GOAL: You've been very vocal and critical about some of your colleagues, former USMNT stars such as Alexi Lalas and Landon Donovan, being critical of stars on the current team, especially Christian Pulisic. And after a quiet July, it's ramped up again after the latest documentary episodes. What's your feeling about all of this now?
BALBOA: It's my national team. It's everybody's national team. I've played for it. I represented it in three World Cups. Tell me, what good does it do for me to bash Christian Pulisic or Tim Weah because they wanted a break? It makes no sense to me. I'm not out to get clicks and likes on on on Instagram, or anything like on Twitter, or X or whatever you want to call it - that's not necessarily who I am... I don't know the pressure [Pulisic is feeling]. I know the pressure of how I felt, and I know what we had to do. But I can't tell you how Christian Pulisic feels. I can't tell you how Tim Weah feels. They're playing 50-plus games a year. I didn't play in Europe the way he does...
So my goal is that we all want to see soccer grow. We want to see this team do well. Why are we beating up our own people? Why are we wasting our time beating each other up when we know all we're asking him is to make sure he got his rest, and now that you got your rest, you know what? Come back hungry. Come back ready to f*cking fight for this country. Now, you had your break. Great. Now, come back and get it done.
GOAL: That's a fair point. Do you think Christian added fuel to the fire by responding to the critics in his own documentary?
BALBOA: Why is it OK for these ex players to knock these guys, though? That's my question. Why is it OK? They could have stopped it a long time ago to support your team, but that's not what they want. They want to wind people up. They're getting paid to do their podcast, so they're getting everybody fired up, which is great. Listen, I love it, don't get me wrong. I love the banter, but at the end of the day, I think Tim Weah said it best: "What have we won?" What has any other generation from the Landon Donovan era all the way down, what have they won? So what if [the current squad] didn't win anything? It's just like they haven't it.
So I get it... And again, it does us no good. We're more focused on beating each other up right now, the ex players against the new players. the new players vs. the ex players, than anything else. Just let them focus on their job... Playing in a World Cup is not easy. Preparing for a World Cup is not easy. Becoming a professional athlete, it's not easy. Now, you've got to play a World Cup at home. You know how much pressure that is? Not any other player can tell you - except for the 22 players that played in '94, those guys - can tell you how much pressure it is to play at home. You don't need your own country, your own ex players, beating you up while you're trying to get prepared for the biggest tournament in the world.
And that legacy is going to be left by them doing something special, getting out of the group, getting into a quarterfinal. Or it's going to put a big black cloud over their careers, and over their national careers, because they don't get out of the group.
GOAL: What advice would you give them then?
My advice is, the same as always... It's very easy to be negative around people... Be positive, let it go. You know? I mean, let it go. Because at the end of the day, you're the one stepping on the field. We're not, we've already done it. You've got to get ready for this World Cup... Who cares what they say at the end of the day? Who cares what the ex players are saying, and who cares? You've got to do your job.
You do your job in a year from now and who is going to say anything to you? Landon's not going to do the job, [Eric] Wynalda's not going to do the job. They've had their time. At the end of the day, we want something special this World Cup. This is the coming out party for soccer in the United States. We need to have this group in sync. We need this group to fight, to scratch, to do something special in this World Cup, because this is going to be a huge turning point in soccer in this country.