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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Scotland third as Clarke fears exit

2 min read
10:33UTC

Beaten 0-3 by Brazil, Scotland finished third in Group C on 3 points; coach Steve Clarke said: 'Think we're heading home.'

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Scotland finish third on 3 points and now await the best-third-place results elsewhere.

Scotland finished third in Group C on 24 June after losing 0-3 to Brazil, ending on 3 points at minus three. Their record read one win and two defeats: a 1-0 victory over Haiti on 13 June, then losses to Morocco on 19 June and Brazil on matchday three. Coach Steve Clarke was blunt afterwards, telling reporters, "Think we're heading home," and adding, "we gave them the goals, we gave them the game they wanted."

Scotland's hopes now rest on others. Under the 48-team format, the eight best of the twelve third-placed teams fill the remaining knockout berths, so their fate depends on how other groups finish rather than anything they can still do. The sports-data firm Opta puts their chance of qualifying as one of those eight below 50 per cent.

The odds shortened on the day itself. Seven teams had already been confirmed in the round of 32 , and South Africa's win lifted a rival above Scotland in the third-place table. Clarke's side can only watch the final groups play out.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In the new 48-team format, the World Cup has 12 groups, and the top two from each group automatically go through to the knockout rounds. The eight best third-placed teams, out of all 12 groups, also go through. Scotland finished third in their group. Whether they advance depends on how their record compares to the third-placed teams from all the other groups. Opta, a sports data firm, calculated their chance at below 50 per cent. Their goal difference of minus-3 is the problem; other third-placed sides with better goal differences will rank ahead of them.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Scotland's minus-3 goal difference leaves them ranked behind most third-placed sides with positive or neutral goal differences; Opta's sub-50% survival probability reflects this structural deficit.

  • Meaning

    Steve Clarke's candid public assessment, 'Think we're heading home', reflects the standard eighth-best-third-place maths; it is also a statement the Scottish FA will evaluate when assessing the coaching position after the tournament.

First Reported In

Update #29 · South Africa reach a first knockout

ESPN· 25 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Scotland third as Clarke fears exit
Scotland's tournament now hangs on best-third-place arithmetic that other results will decide, with Opta rating their chances below even.
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