Pochettino: It's too late for motivational speeches
Mauricio Pochettino is quietly confident of success in USA's World Cup opener but is expecting a difficult test from Paraguay.
The time for talking is over. As USA begin their final plans for one of the biggest games in their history, Mauricio Pochettino says he has no intention to give a big motivational pre-match speech.
After extensive preparations for the global showpiece — and months of ever-increasing hype and hoopla — Pochettino believes that the Stars and Stripes do not need any finely-crafted words from him in the build-up to the clash with Paraguay in their FIFA World Cup 2026™ opener at Los Angeles Stadium on Friday.
"I have already spoken to them. I have already talked... too much. I said [to the players] don't expect an unbelievable speech on Friday," Pochettino said at a pre-match press conference. "No, I am the opposite. I think now is the moment that they need prepare in an emotional and mental way. And I think everyone knows how to be ready.
"I think now they don't need an external motivation or an inspirational speech. If you know the player and the mindset of the player, they need a motivational speech and inspiration when they need to go to train and improve in every single area... because tomorrow is too late. You can give the best motivational speech but if they are not ready then it's impossible to perform."
After defeating Paraguay 2-1 in a friendly match in November, USA are quietly confident of victory despite a series of mixed results since then. As in that fiery fixture in Philadelphia, Pochettino is expecting another keenly-contested clash.
"I know very well the mentality [of Paraguay] — the aggressivity, the [competitiveness].... My expectation is tomorrow is going to be a very tough game," he said. "It's going to be tough because Paraguay not only are competitive and aggressive [but] they have good quality [and] a great coach in Gustavo Alfaro, who is doing a great job and I respect and admire him a lot. It's going to be very, very difficult."
Pochettino has a fully-fit squad to choose from, with defender Chris Richards declaring himself fit after recovering from an ankle injury. The USA coaching staff will make a late decision about whether the Crystal Palace star will start or remain on the bench. Meanwhile, Pochettino did not disclose who out of Matt Freese or Matt Turner will start in goal.
"The most important thing is to believe in yourself, to have that thought of believing that you can do it well, but you have to go step by step," he concluded. "The most important thing is not to see the flag before you get there.... that's why it's important to be prepared. Not only how you start, but how you continue and how you finish."
