It was no surprise that Christian Pulisic's transfer from Borussia Dortmund to Chelsea made him the most expensive American ever - tripling the previous highest total - with the Premier League side paying $73 million (£57m) for the attacker.
The switch will take place at the end of the season, giving U.S. soccer fans a chance to see how their biggest star performs in the most popular league in the world. The Premier League's gain will be the Bundesliga's loss as American viewers consider changing the channel to watch Chelsea rather than Dortmund.
Pulisic's move to England opens up a whole new world of possibilities for American players, breaking the glass ceiling of what can be achieved for U.S. stars. It also opens up new possibilities for Pulisic's childhood friend and international team-mate Weston McKennie.
"It helped a lot to have someone my age breaking through at a high-level club in Germany,"
The two
Texas-born McKennie has outperformed Pulisic this season in Germany, but the role he plays for Schalke does not lend itself to headlines and highlight reels in the same way as Pulisic's trickery for Dortmund. The biggest moment of McKennie’s club career to date came in October, with his winning goal against Lokomotiv Moscow helping the Royal Blues into the knockout stage of the Champions League.
His first Bundesliga goal soon followed, with McKennie gaining in confidence while in possession and making runs forward that he would have kept in check previously.
McKennie is adored at Schalke, who see the midfielder as more than just a marketing tool to sell jerseys in North America and gather more followers on social media. Bodo Menze was responsible for bringing him to the club's famed Knappenschmiede academy from FC
"He is on a wonderful path. He is a very complete defensive midfield player," Menze told Goal. "He is a very strong boy mentally and physically. He is the perfect player to get into the first XI of our club. He is in a very good situation playing as
"I'm a player who attacks his opponents aggressively and puts them under pressure physically," he told
Pulisic's summer transfer could put him in the same company as Tom Brady, Aaron Donald and the American Footballers who contested this year's Super Bowl - sporting heroes who have become household names across America.
The way McKennie is performing for a resurgent Schalke could see him add his own name to that list as the U.S. closes in on the 2026 World Cup. He has the confidence to follow in his friend's footsteps - and the ability too.
"Me and my agent [former U.S. defender Cory Gibbs], whenever we see each other, we think about how far we’ve come," McKennie told Goal last year. "It’s something that I do look back and I say, 'I’ve come a long way.'
"But it’s also a motivation because it can’t stop here. There’s always more. I want to see if I can make it to the next level, and the next level, and keep going further."
Another positive performance against Manchester City in the Champions League last 16 on Wednesday will only further emphasise that McKennie is set to succeed Pulisic as the Bundesliga's big American star.