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Is this World Cup now Europe v South America? Which giants fall today? Day 18 recap

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Is this World Cup now Europe v South America? Which giants fall today? Day 18 recap

Neymar waves to Brazil fans after the game against Scotland in Miami

Neymar's Brazil take on Japan on a day when at least two good teams will go home (Martin Rickett - PA Images)

By Michael CoxJune 29, 2026 Updated 7:19 pm EDT

Sunday was the strangest day of this World Cup, in that there was only one match, sandwiched between days with six and three respectively.

This was for scheduling reasons: no third-placed sides could have played on Sunday, given that the identity of the eight teams and their precise fixtures had only been decided on Saturday night.

It would have been impossible to organise fixtures between any other winners and runners-up while giving them a reasonable — and relatively similar — number of days since their final group stage fixture.

In the game that did happen, co-hosts Canada scored a stoppage-time winner to beat South Africa 1-0, with coach Jesse Marsch calling his players “Canadian heroes” in a post-game on-field speech.

Canada had never won a men’s World Cup game until this tournament and will now face Morocco or the Netherlands in the round of 16.


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Will knockout games signal end of the goal rush?

Canada versus South Africa doesn’t feel like a World Cup knockout game on paper, and wasn’t a very enthralling spectacle on the pitch.

One moment won it. In second-half stoppage time, a poor South African headed clearance fell to Stephen Eustaquio on the edge of the box, and he chested the ball down, let it bounce once, and produced a lovely dipping drive to take Canada through.

It was a lone piece of quality in an otherwise slow-burning match, which — as a preview of the knockout stage — felt a little worrying. Yes, this was only one match between sides unaccustomed to this stage of the competition, and those who aren’t considered among the serious contenders to win the World Cup.

Stephen Eustaquio was Canada’s matchwinner (Sarah Stier – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

But after a free-flowing, open group stage with plenty of goals, there’s always a danger the competition declines in the knockout stage, when one risk is fatal. Teams play more defensively, tiredness creeps in, and players don’t want to over-exert themselves in case they have to play an additional 30 minutes of extra time. Let’s hope things are more exciting going forward.

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Is it now Europe v South America?

Several recent international tournaments have produced a bracket that feels unreasonably lopsided. At Euro 2024, for example, arguably the four best sides were on one half of the quarter-finals: Spain, Germany, France and Portugal. The other side — Netherlands, Turkey, England, Switzerland — felt like a competition to determine who would finish runner-up, and so it proved.

Something similar happened at World Cup 2018. France, Brazil, Uruguay and Belgium were all fearsome teams on the top half of the draw. England, Sweden, Croatia and Russia? Not so much.

That hasn’t quite happened this time around; largely by design. For the first time, FIFA seeded this bracket so the top four seeds — France and Spain in the top half, Argentina and England in the bottom half — won’t meet until the semi-finals, assuming they won their groups. Which they did.

Nevertheless, the top half does seem trickier. It also features the Netherlands, Germany and Portugal, as well as the hosts United States. The bottom half is lacking in serious contenders; partly because Portugal finished runners-up rather than winners, so went into the top half, and partly as Uruguay didn’t qualify at all. It had been anticipated that they would meet their great rivals Argentina in the round of 32.

But what this draw has really thrown up is a rough Europe v South America situation. Of the eight favourites for the competition, France, Spain, Netherlands, Germany and Portugal are in the top half. Then there’s Argentina and Brazil in the bottom half, alongside the major exceptions to this rule: England.

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