
Twenty-four years. That's how long the United States had been waiting to reach a World Cup knockout round. On home soil, against Bosnia and Herzegovina, they did it the hard way — a man down for a significant stretch, two goals to the good, and a date with Belgium now pencilled in. Whatever comes next, this one gets remembered.
The details of who scored and who walked are still being confirmed — Football365 and BBC Sport both reported the 2-0 result and the ten-man element, but the specific goalscorers and the circumstances of the red card had not been fully verified at the time of writing. What is confirmed: the USA held their shape, held their nerve, and held Bosnia at arm's length for long enough to bank three points that mean everything in the context of this tournament.
Playing with ten men at a World Cup is one of the most brutal tests a squad can face — the defensive discipline required, the tactical reshuffling, the sheer collective will to not let it unravel. The USA passed it.
The last time the United States made the knockout stage of a World Cup was 2002, when they reached the quarter-finals in South Korea and Japan before losing to Germany. A generation of American football fans has grown up watching their team exit at the group stage — 2006, 2014, the infamous non-qualification in 2018. This, on home soil, in front of their own crowd, feels different. It should.
A home World Cup was always supposed to be the moment the sport cemented itself in the American mainstream. Reaching the knockouts — especially like this — gives that narrative somewhere real to go.
The reward is a last-16 tie against Belgium — a side with genuine quality and tournament experience, but one that has its own complicated history with World Cup expectations. It's exactly the kind of fixture that sells itself.
The USA will need more than ten men for that one. But after Wednesday, nobody is writing them off.
Twenty-four years. That's how long the United States had been waiting to reach a World Cup knockout round. On home soil, against Bosnia and Herzegovina, they did it the hard way
Sources
Football365
Flagside articles are original write-ups synthesised from multiple sources. We cite every outlet that fed into the piece.
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“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Twenty-four years. Four World Cups. Countless near-misses and early exits. On 2 July 2026, the United States Men's National Team finally ended it — beating Bosnia-Herzegovina 2-0 in the round of 32 to
“Stays on World Cup — different angle, same beat.”
Twenty-four years. Four World Cups. Countless near-misses and early exits. On 2 July 2026, the United States Men's National Team finally ended it — beating Bosnia-Herzegovina 2-0 in the round of 32 to