
Carrick: Man Utd games vs Liverpool some of my favourites
Carrick highlights the significance of Man Utd vs Liverpool rivalry
Zavier Gozo and Adri Mehmeti are standout MLS youngsters making a case for the USMNT World Cup roster. With the roster announcement approaching, their performances could influence coach Mauricio Pochettino's final decisions.
Zavier Gozo from Real Salt Lake and Adri Mehmeti from Red Bull New York are among the top MLS youngsters making a case for the USMNT roster.
Young players like Gozo and Mehmeti face challenges such as limited international experience and the need to integrate quickly into a competitive team environment.
The USMNT roster is scheduled to be announced on May 26.
Zavier Gozo has excelled as a winger for Real Salt Lake, while Adri Mehmeti has emerged as a key midfielder for Red Bull New York, showcasing strong performances.

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One of the lesser-discussed conversations about the USMNT player pool has been the dearth of alternatives on the wings. Pulisic and Tim Weah established themselves as first-choice early in the 2022 cycle and have performed well enough to retain that status. Behind them, Pochettino has largely relied on attacking midfielders playing wide of center, with Club América winger Alejandro Zendejas only getting occasional looks since committing to the US over Mexico. A member of last year’s U-20 World Cup squad, Gozo brings tremendous dynamism from wide areas and a fearlessness when taking his opponents on with the ball. The 19-year-old Utah native arguably boasts better lateral mobility while dribbling than even Pulisic or Weah, allowing him to find open terrain to advance upfield or set up his own shot in tight areas. He’s also surprisingly adept at executing audacious shots with inch-perfect precision. The lack of wing depth has forced Pochettino to craft a narrower formation in the final third, which would complicate Gozo’s path to a World Cup callup. As the likes of Aston Villa and Atlético Madrid reportedly monitor his performances for a possible transfer, he could provide a jolt to the US in the final third.
Before celebrating his 17th birthday on 6 April, Mehmeti was turning heads as the midfield heart of Michael Bradley’s emerging Red Bull New York. The first-year head coach has restored New York as one of MLS’s foremost “press and possess” teams, per Futi, working to keep the ball away from their own half by any means necessary. Doing so requires a midfield that can wisely pick the right pass to extend sequences while being adept at quickly stymying opponents whenever the ball changes hands. In tandem with partner Ronald Donkor, Mehmeti has become his team’s central metronome in possession with considerable incision as he breaks lines with his passing. Raised in Staten Island to Albanian parents, Mehmeti is already generating comparisons to Sergio Busquets given his distribution and screening acumen in spite of limited athleticism. Those concerns about mobility have started to leave him racking up cautions, with four yellow cards in the season’s first 10 games. It’s worth remembering that Sebastian Berhalter had concerns about his quickness at a similar age, and he was able to gain that extra step of pace after his professional debut. Then again, Berhalter’s passing chops weren’t nearly so elite as a teenager. Those worries haven’t limited his ability to involve himself defensively, either. Mehmeti is already among MLS’s most proactive recoverers of loose balls and chips in with interceptions at a considerable clip. His profile is so tantalizing that he may be the best midfielder to come through an MLS academy since Tyler Adams, and possibly the best all-around prospect since Alphonso Davies. While the midfield is the least of Pochettino’s concerns this cycle, Mehmeti shouldn’t be outside the senior national team for long.
If any type of player is certain to force questions before a tournament squad is due, it’s a striker who can’t stop scoring. Pochettino saw one of his likely strike trio (Patrick Agyemang) suffer an ill-timed achilles injury that will keep him out through the summer. While that seems most likely to clarify Haji Wright’s role rather than mimic his wider deployment with Coventry, it creates a little leeway to look at who else is in form. Julian Hall is another of Bradley’s babes, an 18-year-old from New York City who has supplanted Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting in the lineup. Hall has rewarded his manager’s faith with six goals and two assists from just 892 league minutes. A beneficiary of New York’s emphasis on keeping the ball in the opponent’s half, Hall ranks in the 98th percentile for receiving passes in the opponent’s box, per American Soccer Analysis, while registering in the 86th percentile for passes collected in the final third. Whereas some young strikers who first emerge on the wing must learn the art of creating space in the mixer, Hall has a precocious knack for it. Five of his six goals have come inside the six-yard box, including three from set pieces. Despite this, only one was scored with his head, showing confidence to settle the ball and ensure a better shot without dawdling long enough for a defender to adjust. So quickly has Hall established himself as a credible center forward that he has kicked off a dual-national duel. Poland is actively recruiting the teenage striker, with the federation president presenting his mother with a national team shirt bearing her surname and the name Hall wears on the back of his jersey: Zakrzewski. Poland failed to qualify for the 2026 World Cup at the final hurdle and is starting to plan for life after Robert Lewandowski. US Soccer is without a sporting director, and Pochettino seems likely to bolt after the summer. If Hall’s craftiness in close quarters continues, he may remain in squad conversations regardless of the future implications. Related: A long-term plan with mixed results: how Matt Crocker’s US Soccer tenure stacked up
Reyna’s stagnation since the 2022 World Cup has left the US without its ideal lock-picker in the final third. While Diego Luna has emerged as a grittier profile of attacking midfielder and Malik Tillman can chip in with a second striker’s gliding into ceded space, it was Reyna who was projected to enter this summer as the chief final-ball provider. Reyna has spent much of another Bundesliga campaign coming off the bench. In the meantime, Tsakiris has broken through in his second season under Bruce Arena. The 20-year-old has logged 71 league appearances since debuting for his boyhood Quakes in 2022, struggling to stand out until Arena arrived last winter. He’s among the first names on the ex-US manager’s team sheet these days, leading MLS with 32 chances created ahead of Marco Reus (27), Thomas Müller, Lionel Messi (22 apiece) and Carles Gil (21). For a program without a locked-in set-piece specialist, Tskairis’s effectiveness at creating through corner kicks is noteworthy. Fixating on that service would betray his immense range of passing. Tsakiris has proven crafty at slipping seam passes beyond defenders near the box, while he has a classic No 10’s knack for collecting the ball deep and still being able to provide his teammates with service beyond the backline. Like Hall and Banks, there is some outside urgency to vet Tsakiris’s fit for the senior national team. The California native played for the US alongside Gozo at the U-20 World Cup, but is of Greek and Portuguese descent. Greece seems more likely to enquire about his interest, and his access to an EU passport has kept him on European clubs’ radars, with Real Sociedad reportedly making a bid last summer. Tsakiris has the skillset necessary to break down low-block defenses, and is already performing as the best No 10 in one of the few leagues in the world that regularly relies on the role. He, like fellow one-time Quakes academy prospect Luna before him, seems poised to stick around for whatever will follow the 2026 World Cup.