It might be that time of year where most of us begin to focus on the holiday season, but it is also that time of year where Jurgen Klinsmann needs to consider who he will bring to the January camp.

If he is having one at all.

The U.S. Men’s National Team has held a January camp for several years now, but that streak could be in jeopardy in 2016. Not only was Klinsmann unhappy with some of the fitness levels of his players last January, but he and one of his veterans had a public spat about that topic that did not paint either in the best light. Adding more fuel to the fire is that no friendlies have been announced yet by U.S. Soccer.

Klinsmann has hinted since his arrival to the U.S. program that he could do away with the near-month-long camp or change its structure completely. Should he hold one in January, it seems probable that Klinsmann would use the opportunity to look at some of his regular call-ups, a handful of unproven players, and some of the U.S. Under-23 Men’s National Team figures that will be fighting to win an Olympic berth next March.

Which exact players will Klinsmann select if there is a camp? Here’s a 23-man roster we could see:

Goalkeepers (3): Bill Hamid, Ethan Horvath, Sean Johnson

Defenders (7): Matt Besler, Cameron Carter-Vickers, Matt Hedges, Matt Miazga, Matt Polster, Dillon Serna, Brek Shea

Midfielders (8): Fatai Alashe, Michael Bradley, Mix Diskerud, Ethan Finlay, Julian Green, Jermaine Jones, Sebastian Lletget, Darlington Nagbe, Wil Trapp

Forwards (4): Jozy Altidore, Jerome Kiessewetter, Jordan Morris, Bobby Wood

Some thoughts:

As mentioned above, expect Jurgen Klinsmann to bring in a mix of players. Leading the way, of course, would be the veteran crop, including Michael Bradley, Jermaine Jones, Jozy Altidore, and Matt Besler. Clint Dempsey appears likely to miss out again due to Klinsmann’s desire to continue to look at up-and-coming forwards in the pipeline.

Dempsey’s absence would allow Klinsmann to the opportunity to gauge U.S. Under-23 Men’s National Team starters like Jordan Morris and Jerome Kiesewetter, both of whom have impressed in recent months. Bobby Wood would also be in the mix here given his recent run of form for the Americans’ senior team, and the 2. Bundesliga’s winter break that lasts until February.

One surprise omission here could be Gyasi Zardes, who tied the record in 2015 for most matches played by a U.S. player in a calendar year. Zardes continues to be linked with a move abroad, and a formal transfer from the Galaxy would all but rule him out of this camp. If Zardes stays put in MLS, he would make the cut while someone like Galaxy teammate Sebastian Lletget misses out.

Lletget, however, has to be considered for a call-up. His play with the Galaxy was, at times, very impressive, and Klinsmann may want to see if the midfielder can bring that to the top international level. Other midfielders who Klinsmann is likely to be keen on seeing in an up-close-and-perseonal setting are MLS Cup champion Darlington Nagbe, crafty winger Ethan Finlay, and U.S. U-23 regulars Julian Green, Wil Trapp, and Fatai Alashe. Klinsmann regular Mix Diskerud rounds out the group, edging the aging Kyle Beckerman for a spot.

The defense is where Klinsmann may really opt to go young. Besler is a shoo-in, but after him could come more unproven but talented centerbacks like Matt Miazga, Matt Hedges, and Cameron Carter-Vickers. Out wide, Brek Shea figures to be in Klinsmann’s plans while U-23 players Matt Polster and Dillon Serna are also included. Portland Timbers left back Jorge Villafana deserves inclusion, too, but his impending transfer to Santos Laguna is sure to rule him out of contention.

At goalkeeper, there should be no real surprises. Nick Rimando could be among Klinsmann’s selections to provide guidance and savvy to the younger netminders, but the U.S. coach may just as easily choose three promising prospects. Bill Hamid and Sean Johnson would be safe bets in that scenario while a U.S. U-23 goalkeeper like Ethan Horvath could round out the group of shot-stoppers.