John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images

Christian Pulisic, USMNT Earn Draw vs. New Zealand as Fans Ready for Pochettino Era

Timothy Rapp

The United States men's national team looked fairly lifeless through the first hour or so of Tuesday's friendly against New Zealand, a reminder that freshly-appointed head coach Mauricio Pochettino might indeed have his work cut out for him.

And then Christian Pulisic happened.

The USMNT's star winger, brought on as a substitute in the 57th minute, broke a scoreless deadlock in the 69th minute, providing his country with a spark in what was ultimately a 1-1 draw.

The good feelings didn't last long.

Just 20 minutes a series of defensive blunders squandered the USMNT's lead, with the look of anguish on Matt Turner's face reflected by American supporters tuning in:

And so fans and pundits alike were of two minds.

The first was that Pulisic was yet again deserving of high marks:

The second, however, was that the USMNT provided a fairly listless performance—albeit in a meaningless friendly with an interim manager at the helm—and that the Pochettino era can't begin soon enough:

A few points of context to consider.

The first is that the USMNT did appear to score a goal in the first half but had it disallowed, a surprise given there was no VAR in the match.

Another is that there has been a general sense of uncertainty around this team while the Pochettino hiring—which was rumored for weeks—was being finalized. Playing a meaningless friendly under a manager who is simply a placeholder isn't the easiest type of match to get up for.

Those aren't excuses, of course—the United States has far too much talent to draw with New Zealand. There is plenty to clean up in the Pochettino era after Gregg Berhalter's tenure ended with enduring mediocrity.

   

Read 0 Comments

Download the app for comments Get the B/R app to join the conversation

Install the App
×
Bleacher Report
(120K+)