Connect with us

Sports

2026 World Cup: Brazil goes back home as Norway coasts into quarter finals

Published

on

ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad

Erling Haaland‘s brace helped Norway beat Brazil 2-1 and book a place in the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-finals.

Brazil’s hopes of winning a sixth FIFA World Cup title came to a shocking end on Sunday, July 5, 2026, after Norway secured a dramatic 2-1 victory in their Round of 16 clash, with Erling Haaland scoring twice to send the Scandinavian side into the quarter-finals of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

The round of 16 match was packed with drama from the opening stages. Brazil were awarded a penalty in the 14th minute after a VAR review, but Bruno Guimarães failed to convert as Norway goalkeeper Ørjan Nyland produced a superb save to keep the score level. Norway also had an early goal ruled out for offside following another VAR intervention.

Despite dominating possession and creating several chances through Vinícius Júnior, Gabriel Martinelli and Endrick, Brazil were repeatedly denied by Nyland, whose outstanding performance frustrated the five-time world champions throughout the contest.

Advertisement

Norway finally broke the deadlock in the 79th minute when Haaland found space inside the penalty area and calmly slotted the ball past Alisson to hand his side a deserved lead. The Manchester City striker struck again in the 90th minute, finishing off a swift counterattack to double Norway’s advantage and leave Brazil on the brink of elimination.

Brazil managed to pull one back deep into stoppage time when Neymar converted a penalty in the 90+10th minute after another VAR review. However, the late goal was only a consolation as Norway held on for a famous 2-1 victory, knocking the five-time champions out of the 2026 FIFA World Cup and booking a historic place in the quarter-finals.

The 2-1 win sent Norway into the World Cup quarter-finals while condemning Brazil to a shock exit, with Nyland’s penalty save and Haaland’s late double proving decisive on a dramatic night in New Jersey.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Sports

Belgium beat co-hosts USA 4-1 to advance to World Cup quarter-finals

Published

on

By

ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad

Belgium dumped the United States out of their own World Cup on Tuesday, as Charles De Ketelaere’s brace secured a 4-1 win that was eclipsed by the bitter row over Folarin Balogun’s ban.

Victory means the Belgians face Spain in the quarter-finals, while the US follow co-hosts Canada and Mexico out of the tournament with elimination in the round of 16 after a thoroughly flat performance.

All attention pre-game had been on Balogun’s place in the US starting lineup, after US President Donald Trump asked FIFA to review the striker’s one-game suspension for a red card, and the governing body controversially obliged.

But Belgium’s XI had a few surprises of its own, with Kevin De Bruyne and Jeremy Doku among the heavyweights benched. And coach Rudi Garcia’s gambit proved inspired, with De Ketelaere grabbing an early goal to puncture the feelgood vibes in Seattle.

Advertisement

Malik Tillman grabbed one back from a free kick, but De Ketelaere swiftly restored Belgium’s lead. A catastrophic piece of goalkeeping by Matt Freese and a late Romelu Lukaku goal left the Americans dead and buried.

FIFA’s move to suspend Balogun’s ban after he was sent off in the previous round against Bosnia and Herzegovina has been slammed by football fans, pundits and players around the world, but there were no such misgivings among the Seattle crowd.

A colossal roar greeted the stadium announcement of Balogun’s name in the starting XI, vastly dwarfing the cheers even for US talisman Christian Pulisic.

The “USA” thunderclap then echoed around the stadium, utterly drowning out a small corner of chanting Belgium fans in the opening minutes.

Advertisement

But the American party was swiftly silenced. The majority of 67,000 fans fell silent in the ninth minute as De Ketelaere scored, easily tapping home from close range after Nicolas Raskin’s cross evaded some lax defending.

It was the first time the Americans had conceded the opener all World Cup. With the atmosphere deflated, no immediate fightback was visible on the pitch either. The midfield was outgunned and the defense looked nervous.

On the half-hour mark, Balogun drew a foul on the edge of the area and whipped the crowd back to life. He waved his arms frantically as Malik Tillman — fresh from scoring a free kick against Bosnia — lined up the ball.

