Atlanta, GA
World Cup Atlanta: Team and superstar player cheat sheet for casual fans
US national soccer team selects 26 home turf players
United States players gather for training as the 26-man tournament roster is officially locked in. The veteran defensive unit and an attacking core led by dangerous wingers prepare for a major summer performance on home soil. The squad faces its first big test in Los Angeles on June 12th.
ATLANTA – With the world’s biggest sporting event arriving in Georgia, Mercedes-Benz Stadium—officially referred to as “Atlanta Stadium” for the tournament—is set to host eight highly anticipated matches. For casual sports fans, the influx of international teams can feel overwhelming.
From European powerhouses to historic underdogs, some of the most famous athletes on the planet are headed to downtown Atlanta. This quick-reference cheat sheet will get you up to speed on the major teams and household names to watch.
MEET THE U.S. MEN’S NATIONAL TEAM
Spain anchors the Atlanta group stage marquee
Favorites to watch:
Three-time European champions Spain will be the highest-profile team playing in Atlanta during the opening group stage, featuring in two separate match dates. The star-studded squad will face Cabo Verde on June 15, followed by a clash against Saudi Arabia on June 21.
BARCELONA, SPAIN – MAY 10: Lamine Yamal of FC Barcelona celebrates the victory during the LaLiga EA Sports match between FC Barcelona and Real Madrid CF at Spotify Camp Nou on May 10, 2026 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by Eric Alonso/Getty Images)
Spain’s roster features a blend of veteran leadership and electrifying youth. The biggest name to know is teenage prodigy Lamine Yamal, the young Barcelona winger whose dazzling dribbling and historic performances have captured global attention. Alongside him is midfield anchor Rodri, widely considered one of the tactically smartest and most dominant players in modern soccer. Expect Spain to control possession and showcase the fast, precise passing style that made them a global soccer empire.
BARCELONA, SPAIN – MARCH 31: Rodri of Spain looks on during an international friendly match between Spain and Egypt at RCDE Stadium on March 31, 2026 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)
Morocco brings World Cup pedigree back to downtown
The ultimate dark horses:
Morocco captured the hearts of sports fans worldwide with their historic, history-making run to the semifinals at the last World Cup. They bring that same fierce, defensive-minded energy to Atlanta on June 24 when they face off against Haiti.
The Moroccan squad is spearheaded by world-class right-back Achraf Hakimi, a lightning-fast defender who plays his club soccer for Paris Saint-Germain. Adding creative spark to their attack is Real Madrid midfielder Brahim Díaz, who recently committed his international future to Morocco. Known for their passionate fan base and incredibly disciplined defensive structure, Morocco’s match is expected to be one of the loudest and most energetic atmospheres of the summer.
PARIS, FRANCE – APRIL 28: Achraf Hakimi of PSG during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 Semi Final First Leg match between Paris Saint-Germain and FC Bayern München at Parc des Princes on April 28, 2026 in Paris, France. (Photo by Lionel Hahn/Getty I
Underdogs and rising stars
Competitive challengers:
The remaining group-stage matches in Atlanta feature incredibly balanced, competitive squads capable of pulling off massive tournament upsets. On June 18, Czechia squares off against South Africa, while Congo DR faces Uzbekistan on June 27.
- Czechia: Led by towering West Ham midfielder Tomáš Souček and clinical striker Patrik Schick, the Czechs rely on physical dominance, aerial strength, and dangerous set-pieces.
- South Africa: Navigating their way out of a tough Group A, “Bafana Bafana” features goalkeeper Ronwen Williams, who gained international fame for his historic penalty-saving heroics.
- Uzbekistan: Making noise on the global stage, the Uzbek side is led by veteran striker Eldor Shomurodov, a proven goal-scorer with extensive experience in Italy’s top flight.
The Source: This article includes information from official match schedules and group drawings published by FIFA, official squad lists from the Royal Spanish Football Federation and the Royal Moroccan Football Federation, and official tournament previews from the Atlanta World Cup Host Committee.
Atlanta, GA
Missing East Point man’s family pleads for answers as police search enters 4th week
An East Point family is pleading for answers nearly a month after a 20-year-old man disappeared after visiting a local Target store.
According to East Point police, Derek Samuel was last seen April 29 at the Target on Marketplace Boulevard before he walked out of the store and vanished.
Family members said Samuel had been driven to the store by friends. Investigators later located his cell phone in a wooded area behind the shopping center, though police have not publicly identified any suspects in the case.
Samuel’s mother, Nishae Samuel, described her son as cheerful, outgoing and someone who always tried to make others laugh.
“He’s goofy. He’s always smiling, he’s always happy,” she said. “I’ve never really seen my kid sad for real, you know, or upset.”
