The Arizona Republic

18-year-old Pulisic shines for U.S. in Honduras matchup

- RONALD BLUM

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Christian Pulisic gallops elegantly past defenders like a gazelle, with the enthusiasm of youth and a sense of positionin­g that belies his inexperien­ce.

At age 18, he’s getting significan­t playing time at European power Borussia Dortmund. And he’s American. “I just think he’s so much further ahead than I was or than any of us were at that age,” Landon Donovan said.

A week after becoming just the seventh American to score in the Champions League — and the youngest — Pulisic got one goal and set up three others Friday in the United States’ 6-0 rout of Honduras in a critical World Cup qualifier.

“He’s a great player. He can beat people one-on-one on the dribble. He creates mismatches because of that,” Clint Dempsey said after Pulisic assisted on two of his three goals.

Before Pulisic became an American phenom, he was a wunderkind in Germany. He left Hershey, Pa., to sign with Borussia Dortmund in February 2015 and made his Bundesliga debut on Jan. 30 last year. He had two goals in 12 appearance­s, becoming the youngest foreigner to score in the Bundesliga.

He has five goals and eight assists in 31 club appearance­s this season, and has scored this month in the Bundesliga, German Cup and Champions League.

“Playing in more big games there, it’s just gaining experience,” he said.

No. 10 jerseys in soccer have a mystique, assigned to the best players on teams like Pele, Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi.

Donovan was 24 when he took over as the American No. 10 following captain Claudio Reyna’s retirement in 2006. Pulisic was 17 years, 349 days, when he inherited the jersey last Sept. 2 — then coach Jurgen Klinsmann attributed the decision to equipment manager Jesse Bignami. Pulisic scored twice that day at St. Vincent and the Grenadines — the youngest U.S. player with a goal in World Cup qualifying.

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