Key events
33 min Not sure why the USA keep building up on the right when Pulisic is on the left. They don’t get anywhere.
No goal! Pending review
Balogun has put the ball in the net with another great finish, but he needed to get back onside before receiving that pass in a shocking amount of space in the center of the field.
BIH get away with a defensive breakdown. USA need more poise here.
31 min THAT, on the other hand, is a terrible call. Dest and Radeljić bump shoulders, and the giant BIH defender falls. The referee calls a foul. Come on.
29 min Balogun falls in the penalty area! No. It’s like the Harry Kane call today. He was already on the way down when minimal contact was made.
28 min Robinson plays the ball out deep in the BIH half and is looking extremely frustrated.
28 min Alex Freeman is down – the US bench certainly thought he was fouled. USA continue play, though, as Freeman slowly stands.
27 min USA come out of the break in another gear, ramping up the pressure.
Free kick BIH, as Robinson angrily gestures that it was a dive.
Hydration mail
“The bad news for whichever of these teams wins tonight it that they’ll face Belgium, who are now officially the New Germany: they might look like a dead horse being flogged for 80+minutes, but unless you drive a 3-goal stake through their heart, they are going to rise from the coffin and bite you.” – Justin Kavanagh
“I was born and grew up in the US and have no connection to Bosnia but I’m rooting for Bosnia mainly because I never want to hear the irritating “yoo ess ay! yoo ess ay!” chant again. The US men also seem to have this irritating swagger and sense of superiority that doesn’t quite fit a team with their good-but-not-great international resumé, and I feel like they could do with being taken down a peg. I wonder if this comment alone will mean I get turned away at the border the next time I go visit my parents.” – Ruby Pratka
22 min Tillman dummies to Balogun, played for Robinson, then to Pulisic, but he can’t get there.
Everybody hydrate!
21 min Not sure how Tillman wasn’t called for a foul there, though Muharemovic did fall to ground a bit easily, and as we saw with Harry Kane, that doesn’t help.
Corner to the USA – Vasilj punches well, showing no ill effects of the earlier clash.
20 min The USA do a better job this time of defending the goal kick, a sentence I never thought I’d write. Pulisic is quickly fouled at midfield. USA possess again.


Jeff Rueter
Weston McKennie and Tim Ream spending additional time alongside Mauricio Pochettino as Nikola Vasilj is treated. Very different instruction sets, no doubt, but Ream will be crucial to unlock the left side of the US attack.

Jeff Rueter
Bosnia and Herzegovina had one of the lowest field tilts – a possession metric which only tracks attacking-third touches – of any team that advanced from the group, and they seem plenty comfortable with letting the United States bear the burden of dragging the ball around the park.
Sergiño Dest has been pressing the left side of their defense; if Antonee Robinson and Christian Pulisic can get the same downhill patterns running, it could stretch the visitors out and create more room for Folarin Balogun and the midfielders to find shooting lanes.
18 min CHANCE FOR USA! Through ball to McKennie, who has acres of space. He crosses, and Vasilj punches it straight into Robinson’s head! But it flies over the bar.
Vasilj is down hurt.
17 min Good through ball to Balogun, who plays it off a defender but gets a throw-in rather than a corner.
BIH press, and the ball is played back to Freese.
Fotmob isn’t counting the BIH corner kick that was headed for the net as something worth any “xG” mention. Eyeroll.
15 min Half-chance for the USA – Robinson is over on the right. Ball is cut back for Balogun, who shoots wide of the near post.
14 min Free kick near the right sideline, drawn by Dest. They try to take it quickly – that’s not the first time they’ve done it. Maybe they figure they want to get back to open play rather than play it into the mixer with a bunch of tall BIH players.

Alexander Abnos
We’ve entered the 12th minute – this is officially the longest start to a game without a USA goal in this World Cup.
11 min CHANCE BIH! The corner kick is nearly an olimpico, but Freese does just enough to punch it away.

10 min CHANCE BIH! The goal kick is taken 75 yards to Džeko, who’s more than five yards behind the defense! Ball is played over for a Demirović shot at Freese, but it’s right at him. BIH earn a corner.
USA very, very, very lucky. Got caught napping and nearly paid for it.
9 min Something I’ve noticed about the BIH defense as compared with other teams that have packed things back – they’re quick to react when the ball is played from side to side. Other teams have been compact horizontally as well as vertically. The BIH approach seems more effective.
7 min Grappling match in the US half leads to a free kick for the USA as Richards is fouled.
