Czech Republic vs South Africa: Czech set pieces can settle survival scrap
Czech Republic and South Africa meet in the FIFA World Cup with no room for decorative football. Kickoff is 18 June 2026, 16:00 UTC, and this has the feel of a match where every throw-in may arrive wearing a hard hat.
Both lost their opening games, so the table is already tapping its watch. That usually brings caution, yes, but it also rewards the side with the more repeatable weapons.
Czech tools fit the job
Czech Republic do not need to become a silky passing orchestra overnight. Their strongest routes are clear: Patrick Schick as the forward reference, Tomáš Souček and Ladislav Krejčí attacking aerial balls, and Vladimír Coufal supplying from wide and from dead-ball situations.
That matters because this matchup naturally points toward pressure on second balls, corners, long throws and crosses. Czechia can be dangerous even when the open-play rhythm is a bit creaky, which is a handy trick to keep in the pocket.
The defeat to South Korea was not pretty, but it was not a footballing shipwreck either. Krejčí scored from a familiar aerial route, Souček had a tight offside goal ruled out, and the late substitutes gave the attack more life.
South Africa lose balance in the middle
The key market miss, for me, is the scale of South Africa’s absences. Sphephelo Sithole is suspended, removing ball-winning strength in midfield, while Themba Zwane’s suspension takes away an important creative presence between the lines.
That is an awkward double hit: one player helps stop fires, the other helps light them at the right end. Replacing both in a World Cup survival match is not quite like changing socks before a five-a-side game.
Relebohile Mofokeng can bring spark, and South Africa’s wide runners can trouble Czech defenders if Broos restores more natural width. Still, that requires a tactical reset after a Mexico match where the forwards were too isolated and the attack rarely connected cleanly.
Koubek is fixing, not resting
Miroslav Koubek has openly hinted at changes, but the context is important. This is not rotation with slippers on; it is an attempt to sharpen the attack after a performance that did not meet his standards.
Adam Hložek and Michal Sadílek are among the obvious candidates to add legs and cleaner progression. With Schick, Souček, Krejčí and Kovář expected to remain central, the Czech spine should stay intact.
South Africa’s recent attacking record also keeps me on the Czech side. The draw with Nicaragua, the Panama friendlies and the Mexico opener all showed the same concern: territory and intent have not always turned into clear chances.
I considered the lower-scoring angle because neither side is likely to host a carnival. But one early Czech set piece could bend that plan, while asking Czech Republic to win by a bigger margin feels a little too greedy.
The straight win is cleaner. Czech Republic have the sturdier structure, fewer damaging absences, and the more reliable set-piece edge in a match where small details may carry a very loud whistle.








