FIFA World Cup 2026 Semifinals Preview: The Top Four Teams in the World, the Last Four Standing

World Cup 2026 semifinals
FIFA World Cup 2026 semifinals, France vs Spain and England vs Argentina

It has never happened before at a World Cup. Forty eight nations began this tournament. Five weeks and 102 matches later, the last four standing are ranked first, second, third and fourth in the world by FIFA. France, Argentina, Spain and England, the four most credentialled footballing nations still competing, line up against each other in the only logical pairings the bracket could have produced.

Today at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, France meet Spain in a semifinal being described as the final before the final, two sides who have won four of the last five major international trophies between them, playing each other at 3:00 PM ET with a place in the July 19 final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on the line. Tomorrow at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, England face Argentina in a match that carries the weight of 1966 and 1986 in equal measure, the hope of sixty years of English football history pressing against the defending champion who has already rewritten the statistical record books of the tournament.

These are the two matches that everyone who follows football has spent five weeks working towards. They have earned the occasion every one of them presents.

How the Four Semi-Finalists Got Here

The Four Finalists’ Paths to the Semifinals

TeamQF ResultR16 ResultRound of 32 ResultGroup Stage
France2-0 Morocco (Mbappe, Dembele)3-0 Paraguay (Mbappe x2)3-0 Sweden (Mbappe x2, Barcola)Won Group I, unbeaten
Spain2-1 Belgium (Merino 88)1-0 Portugal (Merino)2-0 AustriaWon Group H
England2-1 Norway AET (Bellingham x2)3-2 Mexico (Bellingham x2, Kane pen)2-1 DR Congo (Kane x2)Won Group L
Argentina3-1 Switzerland AET (Mac Allister, Alvarez, Lautaro)3-2 Egypt AET (VAR controversy, Romero, Messi, Enzo)3-0 Cape Verde (Messi x2)Won Group J, Messi 18 WC goals

SF1: France vs Spain  |  Today, July 14  |  AT&T Stadium, Arlington

France have been the most complete team in this tournament from the first whistle to the last. They are the only side to win all five of their matches so far without requiring extra time, a record that speaks to a consistency and clinical edge that no other side in the competition has matched. Kylian Mbappe enters this semifinal with eight goals, level with Lionel Messi at the top of the Golden Boot standings, and the world is talking about a potential record that could fall even before the final.

Spain’s route to this point has carried more friction, more drama, and arguably more character. They were held 0-0 by Cape Verde in their opener. They scraped past Belgium in the quarterfinal courtesy of a Mikel Merino goal with twelve minutes remaining, the same substitute who had already saved Spain against Portugal in the Round of 16. Thibaut Courtois leaving the match injured and his replacement Senne Lammens spilling a shot that Merino converted was the kind of moment that will be remembered in Belgian football for generations.

Spain have not been as dominant as France. They have been, in some respects, as resilient as England, finding ways to win matches that threatened to slip away. Whether that resilience is enough to contain the most complete attacking unit in this tournament across 90 minutes this afternoon is the central question of this match.

France: The Relentless Machine

France’s journey through this tournament has been defined above all by the absence of truly difficult moments. They have not conceded from open play in five matches. They beat Sweden 3-0. They beat Morocco 2-0, repeating almost exactly their 2022 semifinal margin against the same opponent. Mbappe has been at his absolute best at the moments that matter most, his pace in behind Spain’s defensive line the single biggest individual threat in this afternoon’s match. Didier Deschamps has rotated his squad carefully, and the freshness of his key players heading into this afternoon, compared to Spain’s energy expenditure through two extra time matches, is a legitimate tactical advantage.

France  |  Team Profile  |  Semifinal
FIFA Ranking1st
Head CoachDidier Deschamps
Tournament RecordW5 D0 L0  |  11 goals scored, 1 conceded  |  Only team to win every match without extra time
Key AttackerKylian Mbappe  |  8 goals  |  joint Golden Boot leader  |  chasing France all-time record
Key MidfielderAurelien Tchouameni  |  screens the defence; Adrien Rabiot provides energy alongside him
Key Threat TodayMbappe’s pace in behind Spain’s high defensive line is the single most dangerous individual matchup of this match
One ConcernMichael Olise picked up a yellow card vs Morocco; a second would mean suspension for the final
Kylian Mbappe - Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals
Kylian Mbappe – Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals

Spain: The Comeback Kings

Spain have needed a Mikel Merino moment twice in this tournament already. The midfielder who was barely mentioned in any pre-tournament analysis has become the defining player of Spain’s campaign not through individual brilliance across 90 minutes but through the capacity to produce a decisive moment in the moments that matter most. Luis de la Fuente’s side have shown real character, but character alone will not be enough against France’s relentless attacking quality. Lamine Yamal has rediscovered his best form as the tournament has progressed, with the 18 year old scoring in the quarterfinal and looking increasingly comfortable on the biggest stages. Rodri’s control in the engine room gives Spain their best chance of slowing France’s transitions.

