Saturday, June 20, 2026

Paraguay’s Defiant Victory Leaves Türkiye on the Brink as Galarza Writes World Cup History

Paraguay breathed life back into their World Cup campaign with a fierce and unforgettable 1-0 victory over Türkiye in Group D — a match defined by relentless pressure, heroic resistance, and a goal that entered football history within seconds.

Inside a thunderous stadium in California’s Bay Area, where Paraguayan drums echoed throughout the night, La Albirroja produced a performance built not on possession or dominance, but on courage, discipline, and survival.

The decisive moment arrived almost instantly.

Just 64 seconds after kick-off, Matías Galarza unleashed a stunning long-range strike that flew past the Turkish defence and into the net, giving Paraguay the fastest goal of this World Cup and the earliest winning goal ever recorded in tournament history. Timed at 1 minute and 4 seconds, it surpassed Ismael Saibari’s earlier record set for Morocco the same day and became the quickest decisive goal in FIFA World Cup history.

For Paraguay, still haunted by the humiliation of their 4-1 defeat to the United States in the opening round, the goal was more than a breakthrough — it was an act of rebellion.

Türkiye responded with urgency and sophistication. Vincenzo Montella’s side monopolised possession, at one stage controlling nearly 79 percent of the ball, and bombarded the Paraguayan goal with wave after wave of attacks. Yet football, cruel and irrational as ever, refused to reward them.

Kenan Yildiz, Arda Güler and Hakan Çalhanoğlu orchestrated much of Türkiye’s attacking play with elegance and invention, but their finishing collapsed under pressure. Türkiye ended the match with an astonishing 32 attempts and no goals, mirroring the wastefulness of their opening defeat to Australia, where they had managed 30 shots without scoring.

Across two World Cup matches, Türkiye have now produced 62 shots without finding the net — the highest total by any team across a two-game span without a goal since records began in 1966.

Paraguay, meanwhile, defended as though every clearance carried the weight of history.

Their task became even harder just before halftime when Miguel Almirón was shown a red card after VAR reviewed comments directed at Mert Müldür while the Paraguayan forward covered his mouth — the first dismissal under FIFA’s new anti-discrimination protocol regarding concealed speech during confrontations.

Reduced to ten men, Paraguay retreated deeper and suffered longer. Türkiye attacked relentlessly, but desperation increasingly replaced precision. Every missed chance amplified the tension. Every Paraguayan tackle drew louder roars from the stands.

At the centre of Paraguay’s resistance stood Julio Enciso.

Coming into the tournament under an injury cloud after suffering a knock against Nicaragua in a warm-up match, the Strasbourg midfielder delivered a performance of extraordinary maturity and influence. Alongside his assist for Galarza’s goal, Enciso created four chances, completed six successful dribbles, and won nine of his twelve duels.

At just 22 years and 148 days old, Enciso became the youngest Paraguayan player since 1966 to register two assists in a single World Cup tournament. He also joined Francisco Arce and Roque Santa Cruz as only the third Paraguayan player ever to provide assists in multiple World Cup matches.

The statistics surrounding Paraguay’s victory only deepened the sense of improbability.

Türkiye completed nearly 79 percent possession — the sixth-highest figure recorded in a World Cup match since 1966. Defender Abdülkerim Bardakcı completed all 98 passes he attempted, setting a new tournament-era record for flawless passing accuracy in a World Cup match. Yet none of it mattered.

Football ultimately belongs not to the team that dominates the ball, but to the one that survives the moment.

Paraguay have always carried a reputation for resilience on the world stage. Their golden run to the quarter-finals in 2010 — ended only by eventual champions Spain — remains the greatest achievement in the nation’s football history. Against Türkiye, echoes of that stubborn spirit resurfaced.

Of the last four occasions a team has won a World Cup match after receiving a first-half red card, Paraguay are now responsible for two — the other coming against Slovenia in 2002.

For Türkiye, the defeat was devastating.

Montella’s side played with ambition, technical quality, and attacking bravery, but lacked the ruthless instinct required at this level. Elimination now looms after two matches that showcased promise everywhere except in front of goal.

“I’m sad, but I’m proud of my players,” Montella admitted afterward. “They gave everything until the final whistle. That’s football.”

For Paraguay, however, this was football at its most emotional and unforgiving: a night where suffering became strength, where ten men stood against an avalanche, and where Matías Galarza’s strike after 64 unforgettable seconds transformed despair into belief once again.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

No comments:

Post a Comment