Haaland redraws Europe's bracket
July 6, 2026 · 10:35 AM

Haaland redraws Europe's bracket

Norway’s win over Brazil reshaped Europe’s World Cup knockout story, setting up an England-Norway quarter-final while France moved on to face Morocco. The issue also separates confirmed transfer developments, including Maresca to Manchester City and Dumfries to Real Madrid, from unresolved sagas around Éderson and Julián Álvarez.

European club football is still in its summer pause, but the football week was anything but quiet. The World Cup knockout rounds removed Germany and the Netherlands on penalties, pushed France and Morocco into a quarter-final rematch of the 2022 semi-final, and gave Norway the result that changes the whole European side of the bracket: a 2-1 win over Brazil, sealed by two late Erling Haaland goals. 1
The new center of the week is simple. France will face Morocco on July 9 in Foxborough, and Norway will face England on July 11 in Miami. Portugal vs Spain, USA vs Belgium, and Switzerland vs Colombia were still ahead as of Monday morning in New York, so Europe could still add more quarter-finalists. 2

The quarter-final map now runs through Haaland and Mbappé

The confirmed European quarter-final lane has split into two very different games. France reached the last eight by beating Paraguay 1-0 through a Kylian Mbappé penalty, while Morocco beat Canada 3-0 behind Azzedine Ounahi's two goals. 3 4 England took the other confirmed European route by beating Mexico 3-2 at the Azteca, and Norway joined them after Haaland scored in the 79th and 90th minutes against Brazil. 5 1
Quarter-finalDateMatchupEuropean status
QF1July 9France vs Morocco, FoxboroughFrance are confirmed after a 1-0 R16 win over Paraguay. 3
QF2July 10Portugal/Spain vs USA/Belgium, Los AngelesPortugal vs Spain and USA vs Belgium had not been played by Monday morning in New York. 2
QF3July 11Norway vs England, MiamiNorway beat Brazil 2-1, and England beat Mexico 3-2. 1 5
QF4July 12Argentina/Egypt vs Switzerland/Colombia, Kansas CitySwitzerland were still waiting for Colombia after beating Algeria 2-0 in the Round of 32. 2
France still look like Europe's most controlled team. Mbappé scored twice in the 3-0 Round of 32 win over Sweden and then scored the only goal against Paraguay, moving to seven goals at this tournament and 19 World Cup goals overall. 6 7 Morocco arrive with a different kind of pressure: the 3-0 win over Canada made Morocco the first African team to reach back-to-back World Cup quarter-finals. 7

Germany and the Netherlands turned volume into warning

Last week, the European story was how many teams reached the knockouts. This week showed how quickly that volume can thin out. Germany lost 4-3 on penalties to Paraguay after a 1-1 draw in Foxborough, despite having 75% possession and 21 shots to Paraguay's seven. 8 Germany's shootout unraveled through saves from Orlando Gill against Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade, followed by Jonathan Tah sending his sudden-death penalty over the bar. 9
The Netherlands went out the same night. Morocco held them to 1-1 after extra time, Yassine Bounou saved Crysencio Summerville's fifth-round penalty, and Ismael Saibari scored the kick that sent Morocco through 3-2 in the shootout. 10 Ronald Koeman resigned after the exit, which turns a penalty defeat into a full reset for the Netherlands. 10
European teamExit/status this weekWhat changed
GermanyEliminated by Paraguay in the Round of 32, 1-1 after extra time and 4-3 on penalties. 8Germany's first World Cup penalty shootout loss ended the route toward a France meeting. 8
NetherlandsEliminated by Morocco in the Round of 32, 1-1 after extra time and 3-2 on penalties. 10Koeman's resignation moves the Dutch story from tournament failure to managerial transition. 10
SwedenEliminated by France, 3-0, in the Round of 32. 6Mbappé's two goals kept France perfect and moved him level with Lionel Messi on six tournament goals at that stage. 6
AustriaEliminated by Spain, 3-0, in the Round of 32. 11Spain's first World Cup knockout win since 2010 set up the Portugal R16 path. 11
CroatiaEliminated by Portugal, 2-1, in the Round of 32. 12Cristiano Ronaldo scored his first World Cup knockout goal at age 41. 12
Belgium survived rather than settled anything. Belgium came from 2-0 down to beat Senegal 3-2 after extra time, with Youri Tielemans scoring in the 89th minute and then converting a 125th-minute penalty after a seven-minute VAR review. 13 That keeps Belgium alive, but it also leaves Belgium's tournament mood tied to the USA match rather than to the comeback itself.

