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South Africa snatched a dramatic late draw against Czechia thanks to Teboho Mokoena's penalty, keeping their slim knockout hopes alive.(AP Photo)
A dramatic late penalty from Teboho Mokoena earned South Africa a hard-fought point in a tense, scrappy Group A encounter against Czechia at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Thursday.
It was a result that kept both sides' faint hopes of knockout qualification alive but did precious little to inspire confidence in either camp heading into their crucial final group fixtures.Czechia made the most devastating of starts. Barely six minutes had elapsed when Michal Sadílek, one of five changes made by coach Miroslav Koubek, latched on to a pass from Alexandr Sojka after Adam Hlozek had chased down a long throw on the right flank, and drilled a low, firm strike through a crowded South African box before goalkeeper Ronwen Williams could react.
It was the fastest goal of the 2026 World Cup so far, and it immediately silenced a large and vocal Bafana Bafana following inside the stadium.
South Africa, desperate to atone for their woeful opening-match against Mexico which also cost them two players to red cards - reorganised with surprising composure. Hugo Broos' side gradually grew into the contest, patiently building through midfield and probing down the flanks via the tireless Oswin Appollis and Khuliso Mudau.
Patrik Schick and Adam Hlozek were a persistent aerial threat for Czechia but were starved of service as Bafana Bafana seized the slight advantage after the break.The breakthrough, however, refused to arrive until fortune finally intervened. In the 81st minute, Thapelo Maseko's driven effort struck Czech midfielder Pavel Sulc squarely on the hand. A swift VAR review confirmed the on-field decision, and South Africa were handed a lifeline from twelve yards.
Up stepped Mokoena- calm, composed, and utterly ruthless and sent Matej Kovar the wrong way with a perfectly-placed spot kick.
The stadium erupted.Czechia threw men forward in the dying minutes, with Tomas Soucek's late header from a corner cleared off the line in frantic added time, but South Africa held firm to claim a precious point.The match also made history as Tori Penso, Brooke Mayo and Kathryn Nesbitt became the first all-female American officiating crew to work a men's World Cup game, with Penso also becoming the first American woman to referee at the tournament.Both sides remain on one point in Group A, with their World Cup fate hanging on by a thread.



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