Opinions, analysis and commentary

Austria have no business being favourites at SoFi Stadium on Thursday, and nobody in Ralf Rangnick’s camp is pretending otherwise. Spain arrive unbeaten and unscored-upon, the deepest midfield left in the tournament, topping their group with room to spare. What actually gives Austria a route into this game is one player operating in a role that doesn’t show up on a scoresheet: Konrad Laimer, the Bayern Munich right-back who spends as much time in central midfield as he does on the touchline.
Rangnick’s side didn’t scrape into the last 32 by accident. They beat Jordan, pushed Argentina close before a heavier defeat, and survived a 3-3 thriller with Algeria to reach a first World Cup knockout round since 1982. Each match told a slightly different story about where Austria’s threat actually comes from.
| Match | Result | Arnautovic Involvement | Laimer Contribution |
| Austria vs Jordan (16 Jun) | 3-1 win | Goal, stoppage-time penalty | 90 mins played, no goal contribution |
| Austria vs Argentina (22 Jun) | 0-2 loss | No goal, subbed off at 22 mins | 90 mins played, 1 yellow card |
| Algeria vs Austria (28 Jun) | 3-3 draw | Goal, 28th minute, ran onto Alaba long ball | 90 mins played, assist for Sabitzer’s goal |
That Algeria performance is the one worth studying closest. Laimer went the full 90 and set up Marcel Sabitzer’s goal, proof his energy translates into end product rather than just ground covered.
Laimer’s value against Spain is less about one tactical trick and more about relentlessness. Bayern use him interchangeably at right-back and in a double pivot, and Rangnick, who managed him at Leipzig, trusts him to do the same for Austria: step inside off the ball, close down central passing lanes, and still get forward in numbers.
Against Algeria that trust paid off directly. He closed space in midfield, stayed heavily involved for the full ninety, and still had the legs late on to deliver the assist that dragged Austria level. It’s the clearest evidence yet that his pressing intensity isn’t just disruptive off the ball; it produces genuine end product too.
Spain’s midfield has not looked as fluid as its reputation suggests, particularly in the closing group game. Rodri had the most touches and passes against Uruguay but offered little forward momentum, while Mikel Merino, only recently back from stress-fracture surgery on his foot, made no visible impact in that same match.
Pedri remains Spain’s best ball-carrier through the middle, but a misfiring supporting cast around him is exactly the kind of opening a high-energy presser like Laimer can exploit, even without half-space-specific tracking data to lean on for confirmation.
The Arnautovic threat is real, but it’s worth being precise about where his goals have actually come from. His stoppage-time penalty against Jordan followed a handball, not a turnover. His goal against Algeria came from chasing down a long ball played by David Alaba from deep, direct distribution rather than a press-triggered transition.
That distinction matters for Thursday. Austria’s route to goal has so far run through Alaba’s passing range and Arnautovic’s movement in behind, not through turnovers won inside Spain’s defensive third. If Laimer’s press does start winning the ball higher up the pitch against a jaded Spanish midfield, it would represent a genuinely new dimension to Austria’s attack rather than a repeat of an already established pattern.
Spain’s team news adds real uncertainty heading into Thursday. Nico Williams suffered a right abductor muscle injury against Uruguay on 26 June, rated moderate severity by the Spanish federation, and his availability remains unconfirmed. Yeremy Pino, the other injured winger, avoided a fracture but is also touch-and-go for selection.
None of this makes Austria genuine favourites heading into Thursday. Spain have conceded nothing in three matches and have Yamal, Oyarzabal and a squad far deeper than Austria’s, whose own defence has already shipped six goals in the group stage. But a fatigued midfield, an uncertain left flank, and Spain’s World Cup 2026 Laimer pressing tactics could combine to drag this into a scrap rather than a stroll for De la Fuente’s side.
Can Laimer’s engine drag Spain’s midfield into a fight they haven’t faced yet? Drop your prediction in the comments.
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Who is Konrad Laimer and what does he do for Austria?
Laimer is a 29-year-old Bayern player who plays right-back or central midfield for club and country. Rangnick uses his pressing to link defence and attack, and he set up Sabitzer’s goal against Algeria.
Can Austria beat Spain in the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32?
Spain are heavy favourites, unbeaten in Group H with five scored and none conceded. Austria have still shown they can trade goals with strong opposition, as their 3-3 draw with Algeria proved.
Is Nico Williams playing for Spain against Austria in the World Cup 2026?
Williams is a doubt after a right abductor injury against Uruguay on 26 June. The Spanish federation rated it moderate severity, and his Thursday availability wasn’t confirmed as of the latest reports.
How does Spain build up play under Luis de la Fuente?
Spain use a possession-based 4-3-3 with Rodri anchoring midfield and Pedri driving progressive carries. Their build-up looked less fluent against Uruguay, with Rodri offering limited momentum and Merino largely anonymous.
What are Marko Arnautovic’s FIFA World Cup 2026 stats?
Arnautovic, Austria’s all-time leading scorer, has two goals so far this tournament. He scored a stoppage-time penalty against Jordan and a 28th-minute goal against Algeria after chasing down a long Alaba pass.
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