World
Poch: USMNT must aim to match women, win WC
Mauricio Pochettino began his tenure as United States men’s national team coach saying his players should aspire to achieve as much as the American women.
“We are here because we want to win,” he said Friday at his introductory news conference. “We have many examples next to us we need to follow.”
While the U.S. men haven’t reached the World Cup quarterfinals since 2002 and have never won the sport’s top tournament, the American women have won four World Cups and five Olympic gold medals.
“We need to believe we can win the World Cup,” he said.
A 52-year-old Argentine, Pochettino will be coaching a national team for the first time, becoming the 10th U.S. coach in 14 years and its first foreign-born leader since Jurgen Klinsmann from 2011 to 2016. He was hired to replace Gregg Berhalter, who was fired from his second term on July 10, a week after the Americans were eliminated in the first round of the Copa América.
Emma Hayes, who coached at Chelsea before becoming the United States women’s team coach this year, helped recruit her former club colleague.
“I didn’t need to ask. She explained everything,” Pochettino said.
Wearing a dark jacket, a white dress shirt with no tie and a pocket square, Pochettino was flanked by U.S. Soccer Federation president Cindy Parlow Cone, CEO JT Batson and sporting director Matt Crocker, who knew Pochettino from their time together at Southampton a decade ago.
While some have proclaimed the current group the most talented the U.S. has produced, Pochettino was slightly more restrained in his assessment, calling it a “very good generation of players.”
“We need to show that we play like a collective on the pitch,” he said.
Pochettino arrived in the U.S. on Wednesday, a day after his deal was announced, and dined Thursday night with American soccer stakeholders.
His news conference — on Friday the 13th, for those who are superstitious — was in a Warner Bros. Discovery screening room at 30 Hudson Yards on the far west side of the Manhattan borough of New York City, just eight blocks from where Berhalter was introduced at Glasshouse Chelsea on Dec. 4, 2018.
Pochettino has led Espanyol in Spain (2009-12); Southampton (2013-14), Tottenham (2014-19) and Chelsea (2023-24) in England; and Paris Saint-Germain in France (2021-22), leaving after winning a Ligue 1 title.
Pochettino has 637 days before the Americans’ World Cup opener in Inglewood, California, on June 12, 2026. His first games will be friendlies against Panama on Oct. 12 at Austin, Texas, and at Mexico three days later, and his first competitive matches will be in a two-leg Concacaf Nations League quarterfinal in November.
Pochettino is likely to have his full player pool available for just eight one-week training periods before the team gathers ahead of the World Cup. The Americans are thin at goalkeeper and central defense and have had difficulty maintaining on-field discipline.