Later we’ll have live action from Group F:
Japan v Sweden
Tunisia v Netherland (both 00.00 BST/7pm EDT)
… and in Group D …
Paraguay v Australia
Turkey v USA (both 3am BST/10pm EDT/12pm AEST)
Here’s hoping for an enjoyable night all-round, far removed from the shocking incident in Mexico.
That’s all from this blog – there’ll be plenty more tomorrow (Friday where I’m sitting) as Group I reaches its conclusion … including the mouth-watering prospect of Norway v France. Good day!
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Last call from me for the next two blogs, wrapping up Group E …
It’s starting to get real for the big, big game at Philadelphia Stadium …
Both sides have been out to warm up – here’s Côte d’Ivoire …
One or two Germany fans have made it to the New York/New Jersey Stadium also …
Ecuador fans are quietly taking their seats in East Rutherford …
Curaçao v Côte d'Ivoire teams
Curaçao: Room; Gaari, Floranus, Obispo, Brenet, Fonville; Comenencia, J Bacuna, Chong, L Bacuna, Locadia.
Subs: Bodak, Doornbusch, Sambo, Van Eijma, Bazoer, Roemeratoe, Martha, Felida, Antonisse, Hansen, Noslin, Gorré, Margaritha, Kuwas, Kastaneer.
Côte d’Ivoire: Y Fofana; O Diomande, Kossounou, Opéri, Doué; Kessié, Sangaré; Bonny, Y Diomande, Diallo, Pépé.
Subs: Koné, Lafont, Konan, Singo, Agbadou, Ndicka, Seri, S Fofana, Guiagon, Oulai, Adingra, Wahi, Diakité, Guessand, Touré.
KO is just under an hour away. Follow it here with Sarah Rendell …
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Ecuador v Germany teams
Teams for the incoming games are in …
Ecuador: Galíndez, Franco, Ordóñez, Pacho, Hincapié, Yeboah, Vite, Moisés Caicedo, Angulo, Plata, Enner Valencia.
Subs: Ramírez, Valle, Torres, Alcívar, Estupiñán, Anthony Valencia, Páez, Rodríguez, Minda, Jordy Caicedo, Preciado, Castillo, Arévalo, Porozo, Medina.
Germany: Neuer, Kimmich, Rüdiger, Tah, Raum, Nmecha, Pavlovic, Sané, Musiala, Wirtz, Havertz.
Subs: Baumann, Nubel, Anton, Goretzka, Leweling, Woltemade, Gross, Beier, Stiller, Amiri, Thiaw, Ouédraogo, Undav.
Join Scott Murray here for the buildup …
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Attention. England’s Eberechi Eze is in front of cameras, batting away some soft-balls …
On the suggestion that Declan Rice might have left the Ghana draw with a bit of a limp:
He wants to play every game, he’ll do what he can to help the team. I don’t see him carrying an injury, I see him enjoying himself.
On the suggestion that Rice might have to rein it in during his side’s final Group L game against Panama as he’s on a yellow card …
Dec is a smart player, he knows what he’s doing.
On the suggestion that Eze might be a wee bit tired after a long, title-winning season …
I love playing football. Of course you do need time to rest, that can come after.
On the feeling in the squad, and what it’s like to be at his first World Cup …
Having players in the team who have won things definitely gives you a type of confidence, belief and trust.
You can see the intensity and the passion, the spirit we’re playing with. We try to impose ourselves – you can see how hard it is for those who play us.
It’s a beautiful experience. It’s an amazing thing to be a part of – whatever I’m called on to do.
Last-32 ticket prices tumble after Canada and South Korea losses
Losses by Canada and South Korea in their final group matches caused a domino effect that has sent ticket prices for several last-32 matches spiraling.
South Korea were stunned by South Africa on Wednesday night, leaving them in third place in Group A and needing help in order to advance to the knockout rounds. Had South Korea finished among the top two, they would have played their last-32 match in Los Angeles, where the team has a strong contingency. Instead, that match will now feature South Africa.
Earlier in the day, Canada lost to Switzerland to finish second in Group B. While Canada has advanced to the round of 32, they will now face South Africa rather than playing in Vancouver had they finished first in their group.
Ticket tracking service TicketData.com said prices in Los Angeles and Vancouver both dropped more than 40 percentage points in the span of a few hours after Wednesday’s results.
The price for South Africa v Canada at Los Angeles Stadium on Sunday is now at $683 (£517), down 58 percentage points over the past three days. Switzerland’s opponent for the last-32 game in Vancouver on 26 July has yet to be determined, but the price still plummeted to $560 (£424) – down 65 percentage points over the past three days.
After Canada won their second group match, setting the stage for a potential round of 32 match in their home country, the price surged as high as $1,657 (£,1255) on Sunday night.
We like untangling permutations here at Guardian towers. I say “we”, but I had to admit in a meeting earlier that permutations pieces are my journalistic Kryptonite. When there are more than, say, two moving parts, my brain turns to pudding.
