
Mauricio Pochettino has tried a lot of things in football. But brainwave technology as penalty shootout prep? That's a new one — even for him. According to The Athletic, the USMNT are using neuroscience-based methods to give their players a psychological and neurological edge when it comes to spot-kicks at the 2026 World Cup, with the host nation leaving nothing to chance in the sport's most nerve-shredding three seconds.
This story is based on a single source — The Athletic. No official confirmation has been issued by U.S. Soccer or the USMNT coaching staff. We'll update as further reporting emerges.
Penalty shootouts have ended more World Cup dreams than any dodgy refereeing call or injury crisis. They are, by most accounts, an exercise in controlled chaos — and teams have been trying to crack the code for decades. Ice baths, visualisation sessions, dedicated penalty coaches, even studying goalkeeper tendencies frame by frame. Pochettino's staff, it seems, have gone a step further.
The Athletic reports that the USMNT have incorporated brainwave technology into their preparation, though the precise nature of the equipment and the methodology behind it haven't been detailed publicly. What that likely means in practice — neurofeedback training, EEG-based focus sessions, or some form of cognitive load management — remains behind the paywall for now. The broad principle, though, is well-established in elite sport: train the brain to stay calm under pressure, and the body tends to follow.
This isn't as surprising as it sounds coming from Pochettino. His coaching career has always had a thread of genuine curiosity running through it — an openness to sports science and psychological detail that set his Tottenham and Southampton sides apart from the standard Premier League template. The idea that he'd arrive at a home World Cup and leave penalty preparation to instinct alone would be the real surprise.
For the USMNT specifically, the stakes are enormous. Hosting a World Cup and going out on penalties — in front of a packed stadium of American fans who've been sold the dream for years — is the kind of moment that can define a generation of football in a country. Pochettino knows that. His staff know that.
The Athletic's reporting is the sole source on this, and the specifics — which players are involved, how the technology is being applied session to session, and how far the USMNT have progressed in the tournament — aren't confirmed beyond what's available publicly. The finer details remain unverified until more reporting surfaces.
What is confirmed: Pochettino's side are preparing for penalties in a way that goes beyond the standard run-up-and-hope approach. Whether it works is a question only a shootout can answer.
The goalkeeper on the other end of it probably doesn't know what's coming. Neither do we — and that's exactly the point.
Mauricio Pochettino has tried a lot of things in football. But brainwave technology as penalty shootout prep? That's a new one — even for him.
Sources
The Athletic — Football
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
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