28 June 2026 · edwin-chan

Path to the final: every team's bracket mapped

The knockout bracket is set. We traced every team's path from the Round of 32 through to the final. Argentina's route to the title match could avoid every top-10 side until the semifinal. Austria's path runs through Spain, Portugal, and France before a potential final against Argentina. The bracket halves are wildly unbalanced: five of the eight highest-rated teams are crammed into the top half, guaranteeing a bloodbath. Here is the full map.

Wide view of SoFi Stadium during a 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage match between Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina, the scoreboard reading 0-0 above a packed crowd.
Photo Alexis Doine / Wikimedia Commons · CC0

The group stage is over. Seventy-two matches, 18 days, 48 teams reduced to 32. The bracket is set, and the paths forward are not remotely equal.

The 2026 World Cup uses a 48-team format with 12 groups of four. The top two from each group advance directly. The eight best third-placed teams also go through. That produces 32 teams for the knockout round, slotted into a fixed bracket published by FIFA before the tournament began.

The bracket is not a reseed. Finishing position determines your opponent, and your quarter of the draw determines who you could face all the way to the final. Some teams drew paths that look like a gentle ramp. Others walked straight into a wall.

The 32 teams and their R32 matchups

The Round of 32 produces 16 matches. Eight are fixed pairings between group winners, runners-up, and third-placed teams. The other eight depend on which third-placed teams qualified, which determines their bracket slot via a FIFA-published lookup table.

The eight advancing third-placed teams come from Groups B, D, E, F, I, J, K, and L. That locks in the bracket.

MatchTeam A (pos)EloTeam B (pos)EloGap
73South Africa (2A)1529vsCanada (2B)1779250
74Germany (1E)1934vsParaguay (3D)1831103
75Netherlands (1F)1966vsMorocco (2C)1848118
76Brazil (1C)1978vsJapan (2F)191464
77France (1I)2093vsSweden (3F)1726367
78Ivory Coast (2E)1700vsNorway (2I)1935235
79Mexico (1A)1880vsEcuador (3E)18833
80England (1L)2017vsDR Congo (3K)1664353
81USA (1D)1771vsBosnia and Herz. (3B)1597174
82Belgium (1G)1852vsSenegal (3I)18511
83Portugal (2K)1977vsCroatia (2L)192453
84Spain (1H)2148vsAustria (2J)1833315
85Switzerland (1B)1879vsAlgeria (3J)1755124
86Argentina (1J)2124vsCape Verde (2H)1582542
87Colombia (1K)1988vsGhana (3L)1553435
88Australia (2D)1786vsEgypt (2G)171373

The range is enormous. Argentina face Cape Verde with a 542-point Elo advantage. Belgium face Senegal with a 1-point advantage. Those two matches are not in the same category.

The bracket tree

The R32 feeds into a fixed knockout tree. The 16 winners advance to 8 Round of 16 matches, then quarterfinals, semifinals, and the final. Here is the full structure.

Top half of the bracket (Semi 1):

Quarter A:

  • R32: Germany vs Paraguay, France vs Sweden
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: France vs Germany

Quarter B:

  • R32: South Africa vs Canada, Netherlands vs Morocco
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: Netherlands vs Canada

Quarter C:

  • R32: Portugal vs Croatia, Spain vs Austria
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: Spain vs Portugal

Quarter D:

  • R32: USA vs Bosnia, Belgium vs Senegal
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: USA vs Belgium

Bottom half of the bracket (Semi 2):

Quarter E:

  • R32: Brazil vs Japan, Ivory Coast vs Norway
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: Brazil vs Norway

Quarter F:

  • R32: Mexico vs Ecuador, England vs DR Congo
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: England vs Mexico/Ecuador

Quarter G:

  • R32: Argentina vs Cape Verde, Australia vs Egypt
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: Argentina vs Australia

Quarter H:

  • R32: Switzerland vs Algeria, Colombia vs Ghana
  • R16: Winners play each other
  • Likely QF matchup: Colombia vs Switzerland

The top half is significantly stronger. France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, and Portugal are all there. The bottom half's highest-rated team is Argentina (2124), followed by England (2017), then Colombia (1988) and Brazil (1978). The imbalance matters: one semifinal could produce a heavyweight collision, while the other could be more open.

