Rys, who played for the Chicago Sting, tallied in the 54th minute before a crowd of 17,675. He gained possession of a Veee rebound, dribbled through three defenders and fired a 12-yard shot to the left of goalkeeper Tony Chursky for his first international goal.
"I've got the ball right here," Rys told reporters afterward. "I'm going to take it home and hang it on the wall… I predicted before the game I would score, but when I scored, I felt incredible."
It turned out to be Rys’ lone international goal. He died in a tragic car accident on Sept. 12, 1977, near Dortmund, Germany while between trials with Bundesliga clubs. He was 20 years old.
Veee gave the hosts some breathing room in the 81st minute. Mike Flater sent the ball down the right side. Veee, who became an indoor soccer superstar, drew Chursky out of the net before slipping in a 10-yard shot.
Chyzowych was so ecstatic that he bolted onto the field to celebrate with his players. Mexican referee Mario Vazquez ejected Chyzowych for entering the field. While leaving the pitch, the coach smiled and shook a clenched fist above his head.
"It was exciting," Bandov said. "We were a very confident team. We had a player named Juli Vee. He was an unbelievable player.”
The result propelled the Americans atop their three-team North American Zone group. The Canadians, who stunned the Mexicans, 1-0, in an earlier qualifier, needed a draw against Mexico in Toluca, Mexico on Oct. 27 to force a playoff.
"If Canada wins in Mexico, I'll donate my salary for the next three years [to the Canadian soccer development program]," Chyzowych was quoted by United Press International.
Much to the surprise of many soccer observers, Canada managed to secure a result - a 0-0 tie -necessitating a playoff to determine the second team to advance to the final round along with Mexico. The Canadians and the USMNT finished with identical 1-1-2 records and goal differential (minus one).
Canada 3-0 USA - December 22, 1976
Officials could not have chosen a more neutral site - Port-au-Prince, Haiti - to determine which team would advance to Concacaf’s final qualifying round for the 1978 FIFA World Cup.
To prepare for the match, the Americans played three friendlies - all scoreless draws - against Haiti in Port-au-Prince a month prior.
“That was us at the time,” U.S. captain Al Trost (below) said. “The training we went through with Walt was a lot of man-on-man stuff. We were disciplined enough in defending, but to try and make the transition, that’s what made it difficult in creating scoring opportunities. We had some very strong, gifted players, but we had issues making the transition from defense to offense. Sometimes it would work, sometimes it didn’t. That was the decision that was made – Walt wanted to stay in games as best we could defensively and see what we could get out of matches.”