This Documentarian Followed the U.S. Menโ€™s National Soccer Team for 4 Years. Hereโ€™s Her Biggest Takeaway

This Documentarian Followed the U.S. Menโ€™s National Soccer Team for 4 Years. Hereโ€™s Her Biggest Takeaway



For the past four years, Janina Pelayo has traveled with the United States Menโ€™s National Soccer Team, capturing their road to the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The U.S. is hosting this yearโ€™s tournament along with Mexico and Canada, marking the first time three countries share the World Cup duties. Pelayo knew this moment had to be documented.

The result was โ€œU.S. Against the World: Four Years with the Menโ€™s National Soccer Team,โ€ an HBO Original docuseries produced by Pelayoโ€™s production company Park Stories. Born in the Philippines and raised in Juneau, Alaska, Pelayo tells TODAY.com she didnโ€™t grow up watching soccer but understood its global impact.

To create the five-part sports documentary, now streaming, the executive producer led production across six countries and built friendships with the players and their families. She praised the choices they all make to help the men make their dreams come true.

โ€œThe biggest sacrifice is probably (the) time you spend away from your families,โ€ she says. โ€œAnd it just goes to show the amount of support and sacrifice that their families also undergo, not just them, the wives at home… All of their stories have pulled on my heartstrings.โ€

While the episodes led to the World Cup kickoff, Pelayo and her team are still filming.

โ€œYou never know where the magic might happen,โ€ she says. โ€œThere could be an episode after the World Cup, or this could be the first episode of Season 2. Who knows. I just think documenting this moment in history as the sport emerges in the U.S. is going to be worth (it).โ€

She adds that as the sport becomes more popular in the U.S. and more kids decide to pursue it, โ€œitโ€™s meaningful to all the generations.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a moment in time that weโ€™ll never get. World Cups on home soil come across every, maybe, 30 years,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s a special time for sure.โ€

Below, in her own words, Pelayo shares her World Cup memories, as well as what sheโ€™s most looking forward to as the tournament is underway.

What is your earliest memory of watching a World Cup?

I was born in the Philippines, so I didnโ€™t really grow up with the sport. Basketball is still the largest sport there. But my first World Cup memory was, I believe, the 2014 World Cup. I was in Seattle and it was just such an electric atmosphere of people walking about. We were (watching) a game and I didnโ€™t know anything about the sport, the team, but I was in it. It was fun. It built community, which is kind of hard to do as a transplant. (I) had moved to different cities, so finding a common community in the bar was so much fun.

Iโ€™m really late to the party. I think itโ€™s a great event for everyone to get into. Itโ€™s amazing. Thereโ€™s so much to peel back behind soccer and behind national teams, and you just get drawn in.

What was your biggest takeaway from documenting the USMNTโ€™s lives?

Soccer is such a beautiful sport culture and itโ€™s that healthy masculinity that we want to see and highlight. These guys are very young, they care about doing the right thing, even if itโ€™s a hard thing to do, theyโ€™re going to do it. Itโ€™s really beautiful documenting them trying to build a legacy because they havenโ€™t built it yet. Theyโ€™re in the midst of doing it right now. That just resonates with everybody on a day-to-day level, trying to do the best they can. Itโ€™s also eye-opening for me seeing what their families go through and how they step up to the plate in order to join this mission.

What are you most looking forward to during the World Cup?

There was a fan that approached us during the open public training and he basically thanked Yunus Musah for showcasing his faith. Heโ€™s a practicing Muslim on Team USA. That to me is super meaningful because everyoneโ€™s trying to compete and be on the team, and thereโ€™s a million different ways to get here. To highlight Yunusโ€™ story, he was a huge integral part of the team and maybe he makes his way back. But just to showcase that time in their lives, and whether itโ€™s a moment of success or a moment of hardship, itโ€™s leaving the door open for a great comeback story.

Theyโ€™re still all so young. So for me, the biggest takeaway is just, stay tuned. You never know who you might see pop back in or who might emerge as your favorite player because their stories are still being told.

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