USMNT's Pulisic question: Pochettino plays the waiting game ahead of Australia
The U.S. is one win from topping its World Cup group. The catch: its captain hasn't trained since halftime against Paraguay, and the medical staff still hasn't cleared him.

Christian Pulisic pulled up at halftime of the United States' opening World Cup win over Paraguay on 17 June, and he has not trained with the squad since. Twenty-four hours before kickoff against Australia, the U.S. captain was again working away from the group at the training ground in [training venue], with the team's medical staff still evaluating the calf issue that forced him off in the first game. The picture that emerges from camp, per reporting from CBS Sports and ESPN, is a federation treating one player's availability as a single-file decision rather than a storyline: get the scan, read the scan, decide.
Group D is there for the taking. After a dominant opening result, a victory over Australia on Friday would lock the U.S. into first place and the knockout round. The catch — and it is not a small one — is that Pochettino may have to take the field without the player his system has been quietly built around for the better part of a decade.
A captain, a calf, and the calendar
Pulisic came off at the break of the Paraguay win and immediately dropped into the treatment room. By Thursday afternoon, ESPN's reporting confirmed what CBS Sports had flagged earlier in the day: Pulisic had again trained separately, a day out from the Australia match, as U.S. staff continued to evaluate the calf. Pochettino, asked directly, said the medical team would make the call — not the coaching staff, not the captain. That posture reads as procedural, but it also concedes the obvious: the U.S. is not going to gamble its best attacking player on a muscle injury in a group-stage game, even a meaningful one.
The window matters. World Cup group play gives managers exactly three matches to bank points before the bracket tightens and injuries stop being soft tissue and start being squad-building. A calf strain in match one can be either a footnote or a referendum, depending entirely on what the scan says.
The shape Pochettino would actually play
If Pulisic can't go, the question becomes who takes his minutes. CBS Sports' projected XI in his absence leans on a rotation of wide attackers — Gio Reyna and Tim Weah as the most plausible candidates to absorb the creative load, with Malik Tillman as a third option behind the front line. None of them is Pulisic. None of them, in particular, has his capacity to drift off the right half-space and drag a back line five yards out of shape.
The structural problem is that Pulisic has become the system. Since Pochettino took the job, the U.S. has played through Pulisic on the right more consistently than any other channel — not because the coach is unimaginative, but because the captain is the one player in the pool who reliably turns a controlled possession into a chance inside three touches. Replacing him is not a like-for-like swap. It's a re-arrangement of how the U.S. moves the ball from midfield into the final third, and that re-arrangement has to happen on the field at 9 p.m. local, not in pre-game briefings.
What the group actually looks like
A win over Australia doesn't just send the U.S. through — it determines the texture of the round of 16. Top of Group D draws the runner-up from a group whose top seed is broadly expected to be England; second place likely meets a far more difficult opponent, potentially France if Les Bleus top their own pool. Pochettino and the U.S. federation have been publicly allergic to talk of "managing" the group, and the on-field product against Paraguay suggests they mean it. But the group mathematics are not optional, and they sharpen the calculus around a captain who can't fully extend his right leg.
The alternative read is that Australia, already under pressure after a difficult opening match, will sit deeper and try to spring the U.S. on the counter — exactly the kind of match in which Pulisic's press-resistance and one-v-one dribbling matter most. If Pulisic plays at 80%, the U.S. likely still wins. If he plays at 80% and the calf goes on minute 35, the U.S. loses both the player and the game.
What we don't know
The reporting is clear on the symptom and the process; it is not clear on the verdict. Neither CBS Sports nor ESPN's Thursday reporting included a specific diagnosis, and the U.S. federation has not published a scan result. Pochettino's framing — "the medical staff will decide" — leaves the door open until kickoff, and possibly beyond. The most plausible outcome, given the federation's conservative public posture and the calendar, is that Pulisic is held out as a precaution and returns, if needed, in the group finale. The less reassuring outcome is that the U.S. goes into the knockout round with its best player carrying a calf that has not healed, a familiar trap for favourites in tournament football.
Either way, the decision lands on Pochettino's desk in the next 24 hours. The squad trains once more. The captain, for now, trains alone.
— Monexus framed this as a single-fixture injury story with knock-on bracket implications, rather than as a broader crisis narrative; the U.S. is on track to advance, and the reporting from the camp supports reading Pulisic's absence as precautionary, not structural.