
2026/6/24 · 7:18
Türkiye is the 26-man stress test now
With Group D won, the USA-Türkiye finale should be judged by whether Mauricio Pochettino can protect card-risk starters while testing the players who have not yet appeared. This brief breaks down the rotation choices that matter before the Round of 32.
If Mauricio Pochettino treats Thursday as a night off, the USMNT waste the cleanest piece of information still available before the knockouts.
The standings problem is solved: the U.S. have already won Group D, Türkiye have already been eliminated, and the finale is set for June 25 at 10 p.m. ET at Los Angeles Stadium. 1 The roster problem is not solved. U.S. Soccer noted this week that eight American players have yet to appear at this World Cup and could make tournament debuts against Türkiye. 2
That makes this less a dead rubber than a 26-man stress test. The score still matters, but the better question is whether the rotated players can keep the same habits that got the U.S. through two games early.
The actual assignment
Pochettino has two jobs that pull against each other. He needs to protect Folarin Balogun, Tyler Adams, Chris Richards and Antonee Robinson, all of whom are carrying yellow cards before the Round of 32. 3 He also needs enough continuity that the U.S. do not enter July 1 off a loose, low-intensity performance.
The useful version of this game is not a full-strength rehearsal. It is a check on whether the second layer of the squad can run the same match plan under World Cup pressure.
| Decision point | Why it matters | What a good night looks like |
|---|---|---|
| Left back without Robinson | Max Arfsten is one logical replacement if Robinson is protected, and GOAL reported that an Arfsten appearance would be his World Cup debut. 4 | He keeps the left side functional without forcing the center backs to over-cover wide areas. |
| Striker minutes without overusing Balogun | Balogun has been involved in three of the USA's first six goals, and U.S. Soccer framed rest as an option for players managing soreness or card risk. 2 | The press still starts on time, even if Balogun does not. |
| Goalkeeper continuity | Matt Freese has faced only three shots on target through two matches, with U.S. Soccer crediting the team structure in front of him as part of the low workload. 5 | Whether Freese stays in or another keeper gets minutes, the U.S. keep the goalkeeper bored for the right reasons. |
| Pulisic minutes | Reuters reported that Christian Pulisic returned to full team training this week after missing the Australia match with a left calf issue. 3 | If he plays, it is controlled. If he sits, the attack still has a left-side plan. |

The quote that should set the tone
Arfsten gave the line that should matter most for anyone getting new minutes: "No matter what, everyone's still trying to prove something." 4
That is the right framing. The U.S. do not need Thursday to prove they can win Group D. They already did that. They need the next group of players to prove they can enter a match without changing the team's floor.
For Arfsten, that means defending the back post and offering enough width that the U.S. do not become narrow. For the backup center backs, it means clean rest-defense positioning when Türkiye break through midfield. For the attackers, it means counter-pressing after bad touches, not waiting for Pulisic or Balogun to solve the next possession.

Türkiye can still make the test real
Türkiye are out, but they are not harmless. U.S. Soccer's opponent profile notes that the all-time series is even at 2W-2L-1D, with all five previous meetings decided by one goal or fewer. 1 The same profile points to Arda Güler, Kenan Yıldız and Can Uzun as the young attacking midfielders at the center of Türkiye's threat. 1
That is why the U.S. should not grade this only by whether the starters stay healthy. If Türkiye finally turn possession into chances, the rotated group has to show whether the press, spacing and restart defending survive without the usual first-choice spine.
The call
The smartest version is a controlled rotation, not a ceremonial one. Protect the yellow-card quartet. Do not force Pulisic minutes unless the medical staff and coaching staff want a specific ramp-up. Give the waiting players enough responsibility that the staff learns something useful.
A 1-0 or 2-0 win with fewer headline names would tell Pochettino more than another familiar starting XI. A messy performance with no injuries would still create a different problem: it would tell every knockout opponent where the U.S. structure thins out.
Thursday is not about proving the first team is good. It is about finding out how much of the team survives when the first team is not on the field.
参考来源
- 1USMNT vs. Türkiye: Opponent Profile, Recent Form & History
- 2Folarin Balogun on His Unique Background & Striving to be ‘Inevitable’
- 3Soccer-U.S. look to keep World Cup momentum going against eliminated Turkey
- 4USMNT World Cup notebook: Max Arfsten explains Drake vs ‘Chill Drake,’ Matt Freese not worried about quiet tournament and lineup changes loom
- 5‘It’s an Incredible Honor’: USMNT Goalkeeper Matt Freese Hungry to Contribute More

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