Ladies and gentlemen this is your World Cup 2026 USA 🇺🇸 starting 11. Arguably our strongest players except for Weah and Richards who this tells me isn’t fit. Bad news.
@CrossWorks17@kaufsports@MiamiHerald@HeraldSports Nu Stadium is in between Miami International Airport and several major highways. The area is notorious for massive jams. Florida is a car dependent state. Not ideal.
The last half hour of this Haiti 🇭🇹 match should highlight the importance of Frantzdy Pierrot to the way we play. Without him we lose our focal point. No way to release the pressure or pop a counter. Huge player. Guaranteed starter.
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📸: @jmarcos1804
Last Haiti 🇭🇹 World Cup warmup match from Port au Prince B aka Miami 🏖️
We face off against another Pacific Coast nation Peru 🇵🇪
Last time these two did battle was way back in the 2016 Copa America group stages where it ended 1-0 to the South Americans in Seattle
Peru are in pretty horrible form (1 win in 11) but this will be a tougher test than New Zealand 🇳🇿 for Haiti. Still all I ask is NO INJURIES
FT Haiti 🇭🇹 1-2 Peru 🇵🇪
Well they ALMOST had what would have been an upset. If you care about such vulgar things like the FIFA rankings. But that last 10 minutes was pathetic. I’ll excuse the first goal but the 2nd was sloppy. Still shit could have had 2 at the end as well as the game opened up.
No matter Haiti will head North to New Jersey to make camp in good spirits. We played mostly well over the warmups.
Now for the big cats…
To compete and realistically upset stronger nations at the 2026 World Cup, Haiti must start Frantzdy Pierrot, Lenny Joseph, and Wilson Isidor together in attack.
Frantzdy Pierrot (6’4”) brings elite physical dominance, aerial power, and hold-up play. He forces defenses to double-team, assign bigger center-backs, and shift their structure just to deal with crosses and long balls.
Wilson Isidor (6’1”) adds mobility, technical quality, and clinical finishing. He drops deep, links play, turns defenders, and attacks space in behind, forcing defenders out of position.
Lenny Joseph (6’0”) brings pace, versatility, and unpredictability. He stretches the field, attacks 1v1s, and makes intelligent runs that exploit the gaps created by the others.
Together, they create a complete front line: physical power, technical movement, and lightning pace. Defenses cannot solve all three problems at once.
Against top teams, this forces reactions. Defenders double Pierrot, track Isidor tightly, and drop deeper to deal with runs in behind. That caution creates space. When one is overloaded, another is free. Pierrot holds and lays off, Isidor connects and breaks lines, Joseph attacks the open channels.
This is where Haiti becomes dangerous. Crosses, second balls, and transitions become lethal because defenders are already occupied and out of shape.
We’ve already seen flashes of this. In dominant performances like the 4–0 win over New Zealand, multiple attackers contributed, showing how a diversified attack punishes even small mistakes.
Two attackers can be managed. Three different profiles force constant adjustments, and that’s where errors happen.
This trio should be non-negotiable.