So when someone asked me how the race for the eight third-place qualification places was looking, my head pretty much crashed and both of my eyeballs rolled over to be replaced by Xs.
But have no fear! Other, brighter folk have us all covered. As the group stage nears the critical final games, here’s how it currently looks …
Read more here, and feel infinitely more informed than if I tried to explain it to you in person …
“The Little General” has arrived at Philadelphia Stadium. Dick Advocaat, the Curaçao head coach, will helm his side in a massive Group E game against Côte d’Ivoire in approx 90 mins’ time …
Sarah Rendell has the game-specific buildup here …
Meanwhile, in non-World Cup football news …
Newcastle United have been hit with a demand for £3.2m from HM Revenue and Customs over a “deliberate” failure to pay tax, according to official disclosures that relate to a near decade-long investigation into player transfers under the club’s former owner, Mike Ashley.
The Tyneside club, which has been owned by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund since 2021, owes HMRC £1.9m in tax and has also been hit with a penalty of £1.25m, the newly released documents show. The bill emerged as a result of the tax authority’s regular publication of a league table of “deliberate tax defaulters”, with Newcastle United featuring at the top of the most recent list, released on Thursday.
Both Newcastle and HMRC declined to comment on the reason that the club had been placed on the list. However the Guardian understands the fine is linked to a tax probe, known as Operation Loom, that saw officers from HMRC raid the club’s St James’ Park stadium in 2017.
The psychological, societal and commercial benefits to Scotland of World Cup participation have been borne out in recent weeks. Not only has the tournament captured hearts and minds in Scotland but the Tartan Army has done likewise across the United States. Scottish people, self-deprecating as standard, should take a morale boost from football supporters acting as such wonderful ambassadors for their country.
Here lies the great paradox of this World Cup. Scottish fans, superb. The Scottish team? Dismal. Steve Clarke’s side were blunt against Haiti, needlessly cautious against Morocco and a mess when facing Brazil. Scotland find themselves in purgatory, hanging around in North Carolina as a faint hope of progression to the last 32 lives on, yet even those within the camp seem willing to admit their contribution to this tournament deserves nothing more than a flight home. Possession has looked an alien concept to the Scots.
Read more here …
Many thanks John, hello world. More fresh content to report, including this from our new data visual guru Andrew Beasley, who has been running the rule over two of the most ferocious forwards at the World Cup …
… which features graph-based catnip of this ilk. Some stat, this …
With that, Stuart Goodwin takes the reins as the day’s first pair of matches approach.
The German club, 1860 Munich, finalists of the 1965 European Cup Winners’ Cup – beaten by West Ham, are in dire straits, having launched insolvency proceedings.
The 1966 Bundesliga champions, now a fourth-division club issued a statement on Thursday saying an administrator had been brought in.
World Cup Q&A
It’s already in session, with our US-based reporters, Alexander Abnos, Jeff Rueter and Pablo Iglesias Maurer answering your questions.
Sweden’s players were taken by surprise seeing mangled metal and other demolished construction material on one side of Toyota Stadium — the home of MLS team FC Dallas — during their training session Wednesday night.
“I just thought, ‘what happened?’ As far as I knew there hadn’t been any storm,” Sweden midfielder Besfort Zeneli said. That scheduled work, done earlier in the day before Sweden’s season, is part of a years-long renovation project at the stadium.
FC Dallas said in a statement the work “was part of a planned and controlled demolition within an active construction zone. The work was conducted using a pull-down demolition method and did not involve explosives.”
Czech Republic striker Patrik Schick, 30, has announced his retirement from international football after exiting the World Cup in the group stage.
“This decision is not impulsive, nor did it come about overnight. It’s an idea I’ve been carrying with me for quite some time and one I’ve thought long and hard about. I’m leaving proud of what I’ve achieved in the national team jersey,” he added. “At the same time, however, I feel that Czech soccer has much, much more to offer than it has shown in recent years.”
I had the fantastic experience of being at the 2022 World Cup and I am still savouring the memory while dreaming of living it again. But I can also say this: the World Cup demands every ounce of dedication and focus a person has to offer. And with that schedule of commitments it is not always easy to feel the “World Cup atmosphere”.
Manchester United goalkeeper Andre Onana is close to securing a second loan move to Trabzonspor. It is reported that Onana, 30, is set to spend a second season with the Turkish side.
Son Heung-min himself has been speaking about the situation that South Korea are in following their defeat to South Africa.
“I think we have to consider the big picture and figure out where things went wrong. No one is more upset than the players themselves. But I can honestly tell you that we’ve had absolutely zero issue with our team atmosphere.”
The permutations look precarious.
Updated
Argentina are set to rest players, including Lionel Messi, when they face Jordan in Arlington, Texas, having already won Group J. Jordan are already out of the competition.
The Argentina coach, Lionel Scaloni, said: “The idea is to give most players a chance to play. I think they deserve it and, whenever the match allows it, we will do so.”
