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U.S.-born Jonathan Gonzalez hopes to live his World Cup dreams with Mexico

Jonathan Gonzalez of Monterrey fights for the ball with Rafael Marquez of Atlas during the quarterfinals first leg match between Atlas and Monterrey as part of the Torneo Apertura 2017 Liga MX at Jalisco Stadium on November 23, 2017 in Guadalajara, Mexico.
(Refugio Ruiz / Getty Images)
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Jonathan González watched the U.S. national team’s final World Cup qualifier on TV last fall and still hasn’t forgotten how he felt after the 2-1 loss to Trinidad and Tobago knocked the Americans out of this summer’s tournament in Russia.

“I was bummed out,” he said, mustering about as much disappointment as a teenager can muster.

How much that inspired what happened next, he won’t say. But less than three months after the disappointed U.S. team trudged off a soggy field in Trinidad, González declared his intention to play internationally for Mexico, which will take part in the World Cup.

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“A lot of people think it’s just a decision that’s made from morning to night. But it took me a long time to figure it out,” González said Wednesday. “I felt being in Mexico would probably be the best for me.”

For the time being González is in San Jose, 100 miles from Santa Rosa, where he was born to parents with U.S. citizenship and Mexican roots, giving him a choice as to which country he wanted to play for. That makes Friday’s friendly between Mexico and Iceland in Santa Clara a home game for González, who will be playing in front of nearly two dozen friends and family members.

If he plays, that is. At 18 he’s the youngest player on the Mexican team and, having played only 33 minutes for El Tri, one of the least experienced. But the hamstring injury that sidelined the Galaxy’s Jonathan Dos Santos is giving him an opportunity to fight for a seat on the plane to Russia.

“I will give ourselves up until the last day to make the [roster]. And up to that day, they will all be considered,” Mexican coach Juan Carlos Osorio said.

“He’s a young, talented player who’s skillful. He’s eager to learn. Seems to be a good professional,” Osorio said of González. “Hopefully he will continue with his development. He’s one of the guys who has a good present and a prominent future.”

And though González’s present is consumed by thoughts of the World Cup, he insisted his decision to play for Mexico was made with the future in mind as well.

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“That was part of it,” he said of the chance to play in a World Cup before he turns 20. “But I just thought that in Mexico I could develop better. It just felt like it was my environment.”

González has actually been playing in Mexico since 2014, when he joined the youth program of Liga MX club Monterrey. That was the same year he played his first game with an age-group U.S. national team.

He would go on to play 18 more times for U.S. age-group teams without getting a call-up to the senior squad. And that left the door open for Mexico. So after González became a regular in midfield for Monterrey’s first team last summer, Osorio reached out.

There’s wide disagreement about what happened next.

González, who had long expressed a desire to play for the U.S., reportedly was disappointed when he wasn’t called up for the Americans’ November friendly with Portugal. U.S Soccer says it elected to let González stay with Monterrey, which was in the Liga MX playoffs.

González said no one from the U.S. talked to him. Thomas Rongen, U.S. Soccer’s chief scout under former coach Bruce Arena, told CBS Sports he had visited the player’s house three times.

“Most of that was wrong,” González, who made his debut with Mexico in January, said of the varied stories. “I did get something in that last moment when they already knew Mexico was already talking to me.”

The U.S. has successfully recruited other Mexican Americans, such as Jorge Villafaña, Joe Corona, Omar González, Michael Orozco and Edgar Castillo — all of whom decided to play for Uncle Sam.

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González made another decision.

And because of that, there’s one other key difference between Jonathan González and the others: He still has a chance at playing in the World Cup this summer.

“Every time I go to sleep I just find a way to try to get into the squad,” he said. “Whatever I can do to get better and demonstrate what I’m capable of doing. “

kevin.baxter@latimes.com

Follow Kevin Baxter on Twitter @kbaxter11

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