The family says Samuel dreamed of starting his own clothing line and enjoyed gaming and spending time with friends. Surveillance footage reportedly captured him leaving the East Point Target and walking toward Commerce Drive before disappearing.
His mother said the disappearance has taken a heavy emotional toll on Samuel’s siblings, including his twin sister.
“They’re staying strong in this. We’re praying together, we’re trusting God’s plan in this,” she said.
The family is also asking people to avoid spreading misinformation about the case online and instead contact investigators directly with credible tips.
“I just want them to understand that we do need our privacy at this point in time,” Samuel said. “If they do have any information pertaining to my son, just contact East Point Police.”
Police say a $15,000 reward is being offered for information that helps investigators in the case.
Atlanta, GA
NFL Network Names Atlanta Falcons QB as ‘Make or Break’ Player, We Add 5 More
The Atlanta Falcons aren’t quite starting over, but there is a lot of new involved with the organization from the top down. One of the factors that made the Falcons an enticing job when nearly 1/3 of teams in the league had head coach openings was the core of young playmakers that had been acquired through years of high draft picks.
Quarterback Michael Penix Jr. was one of those players, taken with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft. He deputized Kirk Cousins as a rookie before taking over the job full-time with three games remaining. He didn’t quite grow into the bona fide franchise quarterback in year two, before suffering an ACL injury that sidelined him after Week 11.
With a new front office and coaching staff in place, who didn’t draft Penix, NFL Network’s Nick Shook rightly placed Penix Jr. among his 11 players around the league who are in a make-or-break season. Penix is battling both Tua Tagovailoa and his recovery timeline to win, and more importantly, solidify a starting job in Atlanta.
“When he does take the field, though, the pressure will be on,” Shook wrote on NFL Network. “As a former top-10 pick whose brief success as a rookie largely pushed Kirk Cousins out of Atlanta, Penix will be expected to prove he’s continuing to develop, something he struggled to demonstrate in his second season before it ended abruptly with his third ACL tear. Hopefully, he’ll have most of the season to try to make it happen. Otherwise, questions regarding his future will only grow.”
Early mock drafts had the Atlanta Falcons picking an offensive tackle in the top 10 next season. But the fatal flaw in that logic is if the Falcons are selecting top 10 next season, they’ve failed at the quarterback position, and will be targeting a new quarterback in the 2027 draft.
Shook is right, this is potentially a make-or-break year for Penix, but he’s not alone. Let’s take a look at five more Atlanta Falcons who are facing pivotal years.
What about Tua?
It’s not just Penix. The Miami Dolphins took on an NFL record $100 million dead cap hit rather than keep Tua Tagovailoa on the roster. Tagovailoa, still just 28, has a chance to revive his career under Kevin Stefanski in Atlanta and be the next Sam Darnold or Baker Mayfield. But if he can’t win and hold onto the job over Penix, he may be seen as a career backup, at best, moving forward.
Remember that guy who single-handedly beat the Saints?
To borrow a line from Coach Carter – “We don’t see Troy Andersen much, but when we do, it’s spectacular.”
Andersen was last seen wrecking the New Orleans Saints in September of 2024. He had 17 tackles, a pick-six, and was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week. He was also hurt in that game. He made a brief attempt at a comeback, but like too many Falcons in the last two years, he was re-injured and hasn’t played since Week 14 of 2024.
Because he missed so much time, his contract didn’t move forward, so the Falcons still had rights on his rookie deal. They restructured it, and he’ll get one final chance to prove he belongs in the NFL.
The new guy
Atlanta signed Jahan Dotson, hoping to improve its lackluster wide receiver room. Doton’s numbers are nothing to write home about. He has 478 yards receiving in the last two seasons combined. But that doesn’t tell the whole story. Buried on the depth chart behind DeVonta Smith and A.J. Brown, targets were hard to come by for Dotson.
He’ll get the chance to prove in Atlanta that he’s a legit WR2 in this league and drastically improve on the $7.5 million the Falcons are paying him this season.
Can a Four-Year Starter be Make-or-Break?
Left guard Matthew Bergeron is in a contract year. He has been solid, if not spectacular, as a three-year starter. Like many of the players on offense, he regressed in 2025. His rookie contract got him a raise from $1.6 million last season to $3.9 million in 2026.
26 guards make at least $10 million per season, according to Spotrac. If Bergeron can establish himself this year as a better-than-average player at his position, he’ll triple his money again next year.
Boom or bust on the DL
Like Bergeron, defensive lineman Zach Harrison is entering a contract year. He was in the midst of a breakout season last year with 3.5 sacks in the first six games. He was injured against the San Francisco 49ers in Week 7.
He missed two games before some roster mismanagement saw him return and play a career high 47 snaps against the Colts after returning from injury. He was reinjured and didn’t take another snap all season.
