USMNT striker stock watch: Final rankings before the World Cup

The USMNT will announce its World Cup roster on Wednesday. Which strikers will make the cut?

The United States men’s national soccer team will announce its roster for the 2022 World Cup on Wednesday evening.

The striker position has been in flux for most of the year but with just two weeks until kickoff in, some clarity has started to emerge.

Before the roster is revealed, here’s the final edition of Pro Soccer Wire’s 2022 striker stock watch series, with players ranked 1-3 expected to make the flight to Qatar.

The Americans Abroad Five: Tyler Adams is The One

The 23-year-old may be the most important player for Leeds and the USMNT

As Tyler Adams strode off the pitch following Leeds’ madcap 4-3 win over Bournemouth on Saturday, the home fans serenaded their star midfielder.

“There’s only one Tyler Adams!” they sang to the tune of “Guantanamera.”

In bestowing another American player with their own song, Leeds fans were acknowledging how vital and unique the 23-year-old has been for them since his summer arrival.

Adams may be having best season of any American playing in a top-five European league. He’s already one of the most important players on a Premier League team and may be the most important USMNT player when the World Cup kicks off in two weeks.

As much as the Leeds fans love him, if he keeps this up he may not stay at Elland Road for long.

Let’s get to the Five.

Haji Wright keeps scoring in Turkey. He knows the World Cup may still be unlikely.

The forward tells Pro Soccer Wire he’s in the dark over his USMNT future

Haji Wright scored for Antalyaspor on Sunday, as he so often does – he ranks second in the Turkish Süper Lig’s scoring charts with nine goals this season. Among U.S. strikers in Europe, only Josh Sargent, on eight goals for Norwich City, is on the same tier of sheer productivity.With those nine comprising the bulk of Antalyaspor’s 19 total goals thus far, Wright also carries the burden of being far and away the main finishing threat for his club, a weight that much heavier when your team drifts in and around the relegation places, as Antalyaspor did earlier in the campaign.He’s currently on a better pace than his breakthrough 2021-22, where he scored 14 times in 32 matches on loan to earn a permanent transfer from Danish side SønderjyskE amid heavy interest from England’s Hull City and other suitors. He capped that season with a U.S. national team call-up and a goal, from the penalty spot, on his senior international debut vs. Morocco in June.Does all that add up to a realistic shot at the USMNT’s World Cup roster when it’s named on Wednesday? Your guess is as good as Wright’s, it seems.“I mean, when you’re playing well, normally you get rewarded with a call-up,” Wright told Pro Soccer Wire in an exclusive conversation from Turkey this week. “And then if you don’t get called up, it kind of means you won’t be a part of the tournament. So it’s difficult for me to give a solid answer, because I don’t really know. It kind of feels like it’s up in the air.“No, nothing yet,” he said when asked about recent contact from Gregg Berhalter or his staff. “But we don’t really usually communicate that often. I think it’s pretty normal. I’m not sure if any of the players have really heard too much.”Berhalter saw enough quality in Wright to give him his first three caps in the USMNT’s June camp, with a Concacaf Nations League appearance at El Salvador in addition to the friendlies against Morocco and Uruguay. His levels of both performance and mentality in a difficult European environment would seem to line up with what Berhalter says he’s seeking in his player pool.

Jun 1, 2022; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; United States forward Haji Wright (19) reacts after scoring a goal with midfielder Weston McKennie (8) and midfielder Yunus Musah (6) in the second half against Morocco during an International friendly soccer match at TQL Stadium. Credit: Katie Stratman-USA TODAY Sports

“I take it as a good responsibility,” said the lanky frontrunner of the extent to which Antalyaspor attack relies on him. “I think playing with pressure shows character, and I think I enjoy the pressure and I thrive under the pressure. I also want to be the guy that’s scoring goals and getting opportunities and being the player in front of goal. Most people can tell, probably, I’m a goalscorer and I want to be involved in the goals. I appreciate the responsibility.”His summer call-up was a reunion with former YNT and Bradenton Residency Program colleagues like Christian Pulisic, Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Luca de la Torre, which helped him slot quickly into the group dynamic.Yet Berhalter pulled Wright off at halftime of the El Salvador match and afterward said he didn’t “fully capitalize” on his “opportunity” on an “unlucky night.” Three months later he was abruptly left off the roster for the United States’ September camp despite scoring five goals in Antalyaspor’s first three matches of the season.Even if the Yanks’ generally dismal outings versus Japan and Saudi Arabia could be said to have enhanced the reputations of those who didn’t take part, that was a sobering – and confusing – development for a well-traveled 24-year-old who seems to have done just about everything in his power to state his case for the USMNT’s troubled No. 9 job.“As a newcomer, it’s difficult to get adjusted to a new system, to new players around you, new coach, new environment,” said Wright of his June experience. “And I think in training I tried my best to adjust, tried to show myself. And then in the minutes that I got, I did the same. Think I had a few good touches, performances. I was hoping to be a part of the September camp so that I could build on that. But of course, that didn’t happen. So now I’m just waiting to see, trying to play my best now and hoping for the best.”The Süper Lig’s relatively low profile in the United States is probably not helping Wright, who admits he’s in the dark as to whether playing in Turkey is harming his national team chances.

