SOCCEROOS BLOCK OUT THE NOISE: POPOVIC’S NEW-LOOK AUSTRALIA GRID LOCK PARAGUAY TO SEAL KNOCKOUT BIRTH
By Sachit Subba • Football • Jun 26, 2026 05:56 AM • 35 views
SAN FRANCISCO — There are times when tournament football demands the canvas of an artist, and times when it requires the boots of a construction worker. In the cool evening air of the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium on Thursday night, Tony Popovic gladly handed his side the hard hats.
A bruising, often fractious 0-0 draw against a desperate Paraguay was precisely what the doctor ordered for the Socceroos. The point was mathematically enough to secure second place in Group D behind the rampant United States, booking Australia’s ticket to the World Cup’s round of 32. It marks only the third time in history that the nation has breached the knockout waters, matching the achievement of the celebrated 2022 squad in Qatar.
While the aesthetic value of the performance won’t have their upcoming opponents losing sleep, the sight of Popovic engulfing his staff in back-slapping hugs told its own story. For a squad that entered the night under immense pressure, survival was the only currency that mattered.
Popovic's High-Stakes Gamble
Following a toothless 2-2 structural collapse against the United States in their previous outing, Popovic chose the ultimate high-stakes theatre to roll the dice. The tactician made six sweeping changes to his starting lineup, answering a furious wave of domestic criticism by restoring teenage livewire Nestory Irankunda and midfield engine Connor Metcalfe to the fold. He also handed a start to Cristian Volpato, signalling a clear intent to play on the front foot.
The tactical reshuffle was further complicated by an injury to fullback Jacob Italiano, forcing the versatile Jordan Bos to flip across from his natural left-sided home to marshal the right flank.
The gamble initially paid dividends in terms of control. Within minutes of the opening whistle, Volpato unlocked the Paraguayan lines to tee up Jackson Irvine on the right face of the penalty area, only for the skipper's fiercely struck angled shot to fly directly into the midriff of goalkeeper Orlando Gill. Bos and Volpato would both sting Gill’s palms later in the half, though the South American custodian was rarely forced into the spectacular as Australia's final-third delivery lacked precision.

Enciso Sparks a Paraguayan Revival
Gustavo Alfaro’s Paraguay, knowing defeat would be terminal and a draw precarious, offered virtually nothing in a sterile first half. Desperate for a spark, Alfaro introduced the Brazilian-born attacker Mauricio at the intermission.
The tactical shift immediately altered the match's gravity. While Mauricio’s early speculative blast flew high and wide, it signalled a shift in momentum. Soon, Brighton’s mercurial talent, Julio Enciso, began to dictate terms. Operating in the pockets of space between the Australian midfield and back four, Enciso’s direct dribbling repeatedly carved open a tiring Socceroos rearguard.
Paraguay’s golden opportunity fell to the young talisman eight minutes from time. Slicing through the central channel, Enciso found himself with a sight of goal, but his low, hurried effort flashed comfortably wide of the left upright.

A Grandstand Finish
The final exchange evolved into a breathless, end-to-end transition battle. In the 89th minute, Bos almost produced a moment for the folklore archives, dancing past two Paraguayan defenders from the right wing before flashing a cross-shot agonisingly wide of the far post.
At the death, Mauricio managed one final operational check on Australian keeper Joe Beach, but his low, weak effort from the edge of the area was safely gathered.
While the Australians begin planning their logistics for Texas, where they will face the runner-up of a wide-open Group G, Paraguay are left in agonising sporting limbo. With four points, their historic pedigree as 2010 quarter-finalists remains alive, but their destiny rests entirely in the hands of others.
