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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Eustaquio sends Canada past South Africa

1 min read
10:33UTC

Stephen Eustaquio's 92nd-minute goal beat South Africa 1-0 in Los Angeles, handing Canada a maiden World Cup knockout victory.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Eustaquio's 92nd-minute goal gave Canada a maiden knockout win and ended South Africa's first knockout run.

Stephen Eustaquio struck in the 92nd minute in Los Angeles on 28 June to beat South Africa 1-0, sealing the first knockout-round win in Canada's history 1.

Eustaquio, Canada's captain and a midfielder with FC Porto, converted deep into stoppage time to break a tie that had stayed goalless. Canada had reached the knockout stage of a World Cup only as co-hosts of the expanded field, and had never won a tie there. South Africa arrived having reached the knockouts for the first time in their own history .

Two firsts met on the same pitch, and only one could survive it. Canada banked the breakthrough their federation has chased since it rebuilt the men's programme; South Africa's debut in the knockout stage ended at the first attempt, on a goal conceded in the closing seconds. A single stoppage-time moment separated a maiden knockout win from a maiden knockout exit.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Canada beat South Africa 1-0, with Stephen Eustaquio scoring in the 92nd minute, deep into stoppage time added at the end of the match. It was Canada's first-ever win in a World Cup knockout match. Canada had played at only two previous World Cups, in 1986 and 2022, and lost every single match at both. Going from a six-game losing streak spanning nearly forty years to a knockout win is a significant moment for a football nation that has historically struggled at this level. As one of the tournament's co-hosts, Canada's continued run also matters for keeping a home audience engaged deep into the World Cup.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Canada's men's team had almost no professional domestic pathway for most of its history. The Canadian Premier League, the country's first fully professional men's league, only launched in 2019, and MLS expansion clubs in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal gave Canadian-developed players a pro stage they previously lacked.

That infrastructure is only now old enough to be producing the generation, including Eustaquio, that has ended the country's winless World Cup run.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Ending a near four-decade winless World Cup run gives Canadian football a marquee result to point to as validation of its recent domestic league investment.

First Reported In

Update #32 · Four dead in Mexico's World Cup crush

FIFA· 2 Jul 2026
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