South Korea coach resigns, Canada-South Africa kick off knockout rounds: a packed Sunday at the World Cup
Hong Myung-Bo quits a day after South Korea's early exit, while Canada and South Africa step into the first-ever Round of 32 with sixteen years of history weighing on Bafana Bafana.

South Korea coach Hong Myung-Bo resigned on Sunday, 2026-06-28, a day after his side's swift elimination from the 2026 FIFA World Cup and following pointed public criticism from the country's president. The departure, reported by ESPN, lands inside one of the most politically exposed jobs in Korean sport and removes a coach who took charge with the brief of ending a long stretch of knockout-stage underperformance.
It is, on the face of it, a story about one man leaving. But the day's programme stretches well beyond Seoul. The first-ever FIFA World Cup Round of 32 begins the same afternoon, with co-hosts Canada facing South Africa in a fixture that has been a decade and a half in the making for the Africans. The contrast is sharp: a coach departing under fire, and a team walking into history.
Hong's exit and the politics around the bench
Hong's resignation, confirmed a day after South Korea's elimination, came in the wake of criticism from the country's president, according to ESPN reporting on 2026-06-28. The framing matters. In South Korean football, the head-coach role is unusually entangled with national identity and elite expectations; a presidential rebuke at a tournament where Korea advanced to the knockout stage does not soften the optics. By the time the resignation landed, the political weight had already done its work.
The structural read is straightforward: a coach can survive a loss. He cannot easily survive a loss combined with a head-of-state rebuke. The pressure from above removed the room in which a sporting recovery would normally take place.
Sixteen years of weight in Toronto
South Africa's meeting with Canada is, in scheduling terms, just another Round of 32 tie. In the longer arc of African football, it is something else. BBC Sport noted on 2026-06-28 that Bafana Bafana are playing their first-ever World Cup knockout game, sixteen years after the host nation of 2010 passed up the chance to progress at a tournament held on its own soil. That gap — from the whistles at Soccer City to a knockout stage in North America — is the subtext underneath every line of South African pre-match coverage.
Canada, by contrast, arrive as co-hosts and as a side whose competitive ceiling has visibly lifted in the cycle since Qatar. The match is being treated as a coin-flip in the betting markets: CBS Sports previewed a Canada versus South Africa card on 2026-06-28, with same-game parlay picks published earlier that morning, and DraftKings promoted a $200 bonus-bets offer to first-time users targeting the fixture. The promotional density is itself a tell — bookmakers rarely spend heavily on games they read as foregone conclusions.
A wider Round of 32, and the risks that come with it
The knockout stage opens with a structural change as much as a sporting one. FIFA's expansion from 32 to 48 teams has stretched the bracket, and the Round of 32 is a direct consequence: more teams, more games, more room for an upset in any given tie. The official FIFA channel flagged the start of the round on 2026-06-28T07:21, and The Athletic carried the same call-out the same hour, underlining how thoroughly the format change has reset the rhythms of a tournament most viewers still instinctively narrate in the older 32-team shape.
The expansion has its defenders and its critics. Defenders point to broader representation — six African nations in this field, more than ever — and to the additional competitive fixtures that come with a longer bracket. Critics point to the increased probability of dead rubbers in the group stage and to the dilution of the round-of-sixteen as a prestige marker. Both arguments are coherent. The evidence so far is that the group phase retained edge: South Korea, a side ranked to advance, did not.
Stakes for Sunday night
The downstream effects land quickly. South Korea's football association now has a vacancy to fill in a World Cup cycle, with the political signal from the president's office likely to shape the kind of candidate who is approached. Hong's exit was fast, public, and presidential — meaning whoever takes the job inherits not just a squad but a new set of unspoken constraints.
For Canada and South Africa, the stakes are simpler and larger at the same time. A co-host nation reaching the round of sixteen lifts a tournament's commercial and emotional baseline; a South African side reaching the knockout phase for the first time, on a stage that closes a loop with 2010, would register well beyond the bracket. The game will be decided on the field. The frame around it has been settled for sixteen years.
Desk note: Monexus leads on the news — Hong's resignation — and treats the Canada-South Africa tie as the structural counter-weight: a new-format knockout round, a historic African first, and a match the bookmakers are pricing as genuinely open.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/FIFAcom
- https://t.me/TheAthletic