Football Daily | USA, Mexico, Canada: which World Cup co-host can boast the most?

. UK edition

Clutch the Bald Eagle, Zayu the Jaguar and Maple the Moose.
Three strong mascots to be fair: Clutch the Bald Eagle, Zayu the Jaguar and Maple the Moose. Photograph: Robbie Jay Barratt/AMA/Getty Images

In today’s Football Daily: the host nations are feeling jaunty

AND HERE ARE YOUR HOSTS …

An old footballing adage tells us that no World Cup is quite complete without a gutsy run of results from the host nation(s), who dutifully go deep in the tournament to stir up local fervour. See South Korea in 2002 for a prime example: a plucky and at times controversial slalom to the semi-finals before being crushed by a traditional heavyweight. Way back when, a host nation winning the whole thing was commonplace, occurring in five of the first 11 World Cups when Uruguay (1930), Italy (1934), England (1966), West Germany (1974) and Argentina (1978) triumphed on home soil. Nowadays, thanks to Fifa’s completely altruistic desire to spread the game globally, the prospect of a host nation actually lifting the trophy is somewhat diminished, with South Africa and Qatar crashing out in the group stage in recent-ish years.

Even with three hosts for the first time ever in this unique Geopolitics World Cup, a run beyond the quarter-finals for any of them seemed unlikely when the pre-tournament predictions came in. Still, the cliches ring true and Canada’s 6-0 shellacking of Qatar in Vancouver, which virtually assures Jesse Marsch’s crew a place in the knockout stages, was a boost for the neutrals. A serious injury to Ismaël Koné marred the occasion a little, but Jonathan David’s hat-trick – which included a fizzing volley for the ages – will live as long in the memory as Mohamed Manai’s slapstick own goal. Mexico, too, will be in the last 32 after a 1-0 win over South Korea that will live, er, slightly less long in the memory. Midfielder Luis Romo scored the only goal after a horrible handling error from Kim Seung-gyu. Perhaps the South Korean keeper was just bored; Football Daily can only hope none of our UK-based contingent stayed up until 4am to watch that one until its conclusion. Even getting through the nine-minute highlights over our morning Cheerios felt like a slog. Is this what World Cup fatigue feels like?

Anyway, it’s now the turn of the USA USA USA to build on their hugely promising opening win over Paraguay and inject further World Cup fever into the triumvirate of hosts, taking on Australia in a titanic tussle between nations who secretly prefer their balls to be egg-shaped. Mauricio Pochettino’s charges actually resembled a coherent team in that 4-1 victory last weekend, with the pace of Folarin Balogun and Christian Pulisic hugely threatening in attack. But the Australians, who snatched a flamin’ brilliant win over dark horses Turkey in their first outing, will be no pushovers. This feels like the true test for the US. Can they act like big-hitters and swat away successive challengers to top their group and generate momentum into the knockout stages, as would be befitting of THE MAIN hosts of a Donald Trump-endorsed, ultra-commercialised World Cup? Getting out of their group already seems highly likely, but a scruffy scrape to get there will no longer suffice in the modern age of American soccer. Pochettino’s team must be bombastic, confident verging on arrogant, and actually good at football. Annihilate Australia and the World (Cup) is their oyster.

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LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE

Beau Dure steps up to the plate with minute-by-minute coverage of USA USA USA 0-0 Australia at 8pm BST (3pm EDT) before John Brewin brings you all the action from Scotland 0-0 Morocco at 11pm BST (6pm EDT). Jonathan Howcroft is in the hotseat for Brazil 0-0 Haiti (8.30pm EDT/Sat 1.30am BST), before Sam Lewis rounds things off/starts the weekend with Turkey 4-0 Paraguay (11pm EDT, Sat 4am BST). 

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“That was one of my favourite ever moments in an England shirt, especially at a major tournament. I know it’s just the first game, and we’re not getting carried away, but just that emotional connection with the fans, we know how much it means to them. Everyone knew the words, and that was a really special moment, I thought” – it’s fair to say Harry Kane enjoyed singing Wonderwall with the England fans after they saw off Croatia in Dallas. Could the captain enjoy an encore in a month’s time? 🎵 🎵 Maybe … 🎵 🎵

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

Oh god, as if ‘do one’ is not hilarious enough (getting funnier with endless repetition), you are now translating it into the language of the manager involved! Where will it end? Wherever it ends it will just keep getting better and better” – Trevor West (and no others).

I am very much enjoying the GWC here in North America, good stadiums, great fans (the Scots drank Boston dry) but watching the games on American TV is really annoying. The US commentators prattle on continuously without ever identifying the player with the ball, never allow for a moment’s silence, and are such an irritation that its better to watch with the TV on mute and find another source of commentary (this is definitely not just a problem in the USA USA USA – Football Daily Ed). I have friends who prefer to watch the Spanish TV coverage even though they don’t speak Spanish!” – Trevor Wastell

May I be the 1,056th musician to point out that Will Unwin is clearly in the dark re orchestral manoeuvres as evinced by his ‘redundant second fiddle metaphor’ comments (yesterday’s Football Daily). By definition, an orchestra cannot exist without an entire row (desk) of second fiddles and indeed thirds. Marcus Rashford may indeed be dissatisfied with Thomas Tuchel’s assessment of his talents but I would refer him to the comment from a conductor when a second fiddle complained that being two rows back she was too close to the intolerably loud trumpet section behind her. ‘If you want to be nearer the front you should practise harder’ came the response” – Harry Piano.

If you have any, please send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day is … Harry Piano. Terms and conditions for our competitions, when we run them, are here.