The former USMNT player said selections raise questions about the direction of the program 10 months from the 2026 World Cup
Meola disappointed in the roster selection approachThe former goalkeeper expected more narrowed player poolSays upcoming matches will provide significant challengesGetty Images SportWHAT HAPPENED
Addressing Mauricio Pochettino's roster for the September friendlies against South Korea and Japan, World Cup veteran Tony Meola said the USMNT squad selections raise questions about the direction of the program just 10 months out from the 2026 World Cup.
āI am concerned about this roster, period,ā Meola said on CBS Sports Golazo. āI'm trying to live by my own words that this is the manager's roster and, we support the manager. And I'm concerned about this roster because… this camp I thought we were going to narrow down. Of course, thereās always one or two tweaks or additions and all of that stuf.
"I'm starting to think that these some of these guys are Pochettinoās guys. And me, personally, I'm gonna have to wrap my head around some of that because when I look at the roster there's no one guy that goes tha jumps off the page. Like there's not one. But when I put them all together, right?… I am a little bit concerned by this roster – and they will get tested in these two games, by the way.ā
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At the same time, Meola acknowledged that managers don't need to defend or explain their roster decisions.
āDo we think the managers owe us those conversations?" Meola said. "Because Iām off the belief that they donāt. If they do it would be awesome. It would be awesome to hear from Pochettino go āI left Weston (McKennie) off because heās had some issues at the club in the beginning of this season and the past, he doesnāt start the first game and I need him to settle in.' And then youād be like, āOK he likes Weston, we like Weston and weāre going to see him at the World Cup, weāre cool.' It would be great. But I donāt know that he owes us any of that."
THE BIGGER PICTURE
Pochettino inherited a talented but inconsistent player pool when he took charge of the USMNT and his approach thus far has prioritized tactical flexibility and competition for roster spots rather than cementing a core group.
Getty Images SportWHATāS NEXT?
The USMNT face South Korea on Sept. 6 at Sports Illustrated Stadium in New Jersey followed by Japan on Sept. 9 at Lower.com Field in Columbus, Ohio.