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:
Football 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.
Key events
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.
Ecuador 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.
Reaction to Germany’s defeat continues to roll in with brutal headlines and angry commentaries in some of the country’s top media titles.
Bild’s front-page headline described the result as ‘The next German football nightmare’ while columnist Marion Horn took strong exception to how Germany’s Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, had reacted to the defeat.
Merz wrote on his official X account: “Even though the elimination hurts: What a game, @DFB_Team! With your commitment and team spirit at this World Cup, you have thrilled our country. We are proud of you.”
Horn said the post was a “disaster” and “devastating”, adding: “The brutal World Cup defeat against Paraguay, the coach, the attitude and the performance of the German players are symptomatic of the state of the entire country.
“We are at best second-class: Our economy is experiencing an unprecedented downward spiral in every respect, with bankruptcies and de-industrialisation on a daily basis.
“And German football is now living solely off its past reputation. And if I’m to believe (1990 World Cup-winning captain) Lothar Matthaus, then within the team, it was a more important issue whose mother was allowed to fly on the private jet and whose wasn’t, than how we would win the cup.
“Man!!! Football is a COMPETITIVE SPORT!
“And the worst is yet to come. Following the defeat, Chancellor Merz writes : “With your commitment and team spirit at this World Cup, you have thrilled our country. We are proud of you’.
“Chancellor, that’s simply not true!!! I will not accept second-rate treatment. I’m not proud. I’m angry. I’m disappointed. I’m furious! Our children only know Germany as a loser!”
Die Welt columnist Ulf Poschardt took a similar line, in a piece headlined: “Only a successful Germany is worth living in”.
“Germany is once again eliminated early from the World Cup, and the Chancellor even congratulates this miserable team: “We are proud of you”. No, we are not. Quite the opposite,” Poschardt wrote.
Football news outlet Kicker described the result as “a damning indictment of German football – and Nagelsmann”.
Its chief reporter Oliver Hartmann wrote: “The German national team, the biggest disappointment of the tournament so far, leaves the World Cup stage after the first knockout round. Julian Nagelsmann failed to harness and develop his team’s strengths.”
A comment piece by Claudio Catuogno in Suddeutsche Zeitung was headlined: “Someone should tell Julian Nagelsmann: This can’t go on.”
Hello, hello! And goodbye, Tom. You are now riding with me (Graham) for a little while as we continue to chop up the high drama of last night’s action.
Personally I am still trying to piece it all together after falling asleep on the sofa during the second half of Germany’s defeat then taking myself to bed where I saw Germany had scored in extra time so naturally assumed that was that … oops. Then I committed the cardinal sin for my sleep score and checked my phone a little after 4am to see Germany had been knocked out (what?) and the Netherlands were just beginning a shootout with Morocco. So on went the BBC Sounds app and I listened to what I think was loads of penalty misses until Morocco finally put it to bed.
I get the feeling there might be a few more broken night’s sleep yet as my interest in the knockouts has been well and truly piqued.
The England – DRC countdown begins with a tasty slice of on-brand pessimism in the inbox from Richard Lapworth:
England fan here. Genuinely think England are going out to Congo DR on Wednesday and not via a penalty shoot-out! It’s plainly the year of the “underdog” with Paraguay and Morocco both through. Okay so Morocco aren’t actually underdogs anymore but you get my point! Wissa et al will have far more shots on goal than England.
On which note, it’s time to sign out of my stint and hand over to Graham Searles. Catch you soon.
In European domestic managerial gossip news, Sky Sports is reporting that Liam Rosenior is set to take over at upwardly mobile Paris FC after his hiding-to-nothing spell at Chelsea. He is reported to be signing a two-year deal there on Thursday. Paris FC finished 11th in Ligue 1 last season, their first in the top flight for 46 years.
Tuesday’s World Cup Daily podcast has dropped. Max, Barry, Archie and Nicky chew over last night’s drama:
A couple of videos for your delectation now. Photographer Shaun Botterill has a World Cup portfolio spanning 40 years – here he talks about the moments that made those memorable images:
While Toby Moses reflects on trying to concentrate in an exam while his Arsenal hero David Seaman was being lobbed by Ronaldinho for that quarter-final winner in 2002.