Julian Alvarez may get increased minutes. “I didn’t arrive in the best shape to play the friendlies, but I feel very good now. Supporting the team and filling the role that was given to me,” said Alvarez.
Pedro Neto has been speaking ahead of Portugal facing Colombia in Miami. with the Group K winners assured of a gentler path into the knockout rounds by facing one of the best third-placed sides while the runners-up could potentially meet England, Croatia or Ghana.
“Honestly, sometimes we do look at what situations could happen. I’d be lying if I said we didn’t look at what could happen if we finished second or third. But what matters most – being Portuguese, with the mentality we have – is always to be the best. So obviously we are going to face Colombia to finish first, even without knowing what may happen in the other groups. Our mentality is to finish first and that’s what we’re going into the match to do: play a great match and finish in first place.”
Senegal are staring down the barrel of an early exit as they face Iraq on Friday.
Pape Thiaw, the head coach of Senegal, had been without an employment contract since February and was also owed five months of unpaid wages, which led him to refuse to travel to the United States for the World Cup until Bassirou Diomaye Faye, Senegal’s president, intervened. “When this situation happened, Pape called me to discuss it,” said Senghor. “I told him that he had to focus on the assignment for our nation and not be distracted. Seeing our nation do well is what is more important.
“Many in the country have been asking why there are so many problems with the management of the team, as they say that this was unheard of during my time. I have chosen to stay silent until the first anniversary of my departure as FSF president. That is when I will speak my mind.”
Benching Son Heung-Min against South Africa has been explained by South Korea coach Hong Myung-Bo. It didn’t work, and a knockout place is in serious doubt/
“We thought that Son would be better placed when the opponents were losing their energy, not when they had a lot of energy, And when there were more spaces to exploit between the opponents’ defensive line, that’s when we wanted Son to be at his strongest – when the opponents were a bit weaker.
“In terms of the process and preparing for this game, and how we would play on the field, that is something I put much thought into,” he said. “Of course, if we knew what the result was going to be, I probably would have made different choices. But I had a strategy in mind. Whenever such a bad result happens, everyone has their own opinion. The result is really the responsibility of the head coach. Ultimately, it comes down to my hands.”
Updated
City back in for Anderson transfer
Manchester City have made a third bid for the Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson and talks are ongoing between the clubs. City have seen two previous offers rejected in their hunt for the England international but there is confidence they will eventually get their man for a British record transfer fee.
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Here’s today’s Football Daily, by Will Unwin.
Football always gives you cruel hope, but there was next to no chance Steve Clarke’s side were going to give Brazil a gubbing. It took fewer than seven minutes for Scott McKenna to dawdle on the ball, before being dispossessed by Rayan in the penalty area. Vinícius Júnior, who was once so angry he didn’t win the Ballon d’Or that he refused to attend the ceremony, did the rest.
Beyond the World Cup, a Russian team may be allowed to participate at a Fifa event for the first time since Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine after soccer’s global authority said its inaugural U-15 World Cup and Festival, set to be held in Azerbaijan in October, is open to all FIFA member associations.
Fifa banned Russia from international soccer in February 2022 after it invaded Ukraine, but it lifted the suspension from the country’s U-17 boys and girls’ teams the next year. (Reuters)
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Craig Burley, the 1998 Scotland World Cup player turned trenchant ESPN pundit has had his say on his national team’s impending exit.
“I’m sorry, I know this is the way it works with 48 teams, but we are just rewarding complete mediocrity here, and they don’t really deserve to go through, if we’re being honest. And I don’t think they will, barring getting lucky.
“In fact, if they do go through, it’s just going to continue the embarrassment of looking like what Scotland are. And it’s kind of second rate, isn’t it?
“They just don’t have the players. They’ve got a couple. But they just don’t have the players of yesteryear and I’m not talking about the team I played in, although it had some very good players. The team [fellow pundit] Stevie [Nicol] played in had world-class players. Guys at the back like [Alan] Hansen, who couldn’t even get a game at times, but could pass the ball for fun, with anybody. They just don’t have that.
“If they go through, fine, but there should be no celebration if this is the first ever Scotland team to qualify through the group stage.”
Old fashioned wing play is back, though do Noni Madueke and Anthony Gordon buck the trend? The Opta Analyst investigates.
When it comes to goals from completed crosses, there were 36 in the first two rounds of games, which equates to a rate of 0.75 per game. Since records began in 1966, the only World Cup to see more goals from completed crosses per game was in 2002 – that tournament saw an average of 0.84; so, 2026 isn’t far behind.
Last year, Seattle’s local organizing committee, which is separate from Fifa, made plans for 26 June to be a Pride-themed match coinciding with the city’s annual Pride weekend.
In December, Egypt and Iran were drawn to play each other on that date in Seattle, causing a swift firestorm and condemnation from the two countries.
Egypt’s football association appealed to Fifa, saying it “categorically rejects any activities promoting LGBTQ during the match,” warning the events could “provoke cultural and religious sensitivities among fans”. Iran’s football federation was quoted suggesting the Pride designation was an “irrational move that supports a certain group”.
