
Christian Pulisic wants you to know he's fine. More than fine, actually — the USMNT's most important attacking player has told reporters he's ready to go the full 90 minutes, and then some, when the United States face Bosnia and Herzegovina in their FIFA World Cup round-of-32 tie on Wednesday. On home soil. In a knockout game. No pressure.
Pulisic confirmed his availability ahead of what is, by any measure, the biggest match of this USMNT generation's World Cup so far. According to ESPN FC, the AC Milan forward said he is fit and ready to go the distance — phrasing that carries real weight when you're talking about a player who has been carefully managed at club level throughout a demanding AC Milan season.
Whether this is routine pre-match messaging from a captain managing the media cycle or a genuine reassurance after a difficult week of preparation, the public declaration lands as a signal — Pulisic is not hiding, not being wrapped in cotton wool, and not asking to be managed.
Note: This report is currently based on ESPN FC. We will update with additional sourcing as further outlets confirm.
There is no version of the USMNT's attacking game that doesn't run through Pulisic. He is the creative engine, the penalty-box threat, the player opposition defences build their press around. When he's on the pitch and operating at full intensity, the US look like a team that can hurt anyone. When he's not — or when he's clearly carrying something — they look considerably more ordinary.
Bosnia and Herzegovina are not a side to be taken lightly in a knockout format. They qualified from their group and will arrive on Wednesday with nothing to lose and everything to prove. The US, playing in front of a home crowd that has been genuinely electric throughout this tournament, will need Pulisic at his sharpest to break them down.
What's telling about Pulisic's declaration isn't just the fitness update — it's the framing. Saying you're ready to go beyond 90 minutes if needed is the language of a player who has decided this is his moment. He didn't say he'd be available. He said he'd go the distance. There's a difference, and he knows it.
The United States have waited a long time for a World Cup on home soil. Pulisic has waited his entire career for a stage this big. Wednesday, he's made clear, he intends to be on it — for as long as it takes.
Christian Pulisic wants you to know he's fine. More than fine, actually — the USMNT's most important attacking player has told reporters he's ready to go the full 90 minutes, and then some, when the United States face…
Fuentes
ESPN FC
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Twenty-four years. Four World Cups. Countless near-misses and early exits. On 2 July 2026, the United States Men's National Team finally ended it — beating Bosnia-Herzegovina 2-0 in the round of 32 to
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Twenty-four years. Four World Cups. Countless near-misses and early exits. On 2 July 2026, the United States Men's National Team finally ended it — beating Bosnia-Herzegovina 2-0 in the round of 32 to