Paul MacInnes
A near-immutable law of World Cups is that the best team in the group stages never actually wins the thing – think Brazil 82, USSR 86, Italy 90, Argentina 2006, the Netherlands 2014. Can France buck the trend? Well Didier Deschamps – back with the squad after the death of his mother last week – has vowed to stick with the attacking approach that showed France as head and shoulders above the rest in the groups. Paul MacInnes looks ahead to their game against Graham Potter’s Sweden – who’ve had a mixed but lively time of it so far – later on Tuesday.
Didier Deschamps has warned France’s rivals that the team will not change their attacking approach to this World Cup, saying as he prepared for the last-32 tie against Sweden on Tuesday: “We have a capacity for danger, and I want us to keep it.”
The France head coach said it was “good to be busy” as he returned to the camp after time at home following the death of his mother last week. Deschamps expressed gratitude for the support he had received from his team after his bereavement, in another sign of the tight bond among Les Bleus this summer.
“We’ve been labelled as favourites before and, after what we did in the last three matches, that hasn’t gone away,” Deschamps said. “But it’s back to square one now. We’re preparing for a competition within the competition. We have to face a team who have nothing to lose and can give us some problems. We are confident, not overconfident, but in terms of intentions we will look to continue what we managed in the group.
Klopp plays down links to Germany head coach role
Jürgen Klopp has been prominent on broadcasting duties at this World Cup, which has of course sparked speculation about his future managerial intentions. And on cue he has said it is “not the right moment” to talk about becoming head coach of Germany following their World Cup exit, PA Media reports.
Defeat has seen pressure mount on Julian Nagelsmann, but former Liverpool manager Klopp – now Red Bull’s head of global soccer – played down talk of him taking up the national-team reins.
Asked as a pundit on MagentaTV what would have to happen to consider the job, Klopp said in quotes reported on Bild: “I haven’t thought about that yet. I’ve often been in that situation myself as a coach, where a big dream has been shattered.
“I understand that when people talk about the national coach, my name is mentioned. But it’s not the right moment to talk about it, especially not with me.
“I have a job that I really enjoy [as Red Bull’s head of global soccer]. And as far as I know, it’s not a part-time job. The fact is, Germany was eliminated today, and this is not the moment for me to think about Jurgen Klopp’s future.”
Nagelsmann vowed he would stay in the role if the DFB wanted him to continue. He told a post-match press conference: “I’m not one to run away. It’s not the first time, but it’s been happening for a while now that we’ve been delivering tournaments like this and yes, there are certainly a few basic things that I don’t want to go into now.
“I’m not one of those people who sits here and says, ‘I’m resigning now, just because we’ve been eliminated’. If the DFB wants me to continue then I’ll continue and if they don’t want me to, then they can tell me that.”
The other big talking point from that game in Boston for Premier League set-piece grapple fans was the Jonathan Tah header ruled out near the end by VAR, the kind of goal that has been the norm in the English top flight in recent times. Ultimately though, Germany never looked convincing in this tournament.
Our graphics boffins have produced this neat little playable guide to the penalties in yesterday’s Germany v Paraguay shootout, a handy pointer to what type of kicks succeed and fail, which I fully intend to use against my 10-year-old son in the back garden later
Joy and disturbances on the streets of The Hague after Morocco win. This just in from AFP:
Morocco’s dramatic penalty shoot-out win over the Netherlands sparked scenes of joy Tuesday in The Hague, home to a large Moroccan community, but also violent arrests amid clashes with police.
In the Schilderswijk district of the city, AFP reporters saw fans draped in Moroccan flags dancing and cheering in the streets, as car horns blared and firecrackers exploded.
Several hundred supporters gathered at a crossroads in the district, kicking a ball in the air and celebrating wildly with passengers of passing vehicles, sometimes jumping on cars.
Around one hour into the festivities however, the mood soured as riot police arrived on the scene, deploying water cannon and conducting baton charges to clear the crowd.
