Sunday, July 5, 2026

Pochettino's Eventful Weekend

The USMNT Celebrated Before Hosting Belgium on Monday

Mauricio Pochettino has spent the days leading into Monday's Round of 16 clash with Belgium immersed in the same full-hearted embrace of American life that's defined his tenure, and he'll enter the match with his full squad at his disposal after all.

The Argentine coach capped a whirlwind stretch of cultural assimilation with a ceremonial first pitch before Friday's Blue Jays-Mariners game at T-Mobile Park, having taken batting tips from goalkeeper Matt Turner beforehand. It capped a run that's included everything from a newfound country music obsession to leading "U-S-A" chants to celebrating Independence Day by wishing American reporters a "happy birthday." Yet for all his affection for his adopted home, Pochettino was unequivocal about his identity: "I am 200% Argentine. … I am 200% Argentino, sorry. I'm not going to lie, I'm not going to lie."

The relief of having Folarin Balogun available removes what looked like a genuine selection headache. The striker had been facing a one-match suspension after a controversial red card against Bosnia and Herzegovina—a call Pochettino himself dismissed as "a normal action that happened because by accident. … Never a red card." With Balogun back in the fold, Pochettino avoids having to choose between starting Ricardo Pepi or Haji Wright, or shifting Christian Pulisic into a more central attacking role.

Midfielder Tyler Adams had struck a confident tone about the group's ability to adjust regardless, saying the team has "been flexible" no matter who's asked to step up. Beyond the roster clarity, Pochettino continues framing the tournament in his signature terms—moonshots, belief, touching greatness—as the U.S. chases a first-ever multi-game knockout run at a home World Cup, with a quarterfinal date against Spain or Portugal awaiting the winner.

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