IRVINE, Calif. — Christian Pulisic walked up to a throng of reporters and, before he could be peppered with queries about his wounded left calf or his status for Thursday’s game against Turkey, before he could even respond to a flurry of “good mornings”, he smiled and asked: “Can I guess the first question?”Pulisic, of course, knew that everyone was wondering about his injury. So, the first question: “How are you feeling?”“I’m feeling good,” Pulisic said, “positive going into” the United States’ third game of this World Cup on Thursday night at SoFi Stadium near Los Angeles (10 p.m. ET, Fox).“Hopefully I’ll be able to play a part tomorrow,” he said.Although he and the U.S. men’s national team have already clinched the top spot in Group D, rendering Thursday’s game inconsequential, he spoke as if there’s a decent chance he’ll participate.“I’ll discuss that with my coaches and the medical staff,” Pulisic said. “Obviously not a good chance I’ll go and play 90 (minutes) right away … but we’ll see.”He returned to full-team training on Monday after working individually last week and missing Friday’s win over Australia.Speaking to reporters Thursday for the first time since a World Cup-opening win over Paraguay on June 12, he said he still didn’t know what, exactly, the injury was. “I took a big kick to the calf a couple days before the (first) game,” he said. “Throughout the first half (against Paraguay), I felt good, and then I started to notice it a little bit, and I think adrenaline definitely carried me through.