Tillman’s shot deflected off the Belgian wall and span into the net, and the stadium shook.

Advertisement

– Dream over –

But the joy was again short-lived. In the 33rd minute, De Ketelaere leapt up to meet Leandro Trossard’s cross and comfortably out-jumped an off-balance Tim Ream to score his second.

The US inched back into the game as the first half closed out, with Balogun blasting over from a long Tillman throw, then narrowly failing to catch a long ball, again from the Bayer Leverkusen midfielder.

US coach Mauricio Pochettino switched formation at half-time, sending Gio Reyna into the number 10 role and pushing Weston McKennie out to the right. The Americans resumed play with more intensity, pushing higher up the pitch.

Advertisement

But self-inflicted disaster struck in the 57th minute. Freese came out to collect a Belgium long ball, turned to evade the charging De Ketelaere, but then hesitated with his pass.

De Ketelaere jabbed the ball to Hans Vanaken, who made no mistake with an open goal from long range.

Pulisic limped off with an injury minutes later, and with him went the US dreams of reaching a first World Cup quarter-final since 2002.

His replacement, Sebastian Berhalter, flashed an ambitious shot narrowly wide in the 79th minute, and Balogun had a close-range effort saved soon after.

Advertisement

But Chris Richards handed the ball to Lukaku in stoppage time, and the veteran striker did not hestitate to seal the rout.

Continue Reading

Sports

Heartbreaking Moment Cristiano Ronaldo Cries Profusely As His #FIFAWorldCup Career Ends After Spain Loss

Published

on

By

ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad

Cristiano Ronaldo’s World Cup dream ended in heartbreak as Portugal crashed out to Spain in the Round of 16.

The veteran forward fought back tears after what is expected to be his final World Cup, with football’s biggest prize set to remain beyond his reach.

Cristiano Ronaldo’s dream of winning the FIFA World Cup came to a heartbreaking end after Portugal suffered a 1-0 defeat to Spain in the Round of 16 on Monday.

The 41-year-old forward was visibly emotional after the final whistle, fighting back tears as Portugal’s campaign ended. Widely expected to be Ronaldo’s final World Cup, the tournament represented his last realistic chance to lift the one major trophy that has eluded him throughout his illustrious career.

Advertisement

Spain’s victory ended Portugal’s hopes, while Ronaldo walked off the pitch knowing his long pursuit of World Cup glory was finally over.

Continue Reading

Sports

Spain Defeat Portugal To End Cristiano Ronaldo’s World Cup Career

Published

on

By

ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad
ADVERTISEMENT
Zoom Ad

Cristiano Ronaldo’s final World Cup clash ended in heartbreak as Portugal suffered a last-16 defeat to Spain.

The Manchester United legend, 41, revealed before the game this would be his last tournament.

Sadly for the footballing great, it was.

Ronaldo cut a shell-shocked figure at full-time as he stood on the pitch taking in his last international game.

Advertisement

The defeat means he will never equal his arch-rival Lionel Messi, who won the trophy in 2022 and could add to that tally this summer.

Mikel Merino scored a 91st-minute winner as Spain beat neighbours Portugal 1-0 to end Cristiano Ronaldo’s World Cup career and progress to the quarter-finals.

Portugal’s record goalscorer Ronaldo confirmed on Sunday that the 2026 World Cup will be his last, and the 2010 world champions dashed his hopes of signing off by winning the trophy as they left it late to produce a telling moment of attacking quality in a game in which it was surprisingly lacking.

Spain had the better of the first half and saw several opportunities to break the deadlock go begging, but it looked as if extra time would be required to seal their place in the last eight as the second half proved a largely uninspiring event.

Advertisement

But two substitutes combined to settle the tie in Spain’s favour as Ferran Torres’ reverse pass sent Merino through on goal, with the Arsenal man making no mistake with a cool finish to seal a first knockout win for Spain since their triumph in the 2010 final.

The reigning European champions will face either the United States or Belgium in the quarter-finals, with Ronaldo exiting the stage in meek fashion after a defeat that is also expected to spell the end of Roberto Martinez’s time as Portugal coach.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 Naija Blitz News