World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
I could not point out where it is on a map. I don't know the first thing about Bosnia, and I don't wanna know.
"I couldn't point out where it is on a map. I don't know the first thing about Bosnia, and I don't wanna know."
ABC7 reporter Abigail Velez probably thought she was being funny when she said this with a smile during a live national broadcast. At a watch party for US fans in Long Beach, with the camera right in her face, she spoke for the entire host nation. The video went viral, and Velez was forced to apologize: "The World Cup is supposed to be about uniting communities around the world."
The PR statement was flawless. But the internet remembers.
Bosnia and Herzegovina's captain Dzeko fired back during a pre-match press conference. According to British media, the gist was clear: Americans can't even point out most countries on a map.
The original transcript never surfaced, but the message hit home. A 40-year-old man who crawled out of bomb craters in Sarajevo to play soccer all the way to now was treated like a punchline by a journalist who couldn't even pronounce his country's name.
The entire Bosnia team carried this fire into Levi's Stadium. Knockout matches don't care about stats on paper, only who has more to lose.
Esmir Bajraktarević was born in 2005 in Appleton, Wisconsin. His parents are refugees from the Srebrenica massacre who fled to the US and raised him while working on assembly line.
New England Revolution's academy taught him how to trap, run, and read the game. The US soccer production system honed him from a teenager into a professional. On September 7, 2024, he first put on the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team jersey.
In March 2026, the World Cup qualifying playoff final went to a penalty shootout. The 21-year-old stepped up and converted the winning spot kick. Bosnia went to the World Cup; the other team went home. PSV Eindhoven brought him into their first-team rotation, and he won the Eredivisie title along the way. Now he steps into Levi's Stadium in a Bosnia jersey, facing the US goal.
The blade polished by the US youth production line now points at its own throat.
Edin Dzeko was born on March 17, 1986. He's 40.
At the 2014 Brazil World Cup, he scored his first World Cup goal in the 23rd minute against Iran. Twelve years later, on April 2, FIFA's official website ran an article with "last dance" in the title.
The "last dance" narrative is thick, but the numbers don't lie.
In qualifying, he scored 5 goals in 6 games, carrying Bosnia through the playoffs. At Schalke 04, he helped the team climb back from the 2. Bundesliga to the Bundesliga. But by the 2026 World Cup group stage, after three matches, Dzeko's goal tally was stuck at zero.
His shooting boots were off, but he remained captain, the target man, the physical presence defenders had to mark for all 90 minutes. With 150+ international appearances and 73 national team goals, the second-highest scorer in Bosnia's history can't even reach half of that total.
Bosnia's squad averaged 25.92 years old at the tournament's start, making them the third-youngest team. The youngest players entrusted their fate to the team's oldest legs.
Dzeko once published an open letter to Bosnian children in the Players' Tribune: "I grew up with war. Suddenly, I was living a fairy tale." His mother stopped him from going out to play soccer as a child. Minutes later, a bomb landed on that very pitch.
Forty years old, with a bandage wrapped around his right knee. He doesn't care when the music stops; he just wants to burn the last bit of fuel on the grass.
ESPN's odds for this match: USMNT -265, draw +390, Bosnia +800. Kalshi's prediction market gave the US an 83% chance of advancing. All three analysts from The Athletic predicted a US win.
+800. Actuaries voted with real money: Bosnia's implied probability of winning is only about 11%. In the world of bookmakers, the game is already over.
For actuaries, 11% is garbage time. But knockout matches don't have 38 rounds to revert to the mean. One corner kick, one counterattack, a half-step advantage in the box for a 40-year-old veteran in 90 minutes—that's enough.
Pochettino's books can't withstand close scrutiny. Six points came from the first two rounds, not the final leg. A 4-1 demolition of Paraguay was overwhelming, a 2-0 win over Australia looked rock-solid, and then he rotated most of the starting lineup against Turkey, where Kaan Ayhan scored in the 98th minute. 2-3. Whether it was conserving energy or overconfidence, only he knows.
Pulisic injured his left calf against Paraguay and, after returning versus Turkey, was nutmegged by Arda Güler. On June 30, he said he could play 120 minutes. Trust at most a third of such pre-match boasts from players.
Levi's Stadium has an official capacity of 68,827. During the group stage, there were already images of empty red seats. The host nation's box office appeal hasn't been fully justified by FIFA.
Bosnia finished the group stage with 1 win, 1 draw, and 1 loss, scoring 5 goals and conceding 6, with a goal difference of -1. They scraped into the knockout round as one of the best third-placed teams. The stats look ugly. But they're alive.
+800 odds say Bosnia has only an 11% chance. Dzeko doesn't care. He just needs one corner kick, one moment of chaos in the box, half a second where a defender loses focus.
150 matches of international muscle memory, all placed on this one moment.