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Soccer-US keep World Cup dream alive with gutsy win over Bosnia

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 9:34 PM

By Martin Petty

SANTA CLARA, California, July 1 (Reuters) – Ten-man United States roared into the last 16 at the World Cup with a 2-0 victory over Bosnia on Wednesday, ending a 24-year wait for a ​knockout-stage win to keep alive hopes of an American dream run ‌in soccer’s global showpiece.

In a dramatic high-tempo game in the San Francisco Bay Area, Folarin Balogun scored near halftime then was sent off after the break, with Malik Tillman finding the net with a free kick late on to spark euphoria in a partisan arena ‌of ​red, white and blue.

It was a physical encounter ⁠where luck was not always ⁠on the side of the hosts, with Balogun and Christian Pulisic having goals ruled out. Balogun was stunned after being dismissed for a serious foul on Tarik Muharemovic that seemed to be accidental.

Bosnia had barely threatened and ​looked content defending compactly and hoofing long balls upfield. But they switched up gears with the numerical advantage to press for an equaliser before Tillman ⁠came to the rescue eight minutes from ⁠time.

‘DIG IN DEEP’

Victory brought an end to a U.S. run ​of 10 consecutive defeats by European opposition, and set up a last-16 tie in ​Seattle with Belgium, who had earlier rallied from two goals down ‌to beat Senegal 3-2 after extra time.

“I felt we put on such a good performance and didn’t deserve the red card,” said Pulisic. “But for us to dig in deep like that and just to get another goal and to ⁠defend the way we did, it took a real team effort, but we’re proud of that.”

In a match that got under way with a flyover by fighter jets, ⁠the Americans started with ‌attacking verve and silky one-touch moves, spurred on by ⁠the reverberating roars of U-S-A by a crowd in ​the Golden ‌State that came with high expectations.

The U.S. delivered, showing ​speed, intensity and ⁠determination, with Balogun threatening and Pulisic back in the team, intoxicating the crowd with a few blazing runs for goal.

Tillman said his free kick had been well practiced.

“You never know when it’s going to happen but luckily today it happened. I was ready for it. I felt confident,” he said.

(Reporting by Martin Petty; ​Editing by Toby Davis)