Eleven days. That’s all that stands between the United States Men’s National Team and a home World Cup opener. And if Sunday’s thrilling 3-2 win over Senegal at a rocking Bank of America Stadium is anything to go by? America might be ready.

Goals from Sergiño Dest, Christian Pulisic and Folarin Balogun gave Mauricio Pochettino’s side a nervy but deserved victory in front of a euphoric pro-American crowd of 57,741 in Charlotte. It wasn’t always pretty — Sadio Mané made sure of that — but the performance had exactly what the USMNT needed most heading into the tournament. And that thing? Christian Pulisic, finally, gloriously, scoring a goal.
Dest Opens, Pulisic Exorcises His Demons
The US started like a team with something to prove. After back-to-back losses to Portugal and Belgium in March, Pochettino’s men came out sharp and hungry on home turf.

It took just seven minutes for the breakthrough. Ricardo Pepi unlocked the Senegal defence with a clever touch between two defenders, freeing Pulisic down the left. His low cross was inch-perfect, finding Dest in full stride for a clean, one-touch finish at the top of the six-yard box. The stadium erupted.

Then came the moment Charlotte had been waiting for. Pepi again — this time collecting a forward ball from young Alex Freeman and threading a perfectly weighted through pass into Pulisic’s path. Captain America rounded goalkeeper Mory Diaw and steered it inside the near post. He dropped to his knees, bellowed a scream that was equal parts joy and pure relief, and embraced Pepi and Dest like a man who hadn’t scored in five months — because, well, he hadn’t.
His last goal for club or country had come in a Milan win over Hellas Verona back on December 28. Twenty-seven games of drought, over just like that.
“I mean it’s just great to score again,” Pulisic said post-match. “Hopefully people can stop talking about it. I feel great.”

Pochettino was equally relieved: “After a long time, a few months, he scored again. Obviously, that is important for our players in the preparation to the World Cup.”
Mané Reminds Everyone Why He’s Still Elite

Just when the US looked set to coast, Sadio Mané had other ideas. The former Liverpool great, now 34 and still somehow this dangerous, pulled one back with a cheeky finish right before halftime — assisted in part by a defensive mix-up from Miles Robinson. It was exactly the kind of moment that reminded you this Senegal squad, packed with Premier League talent including Nicolas Jackson, Iliman Ndiaye and Pape Matar Sarr, is no pushover.

Pochettino made a massive ten changes at the break — essentially fielding a second XI — and Mané pounced immediately to make it 2-2 on 55 minutes, this time benefiting from a deflection off Robinson’s sliding challenge. Suddenly, Charlotte was nervous.
Balogun Wins It, Chaos Reigns

It took three attempts and two disallowed goals — including one from Timmy Tillman — but Folarin Balogun finally got the winner on 63 minutes. Tim Weah’s cross was partially blocked, but Balogun read it perfectly, reacting first to push the ball inside the far post. Cue pandemonium.

The game had everything after that — breakaways, wasted counters, goalkeeper Chris Brady earning his first senior cap in the closing stages — but the US held on for a result that felt significant.
What It Means

The World Cup starts in 11 days. The USMNT’s talisman has his mojo back. The attack looks fluid and dangerous. The defence still needs work. Germany is next weekend.
Lock in, America. The party’s just getting started. 🇺🇸












