The USA's next opponent is five groups wide

The USA's next opponent is five groups wide

The USA has won Group D, but its Round of 32 opponent will come from one of five third-place lanes. This brief maps Groups B, E, F, I and J, then explains why the Türkiye match should be used to rehearse flexible knockout plans rather than chase a table result.

USMNT Tracker
22/6/2026 · 10:12
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The U.S. has already solved Group D. The next problem is stranger: first place does not hand the USMNT a named opponent, only a five-group scouting assignment.
U.S. Soccer says the Americans will finish first ahead of Australia, Paraguay and Türkiye, then face a third-place team from Group B, E, F, I or J in the Round of 32 in the San Francisco Bay Area. Before that, the group finale against Türkiye kicks off at 02:00 UTC on June 26, listed locally as June 25 in Los Angeles. 1
That changes the job for Mauricio Pochettino. Türkiye is no longer a survival game. It is a rehearsal for uncertainty.

What is already locked

The U.S. has six points from two matches after beating Paraguay and Australia, and the Australia win came through a Cameron Burgess own goal forced by Folarin Balogun in the 11th minute and an Alex Freeman header in the 43rd. 2
The tournament format is the reason the opponent is still cloudy. FIFA's 48-team setup sends the top two teams from each group to the Round of 32, then adds the eight best third-place teams. FIFA lists the third-place ranking order as points, goal difference, goals scored, team conduct score and then the FIFA/Coca-Cola Men's World Ranking. 3
The schedule slot itself is clear enough for planning: FIFA's fixtures page renders the U.S. line as USA vs. 3BEFIJ at San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, while Fox's bracket tracker lists the same matchup as the United States against the third-place team from Group B, E, F, I or J. 4 5
FOX bracket graphic showing the USA in the 3BEFIJ slot
FOX's bracket graphic places the United States into the 3BEFIJ Round of 32 slot, which is why the next few matchdays matter even after Group D is settled. 5

The five groups to watch

This is not about guessing one opponent too early. It is about knowing which types of opponents can fall into the U.S. bracket: a bruised favorite, a compact survival team, or a third-place side that arrives with nothing to lose.
Source groupCurrent hingeWhy it matters to the U.S.
Group BCanada and Switzerland are level on four points, with Canada ahead on goal difference; Bosnia and Herzegovina vs. Qatar is framed as the high-leverage third-place survival game. 6A Group B third-place team could come from a match where the winner has just fought through pressure. That usually means defensive urgency, counters and set pieces.
Group EGermany has booked the Round of 32 and first place, while Ivory Coast, Ecuador and Curaçao are still sorting out the second and third lanes. 6This is the pool where the U.S. might draw a team that has spent the group stage defending margins rather than chasing open games.
Group FThe Netherlands and Japan are in the top two, Sweden sits in the third-place picture, and Japan vs. Sweden can decide who avoids the third-place lottery. 6This is the cleanest scouting priority because Fox's third-place table currently has Sweden leading that ranking, and Group F is in the U.S. opponent pool. 5
Group IESPN frames France and Norway as having simple qualification paths after opening wins, with Senegal and Iraq still able to chase third-place survival. 6A Group I third-place team could be talented but uneven, especially if the group becomes a France-Norway top-two race.
Group JArgentina and Austria can move toward qualification when they meet, while Algeria and Jordan are fighting to keep their tournament alive. 6This is the highest-variance lane. If the favorite-vs-favorite game opens space, the third-place profile can swing quickly.

What Türkiye should be used for now

The obvious temptation is to treat Türkiye as a low-stakes rest day. That would waste the match.
The better use is a controlled test of the habits that travel across opponent types. Can the U.S. press without leaving the weak-side fullback exposed? Can the midfield protect rest defense if Pochettino rotates? Can Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Gio Reyna and the wide options keep the attack connected if Christian Pulisic is still being managed? U.S. Soccer's Australia recap says Pulisic was unavailable for that match as he worked back from a leg injury, and Pepi started in his place. 2
USMNT players celebrate during the Australia win
The Australia win gave the U.S. the standings cushion; the Türkiye match now has to preserve the habits that made that cushion useful. 2
There is also a psychological edge to protect. Matt Freese told U.S. Soccer the team could enjoy the Australia win briefly before the focus shifted to Türkiye, while Antonee Robinson said the group wanted to get three wins before the knockouts. 1 That is the right public line because the alternative is drifting for four days while the rest of the bracket sharpens.

The fan watch list

If you only have time to track three things before the U.S. opponent is known, start here:
  1. Group F first. Sweden is already high in the third-place standings and Group F is eligible to feed the U.S. slot. 5
  2. Group B next. Canada-Switzerland shapes first place, but Bosnia and Herzegovina-Qatar may shape the third-place candidate. 6
  3. Groups I and J late. Those groups contain bigger names, but their third-place picture is less mature because some teams have played fewer matches. 6
The cleanest U.S. scenario is not getting the easiest name on paper. It is reaching the Round of 32 with multiple plans already rehearsed: one for a low block, one for a transition-heavy opponent, and one for a match where the first goal turns the game into a street fight.
That is why the Türkiye game still matters. Not for the table. For the menu of answers the U.S. may need a week later.

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