Stephen Eustaquio delivered a dramatic stoppage-time goal as Canada edged South Africa 1-0, sealing a first-ever place in the World Cup round of 16. The
captain struck in the second minute of added time in Los Angeles, ending South Africa’s resistance and booking a quarter-final meeting with either the Netherlands or Morocco.
This tight contest marked the first round-of-32 match in World Cup history, and both Canada and South Africa were appearing in their maiden knockout tie. Canada controlled more territory and possession across the 90 minutes, yet South Africa’s compact shape and strong goalkeeping from Ronwen Williams kept the score level until Eustaquio’s late intervention.
Canada relied heavily on Eustaquio’s dead-ball quality throughout, as South Africa struggled with crosses and second balls. One early free-kick from the midfielder created the first clear opening after 22 minutes, but Derek Cornelius mistimed his header, sending a tame effort straight at Williams when a firmer touch might have punished the defence.
Eustaquio’s corner deliveries almost broke the deadlock before half-time. A dangerous inswinging set-piece from the left sparked chaos in the six-yard box, with Moise Bombito’s close-range header cleared off the line by Aubrey Modiba and Williams reacting quickly to block Tajon Buchanan’s follow-up as Canada ramped up the pressure on the South Africa goal.
While Canada attacked with growing urgency, South Africa focused on controlled possession at the back and calm passing from Williams. The goalkeeper finished with 77 successful passes, the most by any goalkeeper in a World Cup match since records began in 1966, surpassing Manuel Neuer’s mark of 51 for Germany against Japan in 2022.
Williams’ composure with the ball reflected South Africa’s broader plan to slow the tempo and limit Canadian transitions. South Africa created only one effort on target, yet the structure in front of Williams remained organised for long spells, frustrating Canada’s forwards and reducing space for runners behind the defensive line.
World Cup: Missed chances and key substitutions for Canada
Canada threatened again shortly before the second-half hydration break, when Niko Sigur threaded a clever pass for Tani Oluwaseyi. Williams spread wide to block the striker’s shot, and Mbekezeli Mbokazi then reacted sharply, getting across Jonathan David to clear the danger before David could apply a straightforward finish from close range.
Another contentious moment followed when Richie Laryea went to ground under a challenge from Khuliso Mudau inside the area, but the referee waved away Canada’s penalty appeals. Jesse Marsch later introduced the fit-again Alphonso Davies on 75 minutes for a first appearance of the tournament, as Promise David and Jonathan David both tried efforts from range.
World Cup: Eustaquio’s winning goal and MLS milestone
Just when Canada appeared short of ideas, Ime Okon’s half-clearance dropped invitingly for Eustaquio at the edge of the box. Eustaquio controlled on the chest and drove a precise low shot into the bottom-left corner, beyond Williams’ reach, sparking wild celebrations among the co-hosts and ending South Africa’s hopes of extra time.
3 - Stephen Eustaquio is the third active #MLS player to score a goal in a knockout round match at the FIFA World Cup, joining Landon Donovan (2) and Brian McBride. Hero. pic.twitter.com/U2yVuMZkTcOptaJack(@OptaJack) June 28, 2026
The location added another layer to Eustaquio’s story, as the midfielder is on loan at Los Angeles FC from Porto. The goal also carried statistical significance, with Eustaquio becoming only the third active MLS player to score in a World Cup knockout match, joining Landon Donovan, who scored twice, and Brian McBride.
World Cup: Eustaquio’s creative numbers and match statistics
Eustaquio influenced the contest beyond the decisive strike. The midfielder became only the second player on record, since 1966, to create five chances from set-pieces in a World Cup knockout fixture. The previous instance came from Andrea Pirlo, who produced the same tally for Italy against Germany in the 2006 semi-finals.
Canada’s overall numbers underlined their territorial control. Canada attempted 12 shots to South Africa’s six and registered seven efforts on target to South Africa’s one. Advanced metrics also favoured the co-hosts, as Canada posted an expected goals figure of 1.32 compared to South Africa’s 0.13, reflecting the quality of chances created.
| Team / Player | Shots | Shots on Target | Expected Goals (xG) | Goalkeeper Successful Passes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | 12 | 7 | 1.32 | – |
| South Africa | 6 | 1 | 0.13 | Ronwen Williams – 77 |
The narrow victory sends Marsch’s team into a historic first World Cup quarter-final, where Canada will meet either the Netherlands or Morocco next Saturday. South Africa exit after a disciplined display that tested the co-hosts’ patience, while Eustaquio’s performance, both from set-pieces and open play, stands out as the decisive difference.















