Connect with us

Sports

Cape Verde become smallest country to make World Cup knockout stage

Published

on

Cape Verde have written a remarkable chapter in FIFA World Cup history after becoming the smallest nation ever to reach the knockout stage of the tournament after a goalless draw with Saudi Arabia in their group stage finale in Houston on Friday.

The island nation, with a population of just over 600,000, secured qualification from Group H after finishing unbeaten, collecting three points from three draws against Spain, Uruguay, and Saudi Arabia.
“We are small,” said Vozinha, Cape Verde’s 40-year-old goalkeeper who embodied the grit of his nation. “But we have big hearts and we are fighters.”

The tournament debutants pulled off one of the World Cup’s biggest surprises by playing pre-tournament favorites Spain to a scoreless draw in its opener. They followed that up by scoring their first goals of the World Cup in a 2-2 tie against Uruguay.

With Friday’s draw, they finish undefeated on three points and take second place in Group H behind 2010 winners Spain and a point ahead of two-time World Cup champions Uruguay.

Cape Verde will face defending champions Argentina next up in a round-of-32 matchup in Miami Gardens, Florida, on July 3.

FOLLOW US ON:

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

PINTEREST

TIKTOK

YOUTUBE

LINKEDIN

INSTAGRAM

See also  Nigerian wrestlers arrive Mongolia for 3rd Ranking Series
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

2026 World Cup: Confirmed round of 32 fixtures

Published

on

The 2026 FIFA World Cup has entered its knockout stage, with a number of Round of 32 matches now officially confirmed following the completion of several group-stage fixtures.

History-makers Cape Verde have set up a blockbuster meeting with defending champions Argentina after becoming the smallest nation ever to reach the World Cup knockout rounds. South Africa will face Canada in the first confirmed Round of 32 fixture after finishing as runners-up in Group A.

Several knockout places remain undecided, with the final group-stage matches in Groups J, K, and L set to determine the remaining Round of 32 pairings and the identities of the last best third-placed qualifiers.

Last 32 ties – confirmed teams in bold.

Sunday June 28

Match 73: South Africa vs Canada, kick-off 8pm – Los Angeles, USA

Monday June 29

Match 76: Brazil vs Japan, kick-off 6pm – Houston, USA

Match 74: Germany vs Paraguay, kick-off 9.30pm – Foxborough, USA

Tuesday June 30

Match 75: Netherlands vs Morocco, kick-off 2am – Guadalupe, Mexico

Match 78: Ivory Coast vs Norway, kick-off 6pm – Arlington, USA

Match 77: France vs Sweden, kick-off 10pm – New Jersey, USA

Wednesday July 1

Match 79: Mexico vs Group C/E/F/H/I third place, kick-off 2am – Mexico City, Mexico

Match 80: Group L winners vs Group E/H/I/J/K third place, kick-off 5pm – Atlanta, USA

Match 82: Belgium vs Group A/E/H/I/J third place, kick-off 9pm – Seattle, USA

Thursday July 2

Match 81: USA vs Bosnia-Herzegovina, kick-off 1am – Santa Clara, USA

Match 84: Spain vs Group J runners-up, kick-off 8pm – Los Angeles, USA

See also  Nigerian swimmers primed for Africa junior title chase

Friday July 3

Match 83: Group K runners-up vs Group L runners-up, kick-off 12am – Toronto, Canada

Match 85: Switzerland vs Group E/F/G/I/J third place, kick-off 4am – Vancouver, Canada

Match 88: Australia vs Egypt, kick-off 7pm – Arlington, USA

Match 86: Argentina vs Cape Verde, kick-off 11pm – Miami, USA

Saturday July 4

Match 87: Group K winners vs Group D/E/I/J/L third place, kick-off 2.30am – Kansas City, USA

FOLLOW US ON:

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

PINTEREST

TIKTOK

YOUTUBE

LINKEDIN

INSTAGRAM

Continue Reading

Sports

Netherlands march into World Cup knockouts as group winners

Published

on

The Netherlands beat hapless Tunisia 3-1 on Thursday to top World Cup Group F and avoid a last-32 clash with Brazil, setting up a meeting with Morocco instead.

Ronald Koeman’s men flew into a two-goal lead in soggy Kansas City thanks to some shoddy defending from the North African side.

