Balogun, Wright, McKennie, Aaronson, Wright GFXGetty/GOAL

Americans Abroad: Weston McKennie and Juventus set stage for tight Serie A finish while USMNT strikers Daryl Dike and Folarin Balogun both manage milestone goals

The European season is coming to an end. In fact, for several U.S. men's national team stars playing abroad, it ended this weekend. For those that continue to play on, though, the heat is being turned up as races tighten across the game's top leagues.

In England, it was all to play for in the Championship, and Brenden Aaronson and Leeds left with the ultimate prize: the title. He wasn't the only American celebrating after the league's final games of the season. Daryl Dike's season is over, but it ended with a feel-good goal that has been a long-time coming. Haji Wright's season, meanwhile, will continue as the forward helped his team push into the playoff for Premier League promotion.

The race is tight at the top of Serie A, too. While Christian Pulisic, Yunus Musah and Milan won't take the field until Monday, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah and Juventus earned a good-but-not-great result. They entered the weekend one point ahead of Bologna, and there they'll stay after a 1-1 draw that Sunday in which they wasted a 1-0 lead. Now, the top-four race in Serie A has tightened even more, with teams four through eight all separated by four points.

Bigger games are ahead, and the stage is being set for final weeks of the campaign.

GOAL looks at the major takeaways from this weekend's Americans Abroad.

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    Wright leads Coventry's Premier League push

    The Championship season is over, but not for Haji Wright. Coventry City are playoff-bound, and that means Wright is set for the biggest matches of his club career.

    Everyone knows the stakes that come from the promotion playoff. A spot in the Premier League is the prize, but this is about so much more than that. The money is astronomical. The boost to reputation is, too. Players can change the course of their clubs, and their lives, over the course of just a few games.

    Wright and Coventry had some work to do to even get into the playoff, as they went into the final week knowing they needed a result. They got it, taking down fellow hopefuls Middlesbrough, 2-0, to set up what's to come. Coventry will now look ahead to two legs against Sunderland in the coming days as they look to push to the Premier League.

    In many ways, Wright has proven he belongs. Despite playing 16 fewer games than second-leading scorer Jack Rudoni, Wright finished atop the club's goalscoring charts with 12 in 27 matches. It's the type of haul that can elevate a player to a higher level, whether that comes with Coventry or elsewhere.

    We'll find out soon enough where Coventry will be playing next season. Can they survive the high-stakes playoff to get Premier League soccer and all that comes with it? Or will they be one of the three teams to miss out on those riches? Wright will be key, no doubt, as the club heads into some of the biggest games in the world.

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    McKennie and Juve waste opportunity

    On Saturday, reports emerged that Weston McKennie is set to commit to Juventus for the long-haul. That commitment will come with a well-deserved pay raise, but it will also likely come with an understanding that, while McKennie may be locked in, change is coming.

    How much change? That will depend on the next few weeks. It didn't get much clearer on Sunday, as Juventus settled for a 1-1 draw with Bologna. Both teams are among those fighting for a top-four spot, and that fight is even tighter than before with this weekend's results. Juventus still hold onto fourth, but that hold is shaky with Roma, Lazio, Bolgoa and Fiorentina all lurking heading into these final three games.

    McKennie started for Juve, as he so often has this season. Playing in a more advanced midfield position, he created multiple chances and had some good moments in the final-third. He also did his work defensively, making several plays to help Juve initially protect their early lead. He was joined in the XI by Tim Weah, who had a quieter game, but was decent at his wingback spot.

    Sunday will feel like two points dropped, though. Juventus had a chance to put some real separation between themselves and the teams chasing them. Instead, one slip-up could be the difference between a Champions League spot or missing out on Europe entirely.

    The club is walking on a tightrope, and McKennie, Weah and Co. will need to get things right over these final few weeks to keep them balanced.

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    Dike's feel-good moment

    No one deserved a moment like this more than Daryl Dike. Given all he's fought through and, more specifically, come back from, he's more than earned it. Saturday's goal won't make it all worth it - nothing ever will - but it certainly marks a return towards normalcy for a player who has been sidelined far too long.

    On Saturday, Dike scored his first goal since January 2024, helping close West Brom's season with a win over Luton Town. Making his first - and only - start of the season, Dike headed home in the first half to mark his long-awaited comeback.

    Over the last few years, Dike has been plagued by multiple injuries, including two separate Achilles tears. You could see the weight of all of that on his face the moment the ball hit the back of the net.

