“I've always loved Liberia,” Weah said. “I always go back and help. I feel that that country is a part of me because my dad was born there and grew up there. But I was born in America. I was born in New York. I grew up in the system. I grew up playing for the national team since I was 12 years old. You know, all my friends are still there. I just have the love for the country, just like [my dad] has love for his country. I have the same type of love and the pride and the joy I got for playing for my country.”
Those feelings manifest through his application and his energy every time he steps into camp. United States U-17 MNT head coach John Hackworth noticed Weah’s desire to make an impact every time he earned a call-up to his side ahead of the FIFA U-17 World Cup last year.
“Tim was coming from PSG, so he would come into either events or camps,” Hackworth said. “We didn’t get to see Tim as much. The one thing about Tim is that when he came in, it was like he was in there the whole time. He seamlessly fit in with our group.”
The instant chemistry showed when Weah took the field in India. His contributions in the run to the quarterfinals centered on a hat trick in the 5-0 victory against Paraguay in the Round of 16. The hat trick -- the first ever recorded by a men’s national team player in the knockout stages of a World Cup - included a stunning strike where he collected on the left, cut inside deftly and lashed into the far corner.

“I took the ball, I did this little thing with my foot that I see Neymar do a lot in training and it was just such a quick thinking situation,” Weah explained. “I thought I could just hit it. I saw it going and I was like, ‘oh my God, this is going to be hot on Twitter.’ The third one was just like the cherry on top of a milkshake.”
By producing at the highest youth levels, Weah paved his way for accelerated progression. He started to make inroads with the first team at PSG - he made his first start for the club in the season-ending 0-0 draw with Caen on May 19 - and took his full international bow with a late substitute appearance in the 1-0 victory against Paraguay in March. With the cameo, Weah became the first player born in 2000 to appear for the MNT.
“Even when I used to create my player on FIFA … I used to use USA because I had so much pride for the country,” Weah said. “Getting the chance to wear the official jersey and have the crest across my heart was an amazing feeling. I felt completely blessed and completely honored to play for such a great country with such a huge amount of history and getting the chance to play for them at such a young age.”
He added to that history in May, becoming the fourth youngest player to score for the MNT in a 3-0 win against Bolivia before starting a week later in a hard-fought 2-1 defeat at Ireland.

Even with those milestones already ticked off the list, Weah remains grounded about the challenges ahead. Hackworth noted how Weah’s upbringing still plays a part in how the blossoming forward approaches the challenges ahead.
“I had the privilege to meet his parents,” Hackworth said. “Tim comes from a family that instilled a lot of values and a lot of ethics in him from a young age. The thing that always struck me when I was around Tim is that he didn’t want his last name to be what brought him into an event or what made people talk about him. He wanted to talk about his first name, Tim. That’s a little different because it’s easy to take advantage of the opportunities because of your name. He wanted to prove himself and that he was earning every opportunity that he got.”
It is why the first reaction from the father is exactly as expected - “I'm proud because he's my son,” George Weah said - and why the second one from son naturally follows that path.

This isn’t a story about some young player trying to ease into the game. This is about a genuine prospect trying to grab and push for every last opportunity afforded to him through his ability and his persistence.
It isn’t a blank slate, but it is a canvas with plenty of room for new memories. It is now down to Weah to chart his own course with the United States and make his own indelible mark on the game in the years ahead.