In Iran, LGBTQ+ relationships are illegal, and Egypt has a history of prosecuting queer and trans people.
Fond memories of Les Murray and Johnny Warren as Jack Snape thinks of the boys back home on SBS, the arty Australian TV channel.
“Our football broadcast pioneers Les Murray and Johnny Warren firmly believed that we could get here and will be smiling down on us,” Shipp said, speaking from a downtown San Francisco bar which he, Murray and Warren visited during USA 1994.
“I hope this match stops the nation – there’s every chance it will, given the favourable timing, the unprecedented media coverage we’re seeing and the excitement around this young Australian team. If it does, then that will be the result of 40 years of dedicated work at SBS.”
That’s all from me – time for John Brewin to steer things.
South Africa have failed in their appeal to overturn a three-match suspension for Themba Zwane, who was sent off in their World Cup opener against Mexico.
“We are disappointed with the outcome of our appeal because we strongly believe that the punishment is far harsher than the offense that Themba is said to have committed,” SAFA said.
The midfielder will therefore miss his side’s last-32 tie against Canada.
It’s pretty simple to work out what’s happening in Group D. The US have already won the group, Turkey are at the bottom of the pile and will stay there. It’s all riding on Paraguay against Australia. The Socceroos will finish second with a point; Paraguay will do so only with a victory.
The group runners-up will finish the second-placed side in Group G – at the moment, that’s Iran.
| Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | USA | 2 | 5 | 6 |
| 2 | Australia | 2 | 0 | 3 |
| 3 | Paraguay | 2 | -2 | 3 |
| 4 | Turkey | 2 | -3 | 0 |
Vrancken replaces McInnes as Hearts head coach
Hearts have announced Wouter Vrancken as their new head coach – the 47-year-old joins from Sint-Truiden, who he took third place in the Belgian Pro League last season. He replaces Derek McInnes, who left for Rangers earlier this month.
He’s still going. The former Japan striker Kazuyoshi Miura, 59 years old – I repeat, FIFTY-NINE – has signed another loan deal at Fukushima United from his parent club Yokohama United. Fukushima play in Japan’s third tier.
Here’s a piece about him from when was still an up-and-comer.
“The dominant simplistic narrative that accompanied the shift from Gareth Southgate to Thomas Tuchel was that the former wasn’t ruthless enough and therefore the latter will be more ruthless. There are already assumptions and interpretations of Tuchel’s actions and words being made through that lens which need challenging.”
Right, time for a look at what’s going on in Group F, which wraps up today.
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Japan v Sweden – Dallas Stadium, 6pm local time, 12am BST Friday
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Tunisia v Netherlands – Kansas City Stadium, same time
Tunisia are out; the Netherlands look primed to finish top, though they remain level on goal difference with Japan.
| Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Netherlands | 2 | 4 | 4 |
| 2 | Japan | 2 | 4 | 4 |
| 3 | Sweden | 2 | 0 | 3 |
| 4 | Tunisia | 2 | -8 | 0 |
Arsenal sign Piero Hincapié on permanent deal
Piero Hincapié’s loan deal at Arsenal has turned into a permanent move, the club has announced. The former Bayer Leverkusen defender made 39 appearances last season, including 25 in the league, and started in the Champions League final.
Hello, hello, hello. I welcome you back with some #OnThisDay #content. It’s 48 years to the day Argentina won the World Cup for the first time, beating the Netherlands 3-1 in the final. But forget the actual game: this is a great read.
Right, my work here is done. Taha Hashim is back to guide you through the afternoon. Stay cool. Bye.
I’d imagine (some of) the Scotland fans out in Miami are rousing themselves for breakfast by now, and they have plenty to chew on, travel plan-wise. What are you planning? Straight home? Investigating flights to Mexico? Negotiating overdraft extensions? Would be good to hear from you’se.
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The first woman to referee a men’s World Cup game, Stéphanie Frappart, is joining the staff of Uefa, AP reports. She is taking a full-time job as a Uefa refereeing officer working to train match officials and help appoint them to games in European competitions. The 42-year-old French referee has been a trailblazer for women match officials in the men’s game. At the 2022 World Cup in Qatar Frappart handled Germany’s 4-2 win against Costa Rica in the group stage. She refereed the finals of the 2019 Women’s World Cup and the 2025 Women’s Euros.
Bellamy set to stay with Wales and reject Burnley
Looks as if Craig Bellamy is inclined not to burn the considerable capital he has with the Welsh public, and will spurn Burnley’s overtures, PA Media reports.
The Championship club had identified the former Liverpool and Manchester City forward as their preferred choice to succeed Scott Parker, who left Turf Moor after relegation from the Premier League was confirmed in April.
The Clarets were thought to be in advanced talks with the 46-year-old and the Football Association of Wales, but Bellamy now looks set to stay with the national team.
It is not known why negotiations have stalled.
Neither Burnley nor the FAW commented when contacted.
Bellamy previously worked at Turf Moor as assistant to former manager Vincent Kompany.
