Christian Pulisic: ‘There’s a Champion Mentality at Chelsea’

The young American may well be the only new recruit at Stamford Bridge next season and he is planning to make an impact

Christian Pulisic says he is coming to Chelsea to be his own man. Photograph: Clive Howes/Chelsea FC via Getty Images
Christian Pulisic says he is coming to Chelsea to be his own man. Photograph: Clive Howes/Chelsea FC via Getty Images
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Christian Pulisic: ‘There’s a Champion Mentality at Chelsea’

Christian Pulisic says he is coming to Chelsea to be his own man. Photograph: Clive Howes/Chelsea FC via Getty Images
Christian Pulisic says he is coming to Chelsea to be his own man. Photograph: Clive Howes/Chelsea FC via Getty Images

Early afternoon at Stamford Bridge and the man who could yet prove to be the only new face in Chelsea ranks next season was still pinching himself to be here at all. Christian Pulisic has had six months to contemplate life in the Premier League, having pushed to see out the season in fruitless pursuit of the Bundesliga title with Borussia Dortmund. “I’m still trying to take it all in,” he said. “It’s been a huge dream of mine, to play here in England. So to be here is incredible.”

Pulisic’s arrival is one of the few certainties at a club in flux. The likelihood is he will never play alongside Eden Hazard, a player vigorously courted by Real Madrid and with a parting of the ways seeming inevitable. Doubt persists, too, over the identity of the head coach. Maurizio Sarri has secured Champions League football and steered the team into next week’s Europa League final, but it says everything about his uneasy relationship with club and support that should Juventus offer to buy out his contract Chelsea’s resistance may be perfunctory.

Then there is Fifa’s two-window transfer ban, a sanction the club have yet to raise with the court of arbitration for sport as they continue to await the written reasons for the rejection of their original appeal by the governing body. There remains the possibility that Mateo Kovacic’s loan move from Real Madrid is made permanent and there will be a flurry of loan returns. But Pulisic’s arrival, for £58m, may provide the only injection of new blood to a collective who, perhaps optimistically, still aspire to shatter Manchester City’s domestic dominance.

Not that the 20-year-old American is daunted by what lies ahead. A few days observing training at Cobham, and speaking with Sarri, have strengthened belief that his decision to move to London was sound. “There’s no doubt City had a great season, but Chelsea … there’s a champion mentality at this club,” he said. “They are a confident group of guys who understand we have a long way to go, but we have a great squad already and everyone wants to take the steps so we can compete right away.

“It’s the next challenge I want to take on. I was 15 when I moved to Dortmund. I knew that move wasn’t going to be easy, and the first two years in Germany were very tough for me: a foreign country, a new language, being away from my family and friends … I thought people were looking at me, asking: ‘Who is this American trying to take my spot?’

“I was playing in the youth team and hadn’t ‘made it’. Everything was in front of me. It was a tough time, but I wanted it. My life was soccer. I knew that if I stuck at it and proved I was good enough it would all work out. If they see you can play, they respect you.”

That will be the challenge, too, at Chelsea. The kid from Hershey, Pennsylvania who was schooled under Jürgen Klopp, Thomas Tuchel, Hannes Wolf and Lucien Favre has long endured life as the poster boy of the USA national team and a wunderkind at Dortmund when he made more than 70 Bundesliga appearances in his teens. At Stamford Bridge, some have already earmarked him as Hazard’s successor elect, despite their playing styles hardly standing comparison.

Pulisic may spend time on the wing in Chelsea blue, but he may be happier as a No 10. He had been asked by the club’s website whom he was most looking forward to playing alongside and omitted Hazard from a list that included N’Golo Kanté, Antonio Rüdiger and David Luiz. He seemed rather taken aback that people read plenty into what was apparently an inadvertent oversight. Such is the rather febrile atmosphere at the club.

The hope is that by the time he returns from the summer’s Concacaf Gold Cup – he will report back late for pre‑season – the lie of the land will be clearer.

“Eden’s a fantastic player, we all know that,” he said. “If I can get anywhere close to him, I’ll be more than happy. But I’m coming in to be my own man. I try not to allow pressure from the outside to affect me. I put enough pressure on myself to be good, to be great. That’s how I’ve always been. It’s quite easy to avoid the outside pressure. You just zone it out. I focus on what I can do.”

Pulisic is unfamiliar with the capital, despite visiting with his father, Mark, 12 years ago to take in a Chelsea game – vague memories linger of a Didier Drogba penalty – for all that this will not be the first English club for whom he has featured. As an eight-year-old, he spent a year living in the Oxfordshire village of Tackley and played for Brackley Town’s youth team.

“I remember playing in these little tournaments and we would play an absurd amount of games in a short amount of time,” he said. “I remember winning a few, and once being awarded the MVP trophy … I was so proud of it, my biggest accomplishment. When I was little, if I didn’t get a trophy, I was mad.”