He’s an ideal fit as a pass-rushing 3-4 defensive end and can do a job kicking inside to defensive tackle every once in a while.
But he’s got to stay on the field.
Honorable Mention: CB Clark Phillips III, DT Maason Smith, LB Christian Harris
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Atlanta, GA
Atlanta airport starts mandatory Ebola screenings for some travelers
ATLANTA – U.S. citizens arriving from three African nations are now undergoing health checks at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport as officials try to stop the spread of a deadly Ebola outbreak.
The screening program, which expanded to Atlanta on Saturday, requires travelers to complete health questionnaires and temperature checks before they can continue their onward travel.
Atlanta airport Ebola screening: Mandatory checks hit major hubs
What we know:
The CDC is partnering with federal agencies like U.S. Customs Border Patrol and the state health department to manage this effort.
Travelers arriving from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda and South Sudan must go through temperature monitoring and fill out a brief health questionnaire. Monday marks the third full day of these screenings at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
If travelers are cleared to leave the airport, they will be monitored for 21 days by a state health department at their final destination.
Officials are watching for symptoms such as vomiting, bleeding, diarrhea and fever. Anyone suspected of having the virus will be taken directly to a local hospital, which would very likely be Emory University Hospital.
Ebola screenings start at Atlanta airport
U.S. citizens arriving from three African nations are now undergoing mandatory health checks at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport as officials try to stop the spread of a deadly virus outbreak.
Local perspective:
Hundreds of thousands of soccer fans from around the globe are expected to fly into Atlanta, one of the host cities for the World Cup in just a few weeks.
Dr. Robin Dretler, an infectious disease physician at Emory Decatur Hospital and a board member with the Infectious Disease Society of America, said the expanded airport screenings will help prevent the virus from landing on U.S. shores. Dretler noted that health workers are doing the proper screening both at Dulles and for travelers coming directly to Atlanta.
Dr. Cecil Bennett, the medical director with Newnan Family Medicine Associates, emphasized that the most critical step is running these proper screenings before an individual ever boards an aircraft to travel to the United States.
What we don’t know:
It is currently unclear exactly how many passengers have been screened at the airport since the program began this week. Airport officials referred questions regarding tracking metrics to the CDC, but representatives have not yet responded to requests for comment.
The backstory:
At least 220 people have died from a rare strain of Ebola during this current outbreak, and there is no vaccine available. The screening measure was rolled out progressively across the United States to capture arriving traffic, starting first at Dulles Internation in Washington DC, expanding later to Bush International in Houston, and now to Atlanta.
Dig deeper:
Medical experts worry that drastic policy moves and federal funding cuts have severely reduced the nation’s capacity to track and curb global diseases. The Trump administration made deep budget cuts at the CDC, withdrew from the World Health Organization, eliminated the U.S. Agency for International Development and reduced health aid specifically targeted for the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Dr. Dretler stated that federal budget cuts mean there are fewer epidemiologists available to investigate deadly outbreaks and fewer resources to manage them. He noted that there are far fewer people at the CDC even to perform testing on biological samples, leaving the health infrastructure much more vulnerable than it was just two years ago.
Dr. Bennett added that the United States used to have boots on the ground anywhere a concerning virus emerged, but federal cuts to USAID and other critical agencies mean officials are now finding out about outbreaks after the fact. Dr. Dretler warned that gutting the ability to detect these threats leaves the public less on top of mutating risks, stating that the country is certainly much endangered from diseases anywhere else in the world.
What they’re saying:
Medical experts emphasize that the risk of catching the virus while flying on planes or walking through the terminal remains low.
“It’s not a virus that transmits easily like COVID; the coronavirus transmits easily by respiratory spread Ebola needs close contact,” said Dr. Barney Graham, who leads the David Satcher Global Health Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine and has worked on Ebola vaccines. He added that these types of outbreaks are most dangerous to healthcare providers because of the close contact required for patient care.
Federal officials state that the restrictions are based on previous screening successes. “We are providing the traveling public an assessment and next steps based regarding their on ward movement based on that screening,” Captain Satish Pillai, M.D. stated, noting that the CDC and Custom Border Patrol conduct this type of work successfully with state health departments.
While the screening may not be obvious because people taken away to a certain location, some international passengers noted that warning signs are visible in the terminal. “We saw a sign that said if you are travelling for certain countries be aware of symptoms,” said Mark Lippins, a traveler who returned from Scotland on Monday.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from interviews with passenger Mark Lippins and Dr. Barney Graham of the Morehouse School of Medicine, as well as official statements from the CDC and Custom Border Patrol. Additional information comes from Dr. Robin Dretler and Dr. Cecil Bennett.
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