The dream draws

Argentina received the most favourable path of any contender. Cape Verde in the R32 (542-point Elo gap), then the winner of Australia vs Egypt in the R16 (neither team rates above 1786), then likely Colombia or Switzerland in the quarterfinal. Argentina could reach the semifinal without facing a single top-10 Elo team. Messi's final tournament has been handed the smoothest bracket possible.

Colombia also landed well. Ghana in the R32 (435-point gap), Switzerland or Algeria in the R16, and then potentially Argentina in the QF. Colombia and Argentina are on the same side, so they cannot both make the semis, but the path to the QF is gentle for both.

England drew DR Congo (353-point gap) in the R32. The R16 would likely bring Mexico or Ecuador, both beatable. The quarterfinal is where it gets harder: Brazil or Japan would be waiting. But reaching a QF without facing a top-10 opponent is a favourable draw for any team.

France face Sweden in the R32 (367-point gap), the easiest matchup for any top-five team by Elo. The path tightens quickly, though. The R16 would pit France against the winner of Germany vs Paraguay. A France-Germany Round of 16 match is a plausible outcome, and one of them would be eliminated before the quarterfinals.

Canada qualified from Group B as runners-up and drew South Africa (250-point gap). Given that South Africa were the lowest-rated team to reach the knockouts, Canada received one of the best possible R32 opponents for a second-placed finisher. The R16 would likely bring Netherlands or Morocco, a step up but not a wall.

The nightmare draws

Belgium won Group G, which should guarantee a favourable R32 opponent. Instead, they face Senegal, rated 1851 to Belgium's 1852. One point of Elo separates them. This is as close to a coin flip as any R32 match can be. If Belgium survive, the R16 brings USA or Bosnia, and the QF likely brings Spain or Portugal. Belgium won their group and drew one of the hardest paths of any group winner.

Mexico won Group A with a perfect 9 points (the joint-best record alongside France and Argentina) and are the underdog in their R32 match. Ecuador's Elo (1883) is marginally higher than Mexico's (1880). A perfect group stage, rewarded with the closest possible matchup. Win that, and England is the likely R16 opponent. Win that, and Brazil waits in the QF.

Portugal finished second in Group K behind Colombia and drew Croatia (53-point gap). Two former semifinalists going head to head in the R32. The winner almost certainly faces Spain in the R16, then the USA-Belgium winner in the QF. Portugal's path from second round to semifinal runs through three strong European sides.

Brazil drew Japan (64-point gap), the closest R32 matchup of any group winner besides Belgium and Mexico. Japan are well-organized, rated 12th in tournament Elo, and have a track record of upsets at World Cups. Win that, and Norway or Ivory Coast follows, then potentially England in the QF. Brazil are good enough to handle all of these, but the path has no easy matches.

Croatia qualified as Group L runners-up and immediately face Portugal. The loser is out. Croatia's Elo (1924) is strong, but Portugal (1977) has the edge and the bracket position. Even winning that match leads to a likely R16 against Spain.

The five most interesting R32 matchups

1. Belgium vs Senegal (Elo gap: 1). The closest match by rating in the entire Round of 32. Belgium's golden generation is aging. Senegal beat Iraq 5-0 but lost to both France and Norway. Both teams are physical, both can defend. One of them is going home, and the model does not have a strong opinion about which.

2. Brazil vs Japan (Elo gap: 64). Japan drew the Netherlands 2-2, beat Tunisia 4-0, and drew Sweden 1-1 to finish second in Group F with 5 points. Brazil are stronger on paper, but Japan have already shown they can compete with a top-10 side.

3. Mexico vs Ecuador (Elo gap: 3). Mexico won their group. Ecuador finished third. The Elo says this is dead even. Mexico have the form (three wins, six goals, zero conceded). Ecuador have the rating. Something has to give.

4. Portugal vs Croatia (Elo gap: 53). Two perennial knockout-stage teams, both capable of deep runs. Portugal beat Uzbekistan 5-0 and drew Colombia 0-0 and DR Congo 1-1. Croatia beat Panama and Ghana but lost to England 2-4. The loser's tournament ends at the first knockout hurdle.

5. Australia vs Egypt (Elo gap: 73). Both teams surprised in the group stage. Australia finished second in Group D (ahead of Turkey and Paraguay), and Egypt finished second in Group G (ahead of Iran). Neither was expected to be here. Now one of them gets a Round of 16 match.