There, at least, he will definitely fit in at Stamford Bridge.

(The Guardian)



Ballon d'Or Winner Dembele Still Searching for a Home in France Team

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - France v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, US - June 16, 2026 France's Ousmane Dembele in action. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - France v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, US - June 16, 2026 France's Ousmane Dembele in action. (Reuters)
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Ballon d'Or Winner Dembele Still Searching for a Home in France Team

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - France v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, US - June 16, 2026 France's Ousmane Dembele in action. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - France v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, US - June 16, 2026 France's Ousmane Dembele in action. (Reuters)

If Ousmane Dembele arrived at the World Cup hoping his last two club seasons would finally establish him as one of the cornerstones of Didier Deschamps' France side, the tournament's opening match has instead reinforced a familiar question - where exactly does he fit in this team?

For all his success with Paris St Germain, where he reinvented himself as a central creative force and one of Europe's most influential forwards, Dembele remains a player searching for his place in the national team. France's 3-1 victory over Senegal ‌offered another illustration ‌of the dilemma.

While Les Bleus produced enough attacking quality ‌to ⁠ease past the ⁠African side, Dembele again struggled to make himself indispensable in an attack that increasingly appears to revolve around Kylian Mbappe and Michael Olise.

The emergence of Olise has complicated Dembele's quest to become France's attacking leader. The Bayern Munich playmaker has quickly developed an understanding with Mbappe, combining between the lines and helping drive many of France's most dangerous moves.

That connection has left Dembele operating largely on the right ⁠flank, a role that contrasts sharply with the freedom he ‌enjoyed at PSG this season. In Paris, he ‌drifted inside, dictated attacks and became the focal point of the European champions' offensive ‌play. With France, he found himself wider on Tuesday, leaving room for the ‌explosive Mbappe-Olise duo.

At a time when Mbappe and Olise appear to be forming the attacking partnership around which France are building their title challenge, Dembele is still trying to define his own role.

"The key question is what to do with Ousmane Dembele," Bixente Lizarazu, ‌a 1998 World Cup winner, told French sports daily L'Equipe.

"How do you position him to get the best out ⁠of him and ⁠bring out the Dembele we've seen at PSG? So far, whether in the warm-up games or in this opening match, we haven't seen him play with his usual freedom. After a game like this, he'll be sitting there wondering what more he can do."

Dembele has never entered a major tournament in better form, yet rarely has his place in the team seemed less obvious.

Deschamps continues to trust his ability to unbalance opponents and create danger, but the challenge facing the France coach is becoming increasingly clear. It is no longer about finding room for Dembele in the starting lineup, but about finding a role that allows the Ballon d'Or winner to become as influential for France as he has been for PSG.

If he can't, the 29-year-old could end up sitting on the bench.


FIFA Hydration Breaks Spark Backlash, Blamed for Killing Momentum at the World Cup

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group J - Austria v Jordan - San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, US - June 16, 2026 Austria coach Ralf Rangnick speaks to players during a hydration break. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group J - Austria v Jordan - San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, US - June 16, 2026 Austria coach Ralf Rangnick speaks to players during a hydration break. (Reuters)
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FIFA Hydration Breaks Spark Backlash, Blamed for Killing Momentum at the World Cup

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group J - Austria v Jordan - San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, US - June 16, 2026 Austria coach Ralf Rangnick speaks to players during a hydration break. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group J - Austria v Jordan - San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, Santa Clara, California, US - June 16, 2026 Austria coach Ralf Rangnick speaks to players during a hydration break. (Reuters)

Curaçao fans went wild. The Germans were in shock.

Livano Comenencia had scored a goal for the smallest nation by population to ever qualify for the World Cup against four-time champion Germany.

At 1-1 in Houston a famous upset looked possible.

Then came the hydration break.

Curaçao lost the initiative, conceding two goals before halftime in what eventually became a 7-1 defeat to the Germans.

“I actually felt sorry for them,” former England striker Alan Shearer told The Rest is Football podcast. “They scored and then it was maybe 30 seconds after that it stopped. So it’s killed their momentum.”

FIFA’s new hydration breaks midway through each half — a novelty for this World Cup — were introduced to help players deal with the summer heat in the United States, Canada and Mexico. But critics say they’re having unintended consequences, ruining the flow of the game and giving coaches a chance to tactically shift momentum in their team’s favor.

While player welfare is a real concern with temperatures expected to exceed 90 F (32 C) in the hottest World Cup venues, some say the hydration breaks are just an excuse for broadcasters to go to commercials in the middle of the game.

“We’re in America, right? So, it’s like it is it’s like it’s a timeout,” former Ireland international Roy Keane said on The Overlap, a podcast that he co-hosts with long-time Manchester United teammate Gary Neville. “We love football because of the pace of the game ... what it’s doing is stopping the flow of the game, the momentum.”

