
THE 2026 FIFA World Cup has entered its decisive phase as the competition narrows to the final eight teams, each now only three wins away from being crowned world champions.
Following the tournament's expansion to 48 participating nations and the introduction of a new round of 32, the knockout stage has produced a quarter-final line-up featuring some of international football's biggest names.
France will open the last-eight fixtures against Morocco early on Friday, with the winners securing the first place in the semi-finals.
Spain will then face Belgium early on Saturday in another high-profile European showdown expected to be one of the tournament's most closely contested matches.
England, who progressed after an extra-time victory over Mexico, will meet Norway early on Sunday, while defending champions Argentina complete the quarter-final programme against Switzerland later the same day.
The semi-finals are scheduled for 14 and 15 July before the third-place play-off on 18 July, with the 2026 FIFA World Cup final to be played on 19 July.
Before the quarter-finals begin, however, the tournament schedule pauses for the first time in nearly a month.
After 27 consecutive days of matches across the United States, Canada and Mexico, FIFA has introduced a scheduled rest day to allow the remaining teams additional time for recovery, travel and tactical preparations ahead of the final stages of the competition.
The expanded tournament features a record 104 matches, making it the longest FIFA World Cup ever staged.
As the knockout rounds progress, the match schedule has been deliberately spaced out to provide players with sufficient recovery time between fixtures and to help maintain performance levels during the closing stages of the tournament.
The current break marks the first of several planned rest periods before the competition concludes on 19 July.
Additional recovery days have also been built into the schedule between the quarter-finals and semi-finals, as well as before the final, in an effort to reduce the physical demands on players during the tournament's most crucial matches.
While supporters have become accustomed to daily World Cup action over the past four weeks, the competition now transitions into a more traditional knockout format, with fewer matches, greater anticipation and an increased emphasis on preparation and recovery as the race for football's biggest prize reaches its climax. - July 9, 2026
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