FIFA World Cup 2026: Biggest takeaways from the round of 16
European teams swept through the World Cup round of 16, leaving Argentina and Morocco as the only non-UEFA countries standing.
Morocco did not need Ismael Saibari against Canada, but the Atlas Lions will miss him if they hope to match their 2022 achievement of reaching the semifinal.
Egypt, Africa’s other round of 16 representative, had Argentina on the ropes but fell victim to some questionable calls and non-calls. Hossam Hassan accused officials of favouring Argentina, and he was not the first to do so.
The USA and President Donald Trump took their case to FIFA and got a Folarin Balogun red card overturned. But they found there is such a thing as sporting justice in the form of a 4-1 loss to Belgium.
Lionel Messi kept Argentinian and South American hopes alive, but five-time champion Brazil unsuccessfully adopted Italian-style catenaccio; Colombia failed to find the target (one goal in its last three matches); and Paraguay stuck to its pesky identity, but couldn’t shake up France.
The only UEFA team to go out in the round was Portugal, falling to Spain 1-0 in Cristiano Ronaldo’s final World Cup appearance.
Messi had a penalty kick saved by Mostafa Shobeir, but fired in an 83rd-minute equaliser off a rebound for goal No 8 of this World Cup – and record 21st of his career.
Kylian Mbappe upped his totals to seven for the tournament and 19 of his career with a 70th-minute penalty kick against Paraguay.
Erling Haaland finished two Andreas Schjelderup assists to tie Mbappe with seven goals.
Harry Kane’s penalty kick against Mexico gave him six goals.
Sporting karma is gonna get you
Poetic justice? Or was it simply Belgian superiority position-by-position?
The USA’s 4-1 elimination by Belgium in Seattle ended a hopeful run that attracted record television audiences, but ended with the team’s limitations being exposed.
The Red Devils broke the press with Thibaut Courtois’s long balls, broke down the wings via Dodi Lukebakio and Leandro Trossard, found Charles De Ketelaere with crosses and capitalised on defensive carelessness.
The USA was impressive going all out against Paraguay in its opener and defeated a European opponent (Bosnia and Herzegovina) for the first time since 2002, but struggled to change gears against Turkiye and the Belgians.
As for that red card decision, it only served to motivate the Red Devils, and for Romelo Lukaku to show off a Trump-inspired dance step.
Like the US, Canada is high-press first, ask questions later – no surprise, as its coach is former USA national team midfielder Jesse Marsch.
Morocco absorbed everything the Maple Leafs could throw at it, then found openings in the second half of a 3-0 victory.
The Canadians and their southern neighbours need to implement an alternative to all-out, all-the-time pressing.
Hard-charging and double-teaming tactics don’t always work, especially against superior opposition.
The Atlas Lions showed they do not have to be at their best to win, and Soufiane Rahimi’s emergence gives them an alternative to Saibari up front.
England raised its game at the height of Mexico City
Mexico hoped to deflate the Three Lions with thin air and high-decibel home-field support, along with a quick passing game.
Instead, El Tri found it couldn’t keep pace, as defenders lagged a step behind Jude Bellingham (two goals in a two-minute span) and Anthony Gordon, who sprinted ahead to earn a penalty kick for Kane to convert in a 3-1 win.
Messi might be the GOAT, but he’s not infallible
Argentina is vulnerable. A 3-2 victory over Egypt, a second successive close call against African opposition, revealed Albiceleste’s defensive weaknesses and, possibly, overdependence on Messi.
Along the way, though, Argentina also demonstrated resourcefulness against both Egypt and Cape Verde.
Messi had a penalty kick saved, but eventually came through against the Pharoahs. You’d think Messi would be near-perfect on penalties, but this was listed as his 34th all-time penalty miss.
In the World Cup, this was his second miss of the tournament – he’s four for eight lifetime.
Messi is still Argentina’s most valuable player, but holding midfielder Leandro Paredes has emerged as a key to the 4-1-3-2 alignment.
Yet, if Haissem Hassan hadn’t been injured, Egypt might have held on. Hassan is a dribbler extraordinaire, and his assists on goals (and disallowed goals) included a highlight show of nutmegs, rabonas and stepovers.
France – and, by extension, the game of football – might have been submarined by Paraguay’s ultra-defensive tactics. But it was not the first time.
On the way to winning the 1998 World Cup, France had difficulty with La Albirroja, Les Bleus getting through the round of 16 on a 114th-minute Laurent Blanc goal in Lens.
This Paraguayan squad took aggressiveness to extremes – but it should be noted many South American matches go much further into what has been described as “dark arts”.
The higher the stakes, the greater the rivalry, the wilder it can get. This became a test of France’s composure and confidence, and also its wing play.
Eventually, Desire Doue broke past several Guaranie opponents to earn a penalty kick, though it took a VAR review to detect Diego Gomez’s foul in the 1-0 win.
Long gone were four-time champions Italy (failed to qualify) and Germany (round of 32). Joining them was five-time champion Brazil, which has never defeated Norway (0W-3L-2D).
The Selecao had chances in a 2-1 loss to the Norwegians: Bruno Guimaraes’ penalty kick miss and Endrick’s misfire on a breakaway. Neymar did convert a penalty 10 minutes into stoppage time, with what might have been his last World Cup touch, his ninth goal in four tournaments.
Those predicting Spain would be suspect at the back might have to reevaluate, after La Roja recorded shutout No 5 with a 1-0 victory over Portugal. Mikel Oyarzabal (four goals) has been on target, but Lamine Yamal (one goal) not so much.
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