Another free kick at midfield, taken quickly.
6 min Gigovic is down after clearing the corner with a header but banging his head into Tillman’s in the process. He returns, and the dropped ball is oddly taken – USA under immediate pressure.
5 min This time, the USA build with Robinson, McKennie and Pulisic. McKennie ends up deep in the BIH half and earns a corner.
4 min Many passes on the right wing. They switch to the left, as if remembering the existence of Christian Pulisic, who makes a slashing run and shoots, deflected for a corner.
2 min BIH stationed players in the US half while the UYS defenders kicked it around. The BIH players weren’t moving. Chris Richards seemed a little confused. But the USA play forward and have possession.
1 min Tons of jostling before the corner comes in. Cleared, but set pieces are going to be nervy moments for the USA.
Peep! We’re underway. BIH lined up for the kickoff like it was an NFL kickoff, immediately sending six players forward. They earn a corner kick right away.
At the hydration break, I’ll get to the discussion of Santa Clara’s soccer history.
In the player intros, why are so many US players rubbing their hands like evil geniuses?
A fan is wearing a bald eagle costume with a piece of plastic in front of their face. It’s as if someone thinks Angine de Poitrine haven’t gone far enough.
Officially, the national anthem of Bosnia and Herzegovina has no words. Their fans are singing something, anyway. The team are tight-lipped and stoic.
“Kind of ironic that the USA are playing on Canada Day, of all days! I just want to put in a shoutout for California’s Great America, an amusement park in Santa Clara which shares a car park with Levi’s Stadium (where this game is being played). Unfortunately, the land underneath the park was sold to the developer Prologis, so it’s expected to close at the end of the 2027 season. A great shame – it has a world-class roller coaster in the form of Gold Striker. I hope it gets as much footfall as it deserves while the World Cup is on.” – Matthew Leung
And Canada will be playing on the Fourth of July. England will play one day later, when we’ll still be coughing out our lungs from firework smoke.
Bend It Like Beckham critiques
“Has not aged well. It came out when I was in High School and I LOVED it. But as an adult, two teenaged girls fighting over their adult male coach who not only does not shut it down, but starts a relationship with one of them, sickens me.” – Kathryn Cehrs
Along those lines – I lost patience with the film F1 when the fiercely independent pioneering woman who led the team’s engineering efforts … threw away her entire character development because Brad Pitt did something unexpected at the card table.
“The funniest thing about Bend It Like Beckham is that everyone’s flying over to Hamburg all of a sudden - and then back. It only makes sense if you know that German film financing requires you to shoot at least a small part of the movie in a German city. I’m rooting for Bosnia and Herzegovina tonight: beautiful country with great people and bad politicians. And - as an FC St. Pauli supporter – I’m wishing Nikola Vasilj all the best for the inevitable penalties. And for his private and professional future.” – Konrad Pahlke
That may indeed be one position at which BIH have an edge.

Alexander Abnos
Hello from San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, where as you might expect an extremely pro-USA crowd is filing in. There are certainly more than enough Bosnia and Herzegovina fans here to make some noise should they give them a reason. It’s a beautiful day, sunny and cool in that special Bay Area way (unless you’re in the famously hot upper decks here).
Pre-pregame email …
“Hi Beau! I am very excited because I think it’s a very cool match-up - I cannot imagine two countries that are more different, except in soccer where I think they’re very evenly matched. Though I base this opinion mostly on Bosnia’s elimination of Italy in the qualifiers. Is Bosnia that good or was Italy just very bad? Well we’ll find out very soon, won’t we!” – Vlado
“Balogun is the best reason to keep the 14th amendment (birthright citizenship) as it is. If the Mad King had his way, Balogun would be playing for England.” – Mary Waltz
Maybe then they could beat Mexico.
“When the stadium announcer said, ‘Here is Team USA!’ with all the music and everybody cheered, only the starting 10 came out. (The 3 goalkeepers were already warming up). The whole Bosnia team came out together. After several minutes the USA subs came out and warmed up together, but they were not announced and nobody cheered. The USMNT has historically had a problem with team cohesion, and the decision to bring out only the starters when announcing the team seems like an easy way to create a division within the team that doesn’t need to be there.” – Kathryn Cehrs
“When isn’t a World Cup knock-out match considered a ‘must-win’ game? They all are, or else your tournament is over. But NOW, as the co-hosts with the most (matches), USA surely has to match the progress of on-form Mexico as well as Canada, or else the team and USSF will have egg all over their collective faces. On top of that, should USA fail to get past the Bosnians tonight, Jesse Marsch will become a total monster! (Well, an even bigger monster in the eyes of the USSF and its friends than he already is.) They have the talent to win, but can the USA handle the psychological pressure? I hope so.” – Jason Elliott
Should the USA reach the quarterfinals, I’d argue the “must” factor drops steadily. No one is going to complain if this team go out gracefully against a Spain or a France. This one? There’ll be questions.
