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Chelsea's Christian Pulisic first U.S. male to play in Champions League final

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Klinsmann all smiles seeing Pulisic win the Champions League (0:28)

Jurgen Klinsmann thinks Christian Pulisic winning the Champions League is both huge for the player and the United States. (0:28)

Christian Pulisic made history Saturday as he became the first U.S. man to play in a Champions League final.

Pulisic, who has 36 caps for the United States, came on in the 66th minute of Chelsea's 1-0 victory over Manchester City at Estadio do Dragao.

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Pulisic, 22, is the record holder for goals in a season (2), career appearances (35), assists (7) and minutes for an American in the competition, and added to his list of records when he replaced Timo Werner with Chelsea ahead in Porto.

With Chelsea's win, the Pennsylvania native became just the second American to win the Champions League, joining Jovan Kirovski, who won the competition with Borussia Dortmund in 1997. But Kirovski played in parts of just two group matches that season.

"There's no way to describe this moment. I never in my life thought that I could be here," Pulisic said after the Chelsea triumph. "I hope there's some kids watching back home in America thinking that they can do the same.

"It's massive, this is the biggest thing you can win in club football and I'm just so proud of this team. It's a joy to be here."

Asked about becoming the first American to play in -- and win -- a Champions League final, Pulisic, who wore a U.S. Soccer sweatshirt during the postgame celebrations, said: "That's why I'm wearing this [sweatshirt]. Like I said, I hope there's kids watching back home in America. You can do anything you want to, man."

Pulisic had been an important contributor in Chelsea's run to the title this campaign, leading the team with three goal involvements -- one goal and two assists -- during the knockout stage.

Chelsea claimed their second European crown overall in three final appearances with Saturday's victory. They lost the 2008 final to Manchester United before dramatically beating Bayern Munich on penalties in the 2012 edition.

The final was originally set for Istanbul, but the decision by the UK government to place Turkey on its travel red list forced UEFA to find a new host venue for the all-English match. All arrivals from Turkey into the UK must quarantine at an airport hotel for 10 days.

There were up to 16,500 people in attendance, with City and Chelsea each receiving an allocation of around 6,000 tickets, though the London club returned more than 800 unsold tickets. A further 1,700 tickets were released for the general public, and they sold out on Tuesday.