Brazil’s World Cup ends early as Norway turns discipline into shock
- Sports
- July 5, 2026
PARIS – Brazil’s elimination from the 2026 World Cup by Norway will rank among the tournament’s earliest and most resonant upsets. The five-time champions, long treated as football’s safest aristocrats, were beaten 2-1 in the round of 16 by a Norwegian side that combined tactical discipline with ruthless efficiency. It was not so much a smash-and-grab as a demonstration of how narrow the margin has become between football’s established powers and the rising challengers beneath them.
Brazil, under Carlo Ancelotti, controlled long stretches of possession and fashioned enough chances to dictate the tie, but their superiority was strangely weightless. An early missed penalty set the tone for an evening in which fluency rarely translated into authority.
Norway, by contrast, were compact without being passive and opportunistic without appearing reckless. Erling Haaland provided the decisive edge, punishing Brazilian hesitation with the sort of clinical finishing that elite knockout football rewards.
For Norway, the victory represents more than a quarter-final berth, it is a statement that a country long regarded as peripheral to the game’s top tier can now impose itself on its grandest stage.
For Brazil, the defeat extends a more uncomfortable modern pattern: abundant talent, high expectations and yet another World Cup exit that raises familiar questions about composure, structure and competitive edge when the margins tighten.