The third-placed survivors

Eight of twelve third-placed teams advanced. The cutoff fell between Senegal (3 points, GD +2, in) and Iran (3 points, GD 0, out). The margin was two goals of goal difference.

GroupTeamPtsGDGFR32 opponent
KDR Congo4+14England
FSweden407France
EEcuador402Mexico
LGhana402Colombia
BBosnia and Herz.4-15USA
JAlgeria4-25Switzerland
DParaguay4-22Germany
ISenegal3+28Belgium

Four teams missed out. Iran drew all three matches (2-2, 0-0, 1-1) and still went home, eliminated on goal difference. South Korea beat Czechia but lost to Mexico and South Africa. Scotland beat Haiti but lost to Morocco and Brazil. Uruguay, the most notable absence, finished with just 2 points in a group with Spain, Cape Verde, and Saudi Arabia. Two draws and a loss to Spain. Cape Verde finished above them.

The bracket imbalance

The top half of the bracket contains five of the eight highest-rated teams: France (2093), Spain (2148), Portugal (1977), Netherlands (1966), and Germany (1934). That means at least three of them will be eliminated before the semifinal. The top half is a gauntlet. Potential collisions include France vs Germany in the R16, Spain vs Portugal in the R16, and the survivors meeting in the quarterfinal.

The bottom half is kinder. Argentina (2124) is the clear favourite, with England (2017), Colombia (1988), and Brazil (1978) the other contenders. The path to the final is more open, with fewer forced collisions between top teams.

Every team's path to the final

The bracket is fixed through every round. We can trace each team's likely opponents from the R32 all the way to the trophy. The table below shows the highest-rated potential opponent at each stage (by Elo), and the average opponent pool rating across all four rounds. Lower average means an easier road.

Bottom half (Semi 2)

The bottom half is the kinder draw. Four of the five easiest paths belong to teams here.

TeamEloR32R16 likelyQF likelySF likelyAvg opp
Argentina2124Cape Verde (1582)Australia (1786)Colombia (1988)England (2017)1749
Colombia1988Ghana (1553)Switzerland (1879)Argentina (2124)England (2017)1761
Switzerland1879Algeria (1755)Colombia (1988)Argentina (2124)England (2017)1800
England2017DR Congo (1664)Ecuador (1883)Brazil (1978)Argentina (2124)1806
Australia1786Egypt (1713)Argentina (2124)Colombia (1988)England (2017)1808
Norway1935Ivory Coast (1700)Brazil (1978)England (2017)Argentina (2124)1826
Egypt1713Australia (1786)Argentina (2124)Colombia (1988)England (2017)1826
Algeria1755Switzerland (1879)Colombia (1988)Argentina (2124)England (2017)1830
Brazil1978Japan (1914)Norway (1935)England (2017)Argentina (2124)1847
Ecuador1883Mexico (1880)England (2017)Brazil (1978)Argentina (2124)1850
Mexico1880Ecuador (1883)England (2017)Brazil (1978)Argentina (2124)1851
Japan1914Brazil (1978)Norway (1935)England (2017)Argentina (2124)1863
Ghana1553Colombia (1988)Switzerland (1879)Argentina (2124)England (2017)1869
Cape Verde1582Argentina (2124)Australia (1786)Colombia (1988)England (2017)1885
Ivory Coast1700Norway (1935)Brazil (1978)England (2017)Argentina (2124)1885
DR Congo1664England (2017)Ecuador (1883)Brazil (1978)Argentina (2124)1894

Argentina's path is historically soft. Cape Verde, then Australia or Egypt, then Colombia or Switzerland, then the winner of the other semifinal. They could reach the final without playing a single team rated above 2000. For context, the 2022 World Cup bracket gave Argentina Saudi Arabia, Australia, Netherlands, and Croatia on the way to the final. This path is gentler at every stage.

Colombia's path mirrors Argentina's in the early rounds (Ghana, then Switzerland), but the QF would likely bring Argentina itself. Still, reaching a QF by beating only sub-1900 Elo teams is a gift.

England's route looks comfortable until the quarterfinal, where Brazil or Japan would be waiting. Win that, and Argentina is the likely semifinal. England's path has a clear inflection point: the first two rounds are easy, the last two are not.

