World Cup 2026: Dutch despair, Klopp plays down Germany job links after exit – live | World Cup 2026

Essential reading: here are yesterday’s match reports:

And a word on Cody Gakpo, scorer of a rasping goal for the Netherlands but having a horrible time right now after the loss of his and his partner’s unborn son, as our man in Monterrey, Nick Ames, wrote:

double quotation markFootball is a vessel for myriad thoughts and feelings so it was an intensely affecting moment when, after he had rammed his team into a 72nd-minute lead, the entire Dutch squad piled on to the pitch in joy. More than that, they had done so in support. Gakpo had elected to play despite the announcement that he and his partner had tragically lost their unborn son. He was tearful upon making his way back to the centre circle, pointing to the sky and being comforted by his teammate Denzel Dumfries.

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Here we have Aaron Timms weighing in on the delight of a World Cup cult hero. And what a hero the Ecuador manager Sebastián Beccacece is after going full Pat Cash after his side qualified for the last 32 with a shock win against Germany. Sorry, Paraguay, they got there first! Oh and some help for pronunciation of his surname would be much appreciated as I’m going a bit Fast Show trying to figure it out.

Beccacece’s side are up against a host nation in the late game tonight, it is bound to be an absolute cracker.

double quotation markEcuador face Mexico at the Azteca on Tuesday night – a daunting assignment in which failure would bring no shame. But whatever happens on the field, Beccacece’s legend is already written. The footage of Jürgen Klopp at this tournament, working for German TV and pretending to find Thomas Müller funny and encouraging us all to book with Trivago and smiling his dazzling iceberg smile, has offered a mournful reminder of how sorely football needs big personalities. Club competition is increasingly the roost of guarded, technocratic types, all those Artetas and Marescas in careful control of the on- and off-field script. But international management remains a place for dreamers and madmen, and the World Cup – which still flickers with the power to inspire and uplift, despite all of Fifa’s best efforts – is all the more entertaining for it. No manager has brought more joy to this tournament than Ecuador’s flaxen dugout guru – a man whose every flail, every strop, seems to channel the anxiety, fury, and elation felt by each one of his team’s supporters.

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