine season for Premier League Leeds. On Sunday, he won a penalty that Dominic Calvert-Lewin scored from, then converted his shootout attempt in the tiebreaker to help send Daniel Farkeâs team to the FA Cup semifinals. Leeds will face Chelsea at Wembley Stadium on April 26.
Left off the March roster after missing the start of the MLS season because of injury, Luna responded in the way Pochettino wanted: by getting on the scoresheet for RSL. Lunaâs first goal of 2026 arrived less than three minutes into his first start.
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Not to bury the lead here, but Pulisicâs struggles over the last few months is easily the biggest concern facing the national team ahead of hosting the largest World Cup in history. The 27-year-old star has now gone 13 games without a goal for the Rossoneri. Heâs gone scoreless in eight for his country. Yes, thereâs still time for the USAâs top attacker to find his form. If he doesnât, itâs hard to see how the home team can make a deep run.
Robinson got hurt in training in Atlanta, which isnât his fault. Missing both games still hurts Miles, who anchors a FCC back line that has conceded 15 times in six MLS games. He was on the field when Cincy gave up five more goals in a lopsided March 19 defeat to Mexicoâs Tigres that eliminated them from the Concacaf Champions Cup.
Not only did Arfsten struggle in his brief cameos (18 minutes total) against Belgium and Portugal, Jediâs backup now no longer a left back at club level. In each of the Fresno, California productâs six MLS appearances this season, Crew boss Henrik Rydström has deployed Arfsten as a dedicated winger with more defensive-minded Dane Malte Amundsen behind him.
Another player who could, in theory, benefit from the opening Agyemangâs injury created. But in the deepest position in the player pool, hard-tackling Morrisâs best chance of a World Cup trip could be if one (or more) of Tyler Adams, Johnny Cardoso or Tanner Tessmann canât make it.