Monday, June 22, 2026

U.S. vs Turkiye: A Soccer History

All Five Matches Between the Two Nations Have Been Close Contests

Thursday's group finale at SoFi Stadium will mark just the sixth all-time meeting between the United States and Turkey, a rivalry that, while brief, has produced no shortage of drama across three decades.

The two nations first met in September 1991, when Frank Klopas earned the Americans a 1-1 draw in Istanbul. Their most consequential clash came at the 2003 FIFA Confederations Cup, where Turkey handed the U.S. a 2-1 group-stage defeat. DaMarcus Beasley provided the lone American goal on the way to the USMNT's early elimination from the competition.

The Americans then strung together back-to-back friendly victories. Jozy Altidore and Clint Dempsey scored in a 2-1 win in Philadelphia ahead of the 2010 World Cup, and Dempsey joined Fabian Johnson on the scoresheet for another 2-1 result at Red Bull Arena in 2014.

The most recent meeting came just last summer, a tightly contested friendly in which Jack McGlynn struck in the opening minute before Turkey rallied to win 2-1.

That leaves the all-time series perfectly deadlocked at two wins, two losses and a draw apiece. Both nations also have significant World Cup history—Turkey's remarkable third-place finish in 2002 and the USMNT's consistent presence on the global stage—making Thursday's dead rubber a chance to tip the balance.

Turkiye Eliminated

Expected to Get Out of Group D, Turkiye Eliminated Before Their Final Group Stage Match

Turkiye arrives in Los Angeles on Thursday as a team already heading home, eliminated after two matches, scoreless, and still searching for answers.

The Crescent Stars entered their first World Cup in 24 years, riding enormous expectations, buoyed by a golden generation anchored by Real Madrid's Arda Guler and Juventus winger Kenan Yildiz. Instead, they produced one of the tournament's most bewildering collapses. Across defeats to Australia and Paraguay, Turkey launched 62 total shots without finding the net—the most by any team in a two-match span without scoring since records began in 1966.

Against Paraguay on Friday, Turkey mustered 32 attempts and faced a man-down opposition for more than 45 minutes, yet still fell 1-0 to Matias Galarza's stunning opener just 70 seconds in. A Mert Muldur header that struck the crossbar and post in the 35th minute was the closest they came.

"We tried very hard, but it didn't work," Guler said afterward. "Everybody's sad, everybody's crying."

Coach Vincenzo Montella's rigid 4-2-3-1 system was consistently decoded by opponents, and his reluctance to adapt proved costly. For the USMNT, Thursday's dead rubber represents a low-stakes audition for fringe players, and one final tune-up before the knockout stage begins.