The former Wales captain still has two years remaining on his FAW contract and recently made comments that appeared to commit his future to the role.
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Why have Tunisia had such a dismal World Cup? This AFP piece looks at the administrative dysfuction, mid-tournament sackings, in-fighting and favouritism allegations that have formed the backdrop to their campaign, which ends tonight when Hervé Renard’s already-eliminated team face the Netherlands.
Tunisia’s short-lived World Cup experience lays bare deep dysfunctions
Tunisia’s humiliating exit from the 2026 World Cup after two heavy losses against Sweden and Japan delt a blow to Eagles of Carthage fans, who say it laid bare years of dysfunction within the football federation.
The team, which had made history in 1978 by becoming the first African nation to win a World Cup match, had hoped for a better tournament this summer.
But with nine goals conceded in two games and French head coach Sabri Lamouchi sacked after the first – a 5-1 defeat to Sweden – many Tunisians were faced with a different reality.
Beyond player performances, they blame a deeply flawed national sporting system.
“The collapse of the national team against Sweden and Japan has lifted the veil on the ’football mafia’ whose dismantling everyone is demanding today, before starting from scratch and rebuilding our football,” the Arabic-language daily AlChourouk wrote.
The French-language newspaper Le Temps argued that Tunisian football “has for many years been undermined by clientelism and inter-club infighting”.
That has led to undeserving players being selected for the national team, the newspaper added.
Investigative outlet Inkyfada alleged that there was an “unofficial quota policy” that saw some local players called up only “to satisfy major clubs in the domestic league and ensure that each received their share of FIFA compensation”.
The Tunisian football federation did not respond to AFP’s requests for comment.
Things could get even worse for Tunisia’s chastened players, whose last match on Thursday night is against Group F leaders the Netherlands, before they return home.
And back home, the World Cup has not generated great enthusiasm.
The team’s early elimination, compounded by their matches kicking off in the middle of the night due to the time difference, many supporters have already felt disengaged.
“I had set my alarm, but at the last minute I changed my mind and went back to sleep,” one coffee shop owner in Tunis told AFP following the Japan game.
Many have also recalled statements made by former Manchester United midfielder Hannibal Mejbri following Tunisia’s elimination from the Africa Cup of Nations in January.
“We dream a lot, but we don’t work enough,” French-born Mejbri had said. “We really need to ask ourselves questions because we have fallen far behind.”
Even if new head coach Hervé Renard, who replaced compatriot Lamouchi shortly before Tunisia’s 4-0 thumping by Japan, does find the answers on Thursday, his own long-term fate within the turbulent federation remains uncertain.
Today’s action starts later than usual – we’re still more than seven hours away from kick-off – so why not while away some time by checking out our World Cup Instagram, with features ranging from Barney Ronay’s World Cup video diary, Morgan Ofari following Tuesday’s game with the Ghanaian diaspora in London, reportage on Iran and more.
It’s too hot to do anything else after all.
If you want a respite from the football, it’s lunch in the men’s Test at Trent Bridge, after another morning of toil for England’s bowlers, who have been as blunt thus far as their footballing compatriots were on Tuesday. Daniel Harris is yer man for that:
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Vehicle hits crowd in Mexico's Cabo San Lucas at World Cup gathering
A vehicle struck multiple people at a gathering in the popular tourist resort of Cabo San Lucas following Mexico’s victory in their World Cup match against Czechia on Wednesday night, Los Cabos’ city hall said in a statement.
“According to preliminary information, the vehicle was surrounded by a group of people and, for reasons to be determined by the competent authority, drove through the crowd, injuring several people,” the city hall added.
An unverified video has circulated on social media showing a car ramming a crowd; Reuters couldn’t immediately verify its authenticity. Reuters
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But enough of this Bromley-away-on-a-Tuesday-night chat, what think we of Brazil? Looking mostly second best against Morocco before easy wins against Haiti and Scotland, it’s hard to gauge where they rank against yer Frances and Spains but they have match-winning options all over the pitch, and that might be enough. WinstonWolfe BTL certainly thinks so.
Brazil look decent. Ancelotti has got them playing like Real Madrid - i.e. do the minimum and just score goals. Midfield is a bit slow but they’ve got a good goalie, good central defence, pace to burn up front and the slyest of sly foxes at the helm.
Get Raphinha back, maybe a few 30 min cameos from Neymar and they’re surely contenders.
I thought Bruno Guimarães was excellent too last night.
EFL fixtures: West Ham start at Burnley, Leicester face Notts County
Forgive the domestic diversion but it’s Plan Your Next 10 Months Day for some of us, when we start sizing up weekends away and bending Christmas plans to our will – the EFL fixtures are out. Here’s the story:
Relegated Wolves will launch the Championship season at home to Blackburn, while West Ham head to Burnley in one of the more eye-catching fixtures on the opening weekend.
