Co-hosts Canada and South Africa in historic World Cup knockout clash

BSS
Published On: 28 Jun 2026, 17:34

LOS ANGELES, United States, June 28, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Co-hosts Canada and 
South Africa will both make World Cup history when they meet in the opening 
game of the knockout round on Sunday.

Neither nation has ever reached this stage of international football's 
showpiece event and they could not have asked for a grander stage than the 
spectacular SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.

South Africa are one of nine African sides to have reached the last 32, 
making the continent the major beneficiary of the expanded 48-team format.

The Bafana Bafana looked dead and buried in a 2-0 defeat to Mexico in the 
tournament opener but a spirited 1-0 win against South Korea fired them into 
uncharted territory.

Canada celebrated going through too -- but slipping to a 2-1 defeat to 
Switzerland in their final group game cost them their 'home' status that the 
group winner would have enjoyed.

So they have been forced to head to the United States.

Their American coach Jesse Marsch is banking on the "X-factor" of returning 
superstar Alphonso Davies to elevate his team in Sunday's showdown.

Bayern Munich defender Davies was sidelined for the entire group phase due to 
a hamstring injury and Marsch said he relished the return of the undoubted 
star of Canadian soccer.

"Now that we have Alphonso back and healthy and ready to perform, I think 
it's a big moment for the team and a big boost for the team," Marsch said on 
Saturday.

"He's a big X factor for us," he added.

"Being on the pitch, the belief they have in him, the belief he has in 
himself, I think changes the possibility of what the potential of our team 
is, and what we can do in this tournament," Marsch said.

South Africa's veteran Belgian coach Hugo Broos said reaching the last 32 
meant "we can say already now that the World Cup is a success for us," but he 
insisted his side was hungry to go even further.

"That doesn't mean now that we are happy and that we just play the game 
tomorrow and go home. Once you are there, you want more, and we want to win 
the game tomorrow," he said.

"I think if we can show the same mentality and the same level that we played 
against South Korea, then I think we had a chance to win it -- even if Canada 
is a very tough team."

- Wild end -

On Saturday, the Democratic Republic of Congo became the latest underdogs to 
roar at this World Cup, battling into the knockout rounds for the first time 
while Iran's rollercoaster campaign ended in elimination.

A chaotic finale to the group phase saw Austria and Algeria fill the final 
two berths in the last 32 after battling to an extraordinary 3-3 draw in 
Group J -- a result that dashed Iran's hopes of advancing from their group.

A win for either Austria or Algeria would have allowed Iran to squeeze into 
the last 32, but Sasa Kalajdzic arrowed in a header in the sixth minute of 
injury time to snatch a draw for Austria and spark pandemonium in Kansas 
City.

It was the final act of another enthralling day at the tournament which saw 
DR Congo emulate fellow African minnows Cape Verde by reaching the knockouts 
following a 3-1 defeat of Uzbekistan.

DR Congo's win in Atlanta -- their first ever victory in a World Cup match -- 
was enough to secure third place in Group K, setting up a dream clash with 
England in the next round.

"We love our national team. We love what we represent. I think tonight we 
just showed what it means for us is just to fight no matter what," said DR 
Congo striker Yoane Wissa.

England laboured to a 2-0 win against Panama that left them top of their 
group, but with questions hanging over their ability to win the World Cup for 
the first time since 1966.

Lionel Messi meanwhile scored his sixth goal of the tournament -- and 19th in 
all World Cups -- as reigning champions Argentina beat Jordan 3-1 to make it 
three groups wins out of three. They face surprise qualifiers Cape Verde in 
the next round on Friday.

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