“I understand in the U.S. market, I know Turkey’s not really viewed as an amazing league with amazing players that are a top level, even though it is a very high level in Turkey and there are very good teams fighting in the Champions League, fighting in Europa League, fighting in Conference League, that are doing well in those leagues,” said Wright.“It’s difficult to say whether or not I’m on the radar or not, because I haven’t really had that much communication with the national team.”But the league boasts a dense accumulation of talent and a fervent soccer culture that has helped bring out the best in Wright, a former U.S. youth international who labored to find stability and opportunity at previous stops in Germany and the Netherlands.

Wright with Schalke in 2017

“I like to call it life experience,” he said. “Every country that I played in, every league that I played in taught me something, and I grew as a person, as a player from that. And I think definitely if you’re able to perform in different countries, different leagues, it shows character, and that’s something I want to prove to people – that I’m not just a pushover, or a player with a bad mentality, or whatever it may be. that I can also be a top player one day, and that I also have a great mentality.“For me, personally, it was just a matter of not being 100 percent ready,” he said of his past difficulties. “The more you play, the more you learn, especially in soccer. It’s kind of difficult to learn if you’re not playing. I just needed to get on the field and make the mistakes so that I can learn from them.

“Basically what I’ve done on my journey to where I’m at now, I’ve made a lot of mistakes. But with every mistake comes a lesson, and I’ve learned from every lesson.”

Berhalter explains Pepi call-up ahead of in-form Pefok and Vazquez

The USMNT coach opted for experience and potential over players scoring at their clubs

Of the 26 names on September’s U.S. men’s national team roster, Ricardo Pepi’s was perhaps the most surprising.

The USMNT has a host of in-form striker options at the moment, but Gregg Berhalter opted to omit three of those in favor of a player who hasn’t scored a goal in nearly a year.

Brandon Vazquez has had a breakout campaign with FC Cincinnati, Jordan Pefok is off to a strong start in the Bundesliga with Union Berlin, and Haji Wright is still scoring with Antalyaspor in Turkey.

None of them made the cut.

Pepi has only just completed a loan move to Groningen in the Netherlands after a difficult start to life with Augsburg.

But Pepi’s track record with the USMNT, as well as his obvious potential, made the difference in Berhalter’s mind.

“Keep in mind this is a guy that scored three goals for us in World Cup qualifying and has had a tough time since then,” Berhalter told the media on Wednesday.

“We’re trying to get him confidence. We’re trying to get him into the group and see if he can make a push for the final roster — that’s TBD right now.

“You can see that he can be dominant in the Dutch league. And now it’s a question of if he actually is, and can he really take his game to the next level?

“Pepi has had some good history with us. He started in really important games. And we just weren’t willing to give all that up right now on Pepi, and we still think there’s a big upside with him. We still think he’s got really good potential.”

Berhalter addresses Pefok & Vazquez snubs

Berhalter didn’t go in depth into why Pefok missed out, saying that he was already familiar with what the striker brings to the table.

“We’re pretty confident we know Jordan’s profile, we know what he can do,” Berhalter said. “And we didn’t feel like we needed to see him in this camp to determine whether he can be on the [World Cup] roster or not.”

Berhalter did speak more on Vazquez, a player who has had a breakout campaign in MLS. In the USMNT coach’s eyes, however, his lack of experience with the national team is costly at this late stage.

“For us, it’s comparing him to what we have, comparing him to other guys and then the body of work both with his club and with us,” Berhalter said. “And with us, it’s very difficult for him: He doesn’t have a body of work.”

“I feel bad for Brandon,” the coach continued. “I talked to him and I told him it’s not the end and continue to do what he’s doing and keep himself in the conversation. That’s all I can do.”

(Katie Stratman-USA TODAY Sports)

Berhalter also laid out his vision for what he is looking for in a striker, which could be instructive in explaining some of his personnel decisions.

“We use them in a number of different ways,” Berhalter said. “One of them is to drop in and give us an extra man in midfield. One of the ways is to run behind the backline and then arrive in the penalty box, making good runs inside the penalty box.

“And then finally, starting our defensive pressure. We want to be a high-pressing team. We need forwards that understand the press, know how to use triggers to initiate the press and then actually execute the press well.”

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USMNT striker stock watch: Josh Sargent is back!

Remember when Josh Sargent was the USMNT’s top striker? Those days may be returning.

The U.S. men’s national team is set to play a pair of friendlies in Europe later this month as part of their final preparations for the 2022 World Cup.

First, the USMNT will face Japan in Germany on Sept. 23, then it will take on Saudi Arabia in Spain on Sept. 27. With just two matches remaining for the U.S. until the World Cup begins, there’s not a lot of time left for experimenting or introducing new players.

With that being the case, USMNT coach Gregg Berhalter has hinted that strikers who already have experience in the national team might have an advantage over guys who are still trying to break into the squad.

