Pochettino-AC Milan Talks Surface as USMNT World Cup Camp Opens Under a Cloud
Reports that Mauricio Pochettino held talks with AC Milan just weeks before leading the United States into a home World Cup have raised fresh questions about the manager's commitment to the USMNT project.

Mauricio Pochettino held talks with AC Milan about their vacant managerial post in the days before assembling the United States men's national team for the 2026 World Cup, according to reporting published on 28 May 2026. The Argentine coach, appointed by the US Soccer Federation in January, has also indicated through an intermediary that he intends to leave the USMNT role after the tournament concludes, sources close to the situation told Transfermarkt. The disclosures have cast an awkward shadow over a campaign that, on paper, should play to the host nation's considerable advantages.
The timing is awkward. Pochettino named his 26-man squad on 26 May 2026, and almost immediately drew criticism for the manner in which players learned of their fate. Rather than a personal call or formal briefing, several players received notification by email — a method that produced friction even within a squad whose average age makes them one of the tournament's younger contenders. The BBC reported on 27 May that Pochettino defended the approach, telling assembled media that the process was "professional" and "clear." That explanation did not satisfy everyone. At least one unnamed player is reported to have felt the method lacked the dignity expected at senior international level.
The AC Milan approach, which CBS Sports confirmed independently, appears to have been routed through an intermediary rather than conducted directly. Whether US Soccer's leadership was aware of the approach before it became public is not clear from the available reporting. The Italian club dismissed their previous head coach earlier in the season and have yet to appoint a permanent successor, leaving a vacancy that apparently appealed to Pochettino despite his existing national-team commitment. Milan finished tenth in Serie A this season, their worst result in more than two decades, and their hierarchy is understood to be targeting an experienced rebuild — a profile that, on paper, fits Pochettino's pedigree at clubs including Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea.
What complicates the picture is the World Cup itself. The United States co-hosts the tournament alongside Canada and Mexico, opening on 11 June in Los Angeles. For a manager of Pochettino's standing to be in active conversation with another club during final preparations is unusual, but it is not without precedent in elite football. National-team roles are inherently time-limited; a coach who believes his spell may be approaching its natural end has an interest in keeping options open. US Soccer, for its part, has given no public indication that it regards the Pochettino project as anything other than ongoing.
The roster, meanwhile, produced genuine surprises. CBS Sports identified Alex Zendejas as a standout inclusion — a player whose trajectory through the lower leagues earned a first senior World Cup call-up at 26. Alex Freeman, another uncapped player, also made the cut. Both selections suggested Pochettino was willing to gamble on ceiling over experience, a philosophy that chimes with the broader USMNT strategic review since their failure to advance from the group stage at Qatar 2022. The email controversy and the Milan reports risk obscuring what, on merit, could be one of the more interesting American squads in recent memory.
The stakes here are not symmetrical. If Pochettino departs after the World Cup regardless of result, the search for a successor begins from a position of relative strength — US Soccer has demonstrated the financial ambition to attract a high-profile name. If he leaves mid-tournament, the reputational damage to both parties is significant. For Milan, the vacancy remains open; they can afford to wait. For the USMNT, the window to perform on home soil is finite and begins in under two weeks. The focus, on the pitch at least, remains entirely on what happens between the lines.
Monexus covered Pochettino's appointment in January when US Soccer's decision to pursue a foreign manager was framed as a statement of intent. The email controversy and AC Milan reports have shifted the tone toward uncertainty — a different story from the one most wire outlets were writing as recently as last week.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/transfermarktde/12968