World Cup

Canada Strike Late To End South Africa Dream And Reach World Cup Last 16

Stephen Eustáquio scored the stoppage-time winner as Canada beat Bafana Bafana 1-0, sending the co-hosts into the last 16 for the first time.

Canada have turned a tense knockout night into a national football breakthrough.

Stephen Eustáquio scored in stoppage time to give Canada a 1-0 win over South Africa, sending the co-hosts into the World Cup last 16 for the first time and ending Bafana Bafana’s historic run.

The game looked ready for extra time.

Then Eustáquio changed everything.

The midfielder controlled a South Africa clearance on his chest and struck a clean right-footed shot into the bottom corner. It was the moment Canada had chased all night, and it sent Jesse Marsch, his staff and the unused substitutes into wild celebration.

Canada deserved the breakthrough.

They created the better chances, pushed with more ambition and kept asking questions of a South Africa side that spent long spells trying to slow the game and stay alive.

Moise Bombito came close before half-time when his header was cleared off the line by Aubrey Modiba. Moments later, Canada threatened again in a chaotic spell inside the South Africa penalty area, but Bafana Bafana survived.

There was also a major penalty flashpoint.

Richie Laryea went down after a challenge from Khuliso Mudau near the end of the first half. Marsch was furious when the referee waved play on, but replays suggested Mudau had just managed to get studs on the ball.

South Africa improved after the break, but not enough.

Teboho Mokoena’s early long-range effort was their only shot on target. Oswin Appollis also cut inside after the hour, but his shot drifted away from danger. Canada goalkeeper Maxime Crépeau was rarely stretched.

At the other end, Ronwen Williams kept South Africa in the match.

The Bafana Bafana goalkeeper denied Tani Oluwaseyi, while Mbekezeli Mbokazi produced a vital clearance to stop Jonathan David from turning in the rebound. It was the kind of defending that made extra time feel possible.

But Canada kept pushing.

Alphonso Davies returned from injury off the bench, adding another surge of quality and belief. Canada had already made history in the group stage by winning at a World Cup for the first time. Now they have gone further.

For South Africa, the defeat will hurt.

Hugo Broos’ side had already given Bafana Bafana supporters a tournament to remember by reaching their first World Cup knockout-phase appearance. But against Canada, they struggled to create and lacked the attacking threat to turn survival into another step forward.

Canada now move into a bigger test.

They will face either the Netherlands or Morocco in Houston, and Marsch’s side will need to raise their level again. But they will carry belief, a returning Davies and a new piece of national football history into that match.

Eustáquio’s goal did not just decide a knockout tie.

It gave Canada a World Cup night that will travel far beyond the stadium.

Independent Digital News Network

Also See

NPFL Title Race: Remo Stars Await Rivers United’s Clash Against Kano Pillars

IDNN

TIME Names Nigeria’s Bosun Tijani Among Global AI Trailblazers of 2025

IDNN

ASUU Knocks Education Minister Over ‘No Agreement Signed’ Claim

IDNN

Arsenal squad-management debate grows after Southampton FA Cup exit

Noble Onyeagoro

Unai Emery Becomes Fastest Aston Villa Manager to Reach 100 Wins

Noble Onyeagoro

Tinubu Drug Records: FBI, DEA Request 90-Day Delay in Public Release

IDNN

This website uses cookies to improve User experience. Accept Learn More

Our Policies