
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The United States Men's National Team beat (rightful) African champion Senegal 3-2 in Charlotte, N.C., to kick off its World Cup preparations in style.
Sergiño Dest opened the scoring for the USMNT in the sixth minute before Christian Pulisic doubled the lead in the 19th.
Senegal fought back to tie the game at 2-2 through Sadio Mane and an unfortunate USMNT own goal, but Folarin Balogun struck in the 62nd minute to hand the win to the USMNT.
Here are the key takeaways from a confidence-building tune-up match in advance of the World Cup:
This game was always going to be a practice session for the USMNT and Senegal, and the halftime substitutions proved it: coach Mauricio Pochettino subbed out 10 of his 11 players, including his goalkeeper, to ensure the most men possible got time on the field. It was an expected approach (and probably the right one), but it rightfully left fans with some whiplash.
Rotations are hard for players, too. They've got to make their mark in fewer minutes and adjust to an ever-changing cast of characters. The USMNT wasn't perfect in this anarchic match—spare a thought for debutant keeper Chris Brady in this dark time—but it did hang on to get the result it needed. That's admirable stuff, especially for the cadre of World Cup first-timers who entered this match with understandable nerves.
It's important to note that Senegal rotated heavily in this match, too. If you're wondering why the USMNT looked so dominant in the first half and so edgy in the second, it has less to do with the USMNT itself and more to do with Senegal's defense. It kicked things off with a rotated goalkeeper, two rotated center backs and two rotated midfielders; it improved considerably when it swapped a handful of those guys out for its regular starters.
The USMNT squads of the past fought their way into America's hearts by being gritty, bleeding-heart, never-say-die types who thrived on the world stage despite their comparatively weak on-the-ball skill. When we think of the USMNT's greatest moments, we think of that snarling hustle.
It's wonderful, then, to see this new iteration of the USMNT feature a player who has every bit of that grit but a whole lot of squeal-inducing skill, too. Sergino Dest made this game interesting when he scored the opener in the sixth minute; he made it his when his tricky stepovers utterly flummoxed Senegal's back line closer to halftime.
"We all love football because of all the players doing skills," Dest said earlier in this World Cup cycle. "You're like, ‘Whoa, that's so nice. I want to be like him.' You know?" Yeah, Sergino, we do—and performances like this one are going to leave American kids desperate to jack his style.
"Captain America" Christian Pulisic entered this match with zero goals in any competition since December 2025 and zero goals for the USMNT since November 2024. Those are...sobering numbers for a man tasked with leading the USMNT's offense, but Pulisic wasn't worried.
“I’ve had this happen before in my career,” Pulisic told the media before this Senegal match. There’s difficult times, and then sometimes one will bounce off your knee and go in and then it seems like everything goes in after that.”
Against Senegal, Pulisic did one better than bouncing one in off his knee: he assisted the USMNT's opening goal and slammed home a beautiful, slaloming team move to secure its second.
The USMNT has walked out to a lot of empty stadiums over the past two years. Many speculated that a lack of interest was to blame, but die-hard soccer fans in each affected city were quick to point out that, no, actually, absurd ticket prices were the true culprit.
This USMNT-Senegal match was flagged last week as a low seller, but in a rare (and important) move, the ticket prices were significantly reduced in the days leading up to the game. They sold well, the stadium filled out and the powers that be at U.S. Soccer got a taste of what it could have in every city if ticket prices were consistently reasonable.
The USMNT will take on Germany in Chicago on Saturday, June 6, before heading off to Southern California to begin its World Cup camp. It will open its 2026 FIFA World Cup against Paraguay in Los Angeles on Friday, June 12.
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