    "When you have an injury like that," Dike said, "especially the second time around, all the things you think are like 'Is it going to happen again?' Am I going to be the same?' But with training sessions the last few months and games like today, it pushes a little bit of that today and shows I can still do it and be confident in myself."

    Dike can carry that feeling into summer one that, for the first time in a few years, won't all be centered on rehabilitation. Dike will be working to make sure he's ready and fit for next season, one that will hopefully see him get back to his best.

    "I want about six more games now," he said, "but there's another year next year so let's get going."

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    Celebrations and lessons for Aaronson

    It hasn't always been easy for Brenden Aaronson, to put it lightly. The last few years have been challenging and have forced the American midfielder to reckon with some very tough questions. Those doubts are still in the air, particularly after he was left out of the USMNT's CONCACAF Nations League squad.

    This weekend, then, will have been a reward for all of those difficult moments. Aaronson and Leeds already knew they were going up to the Premier League but, on Saturday, they made sure they'd go up in style.

    Thanks to a late a last-gasp goal from Manor Solomon, Leeds earned a 2-1 win over Plymouth Argyle that officially claimed the Championship title. The celebrations were emphatic and they were deserved.

    Leeds earned their place as the Championship's best from start to finish, and it took them just about every second of this season to prove that fact. Aaronson played his part. He finished the season as Leeds' fourth-leading scorer with nine in the Championship.

    A turbulent start to 2025, ultimately, prevented him from running up that total after a strong close to 2024. Still, this was a good year for Aaronson, one that provided both lessons and celebrations in equal measure.

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    Balogun back scoring goals

    Dike wasn't the only one that scored a long-awaited goal this weekend. Folarin Balogun also announced his return with a meaningful goal of his own.

    Balogun netted in Monaco's 3-1 win over Saint-Etienne, ending his own drought that stretched back to October. A series of shoulder issues kept him out of action for most of that time and, since his return in late March, Balogun has been used somewhat sparingly. Handed the start, Balogun scored Monaco's third and final goal, finding the back of the net in the 78th minute.

    While Dike's focus is just getting back to full fitness, Balogun has big aims this summer. His shoulder injury has kept him out of the USMNT picture since Mauricio Pochettino's arrival as manager, which means he'll have a point to prove if he is involved for this summer's Gold Cup. The expectation is that he will be and, with the World Cup on the horizon, every game and every goal will matter.

    That includes this weekend's. It won't be a goal that will live long in fans' memories, but it is one that can help Balogun get back on track. It's also one that helped Monaco move one step closer to Champions League qualification - they sit third in the league with two games remaining.

    It's been a season to forget for Balogun, for sure, but a return to the scoresheet is key for a striker of his caliber.

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    Moments you might have missed

    + A tough defeat for Antonee Robinson and Fulham as they fell, 1-0, to a Champions League-chasing Aston Villa. Robinson played all 90 minutes at left-back.

    + Tyler Adams had some rough moments, but the midfielder helped Bournemouth hold down Arsenal in a come-from-behind 2-1 win for the Cherries.

    + Saturday's clash between Borussia Monchengladbach and Hoffenheim wasn't a good day for any defenders, as Joe Scally's Gladbach scored in the final minutes to earn a 4-4 draw.

    + No minutes for Gio Reyna in Borussia Dortmund's 4-0 beatdown of Wolfsburg. Kevin Paredes was out of action for the losing side with a slight injury.

    + Mark McKenzie missed Toulouse's 2-1 win over Stade Rennes due to suspension.

    + A tough break for Josh Sargent, who will feel like the only player in the Norwich team to not get a goal or assist. The USMNT striker hit the post in a 4-2 win over Ethan Horvath and Cardiff City.

    + Caleb Wiley started and played 78 minutes for Watford in their 1-1 draw with Sheffield to close the club's season.

    + Gianluca Busio and Venezia picked up a point as they continue to try and fight off relegation. The American played 82 minutes in a 1-1 draw with Torino.

    + PSV made short work of Fortuna Sittard, cruising to a 4-1 win. Malik Tillman started and won the most duels in the match with nine, while Richy Ledezma put in a solid 76-minute shift at right-back. Sergino Dest, meanwhile, replaced Ledezma for a late cameo.

    + John Tolkin put in a solid shift at left-wingback to help Holstein Kiel to a crucial 3-1 win over Augsburg. With the win, Kiel are within just one point of 16th, which would give them a chance to stay in the Bundesliga via the league's playoff system.

    + Griffin Yow helped spearhead a huge win for Westerlo as they compete in Belgium's Conference League playoff. Yow scored a late penalty in a 4-2 win over FCV Dender EH while fellow American Bryan Reynolds started at right-back.

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