Thursday, June 18, 2026

Don’t Sleep on the Socceroos

Coming Off Their Win Over Türkiye, the Aussie Prepare for the Americans

Entering the 2026 World Cup widely dismissed, with American pundits labeling them a "lay-up" and predicting they'd finish dead last in Group D, Australia silenced the noise in emphatic fashion on matchday one, stunning Turkey 2-0 in Vancouver to pull level with the United States at the top of the group standings.

Tony Popovic's side did it the hard way. Australia surrendered 72 percent of possession and absorbed 30 shots, yet never buckled. The hero was 22-year-old goalkeeper Patrick Beach, who delivered eight saves in his competitive national team debut, embodying the kind of low-block defensive resilience that has become the Socceroos' calling card. The goals came on the counter with Nestory Irankunda, 20, becoming Australia's youngest-ever World Cup scorer, before Connor Metcalfe added a second in the second half.

Those two names are central to Australia's attacking threat Friday. Irankunda is a volatile, explosive presence whose pace and ability to beat defenders in tight spaces makes him a genuine danger on the break. Up top, Mohamed Touré, who netted nine goals in 11 Championship matches for Norwich after a January move, brings a clinical edge that belies his age.

Tactically, Popovic deploys a compact 3-4-2-1 that prioritizes defensive organization and transitions. Left wing-back Jordan Bos, one of the Eredivisie's standout fullbacks, provides the primary outlet going forward, and scored the opener the last time these teams met, in a Colorado friendly last October that the USMNT eventually won 2-1.

A team built to make your life difficult, this is no gimme.

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