The week belonged to Haaland, Bellingham and Mbappé

Haaland's week now has tournament weight. Norway beat Côte d'Ivoire 2-1 in the Round of 32 through an 86th-minute Haaland winner, then beat Brazil 2-1 after Ørjan Nyland saved Bruno Guimarães' early penalty and Haaland scored twice late. 14 1 Haaland has seven goals in the tournament, 62 goals in 54 Norway caps, and goals in 14 consecutive internationals. 1
That Brazil match also changed Neymar's story. Neymar scored a stoppage-time penalty, but Brazil were eliminated and Neymar announced his retirement from the national team after the match. 15 His line, "I tried. It started here, at MetLife Stadium, and I finished here. It is now over," closed a Brazil career that began against the United States in New Jersey in 2010 and ended in the same stadium. 15
England's headline was survival with a genuine star turn. Jude Bellingham scored twice in 98 seconds against Mexico, making him the first player since Diego Maradona in 1986 to score two World Cup goals at the Azteca. 16 17 England then played from the 54th minute with 10 men after Jarell Quansah's red card, and Kane's 60th-minute penalty proved decisive despite Raúl Jiménez scoring a Mexico penalty nine minutes later. 5
The Golden Boot race has stopped being a side note. Mbappé, Haaland and Lionel Messi all reached seven goals, the first time three players have scored at least seven goals in the same World Cup edition. 18 Kane is close enough to matter too: his penalty against Mexico was his sixth goal of the tournament and took him to 14 career World Cup goals. 19

Transfers: official deals separated from live sagas

The transfer window finally produced clean statuses for several Premier League and La Liga clubs. Manchester City confirmed Enzo Maresca as head coach on a three-year contract to 2029, and Real Madrid officially announced Denzel Dumfries from Inter Milan on a four-year deal to June 30, 2030. 20 21 Tottenham also moved the market by signing Mateus Fernandes from West Ham United for £85 million, a club-record fee. 22
ClubStatusDetailWhy it matters
Manchester CityOfficialCity appointed Enzo Maresca as head coach on a contract to 2029. 20City have their Guardiola successor, and Maresca returns after earlier spells with City's EDS and Guardiola's staff. 20
Real MadridOfficialMadrid announced Dumfries from Inter Milan on a deal to June 30, 2030. 21Madrid have settled a right-back addition on a long-term contract. 21
TottenhamConfirmed by reportsTottenham signed Mateus Fernandes from West Ham for £85 million. 22The fee is Tottenham's club record, and Spurs beat Manchester United to the midfielder. 22
Atlético MadridReported agreementAtlético moved for Alejandro Grimaldo from Bayer Leverkusen for about €20 million. 23Grimaldo gives Diego Simeone a left-sided wing-back profile after Atlético missed Marc Cucurella. 23
Manchester UnitedPending medicalUnited have an agreement to sign Éderson from Atalanta, subject to completing medical tests after Brazil's World Cup exit. 24Brazil's elimination removes the tournament delay, but United still need the medical and announcement. 24
Barcelona / Atlético MadridUnresolvedÁlvarez's camp prefers Barcelona, while Simeone said Álvarez remains central to Atlético's plans. 25 26This is still a pressure story, not a completed transfer. Atlético's resistance and Barcelona's interest are both live. 26
LiverpoolActive searchLiverpool have confirmed Jérémy Jacquet and Víctor Muñoz, while The Athletic reported continued winger tracking after Yan Diomande chose PSG. 24Liverpool's summer still turns on the second attacking addition, with Bradley Barcola, Yankuba Minteh, Said El Mala, Matias Fernandez-Pardo and Crysencio Summerville among tracked names. 24
The split matters more than the volume. City and Madrid can now move from appointment and right-back speculation into squad construction. United and Barcelona are still waiting on medicals, resistance, or negotiation leverage. Liverpool sit between those poles: some business is done, but the winger search is still the live part of the window.

What carries into the next week

England-Norway is now the cleanest European quarter-final storyline because it joins Kane and Bellingham against Haaland, with Norway coming off the country's first World Cup quarter-final qualification. 1 5 France-Morocco has a different texture: France are 5-0 at the tournament, while Morocco are back in the quarter-finals after also reaching that stage in 2022. 7
The open questions are sharper than last Monday's setup. Portugal-Spain still has to decide one side of the bracket. Belgium must turn the Senegal escape into a cleaner performance against the USA. Switzerland still need to clear Colombia before Europe can count another quarter-finalist. In the club market, Éderson's medical, Álvarez's standoff and Liverpool's winger search are the items most likely to carry into the next news cycle. 2 24
Cover image: Erling Haaland after Norway's win over Brazil; image via Al Jazeera's Norway-Brazil report.

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