The Group D table already has a sharper edge after both sides opened with wins. USA have the cleaner position because of goal difference, yet Australia arrive with enough belief to make this feel less predictable than the odds suggest.
Pochettino's side should try to own territory, pushing the full-backs high and asking the midfield to feed Balogun quickly between the lines. That approach worked against Paraguay, but the missing question is simple: how much does Pulisic's fitness change the rhythm?
Australia's plan is unlikely to be glamorous, but it has teeth. Popovic's back three can sit deep, invite pressure, and look for runners breaking into the channels. It is not pretty all the time. Still, tournament football often rewards teams that know exactly who they are.
The match rhythm should swing between USA possession and Australian counter bursts. Corners may tilt towards the hosts because of territorial pressure, while cards could appear if the Socceroos spend long spells stopping transitions. It has that slightly tense, stop-start group-stage feel.
Head-to-head history gives the Americans a small psychological lift, though friendlies rarely tell the whole truth at a World Cup. This one feels like a test of patience for the co-hosts, and of nerve for an Australian side that has already embarrassed one doubter.