The EFL fixture list was released on Thursday and Wolves will play their first Championship fixture since 2018 under the new head coach César Peixoto at Molineux at 8pm on Friday, 14 August with the former West Brom manager Tony Mowbray back for a second spell in charge of Blackburn.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Friday 14 August
Wolves v Blackburn (8pm)
Saturday 15 August (3pm unless stated)
Bolton v Preston (12.30pm)
Bristol City v Millwall
Charlton v Derby
Middlesbrough v Lincoln
Norwich v West Brom
Portsmouth v QPR
Stoke v Swansea
Sheffield United v Birmingham (5.30pm)
Sunday 16 August
Watford v Southampton (1.30pm)
Burnley v West Ham (4pm)
Monday 17 August
Cardiff v Wrexham (8pm)
LEAGUE ONE
Saturday 15 August (3pm unless stated)
Notts County v Leicester (12.30pm)
Oxford v MK Dons (12.30pm)
Reading v Luton (12.30pm)
Barnsley v Bromley
Blackpool v Wycombe
Bradford v Peterborough
Burton v Stevenage
Cambridge v Wigan
Huddersfield v AFC Wimbledon
Leyton Orient v Sheffield Wednesday
Mansfield v Doncaster
Plymouth v Stockport
LEAGUE TWO
Saturday 15 August (3pm unless stated)
Newport v Rochdale (12.30pm)
Oldham v Port Vale (12.30pm)
Accrington v Colchester
Barnet v Salford City
Cheltenham v Rotherham
Chesterfield v Fleetwood
Crawley v Crewe
Gillingham v Walsall
Grimsby v Exeter
Northampton v Swindon
Tranmere v Shrewsbury
York v Bristol Rovers
The Hammers and managerless Burnley were relegated alongside Wolves and they face each other in their opening match at Turf Moor on the Sunday. West Ham will start a new season outside the top flight for the first time in 14 years, while Burnley are back in the second tier for the third time since 2023.
The London Stadium, West Ham’s home since 2016, will host Championship football for the first time the following Saturday when Nuno Espírito Santo’s side face capital rivals Charlton.
Southampton play their opening fixture on the Sunday and will bid to put last month’s play-off saga behind them after being expelled for spying against Watford at Vicarage Road.
Updated
Some EFL/Wales news: Craig Bellamy has reportedly turned down the Burnley manager’s job, Sky Sports reports, boosting Welsh hopes he’ll stick around for the next Euros.
And the new fixtures are out – Middlesbrough v Lincoln, Burnley v West Ham and Cardiff v Wrexham are among the opening day standouts in the Championship. Full story to follow.
Today’s Football Daily podcast is here, a little belatedly. Get your ears round Max, Barry, Nicky, Ewan and Mark picking over the bones of last night:
World Cup Q&A. USA have certainly made people sit up and take notice. When the draw was made, their game against Turkey tonight had the makings of a crunch decider. But it’s nothing of the sort – the co-hosts have already swaggered through and Turkey are shock early departees.
So what’s the story here? Thankfully, our US writers will be on hand later for a livechat to answer your questions about the USMNT and much more. Join Alexander Abnos, Pablo Maurer and Jeff Rueter from 5PM BST (midday EST, 9AM PST)
The financial pre-eminence of the Premier League has been very evident at this World Cup, with the likes of Crystal Palace and Sunderland providing participants all over the place. Which is a clumsy way of segueing into some gratuitous praise of Haiti’s Wilson Isidor, whose howitzer against Morocco is a top-three contender for goal of the tournament. Haiti may have exited pointless, but they were competitive in all their games and left some lasting memories.
But anyway, goals of the tournament so far anyone? Most of the bangers appear to have been long-rangers thus far. Something to do with the ball?
The third-place permutations are going to be a fun conversational ice-breaker for us all over the next few days, notably Scotland fans. Thankfully, Keiron O’Hara is here to talk us through the hows and whys:
I don’t know that I have seen a summary of exactly what Scotland need to qualify. I’ve had a go at working it all out. Basically they need four of the following to happen.
Group 4: Australia beat Paraguay by 2 or more or Paraguay beat Australia by 4 or more
Group 5: Neither Ecuador nor Curacao win [or, unlikely, Ecuador don’t win but Curacao beat Cote d’Ivoire by 4 or more]
Group 6: Japan beat Sweden by 4 or more
Group 7: Egypt beat Iran
Group 8: Spain beat Uruguay
Group 9: Senegal draw with Iraq or Iraq beat Senegal by 1 or 2 goals (but not 3)
Group 10: Austria beat Algeria by 2 or more or Algeria beat Austria by 4 or more
Group 11: Congo and Uzbekistan draw, or Uzbekistan beat Congo by up to 3 goals (but not 4)
Group 12: Ghana beat Croatia by 3 or more
They’d’ve been helped if Bosnia and Qatar had drawn, and also if South Korea got a point against South Africa, but no.
Touch and go - probably groups 4, 5, 7, 8 and 11 are their best bets. Possibly 9 and 10. It’s not out of the question, but the odds are very much against.
