Bosnia and Herzegovina captain Edin Džeko has etched his name into FIFA World Cup history despite his side facing an uphill battle against the United States in their Round of 32 clash, becoming the oldest outfield player ever to start a men’s World Cup knockout match.At 40 years and 106 days, the veteran striker surpassed every previous outfield player to feature in the knockout rounds, becoming the first outfield player aged 40 or older to appear in a World Cup knockout fixture.However, the milestone could prove to be one of the shortest-lived in tournament history. If Luka Modric (40 years, 296 days) starts for Croatia or Cristiano Ronaldo (41 years, 147 days) is named in Portugal’s starting XI for their respective Round of 32 matches in Vancouver, either veteran would eclipse Džeko’s record less than 24 hours later.The historic evening, however, took a painful turn early in the second half.Five minutes after the restart, Bosnia briefly put the ball out of play after Džeko went down clutching his leg following what appeared to be a non-contact injury. The inspirational captain was unable to continue and was substituted, bringing an unfortunate end to his landmark appearance.The United States lead 1-0 thanks to Folarin Balogun’s strike in first-half stoppage time. The forward reacted quickest to a loose ball inside the penalty area to score his third goal of the tournament and hand the hosts a crucial advantage heading into the closing stages.The contest has since taken another dramatic twist, with Balogun shown a straight red card after a VAR review, reducing the United States to 10 men for the final half hour of regulation time. The dismissal has handed Bosnia renewed hope as they push for an equaliser against a side now focused on protecting its slender lead.Regardless of the final outcome, Džeko’s appearance has already secured his place in the World Cup record books — even if the achievement could be surpassed within a day should either Modric or Ronaldo start for their respective nations.

