
Clint Dempsey believes the United States men’s national team can realistically reach the FIFA World Cup quarterfinals, but he also sees one nightmare scenario the program cannot afford.
The warning matters because the World Cup is at home, and expectations around the USMNT are no longer built on simply showing up. After the 2024 Copa America failure, this team has to prove it can handle pressure as a host.
Dempsey’s target is ambitious without being reckless. He sees a path to the last eight, but only if the group-stage floor does not collapse again.

Clint Dempsey says the United States men’s national team cannot repeat Copa America pain
Speaking on Up & Adams, Dempsey made it clear that a deep run is possible, but the worst-case outcome is still obvious.
“I mean, getting to the quarterfinals or the semifinals would be awesome, but let’s talk about nightmare scenarios. When you think about Copa America in 2024, we were the first host country to not get out of the group [stage] ever,” Dempsey said.
He added, “That was terrible being two years away from the World Cup. Now, in the new World Cup setup, I think it’s more difficult to not get out of the group. All you need is one win and a good goal differential.”
That is the pressure point. The USMNT’s 2024 Copa America exit came on home soil, with Gregg Berhalter’s team failing to get through a group featuring Uruguay, Panama and Bolivia.
The 2026 format should make that kind of failure harder. There will be 12 groups of four teams, with the top two in each group and the eight best third-place teams advancing to a 32-team knockout round.
Clint Dempsey gives the United States men’s national team a quarterfinal standard
Dempsey still believes the ceiling is real if the group-stage business gets handled.
“I think this team can get to the quarterfinals. I think that’s a realistic shout, and then who is to say they don’t go on from there and even go further?” Dempsey stated.
That is not blind hype. A quarterfinal run would match the kind of breakthrough American fans have wanted from the country’s most talented modern generation.
The team has enough quality to believe in that target, with Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tyler Adams, Gio Reyna and Folarin Balogun giving Mauricio Pochettino real pieces to build around.
But Dempsey’s warning keeps the excitement grounded. At a home World Cup, failing to escape the group would not be a disappointment; it would be a program-shaking embarrassment.
For the USMNT, the expectation is clear. Reach the knockouts first, chase the quarterfinals next, and make sure Copa America 2024 stays a warning rather than a preview.
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