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Edition of 16:00 CETTuesday, June 30, 2026
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SportTuesday, June 30, 2026

Orlando Gill’s two penalty saves eliminate Germany and send Paraguay into World Cup last 16

The 26-year-old goalkeeper, who once sold his jerseys to pay for his son’s medical care, denied Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade in a 4-3 shootout victory after a 1-1 draw in Foxborough.

The decisive moment arrived in the seventh round of the penalty shootout at Gillette Stadium, when José Canale’s low strike sent Paraguay into the World Cup’s round of 16 and eliminated four-time champions Germany. The 4-3 shootout win, after 120 minutes of football had ended 1-1, was built on the long limbs and sharp reading of goalkeeper Orlando Gill, who dived to his right to repel Kai Havertz’s opening kick and then sprawled left to keep out Nick Woltemade’s effort. Jonathan Tah later blazed over the bar, leaving Canale to complete one of the tournament’s most startling results.

Paraguay had taken the lead against the run of play three minutes before half-time, when Julio Enciso rose to head in a cross from Matías Galarza. Germany, who controlled nearly 80 per cent of possession in the first half, equalised nine minutes after the restart through Havertz’s header from Florian Wirtz’s delivery. The European side continued to press, but Gill made six saves across the match, including a point-blank stop from Havertz and a crucial intervention to deny Tah’s header in extra time — a goal that was subsequently disallowed by VAR for obstruction on the goalkeeper.

Gill’s performance was the culmination of a rapid rise. Born in the Paraguayan city of San Lorenzo, he moved to Argentina’s San Lorenzo de Almagro in 2024, initially spending six months ineligible before injuries to senior goalkeepers opened a path. He became the club’s first-choice in early 2025, keeping 28 clean sheets in 53 appearances, and made his national-team debut later that year. Viewed from Buenos Aires, his composure under the high ball and his 1.99-metre frame have drawn comparisons with Thibaut Courtois, though Gill himself has noted a more local influence: he practises free-kicks after training and scored four goals in Paraguay.

After the match, Gill dedicated the victory to a nephew who is hospitalised, and his wife revealed on social media that the couple had once sold his jerseys and boots to fund their son’s medical treatment. The goalkeeper’s trajectory also carried a personal redemption arc: in a domestic cup tie for San Lorenzo earlier this year, he had saved two penalties against River Plate only for his side to be eliminated. This time, the two stops proved decisive. German media noted that the defeat ended a perfect World Cup shootout record for the Nationalmannschaft, who had won all four of their previous tournament deciders from the spot.

Paraguay, managed by Gustavo Alfaro, will next face the winner of the round-of-32 tie between France and Sweden, to be played at MetLife Stadium. For a nation that had not reached the knockout stage since 2010, the victory in Massachusetts has already reshaped expectations.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

16%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Latin American press/ Market
TriumphRevanchism

Orlando Gill, the Paraguayan giant, went from criticism to glory as the national hero who extinguished Germany's dreams. After enduring personal sacrifices, including raffling his jerseys to save his son, he delivered a historic performance, saving two penalties to send Paraguay to the round of 16. His story is one of redemption and sacrifice, celebrated as an unforgettable night for Paraguayan football.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismDetachment

Orlando Gill credited his decisive performance against Germany to meticulous preparation, studying every player and every detail. The San Lorenzo goalkeeper saved two penalties to send Paraguay to the last 16, emphasizing the importance of analysis in his heroics. His calm, technical approach was the foundation of the upset.

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Upd. 06:51 AM3 languages · 10 outlets
10 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Orlando Gill’s two penalty saves eliminate Germany and send Paraguay into World Cup last 16

The 26-year-old goalkeeper, who once sold his jerseys to pay for his son’s medical care, denied Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade in a 4-3 shootout victory after a 1-1 draw in Foxborough.

The decisive moment arrived in the seventh round of the penalty shootout at Gillette Stadium, when José Canale’s low strike sent Paraguay into the World Cup’s round of 16 and eliminated four-time champions Germany. The 4-3 shootout win, after 120 minutes of football had ended 1-1, was built on the long limbs and sharp reading of goalkeeper Orlando Gill, who dived to his right to repel Kai Havertz’s opening kick and then sprawled left to keep out Nick Woltemade’s effort. Jonathan Tah later blazed over the bar, leaving Canale to complete one of the tournament’s most startling results.

Paraguay had taken the lead against the run of play three minutes before half-time, when Julio Enciso rose to head in a cross from Matías Galarza. Germany, who controlled nearly 80 per cent of possession in the first half, equalised nine minutes after the restart through Havertz’s header from Florian Wirtz’s delivery. The European side continued to press, but Gill made six saves across the match, including a point-blank stop from Havertz and a crucial intervention to deny Tah’s header in extra time — a goal that was subsequently disallowed by VAR for obstruction on the goalkeeper.

Gill’s performance was the culmination of a rapid rise. Born in the Paraguayan city of San Lorenzo, he moved to Argentina’s San Lorenzo de Almagro in 2024, initially spending six months ineligible before injuries to senior goalkeepers opened a path. He became the club’s first-choice in early 2025, keeping 28 clean sheets in 53 appearances, and made his national-team debut later that year. Viewed from Buenos Aires, his composure under the high ball and his 1.99-metre frame have drawn comparisons with Thibaut Courtois, though Gill himself has noted a more local influence: he practises free-kicks after training and scored four goals in Paraguay.

After the match, Gill dedicated the victory to a nephew who is hospitalised, and his wife revealed on social media that the couple had once sold his jerseys and boots to fund their son’s medical treatment. The goalkeeper’s trajectory also carried a personal redemption arc: in a domestic cup tie for San Lorenzo earlier this year, he had saved two penalties against River Plate only for his side to be eliminated. This time, the two stops proved decisive. German media noted that the defeat ended a perfect World Cup shootout record for the Nationalmannschaft, who had won all four of their previous tournament deciders from the spot.

Paraguay, managed by Gustavo Alfaro, will next face the winner of the round-of-32 tie between France and Sweden, to be played at MetLife Stadium. For a nation that had not reached the knockout stage since 2010, the victory in Massachusetts has already reshaped expectations.

Source divergence

Sport · 10 outlets · 3 languages

16%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable91%
Neutral9%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

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

Orlando Gill, the Paraguayan giant, went from criticism to glory as the national hero who extinguished Germany's dreams. After enduring personal sacrifices, including raffling his jerseys to save his son, he delivered a historic performance, saving two penalties to send Paraguay to the round of 16. His story is one of redemption and sacrifice, celebrated as an unforgettable night for Paraguayan football.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
PragmatismDetachment

Orlando Gill credited his decisive performance against Germany to meticulous preparation, studying every player and every detail. The San Lorenzo goalkeeper saved two penalties to send Paraguay to the last 16, emphasizing the importance of analysis in his heroics. His calm, technical approach was the foundation of the upset.

This story appeared in

10 outlets · 3 languages

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