On This Day in 2024, Pochettino Named US Head Coach After Copa America Collapse
On September 10, Mauricio Pochettino was named head coach of the U.S. Men's National Team, becoming the most high-profile appointment in program history and marking the end of a summer that had exposed American soccer's glaring limitations. Just two months earlier, Gregg Berhalter had been dismissed following a devastating Copa América campaign that saw the United States eliminated in the group stage of a tournament they were hosting — the first time in program history they had failed to advance from the first round of a major tournament on home soil. The humiliation had been complete: a shocking defeat to Panama, a lifeless performance against Uruguay, and the crushing realization that a generation of American talent had stagnated under conservative tactics and risk-averse leadership.
However, Pochettino's path to becoming the architect of American soccer's renaissance began not in the boardrooms of U.S. Soccer, but across three of Europe's most demanding leagues, where he had established himself as one of the continent's most respected tactical innovators. The former Argentina international had forged his reputation through transformative spells at Southampton, Tottenham, Paris Saint-Germain, and Chelsea, developing a philosophy built on high-intensity pressing, youth development, and fearless attacking football. His crowning achievement came in 2019 when he guided Tottenham to their first-ever Champions League final, overseeing one of the most dramatic semifinal comebacks in the competition's history against Ajax Amsterdam.
At Paris Saint-Germain, Pochettino had managed a galaxy of superstars including Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappé, and Neymar, delivering a Ligue 1 title while navigating the unique pressures of elite European football. Even at Chelsea, where his tenure lasted just one season, he had demonstrated his ability to develop young talent, with the Blues finishing strongly to secure European qualification despite a turbulent campaign that ended in mutual separation just months earlier.
U.S. Soccer Sporting Director Matt Crocker had been methodically pursuing Pochettino for weeks, drawing on their previous relationship during Crocker's time as academy director at Southampton, where Pochettino had first announced himself in English football. The courtship had intensified after Berhalter's dismissal in July, with what Crocker described as "a big sales pitch" during a five-hour meeting in Barcelona that was originally scheduled to last two hours. The challenge for U.S. Soccer was not just convincing Pochettino of the project's potential, but also navigating the financial complexities of his departure from Chelsea and securing the resources necessary to meet his substantial salary expectations.
The appointment represented a philosophical revolution for American soccer. Unlike his predecessors, who had largely embraced pragmatic, defensively-minded approaches, Pochettino brought a commitment to proactive, high-energy football that encouraged risk-taking and creative expression. His teams at Tottenham and PSG had been renowned for their pressing intensity and ability to transition quickly from defense to attack, qualities that perfectly aligned with the athleticism and pace that defined the current generation of American players. More significantly, Pochettino's track record of developing young talent offered hope for a player pool that had shown flashes of brilliance but lacked the tactical sophistication to compete consistently against elite opposition.
When Pochettino appeared via video message at TQL Stadium before the team's friendly against New Zealand, speaking in both English and Spanish to acknowledge his new constituency, he emphasized the journey ahead rather than past disappointments. "The decision to join U.S. Soccer wasn't just about football for me; it's about the journey that this team and this country are on," he declared, recognizing that his appointment carried implications far beyond tactical adjustments. He understood that American soccer was approaching a crossroads, with the 2026 World Cup on home soil representing either validation of two decades of development or another missed opportunity for a program still searching for its identity on the global stage.
Pochettino's mandate was unlike any in U.S. Soccer history. With less than two years to prepare for a World Cup that would unfold primarily across American stadiums, he was tasked with not only improving results but fundamentally altering the team's mentality. The talent pool at his disposal was undeniably the strongest in program history — from Christian Pulisic and Tyler Adams to Yunus Musah and Ricardo Pepi — yet these players had consistently underperformed in crucial moments. His challenge would be instilling what Pulisic described as "that winning mentality, in every moment on the field," something that had remained frustratingly elusive despite the individual quality within the squad.