26 USMNT Moments, Past to Present: The Shot Heard ‘Round the World
USA qualifies for first World Cup since 1950 thanks to Paul Caligiuri



This is 26 USMNT Moments: Past to Present, a U.S. Soccer content series that covers 26 defining moments in U.S. Men's National Team history. From inspired victories to stunning goals, and the stars and hidden heroes who made them possible, each chapter reminds us that our dreams on the pitch are worth chasing. Together, they’ve built toward the biggest moment yet: the 2026 World Cup on home soil.
You don’t get a nickname for a goal unless you’ve done something truly iconic. Paul Caligiuri’s “Shot Heard ‘Round the World” was more than that. A goal that lifted a nation, and the literal start to the modern era of soccer in the United States as well as the U.S. Soccer Federation.
"The one question I get the most,” he said in a 2023 interview, “'Had you not scored that goal, had we not won that game, what would soccer be like today?' "
Let’s set the scene.
November 19, 1989. Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. It’s the final day of a grueling Concacaf World Cup Qualifying campaign, and the U.S. Men’s National Team needs a win to qualify for its first FIFA World Cup in four decades.
But it was deeper than just World Cup qualification for 1990. The XI taking the pitch was fighting for respect from the rest of the footballing world. Preparing to host the 1994 FIFA World Cup, the USMNT knew making the world’s tournament in 1990 would be a critical step in setting the stage for the sport to grow. Qualifying would be the ultimate signal to other nations around the world that Americans were serious about soccer. Conversely, a failure would be a massive blow to the momentum that was bubbling across the States. There were even whispers that if the U.S. did not qualify, FIFA would yank the 1994 World Cup from the United States.
Trinidad and Tobago, who only need a draw on the day, were heavy favorites as the hosts. A national holiday had been declared in anticipation of celebrating the country’s first World Cup berth. The max capacity crowd was raucous and red. And they began on the front foot.
“We weren't able to get a rhythm going, so we weren't able to control the tempo, so the only way to control the tempo was to [slow the game], and as fate would have it, the ball went out of bounds,” Caligiuri said in a 2014 interview with MLS. “It took a few seconds to get it started, and it kind of took the wind out of them.”


The throw-in fell to Tab Ramos, who found Caligiuri in space about 45 yards out from the goal. The defensive midfielder had been instructed by head coach Bob Gansler to stay back and prevent Trinidad transitions. In the 31st minute, he defied instruction, roving forward into open space. Then, a defender charged him.
“Now it's beat the guy or if I don't beat the guy and I get the ball stolen, there's a possible counterattack,” Caligiuri said. “That's the last thing I want to do is break my orders and then lose the ball on top of it.”
Caligiuri hesitated as the Trinidadian defender closed in, cleverly dinking the ball past him. The sensible decision would’ve been to settle the ball and drive forward, but as it bumbled forward, Caligiuri didn’t do the sensible. His head went back to his childhood days, hitting stucco off the roof of his family’s garage. Something inside him told him to give it a crack.
“The moment I touched the ball off my foot, I knew I hit it well and it had a chance,” Caligiuri said. “And it had a good chance.”
He took the left-footed shot on the half-volley, a pure, looping strike into the right-side netting, past the outstretched arms of Trinidad goalkeeper Michael Maurice.
USA 1, Trinidad and Tobago 0.
Caligiuri, a defensive-minded midfielder who didn’t often find himself on the scorer’s sheet, was suddenly the author of an iconic goal that any forward would envy.
"These days guys have planned out celebrations," Caligiuri said. "I didn't have a celly. I just raised my arms and ran towards the corner of the box, then I just slid because I didn't know what to do."


Completely overwhelmed, Caligiuri fell to the turf and was immediately dogpiled. He and his teammates understood the gravity of what had just happened. But, in order to cement the legacy of the goal, the U.S. would have to see out the result. Fighting a tough Trinidad side and a metric ton of nerves given what was as stake, the Stars and Stripes made it to the halftime whistle with the lead.
“By the time we entered the locker room [at halftime], I knew we were going to win that game,” Caligiuri said. “I knew in my heart and my mind. I didn't know how it was going to play out, of course, but I could see the determination, and I could feel the confidence.”
Caligiuiri’s belief wasn’t misplaced. The United States pulled off the improbable that day, on the back of an even more improbable goal from an even more improbable goalscorer.
The USMNT was thinking much bigger than just themselves that day. Of course, their sacrifices up until that point were all made worth it with the promise of World Cup qualification secured, but the immediate reaction after the match was much more forward-thinking.
"The game will have a tremendous impact on the sport in the United States," Caligiuri said in the locker room after the match. "It was the single most important game we ever won. It proves to the rest of the world we can play, and we can qualify. We all knew what on the line for the future of soccer in the United States."


To think of a world that Caligiuri’s question poses, one where his strike doesn’t find side netting, where the U.S. doesn’t leave Port of Spain with a win and World Cup qualification, where soccer doesn’t see the same boost, is almost an impossible thought experiment.
Without it, there’s a chance the 1994 World Cup never happens in the United States, nor does Major League Soccer – which was FIFA’s stipulation for the U.S. winning the ‘94 bid – exist.
On the brink of a summer that will see unprecedented excitement around the sport of soccer in the United States, it’s easy to look at individual moments and ascribe their impact. Caligiuri sure has a reverence for the “Shot Heard Round the World”, but he’d be happy to have it eclipsed.
“I hope we win a World Cup, and I hope I'm here for it,” Caligiuri said. “And in some ways, I hope we're not saying my goal is the most important goal, because maybe someone scores a goal and wins the World Cup for us.”
Adam Jasper is the Editorial and Web Coordinator for Atlanta United in Major League Soccer and has covered soccer since he was in high school. Adam is an alum of the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California. Follow Adam on X.