What today's Group I and J games mean for the USMNT opponent pool

What today's Group I and J games mean for the USMNT opponent pool

The USA has already won Group D, but today's Group I and Group J matches can still change how dangerous two Round of 32 opponent lanes look. This brief ranks what to watch before the Türkiye rehearsal.

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USMNT Tracker
2026/6/22 · 7:15
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The U.S. already knows the shape of its next appointment: a Round of 32 game against a third-place team from Group B, E, F, I or J. ESPN lists that matchup for 00:00 on July 2, after the U.S. sealed Group D and Türkiye were eliminated. 1 2
That means the next useful U.S. scouting work happens before the Türkiye match. Group I and Group J play today, and both are in the American opponent pool. The games will not identify the opponent yet, but they can tell us whether two of the five lanes are becoming dangerous or staying thin.

The short version

  • Group I is the cleanest test today. If France and Norway both win, Senegal and Iraq stay on zero points and the eventual third-place team in that group may need a final-day win just to reach three.
  • Group J is more volatile. Argentina and Austria both opened with wins, while Jordan and Algeria are trying to avoid a second straight loss; one result can create a live three-point third-place candidate by the end of the night. 3
  • Group B and Group F still look like the more concrete U.S. scouting lanes. Bosnia and Herzegovina vs. Qatar can produce a four-point third-place team, and Sweden is already sitting first in FOX's live third-place table. 1 4
USMNT Round of 32 opponent lanes
Self-made watch board summarizing the five possible third-place lanes from ESPN's U.S. matchup path and the cited standings pages. 134

Tonight's U.S. opponent-watch board

LaneMatches to watchStarting pointU.S. read
Group IFrance vs. Iraq at 21:00 on June 22; Norway vs. Senegal at 00:00 on June 23Norway have 3 points and +3 goal difference; France have 3 and +2; Senegal and Iraq both have 0. 3 ESPN lists both Group I games for Monday. 1If France and Norway win, Group I probably becomes a weaker third-place lane. If either Senegal or Iraq takes points, the lane gets messy fast.
Group JArgentina vs. Austria at 17:00 on June 22; Jordan vs. Algeria at 03:00 on June 23Argentina have 3 points and +3 goal difference; Austria have 3 and +2; Jordan and Algeria both have 0. 3 ESPN lists Argentina-Austria and Jordan-Algeria as Monday's Group J fixtures. 1Watch the bottom game. A Jordan-Algeria draw keeps both teams on one point; a winner creates a team that can still reach the third-place cut line.
The practical question is not "Who should the U.S. want?" yet. It is "Which lane is capable of producing a credible third-place qualifier?" Group I can either simplify today or join the real watch list. Group J is likely to stay open longer, especially if Argentina and Austria do not separate themselves.

Why Group B and Group F still deserve more attention

Group I and J are today's games, but they are not necessarily the most likely U.S. opponent sources.
LaneWhat we know nowWhy it matters to the U.S.
Group BCanada and Switzerland are level on 4 points, with Canada ahead on goal difference; Bosnia and Herzegovina and Qatar each have 1 point. 3 ESPN says Bosnia and Herzegovina vs. Qatar is a high-stakes match where the winner has an excellent chance to qualify. 1A Bosnia-Qatar winner can reach 4 points. That is the kind of third-place profile that usually survives the 48-team format.
Group FNetherlands and Japan are both on 4 points, while Sweden have 3 and Tunisia are eliminated. 3 FOX's current third-place table has Sweden first among third-place teams. 4This is the cleanest danger lane right now. If Sweden fail to catch Japan, they could still be a strong third-place team rather than a desperate qualifier.
Group EGermany have won the group; Ivory Coast have 3 points, while Ecuador and Curacao each have 1. 3 ESPN says Ivory Coast can secure second with a result against Curacao, while Ecuador likely need to beat Germany to stay alive. 1Germany being locked in first helps clarify the group, but the third-place spot can still swing depending on whether Ecuador or Curacao find a win.
That is why the Türkiye game should be treated as a rehearsal, not a sealed preview of one opponent. The American staff may be preparing for several opponent types at once: a Sweden-level transition side, a Group B survivor with four points, or a Group I/J team that got just enough out of the last two matchdays.
Which opponent lanes look most live before Türkiye
Self-made danger meter based on the current standings and third-place table cited in this brief; it is a scouting-priority read, not a prediction. 34

What this changes for the Türkiye plan

The U.S. does not need a table result against Türkiye. It needs clean habits that travel into an unknown knockout matchup.
That points to three priorities:
  1. Rest defense over score-chasing. If Sweden stays in the U.S. pool, the Americans cannot let the Türkiye match become loose. The wingers, fullbacks and No. 6 have to rehearse how the team protects itself after attacks break down.
  2. Set-piece minutes for the second group. A four-point third-place team from Group B or Group E could turn the Round of 32 into a margins game. Dead-ball roles should not wait until the knockout lineup is named.
  3. Controlled minutes for protected starters. The opponent pool is still wide. That makes it harder to justify risking players who already have yellow-card or fitness concerns just to chase rhythm against an eliminated Türkiye side.
The watch order is simple: check Group J first, then Group I, then keep the Wednesday and Thursday lanes circled. By the time the U.S. kicks off against Türkiye, the opponent pool may still have five labels. It should at least have fewer unknowns.

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