A chance for coaches to huddle with the players

Rather than players merely taking on fluids, coaches have been seizing the opportunity to pass on in-game tactical instructions that would normally not be possible. And early indications are that it is having an effect.

“You can use the break to tell the players what they need to improve or what is good or what they should do better,” Netherlands coach Ronald Koeman said. “So you can use it in different ways to your advantage, and this is what we will be doing.”

In eight of the first 16 games, there were goals scored within 10 minutes of the rehydration break.

Curaçao never recovered after the restart against Germany.

Morocco paid the price against Brazil in New Jersey, having dominated the game from the start and scored just before the first break. Less that 10 minutes after play resumed the game was level with Vinicius Junior equalizing.

Canada, the US, Australia, Scotland, Sweden and Iran have all benefited with goals soon after the break.

Momentum maps have shown how games have shifted after the new stoppages in play.

The hydration breaks also affect the experience of fans watching the games at stadiums. There were boos from the crowd on the first hydration break in the game Tuesday between Iraq and Norway in Foxborough, Massachusetts.

Breaks will be implemented regardless of the weather

Referees pause the games 22 minutes into each half, with players given three minutes to rehydrate.

FIFA stipulated that the breaks would occur regardless of the weather, venue or location, meaning the Spain vs. Cape Verde match in Atlanta on Monday was interrupted despite being under a roof and in an air-conditioned stadium.

The governing body said it was to “ensure equal conditions for all teams, in all matches.”

Spain coach Luis de la Fuente said the breaks make sense in “extreme” heat conditions but questioned whether they were necessary at every match.

“Pause, freshen up and continue. Tomorrow, when the temperature that we’ll have in this stadium is chill, maybe these breaks are not so needed, but we need to abide by the rules," he said.

Norway coach Staale Solbakken agreed.

“I can understand it when it’s like it’s been in Greensboro (North Carolina), when it’s been 35 degrees (95 Fahrenheit) and a really hot climate and there’s a bit of vibration in the air – then I think it’s fine. But I don’t like it otherwise. I think it’s unnecessary," he said.

Broadcasters cutting to commercials

Aside from the sporting impact on games, the stoppages have been criticized for damaging the spectacle for fans, with broadcasters using the opportunity to take commercial breaks.

In the United States, Fox immediately goes to commercials during the hydration breaks. Telemundo, a Spanish-language US broadcaster, does not.

Unlike in US professional sports like baseball, basketball and football, commercial breaks have not been a common feature in football except during the half-time break.

“Every time going to a commercial is a bit ... not really (something) that I like,” said Netherlands captain Virgil van Dijk, who watched World Cup games on TV before the Dutch began their campaign with a 2-2 draw against Japan. “I think for the neutral watchers on TV it’s also not great.”

France coach Didier Deschamps, however, said this is the changing face of football.

“It’s not two half times, it is four quarter times basically that we’ve got. This is what’s been decided and so the players and the coaches adapt to this new reality,” he said.

It is not known if FIFA will implement hydration breaks at all future World Cups, but the English Football Association said it was unlikely to be in place for the European Championship, hosted by the UK and Ireland in 2028.


Bernardo Silva Joins Real Madrid on 2-year Deal Following Manchester City Exit

Manchester City's Bernardo Silva speaks during a farewell ceremony after his last match for the club after a Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Aston Villa in Manchester, England, Sunday, May 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
Manchester City's Bernardo Silva speaks during a farewell ceremony after his last match for the club after a Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Aston Villa in Manchester, England, Sunday, May 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
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Bernardo Silva Joins Real Madrid on 2-year Deal Following Manchester City Exit

Manchester City's Bernardo Silva speaks during a farewell ceremony after his last match for the club after a Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Aston Villa in Manchester, England, Sunday, May 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
Manchester City's Bernardo Silva speaks during a farewell ceremony after his last match for the club after a Premier League soccer match between Manchester City and Aston Villa in Manchester, England, Sunday, May 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Manchester City great Bernardo Silva has joined Real Madrid on a two-year contract, the Spanish club said on Wednesday.

The Portugal international is one of the most decorated players in City’s history, winning many major trophies including six Premier Leagues and one Champions League. He made 460 appearances and scored 76 goals during a nine-year stint with the club.

In his final season in the north of England, Silva won both the English League Cup and the FA Cup. He is currently playing at the World Cup with Portugal.

His trophy haul includes three FA Cups, five League Cup successes, three Community Shields, a FIFA Club World Cup and a UEFA Super Cup winner’s medal.

“Real Madrid C. F. and Bernardo Silva have reached an agreement for him to become a Real Madrid player for the next two seasons, until June 30, 2028,” The Associated Press quoted Madrid as saying in a statement.

The 31-year-old midfielder joined from Monaco in 2017.