Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ)
Tony Popovic and the Socceroos take on Paraguay in San Francisco on Friday in their third and final World Cup group-stage match. After a brilliant opening win against Turkey, the Socceroos crashed down to earth against the United States.
The equation is simple for Australia (ranked 26th) against 37th-ranked Paraguay. A draw or a win sends Australia through to the Round of 32 (the first round of the knockout phase).
A loss does not mathematically end the campaign but it would most likely leave Australia facing a much more difficult opponent in the round of 32, and would drain momentum from a team built around resilience rather than dominance.
The pressure is intense For Popovic, the result will either validate his project or leave it exposed to scrutiny.
Even with a defeat, the Socceroos can’t finish lower than third in Group D, which means they should still progress, depending on the size of the loss and what happens in various games across the other 11 groups.
But if they manage to progress after a loss to Paraguay, the likely pathway would lead to heavyweights France or Germany in the Round of 32: a significantly more difficult assignment. A positive result against Paraguay therefore does more than secure qualification – it shapes the entire trajectory of the tournament and sustains belief in a team whose strength lies in organisation rather than star power.
A second-place finish would open up a more comfortable Round of 32 opponent: the probabilities suggest a match against Iran, New Zealand, or Belgium. Iran carries historical weight, having eliminated Australia in the infamous 1997 qualification playoff for the 1998 World Cup.
New Zealand would bring a regional rivalry, while Belgium, despite its strong reputation in Europe, has not been as dominant in recent cycles and has an ageing squad of fading stars such as their playmaker Kevin De Bruyne and striker Romelu Lukaku.
None of these opponents would necessarily be too much for a disciplined Australia to beat. That is the key point. Popovic has constructed a side defined not by fluency or flamboyance, but by an ability to defend grimly and counterattack.
Where the match may be won or lost Australia is not a team built to dominate possession or produce sustained attacking patterns associated with so-called “Samba football”. Read more: ‘Park the bus’, ‘the false nine’ and ‘total football’: what do soccer’s strange phrases mean?
The Socceroos are a team built to remain compact, absorb pressure and strike in moments. Against Turkey and in spells against the United States, that structure was evident. The backline, when organised and protected by a hardworking midfield, is capable of frustrating higher-ranked opposition.
Paraguay, for its part, is not a prolific attacking side. Their players struggle to convert territory into goals and their attacking output has been limited across the campaign. If Australia’s defensive block functions effectively, Paraguay may find clear chances scarce.
The midfield battle will be defined less by creativity than by discipline. Popovic will expect relentless running, pressure on the ball and the disruption of Paraguay’s rhythm rather than control of the game itself.
It is a model built on containment and transition rather than sustained dominance. In attack, Australia will again rely on moments rather than patterns. Players such as Nestory Irankunda or Cristian Volpato represent the capacity to shift a match in a single action.
This has long been the historical rhythm of the Socceroos at World Cups: not sustained attacking brilliance, but decisive contributions from stars in critical moments, from Harry Kewell to Mark Viduka to Tim Cahill. Paraguay may also be forced to adjust their approach.
Knowing a win is required to secure a more favourable pathway, they are unlikely to remain passive for long periods. That shift could open space for Australia to counterattack, particularly if the game becomes stretched in its later stages.
Miguel Almirón, one of Paraguay’s best players, is also suspended for the match after receiving a red card against Turkey for defying FIFA’s new rule that bans players from covering their mouth when speaking to opposition players.
The broader battle This game also matters beyond the pitch. Football Australia has endured a turbulent period, marked by institutional pressure, governance scrutiny and uneven performances in the men’s domestic game. Read more: Cricket and soccer are Australian sporting giants.
How can they be struggling financially? The A-League remains inconsistent in its visibility and commercial stability, while men’s soccer continues to negotiate its place in a crowded Australian sporting landscape. A win or draw here does not resolve those issues but it does stabilise them.
There is also a broader cultural layer here. Soccer remains the most widely played junior football code in Australia, for both boys and girls, and its participation base continues to grow. While the Matildas have become the country’s most visible national team in recent years, the Socceroos still occupy a symbolic position shaped by the legacy of their exciting campaign in the 2006 World Cup.
However, that status is contingent rather than permanent. It depends on continued relevance at major tournaments – and relevance is ultimately measured in results. A draw or win against Paraguay sustains that position. A defeat weakens it, not immediately but perceptibly.
The scheduling of the match also adds an unusual dimension. A Friday lunchtime kickoff in Australia means the game may be more widely watched. Timing, in modern sport, is never neutral. So much hinges on 90 minutes Popovic finds himself at a familiar point in tournament soccer: where structure meets uncertainty, and preparation meets consequence.
The Socceroos have built their campaign on discipline, organisation and collective effort. Against Paraguay, those qualities will be tested not in theory, but in outcome. This is what gives the match its weight. One result extends belief and opportunity.
The other narrows the horizon.
Steve Georgakis does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Original source: https://analysis1.mil-osi.com/2026/06/25/why-the-paraguay-match-will-define-the-socceroos-world-cup/
