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Edition of 20:00 CETWednesday, June 24, 2026
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SportWednesday, June 24, 2026

Muñoz strike sends Colombia into last 32 as DR Congo resistance crumbles

A deflected 76th-minute goal from Daniel Muñoz secured a 1-0 victory for Colombia over DR Congo, guaranteeing their place in the knockout phase with a game to spare.

Colombia secured their passage to the round of 32 at the 2026 World Cup with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over DR Congo in Guadalajara, Mexico. Daniel Muñoz, the Crystal Palace full-back, scored the decisive goal in the 76th minute, his second of the tournament, after a Juan Fernando Quintero pass found him surging into the area. The shot took a deflection off defender Steve Kapuadi, wrong-footing goalkeeper Lionel Mpasi, who had until then repelled everything Colombia threw at him.\n\nFrom the opening whistle, the South Americans imposed themselves, controlling possession and creating a flurry of chances. Mpasi, however, produced a remarkable sequence of saves. Within the first 20 minutes, he had already made five stops — a statistic not recorded at a World Cup since Jamaica's Warren Barrett against Argentina in 1998. He denied James Rodríguez from distance, blocked a Luis Díaz effort with his legs, and reacted sharply to keep out Jhon Arias. Colombia had a Muñoz goal disallowed for offside in the sixth minute, and their frustration grew as the Congolese defence, marshalled by Chancel Mbemba, held firm.\n\nThe pattern continued after the interval. Díaz was again thwarted by Mpasi early in the second half, and the rebound fell to Arias, who fired wide. Néstor Lorenzo introduced Quintero and Jhon Córdoba just before the hour, and the change proved decisive. Quintero's threaded pass released Muñoz, whose left-footed strike deflected in. Colombia thought they had extended the lead twice through Díaz, but both efforts were ruled out — one for a foul, the other for offside. In stoppage time, Camilo Vargas was finally called into action, diving to his left to push away a fierce Nathanael Mbuku drive, preserving the clean sheet.\n\nThe result lifted Colombia to six points from two Group K matches, guaranteeing a top-two finish and a place in the knockout rounds. Portugal, who thrashed Uzbekistan 5-0 earlier in the day with a Cristiano Ronaldo double, sit second on four points. DR Congo remain on one point, still with a chance of progressing if they beat Uzbekistan in their final match and other results align. Colombia will face Portugal in Miami on Saturday to decide group supremacy, while DR Congo meet Uzbekistan in Atlanta.\n\nViewed from Bogotá, the victory was a testament to Colombian resilience and tactical patience. African outlets highlighted Mpasi's heroics, noting that DR Congo, in their first World Cup appearance since 1974 as Zaire, had pushed a more fancied opponent to the limit. European analysts observed that Colombia's wastefulness in front of goal could be punished by sharper opponents in the knockout phase. For now, however, the Cafeteros have maintained their perfect start and carry momentum into the clash with Portugal.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

50%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphPragmatism

Colombia secured a hard-fought but deserved victory over DR Congo, with Daniel Muñoz emerging as the unexpected hero. The Cafeteros showed patience and dominance, booking their place in the round of 32 and topping the group. The triumph reinforces the team's strong World Cup campaign under Néstor Lorenzo.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Progressive
PragmatismDetachment

Colombia's narrow win over DR Congo sets up a tantalizing group decider against Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal. The result, secured by Daniel Muñoz's late strike, guarantees progression but the real test lies ahead. The narrative shifts to a showdown between the South American upstarts and the European powerhouse.

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Upd. 06:38 AM1 language · 3 outlets
3 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Muñoz strike sends Colombia into last 32 as DR Congo resistance crumbles

A deflected 76th-minute goal from Daniel Muñoz secured a 1-0 victory for Colombia over DR Congo, guaranteeing their place in the knockout phase with a game to spare.

Colombia secured their passage to the round of 32 at the 2026 World Cup with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over DR Congo in Guadalajara, Mexico. Daniel Muñoz, the Crystal Palace full-back, scored the decisive goal in the 76th minute, his second of the tournament, after a Juan Fernando Quintero pass found him surging into the area. The shot took a deflection off defender Steve Kapuadi, wrong-footing goalkeeper Lionel Mpasi, who had until then repelled everything Colombia threw at him.\n\nFrom the opening whistle, the South Americans imposed themselves, controlling possession and creating a flurry of chances. Mpasi, however, produced a remarkable sequence of saves. Within the first 20 minutes, he had already made five stops — a statistic not recorded at a World Cup since Jamaica's Warren Barrett against Argentina in 1998. He denied James Rodríguez from distance, blocked a Luis Díaz effort with his legs, and reacted sharply to keep out Jhon Arias. Colombia had a Muñoz goal disallowed for offside in the sixth minute, and their frustration grew as the Congolese defence, marshalled by Chancel Mbemba, held firm.\n\nThe pattern continued after the interval. Díaz was again thwarted by Mpasi early in the second half, and the rebound fell to Arias, who fired wide. Néstor Lorenzo introduced Quintero and Jhon Córdoba just before the hour, and the change proved decisive. Quintero's threaded pass released Muñoz, whose left-footed strike deflected in. Colombia thought they had extended the lead twice through Díaz, but both efforts were ruled out — one for a foul, the other for offside. In stoppage time, Camilo Vargas was finally called into action, diving to his left to push away a fierce Nathanael Mbuku drive, preserving the clean sheet.\n\nThe result lifted Colombia to six points from two Group K matches, guaranteeing a top-two finish and a place in the knockout rounds. Portugal, who thrashed Uzbekistan 5-0 earlier in the day with a Cristiano Ronaldo double, sit second on four points. DR Congo remain on one point, still with a chance of progressing if they beat Uzbekistan in their final match and other results align. Colombia will face Portugal in Miami on Saturday to decide group supremacy, while DR Congo meet Uzbekistan in Atlanta.\n\nViewed from Bogotá, the victory was a testament to Colombian resilience and tactical patience. African outlets highlighted Mpasi's heroics, noting that DR Congo, in their first World Cup appearance since 1974 as Zaire, had pushed a more fancied opponent to the limit. European analysts observed that Colombia's wastefulness in front of goal could be punished by sharper opponents in the knockout phase. For now, however, the Cafeteros have maintained their perfect start and carry momentum into the clash with Portugal.

Source divergence

Sport · 3 outlets · 1 language

50%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable52%
Neutral48%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphPragmatism

Colombia secured a hard-fought but deserved victory over DR Congo, with Daniel Muñoz emerging as the unexpected hero. The Cafeteros showed patience and dominance, booking their place in the round of 32 and topping the group. The triumph reinforces the team's strong World Cup campaign under Néstor Lorenzo.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Progressive
PragmatismDetachment

Colombia's narrow win over DR Congo sets up a tantalizing group decider against Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal. The result, secured by Daniel Muñoz's late strike, guarantees progression but the real test lies ahead. The narrative shifts to a showdown between the South American upstarts and the European powerhouse.

This story appeared in

3 outlets · 1 language

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