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Football, famously, is a team game, something that appears to have eluded a certain type of pundit (and consumer). And Jonathan Liew has some wise words to say about this tournament’s intrusive cult of the individual:
“Cristiano Ronaldo’s record-equalling sixth World Cup got off to a disappointing start,” began the Reuters match report of Portugal’s 1-1 draw against the Democratic Republic of the Congo last week. And yes, OK: everyone knows how this game works and why everyone plays it. On one hand, perhaps the greatest sporting day in the history of the world’s 15th most populous country. On the other, 41-year-old man does not score. It’s no contest, really. Get those sweet keywords front and left. Harvest that delicious search traffic. Perhaps you even noticed how I just did exactly the same thing.
And yet something does feel qualitatively different this summer: a tectonic shift driven partly by events on the pitch and partly at the behest of the industry itself. This is a World Cup swimming in star names, and never have those star names been so unapologetically, unquestioningly invoked. France do not beat Iraq; instead Kylian Mbappé throws down the gauntlet to Erling Haaland, Harry Kane and the rest. According to Google, Miroslav Klose’s goals record has been searched more at this tournament than in the year he set it. At times the group phase has felt like an inconvenient distraction from the real business of the Golden Boot race. (Can Lionel Messi lift the one trophy he hasn’t won yet?)
Guingamp's Kenzo Kies drowns amid French heatwave
Some tragic news from France, via AFP:
French second division footballer Kenzo Kies of Guingamp has drowned after he and three friends were caught in fast, choppy waters while cooling off in the heatwave engulfing the country.
Firefighters contacted by AFP on Tuesday said they had responded on Monday evening – when temperatures reached as high as 38C – to rescue four young men who were swimming in an area where the river forms waves.
By the time the firemen arrived three of the four had been pulled from the water while Kies was found in the water in a critical condition and taken to hospital.
“Guingamp was saddened to learn of the passing of Kenzo Kies, a young player at the club. Having joined Guingamp last summer, he was playing this season with the reserve team,” Guingamp said, who described Kies as a quiet and well liked teammate.
The club announced the news late Wednesday extending its deepest condolences to the family and friends of Kies, who was 21 and who had previously been at Lyon and Saint Etienne.
The heatwave affecting France has caused “40 deaths” by drowning since June 18. AFP
Thanks Taha, and greetings everyone, bleary-eyed as I am from repeatedly mumbling “they really ought to get it launched” at Scotland’s back four in our wee small hours.
But in the broader tournament narrative, South Africa’s historic win over South Korea feels like the big story of yesterday, but there’s plenty of Korean recriminations. This from Reuters after a defeat that hasn’t quite eliminated them yet, but has flagged serious shortcomings.
Former South Korea midfielder Park Ji-sung criticised the team’s performance in Wednesday’s 1-0 defeat by South Africa at the World Cup, and drew comparisons with their disappointing 2014 campaign that saw them exit in the group phase.
The Koreans, who started with captain Son Heung-min on the bench, still have a chance of advancing as one of the best third-placed teams but Park did not hold out much hope for them going deep into the tournament.
“We need to reflect on whether this was overall a game we tried to win,” Park said during TV commentary.
“There was no visible plan for how to attack. This problem has been the same throughout this World Cup. It seems there were clearly some areas that were neglected during the preparation process …
“We had plenty of time to reflect on what went wrong at the 2014 World Cup,” said Park, who was a key figure in their run to the 2002 semi-finals on home soil. “But this time again, the preparation process and the results look like a repeat of that time.
“Even if the possibility of reaching the round of 32 still remains, I am not confident that we can show a good performance on that stage with the current level of play.”
Time for me to hand over to Tom Davies. Fear not: I’ll return in the afternoon.
A lovely comment BTL:
South Africa also finished on four points in the group stage in 2002 and 2010 … but missed out on progressing. In 2010 it was down to goal difference and, eight years before that, on goals scored.
Expanding to 48 teams? Oh dear.
In admin news, AFP is reporting that Fifa has suspended Nepal due to third-party interference. Story below:
World football’s governing body FIFA has suspended Nepal’s football association, officials said on Thursday, barring the country from all international competitions.
Nepal is currently ranked 175th in FIFA’s world rankings. The women’s national team ranks 88th.
FIFA said in a letter to the All Nepal Football Association (ANFA) that the decision came after “undue interference by a third party”, referring to arguments between ANFA and Nepal’s National Sports Council, the country’s authority for sports administration, over governance of Nepali football.
FIFA holds that a national football association must operate independently of government bodies.
FIFA decided on Wednesday “to suspend ANFA with immediate effect due to flagrant violations of the FIFA Statutes,” FIFA’s Secretary General Mattias Grafstrom said in the letter, shared by ANFA on Facebook.
The council had suspended ANFA in March 2026 for three months as the association was preparing for an election process that FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation had agreed to. It was later lifted in May.
The required elective congress has been repeatedly delayed, with the sports council issuing several directives, including the amendment of ANFA’s statutes under the country’s sports development act.
