Chris Richards World Cup in doubt as ankle injury sidelines USMNT defender
Richards World Cup in doubt after ankle injury

Chris Richards will not take part in the United States' final World Cup tune-up friendly against Germany, head coach Mauricio Pochettino said in Friday's pre-match press conference. While Pochettino awaits further assessments, the defender's status for the World Cup is decidedly in doubt.

"He's still not ready to compete and play," Pochettino said on Friday. "I think we are going to have that opportunity in the next few days to assess him and see his ankle, and then to make a decision."

Richards suffered an ankle injury in Crystal Palace's second-to-last match of its Premier League season against Brentford. The exact nature of the injury is not known, except for Palace manager Oliver Glasner saying that he had torn ligaments in his ankle. He missed their league finale against Arsenal and did not play in the Conference League final against Rayo Vallecano. Ahead of the Arsenal match, Palace manager Glasner said that Richards could be available for the European final, an assessment which had cast a rosier projection of Richards' readiness for the World Cup – boosted by various reports that there was little doubt in Richards' camp that he would be available for this summer's tournament.

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On Friday, Pochettino admitted that his understanding had been that Richards was closer to match fitness given Glasner's comments that the defender could potentially feature in the Conference League final. Instead, Pochettino and his staff will have to make a decision on a key defender's readiness to contribute at this World Cup given the shrinking window of recovery between now and the group stage's opener on 12 June against Paraguay.

"There was a line of information where we were thinking that he could play that final against Rayo Vallecano in Conference League," Pochettino said in Spanish on Friday. "He was on the bench of subs, you remember? After that, [we thought] he could maybe be [involved] against Senegal. In the end, the timelines [are] lengthening and [it] angers me a bit. I'm not happy, because we know Chris Richards is an important player. Of course we all know it."

Richards spent his time in pre-World Cup camp rehabbing by himself until Wednesday's session at the National Training Center, when he took the training field with the rest of his teammates. While they partook in the customary pre-training stretch circles and rondos, Richards was off to the side on a second field with a pair of trainers, doing resistance band work while working on his lateral motion.

"We are never going to take a decision to play with some player that [has a] minimum risk," Pochettino said on Friday. "We prefer to not take [a] risk. That's why all of the players that are going to start, or players that's going to come from the bench, it's because they are healthy, and they are 100% fit to play."

Who could play in Richards' place?

With Richards unavailable in last weekend's 3-2 win over Senegal, Mark McKenzie assumed his usual station at the heart of the center-back trio. Tim Ream broke lines from the left side, while Alex Freeman served as an elbow back to drop deeper in defensive phases and help with build-up in a wider position.

Richards' complicated status helps contextualize the number of defenders that Pochettino included in his 26-man roster, including five center-backs and a couple of wide defenders who can deputize centrally. This group has had extended time to gel and form chemistry ahead of the tournament, decreasing the need to make a like-for-like replacement along the back if Richards is unable to play at the World Cup.

World Cup teams are able to make medically related changes to their tournament squads up until 24 hours before their group stage opens. Pochettino has until 11 June to determine whether or not Richards will remain part of his tournament plans.

"In the end, we can hope that Chris can be there," Pochettino said. "But in the end, we're gonna find ourselves who's coming without competing [for a month] and after, we have to make the decision if he's in form to compete or not. And there's not a lot of time [until] the World Cup."

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