“If it were either Bosnia or Herzegovina I would pick an easy US win. Bosnia and Herzegovina, on the other hand, might not be so straightforward. Did you hear the one about the US fans who wanted to bang drums, blare death metal and honk horns outside the Bosnians’ hotel, but couldn’t find it on the map?” – Peter Oh
Funny how “Bosnia and Herzegovina” gets truncated to “Bosnia,” “Trinidad and Tobago” is “Trinidad,” but “William and Mary” is never just “William.”
I’m thinking of a different way to shorten the country name, but “B and H” seems flippant. Maybe I’ll just go with their country code “BIH.” The “I” actually stands for “and” in the country’s local languages.
The pregame show on Fox Sports 1, which is distinct from the pregame show on Fox, is hyping this as a can’t-lose game for the USA.
Dax McCarty, who has a serious playing resume, is reminding his chest-puffing co-host that Paraguay beat Germany.
Question: Do the USA play better when they’re not expected to win? England 1950, Colombia 1994, Portugal 2002, Mexico 2002, Italy 2006, Spain 2009, England 2010, Belgium 2014 (even in defeat), England 2022. When they are expected to win? Iran 1998. Poland 2002. Trinidad and Tobago 2017. Panama, Panama and Panama.
Or do they just have England’s number? Good news if they face off in the final.
(What? The USA would have to go through Spain and France, and England would have to go through Mexico and Argentina? Never mind.)
This evening’s officials …
Referee: Raphael Claus (Brazil). ARs also from Brazil; fourth and reserve officials from Uruguay.
VAR: Juan Soto (Venezuela), with Nicolas Gallo (Colombia) and Jerome Brisard (France).
(Saying “evening” because it’s a 5 pm kickoff in Santa Clara, Calif., known in soccer circles mostly as the destination of the two protagonists in Bend It Like Beckham, the breakthrough film on women’s soccer that … hasn’t aged well?)
Lineups
No surprise whatsoever for the co-hosts …
USA: Freese; Ream, Richards, Freeman; Robinson, Dest; Tillman, McKennie, Adams, Pulisic; Balogun
Fotmob calls it a 3-4-2-1, with Pulisic and McKennie as twin attacking mids.
Wait …
3-4-2-1? …
IT’S A THREE-SIX-ONE!! (Cue nightmare flashbacks of 1998.)
But honestly, the difference between a 3-4-3 and a 5-4-1 is how well a team is controlling the ball. It might be a mistake, though, to let Robinson spend too much time forward and leave Ream vulnerable. The US captain didn’t look comfortable when he had to leave his comfort zone alongside Richards in central defense and go out to the wings.)
FWIW, Fotmob says Bosnia also will be in a 3-4-2-1. No one believes they’ll play with that many players forward. But we’ll list them that way for now.
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Vasilj; Muharemovic, Radeljić, Katić; Kolašinac, Bašić, Gigovic, Dedić; Alajbegović, Demirović; Džeko
Dedić started the first two games but was out injured for the win over Qatar. Muharemovic returns from a red-card suspension.
But the surprise is Gigovic, the former Swedish international now with Young Boys in Switzerland. He played 61 minutes in the tie with Canada and hadn’t appeared since then. Šunjić, a former Croatian international, makes way.
There’s no place for Wisconsin-born Esmir Bajraktarević. Not yet, anyway.
And it’s done.
That’s a result that just goes to show how brutal the fates can be. There’s no such thing as karma in soccer. The most impressive team over 90 minutes doesn’t always win. One save or one deflection can make one manager an idiot or a genius.
So the pundits who are already drawing up their previews of the USA’s Round of 16 game might want to cool their jets.
We pause now for the denouement of Belgium-Senegal.
Familiar face
For many years, Wisconsin-born Esmir Bajraktarević was part of the US soccer pipeline. He played for youth national teams. He worked his way up through the youth ranks at the New England Revolution and overlapped just slightly with US goalkeeper Matt Turner.
