
USA and Australia Meet in Seattle with Early Knockout Passage on the Line
The second round of group matches begins with both Group D leaders seeking a victory that would secure a place in the last 32, while Brazil aim to recover from a sluggish start against Haiti.
The second matchday of Groups C and D at the 2026 World Cup opened on Friday with a direct elimination-race duel in Seattle, where the United States and Australia each carried three points and the knowledge that a win would book a berth in the round of 32 alongside already-qualified co-hosts Mexico. The Americans entered the contest on the back of a 4-1 dismantling of Paraguay in Los Angeles, a performance that, viewed from Washington, transformed the pre-tournament scepticism around Mauricio Pochettino’s side into a swell of home expectation. Australia arrived with a quieter but equally unblemished record, having upset Turkey 2-0 in a match the Socceroos largely conceded possession yet struck decisively through Nestory Irankunda and Connor Metcalfe.
In the American press, the build-up was coloured by a pundit’s remark that Australia would be a “lay-up” opponent, a comment seized upon by Australian outlets and addressed directly by Socceroos coach Tony Popovic, who told reporters his team would “do our talking on the field” and aimed to “put Australian football on the world map.” Pochettino, for his part, stressed that Australia were a side that “really believe in what they do” and warned that his own team needed to match that conviction. The tactical contrast was sharp: the hosts’ fluid, front-foot attacking shape, led by Folarin Balogun’s brace on matchday one and the creative influence of Christian Pulisic, against an Australian back five anchored by Harry Souttar and a counter-attacking structure that had already punished a more heralded Turkish midfield.
Elsewhere in Group C, Scotland carried the chance to move within touching distance of a first-ever knockout-round appearance when they faced Morocco in Boston. Steve Clarke’s team had edged Haiti 1-0 in their opener, a result that Scottish captain Andy Robertson described as a platform for making history. Morocco, semi-finalists in Qatar four years earlier, had held Brazil to a 1-1 draw and, according to coach Mohamed Ouahbi, possessed the ambition and football to compete at the highest level. The match was played under the shadow of a French court’s confirmation that Moroccan captain Achraf Hakimi will face trial for an alleged rape in 2023; Hakimi, who denies the charge, wrote on social media that he had been “waiting for this trial since day one.”
Brazil’s evening assignment against Haiti in Philadelphia carried a different weight. After the 1-1 draw with Morocco, Carlo Ancelotti acknowledged the need for improvement in “balance and quality of play” and confirmed changes to the line-up, while Neymar remained absent as he continued a recovery programme in New Jersey. Brazilian analysts noted that defender Gabriel Magalhães had publicly called for a more committed performance, framing the Morocco result as a lesson already absorbed. Haiti, returning to the World Cup for the first time since 1974, had lost narrowly to Scotland but showed enough organisation to suggest they would not simply be a passive opponent for the five-time champions.
The late fixture in Group D sent Turkey and Paraguay to San Francisco, both pointless and facing effective elimination with another defeat. Turkish frustration after dominating the ball against Australia yet losing 2-0 was palpable, while Paraguay’s Gustavo Alfaro confronted the fallout from a heavy opening loss and the own goal by Damián Bobadilla that had set the Americans on their way. The group standings meant that a draw in Seattle would keep all four teams mathematically alive, but a winner there would join Mexico in the knockout bracket and leave the loser of the later match with no route back.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
The encounter is cast as a friendly but feisty clash between two long-standing allies. The US side, buoyed by a dominant opening win, seeks to lock in a knockout berth, while the Australians are portrayed as slightly aggrieved and eager to prove themselves. Coverage mixes practical viewing guides with wry observations about the sporting cultures of both nations.
The hosts are cast as clear favorites, benefiting from home advantage and a squad of Europe-based players, but the Socceroos are portrayed as capable of springing a surprise. The match is seen as a decisive group-stage crossroads that could shape the path to the last 32. Analysis balances respect for the American side with cautious optimism for an Australian upset.
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