Stephen Eustaquio waited until the 90th minute to end South Africa’s resistance, slotting home the only goal at SoFi Stadium to send Canada into the next round of the 2026 World Cup. It was a result that defied much of what the game looked like on paper: South Africa held 58% of the ball and generated a tidy passing rhythm all afternoon, yet Canada’s directness and shot volume told the real story. Jesse Marsch’s side created seven shots on target to South Africa’s one, and when the moment came, Eustaquio was there to finish it.

Key Moments
- 46′, Hugo Broos makes an early change, withdrawing Relebohile Mofokeng at the start of the second half as South Africa look to inject more energy in the final third.
- 54′, Nathan-Dylan Saliba picks up a yellow card for holding, a booking that limits his ability to press aggressively for the remainder of his time on the pitch.
- 59′, Canada make a double change: Saliba comes off following his caution, and Moise Bombito is also replaced as Marsch reorganizes his backline.
- 70′, Tani Oluwaseyi and Liam Millar both enter for Canada, signaling a push for the breakthrough with twenty minutes remaining.
- 75′, Tajon Buchanan is brought on as Canada use all five substitutions, flooding the attack with fresh legs against a tiring South Africa defense.
- 90′, Stephen Eustaquio converts to make it 1-0. The goal comes right at the death and settles a tight, absorbing contest in Canada’s favor.
Tactical Breakdown
South Africa controlled the ball in a way that rarely translated into genuine danger. Hugo Broos had his side set up in a 4-2-3-1, and Bafana Bafana completed 468 of their 550 passes at an 85% accuracy rate. Yet for all that possession, they mustered just one shot on target and posted an xG of 0.13, a number that speaks plainly to how peripheral their attacking play was. Canada, sitting in a compact 4-4-2 and working in shorter bursts with 42% of the ball, directed nine of their 12 shots from inside the box and finished with an xG of 1.32. Maxime Crepeau was barely tested, making a single save all game.
The tactical turning point came in the final quarter, when Jesse Marsch introduced Oluwaseyi, Millar, and Buchanan in a concentrated span between the 70th and 75th minutes. The fresh legs stretched South Africa’s increasingly tired backline and kept the pressure relentless enough that, when Eustaquio picked his moment in the 90th, the Canadian midfield had already worn the hosts down. South Africa’s 86th-minute double change, bringing on Evidence Makgopa and Thapelo Maseko, came too late to shift the momentum.
South Africa’s undoing was an inability to convert territorial dominance into meaningful chances. With only six total shots and five of them coming from outside the box, Bafana Bafana never really threatened Crepeau. The lone shot on target summed up the afternoon: competent and organized in possession, but too cautious and peripheral in the areas that count. Canada, for their part, were disciplined enough without the ball to make South Africa’s extra time on it feel largely harmless.
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World Cup knockout bracket
Knockout results, aggregate scores across legs; winners in bold, penalty shootouts noted.
Head to Head
Verdict
Canada advance to the next round of the 2026 World Cup after a patient, disciplined performance that rewarded efficiency over aesthetics. South Africa, who had earned their place in the Round of 32 with four points from their group, exit the tournament having shown genuine organization but an inability to turn possession into goals. For Canada, as co-hosts, the win carries real weight heading into the next stage of a tournament they are playing in front of their own fans.