“What we’re trying to do [is] look at the profile who fits what we’re trying to do the best,” Berhalter said at a Nike event in New York last week, via Steven Goff of The Washington Post. “It may not be the best forward … it’s just what we think fits our team.”

So, who fits the team best?

The latest installment of our USMNT striker stock watch series is dropping now ahead of the release of the September friendlies roster, with players ranked 1-4 considered the most likely candidates for call-ups this month.

The Americans Abroad Five: Reconsidering Ream

Could the Fulham veteran make a late charge toward a World Cup roster spot?

We have been known to lead with the attackers in this here column but this week, it’s time to talk about a defender first.

Tim Ream, at age 34, is commanding a Premier League defense and looking every bit like a player who deserves a spot at the World Cup. But with no USMNT call-ups in almost a year, is it too late for Ream?

We’ll get to the strikers this week too, as a red-hot trio continued their strong play in Europe.

There are also major transfer questions that will be resolved this week, with two of the USMNT’s most vital players potentially set to find new homes.

Let’s get to the Five.

USMNT’s Haji Wright stays hot with another brace for Antalyaspor

It’s non-stop goals for all USMNT strikers right now

Haji Wright is keeping his name in the battle to be the U.S. men’s national team’s main option up top at the World Cup.

For the second straight match, Wright scored twice for Antalyaspor in a 5-2 result. This time though, Wright’s two goals were the only ones Antalyaspor got on the day, as Gaziantep produced a blistering four-goal second half to come from 2-1 down to win on Friday.

Still, Wright now has five goals in four league matches, putting him firmly in the Süper Lig golden boot race with Enner Valencia (who has six for Fenerbahçe). That keeps him in the mix with a red-hot corps of USMNT strikers that includes Josh Sargent and Jordan Pefok, who have been just as sharp for Norwich and Union Berlin, respectively.

Wright got his first by first through pure hard work, battling for a header as Antalyaspor broke forward. Wright didn’t win the ball, but his presence forced an errant header, and he took off into the space opened up as a result, received a through ball from Fredy, and used his defender as a screen to score a 30th minute equalizer.

Ten minutes later, Wright gave Antalyaspor the lead, again on a pass from Fredy. This time, Antalyaspor broke through with some attacking possession, and Fredy’s ball in for Wright was dummied on by Luiz Adriano, setting the USMNT striker up to tuck the ball away first-time.

Watch Wright bag another brace

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Haji Wright follows the lead of every other USMNT striker, bags a brace for Antalyaspor

If you’re a USMNT striker, you had a good weekend

Haji Wright just added to the great weekend U.S. men’s national team strikers are having.

Not long after Josh Sargent scored a brace for Norwich, and Jordan Pefok put up a goal and an assist for Union Berlin, Wright struck twice as Antalyaspor trounced Trabzonspor 5-2.

The first was pretty perfunctory: a penalty that he won after being wiped out by a Trabzonspor defender. Wright dusted himself off and converted the spot kick shortly before halftime.

The second took a little more work. Deep into stoppage time, a cross found Wright in the box, surrounded by two defenders. He brought the ball down on his chest, took a second touch, but all that got him was less space to operate in, and eventually a third defender to deal with.

No problem! Wright turned away from goal, then pivoted abruptly to his right, spinning away from the entire pack of Trabonspor players before firing a low shot that clipped a defender, looping over the ‘keeper and in.

Wright is up to three goals and an assist in three games to start the season for Antalyaspor, meaning that he’s been directly involved in two-thirds of their goals.

Watch Wright’s brace for Antalyaspor

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USMNT striker stock watch: Pefok and Vazquez make strong cases

Which strikers will the USMNT take to the World Cup? Jordan Pefok and Brandon Vazquez are making strong cases

As the 2022 World Cup continues to draw closer, fans of the U.S. men’s national soccer team seem to have a pretty good guesstimate of a first-choice roster with one position in particular standing out as a question mark: striker.

Who will start at the No. 9 spot for the USMNT in Qatar this summer, and who will back him up? The position appears to be totally up for grabs, so we’ve been monitoring the stock of the notable U.S.-eligible striker candidates.

Stateside, the MLS playoff race is heating up, and in Europe, the 2022-23 season has kicked off, providing a good opportunity for a stock watch update.

Let’s get to the list!

USMNT striker stock watch: Dike’s back, Ebobisse’s heating up

Who will start at No. 9 for the USMNT at the World Cup? Right now, Jesús Ferreira leads the striker stock watch power rankings.

If everyone’s healthy, U.S. men’s national team coach Gregg Berhalter probably has a pretty good idea of his preferred starters for the World Cup this fall – at most positions, anyway.

Most spots in the XI have obvious first-choice options, but striker remains a big question mark for the USMNT, at least in the eyes of fans and pundits.

The top candidates for the No. 9 role can make Berhalter’s job easier by performing for their club teams and creating some separation in the competition leading up to November.

We’re going to be periodically checking in on the top striker candidates leading up to the World Cup with our new striker stock watch series. With MLS teams hitting midseason and European clubs beginning preseason, now’s a good time to start.

Let’s get to the list!