Spain  |  Team Profile  |  Semifinal
FIFA Ranking3rd
Head CoachLuis de la Fuente
Tournament RecordW5 D0 L0  |  10 goals scored, 4 conceded  |  Two matches required Mikel Merino goals to win
Key AttackerLamine Yamal  |  18 years old  |  growing stronger with each match  |  scored in the QF
Key MidfielderRodri  |  the pivot; controls tempo and protects the back line against France’s counter
Key Threat TodaySet pieces: Spain’s delivery from dead balls is excellent; Pau Cubarsi shot created Merino’s QF winner
One ConcernMbappe’s pace behind the high line is the same threat that has undone every France opponent this tournament
Lamine Yamal - Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals
Lamine Yamal – Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals

Three Tactical Battles: France vs Spain

Mbappe vs Pau Cubarsi. The first battle of the semifinal sets the tone. Spain’s 19 year old centre back has been composed and technically excellent throughout the tournament, reading danger early and covering ground intelligently. Mbappe’s ability to make explosive diagonal runs behind the defensive line is precisely the kind of challenge that has never been presented to Cubarsi at this level before. Whether he solves it or not will go a long way toward deciding this match.

Rodri vs Tchouameni. The midfield battle between Spain’s controlling pivot and France’s own shield in front of the defence is the tactical chess match within the match. Both are exceptional at breaking up possession and recycling it cleanly. Whoever dominates the central spaces will give their team more time in possession and fewer moments of vulnerability on the transition.

Pedri vs French high press intensity. Spain’s possession system requires Pedri to receive the ball under pressure and find solutions in tight spaces. France’s pressing is organised and disciplined, and any hesitation from Pedri in the central areas creates exactly the kind of turnover that leads directly to Mbappe running in behind the exposed Spanish defence.

SF2: England vs Argentina  |  Tomorrow, July 15  |  Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta

Forty years after Diego Maradona’s Hand of God removed England from the 1986 World Cup in Mexico City, and sixty years after England’s only World Cup title at Wembley in 1966, Thomas Tuchel’s side stand one match away from the possibility of ending both counts simultaneously. There is no fixture in world football that carries as much historical weight in the same space as England vs Argentina. This is not a match. It is a reckoning.

England’s path to this point has been built on Jude Bellingham’s extraordinary individual form and Harry Kane’s evergreen goal threat. Bellingham’s six goals across five knockout matches make him the tournament’s most influential individual player outside of Mbappe and Messi, and his extra time goal against Norway in the quarterfinal, which came after England had been dominated for large stretches following Andreas Schjelderup’s first half opener, was the kind of performance that makes world class players different from very good ones.

Argentina arrive carrying the weight of history in a different way. Lionel Messi, 38 years old, the all time leading World Cup goalscorer in history with 18 goals and the first player ever to provide 10 World Cup assists, is playing what will almost certainly be his final football on this stage. He leads a squad that has been more reliant on collective resilience than individual brilliance at various moments, with Julian Alvarez’s tournament form particularly noteworthy alongside the captain’s own record breaking contribution.

England: 60 Years in the Making

Thomas Tuchel’s admission after the Norway quarterfinal that England had been lucky, and that their tactics had been sloppy at points, was the kind of blunt, accurate self-assessment that characterises how he has managed this squad throughout the tournament. England have not been the most complete team in this competition. They have, however, produced decisive moments in critical situations every single time the tournament has demanded it. Kane’s pair of goals against DR Congo in the Round of 32. Bellingham’s brace against Mexico at Estadio Azteca, which ESPN described as England’s best win on foreign soil in their history. Another Bellingham brace against Norway in the quarterfinal. England are not fluking their way to a final. They are producing quality when it matters.

England  |  Team Profile  |  Semifinal
FIFA Ranking4th
Head CoachThomas Tuchel
Tournament RecordW5 D0 L0  |  13 goals scored, 5 conceded  |  Two matches required extra time
Key AttackerJude Bellingham  |  6 goals in the tournament  |  3rd in the Golden Boot race
Supporting StarsHarry Kane (multiple crucial goals), Bukayo Saka (assists and creativity)
Tuchel’s QuoteAfter the Norway match: ‘We were lucky. They were sloppy. We need to be much better against Argentina.’
One ConcernEngland have conceded five goals, more than France (1) or Argentina (4) across the same number of matches
Historic ContextEngland have not reached a World Cup final since 1966. They have not beaten Argentina at a major tournament since 1966.

