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Edition of 10:00 CETFriday, July 3, 2026
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SportFriday, July 3, 2026

Switzerland End 88-Year Wait for World Cup Knockout Win with 2-0 Victory over Algeria

Breel Embolo and Dan Ndoye scored as Switzerland secured a first World Cup knockout victory since 1938, advancing to face Colombia or Ghana in the last 16.

Switzerland exorcised nearly nine decades of knockout-stage futility at BC Place in Vancouver, dispatching Algeria 2-0 to reach the last 16 of the 2026 World Cup. The result, delivered with a goal in each half, marked the Rossocrociati’s first victory in a direct elimination match at the tournament since they beat Germany in 1938 – a barren run that had spanned seven consecutive exits and become a millstone for a nation that has otherwise been a model of consistency, reaching the knockout rounds at each of the last four World Cups.

The breakthrough arrived after ten minutes and was sculpted by the tournament’s breakout star. Johan Manzambi, the 20-year-old Freiburg midfielder, collected the ball on the left, surged past Aissa Mandi with a sharp change of pace, and cut a low cross into the path of Breel Embolo, who tapped into an empty net. It was Manzambi’s fourth goal involvement of the finals – he now has two goals and two assists – making him, according to Opta data cited by analysts in London, the youngest player to be directly involved in five World Cup goals since detailed records began in 1966. Switzerland then doubled their lead 46 seconds after the interval, when Rafik Belghali’s miscued clearance fell to Dan Ndoye, who controlled and drilled a low shot beyond Luca Zidane.

Algeria, coached by former Switzerland manager Vladimir Petkovic, enjoyed more possession but rarely translated it into danger. Their best first-half chance, a tame Fares Chaibi effort, was easily gathered by Gregor Kobel, and a Riyad Mahrez shot early in the second period was blocked. Swiss coach Murat Yakin, speaking to Spanish-language broadcasters, praised his side’s defensive organisation, noting they “practically conceded no chances”. Across North Africa, the elimination was met with resignation: Algeria became the fifth African side to fall at the first knockout hurdle, leaving only Morocco to carry the continent’s hopes into the last 16.

Switzerland, unbeaten in four matches after topping Group B, will remain in Vancouver to face the winner of Friday’s tie between Colombia and Ghana on 7 July. A victory there would carry them into the quarter-finals for the first time since the 1954 tournament on home soil, a prospect that, viewed from Zurich, no longer feels like a historical anomaly but a tangible target.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 8 languages

57%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressSub-Saharan African press
Continental European press/ DACH+
TriumphPragmatism

Switzerland swept past Algeria with a commanding 2-0 win, scoring early in each half to turn a potentially tricky tie into a comfortable evening. The Nati, facing their former coach Petkovic, made it look easy and now look ahead confidently to the round of 16.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
VictimhoodSkepticism

Algeria's World Cup run ended in bitter disappointment with a 2-0 loss to Switzerland, adding to the growing list of African sides knocked out at the last-32 stage. Despite early promise, the north Africans couldn't recover from goals at the start of each half, leaving Morocco as the continent's only remaining hope.

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Upd. 10:41 AM8 languages · 31 outlets
31 outlets|8 languages|2 min read
Friday, July 3, 2026

Switzerland End 88-Year Wait for World Cup Knockout Win with 2-0 Victory over Algeria

Breel Embolo and Dan Ndoye scored as Switzerland secured a first World Cup knockout victory since 1938, advancing to face Colombia or Ghana in the last 16.

Switzerland exorcised nearly nine decades of knockout-stage futility at BC Place in Vancouver, dispatching Algeria 2-0 to reach the last 16 of the 2026 World Cup. The result, delivered with a goal in each half, marked the Rossocrociati’s first victory in a direct elimination match at the tournament since they beat Germany in 1938 – a barren run that had spanned seven consecutive exits and become a millstone for a nation that has otherwise been a model of consistency, reaching the knockout rounds at each of the last four World Cups.

The breakthrough arrived after ten minutes and was sculpted by the tournament’s breakout star. Johan Manzambi, the 20-year-old Freiburg midfielder, collected the ball on the left, surged past Aissa Mandi with a sharp change of pace, and cut a low cross into the path of Breel Embolo, who tapped into an empty net. It was Manzambi’s fourth goal involvement of the finals – he now has two goals and two assists – making him, according to Opta data cited by analysts in London, the youngest player to be directly involved in five World Cup goals since detailed records began in 1966. Switzerland then doubled their lead 46 seconds after the interval, when Rafik Belghali’s miscued clearance fell to Dan Ndoye, who controlled and drilled a low shot beyond Luca Zidane.

Algeria, coached by former Switzerland manager Vladimir Petkovic, enjoyed more possession but rarely translated it into danger. Their best first-half chance, a tame Fares Chaibi effort, was easily gathered by Gregor Kobel, and a Riyad Mahrez shot early in the second period was blocked. Swiss coach Murat Yakin, speaking to Spanish-language broadcasters, praised his side’s defensive organisation, noting they “practically conceded no chances”. Across North Africa, the elimination was met with resignation: Algeria became the fifth African side to fall at the first knockout hurdle, leaving only Morocco to carry the continent’s hopes into the last 16.

Switzerland, unbeaten in four matches after topping Group B, will remain in Vancouver to face the winner of Friday’s tie between Colombia and Ghana on 7 July. A victory there would carry them into the quarter-finals for the first time since the 1954 tournament on home soil, a prospect that, viewed from Zurich, no longer feels like a historical anomaly but a tangible target.

Source divergence

Sport · 31 outlets · 8 languages

57%High

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral58%
Critical17%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 8 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressSub-Saharan African press
Continental European press/ DACH+
TriumphPragmatism

Switzerland swept past Algeria with a commanding 2-0 win, scoring early in each half to turn a potentially tricky tie into a comfortable evening. The Nati, facing their former coach Petkovic, made it look easy and now look ahead confidently to the round of 16.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
VictimhoodSkepticism

Algeria's World Cup run ended in bitter disappointment with a 2-0 loss to Switzerland, adding to the growing list of African sides knocked out at the last-32 stage. Despite early promise, the north Africans couldn't recover from goals at the start of each half, leaving Morocco as the continent's only remaining hope.

This story appeared in

31 outlets · 8 languages

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