Sign in
Edition of 06:00 CETThursday, July 2, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages379 briefings today
SportTuesday, June 30, 2026

Paraguay stun Germany on penalties as two top-ten sides fall in World Cup first

A 1-1 draw and a 4-3 shootout victory, sealed by José Canale, sent the four-time champions out in the Round of 32 for the first time, hours after the Netherlands also exited.

Paraguay eliminated Germany from the 2026 World Cup in the Round of 32, winning 4-3 on penalties after a 1-1 draw at the Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts. Orlando Gill, the Albirroja goalkeeper, saved spot-kicks from Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade, before José Canale converted the decisive sixth penalty. The result, combined with Morocco’s shootout victory over the Netherlands earlier the same day, marked the first time two teams ranked inside FIFA’s top ten had been knocked out in the opening knockout round of the tournament.

Julio Enciso had given Paraguay the lead in the first half, heading in a cross after a rapid counter-attack. Havertz levelled nine minutes after the restart, glancing a delivery past Gill. Germany dominated possession and created the clearer chances thereafter, and thought they had won it in the 102nd minute when Jonathan Tah headed home a corner. Moroccan referee Jalal Jayed, however, disallowed the goal after a VAR review showed Waldemar Anton obstructing Gill. The match went to penalties, where Germany’s perfect World Cup shootout record — four wins from four — was broken.

Viewed from European capitals, the exit deepens a pattern of underperformance for Die Mannschaft. Since winning the 2014 title, Germany have failed to win a knockout tie at a World Cup, suffering group-stage eliminations in 2018 and 2022. Analysts in London note that the defeat was their first in a World Cup penalty shootout, and only their second in any major tournament after the 1976 European Championship final. South American observers, meanwhile, framed the result as a vindication of Paraguay’s defensive resilience and the tactical approach of Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro, who described the performance as “the biggest victory of my life” and praised his players as “26 warriors who left as legends.”

Alfaro, who previously led Ecuador at the 2022 tournament, acknowledged that his side had to “resist” and that the heavy opening loss to the United States had been a necessary learning experience. He singled out Canale, a late defensive replacement, for playing with the composure of a veteran. The coach also warned against overvaluing the win, insisting that further sacrifice would be required to progress.

Paraguay, back at the World Cup after a 16-year absence, will face the winner of France versus Sweden in the Round of 16 on 4 July in Philadelphia. Germany’s early departure, alongside that of the Netherlands, ensures that the 2026 knockout phase begins with a reshaped field and the absence of two traditional European powers.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

28%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press
TriumphSchadenfreude

A historic night for Paraguay, who authored the most glorious page in their football history. La Albirroja, led by a tearful Alfaro, brought down the German giant on penalties with a monumental Orlando Gill, unleashing the first huge upset of the World Cup. It was a victory of faith and self-belief against all odds.

Continental European press/ DACH+
AlarmSkepticism

Germany's latest World Cup failure takes on dramatic proportions: eliminated in the round of 32 by Paraguay, extending the drought of knockout wins to twelve years. The penalty nightmare, never before lost at a World Cup, and the inability to score more than once against a modest opponent reignite the debate over the national team's structural crisis.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
New Findings Upend Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Sleep and Meal Timing·A Final Bow in Pink: James Van Der Beek’s Posthumous Role in the ‘Legally Blonde’ Prequel·US Navy Helicopter Ditches in Arabian Sea; One Crew Member Missing·Gold rebounds as soft US jobs data and Fed remarks ease rate-hike fears·Under the hedgerows and on the water, the new faces of solitude·Qatar Announces Progress in US–Iran Talks, Next Round Deferred for Khamenei Funeral·US Designates Ecuador’s Chone Killers as Terrorist Group, Deepening Bilateral Security Campaign·DR Congo coach learns of father’s death during press conference after England loss·New Findings Upend Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Sleep and Meal Timing·A Final Bow in Pink: James Van Der Beek’s Posthumous Role in the ‘Legally Blonde’ Prequel·US Navy Helicopter Ditches in Arabian Sea; One Crew Member Missing·Gold rebounds as soft US jobs data and Fed remarks ease rate-hike fears·Under the hedgerows and on the water, the new faces of solitude·Qatar Announces Progress in US–Iran Talks, Next Round Deferred for Khamenei Funeral·US Designates Ecuador’s Chone Killers as Terrorist Group, Deepening Bilateral Security Campaign·DR Congo coach learns of father’s death during press conference after England loss·
Upd. 09:45 PM2 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Paraguay stun Germany on penalties as two top-ten sides fall in World Cup first

