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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

All three co-hosts reach last 32

2 min read
10:33UTC

The round-of-32 bracket took shape on 24 June with Mexico, the United States and Canada all through, the first host trio ever to advance together.

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Key takeaway

All three co-hosts reach the round of 32, a first, as the bracket crowds Europe's favourites.

The round-of-32 bracket crystallised on 24 June, with all three co-hosts through to the knockout rounds. Mexico, the United States and Canada advancing together is a first for any host nation trio in World Cup history, a structural quirk of a tournament spread across three countries for the first time. A first wave of seven qualifiers had been locked into the bracket the day before ; the final-group results filled most of the rest.

The draw's second feature crowds the favourites in a way the 32-team format could not. The eight best third-placed teams slot into a bracket built around 32 sides, and the seeding cannot fully separate the strongest once those wildcards land. The result is a cluster of European heavyweights: confirmed ties include Germany v Paraguay (29 June), France v Sweden (30 June) and England v Cape Verde (1 July), with Germany and France close enough in the draw to meet in the round of 16, far earlier than the old bracket permitted. For readers tracking the favourites, two of Europe's strongest sides may eliminate each other a fortnight before the semi-finals.

Other confirmed fixtures span the spectrum: South Africa v Canada (28 June), Brazil v Japan (29 June), USA v Bosnia-Herzegovina (1 July), Spain v Austria (2 July) and Argentina v Uruguay (3 July). Germany advance without Nico Schlotterbeck, ruled out earlier with a torn ankle ligament. The same wildcard path that lifted thin-margin qualifiers now squeezes the contenders together.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The World Cup has 48 teams this year, split into 12 groups of four. After the group stage, 32 teams remain for the knockout rounds. The bracket shows which teams play each other in the first round. One notable fact: all three countries hosting this tournament, the USA, Mexico and Canada, have qualified for the knockout stage. That has never happened before when a World Cup has had multiple hosts. The tournament also shows several potential early clashes between major football nations, because the expanded 48-team format means more teams from strong confederations, which concentrates the competition earlier in the knockout bracket.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Three host nations advancing together sets a new benchmark for the 48-team format's host-nation benefit argument, which FIFA will use in future multi-host bid evaluations.

  • Risk

    France meeting Germany in a potential round-of-16 tie, should both advance, collapses the bracket's competitive distribution earlier than tournament design intended.

First Reported In

Update #29 · South Africa reach a first knockout

CBS Sports· 25 Jun 2026
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