The top young USMNT players and prospects in 2023

The stars of today and tomorrow are ready to lead the USMNT to a bright future

The U.S. men’s national team should have a bright future ahead.

With one of the youngest teams at the World Cup, the USMNT got out of its group and qualified for the last 16 in Qatar — a substantial achievement after missing the 2018 tournament entirely.

Now the focus shifts to the main event: the 2026 World Cup on home soil.

Several of the 2022 roster’s best young players should be back and right in their prime in 2026, and they should be joined by a host of younger players just starting to make their way in the game now.

Below are some of the USMNT’s best young players. For the purposes of this list, the player must be born in 2003 or later.

The Americans Abroad Five: Is Malik Tillman ready for Bayern?

The on-loan Rangers star may have played himself into a state of purgatory

Every time Malik Tillman puts in a strong performance, which is pretty often these days, Rangers manager Michael Beale is forced to once again address the midfielder’s status at the club beyond this season.

And every time, Beale basically says the same thing: Yes he wants to keep Tillman. Yes, he thinks Tillman would like to stay long term. Yes, Rangers are in talks to make it happen. And no, he doesn’t know if it’s actually going to work.

Tillman’s one-year loan from Bayern Munich has a unique structure: Rangers hold a purchase option worth a reported £5 million. That’s looking like an increasingly easy decision for Rangers but there’s a catch: Bayern also reportedly holds a buy-back clause that it could trigger immediately after Rangers use their own purchase option.

It would see Rangers make an instant profit, and instantly lose a player they see as a cornerstone for the future.

Prior to the season, the 20-year-old was virtually unproven in senior club soccer. Now he’s played himself into a weird state of purgatory: maybe too good for the Scottish Premiership but also maybe not ready for the 10-time defending Bundesliga champions.

Tillman’s breakout campaign and his intriguing summer ahead lead this week’s Americans Abroad Five.

The Americans Abroad Five: Reyna is back again, and we are ready to be hurt

With a month until the World Cup starts, the U.S. attacker once again looks fit and ready

Six weeks ago in this very column, we ran the following headline: Gio Reyna is back — now please stay healthy.

This week, the sentiment is pretty much exactly the same.

Reyna’s injuries have limited his time on the field to fits and starts over the past year, but he is again trending in the right direction after scoring his first goal in 14 months this weekend.

With a month until the World Cup starts, the U.S. attacker once again is resembling something close to his best.

Now please stay healthy.

The Americans Abroad Five: Football hopefully decides

Could this be the start of another fightback at Chelsea for Christian Pulisic?

Ahead of Saturday’s game against Crystal Palace, Graham Potter acknowledged the relationship between Christian Pulisic and his predecessor Thomas Tuchel had at times been frosty.

“I can only comment on him in terms of how he’s been with me,” Chelsea manager Potter said of the USMNT star. “Really positive, he’s an intelligent guy, articulate, knows how to express himself.

“My conversation with him has been good and positive, I’m not going to judge anybody on what has happened in the past, I’m going to make my own mind up. Football hopefully decides.”

Pulisic has been out of favor before with Chelsea, and has always managed to fight his way back. His game-winning assist against Palace, then, could be the start of another fightback for the USMNT star. Or it could be a false dawn.

That assist did come from Pulisic’s favored left-wing position, rather than the wingback spot he’s played so often this season. If Potter at least gives Pulisic a chance at his best position, then the American star will back himself to prove his worth. Football hopefully decides.

USMNT prospects: Aaronson breaking through in MLS, Fletcher scoring in USL

While Brenden Aaronson is turning heads in the Premier League, his younger brother, Paxten, is breaking through in MLS

U.S. fans are understandably abuzz projecting the 2022 World Cup roster and debating the best hypothetical XI for Qatar. But there are reasons beyond the upcoming World Cup to get excited about the USMNT’s future.

After the World Cup, the U.S. will compete in the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Indonesia, followed by the 2024 Summer Olympics in France.

The 2022 World Cup is — of course — the most notable tournament, and it’s on deck first. But we can’t help but look ahead to the next generation, so we’ve started a series tracking USMNT prospects to watch.

Here’s our first installment of sporadic check-ins with some of American soccer’s up-and-coming prospects for 2023 and beyond.

What is going on with American prospects at Wolfsburg?

The Bundesliga club has a less-than-stellar track record with young American players

Two years ago, the Bundesliga website ran an article titled “Why do Wolfsburg have so many young Americans?”

In it, no fewer than four top American prospects were mentioned: Ulysses Llanez, Michael Edwards, Bryang Kayo and Kobe Hernandez-Foster.

All four of them teenagers. All four U.S. youth internationals. And now, two years later, all four of them are gone.

It is through that lens that we must now analyze the situation another top American prospect, Kevin Paredes, is experiencing at the club. It was only this January when Wolfsburg paid D.C. United over $7 million to sign the teenage left back, who had already been called into the U.S. senior national team.

But Paredes has played just 13 total minutes for Wolfsburg thus far. Worryingly, the 19-year-old wasn’t even named to the matchday squad for the club’s first two Bundesliga games this season.

Wolfsburg has been a successful destination for at least one American in the recent past. John Brooks left the club at the end of last season after five years in which he was usually a starter.

But things haven’t gone as well recently when Wolfsburg has signed up-and-coming young Americans, rather than those already established in the German top flight.

As another young American struggles to break through, the situation at Wolfsburg is worth reviewing.