U. S.
center back Chris Richards emphasized the team's calmness despite being a man down.
"It shows how strong the team is," Richards said.
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"We went down a man and nobody really stressed out.
… We got on with it, and I think it was very important that we kept a clean sheet, and then the cherry on top was Malik's free kick."
Tillman described his pre-kick discussion with teammate Antonee Robinson.
"We've been going through all the ways we can possibly take this free kick," Tillman said.
The midfielder chose to shoot over the defensive wall despite skepticism from teammates.
"I know some guys doubted me to go over the wall, but I practiced this in training, and I'm happy it went in."
Tillman, who suffered a cut from an opponent's cleat, noted the goal allowed him to show his passion.
"I was in pain," he said, revealing a torn and blood-stained right sock.
Bosnia goalkeeper Nikola Vasilj expressed frustration over conceding the second goal during his team's strongest push.
"In the worst moment, out of nothing, a free kick and then we conceded the second goal," Vasilj said.
FOX Sports analyst Mark Clattenburg analyzed the red card incident, stating the challenge lacked malicious intent.
"When I watched this in real speed, I thought it was a coming together of two players," Clattenburg said.
He explained that the play did not meet the threshold for a red card.
"The requirement of the red card has to be some speed, some force and some malice. This lacks that."
Clattenburg maintained the collision was accidental.
"Balogun doesn't even look for the foul. It was an accidental challenge, and this doesn't reach the requirements of a red card."
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The FIFA Disciplinary Committee will review the play on Thursday, though referee decisions regarding match facts cannot be appealed.