COLUMBUS, Ohio - Multiple times over the last few months, Mauricio Pochettino has responded to questions about American soccer culture. It's not Argentina, he has said. In an ideal world, it would be something like college football. The passion, the togetherness, the pageantry - having recently experienced it, Pochettino was enamored with it. Imagine that atmosphere for U.S. men's national team games.
Fortunately for Pochettino, though, that isn't the case. For all of the benefits of the culture of Argentina or NCAA football, there are downsides - namely the pressure on those who take the field. Every game, every result, regardless of circumstances, matters. Pochettino himself said he believed in that line of thinking at his first news conference when he was hired last year.
That, though, hasn't been the case with the USMNT in 2025, a year in which Pochettino has largely prioritize process over results. With a World Cup looming, those on the outside are finding it harder and harder to trust that process, particularly without any guarantee of what that end result will be. Through all of the noise, Pochettino has continued to experiment and, at least in the short term, that tinkering is not working.
The reason has been clear: Pochettino is desperate for competition within the squad, so much so that he was willing to shake the core of the USMNT to generate it. The problem he's discovered is that the USMNT's core is more important than ever - and more irreplaceable, too. And so the losses have piled up - he has just nine wins in 17 matches since taking over for the fired Gregg Berhalter last year - forcing Pochettino and the USMNT to confront reality. The plan isn't working.
American soccer fans are more patient than most, and Pochettino has alluded to that. However, the time for patience is nearing an end. Soon, the time for results must begin. In the wake of a 2-0 loss to South Korea on Saturday night, Pochettino, rightly, said that a team really doesn't have to win until the World Cup begins.
That may be true, but in the high-pressure environments he's so enamored with, losing this much wouldn't be tolerated. Optics matter. So do results. The good news? This is fixable so long as Pochettino and the USMNT stare down a few harsh truths.




