Pulisic still separate: what USA must solve before Australia

Pulisic still separate: what USA must solve before Australia

Christian Pulisic remained day-to-day after a third straight separate training session, even as ESPN still projected him into the USA lineup. This update explains the three lineup paths, why the Australia match changes the risk calculus, and what Thursday training needs to clarify.

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June 18, 2026 · 6:08 AM
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Two days before USA-Australia, Christian Pulisic is still not a simple pencil-him-in call. Steven Goff reported that Pulisic spent a third straight training session away from the main group Wednesday in Irvine, worked first in the tented gym, then came out for light ball work with a trainer before the media window closed. U.S. Soccer spokesman Michael Kammarman said his status remains day to day. 1
That does not mean he is out. ESPN's match preview, published Wednesday morning, still projected Pulisic in the starting XI and said recent reports indicated he would be fit to feature against Australia. 2 The point is narrower: the U.S. now has to plan for three versions of Friday, not one.

What changed Wednesday

The new information is the training pattern. Monday and Tuesday already made Pulisic a watch item. Wednesday made it a three-day trend: separate work, light ball touches, no open-session evidence that he finished a full team practice. Goff also reported that Pulisic is not scheduled for a media session before the Australia game, while Mauricio Pochettino's next availability is Thursday afternoon in Seattle. 1
The squad is not talking like panic has set in. Brenden Aaronson said, "We're really hoping Christian's going to be back," while Antonee Robinson framed it as a longer-tournament decision: "If we don't have him back for the game, then we're going to make sure we have him back for the rest of the way." 1 That quote matters because Australia is important, but not the final. The U.S. can advance without burning its best attacker for 90 minutes.

The three lineup paths

Pochettino has a basic choice: chase control early, protect Pulisic's calf, or split the difference.
Pulisic pathWhat it gives the U.S.What it risks
Start himThe cleanest version of the Paraguay front line, with Pulisic's left-sided gravity opening room for Folarin Balogun and Malik Tillman.A setback before the final group match and knockouts.
Hold him for 30-35 minutesA late-game lever if Australia sits deep and the match gets tight.The starting XI may lack the same first-half threat from the left.
Sit himMaximum protection if the calf still looks limited Thursday.Australia can defend narrower and dare the U.S. to create through secondary options.
There is precedent for the awkward shape change. Pulisic exited at halftime of the Paraguay win after getting kicked in the left calf, and Sebastian Berhalter replaced him. Goff noted that the U.S. still created chances after the change but did not score again until Gio Reyna's late goal. 1 If Pulisic cannot start, the question is not just who takes his spot. It is whether Pochettino keeps the same attacking relationships or uses a more conservative midfield to control Australia's counters.

Why the group math changes the risk calculation

This match has top-of-the-table stakes. ESPN described USA-Australia as a Group D meeting between two teams on three points and wrote that a win would seal qualification. 2 U.S. Soccer's own how-to-watch page lists the match for Friday, June 19 at 3 p.m. ET, with the USA ahead of Australia on goal differential after both won their openers. 3
USA vs. Australia official match graphic
U.S. Soccer's match graphic points fans to the Friday, June 19 kickoff in Seattle. 3
MLSsoccer laid out the bigger prize: the U.S. wins Group D with a game to spare if it beats Australia and Türkiye lose or draw against Paraguay. That route would send the U.S. to a Round of 32 match in San Francisco on July 1 against a third-placed team from Groups B, E, F, I or J. 4
Group D clinching scenario graphic
MLSsoccer's scenario graphic shows the U.S. can turn the Australia match into an early group-clinching chance if the other Group D result cooperates. 4
That makes the Pulisic decision uncomfortable. A win can simplify the tournament. But an aggravated calf could complicate everything after it.

Australia's setup makes the first goal matter

Australia's opening win was not a possession clinic. ESPN wrote that the Socceroos faced 30 Türkiye shots but allowed only 1.36 expected goals, and it projected a 5-4-1 shape against the U.S. 2 That tells you what the U.S. is likely to see: blocks of bodies, shots from distance if the ball moves too slowly, and immediate pressure to defend transition once possession turns over.
Tim Weah against Paraguay
Tim Weah's bench role is part of the Plan B conversation if Pulisic's left-sided minutes have to be managed. 5
If Pulisic starts, the U.S. can ask him to draw that block left and open the opposite side for Sergiño Dest or a late McKennie run. If he does not, Tillman becomes even more important between the lines, and Reyna's bench role becomes more than a luxury. Pochettino can still win this match without Pulisic starting, but the ball circulation has to be quicker than it was after halftime against Paraguay.

What to watch Thursday

The next useful signal is not another prediction. It is whether Pulisic trains with the full group in Seattle.
If he is full-go Thursday, the ESPN projected XI looks more plausible. If he is again separate or limited, the smart read is a managed role: bench, late cameo, or no minutes unless the match state demands it. The U.S. does not need a ceremonial start from Pulisic. It needs either a healthy starter or a clear Plan B before Australia spends 20 minutes showing exactly how narrow it intends to defend.

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