Monday, May 4, 2026

Zendejas' Late Penalty

In the First Leg of the Liga MX Clausura Quarterfinal, the American Converted the Equalizer From the Spot

Alejandro Zendejas delivered when it mattered most, converting a late penalty in the 85th minute to earn Club América a 3-3 draw against Pumas UNAM in the first leg of their Clausura 2026 quarterfinal on Sunday.

The American winger stepped up to the spot after Henry Martín was fouled in the box by Nathan Silva, and Zendejas made no mistake, driving a left-footed effort into the bottom right corner. It was a composed finish in a high-pressure moment, and one that leaves the tie finely balanced heading into the second leg.

It capped a busy evening for Zendejas individually. He led both sides in touches with 88, took five shots over the course of the match, and created two chances. He was involved throughout, though the 25% shot accuracy and a single-digit crossing success rate suggested it was not always a polished performance. He hit the woodwork on one occasion and was dispossessed during some of his six dribble attempts, completing just one.

The match itself was overshadowed by a controversy involving a substitution irregularity, with Pumas preparing to file a formal complaint over the brief exit and return of Miguel Vázquez during a triple substitution around the hour mark. The incident arose after Sebastián Cáceres suffered a head injury, forcing América to restructure their planned changes mid-sequence. Early indications suggest the regulations may favor América's position, with the referee having approved the adjustment on concussion grounds, but the Disciplinary Commission will have the final say.

Whatever the outcome of that dispute, Zendejas' penalty ensures América has something to show from the first leg, and gives the American winger a moment of genuine significance on a complicated night.

Ream's Setback

Defender Missed Another Match as His World Cup Spot is in Jeopardy

Tim Ream's World Cup preparations have taken another unwelcome turn.

The 38-year-old center back, who has been sidelined since suffering a groin injury during Charlotte FC's win over New York City FC on April 18, was ruled out of Saturday's match against the New England Revolution after experiencing a setback in his recovery. Charlotte head coach Dean Smith indicated Ream could return in time for the club's fixture against FC Cincinnati on May 9, but the pattern of interruptions is becoming a concern in its own right.

In his absence, Charlotte lost 1-0 at Gillette Stadium, with Carles Gil converting a stoppage-time penalty to settle the contest. It was the third consecutive defeat for the Crown without their veteran defender, and Matt Turner, Ream's international teammate, was on the opposite side, making three saves to preserve the clean sheet.

The timing is far from ideal. Ream has been a consistent starter under Mauricio Pochettino, featuring in 18 of the coach's 24 matches since taking charge in late 2024, captaining the side 17 times. But his performances during March's international window gave room for doubt. He was caught out on several occasions by younger, quicker opponents and conceded the handball that handed Belgium a third goal during a damaging 15-minute spell in which the game slipped away from the USMNT.

Pochettino has used the months since to explore his options at center back, with Auston Trusty, Mark McKenzie and Miles Robinson all receiving opportunities alongside the more settled Chris Richards, who remains the team's standout defender. None of those combinations has conclusively outperformed the others, but the competition for places is real.

Ream is still expected to make the World Cup roster. Whether he arrives fit enough to hold down a starting position, however, is a question that each passing week makes harder to answer with confidence.

Pulisic's Struggling Times

As the Winger Hasn't Scored Since 2025, He Came Off the Bench Again Sunday, Amid Manchester United Rumors

Christian Pulisic's timing couldn't be more awkward. With a home World Cup on the horizon and his place in Mauricio Pochettino's squad presumably secure, the AC Milan forward is enduring the kind of form that raises uncomfortable questions at the worst possible moment.

Pulisic hasn't scored since December 28, when he found the net in a 3-0 win over Hellas Verona, and his last assist came on March 21 in a 3-2 victory over Torino. That's a significant dry spell for a player who was arguably Milan's standout performer in the first half of the season. In their opening 25 league games, Milan averaged over a goal and a half per match, while in the nine games since, that figure has collapsed to less than a goal a game. That figure got worse after Sunday's match against Sassuolo.

Sunday's 2-0 defeat, a match in which Fikayo Tomori was sent off inside 25 minutes, summed up the broader malaise. Pulisic played just 31 minutes, touching the ball only 17 times and not once in the opposition box. Milan's total xG for the match was a meager 0.27, their lowest in a Serie A fixture since 2018. Manager Massimiliano Allegri has already begun rotating around him, turning to Christopher Nkunku in an attempt to find a spark.

Off the pitch, the uncertainty is compounding. With just 12 months remaining on his contract and no active extension talks currently underway, Pulisic's future at the club is genuinely open. Manchester United have been doing groundwork on a potential move, with recruitment chief Christopher Vivell holding long-standing knowledge of the player dating back to his Borussia Dortmund days. Several other Premier League clubs are also monitoring the situation.

Former United goalkeeper Tim Howard has publicly argued there is another level waiting for Pulisic if he returns to England. Right now, Pulisic will simply be hoping to rediscover any level at all before June arrives.