
The wait is officially over for football fans across the globe. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is underway, kicking off a historic tournament hosted across three nations: the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
This edition marks the largest expansion in football history, scaling from 32 to 48 teams and serving up a record-breaking 104 matches packed into 39 days of elite, non-stop action.
The New 48-Team Format Explained
To accommodate the expanded field, FIFA has introduced a brand-new group and knockout structure:
- The Group Stage: 12 groups of 4 teams each.
- The Knockout Qualification: The top 2 teams from each group, alongside the 8 best third-placed sides, advance.
- The Extra Round: Teams will now have to navigate a newly introduced Round of 32 before reaching the traditional Round of 16, adding an extra layer of high-stakes drama.
Tournament Roadmap & Key Round Dates
Football will dominate television screens almost every single day, with only five match-free days scheduled throughout the entire iteration.
[Group Stage] ➔ [Round of 32] ➔ [Round of 16] ➔ [Quarter-Finals] ➔ [Semi-Finals] ➔ [Final]
June 11-27 June 28-July 3 July 4-7 July 9-11 July 14-15 July 19
- Group Stage: June 11 – June 27
- Round of 32: June 28 – July 3
- Round of 16: July 4 – July 7
- Quarter-finals: July 9 – July 11
- Semi-finals: July 14 – July 15
- Third-place Playoff: July 18 (Miami)
- World Cup Final: July 19 (New York)
Opening Results & Early Group A Standings
The action started with a massive double-header in Group A, establishing an early hierarchy as the host nations look to make their mark on home soil.
| Date | Group | Fixture | Result | Venue |
| June 11 | Group A | Mexico vs South Africa | 2 – 0 | Mexico City, Mexico |
| June 12 | Group A | South Korea vs Czech Republic | 2 – 1 | Guadalajara, Mexico |
Mexico commands the early advantage in Group A alongside a clinical South Korean side, leaving South Africa and the Czech Republic with immediate work to do ahead of their Matchday 2 face-off.















