After a weeks-long wait, Mauricio Pochettino is finally, officially, the new head coach of the U.S. men’s national team.
U.S. Soccer announced the hire Tuesday evening, not long after the federation’s board of directors formally approved Pochettino’s contract, which will run through the 2026 World Cup.
Pochettino will not coach the USMNT in Tuesday’s friendly against New Zealand. But he will fly to the U.S. this week and appear at an introductory news conference in New York on Friday. He’ll then take charge of the team for the first time in October.
The announcement had been on hold nearly a month, ever since Pochettino reportedly decided to take the job on Aug. 14. U.S. Soccer executives spent that month involved in and waiting out negotiations among Pochettino’s camp, lawyers, and officials at Chelsea, the English Premier League club that parted ways with Pochettino in May after just one season.
Chelsea still owed him millions of dollars, for what would have been the second guaranteed year of his contract. The exact severance terms, and the exact nature of this summer’s negotiations, were unclear. But all sides eventually reached a deal, one that presumably relieves Chelsea of a chunk of its remaining financial obligations, while also perhaps allowing U.S. Soccer to pay a less-than-full price for Pochettino until his Chelsea checks stop coming.
The messy nature of the situation ultimately precluded Pochettino from making his USMNT coaching debut in September. But, according to reports, it never jeopardized his eventual appointment.
Pochettino will instead debut next month, when the U.S. plays friendlies against Panama (in Austin, Texas, on Oct. 12) and Mexico (in Guadalajara, Mexico, on Oct. 15).
U.S. Soccer did not release any specifics of Pochettino’s contract. But the federation did say in its release that “Pochettino’s appointment is supported in significant part by a philanthropic leadership gift” from Ken Griffin, a billionaire hedge fund manager and one of the 100 richest people in the world.
The release also revealed that “additional support has been provided” by Scott Goodwin, another hedge fund manager, plus “several commercial partners.”
Those financial contributions will likely help U.S. Soccer make Pochettino the highest-paid USMNT coach ever. He reportedly made upward of $10 million per year at his last two clubs, Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain. His USMNT predecessor, Gregg Berhalter, made roughly $1.6 million annually.
Pochettino will also be the most accomplished coach to ever lead the USMNT. He succeeds Berhalter, whose only two previous head coaching jobs were at the helm of Swedish club Hammarby and Major League Soccer’s Columbus Crew.
The 52-year-old Argentine will be compared to Jürgen Klinsmann, previously the biggest name to ever take the U.S. job. But Klinsmann was known primarily as a player; his only prior coaching gigs were short stints with the German national team and Bayern Munich. He was not a tactician. “He specialized in fluff and philosophical rhetoric,” former USMNT goalkeeper Tim Howard recently wrote. “But there was zero soccer.”
Pochettino, on the other hand, is very much a tactician. As a player, he spent most of his 17-year career in the center of defense for Spanish club Espanyol — which is where he began his coaching journey in 2009. He made his name, though, in England, first with Southampton in 2013, then with Tottenham Hotspur, which he took to a Champions League final and the upper echelons of the Premier League.
His five-plus years at Tottenham remain the peak of his coaching career. Since his sacking a few months into the 2019-20 season, he has taken charge of two more prestigious clubs, PSG and Chelsea; but failed to exceed expectations as he did at Spurs. He guided PSG to the semifinals of the Champions League, and to one French title, but departed after Round of 16 exits in both the Champions League and Coupe de France in 2021-22.
Before taking the Chelsea job last summer and after leaving in May, he was linked with other plum jobs, such as those at Real Madrid and Manchester United. But neither became available. Other top clubs, such as Bayern Munich, looked elsewhere.
So Pochettino was available when the USMNT flopped at Copa América, and Berhalter was fired, and U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker went looking for a signature hire.
“Mauricio is a serial winner with a deep passion for player development and a proven ability to build cohesive and competitive teams,” Crocker said in a statement released by U.S. Soccer. “His track record speaks for itself, and I am confident that he is the right choice to harness the immense potential within our talented squad.”
Pochettino will likely bring with him a core group of assistant coaches: Jesús Perez, his right-hand man; Miguel D’Agostino, another assistant and also a former teammate; and Toni Jimenez, a goalkeeper coach. All three have followed Pochettino from Espanyol to Southampton, Tottenham, PSG and Chelsea. Sebastiano Pochettino, Mauricio’s oldest son, has also worked under him at Spurs, PSG and Chelsea as a fitness coach.
What those arrivals mean for the USMNT’s current staff is unclear. Berhalter’s top assistant, B.J. Callaghan, left shortly after the Copa América to take a head coaching job at Nashville SC. Mikey Varas, the interim coach, is reportedly in talks to became MLS expansion club San Diego FC’s first head coach. But entire departments of analysts and performance coaches remain in place, for now.
Pochettino, meanwhile, will reportedly remain based in Europe outside of training camps. In recent years, many U.S. Soccer coaches have been required to move to Chicago, the site of the federation’s headquarters; but that requirement has been relaxed. Pochettino will apparently be allowed to spend most of his time overseas, in part due to his stature, in part because a vast majority of the USMNT’s players are now based in Europe as well.
He could meet some of them individually between now and his first training camp. And his work outside of camps could be critical. All told, between now and the USMNT’s 2026 World Cup opener, they will only be together as a group for around 120 days, at most — the equivalent of less than four months. They will have a few dozen legitimate, non-game-specific training sessions, and 20-25 games, mostly friendlies, to prepare for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity: a World Cup on home soil.
“The decision to join U.S. Soccer wasn’t just about football for me; it’s about the journey that this team and this country are on,” Pochettino said in a statement within Tuesday’s news release. “The energy, the passion, and the hunger to achieve something truly historic here — those are the things that inspired me.”