Brazil face the tightest corridor in the bottom half. Japan in the R32 (Elo 1914, the strongest R32 opponent for any group winner besides Belgium's draw of Senegal), then Norway (1935), then England (2017). Three consecutive opponents rated above 1900. No freebies.

Top half (Semi 1)

The top half is a gauntlet. Five of the eight highest-rated teams are here, and the paths converge violently.

TeamEloR32R16 likelyQF likelySF likelyAvg opp
Canada1779South Africa (1529)Netherlands (1966)France (2093)Spain (2148)1800
USA1771Bosnia (1597)Belgium (1852)Spain (2148)France (2093)1814
France2093Sweden (1726)Germany (1934)Netherlands (1966)Spain (2148)1814
Netherlands1966Morocco (1848)Canada (1779)France (2093)Spain (2148)1817
Belgium1852Senegal (1851)USA (1771)Spain (2148)France (2093)1836
Senegal1851Belgium (1852)USA (1771)Spain (2148)France (2093)1836
Morocco1848Netherlands (1966)Canada (1779)France (2093)Spain (2148)1846
Spain2148Austria (1833)Portugal (1977)Belgium (1852)France (2093)1847
Germany1934Paraguay (1831)France (2093)Netherlands (1966)Spain (2148)1847
Bosnia1597USA (1771)Belgium (1852)Spain (2148)France (2093)1858
South Africa1529Canada (1779)Netherlands (1966)France (2093)Spain (2148)1863
Paraguay1831Germany (1934)France (2093)Netherlands (1966)Spain (2148)1873
Portugal1977Croatia (1924)Spain (2148)Belgium (1852)France (2093)1880
Croatia1924Portugal (1977)Spain (2148)Belgium (1852)France (2093)1893
Sweden1726France (2093)Germany (1934)Netherlands (1966)Spain (2148)1906
Austria1833Spain (2148)Portugal (1977)Belgium (1852)France (2093)1926

Austria face the hardest path of any team in the tournament: Spain in the R32 (Elo 2148, the highest-rated team), then likely Portugal (1977), then the Belgium/USA quarter winner, then France (2093) in a potential semifinal. Their average opponent pool Elo is 1926, nearly 100 points above their own rating. Every round is uphill.

Sweden drew an almost equally brutal road: France (2093) in the R32, then Germany (1934), then Netherlands (1966), then Spain (2148). Four consecutive opponents rated 1900 or above.

France have the easiest R32 match (Sweden, 367-point gap) but then immediately face Germany or Paraguay in the R16. A France-Germany Round of 16 is the single most consequential collision in the bracket. Whoever loses is out before the quarterfinals, and the winner still has Netherlands and Spain ahead.

Spain's path is the opposite of Argentina's. Austria (1833) in the R32 is comfortable, but the R16 almost certainly brings Portugal (1977) or Croatia (1924). Win that, and Belgium or USA follows. Win that, and France or Germany in the semifinal. Spain are the highest-rated team in the tournament, but they have to earn it at every stage.

Portugal and Croatia cancel each other out in the R32. The winner walks into Spain. The loser goes home. This is the most consequential R32 match for long-term bracket implications: it determines whether Spain faces a 1977-rated or 1924-rated team in the R16, and it ends one contender's tournament at the earliest possible stage.

The likely semifinal picture

If seeds hold (the higher-rated team wins every match), the semifinals would be:

  • Semi 1 (top half): France vs Spain
  • Semi 2 (bottom half): Argentina vs England

That gives us a final of either France/Spain vs Argentina/England. But seeds rarely hold perfectly, and the top half is so stacked that an upset in any quarter cascades through the bracket. Germany beating France, or Portugal beating Spain, changes everything downstream.

The bottom half is more predictable. Argentina's path is so much easier than anyone else's that they are the overwhelming favourite to emerge from Semi 2. The question is who they face: England (the likely candidate), Brazil (if they survive Japan and Norway), or a dark horse like Colombia.


Elo ratings are from the tournament-updated snapshot (June 25). They reflect group-stage results via standard K=40 neutral-venue updates. The "likely" opponent at each stage is the highest-rated team in that bracket slot. The full rating table is on the data page. The model publishes probabilities, not recommendations. Full methodology. Full Terms of Use.

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3,301 字 · 发布于 28 June 2026

#- world-cup-2026