Seattle was rocking on Friday, and by the time the final whistle blew, the hosts had given their fans every reason to keep singing. The United States beat Australia 2-0 at Lumen Field, and just like that, Group D had a new heavyweight. Two games, two wins, and a ticket already punched for the Round of 32 — this USMNT side is starting to feel like something special.
No Pulisic, No Problem

Let’s address the elephant in the room first. Christian Pulisic — the captain, the talisman, the guy this whole golden generation is supposed to run through — was nowhere near the pitch, nursing a calf injury on the sideline. For a lot of teams, losing your best player before a must-not-lose World Cup clash would spell disaster. For this USA team? They barely blinked.

Mauricio Pochettino’s men strolled out and dominated from the opening whistle, controlling the ball, controlling the tempo, and controlling Australia’s nerves. It was the kind of performance that makes you sit up and realize: this isn’t a one-man show anymore.
The Own Goal That Set the Tone

Eleven minutes in, the breakthrough arrived — and it had a familiar flavor for anyone who watched the Paraguay game. Antonee Robinson found Folarin Balogun down the left, who turned his man inside out before whipping a teasing ball across the six-yard box with the outside of his boot. Ricardo Pepi and Sergiño Dest crashed into the area, and in the chaos, Australian center-back Cameron Burgess failed to get his feet right and turned the ball into his own net.

Cue pandemonium in the stands. 1-0, USA, and the Socceroos were already chasing shadows.
Freeman’s Full-Circle Moment

If the first goal was chaotic, the second was pure poetry — and pure storyline gold. Just before halftime, Sergiño Dest unleashed a shot from distance that deflected high into the air right in front of goal, and who was lurking to finish it off? Alex Freeman. Barely onside, he rose above everyone and nodded the ball home past goalkeeper Patrick Beach for his first-ever World Cup goal.

Here’s the part that’ll give you chills: Freeman is the son of former NFL wide receiver and Super Bowl champion Antonio Freeman, who played for the Green Bay Packers. Football royalty meeting football glory, all in one header. There was a nervy VAR check — the flag initially went up for offside — but replay confirmed Freeman was clean onside, and the goal stood. The roar that followed when it was confirmed? Absolutely deafening.
After the match, Balogun couldn’t hide his joy for his teammate, calling Freeman humble and down to earth, and saying it meant the world to see him repay the fans with a goal on the biggest stage.
Backs Against the Wall, USA Held Firm

Australia made wholesale halftime changes, throwing on fresh legs in search of a way back into it. Credit where it’s due — the Socceroos pushed, probed, and made things uncomfortable late on, with the game even getting a little chippy as frustration crept in. But the U.S. backline, marshalled brilliantly, refused to crack. Australia couldn’t find the breakthrough, and the U.S. saw out a composed, professional 2-0 from there.
A Historic Night

This wasn’t just three points. The USA hadn’t won back-to-back World Cup matches since the very first tournament back in 1930 — nearly a century of history, rewritten in real time. Pochettino summed it up perfectly afterward, saying it was a fantastic game with a very good first half, and that his side dominated against a tough opponent.
With Türkiye and Paraguay still to settle their own business, the U.S. already knows a draw next time out secures top spot in Group D. But right now, none of that matters. What matters is a home crowd that came alive, a national team playing without fear, and a kid named Freeman who just gave American football fans a memory they’ll be talking about for years.

Two down. The dream very much alive. 🇺🇸
Man of the Match: Folarin Balogun













