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Jesse Marsch ‘Doesn’t Care’ If USA Joins Canada In World Cup Round of 16

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 29, 2026
in Sports
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Jesse Marsch ‘Doesn’t Care’ If USA Joins Canada In World Cup Round of 16
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LOS ANGELES STADIUM — At least one American is headed to the round of 16 at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

Canada coach Jesse Marsch, who was an assistant coach with the U.S. men’s national team when the Stars and Stripes reached the same stage under Bob Bradley in 2010, became the first manager at this summer’s tournament to win a knockout round game, as his Reds topped South Africa 1-0 on a 91st minute strike by veteran midfielder Stephen Eustáquio.

Canada’s Stephen Eustáquio scores goal in stoppage time to advance to Round of 16 | 2026 FIFA World Cup™

Canada’s Stephen Eustáquio scores goal in stoppage time to advance to Round of 16 | 2026 FIFA World Cup™

The Canadians will now play for a place in the quarterfinals against the winner of Monday’s round of 32 contest between three-time World Cup runner-up Netherlands and Morocco, which reached the semis four years ago in Qatar.

Canada had never advanced from group play or even won a World Cup game before this summer. But Canada’s history-making run – in a competition the country is co-hosting along with the United States and Mexico – didn’t begin with glory.

Expected to beat plucky Bosnia and Herzegovina on June 12 in the first World Cup match played on Canadian soil, Marsch’s team settled for a come-from-behind 1-1 tie in Toronto that kept them from topping a group that also contained Qatar and Switzerland.

(Photo by Ulrik Pedersen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Now the Bosnians stand between the USA and a place alongside their northern neighbors in the round of 16. Mauricio Pochettino’s side faces the Golden Lilies on Wednesday in the San Francisco Bay Area. It’s a potential trap game for Pochettino’s side — not that Marsch, the former Premier League and Bundesliga boss who was passed over for the U.S. job when Gregg Berhalter was rehired in 2023 — is at all concerned about how his motherland fares.

“Doug, I appreciate your question,” he told me when I asked what Pochettino’s side had to be wary of against Bosnia to advance. “But I don’t really care.”

That didn’t stop the Princeton University graduate and former Chicago Fire captain, who made two international appearances for the U.S. during his playing days, from weighing in. 

“It’s up to the U.S. to figure out, and they can learn from the matches that Bosnia played,” he continued. “I know a couple of players on their team, and Bosnia is a group of fighters, so they were not easy to play against. I was very complimentary of them after the game. I thought we could have been better in the match, but I think that whoever they play, they will give a really hard match.”

Sunday’s match was played in Southern California because Canada finished second in Group B. All three of Canada’s first round contests were played north of the border. The win over the Qataris and loss to the Swiss took place in Vancouver. Sunday marked the first time a World Cup host had ever played a game in another country other than their own.

“It’s a shame we couldn’t do it in Vancouver, right in front of our fans,” Marsch said. “Nonetheless, I think you saw the team’s character, quality, mentality, togetherness. It’s a pleasure to be their coach.”

(Photo by Jared C. Tilton – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

Marsch had vowed not to speak about the American squad after several of his previous comments caught fire, not the least of which was his revelation on the eve of the 2026 World Cup opener that he and Bradley “had to beg” the U.S. players to sing the Star Spangled Banner before games.  

“These guys,” he said, referring to the Canadian players, “sing the national anthem, belt it out to the top of their lungs. Because they want to show the country how proud they are to be here, to be Canadians and to represent what Canada is.”

U.S. great and current FOX Sports analyst Clint Dempsey, a member of Bradley’s 2010 squad who scored against England during that 2010 World Cup as the Americans won the group over the Three Lions, quickly clapped back.

“I can’t take this guy too seriously,” said Dempsey, the USA’s all-time joint top scorer with 57 goals (tied with Landon Donovan). “When the national anthem happened, I wasn’t someone who normally would sing. I put my hand over my heart, and I’d pray to the good man upstairs.

Added Dempsey: “I’m not going to take advice from someone who switched to the other side and is singing another country’s national anthem.”

Following the biggest win in Canadian men’s soccer history, Marsch said he is “proud to be American.”

“Sometimes I know that Americans get a certain rap for being boisterous, for being arrogant, for being outwardly vocal, and I know that, in many ways, that does describe me, or at least people love to describe me that way,” he said.

“But again,” Marsch said. “I don’t give a s***.”

Canadahistory for canada

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