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For Tyler Adams, Christian Pulisic, and the USMNT, it’s time to prove themselves at the World Cup

The U.S. men have won just nine of the 37 games they've ever played at World Cups and haven't won two group games in one tournament since 1930. Those are the stakes as this team's opener arrives.

Tyler Adams (right) getting to work at Friday's U.S. practice, on the eve of the team's World Cup opener.
Tyler Adams (right) getting to work at Friday's U.S. practice, on the eve of the team's World Cup opener.Read moreJonathan Tannenwald / Staff

IRVINE, Calif. — There is no question that this U.S. men’s soccer team has players with talent and pedigree like never before. Even some of their predecessors, who are as prone to claiming “back in my day” as in any other sport, have said as much lately.

Now, at last, the time has arrived to prove it. For all the pomp and circumstance that Friday’s World Cup opener against Paraguay (9 p.m., Fox29, Telemundo 62) will bring, it also will serve as the ultimate measuring stick.

This is the 12th men’s World Cup in which a U.S. squad has taken part. In the first 11, going all the way back to the inaugural edition in 1930, the Americans have played 37 games.

They have won just nine.

It’s not just that number, sitting alongside 20 losses and eight ties. It’s that the U.S. men haven’t won two games in a group stage since that 1930 tournament. They haven’t won two games in a single tournament since 2002, when they reached the quarterfinals with a round of 16 win over Mexico.

That, in turn, still stands as the only World Cup knockout-round win in program history. And the fact that it came against the opponent the U.S. knows best in the world means that while there isn’t an asterisk, it’s still not the same as beating a team from elsewhere.

» READ MORE: Meet the 26 players on the 2026 U.S. men’s soccer World Cup team

Can this be the summer when that finally changes? And if so, what will it take?

“I think the maturity of the group now, I would say,” U.S. midfield star and longtime leader Tyler Adams said at Friday’s practice. “I know we’ve got some faces [for whom] it will be their first experience in the World Cup. But that being said, they’re all playing at a high level somewhere in the world, if not in MLS, and they’re all going to be able to contribute at a high level.”

The U.S.’s group is easier than others, lacking a European or South American superpower and coincidentally having three rematches of friendlies from last year. A smaller gap in talent means intangibles like mentality and home-field advantage might make a difference.

“I think just continuing to put in good performances, and believing,” said Christian Pulisic, the Americans’ most important playmaker. “I think having the confidence that we’re able to beat anyone, I think that’s what it is. And I think we’ve gained some experience, especially the last World Cup, a lot of guys being around, and now we have an opportunity to prove it.”

» READ MORE: First up for the U.S. men’s national team? Paraguay. Here are our predictions for America’s World Cup opener.

Indeed, Pulisic and Adams are among 13 players on this World Cup squad — exactly half the roster — who were also in Qatar in 2022. But the message has also gotten through to players who weren’t, such as fast-rising defender Alex Freeman.

“I feel like for us it’s having, that confidence in ourselves,” he said. “Knowing that we’re on home soil and it’s a different type of environment, knowing that we have the fans behind us. Now it’s kind of just to show what we can do, knowing that on the field it’s going to be a different type of confidence, different type of intensity that we’ll have to show.”

And how did they feel on game day eve?

“A good nervous, I feel like,” Adams said “I’ve never get nervous for games, but I just feel like … it just feels really real in the moment. And I’m to get out there with this group of guys, because I’m confident in what we can do.”

» READ MORE: ‘I’m ready,’ USMNT star centerback Chris Richards says as he finishes his comeback from injury

Adams wasn’t on the squad when the U.S. beat Paraguay in Chester last November because of an injury suffered a few days before that game. So when asked if that game matters now, his first answer was, “I mean, I didn’t play in it, so to me it doesn’t matter.”

But after the laughs all around that ensued, he agreed that the experience does help the team overall.

“It is nice when you’re breaking down film of an opponent, and you’re breaking down watching with players that we have on the field,” he said. “So I think for a lot of guys, it was probably a good experience.”

Freeman was on the field and became the center of attention when a brawl broke out at the end of the game. That was the latest lesson for the 21-year-old defender, who made a big move from Orlando City to Spain’s Villarreal two months later.

» READ MORE: Matt Freese vs. Matt Turner: The USMNT starting goalkeeper duel could go down to the wire

“I think for me and the team, we know how intense it is, right? And aggressive as well,” he said. “We feel like in those games, it’s going to be kind of the battle, who can strike first. I think for us, it’s to be aggressive first — I think we want to be those people that can go and make the game the way we want to do.”

So, here they are, in the final hours before the biggest game of their lives, with the opportunity for more biggest games of their lives afterward.

“It’s not quite here — still got another day,” Pulisic said. “But definitely feeling more real, getting excited.”

And Adams gave one more rallying cry, adding to the list of them he has given.

» READ MORE: Tyler Adams isn’t as worried as fans are about the USMNT’s lack of defensive midfield depth

“This is, for me, the biggest opportunity to just really grow the game, to inspire people, to show that American players are at the level of the rest of the world,” he said. “I’m not going to say it’s difficult to showcase that week in week out when you’re playing abroad, but that’s not the collective. Now you have a group of Americans playing together at a high level — let’s show everyone what we’re capable of doing.”

Earlier today, Tyler Adams was asked about the burden Christian Pulisic has carried on his shoulders for a decade as the biggest #USMNT star. Here was Adams' eloquent response, and what Pulisic said a few minutes later about whether he feels less of a burden now: www.inquirer.com/soccer/world...

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— Jonathan Tannenwald (@jtannenwald.bsky.social) June 11, 2026 at 3:07 PM
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