Sports12:07 · 7h ago

European Teams Dominate 2026 World Cup Quarterfinals in North America

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

Historically, European national teams have struggled to win the World Cup outside their continent, achieving this feat only twice since 1930: Spain in South Africa 2010 and Germany in Brazil 2014. However, the 2026 World Cup, hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, marks a significant shift. Six of the eight quarterfinalists are European teams: Belgium, England, France, Norway, Spain, and Switzerland. Argentina and Morocco are the only non-European teams remaining, with Morocco recently eliminated by France.

This is the highest number of European teams in the quarterfinals of a World Cup held outside Europe since the 1994 tournament in the United States. The tournament began with doubts about European teams adapting to the extreme heat and humidity of North America, with many teams, including England, training in hot climates to acclimate. Early matches saw several European teams struggle, but they quickly found their rhythm, finishing the group stage with 17 wins, 12 draws, and only 7 losses against non-European teams.

In the knockout rounds, European teams demonstrated mental toughness. England overcame Mexico in a challenging match at high altitude and hostile crowds, with former player Wayne Rooney praising their potential to win the tournament. France handled Paraguay’s aggressive play, and Belgium eliminated the host nation, the United States, setting up a quarterfinal clash with Spain. Experts highlight the depth and quality of the French squad, noting the impact of substitutes in hot conditions.

The expanded 48-team format granted Europe 16 spots, more than any other continent, but sending six teams to the quarterfinals still underscores European dominance. Brazil, a five-time champion, has already been eliminated, and all three host nations failed to reach the quarterfinals. Norway and Switzerland are the surprise European teams advancing, with Norway returning to the World Cup stage for the first time since 1998, led by prolific striker Erling Haaland. Switzerland reached the quarterfinals for the first time since 1954 and now faces defending champion Argentina.

Swiss coach Murat Yakin called this a historic moment for Swiss football, emphasizing that their journey is far from over. With European teams so dominant, the 2026 World Cup could culminate in a historic European victory on North American soil.

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