“The suspension is an issue of grave concern, we are consulting with all stakeholders to lift the suspension keeping Nepal’s football in priority,” ANFA spokesman Suresh Shah told AFP.
The suspension means Nepal can no longer participate in international competitions and the association will lose out on FIFA development programmes, courses or trainings.
“It impacts our players, barring them from opportunities and dampens dreams of aspiring players,” Shah added.
FIFA said the suspension will be lifted if the council revokes its March decisions and allows ANFA to finalise its electoral process.
“The government never wanted this... we are looking for alternative ways to address this crisis,” said Ram Charitra Mehta, a member secretary of the National Sports Council. AFP
Here’s a story on the wires from Associated Press, regarding comments made by former Germany midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger:
World Cup pundit and former Liverpool coach Jürgen Klopp broke off an interview after being asked about former Germany player Bastian Schweinsteiger’s characterisations about Côte d’Ivoire’s style of play.
“A bit African football, a bit unorthodox, a bit wild, a bit perhaps also not so conditioned by tactics. We have to be prepared for it to be unpredictable,” Schweinsteiger said as a commentator on German broadcaster ARD before Germany played Côte d’Ivoire last weekend.
Klopp seemed taken aback when asked about Schweinsteiger’s comments by Deutsche Welle in a huddle with journalists in New York on Wednesday.
“Now you want to carry on the subject,” Klopp responded. “No, no, I have no chance. I have no chance to answer this question. Everybody likes it so you bring me in this situation. It’s not my job that everybody likes it, but this is a serious subject, and I don’t even know what is appropriate to say. For African people it’s one thing, for other people it’s another thing, and I’m not here.”
Klopp said he had felt fortunate to avoid the subject.
“Thank God, I thought, nobody asked me about that. You found a moment. And surprisingly, you are German. That surprised me so much,” he said with irony before leaving. AP
Plenty of Scotland reaction BTL:
I am, admittedly, rather gripped by the golden boot race. It’s a bit of a surprise that no-one has won it twice, though Kylian Mbappé may change that.
This is a fascinating piece, highlighting just how much the World Cup can mean to those who don’t have their own national side in the mix.
Mauricio Pochettino’s US team are having a great time at home – but the last couple years haven’t been all that easy, writes Jeff Rueter.
For more permutations chat, click below:
Samuel Dodson asks:
While it seems rather poor from a competitive vantage point that teams could theoretically advance from their groups after 2 out of 3 abject performances and losses; has anyone done the computations of what would need to happen in the remaining group games for Scotland to progress? Are we rooting for Australia to thrash Paraguay, Germany to draw with Ecuador, etc? Or perhaps Gianni thinks the fun is in finding out at the end ?
Should I at least give it a go? You’re right: they could do with Australia thrashing Paraguay – both are on three points, with Paraguay on -2 goal difference. They need Ecuador and Curaçao to avoid winning, and the Tartan Army will be rooting for Japan against Sweden. I’m not sure I’ve got it in me to dissect anymore – we’ll just have to wait and see.
Amid all the best third-placed teams confusion … Bosnia and Herzegovina have made it through to the last 32.
Ben Fisher watched them beat Qatar:
Our first stop today is at Group E, featuring Germany, Ecuador, Côte d’Ivoire and Curaçao.
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Curaçao v Côte d’Ivoire – Philadelphia Stadium, 9pm BST, 4pm local time
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Ecuador v Germany – New York New Jersey Stadium, same time
Germany have already won the group – Côte d’Ivoire just need a point to finish second and reach the knockouts for the first time.
| Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Germany | 2 | 7 | 6 |
| 2 | Ivory Coast | 2 | 0 | 3 |
| 3 | Ecuador | 2 | -1 | 1 |
| 4 | Curacao | 2 | -6 | 1 |
Updated
Out of all the hosts, it’s Canada who have looked the most shaky. After losing to Switzerland, they’ll play their last-32 tie in Los Angeles instead of Vancouver.
Mexico are having a lovely time: three games, three wins, six goals scored, none conceded. Oh, and Guillermo Ochoa – part of their 2006 World Cup squad – got to play, too.
What an intro.
Andy Robertson: “If you ask me now, I don’t think it’s enough, I don’t think we’ve done enough.”
Steve Clarke: “I think we’re going home.”
It’s not looking great.
Preamble
Hello, hello, wonderful people. Remember this: it ain’t about how you start. Spain lost their first game in 2010, Argentina were stunned by Saudi Arabia in 2022 … and nine-man South Africa went down to Mexico a fortnight ago. No, I’m not saying they’re going to go and win it – but they are through to the knockouts for the first time after beating South Korea in Monterrey.
Scotland, on the other hand, haven’t scored since John McGinn’s winning strike against Haiti, leaving them with a nervous wait to see if their three points and -3 goal difference will be enough for a place in the last 32. Yep, the whole 48-team thing’s a bit off, structurally.
We’ll be reflecting on those results and looking forward to the next 24 hours: Groups E, F and D are all set to wrap up. Drop me a line and let’s talk ball.