FC Dallas' Jesse Gonzalez remains committed to Mexico as Olympics near

FRISCO, Texas ā€“ Jesse Gonzalezā€™s breakthrough 2015 season was just the beginning.


Twice since FC Dallasā€™ season ended in the Western Conference Championship, the 20-year-old goalkeeper has been called up to the Mexican U-23 national team ahead of the 2016 Olympics.


ā€œIt was great,ā€ Gonzalez told MLSsoccer.com of his second experience with the U-23s. ā€œItā€™s a great group of guys to work with, from the coaching staff to the players.ā€


Gonzalez said he has stayed in touch with his Mexican counterparts throughout the offseason at least once a week to keep tabs on how everyoneā€™s training has been going on their professional clubs.


He has played with many of them before with Mexicoā€™s U-18s, according to Gonzalez, helping him strengthen their chemistry as the Olympics are quickly approaching.


ā€œOver there, everybodyā€™s almost the same age, so itā€™s more of a young group,ā€ Gonzalez said. ā€œYou joke around instantly and everything. But at the same time, itā€™s really competitive.ā€

Gonzalez says there is not a huge difference in terms of training regiment from the Mexican Olympic squad to FC Dallas.


In fact, moments after a grueling training session in Frisco where goalkeeper coach Drew Keeshan put Gonzalez through goalkeeping drills, Gonzalez said the national team may actually have some easier moments.


ā€œThere are all sorts of things we do down there. Everything is fun with all the training sessions we do,ā€ Gonzalez said. ā€œThereā€™s times we have fun and times we train, and we mix it up really well.ā€


Because Gonzalez has yet to play a competitive game with El Triā€™s senior team and was born in the US, he is still technically eligible to make a one-time switch to the USMNT.



    But the 20-year-old reiterated he has no plans on making that switch and remains 100 percent committed to Mexico.


    ā€œRight now Iā€™m committed to Mexico,ā€ Gonzalez said. ā€œRight now thatā€™s my focus ā€“ with [FC Dallas] and the Mexico menā€™s national team.ā€


    Gonzalez didnā€™t hesitate with his answer. While expressing gratitude to the US and saying he owes the country a lot for propelling him to where he is as a player today, his pull toward Mexico comes, in large part, from the ones closest to him.


    ā€œAll my family Iā€™ve been around, my people, they all told me the same stuff: Theyā€™ve wanted to see me play over there since I was a little kid,ā€ Gonzalez said. ā€œMy dream was to play Mexico, and my idols are over there. Thatā€™s one of the things that keeps me over there.ā€