A 1-1 draw and a 4-3 shootout victory, sealed by José Canale, sent the four-time champions out in the Round of 32 for the first time, hours after the Netherlands also exited.

Paraguay eliminated Germany from the 2026 World Cup in the Round of 32, winning 4-3 on penalties after a 1-1 draw at the Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts. Orlando Gill, the Albirroja goalkeeper, saved spot-kicks from Kai Havertz and Nick Woltemade, before José Canale converted the decisive sixth penalty. The result, combined with Morocco’s shootout victory over the Netherlands earlier the same day, marked the first time two teams ranked inside FIFA’s top ten had been knocked out in the opening knockout round of the tournament.

Julio Enciso had given Paraguay the lead in the first half, heading in a cross after a rapid counter-attack. Havertz levelled nine minutes after the restart, glancing a delivery past Gill. Germany dominated possession and created the clearer chances thereafter, and thought they had won it in the 102nd minute when Jonathan Tah headed home a corner. Moroccan referee Jalal Jayed, however, disallowed the goal after a VAR review showed Waldemar Anton obstructing Gill. The match went to penalties, where Germany’s perfect World Cup shootout record — four wins from four — was broken.

Viewed from European capitals, the exit deepens a pattern of underperformance for Die Mannschaft. Since winning the 2014 title, Germany have failed to win a knockout tie at a World Cup, suffering group-stage eliminations in 2018 and 2022. Analysts in London note that the defeat was their first in a World Cup penalty shootout, and only their second in any major tournament after the 1976 European Championship final. South American observers, meanwhile, framed the result as a vindication of Paraguay’s defensive resilience and the tactical approach of Argentine coach Gustavo Alfaro, who described the performance as “the biggest victory of my life” and praised his players as “26 warriors who left as legends.”

Alfaro, who previously led Ecuador at the 2022 tournament, acknowledged that his side had to “resist” and that the heavy opening loss to the United States had been a necessary learning experience. He singled out Canale, a late defensive replacement, for playing with the composure of a veteran. The coach also warned against overvaluing the win, insisting that further sacrifice would be required to progress.

Paraguay, back at the World Cup after a 16-year absence, will face the winner of France versus Sweden in the Round of 16 on 4 July in Philadelphia. Germany’s early departure, alongside that of the Netherlands, ensures that the 2026 knockout phase begins with a reshaped field and the absence of two traditional European powers.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 2 languages

28%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable83%
Neutral17%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 2 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Latin American pressContinental European press
Latin American press
TriumphSchadenfreude

A historic night for Paraguay, who authored the most glorious page in their football history. La Albirroja, led by a tearful Alfaro, brought down the German giant on penalties with a monumental Orlando Gill, unleashing the first huge upset of the World Cup. It was a victory of faith and self-belief against all odds.

Continental European press/ DACH+
AlarmSkepticism

Germany's latest World Cup failure takes on dramatic proportions: eliminated in the round of 32 by Paraguay, extending the drought of knockout wins to twelve years. The penalty nightmare, never before lost at a World Cup, and the inability to score more than once against a modest opponent reignite the debate over the national team's structural crisis.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 2 languages

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Debuts Qatar-Gifted Air Force One Amid Bipartisan Ethics Scrutiny

10 languages · 26 outlets

From Economy & Markets

US declines to extend USMCA, triggering annual reviews and a decade of trade uncertainty

8 languages · 29 outlets

From Technology

India orders WhatsApp to halt username feature over fraud fears

3 languages · 8 outlets

Read more