But Bajraktarević was the child of Bosnian refugees. One of his heroes was Edin Džeko, the Sarajevo-born player who distinguished himself at Manchester City, Wolfsburg and Roma.
At age 40, Džeko is still on the team. At age 21, so is Bajraktarević, who converted the winning shot in the penalty shootout that sent his country to the World Cup ahead of Italy.
Jeff Rueter writes:
He didn’t miss, slotting his attempt just underneath Donnarumma’s gloves as the keeper dove to his left. Bajraktarević peeled off to the corner flag and held his Bosnia aloft for the home supporters to admire: Zmajevi were back in the World Cup at Italy’s expense.
That sort of fearlessness in the big moment, coupled with experience scuppering a 2026 World Cup co-host’s home-field advantage, makes Bajraktarević and his team a compelling first knockout adversary. for the US.
And he has had an impact in this Cup. Jeff notes:
Bajraktarević started against Canada and Qatar and came off the bench against the Swiss, logging 214 minutes (including stoppage time) and operating as a recipient for progressive passes. Only Ivan Bašić has played more passes into the box than Bajraktarević’s five for Bosnia and Herzegovina, per Futi, while his 70 attacking-third touches trail his opposite winger, Kerim Alajbegović.
Preamble
Welcome to one of the biggest games in US men’s history.
Such sentiments are often overstated. But this game will have one of two possible outcomes ...
1. A third win in the same World Cup for the first time in US men’s history. Even the semifinalists of 1930 only won twice. The win would be validation that the team’s start to the tournament was no outlier – though seeing Paraguay knock out Germany just three games after the US ran riot over the South American side provides ample demonstration that this US team should officially be rated “not bad.”
2. A national deflating.
Should the USA win and then lose to Senegal ... wait, what just happened? Oh. Should the USA win and then lose to Senegal or Belgium, that would be yet another in a succession of losses in the round of 16, but again -- they would have won three games and would probably stake a claim as one of the better teams to miss out on the quarterfinals. A loss to Bosnia and Herzegovina would be less palatable among US sport fandom.
Which may be unfair, because this is absolutely the biggest game in the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Until this year, the only points the young nation had managed in the World Cup final tournament were in a dead-ish rubber against Iran in 2014. In theory, Iran could’ve wiped out the World Cup debutants and advanced past Nigeria on goal difference, but the Iranian team put up little resistance and collapsed to a 3-1 defeat.
Last year, Bosnia and Herzegovina put up a credible performance in group-stage qualifying, finishing second behind Austria. Then they won two nail-biting affairs in the European playoffs, eliminating Wales on penalties after a late goal from grizzled veteran Edin Džeko, then shocking Italy on penalties after another second-half equalizer.
Then in their return to the Big Dance after 12 years away, Bosnia and Herzegovina stunned co-host Canada with a first-half goal and held on for an impressive draw. Switzerland picked them apart, but they advanced with a solid 3-1 smackdown over Qatar.
And Bosnia and Herzegovina absolutely will not be intimidated. Nor should they. This is a country that endured the horrors of the years of war that followed the collapse of Yugoslavia. Some of the players are the children of refugees from that conflict.
They also happen to have a lot of players who’ve been through pressure cookers in European football, along with some tantalizing prospects.
The USA will be playing to shed the tag of underachievers that has dogged the so-called “golden generation” ever since the failure to qualify for the 2018 World Cup. Bosnia and Herzegovina will be playing for a long-awaited breakthrough on the international scene.
On paper, perhaps this is a game that favors the USA. Ask England if being favored on paper meant the game was easy. Or ask Germany if such a designation kept them from being swept out of this Cup.
Beau will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s an excerpt from Graham Ruthven’s daily World Cup watch guide about this matchup:
What to watch for
Pochettino’s decision to rest most of his first-choice players for the USA’s dead-rubber group finale against Turkey will have paid dividends if the co-hosts are able to keep up the intensity of their play against a Bosnia and Herzegovina team who will sit deep and ask to be broken down.
Bosnia and Herzegovina embrace the slog. They made it to this World Cup by winning back-to-back penalty shootouts against Wales and Italy and will attempt to make the USA’s life a misery in Santa Clara by closing space between the lines, staying compact at the back and playing for set pieces.
Player to watch: Christian Pulisic, USA – The Milan winger made his return from injury against Turkey and could be in line to start this match. Pulisic’s direct running and one-v-one ability could be critical to breaking down the Bosnia and Herzegovina backline.
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