Christian Pulisic is no stranger to pressure. The outside world has put it on his shoulders since he was a kid. From the moment he broke onto the scene, Pulisic has had the weight of American soccer on his shoulders. An introvert at heart, he never really sought it out; it was thrust upon him.
This summer, though, was different. For the first time, Pulisic, willingly or unwillingly, invited that pressure. Now, as the Serie A season begins, he has to answer like never before. For the first time, Pulisic is under pressure of his own making.
All of that stems from this summer. Pulisic's controversial decision to skip out on the Gold Cup prompted a generation-splitting war of words. Former USMNT players accused him and his teammates of being soft. The current squad fired back, with Pulisic barking at those who would question his commitment and Tim Weah accusing those critics of being "evil" and just "cashing checks."
It's overshadowed just about every aspect of the U.S. men's national team one year out from the World Cup and, as the face of the team, Pulisic is facing that heat, fairly or unfairly.
From the start, Pulisic has shown that he doesn't like answering challenges with words. It's what made his PULISIC docuseries on Paramount + - episodes of which continue to add fuel to this fire - so out of character for him. Since he burst onto the scene, Pulisic has been largely uncomfortable with the idea of talking, particularly about himself.
Now, it's all anyone wants to talk about. Pulisic will look to answer the criticism the only way he really knows how, and it turns out it's also the best way to extinguish this particular fire. The face of the USMNT may have to mend some fences, but his best approach is to just play his way through it.
And his ability to do so - or not - will help define the USMNT's road to the 2026 World Cup.
Pulisic made his decision this summer. Whether it was right or wrong remains up for debate. The man himself now has a chance to silence that discussion - or at least turn down the volume. He's put pressure on himself but, if he can perform, it might serve as evidence that he did, ultimately, make the right call this summer.




