Johnny Cardoso became the fourth American to take the field in a Champions League semifinal on Wednesday, playing 87 minutes for Atletico Madrid against Arsenal after a late hamstring injury to Pablo Barrios forced him into the starting lineup.
The appearance put Cardoso in rare company. Before this match, only three Americans had ever played in a Champions League semifinal: DaMarcus Beasley for PSV, Tyler Adams for RB Leipzig and Christian Pulisic for Chelsea. Cardoso, who is one of several USMNT players with no guaranteed spot on the final World Cup roster, now joins that list after stepping into a game that carried far more weight for Atletico than a late-season league fixture.
Atletico's 2025-26 Spanish league season is effectively all but over, with the club 25 points behind Barcelona, and the Champions League has become the only stage left that matters. The Spanish side has not reached a final in ten years, since losing to Real Madrid on penalties in Milan's San Siro, and this semifinal was the kind of night the club has been building toward even as its domestic campaign faded away.
Cardoso did not just fill a gap. He held it for most of the match, lasting 87 minutes in a pressure game that came with a place in the final on the line. That matters because USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino has said performance, not pedigree, will drive his final roster decisions, and a night like this is exactly the sort of test that can cut through reputation. For Cardoso, the question is no longer whether he belongs in the conversation. It is whether he can keep turning moments like this into something larger when the next roster call arrives.