2026 FIFA World Cup: Spain dominates France, advances to World Cup Final
Thirty-three days in, and the world’s biggest tournament is down to its final four.
Forty-eight nations became four. Three host countries have all gone home. What’s left is a semifinal weekend that pits football’s most decorated forward against the game’s brightest young superstar, and Europe’s form team against a wounded, battle-hardened England. Here is everything worth knowing about FIFA World Cup 2026 — the story so far, the players carrying it, and the four teams with a real shot at the trophy on July 19.
From 48 nations to four survivors — the road to semifinal weekend
As of 14 July 2026, 22:00 IST, the newly expanded FIFA World Cup has reached its final four. Every co-host has been eliminated, every quarterfinal is done, and the tournament’s first 48-team edition is now ninety minutes away from its first semifinal kickoff in Dallas.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicked off on 11 June with Mexico hosting South Africa at the Estadio Azteca, opening a month-long festival across sixteen stadiums in the United States, Canada, and Mexico — the first World Cup ever co-hosted by three nations, and the first to feature 48 teams across 12 groups. Five weeks and 98 matches later, that sprawling field has been whittled down to exactly four names: France, Spain, England, and Argentina.
The group stage produced its share of romance — Cape Verde’s fairytale run to the Round of 32 without winning a match, South Africa’s surprise second-place finish in Group A, Scotland’s first World Cup win since 1990. But the knockout rounds have been where the tournament truly sharpened. All three co-hosts are out: Canada lost to Morocco, Mexico fell to England, and the United States were eliminated by Belgium, all in the Round of 16. Brazil, Germany, Portugal, and Netherlands followed them out the door in the rounds that followed.
The quarterfinals, played from 9 to 11 July, delivered genuine theatre. France dismissed Morocco 2-0 in Boston. Spain edged a spirited Belgium 2-1 in Los Angeles. England needed extra time to see off Norway 2-1 in Miami Gardens, with Jude Bellingham’s brilliance eclipsing Erling Haaland on the night. And Argentina survived their toughest test yet — a 3-1 extra-time win over Switzerland — after already having clawed back from two goals down against Egypt in the Round of 16. Two semifinals now stand between this tournament and its champion: France face Spain in Dallas within the hour, and England meet Argentina in Atlanta tomorrow.
Semifinal 1 — France v Spain, AT&T Stadium, Dallas
The two form teams of the tournament collide in the first semifinal, with kickoff just hours away at the time of writing. The winner advances to face England or Argentina in the final on 19 July.
France arrive unbeaten and top of most pre-semifinal power rankings, having dismissed Morocco 2-0 in the quarterfinal behind a Kylian Mbappé strike and a late Ousmane Dembélé finish. ESPN’s live coverage has both sides as narrow favourites depending on the model, with Spain unbeaten since their opening 0-0 draw against Cape Verde and yet to concede in five straight matches. Whichever side wins in Dallas tonight will go into Sunday’s final as favourites; the loser drops into the third-place match in Miami on 18 July. The second semifinal — England v Argentina, in Atlanta — follows tomorrow, 15 July, also at 3:00 PM ET.
48 nations, six confederations, and a group stage whose ripples are still being felt
Five weeks on from kickoff, only four of the original 48 remain — but the group stage still shapes the story. Every semifinalist topped or finished second in their group without losing, and the sides that stumbled early are long gone.
All 48 finalists completed qualification by March 2026, with the three co-hosts — the United States, Canada, and Mexico — entering automatically. Europe sent a record sixteen teams through UEFA qualifying, Africa’s CAF contributed ten (its largest-ever World Cup delegation), and Asia’s AFC sent nine, including Jordan and Uzbekistan making their World Cup debuts. South America, North and Central America and the Caribbean, and Oceania rounded out a field more geographically representative than any World Cup in history.
| Group | Group winner | Runner-up (advanced) | Notable story |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Mexico (3-0-0, perfect record) | South Africa | Host nation swept the group; South Africa’s surprise run past South Korea |
| B | Switzerland | Canada | Canada advanced as co-hosts despite a tricky group |
| C | Brazil | Morocco | Brazil untested defensively through the group phase |
| D | United States | Australia | Australia stunned Türkiye to rival the US for top spot |
| E | Germany | Ivory Coast | Germany’s only blemish: a 2-1 loss to Ecuador |
| F | Netherlands | Japan | Sweden’s 5-goal outburst vs. Tunisia in the opener |
| G | England | Congo DR | England topped the group before a shock R16 exit |
| H | Spain | Cape Verde | Cape Verde’s fairytale — 3 draws, 0 defeats, debut tournament |
| I | France (3-0-0, perfect record) | Norway | Mbappé’s imperious form; Norway’s Haaland breakout |
| J | Argentina (3-0-0, perfect record) | Austria | Messi’s record-breaking opening hat-trick vs. Algeria |
| K | Belgium | Egypt | Egypt’s Salah-led resurgence carries into the knockouts |
| L | Portugal | Colombia | Colombia’s Golden Boot-adjacent breakout run |
Group configurations and standings via ESPN and Olympics.com coverage of the FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage.
The three players who have defined this World Cup
Every tournament has a handful of players who bend it around themselves. Heading into semifinal weekend, three men have separated themselves from an otherwise stacked field — and remarkably, all three are still playing.
Lionel Messi
Now the outright all-time leading scorer in men’s World Cup history, Messi dragged Argentina back from two goals down against Egypt in the Round of 16 and then set up the extra-time winner against Switzerland in the quarterfinal. He has never won a Golden Boot — this may be his last chance.
Kylian Mbappé
Level with Messi on goals but ahead on assists — the tournament’s tiebreaker — Mbappé currently holds the Golden Boot lead. His quarterfinal strike sank Morocco and put France into the semifinal as arguably the tournament’s most complete side.
