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Tunisia arrived ranked 45th in the world after a qualifying campaign in which they conceded nothing across ten matches, a record no side in World Cup history had previously achieved. They left Group F with zero points, twelve goals conceded, two scored, and a goal difference of minus 10. The collapse between those two facts is the story of one of the heaviest group-stage failures in three decades. No other side in this edition came close to producing what unfolded across three matches in Group F.
Tunisia lost 5-1 to Sweden, then 4-0 to Japan, then 3-1 to the Netherlands. Three matches, three defeats, twelve goals against. The contest that illustrated the scale of the problem most precisely was the one against Japan: Tunisia managed two shots and an expected-goals figure of 0.05, against Japan’s eleven shots and an xG of 2.07.
Those numbers don’t describe a team that ran into a hot goalkeeper. They describe a team that barely threatened the opposing goal across 90 minutes while their opponents created chances with routine efficiency.
A minus-10 goal difference with zero points means Tunisia conceded six times more goals than they scored. The distance between that and the clean qualifying record is almost impossible to account for with normal sporting variance alone.
Also read:- Which Round of 32 Draw Is the Biggest Trap Game for a FIFA World Cup 2026 Favourite?
To understand what the numbers actually represent, they need comparison. The table below places Tunisia’s 2026 campaign alongside the two most comparable group-stage collapses since 1990.
| Team | Year | P | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Points |
| Saudi Arabia | 2002 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 12 | -12 | 0 |
| North Korea | 2010 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 12 | -11 | 0 |
| Tunisia | 2026 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 12 | -10 | 0 |
Saudi Arabia’s 2002 campaign included an 8-0 Defeat to Germany and zero goals scored. North Korea’s 2010 exit featured a 7-0 loss to Portugal. Tunisia’s 2026 numbers sit in that same bracket, separated only by a goal or two from campaigns that have become shorthand for group-stage failure.
Tunisia’s own recent history makes this harder to dismiss. In 2022, they beat defending champions France 1-0 and missed the knockouts only on goal difference. That result now reads like a distant outlier.
What connects 2026 to every previous World Cup is the final result: Tunisia has reached seven tournaments and never won a knockout-stage match. The 2026 campaign adds minus 10 to that record without producing anything resembling progress toward one.
The first win in their history came against Mexico in 1978. The record since includes the France scalp in 2022 and enough individual performances to suggest a team capable of competing at this level, but no knockout progression has ever followed any of it.
Sami Trabelsi built the qualifying run. The ten-match unbeaten record with a clean sheet throughout was his. He was sacked after Tunisia’s Round of 16 exit to Mali at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
Sabri Lamouchi took charge of the tournament and was reportedly removed during the group stage itself, with Herve Renard credited with the dugout for the Japan defeat. Three different coaches across the qualification cycle and the tournament proper, layered onto a squad without a recognised goal threat, left Tunisia without the defensive structure that had made them so hard to score against in the months before the tournament began.
The qualifying numbers were built on a system. The World Cup numbers suggest that the system collapsed once the coaching continuity behind it disappeared.
The broader regional picture resists any attempt to treat this as a continent-wide problem. Morocco reached the 2022 semi-finals, the furthest any African nation has gone at a World Cup. Algeria got through their group in 2014. The evidence does not support a blanket narrative about North African football at this level.
What it does support is a narrower argument about Tunisia specifically. Seven tournaments. Zero knockout appearances. A qualifying record that repeatedly suggests they are capable of something better. The pattern is theirs alone, and the Tunisia FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage exit statistics are its most extreme version yet.
Was this Tunisia’s worst-ever World Cup campaign, or does the 1978 debut earn that title? Drop your verdict in the comments.
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How many goals did Tunisia concede at the 2026 World Cup?
Tunisia conceded twelve goals across three group matches against Sweden, Japan, and the Netherlands. They scored twice, finishing with a goal difference of minus 10 and zero points from Group F.
What is the worst group-stage exit in World Cup history since 1990?
Saudi Arabia’s 2002 campaign stands among the worst, with zero goals scored and a minus-12 goal difference. North Korea in 2010 also finished with a minus 11, including a 7-0 loss to Portugal.
Who did Tunisia face in the 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage?
Tunisia played Sweden, Japan, and the Netherlands in Group F. They lost all three matches, conceding five, four, and three goals respectively in a group stage that produced no points.
Has Tunisia ever won a FIFA World Cup match?
Yes. Tunisia’s first win came against Mexico in 1978, their debut tournament. They also beat defending champions France 1-0 at the 2022 World Cup, narrowly missing the knockouts on goal difference.
Why did Tunisia struggle so badly at the 2026 World Cup?
Mid-tournament coaching changes dismantled the defensive structure that had produced a clean qualifying record. Three different coaches across the qualification and the group stage made consistent tactical planning across the campaign impossible.
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