AFP reporters saw around a dozen arrests, with police pinning several young men to the ground after striking them in the legs with batons. Handcuffed, they were driven away in police vans.
Dutch police on bicycles played a cat-and-mouse game with youths through the streets but there was no major damage caused.
Despite multiple attempts, people declined to speak to the media, preferring to keep their identities secret. Many on the streets wore balaclavas or other face coverings.
One of the stories of this World Cup has been the Democratic Republic of the Congo, England’s opponents on Wednesday. The assured progress of the team from Africa’s second largest country has really meant something, as Louis Mukoma writes:
The DRC is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in Africa. There are hundreds of ethnic communities. And hundreds of languages and dialects. Four national languages have been adopted to help create cohesion. There are different cuisines, customs and histories. And today, profound political and societal fractures.The biggest story here is not a sporting one. It is what the Leopards have done for their country.
Eastern Congo has spent decades living through successive wars. Many people there have long felt abandoned by Kinshasa. Whenever violence intensifies, discussions about federalism, autonomy and the country’s fragmentation resurface. Yet, whenever the Leopards play, those divisions seem to pause.
Following the draw with Portugal, celebrations erupted not only in Kinshasa but also in Lubumbashi – in the Katanga region, which has its own secession history – as well as in Goma and Bukavu. The same happened again after the victory against Uzbekistan, but with even greater intensity.
And it is, of course, a disgrace that the DRC’s most celebrated fan, “Lumumba Vea” (nicknamed in tribute to the country’s independence leaer), has been denied a visa to the tournament that brings the world together.
Department of Homeland Security secretary celebrates Iran’s exit with ‘happy dance’
In ‘staying classy’ news, here’s Reuters’ latest report from the Dept of Keeping Politics out of Sport:
US Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin celebrated Iran’s elimination from the World Cup, saying he did a “happy dance,” Sports Business Journal reported on Monday.
The Iranian team barely missed out on reaching the knockout rounds of the tournament. They drew all three of their matches in Group G and finished as the ninth-best third-place team after Austria scored a last-minute goal against Algeria in the final group-stage match. The top eight third-place teams earned spots in the round of 32.
Mullin didn’t hide his overjoyed reaction to the news that Iran was eliminated. He spoke at a World Cup security briefing in Washington, per SBJ, saying he was “so glad they’re gone” and that he was “very happy they’re going back because there wasn’t a single team that we dealt with more than them.“
With the United States in the middle of a military and political conflict with Iran, the U.S. government restricted the Iranian soccer team’s movements during the World Cup. Prior to the event, Iran moved its planned training base from Tucson, Ariz., to Tijuana. The U.S. limited the amount of time the Iranian team could spend in the country preceding each match and required the squad to exit the nation right after each contest.
Mullin told reporters following the Monday briefing, according to SBJ, “I’m just glad they’re done, and they’re not coming back. I was so happy when we were able to pull their visas and said they could leave the U.S. soil, and I might’ve sung a song or two or maybe even danced a happy dance.“
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:
Football 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.
Preamble
Greetings all, and welcome to the latest from the World Cup that never sleeps. When the draw was made back on that infamous night last December, it always had a lopsided look. And so it came to pass that Monday saw three potential winners (kind of) turfed out of the competition. Japan’s dark horses ultimately paid the price for sitting a little too deep against an uneven Brazil side nonetheless stacked with match-winners (how they could have done with a Mitoma to take the pressure off). Then Germany were smothered by a ruthless Paraguay defensive masterclass before choking in the first of two inept penalty shootouts. The other came in Monterrey, where Morocco beat the Netherlands who, unlike Paraguay, paid the price for being too defensive. Given Morocco’s world ranking and recent pedigree, this one was no shock.
Later on Tuesday, we’ve got another possible tie of the round in Côte d’Ivoire v Norway, the former slick and well organised in the groups, the latter a known attacking force. We’ll be across the buildup to that, as well as France v Sweden and the all-Latin American face-off between Mexico and Ecuador at what – Fifa branding conventions be damned – we will always know as the Azteca Stadium.