Pochettino's USMNT roster faces familiar curse ahead of World Cup home stretch
Mauricio Pochettino has named his United States squad for the pre-World Cup friendly against Senegal, but health questions surrounding key players—particularly the absence of Chris Richards—underscore a persistent vulnerability in the American setup.

Mauricio Pochettino named his United States squad on 30 May 2026 for a pre-World Cup friendly against Senegal. Within hours, the Argentine manager was forced to address a familiar problem: the fitness of his defensive spine.
Crystal Palace centre-back Chris Richards will miss the match after suffering an ankle injury while playing for his club. Pochettino told reporters the medical team would "reevaluate" Richards the following week, an admission that offered little clarity on whether the 24-year-old would be available when the World Cup campaign proper begins.
The Richards situation adds to a cluster of health concerns already hanging over the squad. Tyler Adams, the midfielder who has anchored the USMNT engine room for the past three years, has spent large portions of the current club season managing a persistent hamstring issue. Sources close to the setup indicate the coaching staff are treating Adams's availability as an open question, not a settled one.
Thin ice in the middle of the park
Pochettino's pre-tournament calculus is complicated by more than individual fitness profiles. The midfield, once the envy of the American development system, lacks the depth it projected two years ago. Weston McKennie remains a starter but has not recaptured the form that made him a talismanic figure during the 2022 cycle. Yunus Musah, whose technical quality offers the squad's best chance of controlling games against top-tier opponents, has been inconsistent at club level since moving to La Liga.
The broader picture is one of a squad in transition. Several players who featured prominently in Qatar have either aged out of their developmental peak or struggled with injuries that have curtailed their trajectories. The pipeline behind them is talented but green. Against Senegal, a side with physical aggression and disciplined defensive structure, Pochettino will be auditioning options he would prefer to have confirmed rather than tested in a competitive setting.
Pulisic's form compounds the puzzle
Christian Pulisic, the squad's most recognisable figure and its most probable matchwinner, arrives in the setup having endured an inconsistent season at AC Milan. The winger's talent remains undimmed—he produced moments of genuine quality throughout the campaign—but the consistency that defined his best periods with Chelsea and Dortmund has proved elusive in Italy.
Pochettino has publicly backed Pulisic as a foundational piece of his project. That confidence is not misplaced; Pulisic's ceiling remains high enough to swing results against any opponent at this level. But the manager will need to decide whether to build the attacking structure around the winger's current form or hedge by giving greater minutes to alternatives like Ricardo Pepi, who has grown into a more complete striker in the Bundesliga, or the young Brenden Aaronson, whose pressing work suits a Pochettino system better than it suited the previous regime's approach.
The structural problem beneath the headlines
The Richards injury, while unfortunate in isolation, points to a recurring pattern in American football's senior setup: the inability to maintain a stable first-choice backline through major tournament cycles. The centre-back position in particular has been subject to disruption. John Brooks has aged and slowed. Cameron Carter-Vickers, solid when available, cannot be relied upon for a full season. The system Pochettino prefers—one built on high defensive line and aggressive pressing—requires centre-backs comfortable in transition and capable of one-v-one defending against pace. That profile is in short supply domestically.
What this means, practically, is that the friendly against Senegal functions less as a tune-up and more as a diagnostic. Pochettino needs to establish which combinations can hold under pressure, which players can be trusted to execute the system when fatigued, and whether the squad's structural vulnerabilities are manageable or fundamental. The answers he gets in that match will shape the shape of his World Cup preparation in ways the headline roster decisions cannot.
What remains uncertain
The sources do not indicate whether the medical reevaluation scheduled for the following week will produce a timeline for Richards's return to full training. The broader question of whether Adams can sustain a tournament workload remains unresolved in the public reporting. Whether Pochettino has contingency plans for a scenario in which both players are unavailable for the group stage opener has not been addressed in the available coverage.
For now, the picture is one of a capable squad managing significant uncertainty at its structural core. The talent is real. The questions are legitimate. The answers will arrive in June, on the field.
This publication's coverage of the USMNT roster announcement emphasised player health as a structural variable, rather than treating injuries as isolated setbacks. The dominant wire framing foregrounded Pochettino's tactical options; this piece foregrounded the recurrence of the fitness question and its implications for the squad's operational capacity.