Ellyes Skhiri sliced Denzel Dumfries’ cross into his own net and minutes later Sunderland forward Brian Brobbey lashed home from close range.

That apparently sealed the deal for the Netherlands, whose orange-clad fans were entertaining themselves with Mexican waves midway through the first half at Arrowhead Stadium.

Tunisia pulled a goal back in the second half but the Dutch restored their two-goal lead courtesy of a Jan Paul van Hecke header shortly after the hour mark.

The Netherlands, who finished their group fixtures with seven points, pipped Japan to top spot in Group F, and will face Morocco in the second round in Monterrey on Monday.

Japan drew 1-1 with Sweden in Arlington, Texas, to confirm second spot though the Scandinavian side also advanced as one of the eight best third-placed teams.

Netherlands coach Koeman warned against thinking too far ahead, with a potential last-16 tie against South Africa or co-hosts Canada.

“We need to prepare for Morocco first because it will be a big game,” he said.

“It’s a good team with a lot of quality and they can score easily. We know that from Dutch football.”

– Stormy Kansas City –

Thursday’s game started on time after a lightning storm had threatened major disruption earlier in the American Midwest.

See also  PHOTOS: Zubairu appointed Egyptian club Telecom SC head coach

Tunisia went close in the opening moments when Ismael Gharbi fired over from close range but that proved a false indicator of what was to come.

Instead Skhiri turned the ball into his own net in the third minute to put the three-time finalists in front.

Just four minutes later Brobbey smashed home his third goal of the World Cup after Virgil van Dijk headed across the area following a Tijjani Reijnders free-kick.

Tunisia threatened to unravel further but managed to reach half-time without conceding again.

The North Africans pulled a goal back in the 54th minute when Hazem Mastouri headed home from Hannibal Mejbri’s corner.

But any potential jitters were quickly dispelled minutes later when Van Hecke’s header from Reijnders’ corner found its way into the net via a deflection.

Tunisia will go home with their tails between their legs after an embarrassing campaign in which they shipped 12 goals in three games.

Veteran French coach Herve Renard was hired last week after Sabri Lamouchi was sacked following the team’s 5-1 hammering by Sweden in their opening match in Mexico.

But he was unable to stop the rot as Tunisia, who romped through qualifying without conceding a single goal, collapsed 4-0 against Japan before their defeat by the Dutch.

The 57-year-old delivered a frank assessment of Tunisia’s lack of quality.

“We were not at the level for this World Cup,” he said. “This is clear. There is no discussion.

“It’s a big tournament with very good teams, especially in this group. It was a very tough group. And now, the federation of Tunisia needs to sit down and analyse everything.”

See also  EPL: Brighton stun 10-man Chelsea 3-1 at Stamford Bridge

AFP

punch.ng

FOLLOW US ON:

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

PINTEREST

TIKTOK

YOUTUBE

LINKEDIN

Continue Reading

Sports

Japan coach hopes World Cup success inspires Asian rivals

Published

on

Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu hopes his side’s World Cup exploits will inspire other Asian countries after AFP footage showed Chinese football fans celebrating the success of their traditional rivals.

Japan and China have often had fraught political ties, but some Chinese supporters in Shanghai put that aside to cheer Japan’s 4-0 win over Tunisia.

Japan sealed their place in the last 32 on Thursday following a 1-1 draw with Sweden in Texas and face Brazil next.

Asked afterwards by AFP if his team felt their success was not only for Japan, but for Asia as a whole, Moriyasu said: “We are representing Japan, but we’re proud to be representing Japan towards the world.

“And of course, now we are representing Asia.

“I know that other Asians teams are not as successful.

“Even if today we couldn’t get the win, I would like us to be able to encourage other Asian teams as well, and we would like to be their hope.

“Also, if we’re having good competitions among Asian teams, that can get the level up.”

Among other Asian Football Confederation teams, South Korea hope to still reach the next round as one of the best third-placed finishers.

Iran and Australia are also among the AFC sides still in contention.

China failed to reach the World Cup once again, having made it only one time, back in 2002.

AFP

punch.ng

FOLLOW US ON:

FACEBOOK

TWITTER

PINTEREST

TIKTOK

YOUTUBE

LINKEDIN

See also  Barcelona’s Flick regrets red card after obscene gesture, to miss El-Clasico
Continue Reading

Trending