Christian Pulisic, the face of the USMNT, awaits his World Cup moment
AL RAYYAN, Qatar — Childhood dreams, unbridled and exciting, transported Christian Pulisic from the youth fields of central Pennsylvania to the immaculate pitches of the World Cup. They offered him visions of wearing a U.S. jersey, hand over heart as the national anthem boomed and teammates lined up in a neat row.
The fantasy then took him to kickoff, to an opponent of high esteem and to the opportunity to elevate American soccer from midmajor to menace.
Fanciful aspirations mature. Years pass, marked by enormous achievement in our arenas. The moment arrives.
“I’ve played in some big games. I’ve accomplished a lot,” Pulisic said Wednesday, five days before his expected World Cup debut. “I’ve done a lot of things I want to do, but the World Cup is something on top of all of that, and it’s something when I was a kid in Pennsylvania growing up, 5 to 10 years old, all I thought about was a World Cup, playing for the U.S. team in a World Cup. That’s just been a dream my whole life. I’m sure getting into that moment is going to be special.”
U.S. hopes of making a mark in this competition do not fall entirely on Pulisic; he’s got a promising, if inexperienced, brigade around him. He is, though, the face of this team and the focus of both global attention and opponents’ cynical tactics.
“I don’t really want to add a comment that will put any more pressure on him because he knows what he can do,” said Gio Reyna, a 20year-old
forward. “I know what he can do. The whole team knows what he can do.”
It’s not as though Pulisic, a Chelsea FC attacker, has never played in a top event. He has won the UEFA Champions League, FIFA Club World Cup and German Cup; he also featured in three English FA Cup finals. In all, he has appeared in more than 250 matches with two esteemed European clubs.
The Premier League, considered the world’s best proving ground, has been his home since the summer of 2019. Before a U.S.-record $73 million transfer to Chelsea, he excelled with Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga.
The World Cup, though, is a different beast, a onceevery-four-year exam that draws billions of viewers and captures the attention of casual fans in the United States.
Pulisic was a young charge on a veteran squad that failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, ending a span of seven consecutive appearances. Though Pulisic was not the culprit, he carried the pain, anger and ultimately the motivation to atone for the U.S. failure.
His current teammates appreciate his drive and sense of responsibility to push the program to the next level. Employed by London-based Premier League clubs, Pulisic and Matt Turner, the U.S. team’s probable starting goalkeeper, have sat next to one another a few times on trips to and from U.S. assignments, including this past weekend.
“We were just talking a little bit about [the expectations on Pulisic] because I like to get to know people and what makes them tick,” said Turner, who joined Arsenal last summer from MLS’s New England Revolution. “And he’s just excited. He’s excited to be here. He felt the pain and the heartbreak of the last [qualifying campaign] very personally, I know. So for him to be here now, he’s excited to go and express himself and be on the world stage.”
Though he’s the most well-known U.S. player and the subject of marketing campaigns and TV ads Pulisic said expectations carry no burden.
“I’m very excited for the moment,” he said during an interview session with reporters after training Wednesday. “This is the pinnacle of a lot of people’s careers, playing in a World Cup, representing their country. That’s what I’m here to do. I’m going to do the best I can and representing this country and hope I make everyone back home proud. That’s all I can really do. And as long as I do that, I can walk home proud.”