Jude Bellingham
Bellingham has been England’s difference-maker through the knockouts, scoring braces in successive matches against Mexico and then Norway in the quarterfinal — the first player to register consecutive multi-goal knockout games since Diego Maradona in 1986.
Just outside that top tier sits a genuinely stacked chasing pack: England’s Harry Kane (6 goals), Norway’s Erling Haaland (7, before his side’s quarterfinal exit), and a wide cast of breakout names have turned the Golden Boot race into one of the tightest in tournament history — the first time three players have reached seven-plus goals in a single World Cup. With Haaland’s Norway now eliminated, the race for top scorer sits squarely between Messi and Mbappé, with Kane a live shout if England go all the way.
Lionel Messi in 2026 — and the road that started in Qatar
No player carries more narrative weight into this tournament. At 39, in what he has called his final World Cup, Messi is one win away from a second successive final — this time with a script that connects directly back to Argentina’s 2022 triumph.
What he’s done in 2026
Messi opened his tournament with a hat-trick against Algeria, then kept building through the group stage against Austria and Jordan to become the outright all-time leading scorer in men’s World Cup history, passing Miroslav Klose’s long-standing record of 16. His most defining moment, though, came in the Round of 16 against Egypt: with Argentina trailing 2-0 and just 11 minutes left, Messi assisted Cristian Romero’s headed goal, then scored the equaliser himself four minutes later with a first-time strike, teeing up Enzo Fernández’s stoppage-time winner in a 3-2 comeback for the ages. He missed a first-half penalty in that same match — his second missed spot-kick of the tournament and fourth of his career, a men’s World Cup record.
In the quarterfinal against Switzerland, Messi turned provider again, setting up a decisive contribution as Argentina won 3-1 after extra time to reach the semifinals. He now has 8 goals for the tournament — level with Kylian Mbappé, though the Frenchman leads the Golden Boot race on the assists tiebreaker — and sits one victory over England away from a second consecutive World Cup final at 39 years old.
Sources: ESPN · FIFA.com Match Report · Goal.com Golden Boot Tracker
How he delivered Argentina’s third star, in 2022
To understand why a possible Argentina-England final would carry such weight, it helps to revisit what happened in Qatar in 2022. Messi entered that tournament having collected almost every honour football offers except the one that mattered most to Argentine football history. What followed was, by consensus, one of the greatest individual World Cup campaigns ever played — the campaign this 2026 run is now being measured against.
Argentina lost their opener to Saudi Arabia in a genuine shock, before Messi steadied the campaign with decisive contributions against Mexico and Poland to top the group.
Messi scored and assisted through the Round of 16, quarterfinal, and semifinal, driving Argentina past Australia, the Netherlands, and Croatia to reach the final.
In one of the greatest finals in the competition’s history, Messi scored twice as Argentina built a 2-0 lead, saw France’s Mbappé complete a hat-trick to force extra time and penalties, then held his nerve in the shootout as Argentina won their third World Cup.
Messi won the Golden Ball as the tournament’s best player for a second time — the first player ever to do so twice — and finally completed football’s most-discussed unfinished checklist.
That 2022 run is the reason Argentina arrived in North America as defending champions and heavy favourites in their own group. It’s also the emotional backdrop to tomorrow’s semifinal in Atlanta: a 39-year-old Messi, playing what he’s indicated will be his final World Cup, one win away from a final appearance that would let him try to add one more improbable chapter to a story that already reshaped the sport’s history.
Four teams that have simply outclassed everyone in front of them
Every World Cup produces sides that look a level above their opposition. Through six rounds, these four — not coincidentally, the four semifinalists — have been the most consistently dominant, measured by results, underlying performance data, and the manner of their victories.
France
Spain
Argentina
England
The four teams left with a genuine shot at the trophy
There is no bracket left to hide in. Based on results, performance data, and squad depth heading into semifinal weekend, these are the four sides — and only these four — who can still lift the trophy on 19 July.
France
Spain
England
Argentina
France go into the first semifinal in Dallas as many analysts’ pick for outright favourites — the only unbeaten side in the tournament that hasn’t needed extra time or penalties to win a knockout match. Spain’s counter-case rests on a defence that has conceded almost nothing since their opening draw. On the other side of the draw, England’s route has been considerably bumpier — needing extra time against Norway — but Bellingham’s knockout-stage form has been the single best individual sequence of any player bar Messi and Mbappé. Argentina, for their part, have made a habit of winning ugly: two knockout matches, two comebacks, and a 39-year-old captain who has somehow made “written off” his most comfortable position all tournament. Brazil, Germany, Portugal, Morocco, Belgium, Norway, and all three co-hosts — every one of them ranked among pre-tournament favourites — have already been eliminated, a reminder of just how unforgiving this expanded, 48-team format has proven to be.
Why this World Cup matters far beyond the final whistle
Every four years, the World Cup becomes the single largest recruiting poster the sport of football has. A record-setting 48-team field means more countries, more debutant nations, and more first-time World Cup moments than ever before — and that reach matters most where it’s hardest to measure: on youth pitches, in schoolyards, and in front of televisions in households discovering the game for the first time.
Cape Verde, Jordan, and Uzbekistan making their World Cup debuts gives an entire generation of young players in those countries a home team to watch — and believe they could one day represent.
A 39-year-old still performing at the highest level, still adding to his legend, is proof to young athletes everywhere that longevity and love of the game can outlast expectations.
Cape Verde’s run to the Round of 32 without winning a game, and Argentina’s back-to-back comebacks from behind against Egypt and Switzerland, are the exact stories that convince a young player anything is possible on the biggest stage.
Follow the tournament live
For real-time scores, brackets, and match-by-match coverage as the knockout rounds continue, these are the primary sources referenced in this report.

