The FIFA World Cup 2026 quarterfinals conclude with a fascinating, high-stakes encounter that absolute no one predicted. On Saturday, July 11, Thomas Tuchel’s resilient England will square off against StÃ¥le Solbakken’s fairytale Norway at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
England enters the match riding the emotional high of a chaotic, 10-man 3-2 victory over co-hosts Mexico in the cauldron of the Azteca Stadium.
Match Details & Global Kickoff Times
| Match Parameter | Official Information |
| Fixture | England vs. Norway (FIFA World Cup Quarterfinal) |
| Date | Saturday, July 11, 2026 |
| Venue | Hard Rock Stadium — Miami Gardens, Florida |
| Kickoff (Local / EDT) | 5:00 PM EDT |
| Kickoff (CEST / Norway Time) | 11:00 PM CEST |
| UK Broadcast | ITV1 / ITVX |
FIFA Rankings: The David vs. Goliath Profile
On paper, the global standings paint a picture of a clear favorite, but tournament momentum has completely bridged the statistical gap.
England (4th): The Three Lions have held firm at the pinnacle of the FIFA Global Rankings all year. Tuchel's side has experienced a massive boost in belief after surviving an extended shorthand period against Mexico, proving they possess the tournament grit required to go all the way.
Norway (31st): Sitting significantly lower in the official rankings, Norway enters the final eight as the ultimate dark horse of the tournament. However, their performance data against Brazil proved they are exceptionally well-organized structurally and carry the ultimate equalizer in transitional attack.
New Breaking Record: A Historical First
Remarkably, this quarterfinal represents a massive milestone for international football. This is the first time in history that England and Norway have ever faced each other at a FIFA World Cup finals tournament.
While the two nations share a footballing history dating back nearly 90 years, all 12 of their previous senior encounters were strictly limited to international friendlies or continental qualifying group stages.
Head-to-Head History: Taking a "Hell of a Beating"
Historically, England has heavily dominated this fixture, winning seven of their twelve historical meetings.
Total Meetings: 12
England Wins: 7
Draws: 3
Norway Wins: 2
Goals Aggregate: England 24 – 7 Norway
The Ghost of 1981: Norway’s most famous sporting moment occurred in September 1981 during a World Cup qualifier in Oslo.
Team News & Predicted Lineups
England: A Selection Crisis for Tuchel
Thomas Tuchel is facing a massive headache in defensive rotation. Center-back Jarell Quansah is completely unavailable, serving the first of an extended two-match FIFA suspension following his straight red card against Mexico. Compounding their worries, veteran Jordan Henderson is out of the tournament with a fractured wrist sustained during post-match celebrations.
Worse still, Declan Rice (lower back pain), Marc Guéhi, and Reece James (hamstring recovery) all missed primary training sessions earlier in the week, pushing England's medical team to the absolute limit.
Predicted Lineup (4-2-3-1): Pickford; James, Stones, Maguire, Trippier; Mainoo, Rice; Saka, Bellingham, Foden; Kane (c).
Norway: Full Strength and Firing
Ståle Solbakken has no such disciplinary or physical crises to manage. Norway's camp is flying high on pure adrenaline. Veteran keeper Ørjan Nyland is operating at the peak of his powers after his penalty-saving masterclass against Brazil, while the central defensive unit has shown incredible sturdiness absorbing pressure before launching long balls to their talisman.
Predicted Lineup (4-3-3): Nyland; Ryerson, Østigård, Hanche-Olsen, Wolfe; Ødegaard (c), Berge, Thorsby; Bobb, Haaland, Nusa.
The Tactical Battleground
The tactical script centers on a mouthwatering Premier League reunion. Manchester City’s Erling Haaland will go toe-to-toe with John Stones and Harry Maguire in a highly physical aerial duel. Arsenal's Martin Ødegaard will pull the strings from deep midfield, looking to exploit the half-spaces left behind if Declan Rice is operating below 100% physical fitness.
Tuchel's England will look to starve Norway of possession, utilizing Jude Bellingham's late box-crashing runs to disrupt Solbakken's rigid low block. However, if England turns the ball over carelessly in the final third, the blistering pace of Antonio Nusa on the counter could catch a patched-up English backline completely off-guard.
Can Thomas Tuchel's depleted Three Lions navigate the heat of Miami and march into the final four, or will Erling Haaland deliver another historic "hell of a beating" to England?
