Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

John McGinn scored Scotland’s first goal at a World Cup in almost 28 years to put the Tartan Army ahead against dangerous Haiti in their opener at the 2026 finals in Boston on Sunday.
Returning midfielder McGinn’s strike from inside the box deflected in after Che Adams had controlled Grant Hanley’s lofted pass beautifully to start the move and forced a save from Johny Placide on Scotland’s return to a tournament they last played at in 1998, exiting the group stage without a win.
A goal for Scotland. A goal for ALL OF SCOTLAND! 🏴🏴🏴
John McGinn fires his nation ahead against Haiti! #FifaWorldCup pic.twitter.com/2otuUub0oh
— BBC Sport (@BBCSport) June 14, 2026
“It’s a country that’s been on the outside looking in for too long, denied access to the mother of all parties,” commentator Liam McLeod said on BBC Sport.
“But suddenly, almost three decades in the doldrums vanquished in an instant. That is a goal a nation has craved.”
Prolific Scotland midfielder Scott McTominay shot against a post earlier in an entertaining half featuring chances for both sides, who knew victory would send them top of the group after one game for each of the four teams in the section.
“The goal is all about Che Adams,” said former Scotland forward and assistant coach James McFadden.
“It’s a wonderful, absolutely exquisite first touch that allows the attack to be built. Ben Gannon-Doak uses his pace and sends a dangerous ball in again. It was a good save… but the touch from Adams is outstanding.
“I know it’s late [in the UK] and a lot of people – especially young people – are staying up to watch it. But that’s why you do it, for moments like that.”

Both teams had a water break shortly before the 28th-minute goal. “I just wonder if, in that little break, [Scotland coach] Steve Clarke’s asked for more direct balls in behind, because there have been a lot in front,” said McFadden.
“Being a little bit more direct puts Haiti under pressure defensively.”
Hours earlier, Brazil and Morocco shared a 1-1 draw in New Jersey in the first match of the tournament in Group C.
Haiti were unchanged from their 2-1 defeat to Peru in Florida on June 6.
Wolves midfielder Jean-Ricner and Lugano defender Hannes Delcroix both started playing for Haiti before the third and final qualifying round, and Sunderland forward Wilson Isidor has joined their ranks since then.
Haiti starting XI: Johny Placide, Carlens Arcus, Ricardo Ade, Hannes Delcroix, Martin Experience, Jean-Ricner Bellegarde, Danley Jean Jacques, Louicius Deedson, Ruben Providence, Wilson Isidor, Frantzdy Pierrot
Haiti substitutes: Alexandre Pierre, Josue Duverger, Keeto Thermoncy, Markhus Lacroix, Garven Metusala, Jean-Kevin Duverne, Wilguens Paugain, Carl Sainte, Dominique Simon, Woodensky Pierre, Derrick Etienne, Duckens Nazon, Lenny Joseph, Yassin Fortune, Josue Casimir
Just listen to this… 🥹
Goosebumps as the Scotland fans belt out Flower of Scotland at the World Cup 🏴 🎶 #BBCFootball #FifaWorldCup pic.twitter.com/zChW8Py614
— BBC Sport Scotland (@BBCSportScot) June 14, 2026
Scotland brought in McGinn from their 4-0 win against Bolivia in Harrison eight days ago, with Ryan Christie moving to the bench.
Tyler Fletcher is part of the squad after being called up to replace Billy Gilmour when the midfielder suffered a knee injury during the win over Curacao on May 30.
Craig Gordon returned from a shoulder injury in May and the 43-year-old played the first half against Curacao but did not start this time.
Defender Scott McKenna was out with a calf injury that was expected to be short-term and Middlesbrough forward Tommy Conway will miss the finals with an ankle problem.
Southampton striker Ross Stewart has been a part of Scotland’s squad for the first time since 2022, having suffered a string of serious injuries between his previous international appearance and January this year.
Scotland starting XI: Angus Gunn, Aaron Hickey, Andy Robertson, Grant Hanley, Jack Hendry, Scott McTominay, John McGinn, Lewis Ferguson, Che Adams, Ben Gannon-Doak, Lawrence Shankland
Scotland substitutes: Liam Kelly, Craig Gordon, Kieran Tierney, John Souttar, Dominic Hyam, Nathan Patterson, Anthony Ralston, Scott McKenna, Tyler Fletcher, Ryan Christie, Kenny McLean, Lyndon Dykes, Ross Stewart, George Hirst, Findlay Curtis
Kick-off on Sunday was at 02:00 BST (21:00 ET / 18:00 PT). In the UK, live coverage is on BBC One.
Fans can stream the action on a vast range of devices through the BBC iPlayer app and BBC Sport website.