COMMERCE CITY, Colo. - Folarin Balogun isn't particularly comfortable talking about the spotlight. Strikers are loud, by nature, but Balogun is quiet. He's introverted, he says. His hobbies include sleeping, relaxing and enjoying the comforts of his own home. The spotlight he's now under with the USMNT? In many ways, it's foreign to him.
He's not desperate for attention. He prefers peace and quiet over braggadocio and brazen behavior.
In certain ways, though, Balogun has always sought that attention, even if it does go against his nature. Capturing it has been such a driving force behind everything he's done. As a kid, he didn't dream of scoring goals in front of dozens of people - he dreamed of doing it in front of millions. Balogun may be private off the field but, to get where he's always wanted to be, he's always known that he'd have to make some noise.
Balogun's arrival on the USMNT scene several years ago was loud. He was perhaps the most discussed dual-national prospect in American soccer history. Over the course of just a few months, he went from prospect to savior to - in the blink of an eye - a USMNT player. Throughout that process, that spotlight fixed on him and, even since, it hasn't dimmed.
Despite his injuries and the overall chaos of the USMNT post-2022 World Cup, Balogun has remained the man in focus. Just as much as he was two-and-a-half years ago, Balogun may be the player who will define this USMNT's run to the 2026 World Cup.
"I think the hardest part is that we all work our whole lives for something," Balogun tells GOAL, "but I always have a slightly different outlook. You do that work your whole life, and it is a constant pursuit of greatness. At the end of the day, I think it all comes down to definitive moments. Each of those moments makes a great career. There are certain moments that allow other moments to happen. You get to do something you've dreamed of as a kid and, if you keep scoring, you allow yourself to get that opportunity again and again."
The last two-and-a-half years have been opportunities. Balogun integrated himself with his team, performed under several coaches and grown as a striker amid success, failure and injury issues with his club at Monaco. In some ways, all of that matters. In other ways, none of it does. Everything leading up to the World Cup is great but, ultimately, players make their marks on those stages.
Goals against Japan and Ecuador in pre-World Cup friendlies are nice, of course, but they only really matter if they lead to goals next summer. From the moment U.S. Soccer unveiled him as the next star, that was the target. The World Cup has, and will always be, the measuring stick.
The question, then: can Balogun be the guy for the USMNT? American soccer is eager to find out. So is Balogun himself.
"It's changed as I've gotten older," he says. "I feel like playing in front of big crowds with huge expectations, naturally, brings out the best in me. I'm not someone who would ever, physically or mentally, want to fold under big circumstances. I wouldn't want to fold on myself. I can't let that cross my mind. It's why I enjoy those scenarios. Big games, big rewards, so that's not something I would ever need to be scared of."
No fear as he approaches his next big moment. The road has been winding, and it began with a social media post a few years ago.




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