IRVINE, Calif. — Tim Weah found himself doing what every World Cup player must, sooner or later: standing in front of a semicircle of cameras and microphones, answering the same questions.
Australia. Expectations. Team confidence. One game at a time.
Then, high above the crowd of reporters gathered around him Tuesday morning at the United States men’s national team training center, Weston McKennie appeared.
The midfielder climbed onto a camera riser overlooking the media scrum and leaned against the railing, smiling like a mischievous older brother spying on his younger sibling. He watched Weah navigate the chaos below, simultaneously seeing if he could distract his teammate from the reporters who were oblivious that he was lurking behind them.
McKennie and Weah share a bond that has become one of the defining relationships inside the U.S. locker room, and it was moments in the mixed zone Tuesday that remind how team chemistry and friendship are just as important as tactics and formations in a World Cup.
“We’re all so close,” captain Tyler Adams said earlier. “But on my off day, I don’t want to spend time with any of them.”
McKennie and Weah are the exceptions.
“They’re very, very, very, very close,” Tina McKennie, Weston’s mother, told The Post at practice. “His dad is a big fan of Weston. We’re all friends with their family. We’re one big family, honestly. They’ve known each other for a long time. They’re like brothers, and they’ll be like brothers long after soccer.”
That connection stretches far beyond national team camps.
For three seasons, the pair shared a locker room at Italian giant Juventus. When Weah decided to leave French club Lille in 2023, McKennie played a major role in his decision.
“Wes is one of the main reasons why I came to Juventus,” Weah said at the time. “I knew I was going to have one of my best friends on the team.”
Life in Europe can be isolating for young American players. There’s a language barrier, clashing cultures and different expectations when it comes to the sport of soccer.

McKennie and Weah became each other’s safety net.
Weah has joked that he practically lived at McKennie’s house in Turin during the season. The pair spend Thanksgiving and Christmas together, they train together and, according to teammates, they’re rarely apart.
Their friendship became so visible that it even created headlines in Italy when the two jokingly criticized Italian cuisine on a Juventus podcast. McKennie quipped that Italian food lacked variety. Weah piled on by claiming Americans did everything better.
The comments sparked outrage across parts of Italy. Leading former Italian goalkeeper Emiliano Viviano, to jokingly quip that Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, “shouldn’t let him [McKennie] back into Italy.”
The two, naturally, found it hilarious. And their comfort level together translates onto the field.

Few American players understand each other’s movements better than McKennie and Weah.
“I think it’s definitely a big positive because we already have a pretty good understanding,” Weah said. “I understand how he plays, he understands how I play. Our chemistry is really good.”
History backs him up.
In December 2024, the pair combined for a goal in the UEFA Champions League, with Weah providing the assist and McKennie hammering home a spectacular volley. It marked the first time two U.S. men’s national team players had connected for a goal in the competition and it only continued with the national team.
During Friday’s 4-1 World Cup-opening victory over Paraguay at SoFi Stadium, McKennie’s relentless movement helped stretch the Paraguayan defense and create space for the American attack.
“Weston’s running opened up the game a lot for us,” teammate Sebastian Berhalter said. “He made a lot of hard runs throughout that game.”
When Weah entered in the 72nd minute, he immediately brought fresh energy to the attack and together with McKennie, they helped orchestrate Gio Reyna’s stoppage-time goal through intelligent movement and precise passing.
“We’re together every day,” McKennie said of the trust he and Weah have built over the years. “Coming into camp, it’s good to have a travel partner.”
As the United States prepares for Friday’s pivotal group-stage showdown against Australia in Seattle, the bromance between McKennie and Weah remains one of the best World Cup storylines. One patrols the midfield. The other attacks out wide.
Together, they form a partnership that extends beyond the pitch and that friendship was standing in plain sight Tuesday morning, smiling from atop a camera rise while his best friend handled the spotlight below.

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