
Japan and Sweden Advance After Tense Draw, Setting Up Brazil Clash
A 1-1 stalemate in Dallas sent Japan through as Group F runners-up and Sweden as a best third-placed team, with the Samurai Blue now facing a daunting last-32 tie against the five-time champions.
Japan and Sweden secured their places in the knockout phase of the 2026 World Cup with a 1-1 draw at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, a result that suited both sides but left the Asian team with a formidable assignment against Brazil. The match, played before 70,137 spectators, was a cautious affair for long stretches before bursting into life after the interval. Daizen Maeda put Japan ahead in the 56th minute, finishing a slick passing move involving Ritsu Doan and Ayase Ueda with a low right-footed shot past goalkeeper Jacob Widell Zetterström. The lead lasted only six minutes, as Newcastle United winger Anthony Elanga cut in from the right and curled a left-footed strike beyond Zion Suzuki to level the score.
Japan, needing only a point to guarantee automatic progression, had dominated possession in a first half of few clear chances, with Keito Nakamura forcing a sharp save from Zetterström just before the break. After Elanga’s equaliser, Sweden pressed for a winner that would have lifted them above their opponents, and Suzuki was forced into a series of crucial interventions. He denied Alexander Isak’s low drive in the 65th minute, then in stoppage time clawed away another Elanga effort and tipped an Isak header over the crossbar. Both teams lost defenders to injury in the first half: Sweden’s Isak Hien departed with an apparent hamstring problem, while Japan’s Ko Itakura was replaced by Shogo Taniguchi.
The result left the Netherlands, who beat Tunisia 3-1, as Group F winners with seven points. Japan finished second on five points, having drawn with the Dutch and Sweden and beaten Tunisia, while Sweden’s four points were enough to advance as one of the eight best third-placed teams. Japanese media highlighted the historic nature of the achievement: the Samurai Blue progressed from the group stage without defeat for the first time since co-hosting the 2002 tournament, and extended an unbeaten run against European opposition at World Cups. Coach Hajime Moriyasu, speaking after the match, pointed to Japan’s 3-2 friendly victory over Brazil in Tokyo last October as evidence his side could compete with the five-time champions, though he acknowledged the Seleção would be driven by a desire for revenge.
Sweden, who had been thrashed 5-1 by the Netherlands in their previous outing, regrouped effectively under Graham Potter. The English manager praised his players’ resilience and noted the logistical uncertainty of waiting to learn their next opponent, with France a likely candidate. European media observed that the draw was a fair reflection of a match in which both teams, aware that a point would suffice, initially prioritised defensive solidity before the tempo rose in the second half.
Japan will face Brazil in Houston on 29 June, a fixture that pits the Asian dark horses against a team that topped Group C with seven goals scored and only one conceded. Sweden, meanwhile, must await the final ranking of third-placed teams to discover their round-of-32 opponent, with a potential meeting with the Group I winner looming.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 5 languages
A lackluster 1-1 draw between Japan and Sweden sent both through to the knockout stage, but the match was a poor advertisement for the tournament. The result suited both sides, yet the performance left much to be desired, extinguishing Scotland's faint hopes.
Japan battled to a 1-1 draw with Sweden, securing second place in Group F and a dream clash with Brazil. The Samurai Blue now have the chance to recreate their historic friendly win over the Seleção on the biggest stage.
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