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The 48-team bracket has already produced one genuine shock before the round of 32 even begins, and three top-10 sides now face matchups where the rankings gap is far more flattering than the situation actually is. Upsets in expanded knockout formats don’t happen by accident. They happen when a lower-ranked team arrives with recent proof that they can beat a favourite, a defined plan to repeat it, and nothing to lose. Those three conditions rarely align this clearly before the last 32 have even started.
The group stage closes June 27. The last-32 stage runs June 28 through July 3. At least one tie already has all three conditions in place.
Ecuador lost their opener and drew their second game before heading into their final match in East Rutherford needing a win to advance as one of the eight best third-placed sides. They beat Germany 2-1.
Germany had already won Group E before that result, so they progressed regardless. But the damage is real: Germany has now conceded in nine consecutive World Cup matches, and Ecuador carries that scalp into the last 32. A team that had to beat a top-10 side just to survive the group stage did exactly that. That’s not a stat you forget when you’re building a last-32 game plan against the side that provided it.
Brazil (FIFA rank 6) faces Japan (rank 18), and the Netherlands (rank 8) meets Morocco (rank 7), both confirmed once their groups conclude. Germany (rank 10) is projected to face Paraguay (rank 41), subject to the eight best third-placed teams being finalised on June 27. The concern in each of these ties isn’t the rankings gap. It’s what the lower-ranked side brings beyond their seeding.
Third-placed teams in a 48-team tournament often arrive with something a group winner doesn’t: recent evidence, from their own final group game, that they can compete with and beat higher-ranked opposition under real knockout pressure.
Japan beat England at Wembley earlier this year. England is ranked fourth in the world. That result points to a side with the defensive structure to absorb pressure and the pace to punish on the counter in ways that can trouble Brazil’s back line.
Brazil at rank 6 should advance, but Japan at rank 18 is not a routine draw. If Brazil concedes first, this tie shifts in ways a 12-place ranking difference doesn’t prepare you for. Germany’s path looks no cleaner. Paraguay, at rank 41 are the projected opponent, and a German side that has now conceded in nine straight World Cup matches is not built to carry that record into a knockout tie.
South Africa entered this tournament ranked 60th in the world and had never reached a World Cup knockout round. Thapelo Maseko’s 63rd-minute goal beat South Korea 1-0 and lifted them above their opponents into second place in Group A.
They now face co-hosts Canada (rank 30) on June 28 in Los Angeles. This tie sits outside the trap-game conversation for top-10 sides, but South Africa reaching the last 32 is the group stage’s most significant surprise.
Three draws stand out as genuine danger ties for top-ranked sides.
| Match | Team A (Rank) | Team B (Rank) | Upset Risk | Key Threat |
| Brazil v Japan (confirmed) | Brazil (6) | Japan (18) | Moderate | Japan beat England at Wembley this year |
| Germany v Paraguay (projected) | Germany (10) | Paraguay (41) | Moderate-High | Germany has conceded in 9 straight World Cup games |
| England v Ecuador (projected) | England (4) | Ecuador (23) | High | Ecuador just beat four-time champions Germany |
England’s projected tie with Ecuador is the most dangerous of the three. At Euro 2024, Switzerland eliminated defending champions Italy in the last 16. Expanded knockout formats produce exactly this kind of result: one team carries a recent win over higher-ranked opposition, the other carries expectation.
Ecuador has already proved they can do it at this tournament. The FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 32 draw favourites sitting in the most precarious position right now are the ones wearing white with three lions on the badge.
Does England vs Ecuador carry more upset potential than any other last-32 tie, or is there a matchup you think is more dangerous? Drop your pick in the comments.
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Who qualifies for the round of 32 at the 2026 World Cup?
The 32 teams consist of the 12 group winners, 12 runners-up, and the eight best third-placed sides from six groups. The bracket is confirmed once the group stage ends on June 27, 2026.
When does the round of 32 start at the 2026 World Cup?
The last-32 stage begins on June 28, 2026, with the final round-of-32 tie scheduled for July 3. Six days of knockout football across that window will decide all 16 quarter-final spots.
Which teams are considered tournament favourites heading into the knockouts?
Argentina, Spain, France, England, and Portugal hold the top five FIFA rankings entering the tournament, with Brazil ranked sixth. All six have qualified and are expected to advance deep into the knockout rounds.
Has Ecuador beaten Germany at a World Cup before 2026?
No. The 2-1 win in East Rutherford was Ecuador’s first competitive victory over Germany at a World Cup. Germany had already secured Group E top spot before the match, so their last-32 progression was unaffected.
Who does South Africa play in the round of 32 at the 2026 World Cup?
South Africa faces Canada on June 28, 2026, in Los Angeles. It is South Africa’s first-ever World Cup knockout tie, secured after Thapelo Maseko’s 63rd-minute goal beat South Korea 1-0.
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