Argentina: Messi’s Last Stand

Lionel Messi’s tournament has already produced so many historic moments that it risks becoming difficult to process them individually. Eighteen World Cup goals, the first player to provide ten World Cup assists, a hat trick on his 200th Argentina cap, back to back goals in extra time to beat Egypt when Argentina were being eliminated with twenty minutes to play. At 38 years old, in what is almost certainly his final tournament, Messi is producing the kind of football that makes everyone who watched him play during his peak realise that this, right here, is the last chapter of the greatest individual World Cup story ever told.

Julian Alvarez has been just as important in the moments that have mattered. His 112th minute goal against Switzerland was the moment that turned a match Argentina appeared to be losing on the momentum shift, and his movement off Messi throughout the knockout stage has given Lionel Scaloni’s side an attacking combination that is harder to defend than a purely Messi-centric approach would be.

Argentina  |  Team Profile  |  Semifinal
FIFA Ranking2nd (defending champions)
Head CoachLionel Scaloni
Tournament RecordW5 D0 L0  |  16 goals scored, 4 conceded  |  Two matches required extra time
Key AttackerLionel Messi  |  8 goals, 10 assists  |  18 career World Cup goals (all time record)  |  Age 38
Key SupportJulian Alvarez (crucial extra time goals)  |  Mac Allister (midfield control)  |  Enzo Fernandez
GoalkeeperEmiliano Martinez  |  World Cup winning pedigree  |  vocal organiser of the back line
One ConcernArgentina have shown vulnerability in matches that reach extra time. Their squad depth is stretched by this point.
Historic ContextArgentina have won back to back World Cups only once in history, under Menotti and Bilardo (1978, 1982). They are attempting a feat not achieved since Italy in 1938.
Lionel Messi - Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals
Lionel Messi – Player to watch in World Cup 2026 semifinals
Design: 445578gfx | Licensed under CC BY 3.0

Three Tactical Battles: England vs Argentina

Bellingham vs Enzo Fernandez. The match within a match that neither team can afford to lose. Bellingham’s penetrating runs from midfield are England’s primary route to goal in open play, while Enzo Fernandez’s covering runs and long range passing are central to how Argentina maintain control when Messi drops deep. Whoever imposes their rhythm in this contest will likely decide which team reaches the final.

Emiliano Martinez vs Harry Kane. Argentina’s goalkeeper has a reputation for psychological pressure in high stakes matches, his shootout heroics at the 2022 World Cup still vivid in the memory of everyone who watched. Kane’s penalty scoring record for England across this tournament, already established against Mexico, means any foul on the England captain inside the box carries enormous consequences. Their confrontation in any set piece or penalty situation is the match’s single highest tension subplot.

Messi vs Declan Rice. The most famous individual pairing of this semifinal, and the one that most tactical analysts will focus their attention on. Rice’s role as the shield between England’s back four and the world’s most creative attacking player requires him to track Messi’s movement, cut off his passing angles, and do so without losing his positional discipline enough to allow Alvarez or Mac Allister to run into the spaces he vacates. Nobody in world football has solved this problem entirely. Rice has the qualities to make it more difficult than most.

The Final Awaits: July 19 at MetLife Stadium

If both predictions prove correct, the Final on July 19 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey will be France vs England. Two of the top four ranked teams in the world. Two nations who have met 31 times in international football history. The last time they met competitively was the 2022 World Cup quarterfinal, which France won 2-1.

Whoever reaches the final will face an extraordinary context at MetLife, the same venue where the tournament opened with France vs Senegal in Group I over a month ago. The halftime show featuring Shakira, Madonna and BTS, confirmed long before the tournament began, will set the stage for the most watched football match in the history of American broadcasting.

But first, two semifinals have to be played. France vs Spain this afternoon. England vs Argentina tomorrow. Neither one of those will be small.

MetLife Stadium - FIFA World Cup 2026 Final

World Cup 2026  |  Final Four Schedule

MatchDateKick-off (ET)Venue
SF1: France vs SpainJuly 14, 2026 (TODAY)3:00 PMAT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
SF2: England vs ArgentinaJuly 15, 2026 (TOMORROW)3:00 PMMercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia
Third-place matchJuly 18, 20265:00 PMHard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida
THE FINALJuly 19, 20263:00 PMMetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey

Golden Boot Race Heading Into the Semifinals

FIFA World Cup 2026  |  Golden Boot Standings Before the Semifinals

PlayerNationGoalsAssistsStatus
Kylian MbappeFrance84Playing today in SF1
Lionel MessiArgentina810Playing tomorrow in SF2
Erling HaalandNorway73Eliminated in the quarterfinals
Jude BellinghamEngland62Playing tomorrow in SF2
Ousmane DembeleFrance53Playing today in SF1
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