Pulisic-Pepi is the controlled-risk Türkiye read
2026/6/24 · 12:16

Pulisic-Pepi is the controlled-risk Türkiye read

ESPN's projected U.S. XI turns the Türkiye finale into a narrow decision: give Christian Pulisic rhythm beside Ricardo Pepi while keeping the yellow-card core out of unnecessary danger before the Round of 32.

ESPN's fresh projected XI points to a useful compromise: let Christian Pulisic touch the game again, but surround him with the rotation group rather than the yellow-card core. Its U.S. projection has Matt Freese behind Tim Ream, Mark McKenzie and Alex Freeman; Max Arfsten, Sebastian Berhalter, Cristian Roldan, Álex Zendejas and Joe Scally across the middle; and Pulisic with Ricardo Pepi up front.1
That is not an official lineup. It is, however, the cleanest version of the problem Mauricio Pochettino has to solve before kickoff: give Pulisic rhythm, protect the four suspension-risk starters, and still learn something before the Round of 32.23
A tactical look at the U.S. rotation puzzle before Türkiye.
Image source: U.S. Soccer's Türkiye opponent profile.2

The first test is who is not there

The four names that should define the team sheet are Tyler Adams, Folarin Balogun, Chris Richards and Antonee Robinson. USA Today reported that all four enter the Türkiye match on a yellow card, and another caution would suspend them for the Round of 32.3
ESPN's projection leaves all four out. That matters more than whether the shape is written as a back three, a back five, or a lopsided 3-4-2-1. The U.S. have already won Group D; Türkiye have already been eliminated; the only result that can really damage the U.S. is one that removes an essential player from July 1.2
The one exception is Pulisic. ESPN says his calf issue is not serious, that he is expected to be fit for Türkiye, and that Pochettino may want him to get minutes before the knockout match.1 That still argues for a managed appearance, not a full-strength emotional statement.

What a Pulisic-Pepi start would actually test

If Pulisic and Pepi start together, the U.S. should not treat it like a normal attacking dress rehearsal. Balogun's form makes him the first-choice striker for the knockout round, but his card status changes the calculation. Pepi, then, gets the cleaner audition: can he offer enough penalty-box presence that Pulisic does not need to overextend in his first game back?
U.S. Soccer's numbers make the question practical. The U.S. have six goals through two World Cup matches, and the team has scored seven goals in 261 minutes with Pepi and Balogun on the field together, an average of one goal every 37 minutes.4 That stat does not prove Pepi can replace Balogun's current edge. It does show that Pochettino has already found useful attacking minutes outside the single-striker default.
U.S. Soccer's tournament numbers frame the Pepi-Balogun scoring context.
Image source: U.S. Soccer's Behind the Numbers package.4
Rotation questionWhat to watch against TürkiyeWhy it matters
Pulisic's minutesDoes he sprint, press and cut without looking protected?1The Round of 32 needs a ready Pulisic, not a symbolic starter.
Pepi's reference roleCan he pin center backs while Pulisic receives between lines?Balogun can rest only if the attack keeps a believable focal point.
The wide lanesDo Arfsten, Zendejas and Scally keep the field wide enough?1Türkiye's young creators punish turnovers if the U.S. attack gets narrow.
Center-back distributionCan McKenzie and Ream advance play without Richards' passing volume?4Richards has been the team's most secure buildup defender.

The Freese decision is quieter, but not small

ESPN projects Freese to stay in goal. That makes sense if Pochettino wants one spine piece to remain stable while rotating the outfield group.1
Freese has not had a heavy tournament workload. U.S. Soccer wrote that Paraguay put one shot on target in the opener, Australia put two on frame in Seattle, and Freese has faced only three shots on target through two matches.5 That is good news for the team structure. It also means he has not yet had to manage a messy knockout-style match.
Matt Freese gives the rotated U.S. back line a stable goalkeeper reference.
Image source: U.S. Soccer's Matt Freese profile.5
Türkiye are scoreless, but not passive. U.S. Soccer's pre-match numbers credit them with 62 shots across two World Cup matches without a goal.4 For Freese, the useful outcome is not another quiet clean sheet. It is 90 minutes of organizing a changed back line against a team that keeps shooting even when the tournament has turned against it.

The midfield cannot become a permission slip

The danger in a rotated XI is not lack of effort. It is spacing. Adams normally cleans up the first bad touch, Robinson normally fixes the left side with recovery speed, and Richards normally gives the back line a low-risk outlet. Remove all three, and the midfield has to be more disciplined than adventurous.
That is where a Berhalter-Roldan base, if ESPN's projection is close, becomes the real hinge. The task is simple: keep Türkiye's best players receiving with their back to goal. U.S. Soccer identifies Arda Güler, Kenan Yıldız and Can Uzun as the young attacking spine, with Hakan Çalhanoğlu behind them as the veteran reference point.2 If the U.S. midfield chases the game, that group will find the space that Adams usually erases.
So the Pulisic headline should not distract from the boring requirement: the rotated midfield has to make the match dull in the right zones.

My read: start him only with a hard exit plan

The best Pulisic plan is not "start" or "sit" in isolation. It is start with a hard ceiling, or bring him on with a hard ceiling. The useful window is long enough to test touch, acceleration and contact tolerance. It should not be long enough for the match to become about pride, tempo or chasing a third straight win.
If ESPN's projected XI is close, it is a rational compromise. The card-risk quartet stays away from unnecessary exposure. Pepi gets a meaningful role next to Pulisic. Freese gets another organizing rep. The staff gets evidence on Arfsten, Zendejas, Scally, McKenzie and Berhalter before the bench matters for real.
The U.S. have already earned the luxury of this problem. Türkiye is no longer about proving the best XI is good. It is about proving the next 15 players can protect the best XI from a stupid loss before the knockout round starts.

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