The expanded 48 team World Cup promised more soccer, and it delivered more chaos. Debutants held champions, minnows outran favorites, and a couple of giants packed their bags weeks earlier than anyone expected. These are the five results that defined the summer.
Every World Cup produces a few shocks, but 2026 turned the format itself into a weapon for the underdog. With 32 of the 48 teams reaching the knockout rounds, a single point could keep a supposed no hoper alive, and the gap between the elite and everyone else looked thinner than ever. Some of these upsets were single match earthquakes. Others were slow motion collapses by teams that were supposed to be safe. All five left a mark on a tournament that ended with Spain and Argentina in the final, but that will be remembered just as much for the giants who never made it there.
5. Curacao and the greatest save show of the tournament

The smallest nation ever to reach a World Cup was never expected to survive, and a 7-1 loss to Germany seemed to confirm the gap. Then came the game that made Curacao unforgettable. Facing a fancied Ecuador side that dominated possession and peppered their goal, the debutants held on for a 0-0 draw thanks to a goalkeeping performance for the ages from 37 year old Eloy Room.
Room, who plies his trade with Miami FC, made an astonishing 15 saves to keep Ecuador out, one of the finest individual displays of the entire tournament. Curacao carried only around 150,000 people behind them, yet for 90 minutes they made one of South America’s best look ordinary.
- Eloy Room saves against Ecuador: 15 in a single match
4. Uruguay crash out and leave a giant sized void
Some upsets are about who wins. This one was about who lost. Uruguay, twice champions and one of the founding royal families of the sport, went into Group H expecting a comfortable passage and instead failed to win a single game. Drawn alongside Spain, Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia, La Celeste could not put away any of them, and a group they were tipped to navigate with ease turned into an early flight home.
The 2-2 draw with Cape Verde stung, but the wider failure was the story. A team with this much pedigree and this much attacking quality bowing out at the first hurdle was one of the defining disappointments of the tournament, and proof that reputation counts for nothing once the whistle blows.
- Uruguay World Cup titles: 2, including the very first in 1930

3. Cape Verde hold Spain in the shock of the group stage

No story captured the spirit of this World Cup better than Cape Verde. A nation of roughly 525,000 people, ranked 67th and appearing at their first ever World Cup, walked into Atlanta on June 15 and held the reigning European champions Spain to a goalless draw. Spain fired in 27 shots and found only the gloves of goalkeeper Vozinha, who walked off with the man of the match award and the admiration of neutrals everywhere.
The islanders were not done. Days later they came from behind to draw 2-2 with Uruguay, and by the end of the group stage they had done what almost nobody predicted, reaching the Round of 32 on debut. Few teams have announced themselves on the world stage with more style.
- Spain shots against Cape Verde: 27, with zero goals to show for it
2. Paraguay dump out Germany and a nation gets a holiday
If Norway produced the biggest scoreline, Paraguay produced the biggest party. In the Round of 32 on June 29, Gustavo Alfaro’s side took Germany all the way to a penalty shootout and won it, becoming the first team ever to eliminate Germany from a World Cup on spot kicks. Julio Enciso struck a stunning opener before Kai Havertz hauled Germany level, but from the spot the South Americans held their nerve when it mattered most.
The result extended Germany’s grim run to twelve years without a knockout win at a World Cup, a staggering fall for a four time champion. Back in Asunción, the reaction was pure joy. President Santiago Peña declared a national holiday to mark the victory, a reminder that in some corners of the soccer world a single game can stop an entire country.
- Germany’s wait for a World Cup knockout win: 12 years and counting

1. Norway stun Brazil and Erling Haaland ends a dynasty

The biggest single result of the entire tournament arrived in the Round of 16 on July 5, when Norway beat Brazil 2-1 and sent one of the sport’s true heavyweights home. Erling Haaland, who had waited his whole career for a World Cup stage, scored both goals and dragged a Norwegian side that had been absent from the tournament for a generation into the quarterfinals. Brazil, winners of five World Cups and never short on talent, simply had no answer to Haaland’s power and Norway’s refusal to sit back.
For a country that had spent decades watching this competition from home, knocking out the most successful nation in World Cup history was the stuff of fantasy. Norway went on to fall to England in the last eight, but the damage to the Brazilian mystique was already done.
- Brazil World Cup titles before this exit: 5, more than any other nation
The lesson of 2026
The oldest truth in soccer wore a new 48 team suit this summer. Rankings guaranteed nothing, and the nations nobody talked about turned out to be the ones worth watching most closely. Spain and Argentina reached the final, but Norway, Paraguay, Cape Verde and Curacao gave this World Cup its soul. In a tournament built for the underdog, the underdogs showed up.
Erling Haaland
Neymar