The United States booked their place in the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16 with a disciplined 2-0 victory over Bosnia and Herzegovina at the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium, overcoming the setback of playing the final half-hour with ten men.
Folarin Balogun gave Mauricio Pochettino’s side the breakthrough on the stroke of half-time, finishing clinically after a tightly contested opening period in which Bosnia and Herzegovina enjoyed slightly more possession and created several promising opportunities.
The match took a dramatic turn in the 64th minute when Balogun, who had opened the scoring, was shown a straight red card following a VAR review for serious foul play. Reduced to ten men with more than 25 minutes remaining, the USA were forced into a resilient defensive display.
Bosnia and Herzegovina pushed forward in search of an equaliser but struggled to convert their possession into clear-cut chances. Instead, the Americans delivered the decisive blow in the 82nd minute when Malik Tillman curled a superb free kick into the net to double the lead and effectively end the contest.
Despite finishing with fewer players, the USA managed the closing stages comfortably, limiting Bosnia and Herzegovina’s attacking threat while protecting their clean sheet until the final whistle.
Key Match Moments
- 45′ Folarin Balogun gives USA the lead.
- 64′ Balogun is sent off after a VAR review.
- 82′ Malik Tillman scores a stunning free kick to make it 2-0.
- USA hold firm with ten men to secure progression.
Match Stats
Although Bosnia and Herzegovina edged possession (52%) and recorded more shots (11 to 9), the USA proved more clinical when it mattered. The Americans completed 399 passes at 87% accuracy, won four corners, and defended resolutely after Balogun’s dismissal to preserve the victory.
What This Means
The victory sends the United States into the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16, where tougher tests await as the knockout stage intensifies. Bosnia and Herzegovina’s tournament comes to an end after failing to capitalize on their numerical advantage during the final half-hour.
